Page:Spalding's Baseball Guide (1894).djvu/133

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 * +SCORE BY INNINGS.
 * Harvard
 * 1
 * 0
 * 0
 * 3
 * 0
 * 0
 * 0
 * 2
 * 0
 * 6
 * Yale
 * 0
 * 0
 * 0
 * 2
 * 0
 * 0
 * 0
 * 0
 * 2
 * 4
 * }
 * 2
 * 4
 * }
 * }

First base by errors—Harvard, 2; Yale 1. Battery errors—Harvard, 2; Yale, 2. Left on bases—Harvard, 4; Yale, 3. Chances for catchers—Harvard, 10; Yale 8. Sacrifice hits—By Hallowell, 1. Stolen bases—By Mason, 1; Hallowell, 1; Upton, 1; Sullivan, 1; Trafford, 1; Murphy, 2; Beall, 1; Case, 1; Speer, 1. Runners forwarded by base hits—By Sullivan 3; Upton, 1; Frothingham, 1; Speer, 2; Case, 1; Bliss, 1. Balks—By Highlands, 4; Carter, 2.

PITCHING SCORE.

Innings pitched—By Carter, 9; by Highlands, 9. Base hits—Off Carter, 7; off Highlands, 8. Runs earned—Off Carter, 2; off Highlands, 2. Bases on balls—By Carter, 1; by Highlands, 2. Hit batsman—By Carter, 1. Struck out—By Carter, 13; by Highlands, 10. Umpires—Curry and Bond. Time of game—2 hours and 25 minutes.

YALE VS. PRINCETON.

The series of games between the university nines of Yale and Princeton for 1893 began on May 20th at New Haven, on which date fully 5,000 spectators were gathered on the Yale field to witness the contest. The opposing pitchers were Carter, of Yale, and Drake, of Princeton, and the home team held the lead from start to finish, though the game was far from being the one-sided contest the score would lead one to suppose it was. Yale led by 2 to 0 at the start, and were in the van by 5 to 0 at the end of the fourth innings. After that Princeton had the best of it as they got in a run by fielding errors and blanked their opponents in four successive innings. Carter's effective delivery, splendidly backed up by Kedsie, proved too much for the Princeton batsmen, only 5 hits being made off his pitching. Drake, too, was effective, not one of the five runs made on Yale being earned off the pitching, only 6 hits being made. Here is the score: