Word: kingness
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...next game is '90 vs. '91, on Thursday, at 4.45. The teams were as follows: Ninety-one-Morton, Amory, Davis, Walcott, Jones, Stead, Everett, King, Bigelow, Washburn, Tudor, Huntress; Eighty-nine-Vorse, Numberg, Reisner, Griffing, Bent, Grew. Referee-Mr. Kilvert...
...prevented by the weather. Both nines played a good careful game up to the seventh inning, and for a time the issue was very doubtful, Princeton tying Yale 1 to 1 in the fifth, and holding them during two innings. In the last two, the Yale men hit King very hard, and thus ran the score up very rapidly. Neither Mercur nor King was in condition to pitch, Mercur being utterly disabled by a lame arm, hurt in the last game with Harvard and King being so ill as to make it impossible to do his best work. The score...
...make a hit. In the third, Gallivan and Boyden, with one man out, were given each his base on balls. Henshaw followed with a clean single, bringing in Gallivan. Willard cleared the bases with a magnificent base hit, but was put out at second on Bates' hit to King. Bates was advanced a peg on Knowlton's hit, but they were both left on Quackenboss' grounder to Price. In the fourth, Howland led off with a hit, took second on Campbell's sacrifice, third on Gallivan's put out, and scored on Boyden's three-base hit between right...
After the disastrous first inning, Harvard played a game which, if continued, will bring the championship to Cambridge. The entire nine batted hard, few men striking out. Gallivan made his first error in a championship game, an excusable muff of Bates' throw in attempting to put King out at second. Willard led his side at the bat. For Princeton, King and Dana did good work. The score...
...King...