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The Boston Globe from Boston, Massachusetts • 61

Publication:
The Boston Globei
Location:
Boston, Massachusetts
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61
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

C13 Yankee ConferenceIvy League THE BOSTON SUNDAY GLOBE SEPTEMBER 29, 1996 Mass jumps on Harvard defense puts squeeze on mistakes BuckneD. Lemon, YANKEE SUMMARIES. RICHMOND, 37-7 at Nkkenoi Held Richmond 12-21 0 20 7 10 37 BU 10-41 7 0 0 0 7 BU Matt Atlak 3 run (Brad Costello kick) Shawn Barber 60 interception return (Andrew Slater kick) Denver Haught 8 pass from Mat Shannon (Slater kick) Muneer Moore 7 pass from Shannon (kick failed) Minoso Rodgers 7 run (Slater kick) Slater 37 FG Winston October 28 interception return (Slater kick) Attendance 2,069. Rich BU First downs 17 14 Rushes-yards 61-277 30-32 Passing yards 64 147 Return yards 73 137 Passes 6-9-0 14-25-3 Punts 4-178 8-397 Fumbles-kst 2-1 2-1 Penalties-yards 7-60 8-56 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING -R, Prendergrass 16-120, Elio Im-borone 16-69, Rodgers 11-47; BU, Atlak 18-56, Bryant Chisholm 5-7, Damon Mickel 1-7. PASSING Shannon 6-8-0-64, Jimmie Miles 0-1-0-0; BU, Kevin Foley 7-12-1-77, Jason Barnett 7-13-2-70.

RECEIVING Moore 4-53. Haught 1-8, Rah-maan Streater 1-3; BU, Mickel 5-51, Jay Hanafin 2-25, Charles Johnson 1-20. By Joe Burris GLOBE STAFF By John Vellante GLOBE STAFF AMHERST Punt coverage will no doubt be high on Northeastern's practice agenda this week. A little LEWISBURG, Pa. It was billed as the battle of the backs, pitting Har II IVY STANDINGS, Conf.

All Columbia 1-0 2-0 Dartmouth 1-0 2-0 Cornell 1-0 1-1 Yale 1-0 1-1 Harvard 0-1 1-1 Penn 0-1 1-1 Princeton 0-1 1-1 Brown 0-1 0-2 vard's Eion Hu and Bucknell's Rich SUMMARIES Leading the way for UMass was sophomore tailback Matt Jordan, who filled in for injured starters Frank Alessio and Ron Brockington and gained 112 yards on 17 carries and scored two touchdowns, the latter giving UMass a 14-7 lead with 17 seconds left in the first half. Northeastern took a 7-0 lead early in the second quarter when junior cornerback Jamison Starling intercepted an Anthony Catterton pass and returned it 31 yards. But the NU offense, which entered the game leading the YanCon in passing offense, botched several opportunities in UMass territory throughout the contest. Still, with 12:54 left in the game, NU junior running back David Edmundson scored on an 11-yard run to tie it, 14-14. After a 1-yard run, a sack for a 10-yard loss and an incomplete pass, UMass brought out its punting team and the momentum appeared ready to shift to the Huskies.

Then came the fumbles. As the punt was knocked down in a stiff wind, Soffran signaled for a fair catch as he tried to run under the ball. But the ball went through his extended hands and UMass' Ben Scott pounced on it. "The wind was blowing, but there's no excuse," said Soffran. "I should have caught the ball.

I feel like I let the team down." Again the NU defense stopped the Minutemen on three downs, and UMass punted. The 19-yard kick bounced, hit Morales in the back, and again Scott recovered. One play later, freshman fullback Jamie Holston galloped 40 yards for a touchdown, rehearsal would likely do the Huskies some good in light of yesterday's 21-14 loss to the University of Massachusetts, which capitalized on three consecutive NU fumbled punts in the fourth quarter to post the Yankee Conference win. Two of the fumbled punts were by freshman returner David Soffran; the other bounced' off the back of freshman Tony Morales. UMass, which entered the contest second-to-last in the league in turnover margin, scored the winning touchdown after the second fumble, then milked the clock after the third.

"The wind just plays the dickens with the punting game, because the ball comes down and does different things," said UMass coach Mike Hodges, who has led the Minutemen to 13 comeback victories, five against NU. "There was a lot of confidence on our sideline prior to the fumbled punts," said NU coach Barry Gallup, whose team failed in its bid to post a 3-1 start for the first time since 1971. "Three times in a row we stopped them, three times in a row we had turnovers." UMass (3-1, 2-1) posted its 13th consecutive win over Northeastern (2-2, 1-2), and NU hasn't defeated the Minutemen in Amherst since 1958. HARVARD, 30-7 at Lewislmrg, Pa. Harvard IM 3 7 10 10-30 Bucknell 11-2) 0 0 0 7-7 HU-Ryan Korinke 31 FG, 12:32 HU Eion Hu 1 run (Korinke kick), 14:38 HU-FB Korinke 20.

7:29 HU Chris Menick 2 run (Korinke kick), 10:46 HU FG Korinke 33, 00:05 HU Hu 10 run BU Geishauser 18 pass from John (Miller kick), 14:06 A First downs 20 10 Rushes-yards 66-207 31-1-4) Passing 152 105 Punt Returns 5-51 2-13 Kickotf Returns 1-39 7-151 Interceptions Ret 4-00 2-1-3) Comp-Att-Int 1216-2 11-28-4 Sacked-Yards Lost 5-39 3-20 Punts Fumbles-Lost 4-1 2-2 Penalties-Yards 12-81 5-41 Possession 32:36 27:24 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING -Harvard. Hu 29-113. JaySnowden 13-59, Menick 13-43, Damon Jones 5-7, Rich Linden 4-(-7), Gavin Hamels 2-(-8). Bucknell, Whitner 7-34, Peer 6-6, Lemon 12-1-9), Fox 6-(-35). PASSING Harvard, Snowden 10-13-93-2.

Linden 2-3-59-0. Bucknell, Fox 5-19-46-2, John 6-9-59-2. RECEIVING -Harvard, Colby Skel-ton 3-66, Terence Patterson 2-36, Mike Kent 2-14, Chris Eitzmann 1-13, Thomas Giardi 1-11, Nate Storch 1-6. Hu 1-4. Menick 1-2.

Bucknell, Geishauser 2-27, Hurley 2-24, Lemon 2-22, Rockett 1-12, Lima 1-8. Wilcox 1-7, Whitner 1-3, Peer 1-2. ft--, el and the point after made it 21-14 with 8:58 left. "We have what we call a 'fire call' on a short punt," Gallup said. "Everyone is supposed to find the ball and get out of the way, and he made a mistake.

We felt confident going into the fourth period. We had the momentum and the wind." NU failed to score on its next possession, and punted to UMass, which also failed to move the ball. The Minutemen punted and the ball again slipped through Soffran's hands. UMass recovered with 2:32 left and ran off nearly a minute before NU's last drive stalled. UMASS 21, NORTHEASTERN 14 Northeastern (2-21 0 7 0 7 14 UMan 13-1) 0 14 0 7 21 NU Jamison Starling 31 interception run (Brandon Hanes kick) Matt Jordan 70 run (Matt Murphy kick) Jordan 1 run (Murphy kick) NU David Edmundson 1 1 run (Hanes kick) Jamie Holston 40 run (Murphy kick) NU Mass First downs 20 Rushes-yards 35-108 45-201 Passing 223 66 Comp-Att-Int 20-31-1 4-18-2 Return Yards 71 45 Punts-Avg Fumbles-Lost 4-4 0-0 Penalties-Yards 7-35 4-50 Possession 30:58 29:02 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING -NU, Edmundson 13-53, Jeff Reale 7-30, Bnan Vaughan 8-30, David Smith I- 19, Jim Murphy 6-5; UMass, Jordan 17-112, Holston 3-44, Anthony Catterton 10-41, Ron Brockington 6-16, Frank Elessio 3-14.

PASSING -NU, Murphy 31-20-1-223; UMass. Catterton 13-3-2-55, Jeff Smith 5-1-0-11. RECEIVING -NU, Reale 6-46, Scott Mit-chem 4-68, Kevin Morrison 4-42, Smith 4-39; UMass. Torey Hamilton 2-29, Jordan 1-22, Bryan Healy 1-15. UCONN, 42-6 st New Hsvw, Conn.

UCom 13-1) 21 0 21 0 42 Yak 11-1) 0 0 6 0 6 Hezekiah Faison 2 run (Mike Morelli kick) Tory Taylor 1 1 run (Morelli kick) Faison 2 run (Morelli kick) Dak Newton 22 pass from Shane Stafford (Morelli kick) Clint Rodriguez 49 pass from Kris Barber (kick failed) Cart Bond 12 pass from Stafford (Morelli kick) Faison 1 run (Morelli kick) Attendance 27,624 UCom Yale First downs 21 16 Rushes-yards 57-233 31-112 Passing yards 183 178 Return yards 32 78 Passes 11-17-1 14 30-3 Punts 4-162 5-178 FumWes-lost 1-0 3-3 Penalties-yards 7-63 8-5 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING Faison 25 135. Taylor 9-33. Stafford 3-31; Barber 9-46, Jabbar Craigwell II- 43, Garelick 3-15. PASSING-C. Stafford 11-17-1-183, Steve Bowman 0-0-0-0; Blake Kendall 7-16-2-81, Barber 7-141-97.

RECEIVING -C. Newton 2-87, John Fitzsim-mons 2-36, Bond 2-24; Rodriguez 2-66, Heath Ackley 2-31. Begola 1-23. URI, 28-13 at Nnfttoa, R.L Brown 10-21 0 7 0 6 13 URI 12-31 0 14 0 14 28 Wall 2 pass from McCullough (Routt kick), 0:03 R-Sanford 58 run (Walker kick), 1:36 Jenkins 49 rush (Walker kick), 2:42 B-Jessie 8 rush (kick failed), :23 Kuc 3 pass from Hixson (Walker kick), 7:49 Abdul-Matin 1 punt return (Walker kick), 9:26 Brown UM First downs 19 10 Rushes-yards 44-48 31-189 Passing 214 98 Comp-Att-Int 19-41-0 10-15-1 Return Yards 15 78 Punts-Avg 9-34 6 6-35 2 Fumbles-Lost 1-0 4-2 Penalties-Yards 6-47 1-5 Possession 33 07 2653 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING Brown, Jessie 22-48, Wall 10-34, Morey 1-2. Nangmenyi l-(minus 10).

McCullough 10-(minus 26). Rhode, Jenkins 14-109, Sanford 14-93, Hixson 3-(minus 13). PASSING Brown, McCullough 19-41-0-214 Rhode, Hixson 10-15-1-98. RECEIVING -Brown, Morey 7-94, Jessie 3-45, Choquette 3 38. Nangmenyi 3-23, Wall 2 6.

Lairson 18. Rhode. Cruz 4-21, Kuc 3-15, Butler 2-57, Jenkins 15. UMass' Matt Jordan eludes Jason Lewis for a 70-yard TD run, Things fall apart for BU YANKEE STANDINGS New England Division Conf. All New Hampshire 3-0 3-0 Massachusetts 2-1 3-1 Maine 2-2 3-2 Connecticut 1-1 3-1 Rhode Island 0-3 2-3 BU 0-3 0-4 Mid-Atlantic Division Villanova 2-0 3-1 William Mary 1-0 3-1 Delaware 1-1 3-1 James Madison 1-1 3-1 Richmond 1-1 2-2 Northeastern 1-2 2-2 By Marvin Pave GLOBE STAFF Lemon head to head for the first time.

Hu, Harvard's all-time rushing leader, was on one side, and Lemon, bidding to become the first NCAA Division 1-AA player to rush for 1,000 yards four straight years, on the other. But the showdown was no contest as Hu rushed for 113 yards on 29 carries and scored two touchdowns as Harvard crushed Bucknell, 30-7, yesterday, for its first win of the season. While Hu was doing his thing, Harvard's defense squeezed Lemon, who came into the game with 4,042 yards. The senior tailback experienced the worst day of his collegiate career, logging minus-9 yards in a dozen carries before calling it a day with 3:30 left in the third period. Of his 12 carries, seven went for losses.

"It was, without question, the greatest defensive effort I've seen in my three years here," said Harvard coach Tim Murphy. 'We've been building this defense for two years and today it kept us in the game. Our offense was ugly early on, but the defense kept giving us fine field position." So dominant was the Harvard defense spearheaded by ends Chris Smith and Tim Fleiszer, tackles Chris Schaefer and Brendan Bibro, and linebacker Joe Weidle that Bucknell finished the game with minus-4 yards rushing and 105 through the air. Eighty-nine of those yards came in the waning minutes when Bucknell capped an 11-play drive with its only score long after Murphy emptied his bench. The Harvard front line pestered Bucknell quarterback Jim Fox all day and sacked him five times, resulting in 35 yards of losses.

Fox sat down in the fourth quarter having completed 5 of 19 for 46 yards and a pair of interceptions. "We're not going to throw up a goose egg every game," said Murphy, "but we are solid defensively. When you look at the teams that have won the Ivy title over the years, they're usually the teams with the top defense." Harvard's defense was immense. In the first half, Bucknell had nine possessions and sLx of them were three-and-out. In the second half, Bucknell had seven possessions.

One ended in a punt, four in interceptions, one on a fumble and the last with the late touchdown. Of Bucknell's 10 first downs, five came on the touchdown drive. The interceptions were by Jeff Compass, Isaiah Kacyvenski, Glenn Jackson and Bob Psaradelis and the fumble recovery by Aron Natale. Bucknell coach Tom Gadd, who saw his team fall to 1-2, said, "We had to be more physical and we weren't. Harvard beat us up front.

It didn't do anything we didn't expect. We just couldn't handle it." Hu's touchdowns came on runs of 1 and 10 yards, Nos. 20 and 21 of his career, and moved him into a tie for second place on the all-time Harvard list with Charlie Brickley (1912-14). Other Harvard scorers were Ryan Korinke, who kicked field goals of 31, 20 and 33 yards, and freshman Chris Menick, who rushed in from the two. Korinke added three PATs.

Budzinski, Princeton cross up Crusaders ASSOCIATED PRESS Brett Budzinski threw for 193 yards and three touchdowns and may have entrenched himself as Princeton's No. 1 quarterback in the Tigers' 37-30 victory over Holy Cross yesterday at Princeton, N.J. rOUSIQUp Budzinski and Jackie Dempsey stalled the season in a rotation system and coach Steve Tosches said Budzinski would play two of every three series against Holy Cross (1-2). But the senior played all but one series in the first half, leading Princeton (1-1) to scores on five of its first six possessions and a 30-7 lead. Budzinski started the second half but was forced to leave early in the fourth quarter with a twisted ankle.

Preliminary reports indicated it was not serious. He finished 13 for 18. Holy Cross rallied with two third-quarter touchdowns to make it 30-22. Budzinski then drove Princeton to the 4-yard line before coming out with his injur'. Marc Washington, who rushed for 151 yards, capped the drive with a 1-yard run to make it 37-22.

Holy Cross scored with 4 seconds remaining to make it close. Crusader quarterback Brion Stapp was 19 for 35 for 193 yards, while J.R. Walz rushed for 100 yards on 19 carries. Dartmouth 21, Lehigti 14 The Big Green controlled the game thanks to Greg Smith (127 yards) and a defense that forced four turnovers. Columbia 17, Fordham 10 Charles Bettinelli's 17-yard interception return with 32 seconds left in the half put the host Lions (2-0) ahead to stay.

Penn 38, Colgate 7 Rick Gi-anata rushed for 10 yards and scored two touchdowns as the Quakers took ad antage of nine Red Raider turnovers at Philadelphia. It was Colgate's IGth straight kiss. Lafayette 30, Conreif 19 At Easton, L.rar4-Moore rushed for a career-high 1ST yards on 23 carries to Lt the Le'pank For a little more than 15 minutes, winless Bos-w rr ton University was having its way against visit- I 1 1 ing Richmond. The Terriers led, 7-0, thanks to their first opening-quarter touchdown in four games and had ended DELAWARE, 27-17 i 7 7 13-27 DARTMOUTH, 21-14 Darbnwrtk 12-01 6 8 7 0-21 Utugli 11-31 0 6 0 S-14 Smith 3 run (kick failed). 14:28 D-Aljancic 1 run (Regula run), 8:57 Palzone 5 pass from Brown (kick failed), 14:25 Smith 2 run (Regula kick), 8:09 Braswell 25 pass from Brown (Falzone pass), 8:24 DC LU First downs 15 18 Rushes-yards 10-243 05-63 Passing 54 259 Punt Returns 5-52 5-46 Kickotf Returns 2 57 2 9 Interceptions Ret 2-0 0-0 Comp-Att-Int 05-17-0 20-45-2 Sacked-Yards Lost 0-0 2-11 Punts 10-323 6-272 Fumbles-Lost 1-0 3-2 Penalties-Yards 9-69 4-38 Possession 38:09 21:51 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING Dartmouth.

G. Smith 32-127, Garcia 14-64. Alancic 10 23, Karczewski 6-14. Oberle 5-14, Sperger 2-1. Lehigh, Baker 17-51.

Brown 8-18, Snyder 2-8. Talbott 1(14). PASSING Dartmouth, Aljancic 17- 5- 0 54. Lehigh, Brown. 45 20-2 259.

RECEIVING Dartmouth. I Ellis 2-25, Oberle 1-15. Morton 1-9, G. Smith 1-5. Lehigh.

Braswell 6-88. Baker 5 69. Falzone 4-35, Streeter 2-19. Meurer 2-11, Snyder 1-37. columbIaTimo Cotimbii 12-0) 7 7 3 0-17 Forth 10-41 10 0 0 0-10 Coi Bivens 7 run (Linit kick).

6.51 Ford FG Ruoff 31. 10 48 Ford Shaw 3 run (Ruoff kick), 13:07 Col Bettinelli 1 7 interception return (Linit kick), 14 28 Col-FG Unit 37, 11:23 Col fori First downs 18 12 Rushes-yards 51-213 31-160 Passing 90 151 Comp-Att-Int 10-31-2 16-39-3 Return Yards 43 96 Punts-Avg 10-33 6 7-35 7 Fumbles-Lost 11 3-2 Penalties-Yards 9-79 9 89 Possession 33 48 26 12 hNDrVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING-C. Bivens 37 170. Bobby Thomason 11-33. Russell 18.

John Toye 2-2. Shaw 18-104, Madme 6- 35, Cantrell 112. Szocik 6 9. PASSING -C, Thomason 10-30-1-90. Bivens 0-110 F.

Szocik 8 20-2-79. Madme 8-18-1-72. Leith 0-100 RECEIVING -C, Ramirez 5 54, Bivens 2 8. Roxborough 112. Russel 18.

Bondi 1-8 Nelson 4-29, Simmons 2-33. Scoblick 2 24, Shaw 2 8. Lerth 2 6. Robinson 2-1. Davis 1-44.

Frattura 1-6. PRiTnoM7-30 Holy Cms (1-2) 7 0 IS 30 Prwcetoa M( 10 20 7 37 PR Siecfc 24 fteid goal. PR Washington 34 run (Swrk kick). NC Staoo I run (Fiatarone htck) PR Duffy 22 pass from Buazinsw (kick faited PR House 25 pass from Budzinski (Stem hrck) PR Kamara 12 pass from Budzinski (S(erk ktcki HC Labwanti 7 pass from Staop (Stapp kickj HC Staop 1 njn (Stapp njn PR WasringTor 1 run iS. ktckl HC Watz 4 pass from Siapp i Hopkins pass from Stappj Catcrtt 10-41 7 0 7 Nm 11-11 7 10 0 71-31 UP Scott 2 run (Greanouse Kick).

1 50 CU LirOelt 2 run (Arcner kicAI. 105 UP Teodecki 21 run kicki. 8 47 UP FG Guesthouse 14 41 Atjoast 4 oass lor- Tjodecw (Gfearoue fcscn i 0 05 Graf-ita 19 ur 'Gre-priouse kicK'1. 4 10 Grarata 67 run Wi ier 14 33 A 11 MMVWUU. STITIsrtCS RUSh.nG-Cc sate t.f"rw-if 3 3-6.

SmS 5-7. Htcwson 3 8 Ci-eror 1 40 Yfa 5--i). 4 CysveTa 5 13 6l- 11 Pe-n Sctf i8 Aove 15 42 8-107. T-ooett 4 10 1 0 1j 2' PASSING LrWI 9-22 2 110. Vf 0-1-1 0 Lvnc 1 i 0 1 the quarter on a high note with a sack of Richmond quarterback Mike Shannon that forced the Spiders to punt.

Then it all came apart for the Terriers quickly. BU quarterback Kevin Foley, with his team in Richmond territory and showing emotion and precision offensively, threw a pass intended for tight end Brett Dedman that wound up in the hands of linebacker Shawn Barber, who took it 60 yards into the BU end zone to tie a game that Richmond had hardly shown up for. "BU had run that play twice over the middle to the tight end for first downs," said Barber. "When I saw him Dedman go toward the middle and Foley looking at him, I thought they'd do it again. After I caught the ball, the closest BU player to me was 5 yards behind me and he was going the other way." It was the beginning of the end for BU, which fell, 37-7, before 2,069 at Nickerson Field.

Two possessions after Barber's theft, Richmond's Jasper Pen-dergrass turned up the right side for another 60-yard dagger, this time into a BU defense missing sLx starters because of injuries. That set up Shannon's 8-yard scoring toss to Denver Haught It got worse: With Foley on the sideline with a knee injury, a botched handoff in the BU backfield resulted in a fumble recovery by Carry Goodwill at the BU 33. SLx plays later, Shannon connected with a diving Muneer Moore for a 7-yard score and a 20-7 half-time lead. "Barber's interception was the play of the day for us," said Richmond coach Jim Reid, the former UMass head coach and Boston College assistant "I don't think Foley ever saw him. Until that point were outplayed and outcoached; after it and after Pen-dergrass' run, we were a different team." A Shannon-to-Moore 23-yard pass burned BU for a first down at the Terriers' 7 on the Spiders' first possession of the second half.

On the next plav, Minoso Rodgers walked into the end zone and it was 27-7. The Spiders controlled the ball for more than 11 minutes of the third quarter, then tucked it to reeling BU before the final quarter was a minute old with a field goal and 2S-yard Winston October interception touchdown return for a 30-point bulge. It was a key win for Richmond (2-2, 1-1), but BU, which went with redshirt freshman Jason Barnett at quarterback for the second half, is off to its worst start since 1992, when it started 0-6. With upcoming games at Delaware and UMass, that scenario looms again. "We're not a good football team right now," said BU first-year coach Tom MaseHa.

who said Foley's left knee injury possible ligament could keep him out of the Delaware game. "We re injured and we dont have enough experienced players to compete for 60 minutes right now." he "but we have to do a better job as a coaching staff to get the effort out of the players we do have. We're 'ing through growing pains in the wosft way." Azumali leads way as UNH stays perfect ASSOCIATED PRESS Jerry Azumah ran for two touchdowns and caught another, while Chris Bresnahan passed for Von Loo kv touchdowns Tannee ran for one rOlindlip as New Hamp- shire beat James Madison, 39-22, yesterday at Harrisonburg, Va. Azumah scored on a 17-yard run less than four minutes into the game, but injured his ankle early in the second quarter. He returned in the fourth to catch a 7-yard touchdown from Bresnahan and ran 6 yards for another touchdown.

He gained 92 yards on 14 carries. Bresnahan gained his only rushing yard when he sneaked in for a touchdown with only 1:52 left in the first half. Delaware 27, Maine 17 Leo Hamlett ran for one touchdown and passed for two more to lead the Blue Hens to a come-from-be-hind victory at Orono, Maine. UR1 28, Brown 13 James Jenkins rushed 109 yards and had a touchdown at South Kingstown. R.I as the Rams downed the Bears for the first time since 1993 and ended a three-game losmg streak.

UConi 42, Yale 6 Junior tailback Hezekiah Faison ran for 135 yards on 25 carries and soured three touchdowns at New HiMen. Main 13-21 17 0 0 0-17 Tennett 52 pass from Fein (Binder kick). 4:53 M-FG Binder 38, 9 39 M-Jameson 2 run (Binder Kick), 14 31 D-Hamlett 1 run (Leach kick). 13:06 Conti 64 pass from Hamlett (Leach kick), 6:19 Conti 30 pass from Hamlett (kick blocked). 3:15 0 Key 8 run (Leach kick), 12:04 A Del Mate First downs 16 17 Rushes-yards 44-97 48-183 Passing 214 211 Comp-Att-Int 11-22-0 14-35 2 Return Yards 147 55 Punts-Avg 5-41 4 7-28 4 Fumbles-Lost 3-3 10 Penalties-Yards 6-55 6-50 Possession 24:04 35:56 MDMOUAL STATISTICS RUSHING -D.

McGraw 7-75. Petraglia 7-23. Thompson 4-13. Coleman 4-13. Key 5-7.

Hamlett 17-(mtnus 34). Jameson 26-125, Pam 17-49. Fern 5 9 PASSING D. Hamlett 11-22 0-214 Fein 14-35-2-211. RECEIVING D.

Conti 9-196. Batts 2-18. M. Tennett 3-92. Wright 6-71.

Jameson 2-24, Cole 1-11, Maury 1-7, Pam 16. UNH, 39-22 at ltiii utma-m n-n tmun Mam 11-31 0 7 7-22 NH Azumah 1 7 run (kick failed) 2:54 NH Bresnahan 1 run (kick failed) 13 08 JM-Jones 7 pass from Maddoi (Coursey kick) 14:45 NH Jons 7 pass from Bresnahan (rush failed) 3 15 JM Brooks 39 from Maddoi (Byrd pass) 8:11 NH Azumah 7 pass from Bresnahan (Curry kick) 3 23 NH Azumah 6 run (Curry kick) 9: 1 7 JM-Madomt 1 run (Coursey kicn) 10 22 NH Scottron 6 run (Curry luck) 13 05 A 14.000 UN JM First downs 29 23 Rushes-yards 51-273 3137 Passing 246 285 Come, Art Int 24 39 2 20 43 2 Punts-Avg 5-2 5-41 Fumoss Lost 0 0 3 3 Penaitjes-Yards 12 115 7 69 Possession 38 45 21 15 MDMDUAt STATISTICS RUSHING -UNH, Curran 12 106 Azumah 14-92. Scottror, 10-56. Looez 11 26 Jones 11. Bresnanjri 2 1 Fischer 10 JM.

To" 13-69. Bacon 6-50. Evans 5-33. Maodoi 10-36 PSS)NG-UH Bsfanah 24-39 2 216. JM Varxks 20-43-2-285 RECiv'rG-UNn.

Jones 7 95 Scotton 5 39 Tarnusn 4-40 Aru-wah 3 20. laoez 2 "19. Tnoo 114 Barrow 1-13 Z.fsr I 7 Mr Jones 10-115, Boos 5-121. Perry 5-49 Penn Toocw 15-9 1 iSi. Wactetid 3502' PECE NG Co-sa-e Vj-es i 5 H.

itmr-son l-i-2- 54 8o-s 1 I. 2 11. I 9 1- 3 3 Owra 1 0 5- 4i far-jn i-6. 3 21 4-iJu fc.rt! 1 Ijnw i Dcr i ll.

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