Word: home
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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Princeton found the ball in the fourth inning, and rolled up three runs, two of them earned, on a base on balls, a single by Blossom, and a home run by Reynolds, aided by two successful steals...
...safely, or score, in the fourth, fifth, and sixth innings. Princeton, on the other hand, added a run to its score in the fifth, on two errors, a steal, and a wild pitch; while it repeated the operation in the sixth, by the aid of Bickham's home run. The fourth inning had proved disastrous for the orange and black, however, for Brownlee broke a finger, and was forced to yield his place behind the bat to Shaw, while King took Shaw's place at right field...
Earned runs - Princeton, 3; Harvard 3. Two-base hits - Smith, Nichols. Three-base hits - Allen, Blossom. Home runs - Bickham, Reynolds. First base on balls - Nichols, 1; Bickham, 2. First base on errors - Princeton, 4; Harvard, 4. Struck out - Bickham, 11; Nichols, 9. Passed balls - Brownlee, 1; Shaw, 4; Allen, 1. Wild pitches - Bickham, 1; Nichols, 1. Umpire - Mr. Grant, of Lawrence. Time...
Earned runs - '86, 2; '88, '4. Two-base hits - Collins, Palmer, Taylor. Home run - Gardner. Struck out - Rankin. 2; Collins, 3; Austin, 9. Passed balls - Collins, 1; Rankin, 5. Wild pitchs - Collins...
...early in the evening, and they were very conflicting, but no authentic news came from the scene of war. The '89 blood simmered, then bubbled, and finally boiled. The freshmen could stand it no longer. Encouraged by a new rumor that the Harvard fielders had burst bloodvessels in chasing home runs, they descended upon the coveted fence and took possession. They had not been there long. however, when a party of sophomores arrived on investigation bent. These new comers declined to trust to rumor. As custodians of the sacred fence, they had to preserve their holy trust, and until authentic...