Word: plates
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...Clarkson together with an error by Chase allowed Harvard two more runs. The seventh opened with a home run by R. Kernan. Carr received two bases on an error by centre field, and came home on a single by Coolidge, who reached second on the throw to the plate and scored on a passed ball. Matthews, who had got to first base on a muffed third strike, reached third on this same play and scored the last run for Harvard on a single by Clarkson. Cornell scored one run in the third inning on Shepard's three-base...
...which was fumbled by Alworth, allowing the runner to reach third. Matthews got a base on balls, and, stealing second, came home together with Kernan on Stephenson's hit. Stephenson stole second and scored on a single by R. Kernan, who reached second on the throw to the plate, and made the sixth run on a hit by Coburn. Two more runs were scored in the eighth inning, when Coolidge singled, and Matthews reached first on an error by Alworth, both crossing the plate on Clarkson's two-base hit after a clever double steal...
...fault of the team was, as in all the games played this sparing, a disappointing weakness at the bat; the base-running was sleepy, and the fielding full of errors, a fact partly accounted for, however, by the unevenness of the ground, second base being four feet above the plate. Dean's batting was the feature of the game. After the first inning, Hutchinson pitched a fair game for the Second nine, allowing only two bases on balls. The best batting for the Second nine was done by Parker and Greenough; Marshall accepted all of his six chances at second...
Matthews began the scoring for the home team, in the first inning, with a home run. In the fourth, Randall made a base hit and was advanced to the plate by the three-brace hit by Clarkson, who scored in turn on Stillman's fly to the outfield. Daly reached first on a base hit, and R. P. Kernan made an easy infield hit, which was thrown wild, scoring Daly, and advancing Kernan to third. Carr then received a base on balls, when a well-executed double steal brought Kernan home, and advanced Carr to second. An error by Watson...
...exceedingly weak, and the runs were made for the most part on the opponents errors. Smith pitched a fairly good game, with the exception of the fifth inning, when three bases on balls, a home ran by Kennedy, an error by Colby, and a wild throw to the plate, coupled with another hit, brought in seven runs for the Latin School team. Driske, for Roxbury pitched a good game and it was not until the eighth inning that the Second nine had the game well in hand...