Word: dartmouth
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...Harvard lineup at designated hitter, posting an eye-opening .288 average. Prior to this season, Brunnig had nothing more than one at-bat in college, as a freshman. But in 2006, one of the highlights of the senior’s renaissance came during the division-clinching win against Dartmouth in Hanover, N.H. The senior threw six innings, getting roughed up for six earned, but he made up for it in the lineup by going 3-5 with two doubles, three runs, and two RBI. His second knock of the day, notably, was launched about 400 feet, hitting the base...
...score against Brown, losing 2-0 for its fifth straight loss. Harvard made another valiant effort to end its winless streak when it played Princeton, ending the game not in a loss but a 1-1 tie. Harvard was able to draw first blood in its game against Dartmouth when Altchek scored a goal early in the game, but the Crimson could not hold on and lost 2-1. The end of the season brought a number of positives, with a 1-0 win over Columbia and a 3-2 victory over Penn: the Crimson’s only...
...however, the loss of three seniors—almost half of its roster—provided the opportunity for new talent to take the reins. It was freshman Ali Bode who set the tone for the upcoming year, earning a share of first-place honors in the season-opening Dartmouth Invitational. “As a freshman, it was great for her to contribute that way,” Crimson coach Kevin Rhoads said of Bode’s promising start to the season. Harvard set a new high-water mark for itself in the event, finishing third and breaking...
...scores were consistently among the best on the team, providing a model for the team’s rookies. Hynes also set an example with a particularly gutsy performance in the second week of the season. When a knee injury left Hynes unable to participate in the season-opening Dartmouth Invitational, the Crimson was disqualified from participating, unable to field the required four players. The following week, Hynes made sure that his team wouldn’t be put in the same position, returning from his injury to lead his team to an 11th-place finish in the grueling...
When Harvard first baseman Josh Klimkiewicz said, following the Crimson’s division-clinching 23-9 win over archrival Dartmouth on April 30, that “the pitches looked like beach balls today,” he wasn’t daydreaming about the leisure activities of his senior spring. Instead, he was describing his focus at the plate at the most important juncture in the baseball season. During the regular season-ending doubleheader against the Big Green, with Harvard’s season—and Klimkiewicz’s career—in danger of ending...