News

Garber Announces Advisory Committee for Harvard Law School Dean Search

News

First Harvard Prize Book in Kosovo Established by Harvard Alumni

News

Ryan Murdock ’25 Remembered as Dedicated Advocate and Caring Friend

News

Harvard Faculty Appeal Temporary Suspensions From Widener Library

News

Man Who Managed Clients for High-End Cambridge Brothel Network Pleads Guilty

Baseball Falls to Rice in NCAAs

Crimson Eighth-Inning Rally Cut Down at the Plate

By Martin S. Bell, Special to the Crimson

HOUSTON—After a 20-day layoff, key hits against the No. 2 team in the nation become that much scarcer. But with a chance to crawl back from a 6-0 deficit against Rice yesterday, Harvard threw away the one legitimate opportunity it had.

Senior second baseman Faiz Shakir was thrown out at home plate yesterday while attempting to score from second on a two-out single in the eighth inning. The play, which came at a rare point when the Crimson hit Rice’s Steven Herce hard, effectively ended any hope of a history-making upset as Harvard fell to Rice 8-3 in the opening game of the double-elimination NCAA Regionals.

With one out in the eighth inning and Harvard down 6-1, pinch-hitter Andrew Brunswick worked a four-pitch walk off Herce, who had cruised through the game’s first six innings. Sophomore Bryan Hale’s groundout moved Brunswick to second, and freshman Ian Wallace’s double brought him home to cut the deficit to 6-2. Shakir, the next batter, reached first on a catcher’s interference call, and senior Mark Mager singled in another run to make the score 6-3.

Hence, who had seemed unhittable in retiring the Crimson’s first 14 batters, was suddenly mortal. Harvard—seemingly out of the game just moments before—had the tying run at the plate in sophomore Trey Hendricks.

And Hendricks delivered a shallow drive to left. Harvard could have had the bases loaded with two outs for fellow sophomore Mickey Kropf had Shakir been held.

But Harvard Coach Joe Walsh gambled as he has several times this season and waved Shakir around from third. Rice’s Chris Kolkhorst gloved the two-hopper and threw to third baseman Hunter Brown. Brown bobbled the ball, but his throw still beat Shakir to the catcher, ending the inning and the threat.

“The kid made a good play,” Walsh said.

In the next inning, senior reliever Mike Dryden gave up a two-run shot to the Owls’ Eric Arnold to put the game out of reach.

The Crimson had fallen behind early as sophomore Marc Hordon made his first appearance on the mound in over a month. Surprising many who expected to see senior ace Ben Crockett pitch against the team he lost to by a slim margin of 2-1 earlier this year, Walsh went with Hordon, who had been sidelined with a shoulder injury since April 29.

Hordon struggled in the first inning, allowing two singles and two walks, balking on a full count and throwing a wild pitch with the bases loaded as the Owls jumped to a quick 2-0 lead.

Hordon threw in the bullpen with assistant coach Gary Donovan during the top of the second, and whatever they worked on seemed to settle Hordon down. The righty retired eight of the next eleven batters to keep the Crimson in the game until the fifth.

The Harvard hitting, however, was unable to close the gap. Harvard didn’t hit a ball out of the infield off Herce until freshman Ian Wallace’s fly to center in the fourth.

“I knew that the three-week layoff would be a problem,” Walsh said. “We just couldn’t lay off [Herce’s] breaking ball.”

Herce struck out eight before he began to unravel in the seventh.

By that point, Rice had pushed six runs across the plate. Hordon gave up consecutive singles to start the fifth, setting the stage for an RBI groundout by WAC Player of the Year Vincent Sinisi that gave Rice a three-run lead. But Hordon could not get another out. Two batters later pinch hitter Mike Lorsbach drove a curveball to deep right that gave Rice a 4-0 lead, and a sacrifice fly made the score 5-0 moments later.

Just when it seemed that the Crimson had no chance of getting back into the game, the Harvard bats showed signs of life. With the visitors facing a 6-0 deficit in the seventh, senior second baseman Faiz Shakir led off the inning with a sharp double down the right field line, and senior shortstop Mark Mager followed that up with a single to give the Crimson first and third with nobody out.

Sophomore Trey Hendricks, a Houston native, drove in the Crimson’s first run with a hit to right. But Mann grounded into a double play and senior Josh San Salvador flied out to end the inning.

“That was huge,” Rice Coach Wayne Graham said. “That quieted the chaos.”

The chaos would resurface in the next inning, only to be silenced once again when Owls catcher Justin Ruchti applied the tag on Shakir.

Hendricks pitched 2.2 innings in relief of Hordon and went 2-for-4 with an RBI. Mager’s 2-for-4 day brought him to within a hit of tying the school career record of 208 set by Hal Carey ’99.

Crockett will start for the Crimson tomorrow morning at 11 a.m. in the first loser’s bracket game against Washington or Texas Tech.

Rice 8, Harvard 3

at Reckling Park

Houston, TX

NCAA First Round

Harvard (20-25) 000 000 120—3 7 1

Rice (48-11) 200 031 020—8 12 1

2B: H—Wallace, Shakir. R—Janish. SB: H—Mager, Hale. R—Kolkhorst, Sinisi. Pitchers: H—Hordon L (4.1 IP, 5 ER, 4 K), Hendricks (2.2 IP, 0 ER), Dryden (1.1 IP, 2 ER), Ronz (0.1 IP, 0 ER). R—Herce W (8.0 IP, 2 ER, 8 K), Tribe (410 IP, 0 ER, 1 K). Attendance: 3,531

Want to keep up with breaking news? Subscribe to our email newsletter.

Tags