Word: home
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1890-1899
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Harvard won because she bunched her hits and scattered her errors more than Chicago. Eight hits were made by each side, but while the Chicago players made only singles, for Harvard Clarkson made a double in addition to a home run, and Burgess and Haughton also made home runs. Harvard's errors were not so costly as Chicago's, in fact several errors were such, merely because of questionable decisions of the umpire...
...fielding of the home team was superior to that of the visitors; Stevenson's lucky left hand stop of a hot grounder and Burgess's brilliant running catch of a short fly to right, followed by a double play, being the features of the game...
Earned runs-Harvard 4. Two-base hit-Clarkson. Home runs-Haughton, Burgess, Clarkson, Sacrifice-Scannell. Stolen bases-Scannell, Stevenson, Sweet, Winston, Nichols, Jones. Base on balls-by Haughton, G. Clark, Jones, Winston, Nichols, Herschberger; by Brown-Dean, Rand, Paine. Struck out-H. Clark, Rand, Haughton. Double plays-Burgess and Clarkson. Passed balls-Scannell, Jones. Time-2h. Umpire-Murray...
AMHERST, Mass., May 27.- Amherst took advantage of the weak team Harvard sent up here today to avenge her defeat at Cambridge, and did it by the score of 9 to 5. The home team could not hit either Paine or Cozzens advantageously, but won the game on bases on balls and errors by the visitors at opportune times. Paine pitched six innings and was then succeeded by Cozzens, who gave five bases on balls in three innings and made a wild pitch. The score follows...
...Bradley. Bradley let the ball by him, and when he fielded it in, Garrison threw wild to third and Fitz scored. Ninety-seven came near scoring in the fifth inning, when they had a man on second and third and only one out, but Bradley was out trying for home on Garrison's hit to Litchfield and Abbott struck out. The score...