Word: rhett
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...years when the men have taken to the field, or toward the middle of the season, when there has been a reversal of form or when the team has been hopelessly crippled as last year by some eligibility ruling such as the now famous Quogue incident which barred Legore, Rhett, Captain Milburn and Pumpelly from the game. This season, however, the prospects appear to be of a more substantial character, and it is the general opinion among college baseball experts that the building up process already begun by Captain Legore will result in the best team Yale...
...year in the Quogue incident, three are now in college and are therefore eligible for this year's team. Legore, who has the reputation of being one of the best shortstops that Yale has ever had, will be the mainstay of the nine, and Pumpelly in the box, like Rhett in the outfield, will strengthen the team materially...
Yale will have Garfield, Comerford, Fuller, Brainerd and Carey as a pitching staff, with Munson, Mudge, Dann and Stanley as catchers, all with some experience. The rest of the squad of veterans includes Captain Legore, now busy with football, Snell, Bush, Crotty, Kinney, Rhett, Dollard, Lyman, Gilmore, O'Connor and Gage, as infielders, and Conway, Early, Holden, Shepley, Armstrong, Lynch, Page, Gaillard, Thomas and Sheehan as outfielders...
...still in college, eight of the best men have been barred from playing, some on account of studies, others because of the summer ball incident, and still others because of the three-year eligibility rule. Those debarred include such promising men as Captain Milburn, Le Gore, Pumpelly, Easton, and Rhett. Way, the best pitcher at Yale, is debarred because he has already played three years on a college varsity team...
...Gore, A. M. Milburn, R. G. Rhett, Jr., S. A. Pumpelly, and W. Easton, the five Yale baseball players who have been declared ineligible for the coming season, will play on the second or "college" nine this spring. They have refused many offers to join baseball teams of all varieties, professional, semiprofessional, and amateur, but have chosen instead to take part in the development of the Yale team. The second nine should accordingly be as strong, if not stronger, than the regulars...