Word: rbi
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...Saturday, edging the Bobcats (2-2) 4-3 in extra innings. TAMPA 11, HARVARD 5 Up 8-5 in the bottom of the eighth, the Spartans blew the game open with a three-run rally off sophomore pitcher Hampton Foushee. Tampa, ranked third in Division II baseball, received RBI singles from Charlie Raley and Noah Brannon and also scored a run on a wild pitch in the inning. Junior Brad Unger, Harvard’s starter, dug himself into a hole, committing three errors and walking three batters on top of giving up six hits. Unger allowed four runs...
...runs. Sophomore hurler Adam Cole took the loss for the Crimson, falling victim to an 11-strikeout performance by his counterpart on the Dukes, Jeff Naughton. In its first game on Saturday, Harvard defeated Quinnipiac, 4-3, in 10 innings. The Crimson’s offense was paced by RBI doubles from juniors Tom Stack-Babich and Matt Kramer. Harvard used six pitchers to close out the victory, including Wilson, who picked up the win after 1 1/3 scoreless innings of relief work. The Crimson plays its fourth game in three days today against Tampa at 1 p.m. in Tampa...
...senior’s renaissance came during the division-clinching win against Dartmouth in Hanover, N.H. The senior threw six innings, getting roughed up for six earned, but he made up for it in the lineup by going 3-5 with two doubles, three runs, and two RBI. His second knock of the day, notably, was launched about 400 feet, hitting the base of the notoriously deep fence at center at Red Rolfe Field. Why the improvement? Fittingly, the Engineering Sciences concentrator attributed part of his success in 2006 to a new device: contact lenses. “It?...
...Wilson, and Josh Klimkiewicz paced the onslaught. At the close of the season, the quartet represented four of the club’s five .300 hitters—reserve infielder Taylor Meehan was the fifth—with Klimkiewicz fronting the Crimson in homers (7), Wilson tallying the most RBI (43), and Vance swiping a league-leading 25 bases. With Vance and Salsgiver, who stole 18 bags in 20 attempts, Harvard led the Ivy League in stolen bases by a comfortable margin with 86.Returning to Cambridge the following weekend, Harvard dropped a heart-breaking 1-0 pitcher?...
...Haviland, whose ’06 profile included complete games in all five of his Ivy regular season starts and a 0.73 ERA; slugging sophomore third baseman Steffan Wilson, who was one of only two unanimous selections to the team; Klimkiewicz, the league’s most productive RBI man with 41 runs batted in; captain shortstop Morgan Brown; and sophomore centerfielder Matt Vance. Senior rightfielder Lance Salsgiver was named to the All-Ivy Second Team. —ALEX McPHILLIPS