Senior pitchers say their last goodbyes in tournament elimination
Goodbye is never easy. Goodbye on the heels of a devastating loss is much, much harder.
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Goodbye is never easy. Goodbye on the heels of a devastating loss is much, much harder.
The Richmond baseball team battled through a pitchers duel again on Thursday, only this time they were left bloodied on the losing side of the crusade.
They say pitching wins championships, and the adage certainly proved true on Wednesday, as the second-seeded Richmond Spiders and the sixth-seeded George Washington Colonials opened the Atlantic-10 tournament with a pitcher’s duel.
The University of Richmond baseball team has reigned atop the Atlantic 10 standings for the entirety of its 2015 campaign, but it was nearly dethroned this past weekend in its first conference series loss to Rhode Island.
The Richmond baseball team was the clear favorite to win this weekend against Sacred Heart, but sometimes even the favorites disappoint.
After more than five weeks of waiting, the Richmond baseball team finally got to have a true home opener.
In booming fashion, the Richmond baseball team swept the through the first two games of conference play to earn a series win over George Mason.
Just 24 hours after being on the wrong end of a 13-run win, the Richmond baseball team claimed one of its own, beating Minnesota in a 13-2 blowout on Wednesday.
It could have been a fantastic celebration.
I envisioned an immaculate turf field that would excite recruits and make opposing teams envious. I envisioned a baseball field that would make me proud to say I was a former Spider. But months after I first heard of the plan to renovate Pitt Field, that vision exists only in my head.
Friday, Feb. 20 would have been the Richmond baseball team’s home opener, but because of winter weather and delays to the Pitt Field renovations, what was scheduled as the Spiders’ first home game will be played in South Carolina at USC-Salkehatchie.
Pitt Field is getting a makeover, but its transformation will not be complete before Richmond baseball’s home opener on Feb. 20.
On a brisk, October morning, 31 University of Richmond baseball players congregated on the frosty outfield grass of Pitt Field, huddling into a tangle of wind-milling arms and high-kicking legs as they warmed up for practice. After completing their stretches, the players jogged back to the dugout. Except one.
The next phase of the $17 million transformation of Richmond’s 42-year-old Robins Center, which began last year with the remodeling of the basketball arena, is nearly complete, but delays to the renovation of seven varsity sport locker rooms have become a frustration for athletes.
With the MLB postseason upon us and the playoff bracket set, sports analysts have placed their bets on who they believe will be the next Kings of October, and University of Richmond's resident experts — nine players on the baseball team — have weighed in as well.
When senior Stephen Laszcyk was a freshman, he found himself searching for a way to connect with and learn from upperclassmen who shared his interest in finance.
Despite a strong outing by starting pitcher Zak Sterling, the baseball team's errors and its sputtering offense cost it a loss to VCU for the second time in two days, conceding the series to its Atlantic 10 rival.
The first game of the University of Richmond's baseball team's three-game series against Atlantic 10 rival VCU did not go as hoped, to say the least.
He doesn't always star in promotional videos for the Octaves' Spring Fever a cappella concert, but when he does, senior Bennie DeSalvo is dubbed by his fellow group members as the most interesting Octave in the world.
When two University of Richmond staff members' computers were infected with a virus two weeks ago, the FBI contacted the university's Information Services and alerted them of how to handle the virus.