All not lost for over-70 club
For just about every defensive player, there will come a day
where you'll look up at the scoreboard late in some game and shake
your head in disbelief.
"We can't be this bad," you'll think to yourself. Or maybe you'll
say "We can't stop anybody today!"
I remember being on the bad side of 50 points in Randolph-Macon's
1995 game against Catholic. Sure, our offense scored 50 too, so we
tied, but that didn't much matter to Joe Riccio, then our head
coach and defensive coordinator. We ran (or sometimes bear-crawled
or shoulder-rolled) the length of the field, up and back once for
each point we surrendered on what became known as Black Monday to
that year's team.
Giving up 50 was bad, as you can imagine. Across Division III, we
see 60s on scoreboards regularly as well. But what happens when a
team gives up 70 or more points, as we've seen nine times already
in this season's five weeks of play? Can a team put that game out
of its mind and move on, or is it the sort of thing that lingers
over a team like dark rain cloud?
We took a look at how teams fared the week after 70 points were
scored on them, and what we found wasn't necessarily what one would
expect.
Although Hanover was the only team to win the following week,
coaches' one-game-at-a-time mantras took for several teams. Of the
seven Division III teams that gave up 70 (Minnesota-Morris and
Crown both did it against Trinity Bible), two lost by four or less
the following week, six lost by less than two touchdowns and three
gave up 24 or fewer the next week.
Running up the score is almost unilaterally discouraged in Division
III, but high scores do happen. The challenge for coaches and
players is to put the bad game out of their mind and start fresh
the next week.
Perhaps the most impressive fresh start to date has taken place in
Southern California.
Whittier was thumped 70-13 by SCIAC rival Cal Lutheran to close the
curtains on last year's 1-8 season. The Poets actually went ahead
7-0 in that game before giving up 70 unanswered points.
Whittier started this season with a 34-22 home win over Colorado
College, but really got right defensively Sept. 25 against
Pomona-Pitzer. Though they trailed 5-0 at the half, the Poets
rallied for a 9-8 win while allowing the Sagehens just 195 total
yards.
Having already eclipsed its win total from last season, 2-1
Whittier travels to Occidental this week, then plays four of its
final five at home. One of those home dates is a Nov. 6 rematch
against CLU's Kingsmen, who are 0-3 so far.
Hanover's post-70 performance stood out as well. Strength of
opponent might logically be a factor in giving up 70 or in the
performance the next week. But the Panthers' two extremes came in a
72-24 loss at Bridgewater (Va.) and in a 34-31 home win against
Waynesburg. The Yellow Jackets nearly beat the Eagles in last
year's playoffs, following a fourth-down pass into the end zone
short of winning at Bridgewater.
Prior to playing Hanover, Waynesburg had scored like mad in a 64-0
win over Denison and a 73-14 rout against Manchester.
But the Panthers hadn't turned over a new leaf completely by
knocking the Yellow Jackets out of the Top 25. Mt. St. Joseph took
an early lead in the Heartland Conference race with a 29-10 win in
Hanover.
Sul Ross State opened the season with a 79-17 loss to Top 25
Hardin-Simmons. The Lobos, desperately trying to break what was
then a 21-game losing streak, embarked on the American Southwest
Conference's longest road trip, a 900-mile, 15-hour trek to
Mississippi College. Sul Ross nearly brought a win back to Alpine,
Texas, holding a fourth-quarter lead before falling 24-20.
Ohio Wesleyan's sobering 78-21 defeat at Olivet surely made for a
solemn ride home from Michigan, but the Battling Bishops response
the next week should throw Mike Hollway into the NCAC coach of the
year mix. The Bishops certainly battled, leading 14-9 at Wabash
before the Little Giants scored with 7:24 left to improve to
4-0.
Elsewhere, Benedictine followed a 75-7 week four loss to Lakeland
by losing 24-12 to Greenville; Emory and Henry gave up 40 fewer
points to Methodist in a 36-27 loss than it did in a 76-28 defeat
the week before at Washington and Jefferson; Principia followed a
73-14 loss to Rockford by scoring more points than it had in any
game this season during a 35-26 loss to Maranatha Baptist.
Where points are concerned, we haven't seen anything approaching
Rockford's 105 from last season (though that too came against
Trinity Bible, which lost 79-6 to Minnesota-Morris in week four and
74-20 to Crown in week five this season). But the many of the same
teams seemed to be involved in high-scoring games. In some way,
most roads to high scores led to the Heartland.
The HCAC's Manchester had the roughest week of any after giving up
70-plus. They followed the 73-14 week three loss to Waynesburg with
a 49-13 loss to Olivet. The Spartans are surrendering more than 49
points per game, a shade more than their conference counterpart
Franklin, which is allowing 47.8 points per outing.
And funny we should bring up Franklin. Their 63-62 loss to Olivet
on Sept. 11, in which the Grizzlies scored with 37 seconds left and
went for two to win, is an early nominee for shootout of the year
and boldest coaching decision.
We're not quite sure if scoring 70 points or more is a trend. In
1999, six teams did it, including two on the road. In 2000 it was
eight teams, six at home; in 2001 just five, three at home. In
2002, it happened eight more times, three on the road. Last year a
team scored 70 or more 10 times, six at home.
In the nine times it's happened this half-season, only Manchester
has suffered the indignity of being on their home field when it
took place.
The second half of the season will determine whether this is a true
trend. We might see more big numbers, and perhaps involving some of
the same teams. Emory and Henry next plays Hampden-Sydney, last
year's top scoring offense fresh off a loss at Bridgewater. After a
week off, Waynesburg gets back on the field against Bethany, a 63-6
loser to Grove City on Saturday.
As Pat Coleman recently noted in his column for CSTV, someone in
Division III has finished with every point total from 0 to 60,
excluding one (which is impossible) and four, which would take two
and only two highly improbable occurrences of the only ways to
score two points, by safety or by defensive return of a PAT
attempt.
We can add 61 (New Jersey scored that in a shutout of Southern
Virginia), 62 and 63 (from the Olivet-Franklin game), 64
(Waynesburg), 65 (St. John Fisher), 67 (UW-Oshkosh), 68 (Mary
Hardin-Baylor), 72, 73, 74, 75, 76, 78 and 79 to the list. We've
gone nearly 0 to 80.
That's for the math nerds out there.
And just one closing thought: It takes about 10 possessions to get
70 points, more than some teams get in a game. Two per period is
eight and three each quarter is 12, although special teams and
defense likely chip in when big numbers go up, and field goals are
rather scarce. As neat as the numbers games are, I'll take a 14-13
nailbiter any day.
The
triangle
Imagine voting in a poll where you have to track 75-100 teams who
start the season with winning records, having been able to see
games on five Saturdays and a handful of Fridays at best.
That's the boat D3football.com voters are in. We're not necessarily
asking for sympathy, but the teams aren't making it easy on us. For
instance:
Bridgewater beat Shenandoah 35-13, which beat Christopher Newport
14-10, which beat Bridgewater 21-16.
We can factor in home, away and neutral sites, and we're still not
sure what that tells us.
Furthermore, McDaniel beat Bridgewater but lost to Christopher
Newport. After losing at Shenandoah, the Captains are unranked
while Rowan, a team it lost to by one, 33-32 in Newport News, holds
down the No. 11 spot.
They can't be that far apart, can they?
If you take the comparative score logic out to Wisconsin, it's easy
to get twisted up. Even those who accept UW-Eau Claire being ranked
behind St. John's despite beating the defending champions in
Collegeville won't like to compare WIAC scores a few weeks into
conference play. UWEC lost to UW-Whitewater which lost to
UW-Platteville. UW-La Crosse beat UW-Stevens Point, which plays
UWEC this week.
So what good is comparing all of these scores? Can we say Johns
Hopkins will beat McDaniel because the Blue Jays beat Carnegie
Mellon, who beat Wesley, who beat Ferrum, who took Shenandoah into
overtime, and the Hornets beat CNU, which defeated McDaniel?
Probably not. But maybe by Platteville defeating Augustana, which
beat Central 38-7, which beat Bethel in overtime, we can reason
that the WIAC this year is stronger than the CCIW, which is
stronger than the IIAC, which is stronger than the MIAC.
Who knows? You'd think having teams play out-of-conference
opponents would help the pollsters.
Double
trouble
Except for having to wake up at 8:30 a.m. and return home after
midnight, the unprecendented daily double Pat and I attempted
worked out pretty well. We saw and webcasted two good games in
Virginia with conference championship and playoff implications.
Such a feat requires 1 p.m and 7 p.m. kickoffs within close
proximity to each other. Pretty much all of the D3football.com
staff has seen two games in a day before, but two have to be close
enough to give us time to set up at both places too.
Sure, by the end of the day my throat ached so bad Pat could have
tossed me a bottle of Chloraseptic out of the Shenandoah press box
after the second game instead of a measly little Ricola, but if
that's the worst complaint from the day, then I call it a
success.
Anyway, here are few nuggets I picked up along the way that I
thought I'd share:
During postgame at Shenandoah, Christopher Newport coach Matt
Kelchner was asked if he was disappointed at the way the Division
III playoffs are set up, given that his team now needs Shenandoah
to lose to earn the USA South's automatic bid. (In 2002, by the
way, the Hornets beat CNU but lost to Greensboro and Ferrum, and
the Captains beat the Panthers in the season finale to get into the
playoffs.)
Kelchner, perhaps a bit worn down from a frustrating loss in which
his team kept the ball on Shenandoah's half of the field nearly all
night but managed only 10 points, launched into an emphatic defense
of the Division III playoff system.
"The Division III playoffs is the best possible thing you could
ever be involved in," Kelchner said. "Division I needs to take
note."
Kelchner called Division I-A’s Bowl Championship Series "a
joke" and said that they were missing the point, as well as an
opportunity for a great experience for the players. Kelchner, who
spent 16 seasons at Division I-AA William and Mary, knows that
playoffs are a positive at bigger schools as well. He even said
he'd drawn up a playoff plan that Division I-A could use.
From here out, his Captains will have to win and hope for help.
"It's a big challenge," Kelchner said. It's easy when you win.
We're going to see what kind of gentlemen we have."
Should that not work out and the Captains miss the playoffs for the
first time in their history, well, "We should have won the damn
game out there tonight," he said.
Meanwhile, Mike Clark was again smiling after a Bridgewater win.
The Eagles have got the knack in close games, and after beating
Hampden-Sydney, Mike and I were talking. I wasn't taking notes, but
I hope I'm allowed to share.
Having staved off what would amount to playoff elimination by
beating the Tigers, Clark said he hopes H-SC wins out and gets in.
And if that happens, it could be trouble. Clark, a defensive coach,
has a library of tapes on Tigers coach Marty Favret going back to
his days at Catholic, and Hampden-Sydney still rolled up 465 yards
of offense.
Attempting to stop the Tigers based on the two game tapes playoff
teams exchange will be a tall order, Clark said.
Undefeated
watch
Of the 229 Division III schools in 2004 (or 228 and Newport News),
27 remain unbeaten. Averett, Carthage, Moravian and UW-Platteville
are among them; defending national champion St. John's is not.
Three hail from the NESCAC, where just two games have been played.
Three also hail from the MAC (Albright, Delaware Valley and
Moravian, each 4-0), and two each from the ASC (Hardin-Simmons and
Mary Hardin-Baylor), CCIW (Carthage and Wheaton), Empire 8 (St.
John Fisher and Springfield), NCAC (Wabash and Wooster) NWC
(Linfield and Whitworth), WIAC (UW-Platteville and UW-Stout).
There are also teams like UW-La Crosse and Rowan, whose lone losses
have come against opponents outside of Division III.
Winless
watch
Of the 229 schools, 29 have yet to win a game. Of the 29, six
(Bowdoin, Framingham State, Huntingdon, Husson, Plymouth State and
Sul Ross State) were among eight teams that went winless last year.
Puget Sound is 3-1 with three wins against SCIAC teams, snapping
the 11-game losing streak it brought into the season, while Dubuque
(1-3) put the brakes on a 20-game skid Sept. 11 against
Blackburn.
Husson and Huntingdon, first-year programs in 2003, each came a
point away from their first win on Saturday. The Braves, 35-28
losers at Salve Regina in the opener, lost 28-27 at Mount Ida when
Mustangs freshman Ray MacGregor, rumored to be kicking barefoot,
knocked home an extra point in the final 90 seconds. Thomas More
edged the Hawks 37-36 in overtime by converting a two-point
conversion.
Harder to
repeat
Of last season's eight semifinalists, just three (No. 1 Mount
Union, No. 2 Linfield and No. 7 Wheaton) are still unbeaten. No. 4
St. John's and No. 16 Ithaca have a single loss, while Bridgewater
(Va.) and RPI have dropped two and Lycoming three.
And there’s no trophy
for this, but...
Currently, Chapman (at 3-1) has the best record of Division III's
19 independents.
Two for
one
Hardin-Simmons will host Sul Ross State for the second time this
season on Saturday, a month to the day after the two teams' first
meeting.
The Cowboys needed to fill a date after UW-Stout exercised a buyout
clause to opt out of a return game in Texas. HSU went to Wisconsin
last season.
As for why both games would be in Abliene, our guess is that the
gate for the No. 8 Cowboys, even for a second game, might exceed
whatever Sul Ross could earn.
A loss would tie Sul Ross with Plymouth State for the nation's
longest losing streak at 25.
Five games to
watch
> No. 15 UW-Stevens Point at No. 18 UW-Eau Claire: The Pointers,
having faced No. 2 Linfield and No. 3 UW-La Crosse, get no breaks.
Five of the past six between these two have been five points or
fewer, even when one gets off to a hot start. Last year, UW-SP led
31-0 and held on to win by three as UW-EC scored 28 unanswered.
> No. 17 St. John Fisher at Brockport State: Just as soon as the
Cardinals flew past the Golden Eagles as the hot team Upstate, the
ACFC favorites get a shot at them. Brockport's schedule gets thick
after this, with Ithaca, Rowan and TCNJ still looming, so they
can't afford to lose many more and hold out Pool B hope.
> Bethel at No. 4 St. John's: Each team took a surprising
early-season loss, and perhaps neither is as strong as in recent
seasons. But both are still unbeaten in the MIAC, as is
Concordia-Moorhead. The game is also in Collegeville, so we figure
a big crowd will be taking this one in.
> Carthage at Augustana: We've seen Redmen rushers put up gaudy
numbers for a while now, but we can't remember a 4-0 start. With
six CCIW games left on the schedule, including four against
opponents playing .750 ball or better, this early road test should
tell us how real the Redmen are.
> Adrian at Alma: The Bulldogs are unbeaten and the Scots only
loss came against NAIA Tiffin. One of these teams will start to
pull away, joining Hope in the MIAA title chase.
> Also keep an eye on: Whitworth at No. 2 Linfield, Howard Payne
at No. 6 Mary Hardin-Baylor, Millikin at No. 7 Wheaton, Westminster
(Pa.) at No. 14 Washington & Jefferson, No.16 Ithaca at
Norwich, UW-Stout at No. 24 UW-Whitewater, Johns Hopkins at
Franklin and Marshall, Averett at Methodist, Moravian at Wilkes,
Muhlenberg at Dickinson, Anderson at Defiance, Redlands at La
Verne, Pacific Lutheran at Puget Sound.
Who are those
guys?
Our weekly look at teams stepping outside of Division III for
competition:
Ursinus takes on I-AA LaSalle
No. 11 Rowan plays Division II Virginia State.
Husson plays NAIA Southern Virginia, while Huntingdon faces
Southwest Assemblies of God and Chapman goes up against Azusa
Pacific.
Road trips of the
week
Maryville (Tenn.) goes to Cleveland to play Case Western Reserve.
We also don't envy Macalester's St. Paul-to-Colorado Springs trip,
but someone's got to play at Colorado College. Honorable mention
goes to Claremont-Mudd-Scripps leaving L.A. for Portland, home of
Lewis and Clark.
Eye-opener of the
week
Dickinson, UW-Platteville and Cortland State logged the best Top 25
upsets, but Muskingum gets props for a non-upset. The winless
Muskies lost to then-No. 14 Baldwin-Wallace 14-7. Brandon Clum
returned a fumble 62 yards for a touchdown, and Muskingum blocked
two kicks and held twice inside the red zone. But the Yellow
Jackets' D was too strong, allowing just 187 yards and zero
points.
With Capital not even coming close to Mount Union, Baldwin-Wallace
had a chance to replace the Crusaders as the OAC's No. 2 team in a
lot of people's minds, which often means a top 10 vote in the poll.
Instead, the Yellow Jackets laid an egg — though we won't
complain about a win — and leave voters confused as to how
good they might be.
Five things you should
know
1. Augsburg quarterback Marcus LeVesseur rushed for four TDs and
threw for two more to help the Auggies snap a string of three
straight losses decided in the final two minutes (They'd trailed
for just over 28 minutes combined in those games). Though Saturday
was a record setting day for LeVesseur, making his second start,
he's still got a long way to go before football becomes his best
sport. LeVesseur is a two-time national champion wrestler at 157
pounds, 84-0 in two seasons. Seven of his wrestling teammates also
play football.
2. The last time Mount Union lost consecutive games was in 1988,
when Denison and Heidelberg beat the traveling Purple Raiders on
back-to-back September Saturdays.
3. In the last four seasons of awarding an automatic playoff berth
to the winner of its championship game, the NEFC has had four
different champions: Bridgewater State (2000), Westfield State
(2001), Mass-Dartmouth (2002) and Curry (2003). Currently, no one
in the 14-team league is unbeaten, and only Curry (3-1) has fewer
than two losses.
4. Rochester, which got its first win under the Liberty League
banner by beating St. Lawrence 38-7, is a member of the University
Athletic Association, along with Carnegie Mellon, Case Western,
Chicago and Washington U., in other sports. They used to play both
leagues’ schedules before the UCAA/Liberty League expanded
beyond five teams.
5. Before losing 35-14 to Alfred on Saturday, Norwich developed a
habit of coming from behind to win. The Cadets were also
consistent, scoring 21, 22, 24 and 20 points in their
victories.
We'll run neat stats or factoids about any football-playing
Division III school. Use the information below to send a
suggestion, or I'll have to keep making up my own.
Feedback
Reach Around the Nation by sending e-mail to keith@d3football.com or using our
feedback form.
We plan to start sharing your feedback soon enough. We're still
looking for things you should know.
Housekeeping
Thanks again to the nation's SIDs for helping us out. And thanks
for filling in for the slackers too. My favorite media guide
feature is the one where you include the other teams' schedule and
phone numbers. It's like getting 10 media guides in one.
As far as the magazine might be concerned, we appreciate the
responses we’ve received so far, and if you are interested in
receiving our magazine if and when we publish one, please send us
your name and street address.
We feel like we have a good handle on what the content would be
like, and would be in decent shape writing and design-wise. But we
would like to align ourselves with talented writers, designers and
anyone who has experience on the business end of things, either in
sales or in printing and distribution.
If you might be willing to share some expertise or effort, please
send us an e-mail.












