Advertisement

Saved by the Bell: Baseball Must Look for Little Things

BOSTON—For a moment, only a moment, it looked like a season-saving resurrection.

But that wasn’t Trey Hendricks out there inexplicably trotting to the mound in the third inning against B.C. yesterday. It was senior reliever Brendan Reed, decked out in Hendricks’ No. 21 on a day when there were multiple uniform switches and several new faces—seniors on the JV baseball team—in the dugout.

It was a cruel mirage for confused radio announcers from both schools and the start of an unfortunate outing for Reed, who did not look like himself, both literally and figuratively. He also didn’t look much like Hendricks. Reed gave up two solo shots in the inning.

All of the confusion couldn’t mask the glaring reality, and that is this: Hendricks, the junior who is only about as important as oxygen to the Harvard baseball team, will undergo surgery at Massachusetts General Hospital and miss six weeks. Hendricks will have a bone chip removed from his knee, and should be healthy for summer ball in Brewster of the Cape Cod League, set to start a week after NCAA Regionals would occur in early June.

Which of course lends itself to the million dollar question: Can the Crimson still get there?

Advertisement

Can Harvard, which already lost de facto ace Marc Hordon to a torn labrum early in the season, still win the Ivy League championship?

(Consider for a moment a team that still featured Hordon and Hendricks in the middle of the lineup, a team with the pitching depth to push either sophomore Mike Morgalis or freshman Matt Brunnig into a fifth starter’s role).

Can it be done?

Why not?

However badly hurt the team is, the Crimson has quietly put together its best stretch of hitting not only this season, but arguably in three years. Senior Kenon Ronz has peaked at just the right time, leading a pitching staff of Brunnig and Morgalis that, while only three-fourths of a rotation, is better than what most Ivy League teams can put together on any given weekend.

And then, there are the intangibles.

Yesterday, Harvard almost beat an Eagles team that had walloped them the previous week, 24-6.

But for freshman Lance Salgiver’s untimely bases loaded double play in the top of the ninth, the Crimson could have come all the way back from a five-run deficit the inning before.

This isn’t to say that there’s much of a moral victory in losing to B.C. by a little less. But there is something to be said for getting help from unexpected places.

The Crimson got an astonishing five quality innings from Rob Wheeler, who didn’t give up an earned run. Ordinarily a part-time DH for the Crimson, Wheeler went after a lineup of wall-to-wall .300 hitters with a simple curve and a fastball clocked at around 83 mph—hardly more than a sling and a pile of rocks. But Wheeler did nothing but get ahead of hitters early in the count and, had the ninth turned out differently, could have left Fenway with a win.

Advertisement