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2024 Final Power Rankings
NESCAC FOOTBALL POWER RANKINGS –2024
- Wesleyan (8-1)
- Trinity (7-2)
- Tufts (7-2)
- Middlebury (6-3)
- Williams (5-4)
- Colby (4-5)
- Bowdoin (3-6)
- Bates (2-7)
- Amherst (2-7)
- Hamilton (1-8)
1-WESLEYAN (8-1)
2024 Recap
The Cardinals opened the season with two big wins at Middlebury and home against Tufts, but then promptly lost at home to Bates. From there, Wesleyan won series of fairly close games over Hamilton, Colby (in OT) and Bowdoin before beating Amherst soundly. Wesleyan closed the season with a last minute win over Williams and rallied past Trinity to win the NECSAC Championship.
Offense
Yardage Ranking in League: 4th Overall; 5th Rush and 4th Pass
Meaningful Stat: QB Niko Candido made critical clutch plays in their final two wins
Preseason Assets & Question
Top Offensive Assets: WR Wilson and an experienced QB Candido
Key Offensive Question: Can the O-Line help the run game and reduce the sacks?
QB Niko Candido finished 3rd in the NESCAC in passing and near the bottom in completion percentage (49.8%) but threw 14 TDs versus just 3 INTs and had significantly higher yards per completion average (16.0 yds per pass) than his peers. Candido passed to convert two critical third downs and a game winning touchdown in the final minute to beat Williams and threw to convert a 4th and 17 and 4th and goal from the 15 in the 4th quarter to lead the Cardinals past Trinity. WR Chase Wilson finished 2nd in the NESCAC in receiving yards, scored 7 TDs and had an impressive 19.4 yards per catch average. Freshman RB Matt Diaz emerged late in the season to combine with RB James McHugh to fuel the rushing attack; Diaz played in the last 3 games and averaged 5.3 per carry including a 137-yard effort against Trinity. The Wesleyan offensive line yielded a league high 30 sacks, and the Cardinals were the beneficiary of fumble luck – they fumbled 18 times but only lost 7.
Defense
Yardage Ranking in League: 1st Overall; 2nd Rush and 1st Pass
Meaningful Stat: Wesleyan limited opponents to a league low 15.8 points per game
Preseason Assets & Question
Top Assets on Defense: Abraham, Carbeau and Welch
Top Question on Defense: Can the returning defenders improve the scoring D?
The returning starters for Wesleyan improved their scoring defense, which finished best in the NESCAC, and held opponents to the lowest 3rd down conversion (26.5%) and conversion of red zone trips into TDs (43.8%). LB Ben Carbeau finished 4th in the league with 66 tackles, had 7 sacks and 7.5 other TFLs. The Cardinal defenders scored 4 TDs on the year; DB Dylan Connors scored twice in addition to having 43 tackles, 8.5 TFLs, 2 interceptions, a blocked punt and 7 PBUs. FG Gage Hammond went 9-10 on field goal attempts but missed 5 PATs on the year (the balance of the league missed 3 in total).
2-TRINITY (7-2)
2024 Recap
Trinity enjoyed double digit wins in each of their seven wins and outscored their opponents by more than 17 points in six of the victories including lopsided wins over Williams and Tufts. The road loss to Middlebury featured a last second Panther TD, while the home loss in the final to Wesleyan included some late 4th down conversions for the Cardinals. Trinity finished with a league high +140 point differential, with the next highest team at +81 points.
Offense
Yardage Ranking in League: 1st Overall; 6th Rush and 1st Pass
Meaningful Stat: Trinity threw for a league high 24 TDs and a league low 2 INTs
Preseason Assets & Question
Top Offensive Assets: DiNapoli, Clapp and experience on the OL
Key Offensive Question: Can the new QB pick up where Fetter left off?
The Bantams’ new quarterback, Zander Zebrowski, picked up where his predecessor left off as he led the league in passing yards, completion percentage (72% which was 10% higher than the 2nd highest), TD to INT ratio (24:2) and averaged 12.6 yards per completion. WR Nolan O’Brien was dominant: he led the NESCAC in all-purpose yards, receptions, receiving yards and receiving TDs. WR Sean Clapp finished 5th in the league in receiving yards and added 7 TDs. The rushing offense ranked 6th in yards, but Trinity was 8th in rushing attempts and 4th in yards per carry (3.9), led by RB Tyler DiNapoli, who finished 4th in the league with just under 600 yards, a 4.9 per carry average and 7 TDs. The Bantams gave up 21 sacks and as impressive as their offense was, Trinity was shutout in the 2nd half of both of their losses.
Defense
Yardage Ranking in League: 3rd Overall; 3rd Rush and 4th Pass
Meaningful Stat: The defense created 20 turnovers which led to a league high +11 turnover differential
Preseason Assets & Question
Top Defensive Assets: Davis and veterans at LB
Key Defensive Question: Will the brand new D-Line starters hold up?
Trinity defense limited opponents to 16 points per game (which was 2nd best in the league) and had a league leading 16 interceptions. Linebacker Amari Phillips led the team with 50 tackles, DE Jordan Atkinson registered 7 sacks and DB Charlie Cooper had 4 interceptions and 13 PBUs. Trinity had impressive depth on their defensive side: 14 different players had at least half a sack and 9 different players had a least one interception. The Bantam defense will likely long rue the two 4th down conversions, of 17 and 15 yards, ceded to Wesleyan. Kicker Matt Jumes was literally automatic: he was 7-7 on FGs and 37-37 on PATs.
3-TUFTS (7-2)
2024 Recap
Tufts lost a tight early season game at Wesleyan and got beat soundly by Trinity but won the rest of their games including dominating Amherst and Bates and winning closer games over Bowdoin, Hamilton, Colby, Williams and Middlebury.
Offense
Yardage Ranking in League: 2nd Overall; 3rd Rush and 2nd Pass
Meaningful Stat: QB Michael Berluti finished 2nd in the league in total offense
Preseason Assets & Question
Top Offensive Assets: Trio of senior stars in QB Berluti, RB Reece and WR Moore
Key Offensive Question: Can they adequately replace four starters on the O-Line?
Tufts had to replace last year’s OPOY WR Jaden Richardson and play without RB Chartellis Reece, but they were able keep their offense rolling. QB Michael Berluti finished 2nd in the league in passing yards, hit on over 60% of his passes and ran for 291 yards and 5 TDs, but his TD to INT ratio was just 9:5. RB Christian Shapiro finished 3rd in the league in rushing yards and WR Cade Moore finished 4th in receiving yards with 7 receiving TDs. In terms of replacing four starters on the offensive line, the Jumbo front five were impressive: they limited opponents to a league low 8 sacks and blocked for a running game that averaged 4.1 yards per carry. Tufts was in the bottom third of the league in converting red zone trips into TDs, going just 20-38 (53%).
Defense
Yardage Ranking in League: 4th Overall; 7th Rush and 2nd Pass
Meaningful Stat: DB Ty Richardson had league leading 6 INTs in 9 games
Preseason Assets & Question
Top Defensive Assets: Timmins and Rios
Key Defensive Question: Can they replenish the stars lost at each level of the D?
Tufts replaced three defensive starters in the secondary this season, but the results were strong: the Jumbos had 15 INTs, held opponents to a 50% completion percentage and limited a potent Middlebury aerial attack to just 98 yards. In addition to Richardson’s picks, DB Jameer Alves led the team in tackles and DB Louis Timmins had 4 INTs. The front seven was below average in rush defense, yielding 4.0 yards per carry. LB Johnny Ferrelli had 42 tackles, 2 sacks, 5 other TFLs and 5 QB hurries. PK Vaughn Seelicke led the league in points, making a league high 14 FGs (next highest was 9) and going 12-15 inside of 40 yards. The Jumbos lost 10 fumbles and only recovered 2 from their opponents.
4-MIDDLEBURY (6-3)
2024 Recap
Middlebury opened the season by getting crushed by Wesleyan, but rallied to win their next five games, which included tight wins over Colby, Amherst and Williams (in OT) and a last-minute win over Trinity. Unfortunately for the Panthers, they had two more losses down the stretch, an upset loss to Bates and a final game loss to Tufts, sandwiched around a dominating win over Hamilton.
Offense
Yardage Ranking in League: 3rd Overall; 4th Rush and 3rd Pass
Meaningful Stat: WR Patrick Jamin finished 3rd in the league in receiving yards
Preseason Assets & Question
Top Offensive Assets: WR Jamin and OL Perry
Key Offensive Question: Can the running game be elevated?
The running game was elevated, first by a committee approach that later gave way to the emergence of freshman RB Connor McClellan who led the team in rushing, rushing TDs (7), yards per carry (5.2) and gained 121 yards against a stingy Tufts defense in the team’s finale. QB Brian Moran led a strong passing attack, finishing 4th in the league in passing, completing 56% of his passes and throwing 16 touchdowns against 6 interceptions. Jamin and fellow wideouts Ethan Vashel and Michael Ahonen finished 3rd, 7th and 12th, respectively in the league in receiving yards. The veteran offensive line aided in a solid running game but yielded 19 sacks on the season. The Panthers converted a league high 69% of their 4th downs (9-13).
Defense
Yardage Ranking in League: 6th Overall; 4th Rush and 7th Pass
Meaningful Stat: With decorated defenders returning, the results were average
Preseason Assets & Question
Top Defensive Assets: The NESCAC’s best D-line with Kenary and Filias
Key Defensive Question: Can the Panthers restock their LB position effectively?
The Panther defense featured the ’23 DPOY and 3 other All-NESCAC performers (two 1st teamers) but finished middle of the pack statistically. DL Tomas Kenary finished with 5.5 sacks and an impressive 13 QB hurries, and LB Matt Shaw finished 7th in the NESCAC in tackles with 60 and added 4 sacks, 6 QB hurries, 2 PBUs and 1 forced fumble. DB Charlie Ozolin had 4 INTs and DB Teddy Daniel had 3 picks to go with 36 tackles, 3 TFLs and 9 PBUs. Middlebury struggled with field goal kicking down the stretch, missing 4 of their last 5 attempts on the season, and finishing next to last in conversion percentage.
5-WILLIAMS (5-4)
2024 Recap
Williams lost tight games to Middlebury (in OT), Tufts (by 3) and Wesleyan (by 1 in the last minute) and got beaten convincingly by Trinity. The Ephs took care of business in their other five wins over Hamilton, Colby, Bowdoin, Bates and archrival Amherst.
Offense
Yardage Ranking in League: 5th Overall; 2nd Rush and 9th Pass
Meaningful Stat: Williams’ rush game averaged 4.4 yards per carry
Preseason Assets & Question
Top Offensive Assets: Fischetti and McHugh’s rushing prowess
Key Offensive Question: Can they upgrade their passing attack?
Williams improved their completion percentage to 61% (up from 48% a year ago), but their yardage and TD to INT of 13:9 remained an issue and was impacted by QB Owen McHugh who, after strong start, threw just 3 TDs against 6 INTs in his last 4 games. Williams lost one of the top running backs in the NESCAC, Mario Fischetti, early in their 7th game; Fischetti still finished 5th in the league in yards with a 5.7 per carry average. RB Jon Oris and McHugh finished 6th and 10th in the NESCAC in rushing, and late in the season the Ephs used WR Owen Johansen in running packages; he rushed for 111 yds and 3 TDs in his final two games. No Williams receiver finished in the league’s Top 17 in terms of yards, but five receivers had 15 or more catches. The Williams’ offensive line was critical in aiding an effective rushing attack.
Defense
Yardage Ranking in League: 7th Overall; 8th Rush and 5th Pass
Meaningful Stat: DB Holden Gering finished 2nd in the league in INTs and PBUs
Preseason Assets & Question
Top Defensive Assets: Returning experience in the front seven
Key Defensive Question: Can their experience translate into a top defense in the league?
Williams had experience returning, but started 20 different defenders over the season, which appeared to impact their rush defense. LB Ethan Scott finished 7th in the league in TFLs, which included 4.5 sacks, and freshman LB Luke Mangini led Williams in tackles with 53. DB Holden Gering was 2nd on the team in tackles and added 5 INTs, 7 PBUs and 1 forced fumble. Williams gave up the highest percentage of TDs on red zone opportunities to its opponents (19 of 26). PK Ivan Shuran was perfect on the season going 29-29 in PATs and 9-9 on field goals, including a 47-yard FG which was the longest in the NESCAC this season.
6-COLBY (4-5)
2024 Recap
Colby opened the season with three tight losses to quality opponents (Trinity, Williams, and Middlebury), won a 2-point game CBB game against Bates, lost to Wesleyan (in OT), blasted Amherst and split tight games against Hamilton (3 point win) and Tufts (7 point loss). The Mules closed the season with an emphatic win over Bowdoin to take the CBB crown. Despite a losing record, the Mules had a +24 point differential on the season.
Offense
Yardage Ranking in League: 6th Overall; 7th Rush and 5th Pass
Meaningful Stat: RB Keon Smart finished 3rd in the NESCAC in all-purpose yards
Preseason Assets & Question
Top Offensive Assets: Smart and a receiving corps largely intact from ‘23
Key Offensive Question: Can Drake and a slew of seniors elevate the offense?
QB Miles Drake finished 5th in the league in passing, threw 14 touchdowns versus 6 interceptions and rushed for 192 yards and 3 TDs. RB Keon Smart finished 2nd in the league in rushing (4.1 yard per carry average), 3rd in all-purpose yards and had almost 200 yards receiving. Freshman WR Jack Nye emerged as a major receiving force for the Mules, finishing 6th in the league in receiving yards. Colby committed a league worst 48 penalties losing close to 50 yards a game to infractions.
Defense
Yardage Ranking in League: 2nd Overall; 1st Rush and 6th Pass
Meaningful Stat: Colby held opponents to a league low 2.7 yards per rush
Preseason Assets & Question
Top Defensive Assets: Young is a star at linebacker
Key Defensive Question: Can the defense improve when breaking in 8 new starters?
Colby had eight new starters on defense in ‘24, but the group led the Mules to a 2nd ranked defense in the NESCAC. The rush defense was the league’s best, led by LB Julian Young. Young finished 2nd in the league in tackles and had 4.5 sacks, while fellow defenders LB Sebastian Romain and DE Jack Mullen had 9 sacks each. The Mule pass defense generated 29 sacks but allowed a 62.6% completion percentage and 7.2 yards per attempt, both metrics in the bottom third of the league. DB Trevor Smith finished with 49 tackles, 4 interceptions and 3 forced fumbles.
7-BOWDOIN (3-6)
2024 Recap
Bowdoin lost to the top six NESCAC teams but played Tufts (lost by 2) and Wesleyan (lost by 3) competitively. The Polar Bears beat Bates, Hamilton and Amherst, but lost their home finale to Colby, thereby losing the CBB.
Offense
Yardage Ranking in League: 8th Overall; 8th Rush and 8th Pass
Meaningful Stat: Bowdoin threw 15 interceptions, 2nd worst in the NESCAC
Preseason Assets & Question
Top Offensive Assets: Five starters return on the O-Line
Key Offensive Question: Can the production of Boel, Eden, King and Fahey be replaced?
The Bowdoin offense took a step back in ‘24 due to the graduation of some very productive players but averaged just over 20 points per game. QB Robbie Long was the Polar Bears’ leader in passing and rushing yards, but he completed under 52% of his passes, threw 8 interceptions versus 6 touchdowns and rushed for just 3.0 yards per carry. Freshman QB Peter Macauley had an impressive game in their win over Bates, throwing for 270 yards and 5 TDs, but saw less action against Colby. WR Jed Hoggard finished 10th in the league in receiving yards and had a 16.7 yard per catch average. Although there was experience on the offensive line, the Polar Bears yielded 22 sacks and a rushing average that was below 3.4 yards per carry.
Defense
Yardage Ranking in League: 9th Overall; 10th Rush and 8th Pass
Meaningful Stat: Bowdoin led the NESCAC with 35 sacks
Preseason Assets & Question
Top Defensive Assets: Experienced and talented front seven
Key Defensive Question: Can the secondary improve against the pass?
The Bowdoin defense was disruptive, notching 35 sacks, forcing 13 fumbles and snagging 9 interceptions. Unfortunately, those big plays were offset by a league worst rush defense in yards and yards per carry (4.4 yards per carry). The Bowdoin secondary finished 8th in pass yards yielded but held opponents to league averages in completion percentage and yards per attempt. Koy Price had an impressive season finishing 1st in sacks, tackles for loss and forced fumbles, scoring 2 defensive touchdowns and adding a tackle for a safety. Linebackers Gordon Gozdeck and Dan Fiore finished 5th and 8th in the league in tackles, respectively. The Bowdoin kickers went 3 for 5 on field goals and were 0 for 2 from outside of 30 yards.
8-BATES (2-7)
2024 Recap
Bates finished 2-7 but was improved from last year’s winless season. Bates upset NESCAC champion Wesleyan and Middlebury and played Colby (2-point loss) and Williams (3-point loss) competitively. The Bobcats lost to Amherst, both Maine foes as well as then winless Hamilton. I have Bates ranked above Amherst despite their opening loss to the Mammoths, as the Bobcats appeared to be a slightly stronger team by the end of the season.
Offense
Yardage Ranking in League: 7th Overall; 1st Rush and 10th in Pass
Meaningful Stat: RB Ryan Lynskey set the single game NESCAC rushing record
Preseason Assets & Question
Top Offensive Assets: Experienced QB and TE with an emerging star in Beltran
Preseason Offensive Question: Can Bates establish an effective running game?
Bates certainly established an effective running game, leading the league in carries, yards and yards per carry. RB Ryan Lynskey finished 1st in the NECSAC in rushing, eclipsing 1,000 yds, scoring 10 TDs, setting a single game rushing record (344 yds) and sporting a 5.7 yard per carry average. The Bobcats’ strong rush attack made them very effective in the red zone where they converted 19 trips into 16 TDs; Bates only attempted 2 FGs on the season (and made both). The passing game was last in the league in yards, attempts and completions in large part due to the emphasis on the run, but threw 12 interceptions versus 10 TDs and completed less than 52% of their attempts. WR Sergio Beltran missed some early games but turned into both a rushing and receiving threat later in the season. Bates’ offensive line, which featured two sophomores and two freshmen, was impressive in the run game and yielded just 9 sacks on the season.
Defense
Yardage Ranking in League: 8th Overall; 9th Rush and 9th Pass
Meaningful Stat: Bates gave up over 26 points per game, tied for last in the league
Preseason Assets & Question
Top Defensive Assets: Juneau and experience on the defensive line
Key Defensive Question: Do the underclassman in the back seven show growth?
The pass defense yielded the highest completion percentage (67.7%) and gave up 16 touchdowns against just 1 interception on the year. The Bobcats started two sophomores and a freshman in the deep patrol, so some growing pains were on display. Bates’ defense was 9th in the NESCAC in sacks, with 7 on the year. LB Ryan Rozich was a tackling machine – he was 1st in the NESCAC in tackles with 82, and also had 6.5 TFLs. Fellow LB Matt Juneau finished 6th in the league in tackles with 60 and added 3.5 TFLs.
9-AMHERST (2-7)
2024 Recap
Amherst opened the season with back to wins over Bates and Hamilton but then lost 7 straight including lopsided affairs against Tufts, Bowdoin, Colby and Trinity. The Mammoths lost both Little Three games by the combined score of 52-14 and finished the ’24 campaign with a -129 point differential which was 2nd worst in the league (5 points better than Hamilton).
Offense
Yardage Ranking in League: 10th Overall; 10th Rush and 7th Pass
Meaningful Stat: Averaged less than 37 yards per game on the ground
Preseason Assets & Question
Top Offensive Assets: Returning starters at skill position and O-line
Key Offensive Question: Can Amherst improve their struggling offense?
In terms of my preseason question about offensive improvement, the answer was unfortunately no. Similar to past years, the Mammoth offense struggled finishing last in several metrics. Amherst tried two different quarterbacks in ‘24, and are hopeful they have found a starter in 6’3” 230 lbs. freshman QB Marek Hill. In his four starts at the end of the season, Hill showed the ability to pass (270 passing yards against Trinity) and run (51 yards rushing against Williams), but as young players are apt to do, Hill threw 8 interceptions over those games. The running game was almost non-existent, averaging 1.7 yards per carry and just 332 yards on the season; for context the 9th and 8th teams had 600 and 1,002 yards, respectively. The offense line had nine different starters over the year, which likely did not help the run game or pass protection, where they gave up 22 sacks on the season. WR Carter Jung finished 4th in the league in all-purpose yards, 1st in kickoff return yards, and hit his season highs in catches and yards the last two games.
Defense
Yardage Ranking in League: 5th Overall; 6th Rush and 3rd Pass
Meaningful Stat: Luke Harmon finished in the Top 3 in tackles and interceptions
Preseason Assets & Question
Top Defensive Assets: Luke Harmon and returning players at each level
Key Defensive Question: Can their front seven stop the run and create pressure?
Amherst’s front seven was slightly below average against the run, and finished 8th in the league in sacks with 12. Luke Harmon was not only a top tackler and interceptor in the NESCAC, but also led Amherst in TFLs and sacks. Similar to the offensive line, the defense featured several different starters at each level throughout the season, with some likely related to injuries. The turnover may have been a factor in the Mammoths defense giving up the most points in the league (tied with Bates). LB Ty Kazanowsky finished with 45 tackles, 6 TFLs, 1 sack and 3 QB hurries. The Mammoth field goal kicking was an Achilles heel, making just 4 of 8 attempts on the season.
10-HAMILTON (1-8)
2024 Recap
Hamilton lost its first 8 games, getting beaten soundly by Williams, Trinity and Middlebury, but playing Bowdoin, Wesleyan, Tufts and Colby competitively. Down 14-0 in their final game against Bates, the Continentals rallied to win and avoid a winless campaign. Hamilton had a league worst -134 point differential.
Offense
Yardage Ranking in League: 9th Overall; 9th Rush and 6th Pass
Meaningful Stat: Hamilton scored a league low 99 points or 11 points per game
Preseason Assets & Question
Top Offensive Assets: Strong running game behind experienced O-Line
Key Offensive Question: Who will emerge as a playmaker in passing game?
The running game, which averaged just 2.4 per carry, was a disappointment considering the Continentals’ returning runners and linemen who contributed to an effective ground game in ’23. No Hamilton RB scored a TD in ’24. QB Luke Kurzum completed close to 62% of his passes, but threw 6 TDs to 5 INTs, and had one of the league’s lowest yards per completion averages (9.3). Two Continentals wideouts finished in the Top 10 in receiving yards: Chester Boynton and Lucas Perez-Segnini finished 8th and 9th, respectively, with Boynton finishing 2nd in the league in receptions. The offensive line struggled to create rushing yards and yielded 24 sacks, the 2nd most in the NESCAC. Punt returner Liam Leonard finished 2nd in the league in return yards and average.
Defense
Yardage Ranking in League: 10th Overall; 5th Rush and 10th Pass
Meaningful Stat: Hamilton had just 4 INTs and 5 sacks on the year
Preseason Assets & Question
Top Defensive Assets: Veterans across the defensive line
Key Defensive Question: Can the returning starters at each level improve the overall defense?
The returning starters did not improve the defense, which had major issues stopping the pass. Opponents completed 67.5% of their passes and threw for 23 touchdowns, with the next worst team giving up 17 TDs. DB Kyle Bratcher was impactful: he finished 2nd on the team in tackles (55), and first in INTs (2) and PBUs (8). LB Ian Fratarcangeli led the team in tackles with 58 (finishing 9th in the league) and DL Chase White had 6 TFLs in 7 games. The rush defense ranked 5th in yards but that was likely a function of opponents focusing on an aerial attack; the Continentals yielded 4.1 yards per rush. P Tighe Hoey was the NESCAC’s best punter averaging 44.1 yards per punt, close to 4 yards ahead of the next best punter, and hitting 16 punts over 50 yards.
2024 Game Recaps
Week 1 – September 14, 2024
Week #1 Headlines:
- Wesleyan dominates Middlebury in stunning fashion
- Amherst outlast Bates in a defensive struggle
- Trinity’s D stifles Colby
- Williams blasts Hamilton as McHugh leads impressive air strikes
- Tufts holds off Bowdoin with late pick by Richardson
Wesleyan 43, Middlebury 7
Bottom Line: Wesleyan dominates Middlebury in stunning fashion, using a power running game, chunk plays in the passing game and special teams’ TD in a blowout win
Official links:
Wesleyan: Football Sends a Statement with 43-7 Win at Middlebury – Wesleyan University
Middlebury: Football Drops Season Opener to Wesleyan – Middlebury College
What we learned – Wesleyan:
- The Cardinals pounded the ball, rushing 46 times for 186 yds and a 4.0 yd per carry average
- It was a group effort with RB Tyler Flynn (14 carries), QB Niko Candido (12), RB James McHugh (9) and RB Angel LaRose (9) each contributing; Flynn had 80 yards
- Wesleyan supplemented their strong rush game with chunk plays in the passing game: Candido completed just 10 passes, but gained 268 yards
- The 10 completions were primarily to two wideouts: Chase Wilson had 5 catches for 168 yds and 1 TD while Ricky Eng had 4 catches for 94 yds a TD
- The Cardinals completed passes of 66, 48, 45, 31 and 25 yds on the day
- Special teams provided scoring as well: Dylan Connors blocked, scoped and scored on a 40 yd punt block TD
- Wesley Abraham, who was a league leader for INTs in ’23, had a pick
- LB Ben Carbeau (8 tackles, 1 sack), DB Dylan Connors (6 tackles, 2 TFLs) and DB Nick Donatio (6 tackles, 3 PBUs) shined on defense
What we learned – Middlebury
- Middlebury was outgained 454-285 yds, only had 24 minutes of possession and committed 3 turnovers, while the Cardinals had none
- QB Brian Moran was just 19-39 for 205 yds with 1 TD and 1 INT
- WR Patrick Jamin had a strong game, catching 7-92 yds and WR Ethan Vashel had 3-58 yds
- The Panthers could only convert 2 of 14 3rd down chances, and faltered in the red zone going 1 of 3 with a failed 4th down conversion and a fumble dashing those scoring chances
- Two of the Panthers defensive backs, Rocco Stola and Teddy Daniel, led the team in tackles, combining for 13.
Amherst 19, Bates 7
Bottom Line: Amherst tops Bates in a defensive struggle, capitalizing on special teams’ plays
Official links:
Amherst: Mammoths’ D puts the clamps on the Bobcats, 19-7, in season-opening win – Amherst College
What we learned – Amherst:
- Amherst started junior QB Mason Morrow, who was just 13-24 for 140 yds
- The Mammoth offense could only muster 9 first downs on the day, went 1-13 on 3rd down and their rushing game averaged just 2.0 yds per carry, rushing 25-50 yds
- WR Keith Delaney provided a big play in the passing game, catching a 44 yd pass
- Amherst special teams started each half well: they forced a Bates fumble on the opening kickoff and Carter Jung returned the 2nd half kickoff for 52 yards
- The Mammoths special teams’ unit also blocked a punt
- Amherst’s defense was outstanding, holding Bates to just 60 yards through the air, a mere 2.4 yd per rush and had 6 TFLs
- Luke Harmon picked up where he left off in ’23 – he dominated with 12 tackles, 1 sack, another TFL and 2 INTs
- LB Ty Kazanowsky finished with 10 tackles and a TFL
What we learned – Bates
- The Bobcat passing game really labored – Bates had only 8 completions while having 2 interceptions
- The Bobcats missed WR Sergio Beltran, who did not play, in the pass game
- RB Ryan Lynskey had a solid day, rushing 20-78 yds
- Bates turned from QB Colton Bosselait to Seneca Moore early in the 4th quarter; Moore led a 15-play drive, but it ended in a failed 4th down conversion
- Bates was 1 for 4 on 4th down conversions
- The Bobcat defense held Amherst to less than 200 yards of offense
- LB Ryan Rozich had 9 tackles and 2 TFLs
Trinity 17, Colby 7
Bottom Line: Trinity’s defense stifles Colby and the Bantams’ air attack supplied enough offense for the win
Official links:
Trinity: Football Downs Colby, 17-7, In 2024 Season Opener – Trinity College (bantamsports.com)
Colby: Colby Opens Season with Setback in Hartford – Colby College (colbyathletics.com)
What we learned – Trinity:
- Trinity outgained Colby 401 to 236 and had 27 first downs to only 11 for Colby, but went just 3 for 9 on third down chances and lost a fumble
- QB Zander Zebrowski was an impressive 27-32 for 304 yds with 1 TD and no picks
- The WR trio of Sean Clapp, Matt Laughlin and Nolan O’Brien combined for 17 catches for 218 yds and 1 TD
- The Bantams rushed for 97 yds, but they yielded 3 sacks
- DB Ma-Lyke Davis was impactful – he had 6 tackles, 1 sack, 1 TFL and 3 pass breakups
- LBs John Fiore and Sean Ryan combined for 12 tackles and 4 TFLs
- The Bantams committed 9 penalties for 75 yards
What we learned – Colby:
- QB Miles Drake was just 14 for 30, had 1 INT and was sacked twice
- The Colby running game could not get on track: Keon Smart and Brendan Sawyer combined for just 53 yds
- WR Duke Ferrera had a strong game with 7-94 yds, 1 TD including a 52 yd catch
- The Mules were just 3 for 14 on 3rd down
- DB Brody Rice and LB Dennis Dougherty each had 8 tackles
Williams 42, Hamilton 7
Bottom Line: Williams blasts Hamilton as McHugh leads impressive air strikes and Williams’ defense stymies the Continentals
Official links:
Williams: Ephs Cruise to a 42-7 Opening Weekend Victory Over Hamilton – Williams College
Hamilton: Football drops season opener at Williams, 42-7 – Hamilton College
What we learned – Williams:
- QB Owen McHugh had a great day through the air, going 17-25 for 247 yds and 5 TDs
- Williams dominated Hamilton, outgaining the Continentals 459 to 202 yds
- The Ephs rushed for 212 yards for the game, and averaged just under 5 yds per carry
- Williams converted 7 of 15 3rd conversions and their only 4th down conversion
- 4 different Eph wideouts caught touchdowns, Brady Stahelski caught 4-70 yds
- Williams’ defense held Hamilton to just over 200 yds, only 103 yds passing and had 9 TFLs
- Freshman LB Luke Magnini had 8 tackles and 2 TFLs
What we learned – Hamilton
- Hamilton could not get its offense going – it only had 2 first downs late in 1st half, when they were down 28-0
- QB Luke Kurzum was just 9 for 20 for 91 yds and was sacked twice; he did provide 72 yds rushing
- Hamilton mixed in QB Henry Rubey, but he was not any more effective
- The Continentals offense was without RB Kamau Hopewell and WR Jack Hoag, and was hurt by multiple drops
- WR Chester Boynton was one of the few bright spots, he had 6-83 yds and 1 TD
- After stopping Williams effectively on their first two drives, Hamilton gave up TDs on the next four drives of the first half
- The defense surrendered 4.9 per carry on the ground and 5 TDs through the air
- DB Kyle Bratcher played well in the secondary with 5 tackles and 2 PBUs
Tufts 23, Bowdoin 21
Bottom Line: Tufts holds off Bowdoin with late pick by Richardson
Official links:
Bowdoin: Fourth Quarter Field Goal Lifts Tufts Over Bowdoin Football – Bowdoin College
What we learned – Tufts:
- DB Ty Richardson picked off Bowdoin with under a minute to go and returned it 44 yards to thwart the Polar Bears
- Tufts outgained Bowdoin by over 100 yds, gaining 407 versus Bowdoin’s 273
- QB Michael Berluti threw for 321 yds, but had 2 INTs
- RB Chartellis Reece did not play, but RB Christian Shapiro rushed 23-61 yds and had 2 TDs
- The Jumbos’ WR combination was impressive: Cade Moore caught 6-82 yds and Matt Rios had 5-78 yds
- In addition to his late pick, Ty Richardson had another interception and a TFL
- LB Johnny Ferrelli had 7 tackles, 1 sack and 1 PBU
What we learned – Bowdoin
- The Polar Bears leaned on the run game, rushing 35 times for 145 yds, with QB Robby Long rushing 20-95 yds with 2 TDs
- The pass game was more of a challenge for Long, he only completed 9 passes for 124 yds and threw 2 picks
- WRs Jed Hoggard and Austin Hiscoe combined for just 6 catches
- Bowdoin was only 3 for 15 on 3rd down
- LBs Dan Fiore and Gordon Gozdeck each had 10 tackles
- DL Aidan Ready had a big day: 8 tackles, 2 sacks and a fumble recovery
Week 2- September 21, 2024
Week #2 Headlines:
- Wesleyan tops Tufts in defensive struggle
- Amherst’s three 2nd half touchdowns lead to victory over Hamilton
- Trinity’s D stymies Bates
- Williams’ McHugh’s running and passing holds off Colby
- Middlebury rallies in 2nd half to topple Bowdoin
Wesleyan 20, Tufts 9
Bottom Line: Wesleyan tops Tufts in defensive struggle capitalizing on special team plays and turnovers
Official links:
Wesleyan: Defense Dominates, Leading Football to 20-9 Win over Tufts in Home Opener – Wesleyan University
Tufts: Football Falls At Wesleyan, 20-9 – Tufts University (gotuftsjumbos.com)
What we learned – Wesleyan:
- Wesleyan only had 12 first downs to Tufts’ 18, were outgained by 80 yds (367 to 287), but made big plays on special teams and on 3rd down
- The Cardinals jumped on Tufts early, hitting a 75 yd TD strike from QB Niko Candido to WR Chase Wilson on the first play from scrimmage
- Candido finished with just 7 completions, but spread the ball around, targeting six different receivers on his first 6 attempts of the 2nd half
- The Cardinal used a group approach at running back as well: 3 Cardinal backs combined to rush 24-116 yds (4.8 yd average)
- On defense, Wesleyan held Tufts to just 4 for 17 on 3rd down attempts
- LB Ben Carbeau had 11 tackles and two sacks
- DD Nick Donatio was active: he had 8 tackles, 1 TFL and forced fumble
What we learned – Tufts
- Despite their advantage in yards and first downs, Tufts made a series of mistakes that sunk their chances
- The Jumbos had 1 interception, lost 2 fumbles (including one on a punt), had a punt blocked and missed 2 FGs
- Tufts final three drives of the game ended with a missed FG, a fumbled punt and an interception
- QB Michael Berluti completed just 16 of his 41 passes (39%) and threw a pick
- Berluti threw for 249 yards, with WR Matt Rios catching 3 balls for 103 yds
- Tufts had three RBs have 5 or more carries; their leading rusher was Christian Shapiro, who rushed 13-38 yds
- After the initial 75 yd bomb, Tufts defense held Wesleyan passing offense to just 6 completions on 25 attempts for 77 yds
- LB Jeff Xu finished with 7 tackles and DB Louis Timmins had 3 tackles, an INT and blocked a PAT attempt
Amherst 21, Hamilton 7
Bottom Line: Amherst’s three 2nd half touchdowns lead to victory over Hamilton
Official links:
Amherst: Second-half comeback nets Mammoths 21-7 win at Hamilton – Amherst College
Hamilton: Football scores early in home opener, but Amherst prevails 21-7 – Hamilton College
What we learned – Amherst:
- QB Mason Morrow engineered 3 TD drives after halftime, including back-to-back 7-play TD drives of 75 and 81 yds, respectively, to open the 2nd half
- Morrow threw 22-33 for 206 yds with 2 TDs and 1 INT
- The Mammoths featured two freshman running backs in Demitrius Smith and Zachary Curtin, who combined for 17-99 yds and 1 TD
- WR Owen Gaydos caught 6-42 yds and 1 TD
- Amherst let up a 9-play 75 yd TD drive on the opening drive, but then shut down Hamilton for the rest of the game
- The Mammoth defense limited Hamilton to 1.2 yds per rush
- Ty Kazanowsky and Ethan Burdo each had sacks for Amherst
What we learned – Hamilton
- Hamilton could only muster 200 yards offensively and went 0-3 on 4th down attempts
- The Continentals rushed for 25 times for just 30 yds, with RB Nate Wildman gaining just 17 yds on the ground on 7 carries
- Kurzum threw 19-30 for 170 yds, but took 3 sacks
- WR Chester Boynton had another strong week: he caught 10-95 yds
- RB Kamau Hopewell returned and had a handful of touches, but WR Jack Hoag has not played this season
- The Hamilton defense held Amherst to 2 for 12 on 3rd down chances, but allowed 2 of 3 on 4th down
- DB Kyle Bratcher continues to flash in the secondary having 7 tackles, 1 INT and 1 PBU
Trinity 28, Bates 7
Bottom Line: Trinity’s D limits Bates as their aerial attack is impressive
Official links:
Trinity: Football Handles Bates, 28-7 – Trinity College (bantamsports.com)
Bates: Football hangs with NESCAC power Trinity in home opener – Bates College (gobatesbobcats.com)
What we learned – Trinity:
- QB Zander Zebrowski was efficient again: he went 23-30 for 196 yds and 3 TDs
- The RB tandem of Tyler DiNapoli and Jack Tosone split 20 carries and amassed 126 yds (6.3 per yd average)
- WR Nolan O’Brien caught 7-67 yds and 1 TD, and returned a punt for 37 yds, while fellow WR Sean Clapp caught 5-57 yds and 2 TDs
- The Bantams excelled on special teams, running a fake punt for TD and returning a punt 37 yards to set up a score
- The Trinity secondary was dominant: four different players had interceptions and DB Ma-Lyke Davis returned one pick for 20 yds
- Jose Ruiz had 8 tackles with 0.5 sack, and the Bantam front seven was able to generate 3 sacks
What we learned – Bates:
- RB Ryan Lynskey rushed 30 times for 102 yards and a touchdown
- The Bobcats could not find any success in the passing game: Bates had just 4 completions against 4 interceptions
- The Bobcats tried three QBs, but could only go 4-16 for 52 yards
- Bates was once again without their top WR from ’23, Sergio Beltran
- Grad student TE Steven Guerrette had two grabs for 52 yards, including a 42 yd catch
- LB Ryan Rozich had 10 tackles for Bates
- Freshman DB Marquez Narbaez-Estrada was active: he finished with 6 tackles, 1 TFL and 2 pass breakups
Williams 24, Colby 19
Bottom Line: Eph QB McHugh’s running and passing holds off Colby
Official links:
Williams: Ephs Hold Off Late Colby Charge in 24-19 Victory – Williams College
Colby: Football Takes it to the Wire Against Williams on Homecoming – Colby College (colbyathletics.com)
What we learned – Williams:
- QB Owen McHugh was incredibly accurate, throwing 16-18 for 192 yds and 1 TD and he also led the team in rushing: he ran 14-51 yds and 2 TDs
- 9 different Ephs caught passes, with no player catching more than 3 passes; WR Luke Bobo caught 3-50 yds
- RB Mario Fischetti chipped in as well, rushing 17-49 yds
- Williams started the 4th quarter with a 10 play, 6-minute drive which ended with a FG and stretched the lead to 12 points
- DB Holden Gering had 9 tackles and 4 PBUs
- LB Ethan Scott had 4 tackles, 1 sack, 1 TFL and a QB hurry
What we learned – Colby
- Colby outgained Williams (361 to 286), had more first downs (27-19) but had two key penalties to keep Eph drives alive and also missed two PAT attempts (bad snap and missed 2 pointer)
- QB Miles Drake went 21-39 for 227 yds with 2 TDs, but threw a pick at the end zone on the Mules’ final drive
- RB Keon Smart rushed 17-80 yds and TE Atticus Duncan has 2 TD grabs
- Freshman WR Jack Nye had 4-71 yds and WRs Jack Sawyer and Duke Ferrara combined for 7-89 yds
- LB Julian Young continued to be impactful: he had 11 tackles and 2 TFLs
- Fellow LB Sebastian Romain had 7 tackles and 2 sacks
Middlebury 39, Bowdoin 15
Bottom Line: Middlebury rallies in 2nd half to topple Bowdoin
Official links:
Middlebury: Football Scores 32 Unanswered Points To Come From Behind For 39-15 Win At Bowdoin – Middlebury College
Bowdoin: Big Second Half Lifts Middlebury Past Bowdoin in Football Home Opener – Bowdoin College
What we learned – Middlebury:
- Down to Bowdoin 15-7 in the 3rd quarter, Middlebury scored 4 TDs and a FG, while their defense blanked the Polar Bears down the stretch
- QB Brian Moran was solid: he went 14-31 for 196 yds and 3 TDs; he did not have any picks
- The RB by committee of Carter Stockwell, Cody Weitzman and Connor McClellan combined for an impactful 19-149 yds (avg of 7.8 yds per carry) and 1 TD
- WR Patrick Jamin once again shined: he caught 5-100 yds and fellow WR Michael Ahonen had 7-90 yds and 1 TD
- Defensive line standouts Dave Filias and Tomas Kenary combined for 12 tackles and 2.5 sacks on the day
- DB Rocca Stola had 7 tackles and an interception which he returned for 22 yds
What we learned – Bowdoin
- The Polar Bear offense was 3 of 14 on 3rd down, had 2 interceptions, was sacked 5 times and missed a FG
- The Polar Bears featured both Robbie Long and Michael Wolfendale at QB – overall they were 20-30 for 171 yds
- Long and Wolfendale both ran almost as much as they passed – they combined to rush 28 times versus attempting 30 passes.
- The Bowdoin defense limited Middlebury early: the Panthers’ first 5 drives they went 3 and out each time and netted negative 15 yds. On one of those drives, Bowdoin forced a safety
- Bowdoin was flagged for 7 penalties for 54 yds; Middlebury had none
- LB Koy Price was dominant: he had 6 tackles, 1.5 sacks, 1 TFL, 1 forced fumble and made the play to get the safety
Week 3 – September 28, 2024
Week #3 Headlines:
- Trinity and O’Brien bury Williams after slow start
- Bates upsets Wesleyan, capitalizing on Cardinal errors
- Bowdoin holds off Hamilton with strong late defense
- Tufts shuts out Amherst in a dominating effort
- Middlebury’s 2nd half TDs topple Colby
Trinity 45, Williams 14
Bottom Line: After a slow start, Trinity and O’Brien accelerate to bury Williams
Official links:
Trinity: 45 Unanswered Points Leads Football Past Williams – Trinity College (bantamsports.com)
Williams: Ephs Fall at Trinity, 45-14 – Williams College
What we learned – Trinity:
- Trinity was down 14-0 in the 2nd quarter and then scored 45 unanswered points
- The Bantams started the game with 5 and 4 play drives that ended with punts, and then scored on the next 6 drives (5 TDs and a field goal)
- QB Zander Zebrowski was 20-29 for 366 yds (18.3 yds per completion), threw for 4 TDs and had no picks
- WR Nolan O’Brien had a great game: he caught 9-212 yds and 3 TDs
- RB Tyler DiNapoli had a combined 108 yds of offense with 59 yds rushing and 49 yds receiving
- DB Charlie Cooper had a 52 yd pick six and 6 tackles
What we learned – Williams:
- It started well for the Ephs, with two 1st quarter drives of 11 plays that both resulted in TDs
- After generating 232 yds in the first half, Williams could only muster 72 yds in the 2nd half on just 20 plays
- QB Owen McHugh was 14-21 for 168 yds and 1 INT; he was sacked 4 times
- RBs Jon Oris and Mario Fischetti spilt 24 carries and gained 107 yds for a 4.5 yd per carry average
- WR Jack Kennedy led all Williams receivers going 7-58 yds
- Freshman LB Luke Mangini was once again active: he had 9 tackles
Bates 24, Wesleyan 13
Bottom Line: Bates capitalizes on Cardinal errors to break through with upset win
Official links:
Wesleyan: Mistakes Prove Costly in Football’s 24-13 Loss to Bates – Wesleyan University
What we learned – Bates:
- Bates won for the first time since Week #9 of the ’22 season, and snapped a 17-game losing streak to Wesleyan
- The Bobcats did not throw much, but were very effective when they did: QB Colton Bosselait was 7-7 for 137 yds and 1 TD
- Sophomore WR Ryan Gleason caught 5-119 yds and 1 TD; the rest of the team had 18 yds receiving
- RB Ryan Lynskey continued to be productive – he finished 23-121 yds (5.3 per carry average) and 2 TDs
- Bates converted 50% of their 3rd down chances going 7-14
- DB Jack Morrison had 9 tackles, 0.5 TFL and 2 PBUs
What we learned – Wesleyan:
- The Cardinals outgained Bates by over 100 yds (379-272) and had 23 first downs to just 9 Bates, but made costly mistakes
- Wesleyan had two fumbles, a missed FG on a bad snap and failed to convert on two other 4th down attempts, which ended 5 different drives
- QB Niko Candido went 20-40 for 285 yds and 1 TD, including a 87 TD strike to WR Chase Wilson
- RB Tyler Flynn rushed 17-70 yds, but overall Wesleyan only averaged 2.8 yds per carry
- DL Jason Villano had 6 tackles and 3 TFLs and LBs Adam Elsais and Ben Carbeau each had 9 tackles
Bowdoin 21, Hamilton 14
Bottom Line: Bowdoin holds off Hamilton with strong late defense
Official links:
Bowdoin: Long and Price Lead Bowdoin to Homecoming Football Win Over Hamilton – Bowdoin College
Hamilton: Football edged 28-21 at Bowdoin, Rubey ’26 accounts for two TDs – Hamilton College
What we learned – Bowdoin:
- QB Robbie Long had a strong day going 17-29 for 283 yds and 3 TDs and led the Polar Bears with 40 yds rushing
- The WR trio of Jed Hoggard, Slade Postemski and Austin Hiscoe provided big plays: they had 13-198 yds and 3 TDs. They averaged 15.2 yds per catch
- Bowdoin clamped down on Hamilton late in the game, limiting the Continentals to 24 yards on 21 plays on their final 4 drives
- DL/LB Koy Price continues to wreak havoc: he had a pick six, 2 sacks, 0.5 TFLs and 4 tackles
- LB Ferris Collins had 7 tackles, 1 INT and 1 PBU
What we learned – Hamilton:
- Hamilton matched Bowdoin in first downs, but fell short in large part due to 2 INTs, whereas Bowdoin had no turnovers
- QB Luke Kurzum who threw a TD and pick six, and was replaced by Henry Rubey in the 2nd quarter
- QB Rubey went 20-33 for 179 – he had 1 passing TD, 1 rushing TD and 1 INT
- WR Lucas Perez-Segnini caught 7-110 yds and Chester Boynton had 9-67 yds; they both caught 1 TD
- RB Nate Wildman had a 47 yd run but his other eight carries resulted in 9 yds
- DE Aidan Held had 2 sacks and 3 tackles
Tufts 25, Amherst 0
Bottom Line: Tufts shuts out Amherst in a dominating effort
Official links:
Tufts: Defense Dominates As Football Blanks Amherst 25-0 – Tufts University (gotuftsjumbos.com)
Amherst: Mammoths fall to Tufts on the road, 25-0 – Amherst College
What we learned – Tufts:
- QB Michael Berluti was a true dual treat – he rushed for 59 yds and 2 TDs and threw for 230 yds and another score
- Three Tufts RBs Christian Shapiro, Khallid Calhoun and Aundre Smith combined for 32-144 yds, sporting a 4.5 per carry
- WR Cade Moore was impressive going 5-67 and 1 TD
- The Jumbos converted 8 of 15 3rd down chances and controlled the ball for over 39 minutes
- The Jumbo defense was dominant, limiting Amherst to less than 120 yds in total offense
- LB Will Duncanson made big plays: he had 2 INTs and 0.5 sacks to go with his 4 tackles
What we learned – Amherst:
- The Mammoths struggled mightily on offense: they could only muster 119 yds and 8 first downs
- Of Amherst’s 10 drives for the game, only 2 went for more than 4 plays
- The running game could not get any traction, they rushed for just 25 yds at 1.5 yds per carry
- The Mammoths turned to QB John Collier late in the 3rd quarter, but between he and starter Mason Morrow, they completed just 37% of their passes (10 for 27), had less than 100 yds through the air (94) and threw 3 interceptions
- LB Kevin Agnew had 7 tackles and fumble recovery while DB Luke Harmon had 6 tackles and 1 INT
Middlebury 24, Colby 16
Bottom Line: Middlebury’s 2nd half TDs topple Colby
Official links:
Middlebury: Big Second Half Lifts Football Past Colby 24-16 In 60th Meeting – Middlebury College
Colby: Mules Play Even First Half, Panthers Slip Away Late – Colby College (colbyathletics.com)
What we learned – Middlebury:
- QB Brian Moran tossed two 2nd half TDs to put the game out of Colby’s reach
- Moran finished 15-28 for 248 yds and 2 TDs (he had 1 INT)
- The Panthers had two WRs have over 100 yds receiving: Patrick Jamin had 4-113 yds with 2 TDs and Ethan Vashel had 5-103 yds and 1 TD
- Backup QB Aidan Moss led two series in the 2nd quarter, and hit a 27 yd TD pass to Jamin
- Middlebury spread 29 carries among 4 RBs, but they rushed for just 29-82 yds (2.8 yd avg per carry)
- DB Charlie Grant had 11 tackles, 1 TFL and 1 PBU
What we learned – Colby:
- Colby slightly outgained Middlebury on the day, but had one more turnover, which was a critical 4th quarter fumble at the Middlebury 16
- RB Keon Smart was very effective rushing 17-84 yds and catching 6-82 – he was the Mules’ leading rusher and the leading receiver, generating 166 yds of total offense
- The Mules played two QBs, Miles Drake and Declan McNamara: Drake went 24-45 for 214 yds and McNamara passed for 54 yds and rushed for 27 yds
- WR Duke Ferrara caught 10-79 yds
- Colby had just 1 first down in their first 7 drives of the 2nd half, and scored a TD on the last play of the game
- LB Sebastian Romain had 8 tackles and 0.5 sacks, and the DL duo of Andrew Hart and Jack Mullen combined for 14 tackles, 3.5 sacks and 2 TFLs
Week 4 – October 5, 2024
Week #4 Headlines:
- Trinity surges past Tufts in 2nd half
- Williams handles Bowdoin with balanced attack
- Wilson keys Wesleyan comeback over Hamilton
- Middlebury holds off Amherst behind Moran’s 3 TDs
- Drake leads Colby to a tight CBB win over Bates
Trinity 42, Tufts 24
Bottom Line: Trinity surges past Tufts in 2nd half
Official links:
Trinity: Football Outlasts Tufts, 42-24 – Trinity College (bantamsports.com)
Tufts: Second Half Pushes Trinity Past Football Saturday, 42-24 – Tufts University (gotuftsjumbos.com)
What we learned – Trinity:
- Trinity was down 24-21 in the 3rd quarter, and then strung together three touchdown drives of 7, 13 and 11 plays to put away the Jumbos
- QB Zander Zebrowski went 24-28 for 294 yds and 2 TDS and no picks and also ran 15-67 yds and 1 TD
- RB Tyler DiNapoli rushed 19-75 yds and 2 TDs and had 37 yds receiving
- The Bantam WR trio of Clapp, O’Brien and Laughlin combined to catch 14-216 yds and 2 TDs
- DB Dan Calderon blocked a Tufts punt in the 3rd quarter, which led to a TD drive; the Bantams scored on all 2nd half drives before taking 2 knees to close out the game
- DB Jason Irizarry had 6 tackles and a forced fumble
What we learned – Tufts:
- Tufts could not keep pace with Trinity in the 2nd half, as the Jumbos had consecutive 3 and outs which netted negative 3 and negative 2 yds each
- QB Michael Berluti threw 21-33 for 278 yds and 3 TDs
- WR Cade Moore was stellar, catching 6-116 yds and 2 TDs
- The running game could only muster 76 yds
- Tufts was just 2-9 on 3rd down and 1-2 on 4th down
- LB Jeff Xu had 10 tackles 0.5 sacks, 0.5 TFL and recovered a fumble
Williams 34, Bowdoin 14
Bottom Line: Williams handles Bowdoin with balanced attack
Official links:
Williams: Ephs Surge in the Second Half to a 34-14 Win Over Bowdoin – Williams College
Bowdoin: Second Half Surge Sinks Football at Williams – Bowdoin College
What we learned – Williams:
- RB Mario Fischetti had two long TD runs of 68 and 80 yds, finishing with 9-177 yds
- QB Owen McHugh threw 17-24 and 244 yds, hitting 3 TDs against 1 INT
- WR Cameron Lee had 2 TD receptions catching 4-80 yds
- Williams was balanced: they rushed for 236 yds and passed for 244 yds
- The Eph defense held Bowdoin to just 11-30 passing for 132 yds and picked off Bowdoin twice
- Williams lost two fumbles and had 10 penalties for 88 yds
- DB Holden Gering had 2 INTs, 4 tackles and 1 BPU
What we learned – Bowdoin:
- In the first half, Bowdoin ‘s offense had 5 drives of 3, 3, 3, 4 and 5 plays, as well as 3 drives that ended in 2 INTs and a failed 4th down conversion
- QB Robbie Long was just 9-24 for 103 yds and a pick and Bowdoin mixed in Michael Wolfendale in the 3rd quarter who threw 2-6 for 29 yds and 1 TD and 1 INT
- Long and Wolfendale were the top Polar Bear rushers combining to rush for 25-84 yds
- WR Jed Hoggard caught 5-94 yds and 1 TD
- The Polar Bears were 2-13 on 3rd down and 0-2 on 4th down
- DL/LB Koy Price continues to make game changing plays: he had a 15 yd fumble recovery for a score
Wesleyan 19, Hamilton 7
Bottom Line: Wilson keys Wesleyan comeback over Hamilton
Official links:
Hamilton: Football gives up 19 points in fourth quarter in loss to Wesleyan – Hamilton College
What we learned – Wesleyan:
- Wesleyan offense didn’t score on its first six drives, with two ending in fumbles
- The Cardinals were down 7-0 in the 4th quarter and rallied to score 19 unanswered points
- WR Chase Wilson had a huge game: he caught 8-109 yds and 2 TDs
- QB Niko Candido threw 20-27 for 291 yds, 2 TDs and 0 INTs
- Wesleyan ran for just 69 yds and only averaged 2.1 per carry
- DB Dylan Connors had 9 tackles, 1 sack, 1 TFL and 2 PBUs
What we learned – Hamilton:
- Tied 7-7 in the 4th, Hamilton had a costly turnover on an errant backward swing pass leading to 49 yd TD scoop and score
- The Continentals had just 37 yds rushing, with their RBs rushing just 7 times for negative 7 yds
- Hamilton split QB snaps between Henry Rubey and Luke Kurzum; they were the team’s top two rushers and combined for 10-45 yds
- Kurzum went 15-22 for 144 yds and Rubey tossed a TD pass
- WR Chester Boynton caught 10-67 yds
- DB Kyle Bratcher continued to play well: he had 8 tackles and 2 PBUs
Middlebury 29, Amherst 21
Bottom Line: Middlebury holds off Amherst behind Moran’s 3 TDs
Official links:
Middlebury: Football Holds Off Amherst 29-21 For Third-Straight Win – Middlebury College
Amherst: Panthers hold off Mammoths for 29-21 victory – Amherst College
What we learned – Middlebury:
- The Panthers jumped out to a 20-0 and held on to top Amherst
- Middlebury scored on their first 4 drives and then only 1 more time on their next 8 drives
- QB Brian Moran threw 22-38 for 233 yds, 3 TDs and 0 INTs
- Middlebury rushed for 108 yds, led by RB Carter Stockwell who ran 14-60 yds
- WR Patrick Jamin had 2 TDs, and he, Mike Ahonen and Ethan Vashel combined catching 18-204 yds
- The Panthers held Amherst to 17 yds rushing and picked off the Mammoths 4 times
- The DL duo of Tomas Kenary and Dave Filias combined for 3 sacks; Filias added 5 tackles
What we learned – Amherst:
- QB Mason Morrow threw 24-39 for 1 TD but had 4 INTs and was sacked 4 times
- WR Owen Gaydos caught 7-105 yds and WR Sam Gerber added 6-63 yds 1 TD
- In the 1st half, Amherst had 6 drives – 3 went for 10 yards on 10 plays, the other 3 ended in INTs
- The rushing game was a struggle: RB Demitrius Smith had 7-31 yds
- The Mammoths were able to score 3 TDs in the 2nd half and matched Middlebury on first downs, 19 for Amherst versus 20 for the Panthers, but could not overcome the turnovers
- DB Luke Harmon had 11 tackles and 1 BPU
Colby 28, Bates 26
Bottom Line: Drake leads Colby to a tight CBB win over Bates
Official links:
Bates: Football loses 28-26 heartbreaker to Colby – Bates College (gobatesbobcats.com)
What we learned – Colby:
- QB Miles Drake had 225 yds passing and rushed 11-110 yds
- Drake threw 21-24 for 2 TDs and 1 INT; he had a 52 yd run
- WR Jack Nye caught 6-112 yds and 1 TD
- RB Keon Smart rushed 25-154 yds and had 35 yds receiving
- Colby outgained Bates 499-344 yds, but had 8 penalties for 97 yds
- DB Trevor Smith and LB Sebastian Romain each had 9 tackles and combined for 1.5 TFLs
What we learned – Bates:
- Bates rushed for 49-277 yds (averaged 5.7 per carry)
- WR Sergio Beltran returned to being impactful: he rushed 11-102 yds and caught 3-21 yds
- QB Colton Bosselait and Seneca Moore rushed a combined 15-102 yds
- Bates QBs were less effective passing: they went 6-11 for just 67 yds
- The Bobcats failed a 2-point conversion and also came up one yard short on a 4th down play at the Colby 7 yd line
- DB Michael Spencer had 10 tackles and 1 TFL
Week 5 – October 12, 2024
Week #5 Headlines:
- Middlebury outlasts Williams to win in OT
- Wesleyan returns Colby’s OT fumble for TD to win
- Bowdoin steamrolls Amherst behind strong D
- Trinity dominates Hamilton behind Zebrowski
- Tufts blasts Bates under the lights in Lewiston
Middlebury 32, Williams 29 (OT)
Bottom Line: Middlebury outlasts Williams to win in OT
Official links:
Middlebury: Middlebury Edges Williams 32-29 In Overtime Thriller – Middlebury College
Williams: Ephs Lose 32-29 in Overtime at Middlebury – Williams College
What we learned – Middlebury:
- PK Zach Levy hit a game tying FG with 13 seconds in the game, and RB Connor McClellan ran for the game winning TD in OT
- The game was very even: there were 5 lead changes, and the yardage was Middlebury’s 398 to Williams’ 391 yds
- RB Connor McClellan rushed 11-95 yds and 3 TDs
- QB Brian Moran threw 21-27 for 233 yds with 1 TD
- WRs Ethan Vashel and Patrick Jamin combined to catch 12-173 yds and 1 TD
- The Panther D held Williams to just a one yd run in OT on a critical 3rd and 3 from the Middlebury 6 yd line, which held Williams to an OT FG
- DB Charlie Ozolin had 2 INTs and Matt Shaw had 10 tackles, 1 sack and 2 QB hurries
What we learned – Williams:
- Williams played Middlebury close (had 23 1st downs to Middlebury’s 21), but had a bad punt snap that led to a Panther safety, a failed on a 4th down conversion, threw 2 INTs and had a critical penalty on defense that kept a Middlebury drive alive
- RB Mario Fischetti rushed 19-131 yds for 1 TD
- WR Cameron Lee caught 4-66 yds
- PK Ivan Shuran was 5-5 on FGs
- QB Owen McHugh threw 17-31 for 190 yds and 1 TD but had 2 INTs and was sacked three times
- LB Calvin Pedatella had 14 tackles and 0.5 TFL
Wesleyan 23, Colby 17 (OT)
Bottom Line: Wesleyan returns Colby’s OT fumble for TD to win
Official links:
Colby: Wesleyan Slips Past Football in Overtime – Colby College (colbyathletics.com)
What we learned – Wesleyan:
- LB Jake Edwards returned a Colby fumble in OT from the Cardinal 12 yd line 88 yards for a game winning TD
- Wesleyan had 23 1st downs to Colby’s 9, outgained the Mules 246 to 118 yds and possessed the ball for close to 37 minutes
- The Mules stayed in the game in part due to Wesleyan throwing an interception, going 0-2 on 4th down and having two fumbles (the Cardinals fumbled 7 times but only lost 2), including one that Colby returned 90 yds for a TD
- WR Chase Wilson continues to be a dominant force: he caught 8-96 yds and 1 TD
- QB Niko Candido went 22-40 for 225 yds with 1 TD and 1 INT
- The Cardinal RBs combined for just 47 yds on 21 carries
- LB Ben Carbeau and DB Dylan Connors each had 8 tackles and 2 TFLs
What we learned – Colby:
- QB Miles Drake was just 11-24 for 74 yds and 1 TD; the Mules averaged just 6.7 yds per completion
- Colby could only muster 118 yds of offense in the game and had 8 drives of four plays or less
- Keon Smart rushed 18-55 yds, with no other Mule player with more than 23 yds rushing or receiving
- Drake’s fumble in OT came on 2nd and goal from the 5 yd line turning a good TD chance for Colby into a loss
- LB Julian Young had a monster game: 15 tackles, 1.5 sacks and 2 QB hurries
Bowdoin 35, Amherst 7
Bottom Line: Bowdoin steamrolls Amherst behind strong D
Official links:
Bowdoin: Polar Bears Overwhelm Mammoths, Earn First Win at Amherst Since 2005 – Bowdoin College
Amherst: Polar Bears take bite out of Mammoths, 35-7 – Amherst College
What we learned – Bowdoin:
- Bowdoin limited Amherst to a net 1 yd rushing and sacked Amherst 7 times
- LB Ferris Collins had a 55 yd return on a pick 6
- The Polar Bears were 6 for 13 on 3rd down and 1-1 on 4th down conversions
- Bowdoin played 2 QBs again: QB Michael Wolfendale threw 9-16 for 74 yds with 1 TD and 2 INTs; he led the team in rushing with 55 yds
- QB Robbie Long had 57 yds between throwing and running and had 2 TDs, one through the air and one on the ground
- DL/LB Koy Price was again disruptive: 6 tackles, 1.5 sacks, 2 other TFLs and 2 QB hurries
What we learned – Amherst:
- The Mammoths struggled once again on offense going just 4-15 on 3rd down, 0-5 on 4th down and 0-2 in the red zone
- QB Mason Morrow went 13-27 for 101 yds but had the pick 6
- Amherst tried freshman QB Marek Hill in spots – he was 3-10 for 77 yds but had a 52 yd TD strike
- Mammoth RBs combined for 8-26 yds
- WR Carter Jung caught 3-72 yds and 1 TD
- LB Damian Carrano had 10 tackles and 1 TFL
Trinity 31, Hamilton 7
Bottom Line: Trinity dominates Hamilton behind Zebrowski
Official links:
Trinity: Football Muscles Past Hamilton, 31-7 – Trinity College (bantamsports.com)
Hamilton: Football scores on first drive but is tripped up at Trinity, 31-7 – Hamilton College
What we learned – Trinity:
- Trinity outgained Hamilton 388 to 165 in yds
- After punting on their first 3 possessions, the Bantams scored on 5 of their next 6 possessions including 4 TDs
- QB Zander Zebrowski threw 18-25 for 269 yds, 4 TDs and led the team in rushing with 37 yds
- WR Nolan O’Brien continued to be explosive: he caught 5-101 yds and 2 TDs
- The Trinity D held Hamilton to 2.3 yds per rush
- LB Ethan Krauss has 8 tackles and DB Jason Irizarry had 4 tackles, 1 TFL and 1 INT
What we learned – Hamilton:
- The Continentals scored on their opening possession, but never scored again: in the 2nd half they had 8 drives that encompassed 26 plays and yielded just 28 yds
- Hamilton played two QBs, Luke Kurzum and Henry Rubey, but they combined for 17-35 for 97 yds; they averaged just 5.7 yds per completion
- The Continentals had 1 fumble at the Trinity 11 yd line and 2 Kurzum interceptions; Trinity did not have any turnovers
- Freshman RB Alastair Orr and RB Nate Wildman combined to rush 18-68 yds
- WR Luis Perez-Segnini caught 5-43 yds
- DB Kyle Bratcher had 10 tackles
Tufts 45, Bates 22
Bottom Line: Tufts blast Bates under the lights in Lewiston
Official links:
Tufts: Rushing Attack Leads Jumbo Football Past Bates, 45-22 – Tufts University (gotuftsjumbos.com)
Bates: Football can’t slow down Tufts in 45-22 loss – Bates College (gobatesbobcats.com)
What we learned – Tufts:
- Tufts jumped out to an early lead, scoring on 4 of their first 5 drives and 7 of their 10 drives in the game
- QB Michael Berluti threw 15-21 for 138 yds and 1 TD and ran 8-49 yds and another score
- Berluti led an efficient offense: the Jumbos went 6-10 on 3rd down, 1-1 for 4th down and 6-6 in the red zone
- Tufts ran 43-211 yds (4.9 per carry average) with RB Christian Shapiro leading the team running 26-107 yds and 3 TDs
- WR Cade Moore caught 6-62 yds and 1 TD
- DB Henry Ferrelli had 7 tackles on defense
What we learned – Bates:
- The Bobcats rushed 39-162 yds, a 4.2 average per rush
- RB Ryan Lynskey was again the main man on the ground: he rushed 19-74 yds and 1 TD
- The passing game only generated 5 completions (on 14 attempts) with 1 INT
- WR Sergio Beltran was a running and receiving threat for a 2nd game: he caught 3-43 yds and 1 TD and rushed for 6-36 yds
- Bates played 2 QBs, Colton Bosselait and Seneca Moore – they attempted 14 passes and rushed 11 times
- DB Michael Spencer and LB Ryan Rozich each had 10 tackles
Week 6 – October 19, 2024
Week #6 Headlines:
Headlines:
- Middlebury’s late TD catch topples Trinity
- Williams staves off Bates
- Colby blasts Amherst
- Wesleyan holds off Bowdoin in defensive struggle
- Tufts strikes early and tops Hamilton
Middlebury 24, Trinity 21
Bottom Line: Middlebury’s late TD catch topples Trinity
Official links:
Middlebury: Football Snaps Trinity’s Unbeaten Streak With Last-Minute Touchdown – Middlebury College
Trinity: Fourth Quarter Surge Leads Middlebury Past Football – Trinity College
What we learned – Middlebury:
- QB Brian Moran hit WR Mike Ahonen on a 9 yd TD pass with 21 seconds to play to take the lead and the win
- The game winning drive was an 11 play 71-yard drive that included the Panthers converting on 4th and 1
- Middlebury outgained Trinity in yards gained 462 to 351
- QB Brian Moran went 21-41 for 313 yds with 3 TDs and 1 INT
- Freshman WR Jeremy Kiefer caught 4-104 yds, and the Panther WR trio of Patrick Jamin, Ethan Vashel and Mike Ahonen combined to catch 13-150 yds
- Middlebury spread 28 carries among 4 RBs, rushing for 108 yds (3.9 yd avg per carry)
- DL Dave Filias led the team with 6 tackles and had a sack; fellow DL Tomas Kenary had 1 sack and 5 QB hurries
What we learned – Trinity:
- The game was very close: both teams had 22 1st downs, and both held the ball for 30 minutes exactly
- Trinity did not score in the 2nd half, with a fumble and failed 4th and 1 conversion ending drives
- On their last 3 drives, the Bantams could only get one 1st down
- QB Zander Zebrowski was 19-37 for 221 yds with 2 TDs and no picks
- WR Nolan O’Brien had another strong game: he caught 7-92 yds and 1 TD
- RB Tyler DiNapoli rushed 15-93 yds and had 33 receiving yds
- LB Ethan Krauss had 13 tackles and 1 QB hurry, and DE Jordan Atkinson had 8 tackles, 2 sacks and 3 QB hurries
Williams 24, Bates 21
Bottom Line: Williams staves off Bates
Official links:
Williams: Williams Holds Back Triple-Option Bates to Win 24-21 – Williams College
Bates: Football falls just short in 24-21 loss at Williams – Bates College
What we learned – Williams:
- The Ephs scored on back-to-back drives in the 2nd quarter, and held off Bates the balance of the game
- QB Owen McHugh passed 21-32 for 141 yds and rushed for 56 yds
- RB Mario Fischetti was held in check, he rushed 12-40 yds
- WR Jack Kennedy had a big day, catching 8-64 yds
- PK Ivan Shuran connected on a 47 yd FG, the longest FG made this year in the NESCAC
- WR/DB Holden Gering had an impact on offense (2 catches for 6 yds) and on defense where he had 7 tackles and 2 PBUs
- Three freshman defenders, LB Luke Mangini, LB Zakkai Moore and DB Andrew Kreakie combined for 20 tackles
What we learned – Bates:
- Bates outgained Williams 313 yds to 265 yds, but went 0-2 on 4th down, gave up 2 sacks, had 10 penalties for 92 yds and had a 25 yd and a 29 yd punt
- The Bobcats rushed 42 times for 198 yds (4.7 yd average) on the day with league leading rusher RB Ryan Lynskey running 20-126 yds
- QB Colton Bosselait threw 10-21 for 115 yds but had 2 TDs
- WR Sergio Beltran rushed for 43 yds and 1 TD and added 16 receiving yds
- LB Matt Juneau had 10 tackles, and fellow LB Ryan Rozich had 9 tackles with 2 TFLs
Colby 38, Amherst 7
Bottom Line: Colby blasts Amherst
Official links:
Colby: Football Upends Amherst 38-7 – Colby College
Amherst: Mules overpower Mammoths with strong offensive performance, 38-7 – Amherst College
What we learned – Colby:
- The Mules outgained Amherst 372 to 131 yards, held the ball close to 36 minutes, went 9-16 on 3rd down and 5-5 in the red zone
- After their first drive, Colby scored on their next 5 drives including 4 TDs
- QB Miles Drake threw 19-28 for 236 yds and 4 TDs
- 4 Mule players had a TD reception including WR Duke Ferrera who caught 5-58 yds
- RB Keon Smart had 99 yds between rushing (68 yds) and receiving (31 yds)
- LB Julian Young had 10 tackles, 1 sack and 1 TFL
What we learned – Amherst:
- The Mammoths continue to struggle mightily on offense: they had negative 3 yards rushing
- Amherst running backs rushed 6-13 yds
- The Mammoths went 0-11 on 3rd down and had 3 plays or less on 9 of their 11 drives
- Freshman QB Marek Hill got the start, and went 19-29 for 134 yds with 1 TD and 1 INT; he was sacked 3 times
- WR Carter Jung caught 6-37 yds
- LB Ty Kazanowsky had 9 tackles and 1 QB hurry while DB/LB Luke Harmon had 6 tackles, 1 TFL and 2 PBUs
Wesleyan 17, Bowdoin 14
Bottom Line: Wesleyan holds off Bowdoin in defensive struggle
Official links:
Wesleyan: McHugh Scores Twice, Football Holds Off Bowdoin for 17-14 Win – Wesleyan University
Bowdoin: Late Rally Comes Up Short as Football Falls to Wesleyan – Bowdoin College
What we learned – Wesleyan:
- The game was very even: Wesleyan was outgained by Bowdoin by just one yard (250 to 251)
- The Cardinal defense held the Polar Bears to 3-12 on 3rd down and 0 for 2 on 4th down
- Up 3 on their final drive, Wesleyan converted a critical 1st down behind a 14 yd pass to WR Chase Wilson and a 5-yard RB James McHugh run on 4th and 1, which allowed the Cardinals to run out the clock
- McHugh rushed 13-72 yds and 2 TDs and WR Chase Wilson caught 4-61 yds
- QB Niko Candido went just 10-20 for 153 yds and was sacked 8 times
- LB Jake Edwards had 7 tackles and LB Ben Carbeau had 4 tackles and 2.5 TFLs
What we learned – Bowdoin:
- The Polar Bears matched Wesleyan’s offense and had 2 more first downs, but went 0-2 on 4th down
- Down 3 and on the Wesleyan 39 on their final drive, Bowdoin had a dropped pass on 3rd down and could not convert on 4th down
- The two Polar Bear QBs, Robbie Long and Michael Wolfendale struggled with the pass game; they combined for just 9 completions on 25 attempts and had 1 INT
- RB Luke Watson was the team’s leading rusher and receiver – he rushed 11-41 yds and caught 3-80 yds
- DL/LB Koy Price once again wreaked havoc: he had 5 tackles and 2.5 sacks
- 8 different Polar Bears contributed to a sack
Tufts 20, Hamilton 13
Bottom Line: Tufts strikes early and tops Hamilton
Official links:
Tufts: Jumbo Football Holds Off Hamilton For 20-13 Victory – Tufts University
Hamilton: Football tripped up at Tufts, Velardo ’27 boots two field goals – Hamilton College
What we learned – Tufts:
- Tufts jumped out early with an opening 52 yd kickoff return by RB Aundre Smith and three plays later, hitting a 46 yd TD pass to WR Matt Rios
- Tufts never trailed in the game and went 6-12 on 3rd down
- QB Michael Berluti threw 23-31 for 274 yds and 1 TD while rushing for 43 yds
- Tufts rushed 26-114 yds (4.4 per carry) with Smith adding a 36 yd run to his KO return
- WRs Cade Moore, Henry Fleckner and C.J. Burton combined to catch 13-143 yds
- DB Henry Ferrelli was all over the field: he had 10 tackles, 1 TFL, 1 forced fumble, 1 PBU and 1 QB hurry
What we learned – Hamilton:
- Hamilton had more first downs (21 to 19) and time of possession (35 mins to 25 mins) than Tufts, but went just 4 of 14 on 3rd down, 2 of 4 on 4th down and yielded 4 sacks
- QB Luke Kurzum threw 28-39 for 283 yds – he had 1 passing TD and added 18 yds rushing
- WR Ezra Lombardi caught 4-107 yds and 1 TD
- The Continental WR duo of Lucas Perez-Segnini and Chester Boynton combined to catch 17-132 yds
- RB Nate Wildman rushed 9-38 yds
- LB Nick Hoff had 5 tackles and 1 TFL
Week 7 – October 26, 2024
Week # 7 Headlines:
- Bates upsets Middlebury by 1
- Trinity outpaces Bowdoin in 20-point win
- Wesleyan surges past Amherst with 31 unanswered points
- Tufts holds off Williams intercepting the Ephs 4 times
- Colby’s late TD tops winless Hamilton
Bates 21, Middlebury 20
Bottom Line: Bates upsets Middlebury by 1
Official links:
Bates: Football makes more history, defeats Middlebury 21-20 in a Garcelon Field thriller – Bates College
Middlebury: Football Comes Up Short at Bates – Middlebury College
What we learned – Bates:
- Bates upset Middlebury behind a key 4th quarter TD drive, beating the Panthers for the first time since 1988, ending a 33 game losing streak. The game featured 5 lead changes.
- QB Colton Bosselait was outstanding, throwing 13-15 for 175 yds and 3 TDs with 1 INT
- RB Ryan Lynskey continued to be productive – he finished 27-107 yds (4.0 per carry average)
- WR Sergio Beltran caught 5-72 yds and 2 TDs and added 19 yds rushing
- WR Ryan Gleason caught 4-64 yds
- LB Ryan Rozich had 11 tackles and 1 PBU
What we learned – Middlebury:
- Middlebury outgained Bates 369 to 311 yds, but missed 3 field goals (from 48, 21, and 41), with the last miss with 1:14 left in the game
- Moran finished 19-29 for 202 yds with no TDs nor INTs
- Middlebury spread 28 carries among 4 RBs and rushed for 143 (5.1 yd avg per carry); RB Connor McClellan rushed 13-59 yds and 1 TD
- WR Mike Ahonen caught 7-73 yds
- DB Teddy Daniel had an INT and 60 yd return to the Bates 10 to set up a Panther TD
- LB Matt Shaw had 12 tackles and 2 TFLs and DB Charlie Ozolin had 10 tackles and 2 TFLs
Trinity 34, Bowdoin 14
Bottom Line: Trinity outpaces Bowdoin in 20-point win
Official links:
Trinity: Football Claws Past Bowdoin, 34-14 – Trinity College
Bowdoin: Trinity Pulls Away Late in Victory Over Bowdoin – Bowdoin College
What we learned – Trinity:
- Trinity was dominant: they doubled up Bowdoin outgaining the Polar Bears in yards (467 – 212 yds) and first downs (25-12)
- The Bantams scored on their first two drives (10 and 11 plays each) of the game, but were stopped in 3 of their next 4 drives via a fumble, INT and failed faked FG
- QB Zander Zebrowski threw 25-36 for 274 yds and 3 TDs; he threw 1 INT and was sacked 3 times
- RB Tyler DiNapoli rushed 12-91 yds and 1 TD and caught 5-45 yds
- WR Sean Clapp caught 6-68 yds and 2 TDs and his fellow WR Nolan O’Brien caught 9-89 yds
- DB Charlie Cooper had 2 INTs and PBU, while LB Amari Phillips had 8 tackles and 0.5 TFL
What we learned – Bowdoin:
- Bowdoin cut the Trinity lead to 7 in the 3rd quarter, but threw picks on their last two drives to dash hopes of a comeback
- The Polar Bears played freshman QB Peter Macaulay extensively, and he went 13-33 for 124 yds in his NESCAC debut; he had 2 TD passes but also had 2 INTs
- Macaulay also led this team in rushing: he rushed 6-32 yds
- WR Ty Connolly caught 6-47 yds, and fellow receivers Jed Hoggard and Austin Hiscoe each caught TD passes
- DB Ferris Collins had an impressive 15 tackles, and the Bowdoin defense generated 3 sacks and had 1 INT
- LB Gordon Gozdeck and DB Nick Viscusi combined for 21 tackles and 1 QB hurry
Wesleyan 31, Amherst 14
Bottom Line: Wesleyan surges past Amherst with 31 unanswered points
Official links:
Wesleyan: Football Scores 31 Unanswered to Roll Past Amherst – Wesleyan University
What we learned – Wesleyan:
- The Cardinals outgained Amherst by over 100 yds (335-211) and rallied from a 14-point 1st quarter deficit to score 31 unanswered points
- Wesleyan started the game with 4 drives that yielded just 22 yds on 14 plays and then scored TD, FG, TD and TD on their next 4 drives
- Freshman RB Matt Diaz rushed 20-76 yds and 2 TDs, with RB James McHugh adding 11-48 yds
- QB Niko Candido was just 11-24 for 187 yds, but had 2 TDs and no picks
- WR Chase Wilson continued to be a big play weapon: he caught 4-75 yds and a 1 TD
- DL Mike Rowan had 6 tackles, 1 sack and 1 QB hurry
What we learned – Amherst:
- After a 3 and out to start the game, Amherst scored on back-to-back drives in the 1st quarter
- Up 14-0, the Mammoths drove down to Wesleyan 12, but lost a TD due to a holding penalty and subsequently missed a FG
- Amherst went just 3-11 on 3rd down, didn’t field a kickoff to lose possession and were flagged for 7 penalties for 61 yds
- QB Marek Hill threw 14-26 for 138 yds with 2 TDs and 1 INT; Hill also led the Mammoths in rushing, running 9-28 yds
- WRs Owen Gaydos caught 5-34 yds and TE Matthew Diaz caught a 37 yd TD
- LB Carson Skotak had 7 tackles, 1 TFL and 2 QB hurries
Tufts 27, Williams 24
Bottom Line: Tufts holds off Williams intercepting the Ephs 4 times
Official links:
Tufts: Jumbos Hold Off Williams To Earn 27-24 Road Win – Tufts University
Williams: Ephs Suffer Hard-Fought 27-24 Defeat Against Tufts – Williams College
What we learned – Tufts:
- In an evenly matched game, Tufts was able to hold off Williams with 4 INTs of the Ephs
- The Jumbo offense was able to hold the ball for more than 37 minutes
- RB Christian Shapiro rushed 23-131 yds, had 5.7 yds/carry average and 1 TD
- WR Cade Moore caught 6-106 yds including a 41 yd TD catch
- QB Michael Berluti was again a dual treat – he rushed for 62 yds and threw 12-24 for 146 yds with 1 TD and 1 INT
- DB Louis Timmins fumbled a punt that the Ephs recovered, but then picked off Williams in the end zone 3 plays later
- LB Johnny Ferrelli had 9 tackles and 1 TFL, and DB Ty Richardson 4 tackles, 1 INT, 1 TFL and 1 PBU
What we learned – Williams:
- Williams outgained Tufts 397 to 366 yds, but had 4 INTs, including one on a trick play and two in the end zone, went 4 of 13 on 3rd down and only scored 3 times in 6 red zone trips
- QB Owen McHugh was just 15-34 for 212 yds, tossed 2 TDs but threw 3 INTs
- RB Mario Fischetti rushed 2-50 yds before exiting with an injury, but McHugh ran for 12-68 yds and RB Jon Oris 14-60 yds, helping the Ephs to average 6.1 yds per carry
- The receiving trio of Owen Johansen, Brady Stahelski and Luke Bobo combined to catch 11-176 yds (16.0 yd avg per catch)
- LB Tim Landolfi had 9 tackles and 1 sack
Colby 16, Hamilton 13
Bottom Line: Colby’s late TD tops winless Hamilton
Official links:
Colby: Mules Stun Hamilton Late for Third Win in Four Games – Colby College
Hamilton: Football caught by Colby late in fourth quarter in 16-13 setback – Hamilton College
What we learned – Colby:
- RB Keon Smart caught a 19 yd TD pass with 1:18 to play to lift the Mules over Hamilton
- Smart rushed 19-103 yds and caught 4-22 yds
- QB Miles Drake threw 23-38 for 182 yds and 1 TD
- WR Jack Sawyer caught 10-81 yds
- K Christos Tzoumakas was 3-3 on FG attempts
- The Mule defense limited Hamilton to just 4 of 15 on 3rd down
- LB Julian Young had 8 tackles, 0.5 sack and 2 other TFLs
What we learned – Hamilton:
- Hamilton led most of the 2nd half, but did not score in the 2nd half with their final drive ending in an INT
- Colby’s final TD drive was aided by 2 pass interference calls, and the Continentals were flagged 7 times for 70 yds
- QB Luke Kurzum was 17-34 for 156 yds, but had 2 INTs
- WR Ezra Lombardi caught 4-56 yds
- The Continental defense held Colby to just 3 of 12 on 3rd down and 0 for 2 on 4th down
- P Tighe Hoey had punts of 66 and 60 yds on the day
- DBs Kevin Lyons and Joe Cairns combined for 14 tackles, 1 TFL and 5 PBUs
Week 8 – November 2, 2024
Week # 8 Headlines:
- Wesleyan beats Williams on TD pass in final seconds
- Trinity surges past Amherst behind Clapp TDs
- Tufts holds off Colby
- Middlebury dominates Hamilton
- Bowdoin’s aerial attack tops Maine rival Bates
Wesleyan 25, Williams 24
Bottom Line: Wesleyan beats Williams on TD pass in final seconds
Official links:
Williams: Ephs Lose Heartbreaker at Wesleyan, 25-24 – Williams College
What we learned – Wesleyan:
- Luke LaSaracina, who played DB earlier in the year, caught a 14 yd TD pass with 6 seconds to play to beat Williams by 1
- The Cardinals outgained Williams by close to 150 yds (394-253) and rushed for 5.7 per carry, but made costly mistakes which kept the game close
- Wesleyan had a muffed punt, threw an INT in the endzone, committed three critical penalties and overcame some suspect time management on their final drive, but prevailed
- The Cardinals also had a mishandled the snap on a PAT, but alertly converted it to a 2 point conversion, which ended up being the difference in the game
- QB Niko Candido was just 13-32 but had 224 yds and the 1 critical TD pass; he was the Cardinals’ leading rusher with 10-62 yds
- RB James McHugh and freshman Matt Diaz combined to run 20-108 yds
- WR Chase Wilson caught 6-94 yds
- DB Nick Donatio had 12 tackles and 1.5 TFLs and DB Dylan Connors had a pick 6
What we learned – Williams:
- The Ephs attacked Wesleyan on the ground – they rushed 51 times and threw just 5 times
- Of their 13 offensive drives, only 2 went for more than 5 plays (6 and 7 play drives), and Williams went just 1 for 12 on 3rd down
- RB Jon Oris rushed 19-86 yds and caught 1-15 yds
- QB Owen McHugh threw just 2-5 for 22 yds, but rushed 23-77 yds and 1 TD; he had a fumble
- WR Owen Johanssen carried 5-57 yds including a 46 yd TD run
- Freshman LB Luke Mangini had 8 tackles, 1 sack, 1 PBU and 2 QB hurries
- DB Holden Gering had an INT in the Williams end zone in the 4th quarter to keep the game close
Trinity 45, Amherst 20
Bottom Line: Trinity surges passed Amherst behind Clapp TDs
Official links:
Trinity: Football Stomps Amherst, 45-20 – Trinity College
Amherst: Trinity pulls away from Mammoths, 45-20, on Senior Day – Amherst College
What we learned – Trinity:
- Trinity fell behind 10-0, but midway through the 2nd quarter, hit WR Sean Clapp for 81 and 44 yd TD catches on back-to-back drives to take the lead
- The Bantams opened the game with drives that ended with an INT, fumble and 3 and out, and then scored TDs on its next 4 possessions
- QB Zander Zebrowski threw 21-26 and 293 yds with 3 TDs but had 1 INT
- RB Tyler DiNapoli rushed 21-121 yds and 3 TDs
- WR Sean Clapp caught 5-162 yds and 2 TDs while fellow WR Nolan O’Brien had 10-80 yds
- LB Amari Phillips had 7 tackles and returned a fumble 25 yds
- 4 different Bantams had INTs
What we learned – Amherst:
- Amherst jumped out to a 10-0 lead, but the Mammoths could not hold off Trinity and were hurt by throwing 5 INTs and losing 2 fumbles
- Freshman Marek Hill threw 26-41 for 270 yds and 1 TD but had 4 INTs; Amherst turned to QB Mason Morrow in the 4th and he added an INT
- Both Hill and Morrow lost fumbles
- The Mammoth running game could not get any traction, Amherst RBs rushed 13-28 yds
- WR Carter Jung caught 5-83 yds and fellow WR Owen Gaydos caught 7-65 yds
- DB Luke Harmon was impressive again: he had 10 tackles, 2 sacks, 1 forced fumble and 1 INT, which he returned 21 yds
Tufts 28, Colby 21
Bottom Line: Tufts holds off Colby
Official links:
Tufts: Football Wins Fourth Straight With 28-21 Road Win Over Colby – Tufts University
Colby: Tufts Slips Past Colby on Senior Day – Colby College
What we learned – Tufts:
- Tufts scored TDs on 3 of its first 4 drives and converted 2 key first downs on their final drive to run out the clock and hold off the Mules
- The Jumbos went 0-2 on FGs and did not punt
- Tufts had over 400 yds of offense with its three stars, Berluti, Shapiro and Moore shining throughout the game
- QB Michael Berluti was very efficient: he threw 20-28 for 268 yds and 1 TD (no INTs)
- RB Christian Shapiro rushed 20-109 yds and 2 TDs; he averaged 5.5 per carry
- WR Cade Moore had a big day catching 8-94 yds and 1 TD
- DB Henry Ferrelli finished with 7 tackles, 1 INT and 1 PBU
What we learned – Colby:
- Colby got 24 first downs, 353 yds of offense, went 8 of 12 on 3rd down but had two INTs (one in the end zone on 2nd and goal from the 4), a lost fumble and a failed 4th down conversion
- QB Miles Drake 18-31 for 215 yds and 1 TD but had 2 INTs
- Drake rushed for 9-39 yds and had 2 rushing TDs
- RB Keon Smart rushed 20-87 yds
- Freshman WR Jack Nye caught 6-82 yds
- DB Trevor Smith had 11 tackles and LB Dennis Dougherty had 9 tackles, 0.5 TFL and 1 PBU
Middlebury 35, Hamilton 0
Bottom Line: Middlebury dominates Hamilton
Official links:
Middlebury: Defense Stifles Hamilton As Middlebury Retains Rocking Chair With 35-0 Win – Middlebury College
Hamilton: Football shut out in The Old Rocking Chair Classic at Middlebury – Hamilton College
What we learned – Middlebury:
- The Panthers outgained Hamilton 429-191 yds, held the ball for close to 35 minutes, went 8 of 16 on 3rd down and 2 for 2 on 4th down
- QB Brian Moran threw 25-35 for 254 yds and 3 TDs, rushed for 35 yds but had 1 INT
- WR Patrick Jamin caught 8-109 yds and freshman WR Jeremy Kiefer had 2 TD catches
- 5 Panther RBs combined 39-140 yds and 2 TDs
- Oddly Middlebury went for a 4th and goal from the 2 up 28-0 and 6:55 remaining, presumably to get a senior Isaiah Izzo Lizardi a rushing TD, which they did
- LB Matt Shaw had 4 tackles, 1 sack and 1 QB hurry
What we learned – Hamilton:
- Hamilton’s first half offense struggled: they opened the game with four 3 and outs, running 12 plays and gaining just 10 net yds
- QB Henry Rubey started for Hamilton in place of Luke Kurzum and he was just 13-25 for 115 yds and 1 INT
- Rubey was Hamilton’s leading rusher at 15-56 yds
- Hamilton RBs combined for a paltry 7-16 yds and no Hamilton WR had more than 3 catches or more than 36 yds receiving
- The Continentals allowed 71% completion rate and did not generate any sacks
- LB Ian Fratarcangeli had a massive day: 16 tackles and 2 TFLs
Bowdoin 35, Bates 24
Bottom Line: Bowdoin’s aerial attack tops Maine rival Bates
Official links:
Bowdoin: Macaulay’s Record-Setting Performance Leads Polar Bears Past Bobcats – Bowdoin College
What we learned – Bowdoin:
- Bowdoin attacked Bates effectively through the air, with QB Peter Macauley throwing 5 TD passes and averaging 17 yds per completion
- Macauley went 16-23 for 272 yds, no INTs and hit 5 different Polar Bear receivers for TDs including strikes of 50 and 35 yards
- RB Luke Watson rushed 7-55 yds and caught 4-32 yds
- The WR duo of Jed Hoggard and Jake Gaylord combined for 7-147 yds and 2 TDs
- DL/LB Koy Price did his thing again: 7 tackles and a sack and LB Max Danenhower finished with 5 tackles, 2 sacks and another 0.5 TFL
- Both Price and Danenhower made critical 4th down stops
What we learned – Bates:
- RB Ryan Lynskey set a single game NESCAC rushing record, rushing 20 times for a staggering 344 yds, including TD runs of 95, 72 and 54 yards
- Despite Lynskey’s phenomenal day, the Bobcats could not generate much complimentary offense – they completed just 5 passes and had 2 INTs
- On the Bobcats’ final 5 drives, 3 ended in missed 4th down attempts, falling short by 3, 1 and 1 yards and another drive ended an INT; Bates was 2 for 12 on 3rd down
- QB Colton Bosselait was just 5-13 for 65 yds with 2 INTs and was sacked 3 times
- WR Sergio Beltran caught 3-50 yds and added 12 rush yds
- LB Ryan Rozich had 8 tackles, 1 TFL and 1 forced fumble, while DB Johnny Walker finished with 8 tackles
Week 9 – November 9, 2024
Week #9 Headlines:
- Wesleyan tops Trinity to win the NESCAC
- Tufts’s D stymies Middlebury
- Williams shuts out Amherst
- Colby capitalizes on Bowdoin’s miscues to take the CBB
- Hamilton rallies past Bates for first win
Wesleyan 27, Trinity 17
Bottom Line: Wesleyan tops Trinity behind 4th down conversions to win the NESCAC
Official links:
Trinity: Wesleyan Stuns Football In Season Finale, 27-17 – Trinity College
What we learned – Wesleyan:
- Wesleyan converted two critical 4th downs in the 4th quarter, converting a 4th and 17 from the Trinity 48 and 4th and goal from Trinity 15
- QB Niko Candido made both 4th down throws and finished 11-22 for 190 yds and 3 TDs and rushed 20-51 yds and added a rushing TD
- Freshman RB Matt Diaz ran 19-137 yds including a 52-yard run
- WR Luke LaSaracina, who made the game winning catch last week, caught 4-77 yds with a TD including a 17-yard catch on the 4th down play
- The Cardinal defense limited Trinity to 13 first downs, 53 yards rushing and sacked the Bantams 5 times
- DB Nick Donatio had 9 tackles and 1 PBU
- LB Ben Carbeau had 7 tackles, 2 sacks and 1 QB hurry
What we learned – Trinity:
- Trinity scored on 3 of their 4 first half drives, but did not score in the 2nd half, punting 4 times and running out of time on their last drive
- The Bantams offense went 3 for 10 on 3rd down and was only able to possess the ball for just over 24 minutes
- QB Zander Zebrowski was 16-23 for 224 yds with 2 TDs and no picks
- WR Sean Clapp caught 5-75 yds
- RB Tyler DiNapoli had a combined 81 yds of offense with 59 yds rushing and 32 receiving
- The Bantam defense had 5 sacks, but allowed Wesleyan to convert 6 of 13 3rd down chances and 2 of 2 4th down tries
- DB Ma-Lyke Davis had 13 tackles
Tufts 17, Middlebury 7
Bottom Line: Tufts’ defense stymies Middlebury
Official links:
Middlebury: Football Closes Season With Loss At Tufts – Middlebury College
What we learned – Tufts:
- The Jumbo defense held the potent Middlebury passing game to just 11 completions and 98 yards
- QB Michael Berluti threw 16-24 for 151 yds with 1 TD and no INTs
- WR Cade Moore caught 7-59 yds and 1 TD
- QB Luke Leongas stepped in for an injured Michael Berluti in the 4th quarter and led the Jumbos on a 9 play 68-yard drive in which he converted a 3rd and 13 with a 23 yard pass and threw a TD pass
- DB Ty Richardson made his league leading 6th interception, which he returned 59 yards to set up a Tufts FG
- DB Jameer Alves had 9 tackles and 2 PBUs
What we learned – Middlebury:
- Middlebury had just 8 total yards fewer than Tufts but had 2 INTs (one in the end zone) and missed two field goals; Tufts had no turnovers
- QB Brian Moran completed just 11-30 for 94 yds and 2 TDs; the Panthers averaged 238.9 passing yards per game prior to this final game
- Freshman RB Connor McClellan rushed 19-121 yds and 1 TD
- WR Patrick Jamin caught 6-53 yds
- The Panthers defense held Jumbo RB Christian Shapiro to 21-59 yds rushing, limiting the 4th highest rusher in the league to 2.8 yd per carry average
- DB Teddy Daniel finished with 11 tackles, 1 TFL and 1 BPU
Williams 21, Amherst 0
Bottom Line: Williams shuts out Amherst
Official links:
Williams: Ephs Punctuate Season With 21-0 Victory Over Amherst – Williams College
Amherst: Mammoths fall to rival Williams in final game, 21-0 – Amherst College
What we learned – Williams:
- The Williams defense generated 4 sacks and 3 INTs in their shutout
- Williams continued their run heavy approach, rushing 45 times and attempting just 13 passes
- RB Jon Oris rushed 20-75 yds and WR Owen Johansen was used in the run game, and rushed 10-54 yds and 2 TDs
- Senior QB Jack Dickinson got the start, and went just 5-12 for 70 yds with 1 TD but no INTs
- Freshman DL Will Gale stopped Amherst for no gain on a 4th and 2 from the Williams’ 24
- DB Holden Gering was outstanding: he finished with 10 tackles, 2 INTs and 1 forced fumble
What we learned – Amherst:
- Amherst matched Williams in yards (243 yds for Amherst versus 248 yds for Williams) and first downs (13 for Amherst and 14 for Williams), but had a fumbled punt, 3 INTs and went 0 for 3 on 4th down
- Freshman QB Marek Hill passed 23-37 for 186 yds, but threw 2 INTs
- Hill rushed 8-51 yds, combining to rush and pass for 237 of Amherst’s 243 yds of offense
- Mammoth RBs struggled, with 3 RBs combining for 10-8 yds
- WR Carter Jung caught 8-54 yds
- The Mammoths tried QB Jack Cox for a series, but he also threw an INT
- Amherst’s defense held Williams to under 250 yds of offense, and forced Williams to punt on 5 consecutive drives
- DB Luke Harmon had 8 tackles, 2 TFLs and 1 PBU
Colby 34, Bowdoin 10
Bottom Line: Colby capitalizes on Bowdoin’s miscues to take the CBB
Official links:
Colby: CBB Trophy Returns to Waterville – Colby College
Bowdoin: Miscues Doom Football in CBB Title Loss to Colby – Bowdoin College
What we learned – Colby:
- The Mule defense was disruptive: they had 4 INTs, 3 forced fumbles and 7 sacks
- QB Miles Drake went 21-34 for 198 yds and 2 TD passes
- Drake also rushed 9-24 yds and added a rushing TD
- Freshman WR Jack Nye caught 8-92 yds and fellow WR Duke Ferrara caught 5-53 yds and 1 TD
- LB Julian Young had 7 tackles, 1 INT, 1.5 sacks and 1 forced fumble
- LB Sebastian Romain had 3 sacks, 3 tackles, 1 fumble recovery and 1 PBU
What we learned – Bowdoin:
- The Polar Bears were doomed by throwing 4 INTs, fumbling 3 times and botching a punt
- Bowdoin had just 13 first downs, went 3-12 on 3rd down and 0-2 on 4th down
- QB Robbie Long went 13-24 for 166 yds and had 3 INTs; he was the Polar Bears’ leading rusher with 32 yds and a rushing TD
- QB Peter Macauley got some snaps: he threw 2-6 for 22 yds (with 1 INT) and ran 3-18 yds
- The WR duo of Ty Connolly and Austin Hiscoe combined for 10-124 yds
- LB Gordon Gozdeck had 12 tackles, 2 TFLs, 1 forced fumble and 1 PBU
- DL/LB Koy Price finished with 8 tackles, 2.5 TFLs and 3 PBUs
Hamilton 24, Bates 21
Bottom Line: Hamilton rallies past Bates for first win
Official links:
Hamilton: Football ends season with 24-21 come-from-behind win over Bates – Hamilton College
Bates: Hamilton Comes Back to Beat Bates, 24-21, in Season Finale for Both Squads – Bates College
What we learned – Hamilton:
- Down 14-0, Hamilton scored on 4 of its final 5 drives, before kneeling out game
- The Continentals controlled the clock, possessing the ball for close to 36 minutes and had 6 drives of 8 plays or more
- QB Luke Kurzum went 25-32 for 248 yds with 3 TDs and no INTs
- Kurzum also ran 13-57 yds
- WR Lucas Perez-Segnini had a monster day: he caught 9-126 yds and 3 TDs
- Hamilton converted 11 of 18 3rd down tries and did not turn the ball over
- DB Joe Cairns had 7 tackles and 1 INT
What we learned – Bates:
- Bates jumped out to a 14-0 lead behind a QB Colton Bosselait TD pass and capitalizing on a Hamilton botched punt snap, but had 2 INTs and a fumble in subsequent drives
- Bosselait threw 10-14 for 129 yds with 2 TDs but 2 INTs
- RB Ryan Lynskey rushed for 13-73 yds and 1 TD
- WR Sergio Beltran had 83 total yards: 34 yds rushing and 49 yds receiving
- LB Ryan Rozich had 14 tackles
- DB Marquez Narvaez-Estrada had 6 tackles, 1 sack and 1 TFL
2023 Final Power Rankings
NESCAC FOOTBALL POWER RANKINGS –2023
- Middlebury (8-1)
- Trinity (8-1)
- Tufts (6-3)
- Wesleyan (6-3)
- Amherst (4-5)
- Bowdoin (4-5)
- Williams (3-6)
- Hamilton (3-6)
- Colby (3-6)
- Bates (0-9)
1-MIDDLEBURY (8-1)
Middlebury lost a tight game to Wesleyan but won the rest of their games including close games against Williams (by 2), Trinity (by 5) and Bowdoin (by 7). Their victory in Hartford over a dominant Trinity team and their 19-10 win over Tufts late in the season propelled them to a co-championship in Coach Mandigo’s first season. They finished ranked #1 in my Power Rankings over Trinity despite less statistical dominance, based on their victory over the Bantams in Hartford.
Offense
The Panthers finished 3rd in offensive scoring and 3rd in passing offense. QB Cole Kennon was 2nd in the NESCAC in passing yards and threw for 17 TDs, but he also led the league in interceptions with 13. The Middlebury wideouts were impressive led by WR Patrick Jamin and Donovan Wood, who finished 4th and 6th in receiving yards, respectively and combined for 11 TDs. Jamin had a TD catch in the final minute against Williams to win that game 12-10. WR Mike Ahonen was also a major factor down the stretch. The passing game was needed as the running game never truly found its footing, as opponents outrushed the Panthers and 5 different running backs led Middlebury in rushing for a game in ’23.
Defense
The Panthers finished 2nd in scoring defense, but only 4th in rush defense and 8th in pass defense. The Middlebury defense was 2nd in 3rd down defense and the best in the red zone, allowing touchdowns at a league low 30% of the time. Their red zone defense was crucial in close wins over Bowdoin (INT in the end zone), Trinity (stopped run from the 2 as time expired) and Tufts (4th and goal stop from the 1). Middlebury’s defense featured a slew of highly rated playmakers including five 1st team All-NESCAC defenders in lineman Tomas Kenary and David Filias (who finished 1st and 2nd in the league in sacks, respectively, with 19 combined), LB John McCool (who finished 5th in league in the tackles) and DBs Finn Muldoon (2nd in the league in tackles) and Rocco Stola (who had 11 PBUs). Tomas Kenary, who had 11.5 sacks and 19.5 TFLs was the NESCAC Defensive Player of the year.
2-TRINITY (8-1)
The Bantams blew out most all of the NESCAC in a truly dominant season, but had a killer home loss against Middlebury, where they were stopped two yards short of victory on their final play. Trinity finished with a stunning positive point differential of 282 points or 31 points per game but finish #2 in my Power Rankings to Middlebury based on the head-to-head loss. The Bantams were fortunate that the NESCAC awards co-champions (and do not use head-to-head as the tiebreaker) but based on their performance also have to wonder how such a dominant season resulted in sharing the crown.
Offense
Trinity finished 1st in the NESCAC in offense and 1st in passing. QB Spencer Fetter was great: he led the league by a wide margin in completion percentage (63.4%), passing yards (285 yds/game) and TDs (32), and had only 3 interceptions. That effort led the league to name him the Co-Offensive Player of the Year. His key target was 1st team All-NESCAC WR Sean Clapp, who led the NESCAC in catches, yards and TD receptions, and made a legitimate case for Co-Offensive Player of the Year. 1st team All-NESCAC RB Tyler DiNapoli rushed for the 2nd highest yards in the league, running for 113-701 yds and 5 TDs. Two other backs for Trinity, Will Kirby and Colin McCabe, combined for another 661 yards rushing and 12 TDs. The offensive line, with two 1st team All-NESCAC lineman in Patrick Donovan-Jenkins and Anthony Castillo, assisted in Trinity rushing for 4.7 yds/carry and yielding just 4 sacks.
Defense
Trinity finished 2nd in the NESCAC in offense, and 1st in rush defense. The Bantams yielded a mere 2.3 yards per carry, and just under 65 yards per game. The front seven was comprised of six graduate students, led by three 1st team All-NESCAC defenders in DL Cooper Mandel, DL Joseph Lepore and LB Michael Masse. In pass defense, Trinity had a league leading 20 interceptions (the 2nd highest had 14) with DB Ma-Lyke Davis and DB Tyler Jameson both snagging a league leading 5 INTs each. On special teams, 1st team All-NESCAC K Matthew Jumes was a perfect 14 for 14 in field goal kicks.
3-TUFTS (6-3)
The Jumbos were dominant in 6 games, but lost a stunner in Clinton to Hamilton, were blown out by Trinity in the opener and lost a tight one against Middlebury. They rank #3, ahead of 6-3 Wesleyan based on a head-to-head win and a stark statistical differential. To a large degree the Tufts’ statistics would suggest a record better than 6-3.
Offense
Tufts finished 2nd in the NESCAC in offense, and 1st in both rushing and 3rd down conversion rate. On the ground, RB Chartellis Reece led the league with 808 rushing yards, which was close to or greater than four NESCAC teams’ total rushing output. QB Michael Berluti threw for 19 TDs against just 5 interceptions, completed 55% of his passes, ran for 516 yards and averaged 282 yds between the run and the pass. WR Jaden Richardson was named the league’s Co-Offensive Player of the Year, and he generated slew of big plays including 13 TDs and a 18 yd per catch average. The Jumbo offensive line, led by 1st team All-NESCAC lineman Travis Cepalia, yielded just 6 sacks on the season and paved the way for a 5.4 rush per carry average.
Defense
The Jumbos finished 1st in overall defense and pass defense. The Jumbo secondary yielded just 145 yds per game, just 8 passing TDs and intercepted their opponents an offsetting 8 times. 1st team All-NESCAC DB Louis Timmins finished the year with 4 interceptions and 6 PBUs. The Jumbos had had a 1st team All-NESCAC player at each level of their defense – Timmins (secondary), E.J. Comerford (linebacker) and Ed Iuteri (defensive line). Tufts finished 1st in 4th down defense, yielding conversions on less than 24% of opponents’ tries.
4-WESLEYAN (6-3)
Wesleyan upset Middlebury and beat rivals Amherst and Williams to take the Little Three crown. The losses to powers Trinity and Tufts were to be expected, but the Cardinals had tough loss to Colby in OT. Wesleyan was outgained by 62 yds and outscored by 19 points, but still found its way to win 6 games.
Offense
The Cardinals finished middle of pack in the league statistically on offense, including 4th in passing. QB Niko Candido averaged 240 passing yds per game and had 21 TD throws but completed just 53% of his passes and had 11 INTs. The Wesleyan offense was fueled by the two topflight wideouts: WR Chad Wilson and Thomas Elkhoury finished 5th and 7th in receiving yards in the league, respectively, with Wilson catching 10 TDs and earning 1st team All-NESCAC honors. The Cardinals rushed for just 2.7 yards per carry, led by a trio of running backs with RB Tyler Flynn the leading rusher with 309 yds. The offensive line yielded a league high 33 sacks.
Defense
As with their offense, Wesleyan finished middle of pack in the league statistically. A couple Cardinals stood out: 1st team All-NESCAC CB Wesley Abraham finished tied for 1st in interceptions (5) in the league and returned 2 picks for touchdowns. Fellow defensive backs Sean Walker and Jack Nally ranked rank 4th and 7th in the league passes defended, respectively. Linebackers Ben Carbeau and Jack Edwards rank 6th and 8th in the NESCAC in tackles and Edwards earned 1st team All-NESCAC honors.
5-AMHERST (4-5)
Amherst beat Hamilton and Bates and finished the year with back-to-back wins over Bowdoin and Williams. The late wins, including a tight win over their archrival Williams, propelled them to the 5th ranking.
Offense
The Mammoths averaged just 14 points per game, finishing 9th in scoring, rushing yards and total offense in the NESCAC. The quarterback position was in transition – they started with freshman John Collier, changed to Jack Cox and finished with Mike Piazza. WR Carter Jung provided some big plays – he averaged 15.4 yds per catch. The offensive line performance was below par: the Mammoths had a paltry 2.3 yds per carry and yielded 24 sacks. No Amherst RB finished in the Top 15 rushers in the league.
Defense
Amherst finished in the middle of the pack defensively, but was 2nd in pass defense. The Mammoths had 11 interceptions against giving up 14 passing TDs. 1st team All-NESCAC DB Luke Harmon made several game changing plays finishing with 75 tackles (3rd in league), 10 TFLs, 2 sacks and 3 INTs returned for 80 yds. Amherst did not generate much pass rush, as they only had 10 sacks. LB Trey Doyle finished 9th in the league tackles with 61 and freshman Christian Moore had a game for the ages against Williams: he intercepted a bobbled Eph pass at the Amherst goal line and returned it 76 yds, had a scoop and score and intercepted Williams in the Amherst goal line late in the game.
6-BOWDOIN (4-5)
Bowdoin beat Bates and Colby to win the CBB and reach 4 wins for the first time since 2011. They lost to Middlebury, Amherst, and Wesleyan by a total of 16 points. The Polar Bears are ranked #6 behind 4-5 Amherst, as the Mammoths beat Bowdoin.
Offense
Bowdoin finished 3rd, behind Trinity and Tufts, in the NESCAC in offensive yardage averaging 392 yds per game. QB Andrew Boel was impressive in 7 games before being sidelined, completing 60% of his passes, hitting 15 TD passes, and averaging 275 yds per game (which is 3rd in the NESCAC). The Polar Bears finished 2nd in the league in passing offense and featured two 1st team All-NESCAC pass catchers: WR Colton Fahey was 2nd in the league in receiving yards (and 3rd in all-purpose yds) and TE Brendan King finished 8th in receiving yards and had 10 TDs. RB Andre Eden finished 3rd in the league in rushing. Bowdoin struggled with interceptions (13) and finished negative 5 in turnover differential.
Defense
The Polar Bears finished 2nd in the league in rush defense. Bowdoin’s Koy Price was 2nd in the league with 12.5 TFLs and had 5.5 sacks and garnered 1st team All-NESCAC honors. The Polar Bears registered the highest sacks in the NESCAC, with 28. LB Max Jacobs led the team in tackles with 62 and had 4.5 sacks. Bowdoin was the most penalized team in the league, costing themselves 63 yds a game in penalty yardage.
7-WILLIAMS (3-6)
The Ephs opened the season with nice win at Colby and beat Hamilton and Bates. Williams lost their other games including a tough loss where they outgained Amherst, but turnovers cost them the game against their archrival. Williams lost to Wesleyan to go 0-2 in the Little Three and are ranked highest among the three 3-6 teams based on their head-to-head wins over those teams.
Offense
Williams’ offense finished 2nd in league rushing but 9th in passing. The run game was led by RB Mario Fischetti, RB Jon Oris and freshman QB Owen McHugh, as the Ephs averaged 4.2 per carry. Fischetti led the NESCAC in rushing in his first four games before going down while McHugh and Oris combined for 847 yds for the season. The passing game struggled, as McHugh was last in the league in completion percentage amongst the league starters, completing just 48% of his passes, which was a factor in Williams finishing last in 3rd down conversions, converting just 29% of its chances. No Ephs receivers finished in the Top 15 in the league.
Defense
Williams finished 3rd in rush defense and 4th in scoring defense. The Ephs had 27 sacks with DL Cameron Smith and LB Ethan Scott combining for 13 sacks and 68 tackles on the year. Williams endured some unfortunate fumble luck: opponents fumbled 17 times, but the Ephs only recovered 6. Holden Gehring, who caught 22 for 254 yds, also provided help in the Williams’ secondary, where he had 2 INTs.
8-HAMILTON (3-6)
Hamilton beat Colby and Bates and had a stunning comeback overtime victory at home against Tufts. They lost tight games to Amherst and Williams, and were outmatched in their other games. The Continentals sit at 8th in the power rankings ahead of 3-6 Colby (as they beat the Mules) and below 3-6 Williams (as they lost to the Ephs).
Offense
Hamilton finished 4th in rushing offense but last in passing yardage. Freshman RB Nate Wildman led the Continentals in rushing for the first part of the season, including a 119-yard day against Amherst, and converted QB Matt Banbury took most of the carries the 2nd half of the year. Freshman QB Luke Kurzum, who was the NESCAC Rookie of the Year, was also a strong runner, and the trio of Banbury, Wildman and Kurzum finished 6th, 8th and 9th in the NESCAC in rushing, respectively. The passing game yielded a league low 150 yards a game, with expected growing pains from starting a freshman at QB; Kurzum had 7 TDs to 5 INTs. No Hamilton wideout finished in the Top 19 in receiving yards in the league, as TE Marc Howrigan was unable to replicate his strong ’22 season.
Defense
The Hamilton defense struggled in ’23: they finished 8th in rush defense and 9th in pass defense. The Continentals finished with just 12 sacks, and 6 of those were made in their final game against winless Bates. LB Cole Rivell was strong in the run defense, registering 74 tackles, which ranked 4th in the NESCAC. The secondary had several new starters, but CB Kyle Bratcher was a standout – he finished with 8 PBUs and 4 INTs on the season.
9-COLBY (3-6)
The Mules had an impressive win over Wesleyan and topped Amherst and Bates, but finished the year with four straight losses, including dropping home games to Hamilton and Bowdoin. In those early wins, special team plays were critical: Colby blocked a punt for a TD (Bates), blocked a game winning FG (Wesleyan), and benefitted from a missed FG and PAT (Amherst). Colby finished with a negative point differential of 105 points. The Mules are ranked 9th based on their losses to the other two 3-6 teams, Hamilton and Williams.
Offense
Colby finished 8th in the league in scoring. The quarterback position lacked continuity: Miles Drake started the first two games, followed by Thomas Keeling through game 8, and freshman Christopher Milmoe started the final game. Keeling was efficient – he completed 57% of his attempts, had 8 TDs to 2 INTs and averaged 178 yds passing per game. WR Matt McHugh – who had one catch in two games in ’22 – emerged as a big play wideout for the Mules: he had 45 catches for 529 yds including two games where he had 160 and 120 yds receiving, respectively. The offensive line had its issues: Colby ran for just 2.1 per carry and yielded 32 sacks (the NESCAC worst was 33). RB Keon Smart finished 10th in the league in rushing and was a pass catching threat: Smart finished with 691 yds between rushing (339 yds) and receiving (352 yds).
Defense
Colby finished 9th in scoring defense (just at 28 pts per game), although their yardage statistics were closer to the middle of the pack. The defensive line was able to generate pressure as they notched 21 sacks, but the Mules only had 3 INTs while giving up 17 TD passes over the 9 games. LB Julian Young was a tackling machine – he earned 1st Team All-NESCAC honors and finished 1st in the NESCAC with 94 tackles, which was 16 higher than next highest player.
10-BATES (0-9)
The Bates had to replace several key starters from their ’22 campaign, and in playing a slew of young Bobcats failed to win a game in the 2023 season. Their best chance for victory came against Colby, but too many turnovers led to a six-point loss. Bates finished with a league worst point differential of negative 213, and their winless campaign led to the #10 ranking.
Offense
Bates finished last in the league in scoring and rushing offense. The running game average a mere 1.9 per carry as Bates leaned on freshman RB Ryan Lynskey and sophomore RB Adam Steinberg. The offensive line, which had two freshmen starters, struggled as evidenced by league low rushing totals and the yielding of 28 sacks. The passing game finished 7th in the league, fueled in large part by experienced QB Colton Bosselait and TE Steven Guerrette as well as an emerging star in WR Sergio Beltran. Beltran finished in the Top 10 in the league in receiving, and broke 100 yds receiving in two games, while Guerrette finished in the Top 15 in receiving. At QB, Bosselait completed 50% of his passes and had 11 TDs but threw 8 INTs. The Bobcats gave meaningful snaps to freshman QB Seneca Moore, who was more of a running threat: he attempted 23 passes while rushing 49 times.
Defense
Bates had major defensive issues in 2023: they were last in overall defense, last in rush defense, had only one interception and allowed opponents to convert over 50% of their combined 3rd and 4th down conversions. DL Matt Juneau was a standout, finishing 7th in the NESCAC in tackles and registering 4.5 TFLs. The Bobcats could only muster 5 sacks. The linebacking corps and secondary were green: Bates started four freshman and two sophomores at those units, so the growing pains were to be expected.
2023 Game Recaps
Week 1 – September 16, 2023
Headlines:
- Trinity dominated a good Tufts team
- Wesleyan and Bowdoin both played well on the road
- Williams beat Colby behind an impressive freshman quarterback
- Middlebury won a defensive battle against Amherst
- Bates and Hamilton turned to youth, which will make wins tough to come by
Wesleyan 28, Bates 17
Bottom Line: Wesleyan dominated through the air to beat a Bates team with several freshman in their secondary; Cardinal streak over Bates increases to 17 straight.
Official links:
Wesleyan: Candido Throws for 341, Cardinals Hold Off Bates in 28-17 Season-Opening Win – Wesleyan University
Bates: Rookies impress in football’s 28-17 loss to Wesleyan – Bates College (gobatesbobcats.com)
What we learned – Wesleyan:
- QB Niko Candido was outstanding: 75.7% completion percentage, 28-37 for 341 yds and 3 TDs and zero INTs.
- WR Thomas Elkhoury was dominant (12-147 yds) against a green Bates secondary, and WR Chase Wilson chipped in with 5-66 yds
- Wesleyan used a strong passing game to control the game – they ran 22 more plays than the Bobcats and enjoyed 37+ minutes of possession
- The Cardinals were efficient on big downs including going 3 of 4 on 4th down and 50% on third down
- Wesleyan will look to improve their running game in future weeks: their two lead backs had 27 rushes for 60 yards (only 2.2 average per carry)
- On defense, their All-NESCAC players showed up: LB Jake Edwards had eight tackles, and DL Mike Rowan had six tackles, 2 TFLs, and 0.5 sack
What we learned – Bates
- Offense was a challenge as a lot of new faces played in Lewiston.
- QB Colton Bosselait was only 10-27 in the passing game
- The Bobcats featured a freshman running back, Ryan Lynskey, who led Bates in rushes and catches
- Only one Bates WR caught a pass: Sergio Beltran had three catches for 41 yards
- Bates got a strong game from DL Finn Duffey (7 tackles, 1.5 TFL, 1 sack) and the Bobcat d-line held Wesleyan’s rushing game in check
- LB Jackson Collins led Bates with 8 tackles and 1.5 TFLs
- Bates started young players in their defensive back seven, including four freshman and two sophomores
Middlebury 21, Amherst 7
Bottom Line: Middlebury’s offense had some early success against a tough Amherst defense, and then it was a defensive contest for the rest of the game.
Official links:
Middlebury: Football Opens Season With 21-7 Victory Over Amherst – Middlebury College
Amherst: Fast start lifts Panthers to 21-7 win over Mammoths in season opener – Amherst College
What we learned – Middlebury:
- WR Patrick Jamin made a 53-yard catch on the Panthers’ second offensive play
- The next three offensive series for Middlebury included two balanced drives of 10 and 7 plays that ended in TDs
- In the second half the offense was stymied – they had an interception, fumble and 4 three and outs. The Panthers could only muster 41 yards of offense in the second half
- Carter Stockwell led the Panthers in rushes and yards (18-65 yds)
- Quiet day for All-NESCAC WR Donovan Wood (2-10 yds), and QB Cole Kennon was a pedestrian 11-22 for 135 yds (1 TD, 1 INT) on the day
- The Middlebury defensive line, led by All-NESCAC DL Tomas Kenary (4.5 sacks) and DL Dave Filias (3.5 sacks) wreaked havoc
- The Panthers finished with 9 sacks. For context, the team with most sacks in the league (9 games) in ’22 had 24
- All-NESCAC LB John McCool had 10 tackles
What we learned – Amherst
- The Mammoths rushed for only 5 yards, with the running backs rushing for 51 yds
- Protection was an issue – Amherst QBs were sacked a stunning 9 times
- In the first half, the Mammoths had 5 three and outs and only 2 first downs
- We saw a quarterback switch; Amherst inserted freshman John Collier for Jack Cox midway through the 3rd quarter
- Collier threw two picks but managed a TD at very end of the game; he went 24-44 for 181 yds (1 TD, 2 INTs)
- WR Owen Gaydos had 8 catches for 66 yards, providing some juice to the offense
- After yielding three early scores, the Mammoth defense tightened up. Amherst held Middlebury to 3-12 on 3rd down and 0-1 on 4th
- LB Trey Doyle was standout, he had 10 tackles and 1 TFL
Williams 25, Colby 22
Bottom Line: Williams’ freshman quarterback led the Ephs past a veteran Colby defense.
Official links:
Williams: Ephs Overcome 14- 0 Deficit to Down Colby 25-22 in Season Opener – Williams College
Colby: Williams Prevails But Colby’s Season Looks Bright – Colby College (colbyathletics.com)
What we learned – Williams:
- Williams did not score in its first quarter, but freshman QB Owen McHugh took over late in the first quarter and led the Ephs to 4 TDs in the next 6 drives
- McHugh went 12-16 for 138 yds and 2 TDs; he also rushed for 17-77 yds
- RB Mario Fischetti rushed well: 19-119 yds, a 6.3 yard per carry average
- In addition to quarterback, the Ephs may have also found a young WR threat – freshman Holden Gering was their leading receiver with 4-56 yds and 2 TDs
- Williams’ defensive line got 4 sacks
- The Ephs’ young secondary (with three sophomores) played well: S George Papadopoulos and CB Justin McGrail combined for 14 tackles
- K Evan Shuran was a bit shaky – 1-2 for PATs and missed FG
What we learned – Colby
- Colby benefited from turning a blocked punt into an early TD and a short field after Ephs turnover on downs to score, but were stymied for most of the first three quarters
- New QB Miles Drake threw it well – going 22-32 for 245 yds (1 TD, 1 INT)
- WR Matt McHugh – who had one catch in two games in ’22 – exploded for 8 catches for 160 yds and 1 TD, including catches for 70 and 28 yds
- The Mule running backs rushed for only 46 yds, with RB Keon Smart limited to 11 yds on 5 carries
- The veteran Colby defense, which had seven returning starters and nine upperclassmen, could not stymie Williams’ freshman QB
- LB Julian Young was active; he had 14 tackles and 1 TFL
Trinity 44, Tufts 19
Bottom Line: Trinity dominates Tufts early
Official links:
Trinity: Football Dismantles Tufts, 44-19, In Season Opener – Trinity College (bantamsports.com)
Tufts: Football Opens 2023 Season With 44-19 Setback At Trinity – Tufts University (gotuftsjumbos.com)
What we learned – Trinity:
- Trinity continues to be dominant, this time against a foe in Tufts that has seven ’22 All-NESCAC players returning
- WR Sean Clapp was outstanding, going 9-172 yds
- QB Spencer Fetter had a good day going 20-38 for 313 yds, 2 TDs and 0 INTs
- The Bantam RB trio was very effective – Tyler DiNapoli, Bill Kirby and Colin McCabe combined for 34-147 yds and 3 TDs – a 4.3 yards per carry clip
- Trinity’s defense shut down Tufts offense in the first half forcing 7 Jumbo punts and giving up only a late FG
- The Bantams dominated the time of possession, controlling the ball for over 36 minutes
What we learned – Tufts
- Tufts’ first seven drives resulted in a total of 74 yards and 7 punts. At that point, it was 28-0 Trinity.
- Tufts ramped the offense after that juncture, but the game was never closer than 21 points
- 1st team All-NESCAC QB Michael Berluti was 23-53 for 344 yards and 3 TDs. His completion percentage was 43%.
- The Tufts’ rushing game was limited; RB Aidan McLean rushed for 7-44 yds
- WR Jaden Richardson had 6-146 yds and 3 TDs and WR Cade Moore added 6-103 yds, but most of that damage came in the 2nd half
- The Jumbos yielded 10 3rd down conversions to Trinity in 17 chances
- LB EJ Comerford had 13 tackles and DB Vic Garza 3 PBUs
Bowdoin 26, Hamilton 12
Bottom Line: Bowdoin jumped out to a 19-0 dominating first half and cruised to victory
Official links:
Bowdoin: Polar Bears Roll to Road Win in Season-Opener at Hamilton – Bowdoin College
Hamilton: Football falls to Bowdoin, Kurzum ’27 throws two TD passes – Hamilton College
What we learned – Bowdoin:
- Bowdoin dominated the first half, generating 307 yards while limiting Hamilton to 45; very similar to last year’s opener
- Polar Bears started with a 13-play drive that ended with a pick, but then reeled off 2 TD drives and a 14 play drive that ended up in a FG
- QB Andrew Boel was 17-27 for 347 yards – completing chunk plays of 68, 48, 31 and 28 yards
- WR Colton Fahey had 5 catches for 94 yards and TE Brendan King had 6 catches for 78 yards and 1 TD
- RB Andre Eden had 66 yards, but Bowdoin’s passing attack was the story of the day
- Bowdoin shut out Hamilton in the first half, and DB Koy Price and LB Max Jacobs combined to have 18 tackles, 2.5 TFLs and 3 sacks
What we learned – Hamilton
- Hamilton’s struggled early with inability to stop Bowdoin and its offense had only 45 yards in the first half
- The Continentals started to rotate in freshman QB Luke Kurzum in 1st quarter, with he and QB Matt Banbury alternating series and even alternating within drives
- Banbury provided effective running (had one 43 yd run and 99 rush yards in total) while Kurzum led the passing effort, going 13-24 for 84 yds and 2 TDs
- Continental freshman led many of the offensive categories: Kurzum was the leading passer (attempts, completions and yards), Nate Wildman led Hamilton running backs in carries and yards, and the two leading receivers were WR Jack Hoag and Wildman
- The Continental secondary lacks experience, with only senior James Bourque having played meaningful defensive snaps in prior seasons.
- LB Cole Rivell had 11 tackles, 1 TFL and 1 FF
Week 2 – September 23, 2023
Headlines:
- Trinity continues its dominant roll
- Bowdoin and Tufts impress
- Wesleyan capitalizes on turnovers to top Middlebury
- Three freshman quarterbacks struggle
Amherst 17, Hamilton 14
Bottom Line: Amherst rallied late to beat Hamilton in a defensive battle
Official links:
Hamilton: Football edged 17-14 at Amherst, Wildman ’27 runs for two scores – Hamilton College
What we learned – Amherst:
- RB Tariq Muhammad scored on a 63 yd TD on Amherst’s third offense play, but then Hamilton was able to hold Amherst offense in check until the 4th quarter
- The Mammoths started freshman QB John Collier; Collier struggled but went 5-6 for 49 yards on a late drive to tie the game in the 4th quarter
- DB Luke Harmon had an interception late in the 4th, and returned it 34 yards to set up Amherst’s game winning field goal
- In addition to his big interception, Harmon had 9 tackles, 2 TFLs and a sack – an impressive defensive effort for the sophomore
- After Muhammad’s opening 63-yard run, Amherst only had 40 rushing yards for the rest of the game
- WR Sam Gerber led the Mammoths in receiving – going for 8-63 yds and a key third down catch on their 4th quarter TD drive
What we learned – Hamilton
- Hamilton also started a freshman QB, Luke Kurzum, who also struggled going 12-29 and 152 yards against a tough Amherst defense
- His late interception and 34 yd return as well as Hamilton’s inability to convert on 3rd down (7-19) cost them: the Continentals outgained Amherst by 41 yds in the game
- Fellow freshman RB Nate Wildman was impressive – he went 35-119 with 2 TDs
- LB Nick Hoff had 10 tackles and DL Chase White had 4 tackles, 1,5 TFLS and 0.5 sack
- DB Kyle Bratcher had an interception and 2 PBUs
Bowdoin 20, Williams 0
Bottom Line: Bowdoin’s defense shuts down Williams
Official links:
Bowdoin: Football Posts Impressive Shutout of Williams in Home Opener – Bowdoin College
Williams: Williams Drops First Road Test at Bowdoin 20-0 – Williams College
What we learned – Bowdoin
- Bowdoin’s defense was dominant in the first half, holding Williams to five three and outs to open the game
- The Polar Bear defense held Williams to 2 of 14 on third down and 0 for 2 on fourth down
- Bowdoin hit big plays through the air: the trio of WR Colton Fahey, WR Jed Hoggard and TE Brendan King combined for 11 catches and 220 yards – averaging 20 yards a catch
- Bowdoin made their share of mistakes in the shutout: QB Andrew Boel threw for 244 yards but had two interceptions and Bowdoin had 11 penalties for 110 yds
- Bowdoin dominated the time of possession, holding the ball for 36 minutes
- LB Max Jacobs and LB/DB Koy Price combined for 11 tackles, 6 TFLS and 4 sacks
What we learned – Williams
- After an impressive opening game, Williams’ freshman QB Owen McHugh struggled, going 9-28 for 138 yds and 1 INT
- The passing game was severely limited by Bowdoin; the Ephs only completed 10 passes and gave up 6 sacks
- RB Mario Fischetti provided a good effort rushing going 16-79 yds, averaging just below 5 yd per carry
- Freshman WR Holden Gering continues to be their leading pass catcher – he had 3-37 yds
- LB Cameron Smith had seven tackles, 3 TFLs and 2.5 sacks
- Williams had beaten Bowdoin 9 consecutive times before this shutout loss
Trinity 48, Colby 7
Bottom Line: Trinity dominates Colby, exploding in the in third quarter
Official links:
Trinity: Football Clobbers Colby, 48-7 – Trinity College (bantamsports.com)
Colby: Third Quarter Costly, Mules Drop to Trinity – Colby College (colbyathletics.com)
What we learned – Trinity:
- Trinity continues to roll, winning their 13 straight NESCAC game and outgaining Colby 499-123 in yds
- After leading just 9-7 at half time, the Bantams scored 4 touchdowns and a FG on their first five drives of the 2nd half
- The Bantams were effective on third down going 8 for 15
- WR Sean Clapp continues to be outstanding – 6-121, 2 TDs
- QB Spencer Fetter was very efficient: 19-30 for 319 yds and 3 TDs
- Tyler Jameson had two picks and Trinity had 6 sacks
What we learned – Colby
- Colby scored on its first drive, and then were effectively shutdown: The Mules only had 83 yards the rest of the game
- QB Miles Drake was 15-29 and threw two picks
- RB Locksley Burke has the most carries for Colby, going 12-45 yds
- RB Keon Smart was the Mules’ leading receiver, 7-42 yds as the Colby WRs only had 45 yards receiving
- Colby did not force Trinity to punt
- LB Julian Young had another big day in the tackle department notching 12 tackles and 1 TFL
Wesleyan 24, Middlebury 21
Bottom Line: Wesleyan tops Middlebury in a back-and-forth contest
Official links:
Wesleyan: Defense Sparks Wesleyan’s 24-21 Home Win over Middlebury – Wesleyan University
Middlebury: Football Edged By Wesleyan 24-21 In Back-And-Forth Battle – Middlebury College
What we learned – Wesleyan:
- QB Niko Candido was able to hit big plays including a 66 TD strike to WR Liam Kennedy but struggled with hitting completions, going just 18-42 (43%)
- Candido was productive on the ground, rushing for 8-73 yds
- RB Tyler Flynn added 61 yds on 17 carries
- The Cardinal secondary made several big plays: DB Jack Nally had 2 interceptions and DB Wesley Abraham had a pick six, as well as 2 PBUs
- The Cardinal rush defense also did good work against the run: Middlebury averaged just 2.7 yds per carry
What we learned – Middlebury
- QB Cole Kennon struggled – he threw 3 picks including a pick six and had a fumble during a late 4th quarter Panther drive
- Ultimately the 4 turnovers and a missed 4th down conversion proved too much for Middlebury to overcome against a good Wesleyan team
- After a quiet opener, WR Donovan Wood emerged with a strong game: 4-109 yds; he provided big plays with catches for 33, 33 and 32 yds
- RB Ollie Orvis was the lead back for Middlebury, rushing for 23-74 yds
- DB Rocco Stola had a major impact on the game: he had an interception and a 66 yd KO return
Tufts 44, Bates 16
Bottom Line: Tufts’ strong running game tramples Bates
Official links:
Bates: Beltran has big game in football’s 44-16 loss at Tufts – Bates College (gobatesbobcats.com)
What we learned – Tufts
- Tufts struggled to run the ball last week against Trinity, but that changed this week against Bates
- The Jumbos appear to have found a rushing answer in junior RB Chartellis Reece, who went for 20-178 yds
- QB Michael Berluti added another 75 yards rushing, including a 61-yard TD scamper, which aided in a 329-yard rushing effort
- Tufts outgained Bates by over 200 yards
- WR Cade Moore provided a lift in the passing game going 5-59 and 1 TD, while Berluti had a quiet day for his standards going 12-19 for 140 yds
- LB EJ Comerford continues to pile up stats for the Tufts defense: he had 9 tackles and 1 TFL
What we learned – Bates
- Bates’ veteran defensive line had been a strong spot for the Bobcats, but had a rough day against the run
- Bates’ offense was able to put together 4 long drives: drives of 14, 10, 9 and 9 plays through the day, but those only produced 16 points
- The Bobcats may have found their next top wideout: sophomore WR Sergio Beltran went for 7-127 2 TDs
- Outside of Beltran, Bates failed to yield much more in offense – only 35 yards passing came from other receivers and Bates could not break 100 yards rushing across multiple backs
- Freshman RB Ryan Lynskey led Bates in attempts (11-35 yds)
- Another freshman, DB Jack Morrison, led Bates in tackles with 7
Week 3 – September 30, 2023
Headlines:
- Trinity, Tufts and Wesleyan impressive in victory
- Middlebury holds off Bowdoin late with key defensive stops
- Colby capitalizes on Bates mistakes to prevail in opening CBB contest
Trinity 49, Amherst 0
Bottom Line: Trinity overmatches Amherst in first half to blow out the Mammoths
Official links:
Amherst: Mammoths drop 49-0 decision to Trinity – Amherst College
Trinity: Football Topples Amherst, 49-0 – Trinity College (bantamsports.com)
What we learned – Trinity:
- Trinity continues to roll, winning their 14 straight NESCAC game and outgaining Amherst 457-145 in yds
- 6 of 8 the Bantams’ first half drives ended up in touchdowns, as they jumped out to a 42-0 lead
- QB Spencer Fetter was once again very efficient: 11-16, 156 yds and 3 TDs. He sat out the 2nd
- TB Tyler DiNapoli made the most of his 9 carries, rushing for 110 yds including runs of 51, 17, 14 and 13 yds. Like Fetter, he also sat the 2nd
- The Trinity defense forced 3 turnovers, held Amherst to 2-11 on third down and registered 3 sacks
- LB Cade Klarides-Ditra had 2 tackles, 1 TFL, recovered a fumble, intercepted a pass and had a PBU.
- Only thing to nitpick on Trinity was too many penalties: 7 for 65 yds
What we learned – Amherst
- Freshman QB John Collier understandably struggled against an impressive veteran Trinity defense: he went 15-29 for 95 yards and two interceptions
- Amherst had only 7 first downs in the first half but also 4 turnovers
- WR Owen Gaydos had a solid day – 5-45 yds
- The Amherst run game continues to struggle – the Mammoths tried five different backs on the day and they went 13-44 yds
- Amherst’s accomplished defense could not slow Trinity, but DB Luke Harmon continues to shine he had 6 tackles and a QB hurry
Middlebury 34, Bowdoin 28
Bottom Line: Middlebury holds off Bowdoin in 4th with key defensive stops
Official links:
Middlebury: Football Hands Bowdoin Its First Loss Of The Season With Gritty 34-27 Win – Middlebury College
Bowdoin: Football Comes Up Just Short in First Loss of the Season at Middlebury – Bowdoin College
What we learned – Middlebury
- QB Cole Kennon connected on some long passes – he was just 21-41, but threw for 358 yds and 3 TDs
- Two Panther wideouts stood out: Patrick Jamin had 8-185 and Donovan Wood had 6-110 and 2 TDs.
- Middlebury had several big plays including Jamin (60 yd TD), RB Walker Coleman (51 yd TD run), Kennon (44 yd run), Wood (42 yd catch) and WR Ethan Vashel (35 yd run)
- If you take out Coleman’s 51 yard run, Panther running backs only rushed for 13-29 yds
- The defense matched the offense’s big plays – DB Finn Muldoon had a pick off in the end zone to thwart Bowdoin, and DB Sam Wilson had a PBU on 4th down to end it
- LB John McCool had 13 tackles, 2.5 TFLs and a forced fumble.
- K Zach Levy went 2-4 in FG attempts, missing from 36 and 35 yds out
What we learned – Bowdoin
- Bowdoin played well against Middlebury but a late interception in the end zone hurt their chances
- The Polar Bears had more yards than Middlebury, converted 3 of 4 on 4th down and had a time of possession advantage of 37 to 23 minutes.
- QB Andrew Boel threw for 417 yds going 35-55. He had 2 TD but 2 INTs
- The Polar Bear trio of WR Colton Fahey, WR Jed Hoggard and TE Brendan King continued their strong play: they combined for 21 catches and 316 yards and two touchdowns
- RB Andre Eden provided some balance to the offense – he rushed 19-73
- LB Max Jacobs contributed across the board: he had 6 tackles, 1.5 TFLs, 1 sacks, 1 QB hurry and a PBU
Wesleyan 35, Hamilton 14
Bottom Line: Wesleyan levies air assault on Hamilton
Official links:
Wesleyan: Football Rolls Past Hamilton, 35-14 – Wesleyan University
Hamilton: Football drops 35-14 decision at Wesleyan, scores special teams TD – Hamilton College
What we learned – Wesleyan:
- WR Chase Wilson was the star of the day: he went for 10-158 yds and 4 TDs
- QB Niko Candido attacked the Hamilton secondary going 24-39 for 339 yds 5TDs and 0 INTs. Up 35-6 in the 4th, he sat out a series.
- WR Thomas Elkhoury grabbed a 46 yd TD and a committee of three RBs went 26-111 yds
- Wesleyan dominated the game – they outgained Hamilton by over 300 yards (466-162) and held a time of possession advantage of almost 38 minutes to 22, but the score was skewed by a Hamilton blocked punt for a TD
- Linebackers Jake Edwards and Ben Carbeau combined for 14 tackles, 2 TFLs, 1 sacks and a BPU and the Cardinal rush defense held the Continentals to 31 yds on 24 carries.
- DB Wesley Abraham picked off Hamilton twice
What we learned – Hamilton
- Hamilton played three quarterbacks with freshman Luke Kurzum having the most success through the air: 9-14 125 yds and 1 TD
- QB Matt Banbury had a fumble and an INT and soph QB Henry Rubey was 3-7 for just 2 yds with an INT
- Joseph Campanella snagged a 42 yd TD, but overall the Continentals could only muster 162 yards of total offense, and only 31 yds rushing
- Hamilton had one series of 7 plays (their lone TD drive), but the remaining 12 offensive series were no longer than 5 plays.
- Freshman WR Chester Boynton blocked a punt and scored of the block
- LB Cole Rivell stood out with 11 tackles and forced fumble
Tufts 28, Williams 10
Bottom Line: Tufts is dominant in win over Williams
Official links:
Tufts: Richardson, Offense Stellar In 28-10 Win Over Williams – Tufts University (gotuftsjumbos.com)
Williams: Williams Drops Week 3 Road Game at Tufts 28-10 – Williams College
What we learned – Tufts:
- WR Jaden Richardson torched an inexperienced Eph secondary – he had 10-153 and 3TDs receiving
- QB Michael Berluti was outstanding going 23-33, 265 yds, 3 TDs and 0 INTs; he also added 18-120 yards for an impressive 385 yds of total offense
- RB Chartellis Reece has another strong week going 21-104 yds and 1 TD
- The score didn’t reflect Tufts dominance; Tufts had 29 first downs to Williams’ 8, outgained them 514 to 252 in offensive yds and controlled the ball for close to 41 minutes
- What skewed the score was Tufts went 0 for 3 on 4th down conversions including failing to get a 1st down at the end of 15 and 12 play drives
- The Jumbos notched 3 sacks with ’22 All-NESCAC defensive lineman Ed Iuteri getting a sack
What we learned – Williams:
- RB Mario Fischetti continued to be a very effective runner, he went 14-138 including runs of 61 and 21 yds
- Williams struggled through the air as they started a freshman QB Owen McHugh: he was limited to only 5 completions
- Of Williams’ 11 drives, they only had two drives that had more than 5 plays
- Freshman WR Brady Stahelski had a 43 yd catch, but Williams could only muster 32 other yards from the passing game
- DB James Hemmer had 14 tackles and 1 TFL and LB Tim Landolfi added 12 tackles
Colby 30, Bates 24
Bottom Line: Colby capitalizes on Bates mistakes to prevail in opening CBB contest
Official links:
Colby: Mules Make it Five in a Row Against Bobcats – Colby College (colbyathletics.com)
Bates: Football’s rally falls just short in 30-24 loss to Colby – Bates College (gobatesbobcats.com)
What we learned – Colby
- RB Keon Smart had himself a night: scored 3 times – two rushing TDs and one receiving
- Smart provided 255 yards of total offense for the Mules, which was over 80% of their total output.
- 2nd string QB Thomas Keeling took the reins for the Mules, he was 12-19 for 135 yds and a TD
- Colby did not have a first down in the 1st half but scored 21 points after turning an early Bates fumble deep in the Bobcat end into a touchdown, hitting a 75 yd TD pass and blocking a punt for a TD.
- The Mules had 3 sacks and picked off Bates two times
- LB Julian Young had 13 tackles, 2 TFLs and recovered a fumble and returned it for 20 yds
What we learned – Bates
- Bates outgained Colby 387-318 in yds and had 23 first downs to Colby’s 10 but were hurt by having three turnovers and yielding a punt blocked for a touchdown
- QB Colton Bosselait went 28-49 for 312 yds with 3 TDs and 2 INTs
- Soph WR Matt Holmes (6-110) and TE Steven Guerette (9-102) both went over 100 yds receiving and soph WR Sergio Beltran had 10 catches. Holmes had 1 TD and Guerette had 2.
- Freshman RB Ryan Lynsky carried for 17-54 and had 25 yds receiving
- Bates rallied in the 4th qtr from 27-10 to put together back to back long touchdown drives, but in their final possession, Bates had a 9 play end with an interception at the Colby 30
- DL Matt Juneau had 8 tackles, 2 TFLs and a QB hurry
Week 4 – October 7, 2023
Headlines:
- Trinity and Tufts post solid victories
- Middlebury scores in the final minute to beat Williams
- Colby and Amherst win behind strong defensive efforts
Amherst 17, Bates 7
Bottom Line: Amherst defense smothers Bates
Official links:
Amherst: Mammoths declaw Bobcats for 17-7 road win – Amherst College
Bates: Amherst pulls away in third quarter, defeats football 17-7 – Bates College (gobatesbobcats.com)
What we learned – Amherst:
- The Mammoth defense was dominant holding Bates to just 34 yds rushing on 23 carries
- After starting frosh John Collier at QB, Amherst switched to junior QB Jack Cox, who took over mid-2nd quarter
- Cox led Amherst to 2 touchdowns and a FG on his first four drives
- Soph WR Gabe dos Santos had his first career catches, and went 4-66 and a 41 yd TD catch
- Wideouts Owen Gaydos, Carter Jung and Sam Gerber combined to catch 15-95 yds
- The running game was better as Eckelkamp and Muhammad collectively went 24-99 yds
- DB Luke Harmon continues to be a playmaker on defense: 7 tackles, 2 BPUs and an interception with a return for 34 yds
What we learned – Bates
- Bates struggled on the ground – frosh RB Ryan Lynsky rushed 8-14 yds and their next highest rusher was QB Colton Bosselait with 10 yds
- Bates’ first half drives included a drive ending in a fumble, two drives ending in interceptions and three 3 and outs that yielded 9 yds total
- The Bobcats had two turnovers to none for Amherst, and only possessed the ball for close to 25 minutes in the game
- Bosselait went 18-35 for 184 yds and 1 TD but had 2 INTs
- TE Steven Guerrette had another good game (7-85 yds) as did WR Sergio Beltran (7-76 yds)
- DBs Jarrin Sato and Michael Spencer led the defense with 9 tackles each
Trinity 34, Hamilton 21
Bottom Line: Trinity tops Hamilton with balanced effort
Official links:
Trinity: Football Fends Off Hamilton, 34-21 – Trinity College (bantamsports.com)
Hamilton: Football hangs tough in 34-21 loss to Trinity, scores three TDs – Hamilton College
What we learned – Trinity
- Bantams controlled the game, outgaining Hamilton 389-211 in yds and 27-15 in first downs
- QB Spencer Fetter went 28-45 for 248 yds and 3 TDs
- WR Sean Clapp continues to be a dominant NESCAC wideout – he went 13-103 and 1 TD
- The Trinity RB trio of DiNapoli, McCabe and Kirby rushed for 31-141 yds
- It was only a 13 point win as the weather dampened the Bantam effectiveness: Trinity threw a pick (Fetter’s first of the year) and the Bantams went 0-3 of 4th down
- DB Ma-Lyke Davis had two interceptions, and returned those picks 63 yds
- The win extended Trinity’s winning streak over Hamilton to 28 games
What we learned – Hamilton
- Hamilton played soph QB Henry Rubey in this game – he was limited to 9-22 and 137 yds
- Rubey ran for 29 yds and threw for 2 TDs, including a beautiful strike to WR Ezra Lombardi, but also had 3 INTs
- WR Luis Perez-Segnini caught 5-84 and snagged a 42 yd TD
- TE Marc Howrigan had another quiet receiving game but had a block punt with a scoop and score. This game is the 2nd week in a row Hamilton scored off a blocked punt
- LB Cole Rivell had 7 tackles and 1 TFL and fellow LB John Wilson finished with 12 tackles
- Hamilton still has not made a field goal; they tried their first FG of the season in this game, but missed from 51 yds out
Colby 20, Wesleyan 13 (OT)
Bottom Line: Colby wins defensive battle in OT
Official links:
Colby: Colby Tops Previously Unbeaten Wesleyan 20-13 in Overtime – Colby College (colbyathletics.com)
Wesleyan: Football Suffers 20-13 OT Defeat at Colby – Wesleyan University
What we learned – Colby:
- Colby outgained Wesleyan 294-237 and held the ball for almost 35 minutes to the Cardinals 25
- The Mules blocked Wesleyan’s game winning FG attempt at the end of regulation and won it in OT
- QB Thomas Keeling went 19-29 for 212 yds and 2 TDs
- WR Jack Sawyer exploded for 7-129 yds and 2 TDs and scored on the opening play of OT; he had caught 5-33 for the season before this game
- RB Keon Smart rushed for 20-85 yds, but the Mule defense was the story
- Wesleyan came into the game averaging over 428 yds a game, but the Colby D held them to 237 yds
- The Mules had 6 sacks and forced a fumble, and foiled Wesleyan’s OT drive at the 7
- LB Julian Young had 11 tackles and 1 TFLs while LB Marc Dougherty had 8 tackles, 2.5 TFLS and 1 sack
- The snapped Wesleyan’s 12 game winning streak over Colby
What we learned – Wesleyan
- QB Niko Candido struggled against Colby’s D and the Waterville elements, going 13-30 for 158 yds and 2 TDs. He had averaged 311 yds per game in the Cardinals’ first three contests
- Wesleyan scored on their opening drive, but then only had 30 yds the rest of the 1st half
- Their offense was hurt by a fumble and a blocked 37 yd FG
- WR Thomas Elkhoury caught 5-64 yds, but a potent passing offense was limited
- Wesleyan’s defense generated 6 sacks, and soph DL Declan Welch had 7 tackles, 2 TFLs and 2 sacks
- LB Ben Carbeau had 9 tackles, 1.5 TFLs and 1 sack
Middlebury 12, Williams 10
Bottom Line: Middlebury scores in the final minute to top Williams
Official links:
Middlebury: Last-Minute Touchdown Lifts Middlebury Past Williams 12-10 – Middlebury College
Williams: Williams Drops Close Game at Home to Middlebury 12-10 – Williams College
What we learned – Middlebury:
- Middlebury scored with 56 seconds left to beat Williams
- Cole Kennon completed 13-35 for 255 yds but had 4 INTs
- WR Patrick Jamin continues to be a key Panther as he had 6-140 yds and 1 TD, including the game winner while WR Donovan Wood caught 4-86 yds including a 34 yd catch
- The running game was limited: Panther backs had 14 carries for only 24 yds
- Middlebury’s first three drives ended in fumbles and after a FG drive to start the 2nd half, their next four drives ended with interceptions
- DL David Filias had 9 tackles, 2 TFLs, 1 sack and one forced fumbles
What we learned – Williams:
- Williams had one, repeat one yard passing; frosh QB Owen McHugh went 2-11 with weather being a factor
- The Ephs were able to run the ball, rushing 66 times for 258 yds (3.9 per carry)
- The duo of RB Mario Fischetti (20-119) and soph RB Joe Oris (23-77) led the way, with McHugh adding in 40 yds rushing
- The rush heavy approach allowed Williams to possess the ball for close to 42 minutes
- Williams played strong run defense – they held Middlebury to 55 yds on 27 carries
- DB George Papadopoulos had a pick 6, which generated the Ephs only TD
- LB Tim Landolfi had 12 tackles, 1.5 TFLs and 1 sack for Williams
Tufts 24, Bowdoin 10
Bottom Line: Tufts outpaces Bowdoin in a rain soaked game
Official links:
Tufts: Defense Strong For Football In 24-10 Road Win at Bowdoin – Tufts University (gotuftsjumbos.com)
Bowdoin: Tufts Scores 21 Unanswered Points To Rally For Football Win Over Bowdoin – Bowdoin College
What we learned – Tufts
- The weather limited both offenses, but Tufts outgained Bowdoin 263-155
- QB Michael Berluti went 15-28 for 172 and 2 TDs
- Big play WR Jaden Richardson had 4-48 yds and 2 TDs and WR Henry Fleckner had a 62 yd catch
- The Jumbos struggled to run the ball – Berluti led Tufts in rushing with 48 yds, but the Tufts running backs only went for 20-48 yds
- Tufts scored on back-to-back drives in the 2nd qtr which was the key in the win
- Soph DL Sulieman Abuaqe had a coming out party: 5 tackles, 4 TFLs and 3 sacks – all firsts for him this season
What we learned – Bowdoin
- Offense could only muster 155 yards, and the weather in Brunswick didn’t help
- The Polar Bears scored a FG and TD on 2 of their first three drives, but there final 9 drives ended in 8 punts and an interception
- They were only 4-17 on third down and gave up 5 sacks
- QB Andrew Boel was only 7-24 for 117 yds and an INT
- QB Robbie Long led Bowdoin in rushing, he went 16-51 yd
- LB Max Jacobs continued to be outstanding: he had 10 tackles and 2 TFLs
Week 5 – October 14, 2023
Headlines:
- Middlebury stuns Trinity with last second goal line stand
- Colby and Williams rally late to earn victories
- Tufts and Bowdoin post impressive wins
Colby 19, Amherst 16
Bottom Line: Colby rallies to beat Amherst
Official links:
Colby: Huge 4th Quarter Seals Third Straight Win – Colby College (colbyathletics.com)
Amherst: Mules kick last-minute field goal to rally for 19-16 win over Mammoths – Amherst College
What we learned – Colby:
- Colby found yet another way to win a tight game, and this week Mule K Christos Tzoumakas kicked a game winning field goal with 3 seconds to play
- Down 16-7, the Mules rallied to score 12 points in the 4th quarter to secure the win
- QB Thomas Keeling was 18-33 for 201 yds including going 4-5 for 57 yds on the game winning drive
- WR Matt McHugh had 5-68 yds and the Sawyer brothers (Brendan and Jack) combined to catch 8-99 yds
- This game was evenly contested – Colby had 17 first downs to Amherst’s 16, Colby punted 9 times to Amherst’s 8 and Colby ran 68 plays to Amherst’s 67.
- DB Payton Reid had 5 tackles, 0.5 TFLs, 0.5 sacks, 1 PBUs and 1 forced fumble
What we learned – Amherst
- QB Jack Cox led the Mammoths, and he went only 20-42 for 209 yds but had 2 TDs
- WR Owen Gaydos led the team in receiving going 8-63 yds and 1 TD, and WR Carter Jung had a 60 yd TD catch
- The Mammoths had 13 yds net rushing; their lead backs combined for 17-59 yds
- Amherst opened the 2nd half with a 77 yd TD drive, but on their final 6 drives they only got 86 yds combined with the drives ending in 5 punts and a fumble
- In a close game, Amherst’s missed a 24 yd FG and extra point which hurt them
- DB Luke Harmon continues to make plays all over the field – he had 13 tackles, 4 TFLs and a sack
Middlebury 20, Trinity 15
Bottom Line: Middlebury stuns Trinity with last second goal line stand
Official links:
Middlebury: Defense Dominates As Middlebury Snaps Trinity’s 15-Game Winning Streak – Middlebury College
Trinity: Football Rally Comes Up Short Against Middlebury – Trinity College (bantamsports.com)
What we learned – Middlebury
- The Panther defense stopped Trinity on the 3-yard line on the last play of the game to beat undefeated Trinity
- LB Kiernan Sheridan made the game winning tackle to the end game; he finished with 7 tackles, 1 TFL and 1 PBU
- QB Cole Kennon went 20-35 for 285 yds and 3 TDs
- WR Mike Ahonen had a career day catching 9-175 yds and a 68 yd TD
- WRs Patrick Jamin and Donovan Wood combined for 11-110 yds and 2 TDs
- DB Finn Muldoon had 11 tackles and 1 INT
What we learned – Trinity
- Trinty outgained Middlebury 444-338 yds and had a time of possession advantage of almost 36 mins to 24 mins
- The issue for the Bantams was in the 1st half they had four long drives (plays of 14, 13, 11 and 9 for 182 total yards) but only scored 9 points from that offensive success
- Trinity started the 2nd half with another drive that ended in a FG, but then their next five drives ended with a fumble, FG, 3 and out, interception before the final drive ended at the Middlebury 3
- RB Tyler DiNapoli went 33-138 yds, WR Sean Clapp caught 7-106 yds and WR Nolan O’Brien snagged 6-122 yds
- Trinity was hurt by two interceptions (Fetter only had 1 in his first four games), a missed FG and going 5 for 16 on 3rd down conversions
Tufts 49, Wesleyan 14
Bottom Line: Tufts blasts Wesleyan with impressive aerial attack
Official links:
Tufts: Huge First Half All Football Needs In 49-14 Win Over Wesleyan – Tufts University (gotuftsjumbos.com)
Wesleyan: Cardinals Drop 49-14 Decision to Tufts – Wesleyan University
What we learned – Tufts:
- The Jumbos scored TDs on their first five drives, and on 7 of their first 8 drives to take a 49-7 lead
- QB Michael Berluti went 14-20 for 281 yds and 4 TDs
- WR Jaden Richardson continued to be a big play threat – he had 73 and 57 yd TD catches and finished 4-147 yds
- WR Cade Moore had 8-93 yds and 2 TDs
- The Tufts running backs Audre Smith and Chartellis Reece combined for 105 yds, 3 TDs on only 13 carries
- LB Shane Reiner had 9 tackles, 3 TFLs, 3 sacks and 1 forced fumble
What we learned – Wesleyan
- Wesleyan had one 75-yard TD drive in the first half, but could only muster 25 yds on the other 6 first half drives which ended with 4 punts and 2 fumbles
- Tufts led 42-7 at the half and outgained Wesleyan 483-253 yds
- QB Niko Candido was only 12-22 for 167 yds
- WR Thomas Elkhoury and Chase Wilson combined to catch 8-138 yds
- The Cardinals yielded 6 sacks on the game and did not sack Tufts
- Neither teams’ quarterbacks played in the 4th quarter as the game was decided at that juncture
Williams 24, Hamilton 17
Bottom Line: Williams late TD pass lifts Ephs past Hamilton
Official links:
Williams: Offense Powers Williams to Win in Week 5 Matchup at Hamilton 24-17 – Williams College
Hamilton: Football downed 24-17 by Williams, Wildman ’27 runs for two TDs – Hamilton College
What we learned – Williams:
- Freshman QB Owen McHugh hit TE Sam Jaffe for a 55 yd TD late in the 4th to take the lead
- McHugh was 14-24 for 221 yds with 1 TD and 1 INT; the 221 passing yds were more than the Ephs had in the three preceding games combined
- RB Mario Fischetti did not play, but McHugh ran for 16-69 yds and RB Jon Oris added 12-40 yds
- Oris was the Eph’s top receiver catching 6-110 yds, including a 51 yd catch
- Williams led 17-7 at the half, but had three short offensive series (10 plays and 34 yds) before the big play late to Jaffe
- LB Ethan Scott had 9.5 tackles, 1.5 TFLs and 1 INT
What we learned – Hamilton:
- Hamilton rallied from down 17-7 to tie the game, before giving up the Jaffe TD
- The Continentals matched Williams’ offense output – they rushed for 6 more yards and passed for 10 yds less than the Ephs
- Freshman RB Nate Wildman rushed 18-82 yds and 2 TDs
- Hamilton was led by freshman QB Luke Kurzum who went 22-34 and 211 yds but had 2 INTs
- WR Lucas Perez-Segnini led the Continentals in receiving, catching 6-49 yds
- Hamilton’s offense went 9-18 on 3rd down and 3-4 on 4th down
Bowdoin 35, Bates 20
Bottom Line: Bowdoin topples Bates with 4 first half TDs
Official links:
Bowdoin: Big Second Quarter Propels Polar Bears to Homecoming Win Over Bates – Bowdoin College
Bates: Football can’t hold early lead in 35-20 loss to Bowdoin – Bates College (gobatesbobcats.com)
What we learned – Bowdoin
- The Polar Bears used a balanced attack to beat CBB rival Bates, scoring on four consecutive drives in the first half
- After falling behind 17-7 to Bates, Bowdoin outscored Bates 28-3 to close out the game
- QB Andrew Boel threw 4 TDs, finishing 14-20 for 225 yds with 1 INT
- WR Colton Fahey caught 5-85 and an impressive 3 TDs
- RB Andre Eden rushed 16-78 yds to complement the passing attack
- DB Koy Price was a star on defense, having 8 tackles, 4 TFLs, 2 sacks and 1 forced fumble
What we learned – Bates
- QB Colton Bosselait went 27-45 for 310 yds and 2 TDs
- WRs Drew Sachs and Sergio Beltran each had 8 catches and a TD, and had 106 and 88 yds, respectively
- After jumping out to a 17-7 lead, on the Bobcats next 9 drives, they had a FG, 5 punts, an interception, fumble and a loss on downs
- The rushing game was again non-existent. They had net negative 25 yds, and if you exclude the QB runs/sacks, Bates rushed 13 times for 11 yds
- DL Matt Juneau had 8 tackles and 1 TFL
- The loss takes Bates out of the CBB crown chase, having lost to both Bowdoin and Colby
Week 6 – October 21, 2023
Game recaps
Headlines:
- Middlebury, Trinity and Tufts win in dominant fashion
- Hamilton captures first victory at Colby
- Wesleyan scores 2 defensive TDs to hold off Bowdoin
Tufts 34, Amherst 14
Bottom Line: Tufts’ balanced attack tops Amherst
Official links:
Tufts: Win Streak Hits Five For Football With 34-14 Win At Amherst – Tufts University (gotuftsjumbos.com)
Amherst: Jumbos post 34-14 win over Mammoths – Amherst College
What we learned – Tufts:
- Tufts gave up an early TD to Amherst, then scored 34 unanswered points
- The Jumbos outgained the Mammoths 426-171, with a balanced effort of 206 yds rushing and 220 yds passing
- Another strong game for QB Michael Berluti – he threw 18-34 for 220 yds and 3 TDs and ran for 64 yds
- WR Jaden Richardson continues to post big plays: he had 4-98 yds and 1 TD including a 55 yd catch
- RB Chartellis Reece ran 21-89 1 TDs, and wideouts Cade Moore and Robbie Moret combined for 11-89 yds (Moore had 2 TDs)
- DB Drew Guida had 5 tackles, 1 TFL, 1 sack, 1 FF and a fumble recovery
What we learned – Amherst
- Offense continues to be a challenge for Amherst
- The Mammoths had 8 consecutive offense drives which all had just 3 plays and only one had positive yards (8 yds)
- QB Jack Cox was only 5-15 for 71 yds, he was relieved by Mike Piazza who went 2-3 for 21 yds
- RB Louie Eckelkamp rushed 10-44 and WR Carter Jung had a TD catch
- Amherst was hurt by penalties, they had 7-55 yds, and lost a net 50 yds against Tufts (1-5 yds)
- DB Luke Harmon had 8 tackles and 1 TFL
Middlebury 48, Bates 7
Bottom Line: Middlebury’s aerial assault blast Bates
Official links:
Middlebury: Football Storms Past Bates 48-7, Kenary Breaks Career Sacks School Record – Middlebury College
Bates: Big plays cost football in 48-7 loss at Middlebury – Bates College (gobatesbobcats.com)
What we learned – Middlebury
- Middlebury amassed 426 yds passing (21.3 yd/completion) and 523 yds of total offense
- This game was 31-0 with 3 minutes left in the first half
- QB Cole Kennon 17-28 for 353 yds and 4 TDs including passes of 83, 58 and 56 yds
- Another great day for wideouts Donovan Wood (6-95 yds and a TD) and Patrick Jamin (7-72 yds and a TD)
- A committee of four Panther RBs combined for 93 yds on 26 carries and 2 TDs
- DL Tomas Kenary was dominant: he had 6 tackles, 4.5 TFLs and 3.5 sacks – he now has 9 sacks in 6 games
What we learned – Bates
- The Bates’ offense struggled – in its first 6 drives it had 5 three and outs and a fumble; three of those drives netted negative yds
- QB Colton Bosselait went 3-12 for 32 yds and was ultimately replaced by freshman QB Seneca Moore
- Moore was 7-12 for 84 yds and 1 INT, but provided a rushing element; he rushed 18-77 yds
- The Bobcats gave up 5 sacks
- The Bates defense struggled on big downs giving up first downs on 9 of 14 3rd downs and 1 4th down
- DL Matt Juneau led the Bobcats with 9 tackles
Wesleyan 35, Bowdoin 30
Bottom Line: Wesleyan capitalizes on Bowdoin miscues and holds off their late charge
Official links:
Wesleyan: Football Scores 35 Unanswered, Holds Off Late Bowdoin Rally to Win, 35-30 – Wesleyan University
Bowdoin: Fourth Quarter Rally Comes Up Just Short in Football Loss at Wesleyan – Bowdoin College
What we learned – Wesleyan
- The Cardinal defense scored twice in the 2nd quarter – a scoop and score off a Jake Edwards sack and a pick six by Kade Doverspike
- In addition, Wesleyan threw a 27 yd TD strike on 3rd and 23 with 2 seconds left in the first half
- QB Nick Candido was solid – 12-25 for 216 yds and 2 TDs and 1 INT
- The productive duo of Chase Wilson and Thomas Elkhoury combined for 8-144 yds and 2 TDs
- RB Ezra Jenifer chipped in with 7-46 yds and 1 TD
- DB Dylan Connors had 14 tackles and LB Jake Edwards had 11 tackles, 0.5 TFL and the aforementioned fumble recovery
What we learned – Bowdoin:
- The Polar Bears dominated the stats sheet, but yielding the two defensive touchdowns and the late end of the half TD proved too much to overcome
- They outgained Wesleyan 444-216 yds, held the ball for twice as long (40-20 mins) and had 30 first downs to the Cardinals’ 16
- The three negative plays cited above, a missed field goal and 10 penalties (net loss in penalties vs opponent was 46 yds) hurt their chances
- Bowdoin rallied for three 4th quarter TDs, with the last one scored with 52 seconds left, but it was too little too late
- QB Andrew Boel was 31-51 for 431 yds and 4 TDs, but had the pick six and fumble taken back for a score
- WR Colton Fahey caught 8-144 and TE Brendan King had 7-90 including the three 4th quarter TDs
- RB Andre Eden led the rushing attack with 19-80 yds
Hamilton 17, Colby 6
Bottom Line: Kurzum leads Hamilton to first win at Colby
Official links:
Hamilton: Football stifles Colby on the road in 17-6 NESCAC win – Hamilton College
Colby: Colby’s Win Streak Snapped by Hamilton – Colby College (colbyathletics.com)
What we learned – Hamilton:
- Hamilton broke through with their first victory in a defensive battle, scoring twice in the 4th quarter
- Freshman QB Luke Kurzum threw for a TD and rushed for another
- Kurzum finished 15-22 for 143 yds and rushed 16-62 yds
- RB Nate Wilman missed the 2nd half, but converted QB Matt Banbury took his place and rushed 17-53 including 7 times on a time killing 8 play drive that culminated in a FG
- DB/P Tighe Hoey had 3 PBUs and pinned the Mules insider their own 20 4 times on day
- LB Cole Rivell has another strong game: 9 tackles, 1 forced fumble and 1 PBU
What we learned – Colby:
- Colby outgained Hamilton 340-289 yds, but had a fumble and went 0 for 3 on 4th down
- QB Thomas Keeling was 23-41 for 260 yds including a 51 yd strike to WR Matt McHugh
- McHugh finished with 7-120 yds receiving
- The Mules had only one trip into the red zone and settled for a FG
- In addition to the fumbles and 4th down misses, Colby had 6 penalties for 50 yds to Hamilton’s 1 for 5 yds
- LB Julian Young was again a tackling leader – he had 10 tackles
Trinity 41, Williams 14
Bottom Line: Trinity hands Williams lopsided loss
Official links:
Trinity: Football Dominates Williams, 41-14 – Trinity College (bantamsports.com)
Williams: Ephs Football Loses to Trinity 41-14 – Williams College
What we learned – Trinity
- Trinity gave up an opening TD to Williams, then preceded to score 41 straight points
- The Bantams threw an INT on their opening drive and then scored TDs on 6 of their next 8 drives
- WR Sean Clapp was impressive: 5-129 and 3 TDs including a 52 yd catch
- RB Colin McCabe rushed for 11-103 and 2 TDs and fellow RBs Bill Kirby and Tyler DiNapoli combined for 23-104 yds on the ground
- QB Spencer Fetter was again an efficient 12-18 for 242 yds and 4 TDs; his yards per completion was over 20 yds
- LB Dan Calhoun had 5 tackles, 1 TFL and 1 sacks
What we learned – Williams
- Williams opened the game with a 75 yd TD drive, with QB Owen McHugh going 3-3 for 49 yds and a TD
- The Ephs next 10 drives included 8 three and outs, 1 four and out and zero points; at that point it was 41-7
- McHugh ended up 14-27 for 200 yds and 2 TDs
- No RB Mario Fischetti for a 2nd game; the other Williams backs rushing for 19-73 yds
- The Ephs were 1 for 4 on 4th down and had a fumble
- Freshman LB Nathan Rodi had 5 tackles, 1.5 TFLs, 0.5 sacks and a forced fumble
Week 7 – October 28, 2023
Game recaps
Hamilton 36, Tufts 34 (5 OT)
Bottom Line: Hamilton rallies to stun Tufts in five overtimes
Official links:
Hamilton: Football pulls out thrilling 36-34 win over Tufts in five overtimes – Hamilton College
Tufts: Hamilton Tops Football In Five Overtimes, 36-34 – Tufts University (gotuftsjumbos.com)
What we learned – Hamilton
- Hamilton was down 17-0 at half, but rallied for 17 unanswered 2nd half points to force overtime and then traded blows in the OT, outlasting Tufts with a stop in the 5th OT
- The Continentals opened the 2nd half with a long TD drive, then blocked a punt for a TD to cut the lead to 17-14
- Freshman QB Luke Kurzum converted a 3rd and 31 with a 31 yd run to set up freshman K Ben Waterman’s game tying FG with two seconds to play
- After throwing 2 INTs in the first half, Kurzum shook off an injury and rallied Hamilton to the win: he led the game tying drive and converted multiple scores and needed 2-point conversions to secure the upset
- Kurzum had 177 yds passing and 61 yds rushing and Matt Banbury, who was switched from QB to RB, rushed 23-87 yds and scored in OT
- LB Cole Rivell had 11 tackles, and DB Kyle Bratcher had 6 tackles, 1 TFL and 3 PBUs
What we learned – Tufts:
- Tufts took a 17-0 at half time in their classic fashion: RB Chartellis Reece rushing TD, QB Michael Berluti to WR Jaden Richardson TD strike and a DB Louis Timmins interception
- In their 4 first half drives they drove the ball effectively: they scored two TDs, kicked a FG, and missed one
- The Jumbos drove 10 plays for 49 yds in their opening drive of the second half, but missed the FG, and then proceeded to punt on their next three drives, including a three and out on a drive that started with just 2:35 left
- Tufts missed 2 FGs, had a punt blocked for a TD and yielded a 31 yd run on 3rd and 31 with just 14 seconds to go
- Tufts traded TDs and most all 2-point conversions until the 5th OT, where the Jumbos failed to convert on a Berluti pass to WR Cade Moore
- RB Reece had a monster game rushing 27-168 yds and WR Richardson had a 63 yd TD catch
- DL Javier Rios had 7 tackles, 3.5 TFLs, 1.5 sacks and a forced fumble but had a costly facemask penalty in the final minute.
Wesleyan 34, Amherst 7
Bottom Line: Wesleyan’s two pick sixes bury Amherst
Official links:
Wesleyan: Football Celebrates Homecoming with 34-7 Domination of Amherst – Wesleyan University
Amherst: Mammoths fall to Wesleyan on gridiron, 34-7 – Amherst College
What we learned – Wesleyan:
- Wesleyan scored on two pick sixes including one by one of the best DBs in the NESCAC, Wesley Abraham, who took an interception back 30 yds for the score
- WR Chase Wilson had a huge game going 9-146 yds and 2 TDs
- DB Dylan Connors had a 82 yd pick six, and added 2 BPUs and 3 tackles
- QB Niko Candido went 16-25 for 228 yds and 3 TDs, but had 2 INTs
- The Cardinals running backs were effective rushing – the RB trio of Tyler Flynn, James McHugh and Ezra Jenifer combined to rush for 22-123 yds, an impressive 5.6 per carry
- Wesleyan had a FG and a PAT blocked by the Mammoths
What we learned – Amherst:
- Amherst had the ball trailing 13-7 with less than a minute left in the 1st half and then threw a pick six, gave up a 50 yd TD 4 plays into the 3rd qtr and in their next offensive series threw another pick six on the first play
- That 21-point barrage put the game at out of reach at 34-7
- Quarterback issues persist for the Mammoths as QB Jack Cox alternated with Mike Piazza, but the duo was just 18-37 for 132 yds with Cox tossing two interceptions for TDs
- QB Piazza was Amherst’s leading rusher (12-55 yds) and their RB Jack Roberge was their leading receiver with 5-35 yds
- In addition to the two pick sixes, Amherst was plagued by a lost fumble and a missed FG
- LB Andy Skirzenski was back making an impact – he had 13 tackles and 1.5 TFLs, and DL Kemit Fisher had 5 tackles, 1.5 TFLs and 1.5 sacks
Postponed to Nov 18th:
Trinity at Bowdoin
Williams at Bates
Middlebury at Colby
Week 8 – November 4, 2023
Game recaps – Week #8
Headlines:
- Wesleyan rallies in the 4th quarter to beat Williams to win the Little Three
- Middlebury dominates Hamilton in Old Rocking Chair Classic
- Amherst holds off Bowdoin with late defensive stands
- Trinity blasts Bates in lopsided affair
- Tufts drills Colby in impressive fashion
Wesleyan 30, Williams 22
Bottom Line: Wesleyan rallies in the 4th quarter to beat Williams to win the Little Three
Official links:
Williams: Williams Football Falls on Homecoming to Wesleyan – Williams College
What we learned – Wesleyan:
- Wesleyan fell behind 22-8 at halftime in part by giving up a safety on a 2 yd rush loss, fumbling on a kickoff from Williams and having a punt blocked
- The Cardinals were not much better in the 3rd quarter, where their four drives ended with an interception, failed 4th and 8 try and two fumbles
- The 4th quarter the Cardinals took control scoring 3 TDs on successive drives to capture the win
- QB Niko Candido was 24-48 365 yds and 3 TDs, but was sacked 8 times
- WR Thomas Elkhoury caught 7-128 yds and 1 TD and WR Chase Wilson added 6-127 yds
- The Wesleyan run game was limited as their RBs ran 12 times for 11 yds
- LB Ben Carbeau had 7 tackles, 1 TFL and 1 sack
What we learned – Williams:
- Williams settled for two FGs after having 1st and goal at the 6 and 7 in the first quarter, but did convert a blocked punt they recovered at Wesleyan 8 for a TD
- The Ephs also had a 47 yd strike from QB Owen McHugh to WR Brady Stahelski in the first half, but Williams was shut down in the 2nd half
- In their eight 2nd half drives, the Ephs had 4 short drives they ended in a punt, 2 they ended in fumbles and 2 that ended in interceptions
- McHugh went 13-32 for 190 yds and 2 TDs, but had 2 interceptions and 2 fumbles
- No RB Mario Fischetti, but McHugh rushed for 22-73 yds and RB Jon Oris added 12-49 yds
- Williams had 8 sacks and LB Ethan Scott had 4 tackles, 3.5 TFLs , 3.5 sacks and 3 forced fumbles
- WR/DB Holden Gering played both ways – he caught 3-37 and had 5 tackles, 1 INT and 4 PBUs
Middlebury 41, Hamilton 7
Bottom Line: Middlebury dominates Hamilton in Old Rocking Chair Classic
Official links:
Middlebury: Football Topples Hamilton 41-7 In Old Rocking Chair Classic – Middlebury College
Hamilton: Football tripped up by Middlebury in Old Rocking Chair Classic – Hamilton College
What we learned – Middlebury:
- The Panthers were dominant, outgaining Hamilton in yards 502-199 and showing balance with 194 yds rushing and 308 yds passing
- QB Cole Kennon was outstanding – he threw 27-37 yds for 308 yds and 3 TDs offset by 1 INT
- A trio of Panther receivers were impressive: Patrick Jamin (8-121 yds), Mike Ahonen (8-82 yds, 1 TD) and Donovan Wood (6-79, 1 TD)
- Five different Panther RBs combined for 36-170 and 2 TDs, averaging 4.7 yds per carry
- DB Finn Muldoon had 8 tackles and 1 PBU
What we learned – Hamilton:
- Hamilton only got 10 first downs, and on their last 7 possessions they had zero first downs, no more than 6 yds on any drive and a combined net negative 3 yds
- Freshman QB Luke Kurzum struggled going 12-21 for 141 yds and was sacked 3 times
- WR Ezra Lombardi had 6-72 yds
- The Continental running game never got going – RBs Matt Banbury and Nate Wildman could only generate 34 rushing yards on 13 carries
- Middlebury ran 78 plays to Hamilton’s 48, and Hamilton allowed the Panthers to convert 50% of their 3rd and 4th down opportunities
- LBs Cole Rivell and Nick Hoff each had 8 tackles
Amherst 27, Bowdoin 23
Bottom Line: Amherst holds off Bowdoin with late defensive stands
Official links:
Amherst: Piazza’s passing, goal-line stand help Mammoths topple Bowdoin on the road, 27-23 – Amherst College
Bowdoin: Fourth Quarter Goal Line Stand Lifts Amherst Past Bowdoin Football – Bowdoin College
What we learned – Amherst:
- The Amherst defense made two big plays in the 4th quarter, including a 4th and goal stop from DB Luke Harmon and an interception by LB Kevin Agnew to hold on for the win
- The Mammoths passing game had one of their best games of the season: QB Mike Piazza went 25-35 for 374 yds and 3 TDs
- Amherst’s WR made big plays: WR Owen Gaydos received 9-130 yds and 1 TD, Gabe dos Santos had a 72 yd catch and Carter Jung snagged a 51 yd TD reception
- Piazza also contributed 45 yds gained on rushing, but the rest of the Mammoth RBs were limited
- In addition to his big INT in the 4th quarter, LB Kevin Agnew had 6 tackles, 1.5 TFLs and 1 PBU
- DL Anthony Leneghan and Luke Harmon each had 7 tackles
What we learned – Bowdoin:
- Bowdoin matched Amherst’s offense (419 yds for Bowdoin, 417 yds for Amherst), but had two interceptions and could not convert a big fourth down late in the game
- The Polar Bears lost QB Andrew Boel, who was 13-14 for 129 yds and 1 TD before he exited in the 2nd quarter
- QB Robbie Long, who has game experience, stepped in and threw 8-16 for 117 and 1 TD and rushed 18-72 and 1 TD
- The Polar Bear trio of WR Colton Fahey and Ausitn Hiscoe and TE Brendan King combined for 17-198 and 2 TDs
- Bowdoin missed a PAT in the 2nd quarter, which loomed large down the stretch of the game
- DL Kanoa Young had 5 tackles, 3 TFLS and a sack
Trinity 52, Bates 7
Bottom Line: Trinity blasts Bates in lopsided affair
Official links:
Trinity: Football Blasts Bates, 52-7, On Senior Day – Trinity College (bantamsports.com)
What we learned – Trinity:
- Trinity generated 524 yds of offense, scoring on 8 of their ten possessions
- It was the usual suspects for the Bantams offense as Fetter, Clapp and the RBs led the way
- QB Spencer Fetter was uber efficient going 27-35 for 311 yds, 4 TDs and no INTs
- WR Sean Clapp caught 8-133 yds and TD and the RB duo of Tyler DiNapoli and Will Kirby combined for 19-115 and 2 TDs
- The Trinity defense shut out Bates for the better part of the game, yielding a late TD after the Bantams led 52-0
- Trinty’s defense was a true team effort: 10 different defenders combined for 10 tackles for loss and 5 defenders combined for 4 sacks
What we learned – Bates:
- Bates was outgained by Trinity 524 yds to 183 yds, and Trinity had 31 first downs to Bates’ 12
- The pass game was uneven – the Bates QBs went 11-23 for 113 yds and two interceptions
- QB Colton Bosselait played all but one series in the first half, and threw 2 interceptions
- Freshman QB Seneca Moore played the 3rd quarter and QB Liam Foley led the Bobcats in the 4th quarter, including their late TD drive
- Freshman RB Ryan Lynskey rushed 14-71 yds
- The experience difference was stark in this game – of Trinity’s 22 starters, 16 were grad students or seniors, while for Bates that number was 6
Tufts 38, Colby 0
Bottom Line: Tufts drills Colby in impressive fashion
Official links:
Tufts: Football Uses Dominant Defense To Blank Colby 38-0 – Tufts University (gotuftsjumbos.com)
Colby: Colby Breaks Down in Boston – Colby College (colbyathletics.com)
What we learned – Tufts
- Tufts defense was dominant, holding Colby to just 5 first downs and a mere 70 yds for the entire game
- The Jumbos had five times the yardage of Colby, outgaining the Mules 357-70 and holding the ball for over 38 minutes
- The Jumbos’ defense allowed just 3 completed passes and had an interception
- RB Audre Smith was impressive rushing 10-95 at 2 TDs including a 47 yd scoring run and WR Jaden Richardson caught 7-70 yds
- QB Michael Berluti had an average day for him: 14-21 for 163 yds with 1 TD and 1 INT; he rushed for 42 yds and sat out the 4th quarter
- DL Ed Iuteri was impactful – 4 tackles, 2 TFLs, 2 sacks, 1 forced fumbles, 1 QB hurry and a PBU
What we learned – Colby
- Not pretty for the Mules – outside of their 2nd drive of 11 plays for 56 yds, their offense did very little
- Colby’s 10 other offensive drives yielded just two first downs and 14 yds
- The Mules had two fumbles, an interception and a blocked FG
- QB Thomas Keeling went 2-11 for 23 yds and was relieved by Shane Baldwin who wasn’t any better: 1-4 for 5 yds and an INT
- Searching the positives, RB Locksley Burke had a 21 yd run and 30 yds on 2 carries
- LBs Mark Kassis and Julien Young combined for 19 tackles, 1 TFL and an INT
Week 9 – November 11, 2023
Game recaps – Week #9
Headlines:
- Middlebury defense holds off Tufts to get a step closer to NESCAC crown
- DB Moore’s defensive plays lead Amherst past archrival Williams
- Bowdoin beats Colby soundly for CBB crown
- Trinity blasts Wesleyan behind a potent aerial attack
- Hamilton jumps out to 21-0 and staves off Bates
Middlebury 19, Tufts 10
Bottom Line: Middlebury holds off Tufts to get a step closer to NESCAC crown
Official links:
Middlebury: Football Prevails 19-10 Over Tufts In Defensive Battle, Extends Win Streak to Six – Middlebury College
Tufts: Football Drops Season Finale At Middlebury, 19-10 – Tufts University (gotuftsjumbos.com)
What we learned – Middlebury:
- DB John McCool intercepted Tufts late in the 4th quarter and returned his pick 59 yards for a touchdown to seal the game
- The Panther defense created 3 turnovers, stuffed Tufts on 4th down from their 1 yd line and had 11 pass breakups
- McCool had 11 tackles and 0.5 TFLs and DL Tomas Kenary had 2 sacks
- The Middlebury offense struggled: QB Cole Kennon threw an interception, fumbled (which the Panthers recovered) and then was relieved by QB Brian Moran
- Moran was serviceable going 7-15 140 yds and 1 INT, but the Panther offense did not score in the 2nd half and went 3 for 11 on 3rd downs
- WR Patrick Jamin caught 6-114 yds and RB Carter Stockwell ran for 20-78 yds and 1 TD
What we learned – Tufts:
- The Jumbos outgained Middlebury 443 to 269 yds, but made too many mistakes to win
- Tufts had 2 INTs, 1 fumble, a failed 4th down on the Middlebury 1 yd line, a missed FG and committed 11 penalties
- The Jumbos Tufts were only 2 for 5 in the red zone
- QB Michael Berluti went 19-41 232 yds and rushed 12-61 yds, but had 2 INTs
- RB Chartellis Reece rushed 20-125 yds and 1 TD
- WRs Jaden Richardson and Cade Moore combined for catching 10-149 yds
- DB Drew Guida had 6 tackles, 1 forced fumble, 1 INT and 1 QB hurry
Amherst 21, Williams 14
Bottom Line: DB Moore’s defensive plays lead Amherst past archrival Williams
Official links:
Amherst: Mammoths use Moore big plays to top rival Williams, 21-14 – Amherst College
Williams: Ephs Lose on the Road at Amherst – Williams College
What we learned – Amherst:
- Coverted freshman WR Christian Moore had an impressive day playing DB: he intercepted a bobbled Eph pass at the Amherst goal line and returned it 76 yds, had a scoop and score and intercepted Williams in the Amherst goal line late in the game
- QB Mike Piazza was solid going 13-19 for 195 yds and 2 TDs and led the Mammoths on a 9-play 92 yd TD drive in the 4th quarter to take the lead
- The running game struggled generating just 44 yds
- A special team gaffe, a snap over the punter’s head, led to an easy score for Williams
- In addition to Moore, two of Amherst’s top defensive players shined: LB Andy Skirzenski and DB Luke Harmon
- Skirzenski had 17 tackles and Harmon had 14 tackles, 1 TFL and one forced fumble
What we learned – Williams:
- Williams outgained Amherst 297 to 249 yds, held the ball for 34 minutes and had 19 first downs to Amherst’s 14, but could not overcome the turnovers
- The Ephs had two long drives of 72 and 53 yds that ended up in no points due to interceptions
- Freshman QB Owen McHugh went 9-16 and a mere 70 yds, but had 2 TD passes and 63 yds rushing
- RB Jon Oris rushed 26-111 as Williams’ ground game generated 227 yds
- WR/DB Holden Gehring caught 4-43 yds as a WR and an interception as a DB
Bowdoin 35, Colby 14
Bottom Line: Polar Bears
Official links:
Bowdoin: Football Crushes Colby To Capture First CBB Crown Since 2010 – Bowdoin College
Colby: Bowdoin Bests Colby for CBB Title – Colby College (colbyathletics.com)
What we learned – Bowdoin:
- Bowdoin outgained Colby 352 to 158 yds
- In the 2nd quarter, the Polar Bears scored touchdowns on four consecutive drives including drives of 68, 61, 75 and 46 yards.
- QB Robbie Long stepped in for Andrew Boel and went 18-30 for 263 yds and 2 TDs
- WR Colton Fahey caught 9-193 yds and 2 TDs
- The running game was effective with RB Andre Eden going for 18-68 yds and 2 TDs
- Bowdoin was 10-16 on 3rd downs and 1-1 on 4th downs
- Defensive linemen Liam Wholey, Kanoa Young and Aidan Reidy combined for 16 tackles and 5 sacks
What we learned – Colby:
- Colby fell behind 21-0 in the first half, struggling on offense with drives ending in a fumble, two 3rd down sacks and an interception
- Freshman QB Christian Milmoe went 11-21 for 87 yds with 1 TD and 1 INT
- The passing game struggled: Colby had only 112 yds passing and the Mules gave up 7 sacks
- On the Mules first 10 offensive drives, they did not run more than 6 plays on any of them
- WR Matt McHugh caught 4-42 yds and 1 TD
- LB Julien Young was tackling machine, notching 14 tackles
Trinity 58, Wesleyan 6
Bottom Line: Trinity blasts Wesleyan behind a potent aerial attack
Official links:
Trinity: Football Clips Wesleyan, 58-6 – Trinity College (bantamsports.com)
Wesleyan: Football Falls to Trinity in 2023 Season Finale – Wesleyan University
What we learned – Trinity:
- Another week, another Trinity blowout
- The Bantam outgained their Connecticut rivals 495-275 yds including 359-138 through the air
- QB Spencer Fetter was outstanding going 21-28 for 311 yds and 6 TDs
- WR Sean Clapp had a monster day catching 9-169 yds and 4 TDs
- Fellow WR Matt Laughlin caught 5-84 and 1 TD
- Trinity opened the game with five drives which resulted in 4 TDs and a FG, and after opening the 2nd half with a punt, the Bantams scored touchdowns on their next 4 drives
- DB Tyler Jamison had 9 tackles and 1 INT
What we learned – Wesleyan:
- Wesleyan opened the game with 5 offensive drives that ended in 3 INTs, a fumble and a failed 4th down
- QB Niko Candido struggled against a stout Trinity, going 11-27 for just 91 yds with 1 TD but 5 INTs
- The productive WR duo of Thomas Elkhoury and Chase Wilson was limited to receiving 4-37 yds
- Wesleyan issues included 5 interceptions, 2 fumbles lost and going for 4 for 13 on third down
- RB James McHugh broke away for 45 yd run, and the Cardinals rushed for 34-141 yds for a 4.1 per carry average
- LB Kade Doverspike had 11 tackles
Hamilton 21, Bates 7
Bottom Line: Hamilton jumps out to early 21-0 lead and holds of Bates
Official links:
Hamilton: Football finishes season on a high note with 21-7 win at Bates – Hamilton College
What we learned – Hamilton
- Hamilton scored 3 TDs on their first three drives of the game, racking up 151 yds of offense
- After the opening drives, the Continentals did not score again: they had just 131 yds on 8 drives which included multiple 3 and outs, a fumble and 2 missed FGs.
- Freshman QB Luke Kurzum went 12-23 for 143 yds and rushed for 10-50 yds
- The Continentals had 6 sacks of Bates after having just 6 over the 8 games coming into the game
- TE Mark Howrigan caught 5-67 yds
- DB Kyle Bratcher finished with 6 tackles, 1 INT, 1 forced fumble and fumble recovery while DE Aidan Held had 6 tackles, 2 sacks and forced fumble
What we learned – Bates
- Bates struggled in the passing game with QBs Colton Bosselait and Liam Foley combining to go 18-45 for 174 yds with 1 TD and 1 INT
- Bates missed a 21 yd FG after an opening 17 play 69 yd drive and missed a pass on a 4th and goal from the Hamilton 5 after 13 play 48 yd drive
- In the 2nd half, the Bobcats did not score with their 7 offensive drives ending in an interception, fumble, a 3 and out and 4 failed 4th down conversions
- Bates had a 7 yd punt, which set up Hamilton on a short field
- WR Sergio Beltran was a standout for the Bobcat catching 11-112 yds and 1 TD
- LB Jackson Collins had 11 tackles and DL Matt Juneau had 9 tackles and 1.5 TFLs
Week 10 (Rescheduled Slate) – November 18, 2023
Game recaps – Week #10
Headlines:
- Trinity rolls over Bowdoin to capture co-championship
- Middlebury rallies past Colby in 2nd half to earn co-championship
- Williams blasts winless Bates
Trinity 58, Bowdoin 21
Bottom Line: Trinity rolls over Bowdoin to capture co-championship
Official links:
Trinity: Football Wins Share of NESCAC Crown With 58-21 Win Over Bowdoin – Trinity College (bantamsports.com)
Bowdoin: Football Concludes Season With Loss to Trinity – Bowdoin College
What we learned – Trinity:
- Another week, another Trinity blowout to claim their share of the championship
- The Bantams outgained Bowdoin 603-316 yds and scored 7 TDs on their first 8 drives
- The Trinity dominance was balanced: 221 by ground and 382 by air
- The stats were staggering: QB Spencer Fetter threw 7, repeat 7, TDs going 26-42 for 378 yds
- WR Sean Clapp had his 2nd consecutive monster game: catching 14-241 yds and 3 TDs
- The RB duo of Tyler DiNapoli and Will Kirby rushed 12-181 and 1 TD, and the Bantams averaged 8.2 yds per carry
- Even LB Michael Masse scored on offense as he caught a 1 yd TD
What we learned – Bowdoin:
- Bowdoin scored on their opening drive, going 75 plays on 6 plays
- After that opening drive, Bowdoin could not stop Trinity, as the Bantams scored 4 TDs on consecutive drives and mounted a 48-14 halftime lead
- No Andrew Boel: QB Robbie Long went 16-37 for 169 yds and 2 TDs, but threw 3 INTs
- TE Brendan King finished off his career with a strong game, catching 9-92 and 2 TDs
- Bowdoin was 1-4 in red zone chances and went 1-3 on 4th down conversions
- DL Kanoa Young continued his strong play: he had 12 tackles and 2.5 TFLs
Middlebury 35, Colby 28
Bottom Line: Middlebury rallies past Colby in 2nd half to earn co-championship
Official links:
Middlebury: NESCAC Co-Champions! Middlebury Tops Colby To Earn Share Of League Title – Middlebury College
Colby: Not posted
What we learned – Middlebury:
- Middlebury won and earned a share of the NESCAC football championship
- As they have done throughout the season, the Panther defense made two key plays in the first half to keep the game close: they stopped the Mules on a 4th and one from their own 26 and they forced a fumble at the Colby 1 to set up the Panther offense for any easy score.
- Tied 14-14 at half, Middlebury scored TDs on each of their first 3 drives to build a lead Colby could not overcome
- The Panthers were effective on the ground averaging 4.4 yds per carry
- RB Cody Weitzman rushed 13-82 yds and 1 TD and RB Caleb Smith had a 38 yd run
- WR Donovan Wood caught 7-92 yds
- QB Cole Kennon was just 14-34 for 215, but threw one TD
What we learned – Colby:
- Colby outgained Middlebury 391-364 yds, but had two turnovers, went 0 for 2 on 4th down and 1-2 in the redzone
- In the 3rd qtr the Colby offense bogged own – 4 drives amounted to just 12 plays, a net negative 7 yards with an interception
- QB Thomas Keeling had a strong game throwing 34-54 for 362 and 4 TDs, outpacing any of his earlier starts
- RB Keon Smart caught 11-143 yds and 2 TDs
- WR Jack Sawyer caught 5-99 yds and 2 TDs and follow wideout Matt McHugh snagged 12-62 yds
- LB Julian Young continued to be a defensive force– he finished with 11 tackles, 2 TFLs and forced and recovered a fumble
Williams 43, Bates 0
Bottom Line: Williams blasts winless Bates
Official links:
Williams: Ephs Triumph at Bates 43-0 – Williams College
Bates: Football falls to Williams in season finale – Bates College (gobatesbobcats.com)
What we learned – Williams:
- Williams outgained Bates by close to 400 yards (556 to 163 yds), had 29 first downs to Bates’ 8 14, and averaged 8.8 yds per play
- On the Ephs’ first 9 drives, Williams scored 7 TDs and a FG
- Freshman QB Owen McHugh went 14-21 for 241 yds and threw 2 TD passes and ran for 51 yds and 1 TD
- RB Jon Oris rushed 10-72 yds as Williams’ ground game generated 256 yds
- The WR trio of Cameron Lee, Holden Gehring and Paul Harshbarger caught 12-198 yds and 2 TDs
- The Williams’ defense held Bates to just 75 yds in the first half, including picking off Bates twice
What we learned – Bates:
- No Colton Bosselait at QB for Bobcats; QB Liam Foley went 9-22 for 127 yds and 2 INTs
- Freshman QB Seneca Moore also played several series
- Bates was just 2 for 14 on 3rd down, 1 for 3 on 4th down and 0 for 2 in the red zone
- Bates finished negative three in turnovers – fumbling once in addition to Foley’s two picks
- Bobcats are young at RB and WR: their top three rushers and receivers in this game were sophomores and freshmen
- Freshman LB Ryan Rozich had 8 tackles and LB Shane Broughton had 7 tackles and a TFL