Word: shawne
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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Reclaiming his role as the ace of the Crimson rotation after struggling in the early going is junior Shawn Haviland, last season’s Ivy League Pitcher of the Year. Haviland has gone eight innings in each of his last two starts and has regained his trademark control. In last Saturday’s performance against Yale’s powerhouse offense, Haviland shut out the Bulldogs over eight frames, striking out seven and walking only...
...Crimson travels to Lynn, Mass., tomorrow to take on Boston College in the first round of the Beanpot at Fraser Field.HARVARD 6, YALE 0Harvard jumped on the Bulldogs early and often, scoring all six of its runs in the first four innings, before coasting on the arm of ace Shawn Haviland to complete the doubleheader sweep.The Crimson got things going in the bottom of the first inning on junior Matt Vance’s one-out RBI single that scored junior Jeff Stoeckel to give Harvard the early advantage. Stoeckel came up big again in the second, singling home senior...
...important question that remains to be answered regarding pitching, though, is that of a fixed rotation. The starting pitching duties have primarily spread across five players this season—junior Shawn Haviland with five starts, junior Brad Unger and freshman Eric Eadington with four starts each, and sophomore Adam Cole and freshman Max Perlman with three apiece...
...Shawn Haviland didn’t let the cold numb his right arm or numb him to the significance of Saturday’s win over Princeton. It was a rivalry game against Harvard’s decade-long nemesis in the battle for Ivy League supremacy and against the squad that ended the Crimson’s NCAA aspirations with an Ivy Championship Series sweep last May. It was the junior right-hander’s first victory of the season, his first in over 11 months. And it came over Tigers ace Christian Staehely, who was named...
...degrees. In a rematch of the two Ancient Eight division champs from a year ago, Harvard and Princeton split a doubleheader, the third consecutive twinbill split for the Crimson. The Tigers took game one, 6-4, in extra innings behind a complete-game effort from Steven Miller, while Shawn Haviland led Harvard to a 6-3 victory in the second matchup. But neither team seemed close to last spring’s championship form, and, in the frigid temperatures, neither team seemed able to really heat up. The weather made for a tough day in the field for both teams...