Word: innings
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...kicking would prevent further score, but just seven minutes before the close Terry secured the ball after a very bailliant rush by Twombly, and sent it over the bar, scoring the first goal for Yale. Much rough work followed, in which Richards of Yale was severely hurt, but the inning closed with the score unaltered, 6 points to 0 in Yale's favor...
...ball was passed back to Cowling and he kicked a very pretty goal from the field. From the next kick-off the ball again approached Princeton's line, and from a fumble by Baker Kendall scored a touchdown for Harvard, but the try-for-goal was a failure. The inning closed with the score 7 to 6 in Harvard's favor, exactly the same as the final score last year, and Harvard began to feel victory near at hand. Moffat's famous kicking had not as yet been seen and so was not reckoned on, but the so and three...
...curve delivery in base-ball pitching, says the Philadelphia Press, was the greatest change ever introduced into the game, and in these days, when an old-time straight pitcher would be knocked out of the box in one inning, there are a good many claimants for the credit of originating it. College men, with the exception of those from Harvard, always insist that Avery brought it to light at Yale, while the Harvard men, who naturally would refuse to see a curve of two feet in a Yale pitcher's delivery, incline to the opinion that Mann, of Princeton...
...Wednesday afternoon at New Brunswick. N. J., Princeton defeated Rutgers by a score of two goals and three touchdowns to three safety touchdowns. The first inning of the game was very closely contested, only one safety touchdown being scored against Rutgers; and it was not until two of their opponents had been injured that Princeton secured any decided advanage...
...touchdown by Keyes made after some brilliant passing and good running. The Latin School were forced to a safety touchdown by the good play of '87, but the freshmen failed to score anything further in the first three quarters. One of the Roxbury eleven was injured shortly before the inning closed, and the second half was played with ten men on a side. At the beginning of the second three quarters, good running by Sears and Butler gave the Latin School their only score, 1 touchdown from which no goal was kicked. Soon after Brooks gained a touchdown for Harvard...