Word: gallivan
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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Knowlton, in the sixth, retired on a long fly to Hunt. Quackenboss made a single to left and scored on Howland's two-bagger between centre and right, making Harvard's first and only earned run of the game. Campbell and Gallivan both went out, Stewart to McBride...
...over McBride's head, allowing Knowlton and Quackenboss to score, and giving Campbell his third. Dann finished Yale's wretched exhibition of ball-playing by a throw to third to catch Campbell. The ball struck the runner's back and bounced into left field, allowing Harvard one more run. Gallivan finished the inning by a grounder to short...
...second on McConkey's muff of his fly to short left field, the ball rolling down to the track. Dann had two passed balls in quick succession, giving Harvard its sixth unearned run. With two men out, Campbell reached first on a missed third strike, but was left by Gallivan's easy grounder to Noyes...
Yale scored twice in the fifth by bunching hits. Dann led off with a clean hit to left. Hunt flied out to Gallivan McBride's hit to right advanced Dann a base, and both scored on two successive wild pitches by Bates. These two runs were direct gifts to Yale by the Harvard pitcher, for Stewart struck out and Walker hit an easy one to Bates...
Yale was again prevented from scoring by Harvard's brilliant playing. Stagg knocked a pop fly to the infleld which dropped in the midst of five Harvard men; Stagg, seeing second uncovered, tried to take more than one base, but was put out, Campbell to Gallivan. McConkey went out on a grounder to short. With two out, Calhoun hit safely to right and stole second. Noyes followed with a beautiful single to centre; Boyden stopped the ball and, by a perfect throw to the plate, shut off Calhoun, who was trying to get home from second on Noyes...