Baseball splits with Columbia to send Ivy series to game 3
Tied.
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Tied.
It will be the second meeting of the two teams this season. On April 7, the Big Green (24-14, 15-5 Ivy) and the Lions (20-24, 15-5 Ivy) split a doubleheader in Hanover. Columbia took the first game, 7-1, and the Big Green won the nightcap, 9-3.
Dartmouth baseball clinched the Red Rolfe Division title and the home field advantage for next weekend's Ivy League championship against Gehrig Division winner Columbia after three wins against Harvard this weekend.
Dartmouth (21-13, 12-4 Ivy) tied the game with two runs in the bottom of the ninth inning. The Big Green traded runs with the Catamounts (17-14, 4-4 America East) in the 10th inning, and held UVM scoreless in the 11th and 12th innings before Wren's RBI single.
The split series protects Dartmouth's 2.5-game lead over Yale in the Red Rolfe Division race.
After this weekend's results, Dartmouth (17-10, 10-2 Ivy) is in first place in the Red Rolfe Division of the Ivy League, two and a half games ahead of Yale (15-18-1, 7-4 Ivy). Meanwhile, Brown (13-16, 5-7 Ivy), the defending Ivy League champion, dropped to five games behind the Big Green.
On Sunday, Dartmouth (13-9, 7-1 Ivy) broke open the first game with a three-run sixth inning against the Quakers (11-11-1, 3-4 Ivy) to take the ballgame. The Big Green bats were much quieter in the nightcap , however, when Dartmouth managed four runs on only three hits, barely holding on for the victory in the ninth inning.
Dartmouth (10-7, 4-0 Ivy) racked up 15 hits in the first game against Cornell (6-10, 0-2 Ivy), and seven players recorded two or more hits.
The trip from Hanover to New Jersey is a lot easier to make when you're going there to win.
The trip from Hanover to New Jersey is a lot easier to make when you're going there to win.
The trip from Hanover to New Jersey is a lot easier to make when you're going there to win.
The Big Green (6-7, 0-0 Ivy) showed the late-inning resiliency that was missing in the 2007 season, snatching a 7-5 win from Quinnipiac on Wednesday.
Dartmouth's men and women's track and field teams escaped the mud and snow of Hanover this spring break, traveling to Scottsdale, Arizona to take advantage of the warmer climate before the spring season begins this weekend.
Cottrell led the team in tackles this season with 56 on his own and 52 assists. He grabbed three interceptions and captained the defense.
Kathy Slattery Phillips, Dartmouth's Sports Information Director, died Wednesday after complications stemming from a brain aneurysm. She was 55.
Dartmouth's football season ran a bit longer than expected Saturday as a late comeback pushed the game into overtime. However, the Big Green (3-7, 3-4 Ivy) faltered and fell to Princeton 17-14 in the extra frame.
The Bears' (4-5, 3-3 Ivy) offense was led almost single-handedly by WR Bobby Sewall. Sewall caught 18 passes for 141 yards, had 15 carries for 154 yards and four scores, and even threw a touchdown pass.
Bennewitz, back in the starting role, led Dartmouth's charged offense to a 59-31 rout of Cornell (4-4, 1-4 Ivy).
The Big Green (2-5, 2-2 Ivy) traded touchdowns and interceptions with Harvard (5-2, 4-0 Ivy) for much of the afternoon, and the game came down to a late Dartmouth scoring drive that stalled before it ever got started.
The Big Green (2-4, 2-1 Ivy) were in a familiar position after the Lions (1-5, 0-3 Ivy) drove 96 yards in six plays to tie the game at 28-28 with 9:54 remaining in the fourth quarter. Then a missed 28-yard field goal off of the right upright certainly put the Colgate game in the minds of many in attendance.