Word: pitcherful
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...clearer. Sacrifices need to be made to see these goals through. In my own case, I am currently limited to sixty pitches per outing. Now if I had stayed at Harvard I would likely be throwing a hundred or more pitches every time I took the mound. As a pitcher you pride yourself on how long you can lead your team and how many wins you can earn. Throwing only sixty pitches limits me to four innings and thus does not allow me to qualify for a win (the winning starting pitcher needs a minimum of five innings) and leaves...
...want to have that gap. [BC] means a lot more than a lot of other teams on our schedule because New England’s so important to us.” Staked to an early lead, ace Shawn Haviland, on the heels of another Ivy Pitcher of the Week honor, could not cage the high-flying Eagles. After retiring the side in order in the first, Haviland ran into trouble in the second, surrendering four runs on three hard hits. The tail end of the lineup did most of the damage. Number eight hitter Ryne Reynoso drove...
...Byrne, now a proud father of a Harvard team leader. The younger Byrne, who is recovering from season-ending surgery on his meniscus, watched from the stands. Joe Mackey, father of leftfielder Chris Mackey, fondly remembered when he played at Fenway in the Beanpot tournament and faced UMass pitcher Mike Flanagan. Flanagan went on to become an Orioles star and Cy Young award winner. Judith Klimkiewicz expressed the thoughts of many of the parents. “For any young boy,” she said, “especially in Massachusetts, it is a dream to play here...
BOSTON—At Boston College’s Flynn Field two weeks ago, Ted Ratliff, a starting pitcher for the Eagles, carved up and sent home an injury-riddled Harvard lineup in a 10-0 blowout. Last night at the Beanpot championship, the surroundings were a bit different—Fenway Park’s Green Monster cast a shadow that dwarfed Harvard left fielder Chris Mackey—and crosstown bragging rights were at least officially on the line. But the story remained the same. Once again Ratliff, a Harvard, Ill. native, dominated the Crimson, completing a three...
...That sidearm guy [Dietz] is pretty good-- his slider moved about two feet, sophomore Matt Vance said. “Then it started getting dark and we had trouble seeing the ball. He was more tricky than the pitcher we faced in the first game...