Word: scored
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...freshman foot-ball team played its first game yesterday at Groton, with the Groton School team. The freshmen, though they played a very loose game and were out weighted, won by the score of 44 to 19. The play of the freshmen considered as a team, was poor, but individual play in many cases was very good. The team played as follows: Rushers, Magoun, Morse, Piper, Garrison, Smith, Gay, Crehore, quarter-back, Crane; half-backs, McCoy and Slade, (capt.); full back, Hunnewell; subs., Emmonds and Curtis...
...students who were out on Jarvis Field Saturday afternoon saw Harvard defeat Stevens by a score of forty-four points to nothing; but they also saw more than that. They saw Harvard for the first half hour play as poor a game as it is possible for a university team to play. Every man in the rush-line, without exception, tackled high, as high as they could reach. Brooks, who ought to set the team a good example, was fully as bad, if not worse than the rest of the men in this respect, time and time again jumping...
...backs, which combined with a little running and kicking by Stevens, got the ball well down the field. Rushes by Harding and Butler, and a good drop by Brooks carried the ball back again, and Remington made the last touchdown, from which Brooks kicked a goal, making the score 44 to 0. Peabody and Fletcher played a good game right through, and in the second half the playing of the rush line was decidedly more encouraging. The conclusion one would draw from the game as a whole is, that if the other side gets rattled Harvard can take advantage...
...were for extras, when the Pawtucket side went in and only succeeded in scouring 81, thus Harvard won the match by 12 runs, the decision being on the first inning, as two could not be played before the time for drawing the stumps arrived. The following is the score...
...season in which the relative strength of the Harvard and Princeton elevens might be compared with any degree of accuracy. Taking into consideration, the fact that Princeton played two halves of three quarters of an hour apiece, while yesterday each half only lasted thirty minutes, the score compared very favorably with that of the Princetonians, yet it must be said some of the playing done by Harvard was wretched. The eleven cannot be too severely criticised for their lax and faulty play in the first half, when two splendid chances were offered for touchdowns, but were lost through careless fumbling...