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Army Sweeps Baseball in Series of Close Contests

Emily C. Wong

Senior southpaw Brent Suter, shown here in an earlier contest, struggled in his only appearance in the Harvard baseball team’s series against Army, surrendering four earned runs on five hits in 5.2 innings pitched. The Crimson dropped that contest, 4-2, and is now in the midst of an 11-game skid.

Road woes continue for the Harvard baseball team. Despite amassing early leads in two of four games and keeping three contests within a run, the Crimson (1-16) dropped four tight matchups at Army (15-6) on Friday and Saturday, increasing its current losing streak to 11.

“As a whole, we played pretty well,” sophomore infielder Carlton Bailey said. “We just didn’t really get key hits when they were needed. But our deficits were by only one or two runs, so it wasn’t like we got blown out. We just didn’t produce when we needed to.”

Sophomore infielder Jake McGuiggan continued, “Eleven of our 16 losses have been by one or two runs. You could say we’re the best one-win team in the country. I think that bodes well for when we start Ivy games this weekend.”

Harvard has played its first 17 games on the road and will add five more to that number before finally returning to O’Donnell Field on April 4.

ARMY 7, HARVARD 6 (10 inn.)

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With the Crimson down 6-4 in the eighth inning in the second game of Saturday’s doubleheader, McGuiggan hit a timely double to drive in freshman centerfielder Mike Martin and sophomore left fielder Jack Colton, tying the score at six apiece. But Army broke the stalemate in the bottom of the 10th, closing out the series with a fourth straight win over the Crimson, 7-6, on what McGuiggan believed was a questionable call.

“It was bases loaded with one out, and obviously, if they score they win,” McGuiggan said. “They hit a ground ball to second baseman [Jeff Reynolds] who tried to tag the runner…. From where I was standing at shortstop, it looked like [the runner] stepped on the grass, but the umpire called him safe, the run scored, and they won.”

After Reynolds scored a run in the first, Army took over, outscoring Harvard, 5-1, in the first five frames. The Crimson started to stage a comeback in the sixth inning, as junior third baseman Kyle Larrow keyed a three-run frame for the Crimson with an RBI single down the right, plating Colton and sophomore first baseman Steven Dill. Martin scored the inning’s final run on McGuiggan’s sacrifice fly to center field.

Harvard tied it up in the eighth inning, but after a scoreless ninth, Army designated hitter Mike McCants grounded out to drive in the winning run.

ARMY 1, HARVARD 0

Earlier on Saturday, Harvard held Army scoreless for all but one inning, falling once again as a third-inning RBI single lifted Army to a 1-0 victory.

Because the contest was the first in the day’s twinbill, the game was only seven innings as opposed to the customary nine.

“It’s tough to play two less innings, especially when you lose 1-0,” McGuiggan said. “If this game was the second game, we would have six more outs to deal with and potentially be able to get a run across. Coach always says, ‘It’s not really a baseball game unless it’s nine innings.’”

Both of the Crimson’s  two hits in the contest came off the bat of shortstop Carlton Bailey. Junior captain Andrew Ferreira took the loss for Harvard after 4.2 innings and four strikeouts.

“I’m sure the rest of the team feels this way too, but it’s pretty frustrating,” Bailey said of the squad’s close losses. “We’re always right there—a hit away—from taking games away from very good teams. We’re doing all we can in practice to make sure we can get that extra hit, so instead of losing by one, we can win by one or more.”

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