Spalding's official college base ball annual1911- . ree places in the second Fitts played consistently good ball throughout the year,and Partenheimers work at third, though seldom brilliant, wasalways steady. Both these men did more than their share of theirteams hitting. Kenneth Nash of Brown is again chosen for the short brilliant infielder was the same brainy player of old, cover-ing acres of ground and hitting in the pinches. In the outfield Dartmouth is given two places, and Tufts and Hoban of the Green go in right and center, and CaptainHooper of the Brown


Spalding's official college base ball annual1911- . ree places in the second Fitts played consistently good ball throughout the year,and Partenheimers work at third, though seldom brilliant, wasalways steady. Both these men did more than their share of theirteams hitting. Kenneth Nash of Brown is again chosen for the short brilliant infielder was the same brainy player of old, cover-ing acres of ground and hitting in the pinches. In the outfield Dartmouth is given two places, and Tufts and Hoban of the Green go in right and center, and CaptainHooper of the Brown and Blue is put in left. All three of thesecan hit, field and run the bases in splendid form. The year de-veloped other outfielders of more than passing ability, but thethree mentioned outrank them all. , This All-New England team will be strong in all departmentsof the game. It will have two great pitchers, a catcher in whopiboth can have perfect confidence, a fast-fielding infield and anoutfield exceptionally strong on both offense and SPALDINGS ATHLETIC LIBRARY. S? New England Intramural Base Ball By Henry T. Claus. Deeply significant of that new spirit in college athletics, thespirit which makes Base Ball a game for the many rather thanfor the few—are the intramural and interfraterity contests thatare so successfully carried on in most of our New Englandinstitutions of learning. Added to this it is becoming the cus-tom to build great athletic fields and more capacious fact, real indoor and outdoor playgrounds are the order ofthe day. In place of the old field, which usually included a BaseBall diamond, a running track and a foot ball gridiron, has comethe campus, the dimensions of which are stated in terms ofacres and which often comprises a dozen Base Ball and foot ballfields, countless tennis courts, golf links, three or more runningtracks, cross-country courses, in fact, every facility needed toallow five or six hundred men to ofitain sound and


Size: 1276px × 1959px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectbasebal, bookyear1913