Advertisement

Baseball's Offense Key in Ivy Wins

Consider second base settled, for the time being.

As junior Zak Farkes continued to battle shoulder soreness, that’s where sophomore Brendan Byrne, hoping to fend off a cadre of worthy challengers for the fill-in role, hoisted the Harvard baseball team (11-6, 4-0 Ivy) to dual victories in Philadelphia yesterday. With twin two-RBI doubles—the second giving the Crimson the eventual victory in Game 2—Byrne paced a balanced offense from the nine hole in a 6-4, 11-5 doubleheader sweep of Penn (8-13, 5-3 Ivy).

It was the second makeup doubleheader in as many days for the Crimson, which extended its winning streak to five games.

“I don’t think I solidified anything with the type of team we have,” Byrne said. “Every game we have sort of a showcase.”

Five players—Byrne, Farkes, senior Ian Wallace, and freshmen Taylor Meehan and Griff Jenkins—have received time at the keystone this season. With Farkes getting his at-bats at DH—he went 0-for-3 with an RBI yesterday—and Wallace splitting time in the outfield, Byrne has the most experience of the remaining competitors.

Advertisement

“It’s sort of a merry-go-round at certain points,” Byrne said. “You try to make the most of it.”

In addition to extending the team’s undefeated streak, Harvard’s sweep put a damper on Penn’s early season success. Having started the league schedule at 5-1, the Quakers entered the day fresh from a Monday sweep of Red Rolfe divisional powerhouse Dartmouth in Hanover, NH.

Today, the Crimson welcomes Holy Cross at 3 p.m. for its home opener.

HARVARD 11, PENN 5

By scoring all 11 runs in the fifth inning and beyond, the Crimson’s comeback victory in Game 2 little resembled the lopsided score on the books.

Penn spotted Quaker starter Brian Cirri with an early 3-0 lead, and took that margin into the top of the fifth.

Thanks to the continued hot-hitting of freshman slugger Steffan Wilson, who knocked a 2-1 pitch into left field for the team’s first RBI single, Harvard rallied for two in the fifth.

But it was Byrne’s sixth-inning, two-RBI double, scoring Wallace and junior shortstop Morgan Brown, which gave the Crimson a 4-3 lead that it wouldn’t surrender.

“You never know who’s going to come up big,” captain Schuyler Mann said, adding that production from the nine spot of the order “makes us a really dangerous team.”

Tags

Advertisement