heads-up runner who charges the basepaths like a burly Rickey Henderson.
In the Crimson's 15-12 victory in Game 1 of the Brown series, Bridich had a typically strong day. He singled and stole a base in the third, walked
and scored a run in the fifth, and in his second trip to the plate in the frame, took Bear reliever Bryant Romo yard to center field for a three-run shot.
And in a 6-2 win in Game 4, Bridich had RBI in three straight at-bats, keeping rallies rolling each time with a pair of run-scoring singles and a sacrifice fly.
Even on his rare outs last weekend, Bridich contributed. Along with the
sac fly, he moved a runner over in Game 3. In 16 plate appearances, he made unproductive outs only four times, and had a .625 on-base percentage.
Bridich started the season with an engraved seat on the Harvard bench. The media guide lists him as a potential backup catcher, and until the Ivy slate, he saw most of his duty in spot situations-pinch-running and spelling senior Jason Keck behind the dish.
But Bridich has scratched, clawed and seemingly willed his way into the starting lineup, converting on every opportunity he's been given.
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