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Heading into a crucial weekend series to close out the Ivy League
season, the Harvard baseball team isn’t playing like the division
leaders.
In an effort plagued by careless errors, it seemed that the
Crimson (18-16-1, 12-4 Ivy) could do right only at the plate. Harvard
belted out 17 hits in a sloppy 14-12 loss to the University of Rhode
Island (URI) (23-9, 9-4 Atlantic-10) yesterday in non-conference play
at O’Donnell Field.
The game featured poor pitching and fielding on both sides,
with Harvard committing two errors and URI three. Neither starting
pitcher fared well, as the Rams chased Crimson starter Jake Bruton
(0-1) after five innings and six runs (four earned). But URI really
teed off on the Harvard relief, especially during a sixth inning that
included five Ram hits and back-to-back wild pitches from Mike
Dukovich, each of which scored a run.
“We played pretty poorly,” sophomore Tom Stack-Babich said. “We didn’t throw strikes, and we didn’t field well.”
In the early going, Crimson hitters managed to get to URI
starter Jamie Digidio (7-0), in spite of his stingy 1.36 ERA entering
the game. Sophomores Taylor Meehan (4-for-5, four runs scored) and Matt
Kramer singled and executed a perfect double steal in the second, with
Meehan crossing the plate to put Harvard on the board.
In the next frame, Matt Vance doubled home Matt Rogers, who
had reached on an error. The Crimson kept the heat on Digidio with an
RBI double from Steffan Wilson and back-to-back RBI singles from Meehan
and Matt Brunnig to take a 5-3 lead through three innings.
But Harvard couldn’t quite keep up with a URI lineup that
scored eight runs in the fifth and six innings combined. The Rams got
back-to-back home runs from Scott Brown and Ryan Cunningham to take a
6-5 lead in the fifth, and never looked back.
In addition to poor pitching, Harvard made mistakes in the
field and on the bases. An error by Meehan at shortstop allowed
Cunningham to reach and kick off the Rams’ three-run second inning. In
addition, three Crimson baserunners were thrown out in the first three
innings, including Kramer, who was caught wandering off third base in
the second to end Harvard’s scoring threat.
On the bright side, the Crimson received stellar
contributions from its bench. Junior catcher Justin Roth notched his
first collegiate home run with a three-run shot in the eighth, while
Stack-Babich had a double and a home run in his two at-bats.
“It felt really good,” Roth said of his home run. “We had
runners on and we were down a lot—I was just trying to give the team a
spark.”
The Crimson made it close at the end, scoring four in the
eighth and three in the ninth on Stack-Babich’s solo shot and Kramer’s
two-run single. But URI’s Brett Palaski buckled down to retire the next
three batters and end it.
“The positive we can take away from this game is that we
didn’t fold,” Stack-Babich said of his team’s late rally. “We almost
had it there—early in the season, we’d get down early and roll over.”
Harvard head coach Joe Walsh, visibly angry after the game, disagreed.
“I don’t take any positives out of this loss,” he said. “We
made mistakes that we shouldn’t be making at this point of the season,
things characteristic of a weak high school team.”
Harvard leads the Rolfe Division of the Ivy League by one game
over Dartmouth, whom the Crimson will face four times this weekend to
close out regular season league play. After taking three of four from
Ivy foe Brown last weekend, the Crimson suddenly lacks momentum heading
into a key series.
“We need to have a constant fight going into this last weekend,” Stack-Babich said.
SHORT HOPS
Walsh remained non-committal on the weekend status of Ivy RBI
leader Josh Klimkiewicz, who missed his fifth straight game with an
elbow injury....Roth, a former JV player, raised his slugging
percentage to .889 in nine at-bats with his homer....Morgan Brown, who
has been bothered by a sore hamstring for almost a month, entered the
game as a defensive replacement in the ninth and singled in the bottom
of the inning. He was replaced by pinch runner Adam Cole, who doubles
as the team’s second starter in the pitching rotation.
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