Word: basers
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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Until the seventh inning but one hit was made off his delivery and after that but five more were added. In the eighth, Hopkins knocked a three baser over right field fence. It was a block ball and Hopkins came home on it. Harvard excelled in pitching, as the score shows. Allen did magnificent work behind the bat, Coolidge and Baker had little to do but they did that little well, while the out-field played a beautiful game throughout, Crocker doing especially good work while Lovering and Le Moyne caught some particularly difficult flies. For Yale, Camp and Hopkins...
...game with the Beacons yesterday was called in the middle of the third inning on account of rain. At that time the score stood 9 to 2 in favor of Harvard. In the first inning Harvard made six runs, Coolidge and Baker each making a three-baser, and Smith, Lovering, Allen and LeMoyne making singles. Mr. Winslow, '85, was umpire. Score by innings...
...wild pitch. Coolidge was given his base on balls, and went to second. Baker sent a high fly over left field's head, knocking home Keep and Coolidge, and reaching second himself. Smith was given his base on balls, and came home on Lovering's hot two-baser by second and Wadsworth's error. To cap the climax Nichols sent a three-baser far over the fielders' heads, and brought Lovering home. Nichols was left on third, as Allen flied out to Rhett. For Brown, Shedd was given first base on called balls. Durfee hit a hot one at Coolidge...
...Harvard earned three runs in the seventh. Keep reached first on Shedd's fumble, and stole second. Coolidge sent him to third on a safe hit, and then went to second himself. Baker sent both home on a hit, and came in himself on Lovering's three-baser. Lovering came in on a base-hit by Nichols, who was soon forced out by Allen. Allen was run out between first and second, every man on the Brown nine taking a hand...
...nine, there is no reason to feel discouraged about our prospects. For the first 7 innings the game was sharply contested, and the superiority of play evidently lay with the Harvards. The batting of the nine was strong. Nichols excelled in this respect, placing to his credit a 3 baser, 2 baser and a single. White's work as pitcher was especially gratifying; not a hit was made off his delivery until the seventh innings and only four during the whole game. He fielded his position for all it was worth, and made several beautiful stops of hard-hit balls...