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Baseball Goes Down to Bayou

Harvard earns five seed in NCAA Regional at LSU

Looking for the last three College World Series champions? They're bearing down on Baton Rouge, Louisiana for the beginning of the long march back to Omaha.

Two-time defending champ and host LSU, along with 1995 titlist Cal State-Fullerton, will get in their digs tomorrow afternoon at Alex Box Stadium, seeded first and second respectively in the South II Regional of the NCAA's 48-team tournament.

For the record, there's another gem of a ballclub buried down at the fifth seed. It's the best team in New England, it's won two straight Ivy League crowns and it's primed to duplicate the shocker it pulled off in Stillwater, Okla. about this time last year.

For the second consecutive seasons, the Harvard Crimson will quit Cambridge a few days earlier than the rest of us, trekking to the deep South for a crack at glory and an opportunity to debunk the myth that good baseball doesn't exist in the Northeast--and it has to like its chances.

Harvard (34-10, 18-4 Ivy) will kick off the 11th trip to the NCAA tournament in the history of its program with a 3 p.m. matchup against Fullerton (44-15, 25-5 Big West) tomorrow, with remaining games in the six-team, double-elimination field contingent upon Round One results.

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The NCAA selection committee surprised Harvard with a five-seed, rewarding its sparkling 34-6 mark against non-ranked opponents and last year's third-place finish--which included victories over top-seeded UCLA and Stetson--in the Midwest Regional.

We feel the respect the committee showed us is well-deserved," said captain Dave Forst. "And we feel that we can repeat what we accomplished last year."

The Crimson will open against a Titans squad that received an at-large bid after a mediocre 2-2 performance in the Big West tournament. Fullerton dropped a 6-5 decision to eventual runner-up Sacramento State, then lost its most recent game 12-0 to fellow NCAA tournament participant Long Beach State.

The word on Fullerton is that it plays a brand of baseball similar to the Crimson's preferring the hit-and-run to the long ball, beating opponents with the short game that Harvard seems to have down pat.

"They're not a powerhouse team," said junior catcher Jason Keck. "They're more crafty, they hit and run, which gives us a better chance. We're looking forward to the matchup."

The Titans also boast one of California's top lefthanded starters in Cal State-Northridge transfer Benito Flores. The senior--who was junior righthander Donny Jamieson's teammate at Orange Country's El Dorado High School--sports a nifty 12-0 record and a 3.29 ERA.

"If history repeats itself, we'll be in good shape," Forst said. "Last year two of our big wins came against lefties--UCLA and Miami. They're throwing lots of off-speed pitches and getting up around 85 with the fastball, and we're just trying to take the ball the other way."

But among Harvard baseball's distinguishing characteristics this season remains its talented--and extraordinarily deep--pitching staff. After losing Frank Hogan '97 to graduation, and watching junior righthander Andrew Duffell struggle with injury, the Crimson found aces wherever it looked, from junior second-team All-Ivy starter Garett Vail (5-2, 2.34 ERA) to freshman phenom John Birtwell (4-0, 2.57).

Coach Joe Walsh additionally found himself blessed with a bullpen that could go four and five deep without falling off, getting breakthrough years from senior first-team All-Ivy Mike Marcucci, whose middle relief expertise got him seven wins across 35 and two-thirds innings of work, and sophomore Derek Lennon, who made the jump from the junior varsity program and impressed in long relief, finishing 3-1 with a 3.24 ERA.

"In seven-inning games, you can get away with not having a deep pen," Keck said. "But we had a whole lot of quality guys throwing every day."

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