Word: error
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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Frantz opened the second inning with a single, Stillman sacrificed him to second and Devens scored him with a two-base hit. Devens then scored on Coolidge's single. In the fourth inning Stillman went to first on White's error, reached second on Fincke's sacrifice and scored on Devens's hit. In the sixth inning singles by Frantz, Stillman, Devens and Clarkson and a series of errors of Collier, White, Gawthrop and Brown gave Harvard four unearned runs. In the next inning Clark reached first on Brown's error, and Reid brought him in with his long home...
...thus allowing Place to score. Harvard's first score was the three runs made in the third inning. Clarkson made a scratch infield single, stole second and went to third on Wendell's hit. Clark hit to right field, bringing in the two runners, and scored on Hoover's error and a wild pitch. In the fourth inning with one out, Fincke singled. Clarkson forced him out and then stole second. He went to third on a passed ball and scored on Van Patten's wild throw to first to catch Wendell. Clark singled, and Wendell went to third...
...first inning Harvard scored a run on Wendell's single, Touhill's error at second and Bleucoe's muff of a throw to the plate. Wendell opened the third with another single, went to second on Reid's sacrifice and scored on Clark's two-base hit. In the fourth Michigan made a run on Davies' three bagger and Weber's long fly; and tied the score in the sixth on Bleucoe's single, Touhill's out at first and Flesher's single. In the seventh Michigan took a lead of two runs on Utley's single, Condon's three...
PROVIDENCE, R. I., May 22, 1901.--The Brown baseball team shut out Dartmouth this afternoon by the score of 5 to 0. The Brown nine made eight hits and two errors, and Dartmouth five hits and only one error. The batteries were Wash-burn and Whittemore for Brown, and Varney and Roe for Dartmouth...
...struck out eight men. Kernan misjudged three high fouls, but otherwise he showed some improvement. Except in one instance he threw to bases well, and held pitched balls reliably. Frantz was weak at the bat, partly because of swinging too hard. He fielded faultlessly. Clark made a costly error but he covered plenty of ground and made two opportune hits. George, who has been prevented from playing until recently by his work in the Medical School, played all though the game for the first time this year. His two singles seem to indicate an improvement in his hitting...