Word: mph
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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With the top prospect in the Ivy League, Ross Ohlendorf, throwing for Princeton—his 95-mph fastball has earned him first-round status—Klimkiewicz was unfazed. He drove in all four of the Crimson’s runs with a double and a homer in his only two at-bats against Ohlendorf as Brunnig earned the 4-3 victory...
...theoretically playing “out of position” after being an infielder in high school. He also answered the call when he resumed an injury-interrupted pitching career by making a relief appearance in the title game against Princeton, hurling two-plus shutout innings and hitting 92 mph on the radar gun with his first pitch...
...over the place yesterday. Alternating between two fastballs, a curve and a sinker, Salsgiver featured plenty of movement—hardly the frozen ropes he’s used to uncorking from the outfield grass. Salsgiver threw all the harder from close range, too, clocking out at 91 mph according to one gun. He retired the side in order on seven pitches in the seventh and set down the first two batters of the eighth before being lifted for senior Ryan Tsujikawa...
...right index finger, Wahlberg’s appearances had been largely hit or miss. He had been inconsistent to the point where Harvard coach Joe Walsh would warm up freshman Morgan Brown alongside him, in case the finger acted up and Wahlberg was unable to harness his 90 mph...
Among Rodriguez’s favorite activities is driving to Revere Beach and speeding down the Bunker Hill Bridge to test the promised acceleration of 0 to 60 mph in 6.2 seconds. The prospect of accidents, however, limits Rodriguez to the speed limit. “People are in front of you all the time,” he says of other motorists, “but it’s probably a good thing because I’d go crazy.” Rodriguez instead satiates his need for speed by blasting soundtracks from his convertible while trying...