As young and talented as the Harvard throwers are, though, the 2000 season proved that no team can succeed on pitching alone.
This season, the Crimson hit just .258 as a team, the lowest mark in the Ivy League. Only one of the regular Harvard starters, sophomore shortstop Mark Mager, batted above .300.
Outside of Mager, the Harvard batsmen were very inconsistent in their success at the plate.
Sophomore second baseman Faiz Shakir, playing in his first season as an everyday starter, enjoyed a 13-game hitting streak during the month of April.
At the end of the season, however, Shakir cooled off considerably, collecting just one hit in his last 21 at-bats.
In addition, junior first baseman John Franey, who tied for the team-lead in home runs (5) and was second on the Crimson in slugging percentage (.412), finished the season with just a .227 batting average.
Franey's woes were representative of the struggles faced by the rest of the team's traditional run-producers.
Junior center fielder Scott Carmack, for example, batted just .237 this season after going .328 one year ago. Senior tri-captain Erik Binkowski, meanwhile, had just 11 RBI this year after driving in 31 runs in 1999.
Such lack of production from the middle of the order forced Walsh to undertake some desperate measures to try to score runs.
Toward the middle of the season, Walsh tried out Mager, a natural one- or two-hole hitter as demonstrated by his team-leading 21 steals, in the third spot.
Mager did prove up to the task, driving in 24 runs on the season, good for second on the team behind sophomore third baseman Nick Carter, who had 27.
Still, such measures got away from what Walsh had wanted to do and what has been successful in the past.
"Mager had a good year for us hitting in different spots," Walsh said. "But he's not a three-hole hitter."
A true bright spot for the Crimson this year was the emergence of sophomore catcher Brian Lentz.
Playing in his first season as a college player, Lentz hit a respectable .283 with the second-highest hit total on the squad (39).
Read more in Sports
Salvete Omnes: The History of the Latin OrationRecommended Articles
-
Lock and Load: Harvard's Rotation Poised to DominateThere are precious few reminders of the glory days of baseball left like the Ivy weekend. Two days, four games.
-
Seniors Look to Return Baseball to Glory DaysThree seasons ago, the members of Harvard baseball team’s senior class began their careers as baby-faced rookies. Eight teenagers from
-
AOTW: Three's a Crowd, Unless You WinBefore the week started—before a pile of players on the infield grass, a Gatorade-soaked Joe Walsh and 25 championship rings
-
Revamped Staff, Explosive Lineup Key Hardball Repeat BidEarl Weaver, one of baseball's legendary gurus and mastermind of the Baltimore Orioles machine in the early 1980s, subscribed to
-
Lentz Returns for BaseballLast season, then-freshman Schuyler Mann emerged as Harvard’s No. 1 catcher and soon-to-be star. Then Mann met The Man. Senior
-
Weather or Not, Here Comes BaseballAfter months of winter conditioning, a seven-week downtime, and the agony of seeing almost every other school begin its season