Word: wilding
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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Clarkson was greatly affected by the cold, damp air, and it was only with the greatest effort that he attained his speed and control. He gave three bases, made a wild pitch, and allowed seven hits, two of which were for three bases. He was remarkably steady in the eighth and ninth innings, however. The playing of Frantz was the most valuable for Harvard. Aside from bringing in the winning runs, he made a throw to second in the eighth, which resulted in a double play. Reid did not hit as well as usual, but played his position well...
...Clark, Coolidge, Davies, Flesher. Double plays--Reid to Frantz to Coolidge, Devens to Frantz. Bases on balls--by Clarkson: Condon, Touhill; by Utley: Reid 2. Hit by pitched balls--by Clarkson: McGinnis; by Utley: Clark. Struck out--by Clarkson: Condon, Snow Bleucoe, Flesher, Utley 2; by Utley: Murphy, Putnam. Wild pitch -- Clarkson. Time--1h. 50m. Umpire--Kelly...
Harvard began scoring in the second inning. Clark singled; Devens sacrificed him to second; Coolidge singled, and Clark scored on a wild throw to first. Coolidge went to second on the play and came home on Putnam's two-base hit. Putnam went to third on George's out and was allowed to score because of Bettes's interference. George and Kernan opened the fourth with singles, and on Jackson's wild throw of Murphy's grounder George scored. Murphy was caught stealing and Frantz went out at first. Then Stillman scored Kernan with a three-bagger and came home...
...Frothingham, Coburn, Lovering. Bases on balls--by Coburn: Keene 2, Kendall, Canterbury, Milne; by Laverack: Christenson 2, Lovering, Ware. Hit by pitched ball-by Laverack: Coburn. Struck out--by Coburn: Keene 3, Laverack 2, Gauterbury, Milne; by Laverack: Chase, Ware; by Putnam: Coburn, Chase, Ware, Passed, balls -- Putnam, Paul. Wild pitch -- Laverack. Time--2h 45m. Umpires--F. G. Farrington, J. D. Clark...
...sure at critical times and strengthened the infield considerably. Parker caught an errorless game and was accurate in throwing to bases. The outfield handled the balls quickly and backed up the infield in good style. For the Sophomores, Perry played the best game, catching cleverly, and stopping many wild pitches. The infield did not handle balls quickly enough and threw poorly. The outfield work was marred by a few errors, but several excellent catches of hard flies easily counterbalanced this...