Word: starter
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...Havard win, freshman lefthander Hampton Foushee pitched four innings of one-run ball in his first collegiate start. Harvard head coach Joe Walsh will likely use a combination of pitchers today, with the effect of using the occasion as a midweek tune-up against live hitting. No. 1 starter Shawn Haviland, named Ivy League Pitcher of the Week for the second straight week yesterday, will likely make an appearance. —THE CRIMSON STAFF
...Harvard softball team received excellent pitching from each of its two starters, but couldn’t get things going at the plate as Dartmouth swept a doubleheader in Hanover on Saturday afternoon 3-0, 3-2, to close out Ivy League play for both clubs. Big Green pitching held the Crimson scoreless for thirteen consecutive innings to start the afternoon. Harvard (20-23, 6-8 Ivy) managed only seven hits on the day, while Dartmouth (14-22, 7-7 Ivy) banged out fourteen. During the month of April, the Crimson has struggled to put runs on the board...
...guess we came out on top.”The second varsity did indeed finish first, and Harvard did so once again in a triumphant, dominant fashion. But first, Harvard suffered a slight blow that no training or preparation could have prevented. The race starter called for the start before Harvard had settled in at the line, as the windy conditions made it impossible for both boats to remain aligned at the start for more than a few seconds.The minor setback lasted for precious few strokes. Harvard built a two-seat lead after the first 25 strokes, and the Crimson...
Faiola (6-0) survived eight punishing innings for a win, throwing an arduous 147 pitches on a day when Harvard’s answer—freshman starter Adam Cole (2-3)—was lifted before recording a third out. But Faiola—the Ivy League’s putative Pitcher of the Year—gave up eight runs, six earned, as the Crimson battered him for 14 hits and two walks...
...with a tough, 2-1 complete game loss to Yale.Against the Crimson on Saturday, he managed to outdo himself in two ways.Faiola (6-0) survived eight punishing innings for a win, throwing an arduous 147 pitches on a day when Harvard’s answer—freshman starter Adam Cole (2-3)—was lifted before recording a third out. But Faiola—the Ivy League’s putative Pitcher of the Year—gave up eight runs, six earned, as the Crimson battered him for 14 hits and two walks...