Word: shutout
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...start, when Madick bailed sophomore Margaux Black out of a bases-loaded jam in the sixth and pitched a perfect seventh inning to earn just her third career save. Madick pitched six hitless innings in two games against Columbia the following weekend, got the win in both contests with shutout innings against Penn, then threw six shutout innings in relief of sophomore Dana Roberts against Holy Cross. After lights-out pitching in her relief role and with Ivy League North Division play opening against Yale, Allard saw the opportunity to use Madick in a more traditional way. Madick...
...leaving the bases loaded to end the game.In two innings of scoreless relief, Black gave up two hits, but Harvard’s defense kept them stranded to secure the win.HARVARD 7, YALE 0In the first of the four game series, the Crimson dominated in a seven-inning shutout, bringing around seven base runners while stranding eight Bulldogs.Madick pitched the first five innings, surrendering five hits while striking out five and keeping Yale from crossing the plate. Black continued to deny Yale for the final two innings, not allowing a single hit while sitting down two. Scoreless into the fourth...
...support, extending its dry spell from the opener. Freshman Sean O’Hara supplied the Crimson’s first extra-base hit of the doubleheader—after nine singles—when he doubled off Penn reliever Reid Terry in the eighth. Terry finished the shutout for rookie Sam Gilbert, who turned in 5 2/3 innings of scoreless ball. PENN 10, HARVARD 0 Quakers stopper Todd Roth bested Harvard’s ace, senior Shawn Haviland, in the seven-inning opener, twirling a two-hit, six-strikeout shutout while Haviland fell to 0-5 on the year...
...pitcher Brad Unger of a win. The righty threw an impressive seven-inning complete game, allowing only two runs on five hits and three walks while striking out six, but Harvard was unable to muster any offensive output as Lions pitcher Joe Scarlata allowed only two hits in his shutout effort...
...perennially-contending Harvard baseball team. The Crimson (1-18, 0-4 Ivy) continued its woeful season at the plate and watched suddenly hot Columbia (9-16, 5-1) thrive in wet, frigid weather yesterday. The Lions swept the doubleheader, taking the first game, 2-0, behind a complete game shutout from Joe Scarlata, and hitting their way to a 10-2 rout in the nightcap. “We just needed something to happen, and the bats were silent,” Harvard coach Joe Walsh said. “Whether it was 92 degrees today, it still could have...