Word: kramer
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...voted to the All-Ivy League First Team. Called upon to drive in runs even from the leadoff spot, Vance batted a gaudy .429 in league play and .447 with runners in scoring position.But even with Vance leading the way and Casey and juniors Tom Stack-Babich and Matt Kramer emerging as pleasant surprises offensively, the Crimson couldn’t keep up with Brown’s breakneck pace at the plate. “We didn’t have a lot of power, we weren’t having explosions, we weren’t putting teams...
...Crimson ran out of its best rally in the fourth inning when junior Matt Kramer committed interference on a no-out, bases-loaded ground ball. Kramer and the batter were both called out, and the runners were prevented from moving up a base...
...outs, but Prince responded by knocking in both Vance and Wilson with a long opposite-field single. The Crimson tacked on three more in the sixth with a Wilson walk; three straight singles by Tom Stack-Babich, Rogers, and shortstop Jeff Stoeckel; and a sacrifice fly by junior Matt Kramer. Perlman (4-1) was again stellar, scattering nine hits and striking out four. The rookie got a hand from his defense in the second inning, when Matt Nuzzo was thrown out at the plate trying to score from first on a double. The relay throw from Stoeckel was high...
...going in the bottom of the first inning on junior Matt Vance’s one-out RBI single that scored junior Jeff Stoeckel to give Harvard the early advantage. Stoeckel came up big again in the second, singling home senior catcher Andrew Casey and junior first basemen Matt Kramer. Stoeckel stole second and would score his second run of the game on a Yale throwing error. Harvard got its final two runs in the fourth thanks largely to Bulldog miscues. With two outs, Stoeckel was hit by a pitch, and senior second baseman Brendan Byrne reached on an error...
...Christine, 3EB has arguably not had a hit since 1999, when the hook-y “Never Let You Go” rose to #14 on the Billboard Hot 100 Charts. Apparently, people will let 3EB go. Other alums took a more hostile approach: as Matthew L. Kramer ’98 puts it, “Why do you care...?” Perhaps 3EB isn’t worth caring about, but any band capable of feuding with badass Matchbox Twenty is clearly deserving of some importance. “I guess Akon and Jay-Z were...