Word: steffan
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...tentative non-conference southern swings, including a three-game sweep at the hands of SEC powerhouse Florida and a 3-4-1 spring break jaunt through the Sunshine State. “We knew the season, regardless of what we were doing before, started today,” sophomore Steffan Wilson said after the Princeton games. “We needed two [wins]. We’d been struggling a little bit down in Florida.” Sophomore ace Shawn Haviland and freshman fireballer Adam Cole shut down Princeton—Cole fanned 11 in his Ivy debut?...
...such honor for Klimkiewicz in his productive four-year career. The five Harvard players named to the All-Ivy First Team are Haviland, whose ’06 profile included complete games in all five of his Ivy regular season starts and a 0.73 ERA; slugging sophomore third baseman Steffan Wilson, who was one of only two unanimous selections to the team; Klimkiewicz, the league’s most productive RBI man with 41 runs batted in; captain shortstop Morgan Brown; and sophomore centerfielder Matt Vance. Senior rightfielder Lance Salsgiver was named to the All-Ivy Second Team...
They never could. Matt Vance, Salsgiver, Klimkiewicz, and Steffan Wilson—the first four hitters in the Crimson lineup, and statistically the finest foursome in the Ancient Eight—went a staggering 3-for-33 on the day. Tigers starters Erik Stiller and Christian Staehely worked quickly, flummoxing them with a steady repertory of fastballs and off-speed stuff, the latter hitting the glove in every count...
...well,” Walsh said. “They didn’t pitch outstanding.” Harvard, in the midst of a subpar performance from its stopper, remained resilient, rallying for three runs with two outs in the fourth on consecutive base hits from third baseman Steffan Wilson and seniors Matt Brunnig, Brown, and Chris Mackey. Mackey provided the big hit with a two-run single to right field. “We came back, 5-3, and I thought ‘Here we go’,” Walsh said...
...skies finally opened up, so did the Crimson offense. Harvard (21-18-1) engineered a dramatic comeback with five runs in the ninth inning to topple host Northeastern (21-17), 7-5, in a wet non-conference affair. With two outs and runners on the corners, sophomore third baseman Steffan Wilson crushed a 1-0 fastball from Huskies closer Matt Morizio through the now-driving rain into deep centerfield. The ball bounced up against the 435-foot mark on the wall as the centerfielder slipped in pursuit, and Northeastern bungled the relay throw, allowing Wilson to chug...