Word: wildness
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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Paine was very wild during the early part of the game, giving six bases on balls and hitting two men. He was, however, very effective and allowed only three scattered hits, one of which was a scratch. All the outfielders made brilliant catches, but the infield was rather unsteady. For Princeton Wilson pitched well until his arm gave out, and Altman made a fine running catch. Kelly fielded very poorly...
...base hits-Gunster, Altman. Stolen bases-Burgess, Clarkson, Dean, Sankey 3, Ward 2, Smith, Bradley. Bases on balls-Off Paine 7; off Wilson, 1; off Easton, 3. Struck out-By Paine, 5; by Wilson, 1; by Easton, 3. Hit by pitcher-Burgess. 2; Smith, Sankey. Passed ball Smith. Wild pitch-Paine. Time-2 hours. Umpire-Betts...
Neither team scored in the first inning. In the second Haughton took first on Johnson's muff, but was out trying for second. Rand was safe on Holloway's wild throw and stole second. Wunder tried to catch him off the base and threw where there was nobody to catch the ball, and Rand scored...
...fifth, U. of P. made their last run. Wilhelm got a double and scored on a wild pitch and another double by Ritchie. Harvard scored twice. Haughton, Stevenson and Chandler all made two-base hits, bringing in two earned runs...
...playing of the Harvard team was almost perfect; no errors were made, almost every opportunity was accepted, every man made a hit, no one struck out, and only one hit was made off Paine. Neither catcher had a passed ball, and neither pitcher made a wild pitch or hit a batter...