Word: man
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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Hartford and Hicks, who have done some remarkably good pitching this year, will form a strong pitching staff for next season. R.G. McKay from this year's Freshman team will also prove a valuable man. Of the other pitchers on the University team, D.O. Slater '08 and D.C. Brennan '08 will graduate. Lanigan, who pitched a few games this year, will probably be used in the box very little next year...
...last season, but on account of his light weight, he will probably be tried out at end. R.C. Brown, ex-captain of his Freshman team, who was unable to play last fall on account of illness, will probably be able to play next year and should prove a valuable-man...
Although the Yale freshman eight has nothing like the clean form of the Harvard 1911 crew, the men have developed considerable speed. The Harvard Freshmen are fortunate in having a very good man at stroke and ought to win their race without much difficulty...
...prospects for a strong University crew for next year are very bright. Only one man, J. Richardson, Jr., '08, the captain, who rows number 7, will be lost by graduation. It is likely that one of the members of this year's crew will be changed to number 7. To fill the vacancy will be P. Withington '09 and R.M. Ellis '09, of the University four-oar, as well as R.W. Cutler '11, L. Withington, Jr., and other members of the 1911 Freshman crew. Several of the members of the upperclass crews will be available another year as material...
...little advantage on either side. The stroke-oars in both crews have never rowed in a four-mile race. Griswold of Yale stroked the Yale winning four-oar last year, while Sargent, the Harvard stroke, rowed two on the Freshman crew. In form, however, Sargent is the superior man of the two. His stroke has a better proportion and the rhythm is decidedly more even. The stroke that Yale is roivipg this year, as in the past two years is longer in the water than Harvard's, so that Harvard will have to row the faster stroke...