2004 in review 2004 depauw football...

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2004 in Review 28 — 2005 DePauw University Football 2004 DePauw Football Statistics RUSHING Att Gain Loss Net Avg TD Long Jeremiah Marks 150 942 20 922 6.1 10 83 Ross Wiethoff 140 959 175 784 5.6 7 91 Matt McMahon 127 519 34 485 3.8 3 29 Jason Murphy 66 258 6 252 3.8 4 19 John Michels 18 110 4 106 5.9 1 26 Eric Lewis 0 48 0 48 0.0 0 0 David Countee 2 4 0 4 2.0 0 3 Jamarcus Shephard 1 0 6 -6 -6.0 0 0 Team 5 0 49 -49 -9.8 0 0 DEPAUW 509 2840 294 2546 5.0 25 91 OPPONENTS 321 1313 230 1083 3.4 6 31 PASSING Effic Att Cmp Int Pct Yds TDLong Ross Wiethoff 147.21 157 90 4 57.3 1343 11 70 Karl Odenwald 61.08 13 5 0 38.5 35 0 12 Team 0.00 1 0 0 0.0 0 0 0 DEPAUW 139.80 171 95 4 55.6 1378 11 70 OPPONENTS 122.78 341 201 14 58.9 2296 16 85 RECEIVING No Yds Avg TD Long Jamarcus Shephard 47 815 17.3 7 70 Brian Culp 20 253 12.6 0 43 Chase Jonason 12 218 18.2 2 53 Matt McMahon 4 12 3.0 0 7 Chris Gines 3 24 8.0 0 9 Brett Claxton 3 13 4.3 2 6 David Araiza 2 23 11.5 0 15 Torey Rauch 2 12 6.0 0 6 Jeremiah Marks 2 8 4.0 0 9 DEPAUW 95 1378 14.5 11 70 OPPONENTS 201 2296 11.4 16 85 PUNT RETURNS No Yds Avg TD Long Chris Gines 17 76 4.5 0 40 David Araiza 2 9 4.5 0 7 DEPAUW 19 85 4.5 0 40 OPPONENTS 20 95 4.8 0 14 KICK RETURNS No Yds Avg TD Long Jamarcus Shephard 13 317 24.4 0 64 Brett Claxton 4 44 11.0 0 16 John Michels 4 69 17.2 0 22 David Araiza 3 37 12.3 0 18 Chris Brolsma 3 24 8.0 0 13 Curran Clark 1 0 0.0 0 0 Devin Barr 1 10 10.0 0 10 Brandon Horn 1 5 5.0 0 5 DEPAUW 30 506 16.9 0 64 OPPONENTS 37 670 18.1 0 41 INTERCEPTIONS No Yds Avg TD Long Andrew Huff 3 51 17.0 0 28 Brendan Berigan 3 37 12.3 0 19 Obinna Ugokwe 2 19 9.5 0 19 Matt Koch 2 0 0.0 0 0 Greg Sylvester 1 38 38.0 0 38 Michael Elkins 1 0 0.0 0 0 Curran Clark 1 0 0.0 0 0 Chris Lambring 1 0 0.0 0 0 DEPAUW 14 145 10.4 0 38 OPPONENTS 4 70 17.5 0 50 FIELD GOALS FGM-FGA 10-19 20-29 30-39 40-49 50+ Long Tyler Mallory 4-9 0-0 1-3 2-5 1-1 0-0 40 PUNTING No Yds Avg Long TB FC I20 Blkd Bill Riley 44 1493 33.9 53 4 5 13 1 Ross Wiethoff 3 128 42.7 59 1 0 1 0 Team 1 0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 DEPAUW 48 1621 33.8 59 5 5 14 1 OPPONENTS 54 1873 34.7 71 2 7 14 1 DATE OPPONENT W/L DPU OPP ATT Sept. 4 *at Rhodes W 20 14 1,500 Sept. 11 WISCONSIN-STOUT L 0 23 1,500 Sept. 18 HOPE W 35 14 1,200 Sept. 25 *TRINITY L 28 29 3,000 Oct. 2 at Chicago W 28 24 1,225 Oct. 9 *SEWANEE W 27 13 1,500 Oct. 23 *at Millsaps W 38 7 1,000 Oct. 30 *at Centre W 41 26 750 Nov. 6 *ROSE-HULMAN W 30 3 2,000 Nov. 13 at Wabash W 14 7 11,504 *denotes SCAC game TEAM STATISTICS DPU OPP FIRST DOWNS 184 176 Rushing 130 65 Passing 49 102 Penalty 5 9 RUSHING YARDAGE 2546 1083 Yards gained rushing 2840 1313 Yards lost rushing 294 230 Rushing Attempts 509 321 Average Per Rush 5.0 3.4 Average Per Game 254.6 108.3 TDs Rushing 25 6 PASSING YARDAGE 1378 2296 Att-Comp-Int 171-95-4 341-201-14 Average Per Pass 8.1 6.7 Average Per Catch 14.5 11.4 Average Per Game 137.8 229.6 TDs Passing 11 16 TOTAL OFFENSE 3924 3379 Total Plays 680 662 Average Per Play 5.8 5.1 Average Per Game 392.4 337.9 Kick Returns: no.-yards 30-506 37-670 Punt Returns: no.-yards 19-85 20-95 Interception Returns: no.-yards 14-145 4-70 Fumbles-lost 14-10 11-5 Penalties-yards 40-359 40-323 Punts-average 48-33.8 54-34.7 Time of Possession/Game 32:11 27:49 3rd-down conversions 64/144 42/137 4th-down conversions 12/20 9/26 |———— PATs ————| SCORING TD FGs Kick Run Rcv Pass DXP Saf Pts Jeremiah Marks 10 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 60 Ross Wiethoff 7 0-0 0-0 0-1 0 2-2 0 0 42 Jamarcus Shephard 7 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 42 Tyler Mallory 0 4-9 29-33 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 41 Jason Murphy 4 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 24 Matt McMahon 3 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 18 Chase Jonason 2 0-0 0-0 0-0 1 0-0 0 0 14 Brett Claxton 2 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 12 John Michels 1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 6 Brian Culp 0 0-0 0-0 0-0 1 0-0 0 0 2 DEPAUW 36 4-9 29-33 0-1 2 2-2 0 0 261 OPPONENTS 22 4-8 12-17 0-2 2 2-3 0 0 160 BY QUARTER 1st 2nd 3rd 4th TOTAL DePauw 38 105 54 64 261 Opponents 22 30 47 61 160

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Page 1: 2004 in Review 2004 DePauw Football Statisticsc510383.r83.cf2.rackcdn.com/ath/football/2005/guide/2004...2005 DePauw University Football — 29 2004 in Review DEFENSIVE LEADERS TACKLES

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28 — 2005 DePauw University Football

2004 DePauw Football StatisticsRUSHING Att Gain Loss Net Avg TD Long Jeremiah Marks 150 942 20 922 6.1 10 83Ross Wiethoff 140 959 175 784 5.6 7 91Matt McMahon 127 519 34 485 3.8 3 29Jason Murphy 66 258 6 252 3.8 4 19John Michels 18 110 4 106 5.9 1 26Eric Lewis 0 48 0 48 0.0 0 0David Countee 2 4 0 4 2.0 0 3Jamarcus Shephard 1 0 6 -6 -6.0 0 0Team 5 0 49 -49 -9.8 0 0DEPAUW 509 2840 294 2546 5.0 25 91OPPONENTS 321 1313 230 1083 3.4 6 31

PASSING Effic Att Cmp Int Pct Yds TD Long Ross Wiethoff 147.21 157 90 4 57.3 1343 11 70Karl Odenwald 61.08 13 5 0 38.5 35 0 12Team 0.00 1 0 0 0.0 0 0 0DEPAUW 139.80 171 95 4 55.6 1378 11 70OPPONENTS 122.78 341 201 14 58.9 2296 16 85

RECEIVING No Yds Avg TD Long Jamarcus Shephard 47 815 17.3 7 70Brian Culp 20 253 12.6 0 43Chase Jonason 12 218 18.2 2 53Matt McMahon 4 12 3.0 0 7Chris Gines 3 24 8.0 0 9Brett Claxton 3 13 4.3 2 6David Araiza 2 23 11.5 0 15Torey Rauch 2 12 6.0 0 6Jeremiah Marks 2 8 4.0 0 9DEPAUW 95 1378 14.5 11 70OPPONENTS 201 2296 11.4 16 85

PUNT RETURNS No Yds Avg TD LongChris Gines 17 76 4.5 0 40David Araiza 2 9 4.5 0 7DEPAUW 19 85 4.5 0 40OPPONENTS 20 95 4.8 0 14

KICK RETURNS No Yds Avg TD LongJamarcus Shephard 13 317 24.4 0 64Brett Claxton 4 44 11.0 0 16John Michels 4 69 17.2 0 22David Araiza 3 37 12.3 0 18Chris Brolsma 3 24 8.0 0 13Curran Clark 1 0 0.0 0 0Devin Barr 1 10 10.0 0 10Brandon Horn 1 5 5.0 0 5DEPAUW 30 506 16.9 0 64OPPONENTS 37 670 18.1 0 41

INTERCEPTIONS No Yds Avg TD LongAndrew Huff 3 51 17.0 0 28Brendan Berigan 3 37 12.3 0 19Obinna Ugokwe 2 19 9.5 0 19Matt Koch 2 0 0.0 0 0Greg Sylvester 1 38 38.0 0 38Michael Elkins 1 0 0.0 0 0Curran Clark 1 0 0.0 0 0Chris Lambring 1 0 0.0 0 0DEPAUW 14 145 10.4 0 38OPPONENTS 4 70 17.5 0 50

FIELD GOALS FGM-FGA 10-19 20-29 30-39 40-49 50+ LongTyler Mallory 4-9 0-0 1-3 2-5 1-1 0-0 40

PUNTING No Yds Avg Long TB FC I20 BlkdBill Riley 44 1493 33.9 53 4 5 13 1Ross Wiethoff 3 128 42.7 59 1 0 1 0Team 1 0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0DEPAUW 48 1621 33.8 59 5 5 14 1OPPONENTS 54 1873 34.7 71 2 7 14 1

DATE OPPONENT W/L DPU OPP ATTSept. 4 *at Rhodes W 20 14 1,500Sept. 11 WISCONSIN-STOUT L 0 23 1,500Sept. 18 HOPE W 35 14 1,200Sept. 25 *TRINITY L 28 29 3,000Oct. 2 at Chicago W 28 24 1,225Oct. 9 *SEWANEE W 27 13 1,500Oct. 23 *at Millsaps W 38 7 1,000Oct. 30 *at Centre W 41 26 750Nov. 6 *ROSE-HULMAN W 30 3 2,000Nov. 13 at Wabash W 14 7 11,504*denotes SCAC game

TEAM STATISTICS DPU OPPFIRST DOWNS 184 176 Rushing 130 65 Passing 49 102 Penalty 5 9RUSHING YARDAGE 2546 1083 Yards gained rushing 2840 1313 Yards lost rushing 294 230 Rushing Attempts 509 321 Average Per Rush 5.0 3.4 Average Per Game 254.6 108.3 TDs Rushing 25 6PASSING YARDAGE 1378 2296 Att-Comp-Int 171-95-4 341-201-14 Average Per Pass 8.1 6.7 Average Per Catch 14.5 11.4 Average Per Game 137.8 229.6 TDs Passing 11 16TOTAL OFFENSE 3924 3379 Total Plays 680 662 Average Per Play 5.8 5.1 Average Per Game 392.4 337.9Kick Returns: no.-yards 30-506 37-670Punt Returns: no.-yards 19-85 20-95Interception Returns: no.-yards 14-145 4-70Fumbles-lost 14-10 11-5Penalties-yards 40-359 40-323Punts-average 48-33.8 54-34.7Time of Possession/Game 32:11 27:493rd-down conversions 64/144 42/1374th-down conversions 12/20 9/26

|———— PATs ————| SCORING TD FGs Kick Run Rcv Pass DXP Saf PtsJeremiah Marks 10 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 60Ross Wiethoff 7 0-0 0-0 0-1 0 2-2 0 0 42Jamarcus Shephard 7 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 42Tyler Mallory 0 4-9 29-33 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 41Jason Murphy 4 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 24Matt McMahon 3 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 18Chase Jonason 2 0-0 0-0 0-0 1 0-0 0 0 14Brett Claxton 2 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 12John Michels 1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 6Brian Culp 0 0-0 0-0 0-0 1 0-0 0 0 2DEPAUW 36 4-9 29-33 0-1 2 2-2 0 0 261OPPONENTS 22 4-8 12-17 0-2 2 2-3 0 0 160

BY QUARTER 1st 2nd 3rd 4th TOTALDePauw 38 105 54 64 261Opponents 22 30 47 61 160

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DEFENSIVE LEADERS TACKLES For Sacks- Int- UT AT TOT Loss Yds Yds BrUp Hurry 11 Greg Sylvester 34 20 54 2.5-10 . 1-38 4 .44 Michael Elkins 29 22 51 1.5-4 . 1-0 . .38 Eric Lewis 35 15 50 4.0-11 2.0-7 . 3 221 Cory Partlow 30 14 44 2.5-3 . . . .98 Dustin Hertel 31 10 41 17.0-67 7.0-42 . 1 545 Aaron Key 28 11 39 4.0-10 1.0-6 . . 119 Obinna Ugokwe 26 11 37 3.0-12 . 2-19 2 .93 Darron Lasley 19 18 37 6.0-23 2.0-14 . 1 459 Matt Koch 19 14 33 2.5-2 . 2-0 1 390 Luis Davila 20 10 30 3.5-9 0.5-1 . 1 248 Rob Farrow 12 11 23 2.5-10 1.0-5 . 2 .16 Andrew Huff 14 7 21 1.0-1 . 3-51 3 .51 Eric Rausch 13 6 19 3.5-7 . . . 127 Curran Clark 13 5 18 . . 1-0 2 .99 Devin Barr 11 1 12 3.5-8 0.5-1 . 1 34 Brendan Berigan 8 2 10 . . 3-37 5 .68 Rob Camfield 7 3 10 2.0-15 2.0-15 . . .95 Ian MacLeod 7 2 9 3.0-15 3.0-15 . . 142 Andy Brandstatter 6 2 8 . . . . .50 Joseph Di Salvo 6 2 8 . . . . .92 Forest Andrews 8 0 8 2.0-9 2.0-9 . . 122 Chris Lambring 6 1 7 . . 1-0 1 .8 Felix Felder 5 1 6 . . . 1 .30 Chris Brolsma 5 0 5 . . . . .6 Ben Brown 3 2 5 . . . 1 .57 Jesse Brutkiewicz 1 2 3 . . . 1 .77 Carl Albrecht 0 1 1 . . . . .23 Matt McMahon 0 1 1 . . . . .70 Scott Wareham 1 0 1 1.0-4 1.0-4 . . .1 Chris Gines 1 0 1 . . . . .39 Jevon Pruitt 1 0 1 . . . . .80 Dan Toleikis 0 1 1 . . . . .74 Kerry Pappas 0 1 1 1 . . . .52 Jon Gratz 0 1 1 . . . . .TM Team . . . . . . . . DEPAUW 400 196 596 65-220 22-119 14-145 30 23 OPPONENTS 450 250 700 61.0-238 20-134 4-70 19 12

Blocked kicks: Luis Davila 2, Dustin Hertel 1Fumble recoveries: Andrew Huff 1, Brendan Berigan 1, Rob Camfield 1Forced fumbles: Eric Lewis 1, Dustin Hertel 1, Darron Lasley 1, Matt Koch 1, Brendan Berigan 1

2004 TIGER AWARD WINNERSMost Valuable Player .......................................................................................... Jamarcus ShephardThomas A. Mont Offensive Player of the Year ......................................................Ross WiethoffRaymond “Gaumey” Neal Defensive Player of the Year ............................................ Matt KochMonon Bell Most Valuable Player Award .....................................................Matt McMahon (off.) Brendan Berigan (def.)Chester C. Elson Tiger of the Year Award ........................................... Chris Brolsma, Matt KochEdwin C. Boswell Freshman of the Year Award ............................ Brett Claxton, Jeremiah MarksByron Elson Most Improved Award ..................................................Matt McMahon, Greg SylvesterKen Holland Memorial Award .....................................................Kyle McGrath, Obinna UgokweGeorge E. Lortz Award (Highest GPA Among Seniors) ................................................Chris BrolsmaJames C. Loveless Battle of the Trenches Award ........................... Dustin Hertel, Chase JonasonScout Team Player of the Year .......................................................................... Joel Dart, Ryan McElwainOne Play Warrior ........................................................................................................................Chris BrolsmaAll-SCAC First Team ..................................................Jon Gratz, Dustin Hertel, Matt Koch, Eric Lewis, ........................................................................................Jeremiah Marks, Jamarcus Shephard, Greg Sylvester All-SCAC Second Team ........................ Chad Homan, Chase Jonason, Darron Lasley, Ross WiethoffAll-SCAC Honorable Mention ........................................ Chris Brolsma, Brian Culp, Matt McMahon, Cory Partlow, Obinna UgokweAll-SCAC Academic Honor Roll: ..........................Ben Baenen, Chris Ball, Jeff Bonner, Alex Boucher

Chris Brolsma, Patrick Croner, Brian Culp,Joel Dart, Chad Homan, Julian Jones, Tyler Mallory

Kyle McGrath, Mike Motch, Braden Nordman, Cory Partlow, Paul Raskin, Ryan Shatto, Bill Snyder,

Dan Toleiks, Jake Tri, Chris Will, Abe Winkle

DePauw 20, Rhodes 14 September 4

MEMPHIS, Tenn. — The longest run by a DePauw player in 14 years turned the game around as the Tigers rallied from a 7-0 first-half deficit to score 20 straight points on the way to a 20-14 Southern Collegiate Athletic Conference win over host Rhodes. The victory was also the first DePauw win for head coach Bill Lynch. Rhodes missed a 32-yard field goal on its first posses-sion, but needed just two plays on its next series to take the early lead. Senior quarterback Daniel Swanstrom teamed with Michael Hatcher for a 60-yard touchdown pass and Hunter Tigert added the point-after to give the Lynx a 7-0 lead with 2:56 left in the first. Early in the second quarter the Tigers started on their own 7-yard line after Andrew Huff intercepted Swanstrom’s pass. On the third play of the series, freshman Jeremiah Marks got the call and answered with an 83-yard run down the left sideline that included running over a Lynx defender. Tyler Mallory’s extra point tied the contest at 7-7 with 10:38 remaining in the half. The run was the longest by a DePauw runner since Terry Dickey went 85 yards in a 1990 contest. That single play seemed to turn the momentum around as the DePauw defense forced Rhodes to punt after they were unable to pick up a first down. Chris Gines returned the punt 40 yards to the Rhodes 28. Wiethoff ’s 8-yard run and Mallory’s kick made it 14-7 with 6:49 remaining in the half. DePauw’s defense continued to shine as it allowed only 14 yards and no first downs the remainder of the half. Another defensive play set up a DePauw score in the third quarter when Greg Sylvester picked off a Swanstrom pass and returned it 38 yards to the Rhodes 27. Three plays later Mallory booted a 37-yard field goal to make it 17-7 with 8:37 left in the third. The Tigers shut down the Lynx without a first down on the next series and the offense took over on the DePauw 47 with Karl Odenwald taking over for Wiethoff for a couple of series as Wiethoff was suffering from cramps in the 90-degree Memphis heat. Odenwald helped direct a series that moved to the Rhodes 23. Mallory was called upon and he kicked a 40-yard field goal to push the margin to 20-7 with 2:10 left in the third. Early in the fourth, the Lynx closed the gap to six points when Swanstrom connected with Matt Dement for a 64-yard score and Tigert added the extra point to make it 20-14 with 13:36 left. The touchdown came on the play immediately after what appeared to be a fumble recovered by DePauw. However, an inadvertent official’s whistle forced a replay of the down. The teams then exchanged two punts each before the Tigers took over on their own 32 with 6:24 remaining. DePauw was able to take 4:30 off the clock in 11 plays, but Mallory’s 38-yard field goal was blocked by Chris Castlebury with 1:54 remaining. Swanstrom completed a pair of passes to move the ball to the Rhodes 42, but four straight incomplete passes gave the ball back to the Tigers and they were able to run out the final 28 seconds. The Tigers totaled 272 rushing yards on 53 carries. Marks totaled 104 yards in 13 carries and was the first DePauw player in school history to break the century mark in his first collegiate game as a freshman. Wiethoff rushed for 86 yards in 20 carries and Matt McMahon added 59 yards on 13 carries. Swanstrom completed 21 of 39 passes for 257 yards and a pair of scored but was intercepted twice. He also rushed for 41 yards. Dement caught seven passes for 115 yards, while Hatcher hauled in seven for 110 yards. Aaron Key was credited with nine tackles, while Matt Koch added seven. Brian Steinert led Rhodes with 15 fol-lowed by Ben Clark with 10.

DePauw 0 14 6 0 — 20Rhodes 7 0 0 7 — 14

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First QuarterR — Hatcher 60 pass from Swanstrom (Tigert kick), 2:56

Second QuarterD — Marks 83 run (Mallory kick), 10:38D — Wiethoff 8 run (Mallory kick), 6:49

Third QuarterD — FG Mallory 37, 8:37D — FG Mallory 40, 2:10

Fourth QuarterR — Dement 64 pass from Swanstrom (Tigert kick), 13:36

TEAM STATISTICS DPU RCFirst Downs 14 14Rushes-Yards 53-272 27-72Passing Yards 71 257Att-Comp-Int 16-6-0 39-21-2Total Plays-Yards 69-343 66-329Punts-Avg 8-29.9 6-31.5Fumbles-Lost 1-0 5-2Penalties-Yards 5-30 5-55Possession Time 34:55 25:05Sacks By: Number-Yards 0-0 1-4

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICSRUSHING — DePauw, Marks 13-104, Wiethoff 20-86, McMahon 13-59, Murphy 7-23. Rhodes, Swanstrom 9-41, Lake 3-19, Childs 9-18, Faver 5-8, Quinn 1-(- 14).PASSING — DePauw, Wiethoff 5-13-0-59, Odenwald 1-3-0-12. Rhodes, Swanstrom 21-39-2-257.RECEIVING — DePauw, Culp 3-26, Shephard 2-31, Jonason 1-14. Rhodes, Dement 7-115, Hatcher 7-110, Childs 2-30, Bozant 1-5, Muller 1-5, Greer 1-5, Lake 1-0, Castleberry 1-(-13).

Wisconsin-Stout 23, DePauw 0September 11

GREENCASTLE, Ind. – Visiting Wisconsin-Stout scored 20 second-half points to build upon a 3-0 halftime lead on the way to a 23-0 win over DePauw on Community Day at Blackstock Stadium. Stout quarterback Nick Ohman rushed for a game-high 116 yards, threw for 216 and accounted for all three Blue Devils touchdowns with one rushing and two passing. The Blue Devils led 3-0 at the half on a 19-yard field goal by Evan Larsen with 1:37 remaining in the first that capped a 19-play, 94-yard drive over an 8:10 span. DePauw’s defense put together a goal-line stand late in the first half as it stopped the Blue Devils at the Tigers’ 4-yard line. DePauw then drove to the Stout 16 and eventu-ally called upon Tyler Mallory for a 32-yard field goal with four seconds remaining. Mallory’s kick, however, sailed wide left. Stout took advantage of its first possession of the second half as it drove 82 yards in 12 plays with Ohman tossing a 25-yard scoring pass to John Freeman to make it 10-0 with 7:45 left in the third. The Blue Devils defense stopped the Tigers on three plays and got the ball back at the DePauw 49. Six plays later, Ohman ran it in from nine yards to make it 17-0. The Tigers drove into Stout territory on the next series, but Matt McMahon fumbled at the Blue Devils’ 35 and Schils recovered. Early in the fourth Jordan Sinz intercepted a Wiethoff pass and returned it to the Stout 46. Ohman teamed with Jesse Wendt for a 10-yard score with 9:18 left to make it 23-0. The extra point attempt was blocked. Stout totaled 416 yards of offense with 200 on the ground and 216 through the air and held DePauw to 280 yards including only 73 on the ground. The Blue Devils’ Ryan Englebert rushed for 58 yards and caught eight passes for 28 yards. Ross Jones hauled in six for 81 yards. Jeremiah Marks paced DePauw with 54 rushing yards on 10 carries. Wiethoff completed 10 of 19 passes for a career-high 193 yards. Five of those went to Shephard for

136 yards. Defensively, Sinz and Schils each recorded seven tackles, while Schils led the way with a pair of sacks. Greg Sylvester led DePauw with 15 tackles followed by Obinna Ugokwe with nine including a team-high three for losses totaling 12 yards. The shutout was DePauw’s first since it lost to Trinity in 1999 and its first at home since a loss to Hope in 1994. Wis.-Stout 3 0 14 6 — 23DePauw 0 0 0 0 — 0

First QuarterUW-S – FG Larsen 19, 1:37

Third QuarterUW-S - Freeman 25 pass from Ohman (Larsen kick), 7:45UW-S - Ohman 9 run (Larsen kick), 2:47

Fourth QuarterUW-S - Wendt 10 pass from Ohman (kick blocked), 9:18

TEAM STATISTICS UW-S DPUFirst Downs 23 13Rushes-Yards 47-200 36-73Passing Yards 216 207Att-Comp-Int 31-23-0 24-12-1Total Plays-Yards 78-416 60-280Punts-Avg 3-35.3 6-34.3Fumbles-Lost 0-0 1-1Penalties-Yards 5-29 3-20Possession Time 36:11 23:49Sacks By: Number-Yards 4-25 1-5

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICSRUSHING — UW-Stout, Ohman 19-116, Englebert 18-58, Wendt 1-9, Reese 1-6, Ashfield 5-4, Jackson 1-4, Hendricks 2-3. DePauw, Marks 10-54, Murphy 8-33, Mc-Mahon 7-13; Wiethoff 11-(-27).PASSING — UW-Stout, Ohman 23-30-0-216, Ashfield

0-1-0-0. DePauw, Wiethoff 10-19-1-193, Odenwald 2-5-0-14.RECEIVING — UW-Stout, Englebert 8-28, Jones 6-81, Wendt 4-28, Freeman 3-51, Sprester 1-21, Mattison 1-7. DePauw, Shephard 5-136, Culp 3-42, Gines 2-15, Araiza 1-8, Rauch 1-6.

DePauw 35, Hope 14September 18

GREENCASTLE, Ind. — DePauw totaled 388 rushing yards and 498 total on the way to a 35-14 win over visiting Hope on a sunny, warm day at Blackstock Stadium. Junior quarterback Ross Wiethoff rushed for a career-high 158 yards on 16 carries and completed 13 of 17 passes for 110 yards and three touchdowns. Freshman running back Jeremiah Marks also topped the 100-yard mark with a career-best 144 yards and a touchdown on 16 carries. The Tigers scored first on a 21-yard pass from Wiethoff to Jamarcus Shephard with just 53 seconds left in the first quarter. Tyler Mallory booted the first of five successful extra points to make it 7-0. The Flying Dutchmen tied the score just over two minutes later as Jake Schrock hauled in a 56-yard pass from Joe Schwander. DePauw took the lead for good on its next possession as Shephard returned the ensuing kickoff 64 yards to the Hope 27. Six plays later, Wiethoff and Shephard teamed for a 9-yard scoring pass. On its next series the Tigers made it 21-7 on Jason Murphy’s 3-yard run. Marks picked up 50 yards in the series including a 37-yard gain that set up the score. A key point in the second half occurred when Wiethoff fumbled near midfield and the Tigers were assessed a personal foul on the play giving the Flying Dutchmen the ball on the DePauw 32. Schwander and Joe Verschueren teamed for a 30-yard gain to the 2-yard line, but the DePauw defense put together a goal-line stand with Luis Davila recording a fourth-down tackle of Paul Burgess for a 1-yard loss. Later in the third, Wiethoff picked up 71 yards on a scamper to the Hope 6 and then tossed a 2-yard touchdown pass to Brett Claxton to make it 28-7 with 6:27 left in the quarter. Hope scored on its next series as Schwander and Dustin Smith connected on a 7-yard scoring pass that was preceded by Schwander’s 44-yard strike to Schrock. The final score of the contest came with 12:25 remaining when Marks scored on a 5-yard run. The freshman totaled 59 yards on four carries during the drive. DePauw held a 39:26-20:34 time of possession advantage and outgained the Flying Dutchmen 498-378. Schwander completed 14 of 35 passes for 255 yards and two touchdowns, while two Hope receivers topped the 100-yard plateau. Verschueren caught seven passes for 110 yards with Schrock totaling 115 yards on three catches. Shephard caught nine passes for 83 yards and the two touchdowns and returned two kickoffs 80 yards to finish with 163 all-purpose yards. Eric Rausch and Matt Koch each finished with five tackles for the Tigers. Mitch Cumings led Hope with 12 stops including three for losses totaling 12 yards.

Hope 0 7 7 0 — 14DePauw 7 14 7 7 — 35

First QuarterD - Shephard 21 pass from Wiethoff (Mallory kick), 0:53

Second QuarterH - Schrock 56 pass from Schwander (Barnett kick), 13:45D - Shephard 9 pass from Wiethoff (Mallory kick), 11:07D - Murphy 3 run (Mallory kick), 6:16

Third QuarterD - Claxton 2 pass from Wiethoff (Mallory kick), 6:27H - Smith 7 pass from Schwander (Barnett kick), 4:26

Jeremiah Marks rushed for 144 yards on 16 carries in the 35-14 win over Hope.

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Fourth QuarterD - Marks 5 run (Mallory kick), 12:25

TEAM STATISTICS DPU HCFirst Downs 18 22Rushes-Yards 28-123 60-388Passing Yards 255 110Att-Comp-Int 35-14-2 19-14-0Total Plays-Yards 63-378 79-498Punts-Avg 7-45.3 6-31.8Fumbles-Lost 1-1 1-1Penalties-Yards 2-19 3-30Possession Time 20:34 39:26Sacks By: Number-Yards 1-4 3-9

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICSRUSHING — Hope, Schwander 12-68, Burgess 13-38, Smith 1-13, Diekevers 1-2, Serrano 1-2. DePauw, Wiethoff 16-158, Marks 16-144, Murphy 12-49, McMahon 14-33, Countee 2-4.PASSING — Hope, Schwander 14-35-2-255. DePauw, Wiethoff 13-17-0-110, Odenwald 1-2-0-0.RECEIVING — Hope, Verschueren 7-110, Schrock 3-115, Travis 1-11, VandenBosch 1-11, Smith 1-7, Serrano 1-1. DePauw, Shephard 9-83, McMahon 2-5, Culp 1-14, Jonason 1-6, Claxton 1-2.

Trinity 29, DePauw 28September 25

GREENCASTLE, Ind. — Faced with fourth-and-goal from the DePauw 9-yard line, Trinity quarterback Dan DesPlaines rolled to his right and connected with Robert Kelner with just 10.6 seconds left and gave ninth-ranked Trinity a 29-28 Southern Collegiate Athletic Conference win. The touchdown completed a comeback that erased DePauw’s late 12-point lead. DePauw built a 28-16 advan-tage after Jason Murphy’s 15-yard run with 5:32 left. Following Murphy’s score, Trinity’s Kolby Brailsford took the ensuing kickoff at the goal line and returned it to the Trinity 41. Trinity needed just four plays to cover the 59 yards with DesPlaines teaming with Brailsford for a 25-yard score with 4:53 remaining. Todd Canion’s extra-point made it 28-23. The Tigers picked up a first down on the next series before Trinity stopped the hosts at the Trinity 49. Bill Riley’s

punt sailed into the end zone and Trinity took over on its own 20. With no timeouts remaining, DesPlaines literally began the two-minute drill as exactly two minutes remained in the contest. Three straight completions moved the ball to the DePauw 40 with the last one covering 26 yards to Kelner. DesPlaines then rushed for eight and Jerrold Jones added seven to move the ball to the DePauw 25. A 16-yard pass play to Kelner moved the ball to the nine with just over 30 seconds left. Three straight incomplete passes set up the game-winner on fourth down. DePauw had two chances from their own 40, but Ross Wiethoff ’s first-down pass was incomplete and he was sacked on the final play by Dustin Allen. The lead see-sawed early as Trinity’s Canion got the scoring underway with a 20-yard field goal with 1:08 left in the first. DePauw took the lead on a 53-yard pass play from Wiethoff to tight end Chase Jonason just eight seconds into the second. The score was the first of Jonason’s collegiate career. Jones scored on a 24-yard run with 6:29 left in the half, but Jeremiah Marks put DePauw ahead, 14-10, with a 5-yard run with 4:06 remaining in the second. Trinity took a 16-14 lead with 46 seconds remaining in the half on a 7-yard pass from DesPlaines to Kelner. The three-play, 19-yard drive was set up by a DePauw fumble that Trinity’s Brant McAdams recovered after a hit by Wacey Clarke. On its first series of the second half, Trinity drove to the DePauw 20, but Canion missed a 37-yard field goal. DePauw converted three consecutive third-down situations on the next possession and moved to the Trinity 33. Marks carried for gains of 18 and two yards but a fumbled snap at the Trinity 11 was recovered by Trinity’s Michael Perez. Ian MacLeod’s third-down sack of DesPlaines on Trinity’s next possession forced the visiting Tigers to punt and, after a penalty on the return, DePauw took over on the Trinity 37. Wiethoff picked up two yards on second down and Trinity was whistled for a late hit on the play that moved the ball to the Trinity 20. Four plays later, Wiethoff tossed a 5-yard pass to Clax-ton for the score that put DePauw ahead 20-16. Wiethoff and Jonason teamed for the two-point conversion to make it 22-16 with 11:40 left. DePauw linebacker Matt Koch then picked off DesPlaines at the DePauw 45 with 11:01 left. Murphy converted a fourth-and-one situation with a 3-yard gain before Wiethoff and Jonason connected for an 8-yard gain to set up Murphy’s score. Wiethoff ’s run for the two-point

conversion failed. Trinity entered the game ranked third in the nation with just over 555 total yards per game and totaled 443 with 139 coming in the final 5:21. DePauw finished with 373 total yards. Wiethoff completed 10 of 18 passes for 180 yards and two touchdowns with Brian Culp hauling in five of those for 79 yards. Murphy finished with a career-high 77 rushing yards. DesPlaines completed 26 of 40 for 316 yards and three touchdowns. Kelner caught nine for 104 yards and two scores. Jones finished with 98 rushing yards and a touchdown for Trinity. Defensively, Trinity’s Kacey Clark totaled 16 tackles with one for a loss and one forced fumble. Dustin Hertel and Aaron Key each had six stops for DePauw.

Trinity 3 13 0 13 — 29DePauw 0 14 0 14 — 28

First QuarterT — FG Canion 20, 1:08

Second QuarterD — Jonason 53 pass from Wiethoff (Mallory kick), 14:52T — Jones 24 run (Canion kick), 6:29D — Marks 5 run (Mallory kick), 4:06T — Kelner 7 pass from DesPlaines (kick failed), 0:46

Fourth QuarterD — Claxton 5 pass from Wiethoff (Jonason from Wiethoff), 11:40D — Murphy 15 run (run failed), 5:32T — Brailsford 25 pass from DesPlaines (Canion kick), 4:53T — Kelner 9 pass from DesPlaines (run failed), 0:10

TEAM STATISTICS TU DPUFirst Downs 21 19Rushes-Yards 29-127 54-193Passing Yards 316 180Att-Comp-Int 40-26-1 18-10-0Total Plays-Yards 69-443 72-373Punts-Avg 6-36.5 5-33.4Fumbles-Lost 0-0 2-2Penalties-Yards 4-50 1-10Possession Time 27:01 32:59Sacks By: Number-Yards 3-11 1-2

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICSRUSHING — Trinity, Jones 23-98, DesPlaines 3-18, Hicks 1-6, Boles 1-4, Federle 1-1. DePauw, Murphy 20-77, Wiethoff 16-65, Marks 11-45, McMahon 6-12, Shephard 1-(-6).PASSING — Trinity, DesPlaines 26-40-1-316. DePauw, Wiethoff 10-18-0-180.RECEIVING — Trinity, Kelner 9-104, Kremers 4-61, Boles 4-40, Jones 3-17, Palmertree 2-49, Brailsford 2-33, Hicks 1-7, Lacroix 1-5. DePauw, Culp 5-79, Jonason 2-61, Shephard 1-36, Claxton 1-5, Marks 1-(-1).

DePauw 28, Chicago 24October 2

CHICAGO, Ill. — The Tigers improved to 3-2 on the season with a 28-24 win over host University of Chicago, but they had to survive another opponent comeback to do so. Leading 28-12 after Jamarcus Shephard’s 57-yard touchdown reception from Ross Wiethoff with six minutes left in the third, the Tigers watched that lead dwindle on the next two Maroons’ possessions. Frank Brown’s 17-yard touchdown run with 57 seconds left in the third cut the lead to 28-18. DePauw’s next possession stalled and Chicago took over on its own 32. The Maroons put together a 14-play, 68-yard drive that ended in Austin Way’s 1-yard run. Mike Morentzi missed his third extra-point attempt of the day and the Tigers still held a 28-24 advantage with 6:59 to play. Chase Jonason gave the Tigers a second-quarter lead against Trinity with this 53-yard reception from Ross Wiethoff.

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The Tigers started from their own 33 and picked up a couple of first downs before being faced with a fourth and eight from the Chicago 37. The punt snap sailed over punter Bill Riley’s head and no one gained control until the ball popped out of a pile and DePauw’s Eric Lewis scooped it up at the DePauw 28 and returned it to the Maroons’ 24 for a first down. DePauw was able to run the clock down to 53 seconds after punting. Chicago advanced to their own 44 before time expired. Wiethoff put the Tigers ahead on their second posses-sion with a 91-yard sideline scamper. Jack Stockert closed the margin to 7-6 with a 23-yard pass from Marc Zera. Jason Murphy’s 6-yard run and Shephard’s 50-yard pass from Wiethoff made it 21-6 at the half. The Maroons closed the gap to 21-12 early in the third after T.J. Rajcevich picked off a Wiethoff pass and returned it 50 yards. Brown plowed in from six yards for the score with 12:49 left in the third. DePauw outgained Chicago 366-303 with Wiethoff rushing for 94 and Murphy adding 51. Wiethoff completed 13 of 21 passes for 201 yards and two touchdowns to Shephard. Finishing with 10 catches for 159 yards, Shephard moved into fifth place on DePauw’s all-time reception list, fourth on the receiving charts and third among all-purpose leaders. Zera completed 25 of 41 passes for the Maroons for 223 yards with seven each going to Micah Dawson and Stockert. Michael Elkins led the Tigers with 11 tackles and added an interception. DePauw finished with four sacks including one each by Dustin Hertel, Ian MacLeod, Rob Camfield and Forest Andrews. Gabriel Fernandez led Chicago with 12 tackles and three tackles for losses totaling six yards.

DePauw 7 14 7 0 — 28Chicago 6 0 12 6 — 24

First QuarterD — Wiethoff 91 run (Mallory kick), 9:38C — Stockert 23 pass from Zera (kick failed), 4:11

Second QuarterD — Murphy 6 run (Mallory kick), 8:50D — Shephard 50 pass from Wiethoff (Mallory kick), 4:09

Third QuarterC — Brown 6 run (kick failed), 12:49D — Shephard 57 pass from Wiethoff (Mallory kick), 6:00C — Brown 17 run (run failed), 0:57

Fourth QuarterC — Way 1 run (kick failed), 6:59

TEAM STATISTICS DPU UCFirst Downs 12 20Rushes-Yards 41-165 33-80Passing Yards 201 223Att-Comp-Int 21-13-1 41-25-1Total Plays-Yards 62-366 74-303Punts-Avg 6-30.5 6-35.5Fumbles-Lost 1-0 0-0Penalties-Yards 6-63 8-42Possession Time 30:06 29:54Sacks By: Number-Yards 4-27 3-24

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICSRUSHING — DePauw, Wiethoff 16-94, Murphy 14-51, McMahon 10-7, Team 1-(-35), Lewis 0-48. Chicago, Brown 14-43, Way 7-18, Dawson 2-12, Zera 10-7.PASSING — DePauw, Wiethoff 13-21-1-201. Chicago, Zera 25-41-1-223.RECEIVING — DePauw, Shephard 10-159, Culp 2-19, Jonason 1-23. Chicago, Dawson 7-71, Stockert 7-71, Malo-ney 3-32, Albian 3-32, Brown 3-5, Guardi 1-8, Way 1-4.

DePauw 27, Sewanee 13October 9

GREENCASTLE, Ind. — DePauw freshman run-ning back Jeremiah Marks rushed for a career-high 182 yards and two touchdowns and junior quarterback Ross Wiethoff rushed for 106 and threw for 147 to lead the Tigers to a 27-13 Old Gold Day and Southern Collegiate Athletic Conference win over visiting Sewanee. DePauw jumped out to a 6-0 lead on a 1-yard run by Marks with 2:05 left in the second quarter, but the extra-point attempt was blocked. On the next possession, DePauw’s Andrew Huff intercepted Wes Satterfield’s pass at the DePauw 25 and returned it to the Sewanee 47. Six plays later Wiethoff teamed with Jamarcus Shephard for a 20-yard score and then connected with Brian Culp for the two-point conversion to make it 14-0 with just 8.8 seconds left in the half. Midway through the third quarter, DePauw’s Luis Davila blocked Jake Roberts’ 29-yard field goal attempt and the Tigers took over on their own 20. DePauw wasted little time as Wiethoff scampered 80 yards on the next play for a touchdown. The extra-point attempt was off the mark and DePauw held a 20-0 advantage with 6:45 left in the third. Sewanee reached the board early in the fourth as Kola Pacheco recovered Matt McMahon’s fumble on the DePauw 30. A pass interference call on DePauw moved the ball to the 15 and four plays later Satterfield found Steven Motley for a 7-yard score with 11:34 left in the game to make it 20-6. Sewanee missed the try for two after a bad snap on the extra-point kick attempt. Later in the quarter the Tiger defense stopped Sewanee in the red zone for the third time and took over on their own 18-yard line. Wiethoff connected with Culp for a 19-yard gain before Marks blasted through the line on the way to a 63-yard touchdown run. Tyler Mallory’s point-after made it 27-6 with 7:43 left. On the first play of the next drive, Sewanee’s Motley tossed an 80-yard halfback pass to Patrick Scott. Roberts hit the extra point to make it 27-13. Sewanee drove to the DePauw 28 late in the game before Obinna Ugoke picked off Satterfield’s fourth-down pass. DePauw outgained Sewanee 445-343 including a 298-54 rushing advantage. The Tigers averaged 7.7 yards per play. Marks rushed for 182 yards on 24 carries for the sixth-highest single-game total in school history and the second-highest by a DePauw freshman. His third 100-yard game on the season equaled a DePauw freshman record. Wiethoff completed nine of 15 passes for 147 yards and one touchdown. Shephard caught four passes for 78 yards, while Culp had three for 48 yards.

Harlin Hickerson led Sewanee with 28 yards on 10 car-ries. Satterfield completed 25 of 36 passes for 209 yards. Motley caught seven of those for 63 yards, while Scott had four for 109 yards. Defensively, DePauw sacked Satterfield three times with Dustin Hertel recording two and Rob Camfield finishing with one. Aaron Key led the Tigers with 10 tackles, while Rob Farrow had eight. Hertel finished with 4.5 tackles for loss. Sewanee totaled four sacks with Donald Allen finishing with two and Kyle Joyce and Mike Glanton each adding one. George Twitty led the team with 12 tackles. Sewanee 0 0 0 13 — 13DePauw 0 14 6 7 — 27

Second QuarterD — Marks 1 run (kick blocked), 2:05D — Shephard 20 pass from Wiethoff (Culp from Wiethoff), 0:09

Third QuarterD — Wiethoff 80 run (kick failed), 6:45

Fourth QuarterS — Motley 7 pass from Satterfield (pass failed), 11:34D — Marks 63 run (Mallory kick), 7:43S — Scott 80 pass from Motley (Roberts kick), 7:27

TEAM STATISTICS US DPUFirst Downs 18 17Rushes-Yards 35-54 42-298Passing Yards 289 147Att-Comp-Int 37-26-2 16-9-0Total Plays-Yards 72-343 58-445Punts-Avg 5-32.8 4-41.8Fumbles-Lost 0-0 3-3Penalties-Yards 2-15 7-70Possession Time 35:05 24:55Sacks By: Number-Yards 4-31 3-16

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICSRUSHING — Sewanee, Hickerson 10-28, Satterfield 18-19, Green 4-10, Motley 2-7, Team 1-(-10). DePauw, Marks 24-182, Wiethoff 13-106, Michels 2-13, McMahon 3-(-3).PASSING — Sewanee, Satterfield 25-36-2-209, Motley 1-1-0-80. DePauw, Wiethoff 9-15-0-147, Team 0-1-0-0.RECEIVING — Sewanee, Motley 7-63, Scott 4-109, Hickerson 4-20, Cross 3-27, Taylor 2-29, Green 2-10, Eson 2-1, Mears 1-15, Cole 1-15. DePauw, Shephard 4-78, Culp 3-48, Araiza 1-15, Rauch 1-6.

DePauw 38, Millsaps 7October 23

JACKSON, Miss. — DePauw scored five rushing touchdowns and the defense held the host Majors to just 225 yards on the way to a 38-7 Southern Collegiate Athletic Conference win at Millsaps. The Majors entered the contest with the conference’s top scoring defense. Jeremiah Marks led DePauw with 86 yards on 20 carries and added two touchdowns, while Matt McMahon, Ross Wiethoff and John Michels each ran for one score in the victory. The Tigers scored on all three of its first-half posses-sions, while the DePauw defense limited the Majors to only 75 yards in the first 30 minutes. McMahon’s 1-yard run with 6:27 left in the first put the Tigers on the board first and Marks made it 14-0 on a 2-yard run early in the second that capped a 17-play, 65-yard series. Wiethoff then scored on a 13-yard run with just 33 seconds left in the half to make it 21-0. The Majors opened the second half by recovering an onside kick and proceeded to score on Tyson Roy’s 2-yard run with 11:04 left in the third. Tyler Mallory’s 36-yard field goal with 14:54 left in the game made it 24-7. Brendan Berrigan recovered Roy’s fumble on the Millsaps 21 on the Majors’ first play of the next series. Marks carried three straight times including the final 11 yards for the score that pushed the Tigers lead to 31-7 with 13:01 left.

DePauw limited Sewanee to just 54 rushing yards in 35 attempts on the way to a 27-13 Old Gold Day win.

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DePauw linebacker Matt Koch intercepted Mike Dean’s pass at the Majors’ 39 and Michels got the call three straight times with the final covering 26 yards and making it 38-7 with 9:31 left. The DePauw defense stopped Millsaps at the DePauw 5 when Obinna Ugokwe picked off Raymece Savage’s third down pass with just 4:12 left. The Tigers totaled 367 yards to Millsaps’ 230 with 221 coming on the ground. In addition to Marks’ 86 yards, Michels added a career-high 56 and MacMahon finished with 51. Wiethoff completed 13 of 17 passes for 137 yards. Jamarcus Shephard caught seven passes for 99 yards and extended his streak of games with a reception to 27. Roy finished with 61 yards in 14 carries for Millsaps and caught three passes for 37 yards. Koch and Aaron Key were credited with three tackles each for DePauw. Key, Forest Andrews and Ian MacLeod each had one sack for the Tigers. Marshall Brown led Millsaps with eight stops.

DePauw 7 14 0 17 — 38Millsaps 0 0 7 0 — 7

First QuarterD — McMahon 1 run (Mallory kick), 6:27

Second QuarterD — Marks 2 run (Mallory kick), 9:32D — Wiethoff 13 run (Mallory kick), 0:33

Third QuarterM - Roy 2 run (Alford kick), 11:04

Fourth QuarterD – FG Mallory 36, 14:54D - Marks 11 run (Mallory kick), 13:01D - Michels 26 run (Mallory kick), 9:31

TEAM STATISTICS DPU MCFirst Downs 24 16Rushes-Yards 48-221 30-120Passing Yards 146 110Att-Comp-Int 18-14-0 16-9-2Total Plays-Yards 66-367 46-230Punts-Avg 1-51.0 4-33.8Fumbles-Lost 0-0 1-1Penalties-Yards 5-40 2-20Possession Time 36:43 23:17Sacks By: Number-Yards 3-14 0-0

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICSRUSHING — DePauw, Marks 20-86, Michels 8-56, McMahon 13-51, Wiethoff 7-28. Millsaps, Roy 14-61, Woodall 3-32, Savage 5-22, Lorino 4-13, Sullivan 1-0, Dean 3-(- 8).PASSING — DePauw, Wiethoff 13-17-0-137, Odenwald 1-1-0-9. Millsaps, Savage 7-11-1-89, Dean 2-5-1-21.RECEIVING — DePauw, Shephard 7-99, Jonason 2-16, McMahon 2-7, Gines 1-9, Marks 1-9, Claxton 1-6. Millsaps, Roy 3-37, Hooper 2-26, Lorino 2-19, Johnson 1-15, Hinton 1-13.

DePauw 41, Centre 26October 30

DANVILLE, Ky. — DePauw quarterback Ross Wiethoff threw three touchdown passes and rushed for another as DePauw won its fourth straight game by defeat-ing host Centre 41-26. The Tigers set the tone for the contest on the game’s first series as they took nearly half of the first quarter to drive 65 yards and take a 7-0 lead on Matt McMahon’s 4-yard run with 7:40 left in the first. McMahon totaled 50 yards on the drive as the Tigers kept the ball on the ground for 13 of their 14 plays against a strong wind. On the second play of DePauw’s next series, a fumbled handoff on second down was recovered by Centre’s Jeremy Ware at the DePauw 5. The DePauw defense put together a goal-line stand and forced the Colonels into a 22-yard field goal by Chris Thompson.

DePauw opened the second quarter on its own 26 and, following a 4-yard run by McMahon, Wiethoff teamed with Jamarcus Shephard for a 70-yard score to make it 14-3 with 13:25 left in the half. They made it 21-3 later in the second when, following a short Centre punt, Wiethoff connected with Shephard again for a 56-yard touchdown. Centre reached paydirt on a 2-yard pass from Brian Behrendt to Adam Clark with just 37 seconds left in the first half to cut the DePauw lead to 21-10. The drive was kept alive by a successful fake punt on fourth-and-five from the Centre 40 and another fourth-down conversion in the DePauw red zone. Andrew Huff intercepted a Behrendt pass early in the second half and returned it to the Centre 18. The Tigers looked poised to score again, but Jeremiah Marks fumbled near the goal line and Centre recovered at its own one. The Tigers did make it 28-10 after starting a drive on their own 31. Consecutive passes from Wiethoff to tight end Chase Jonason totaled 66 yards and set up a 3-yard touchdown run by Marks. Wiethoff ’s 1-yard keeper early in the fourth pushed the lead to 34-10. Another defensive stand gave the Tigers the ball on the Centre 43 and eight straight runs by Marks pushed the ball to the Centre eight. Marks fumbled at the Centre four on second down and Chad Loveless recovered for the Colonels. Behrendt completed an 11-yard pass to Zach Brooks on first down and then found David Crowley who streaked down the left sideline for an 85-yard touchdown with 5:29 remaining. Behrendt and Rhese McKenzie teamed for the two-point conversion that cut the margin to 34-18. The Tigers recovered a Centre onside kick and used the clock well in driving to the seven where Wiethoff tossed a 7-yard scoring pass to Jonason to make it 41-18 with 1:42 left. Behrendt’s 17-yard pass to Crowley with 38 seconds remaining and a subsequent two-point play involving the two wrapped up the scoring. The Tigers outgained Centre 448-421 and held a 208-31 advantage on the ground. McMahon rushed for a career-high 97 yards on 25 carries and Marks added 87 on 18 attempts. Wiethoff completed eight of 13 passes for a career-high 240 yards along with three touchdowns and an efficiency rating of 277.38. He also rushed for 24 yards. Shephard had four catches for 156 yards, while Jonason finished with three for 73 yards. Behrendt completed 34 of 49 yards for 369 yards and three scores, while Crowley caught 11 passes for 218 yards and two touchdowns. Jeremy Britt rushed for 42 yards and caught seven passes for 28 yards. Defensively, the Tigers held their fourth opponent under 100 rushing yards and were led by Eric Lewis with 10 tackles and Greg Sylvester with nine. Dustin Hertel finished with 2.5 tackles for 18 yards of losses including an 11-yard sack. Jarrod Zywien had 12 stops for the Colonels with Loveless adding six.

DePauw 7 14 7 13 — 41Centre 3 7 0 16 — 26

First QuarterD - McMahon 4 run (Mallory kick), 7:40C – FG Thompson 22, 3:07

Second QuarterD -Shephard 70 pass from Wiethoff (Mallory kick), 13:25D -Shephard 56 pass from Wiethoff (Mallory kick), 5:50C - Clark 2 pass from Behrendt (Thompson kick), 0:37

Third QuarterD -Marks 3 run (Mallory kick), 3:53

Fourth QuarterD - Wiethoff 1 run (kick failed), 12:47C - Crowley 85 pass from Behrendt (McKenzie from Behrendt), 5:29D - Jonason 7 pass from Wiethoff (Mallory kick), 1:42C - Crowley 17 pass from Behrendt (Crowley from Behrendt), 0:38

TEAM STATISTICS DPU CCFirst Downs 21 20Rushes-Yards 54-208 20-31Passing Yards 240 390Att-Comp-Int 13-8-1 50-35-1Total Plays-Yards 67-448 70-421Punts-Avg 3-29.7 6-28.2Fumbles-Lost 3-3 0-0Penalties-Yards 3-24 5-33Possession Time 31:24 28:36Sacks By: Number-Yards 1-11 1-13

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICSRUSHING — DePauw, McMahon 25-97, Marks 18-87, Wiethoff 11-24. Centre, Britt 19-42, Behrendt 1-(-11).PASSING — DePauw, Wiethoff 8-13-1-240. Centre, Behrendt 34-49-1-369, Hinkle 1-1-0-21.RECEIVING — DePauw, Shephard 4-156, Jonason 3-73, Culp 1-11. Centre, Crowley 11-218, Britt 7-28, Brooks 6-42, Clark 5-40, Hinkle 2-31, Brenner 2-10, Zywien 1-21, Gaffney 1-0.

DePauw 30, Rose-Hulman 3November 6

GREENCASTLE, Ind. — Behind a school-record three 100-yard rushers, DePauw won its fifth straight game as it defeated Rose-Hulman, 30-3. The Tigers set an SCAC record with 507 rushing yards on the way to improving to 7-2 overall and finishing SCAC play at 5-1. The 507 ground yards was the second-best performance in school history behind the 532 set against Principia in 1975 and the Tigers’ 573 total yards was the third-best performance by a DePauw team. Quarterback Ross Wiethoff led the way with a career-high 186 yards on 15 carries, while senior Matt McMahon established a career-high for the second straight week by totaling 137 yards in 22 tries. Jeremiah Marks became the first freshman in school history to gain at least 100 yards in four games when he totaled 129 on just 17 attempts. The teams battled to a 3-3 halftime tie as DePauw’s Tyler Mallory booted a 25-yard field goal late in the first and Rose-Hulman’s Jeremy Sharp sent a 20-yarder through the uprights with 10 seconds left in the half. Each team had opportunities as DePauw took its opening drive to the Rose-Hulman 20 before Brett Bueltel intercepted Wiethoff ’s pass in the end zone. Later in the half, DePauw’s Brendan Berigan notched the first of two interceptions as he picked off Cameron Hummel at the DePauw 15 and returned it 19 yards.

Dustin Hertel’s third-quarter sack forced a Rose-Hulman fumble and led to a DePauw score in a 30-3 SCAC victory.

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The Tigers scored on each of their first four second-half drives and opened the second half with a five-play, 80-yard drive capped by Marks’ 53-yard run and subsequent 3-yard score. On their second possession, the Tigers again started at their own 20 and drove 80 yards with Wiethoff covering the final 22 on third-and-goal. On its next series, Rose-Hulman was faced with a third-and-nine from its own 35 when Dustin Hertel hit Hummel, jarring the ball loose for Rob Camfield to recover at the Engineers’ 23. After an incomplete pass on first down, Marks carried five straight times including a 1-yard run with 2:38 left in the third to make it 24-3. Aaron Gerhardstein replaced Hummel at quarterback for the Engineers on their next series and drove his squad to the Tigers’ 28 before Berigan picked off his second pass of the afternoon at the DePauw 4. Starting on its own nine, DePauw drove 91 yards in nine plays with McMahon running the last nine yards to make it 30-3 with 12:32 remaining in the game. Wiethoff completed seven of 17 passes for 66 yards with three going to Jamarcus Shephard. Shephard moved into fourth place in SCAC history in receiving yards and fifth in receptions. Gerhardstein led Rose-Hulman with 56 yards in just seven attempts and completed five of 11 passes for 43 yards. Hummel completed seven of 18 for 75 yards. Eleven dif-ferent Engineers caught passes with Bryan Pape and Ryan Hart each recording two. Rose-Hulman finished with 290 yards of offense. Defensively, Michael Elkins and Dustin Hertel each finished with nine tackles with Hertel adding 2.5 for losses of 16 yards. In addition to his two interceptions, Berigan also broke up three more. Bueltel totaled 12 tackles for the Engineers and added three breakups in addition to his eighth interception of the season. Austin Hastings added 10 tackles. Rose-Hulman 0 3 0 0 — 3DePauw 3 0 21 6 — 30

First QuarterD — FG Mallory 25, 2:58

Second QuarterR — FG Sharp 20, 0:10

Third QuarterD — Marks 3 run (Mallory kick), 13:10D — Wiethoff 22 run (Mallory kick), 6:09D — Marks 1 run (Mallory kick), 2:38

Fourth QuarterD — McMahon 9 run (kick failed), 12:32

TEAM STATISTICS RHIT DPUFirst Downs 14 28Rushes-Yards 35-143 66-507Passing Yards 147 66Att-Comp-Int 30-12-2 19-7-1Total Plays-Yards 65-290 85-573Punts-Avg 5-33.2 2-27.0Fumbles-Lost 3-1 1-0Penalties-Yards 5-40 3-31Possession Time 23:25 36:35Sacks By: Number-Yards 1-8 2-17

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICSRUSHING — Rose-Hulman, Gerhardstein 8-54, Key 15-33, Hummel 10-31, Schlegel 2-23, Tucker 0-2. DePauw, Wiethoff 15-186, McMahon 22-137, Marks 17-129, Michels 8-37, Murphy 3-18, Team 1-0.PASSING — Rose-Hulman, Hummel 7-18-1-75, Gerhard-stein 4-10-1-43, Hawkins 1-1-0-29, Team 0-1-0-0. DePauw, Wiethoff 7-17-1-66, Odenwald 0-2-0-0.RECEIVING — Rose-Hulman, Pape 2-34, Hart 2-14, Beckstrom 1-29, Gulden 1-24, Hammes 1-14, Lemond 1-9, Moore 1-8, Key 1-5, Downey 1-5, Schlegel 1-5. DePauw, Shephard 3-27, Jonason 2-25, Culp 2-14.

the ball at its own 48. Harbaugh converted a third down with a 12-yard pass to Brandon Roop before Wabash went to the ground to move the ball to the DePauw 9. Wabash put its only points on the board when Lafitte tossed a halfback pass to Harbaugh for a touchdown to make it 14-7 with 7:51 left in the third. The teams exchanged punts throughout the rest of the third period before DePauw took over on its own 27 with 10:53 left in the game. The ground attack of McMahon, Jeremiah Marks and Wiethoff drove the Tigers to the Wa-bash 41. The big play in the drive came from the DePauw 48 when Marks converted a fourth-and-inches. The Tigers were forced to punt with four minutes left and Wiethoff ’s 53-yard punt landed in the end zone for a touchback. The Little Giants took over on their own 20 with Harbaugh running for six yards and completing a pair of passes to the Wabash 41. The Tigers were whistled for pass interference on the next play which moved the ball inside DePauw territory at the Tigers’ 44. After an incomplete pass on first down, Wabash picked up one yard on Gorrell’s run before Harbaugh was sacked by Eric Lewis for a two-yard loss on third down. Harbaugh’s fourth-down pass, intended for Roop, fell short after Ian MacLeod applied pressure giving DePauw the ball with just 1:16 left. The Tigers sealed the win when McMahon rumbled for 15 yards on a second-down play and DePauw ran out the clock. In a game with just 457 yards of offense between the two teams, DePauw edged the Little Giants 231-226 in total offense. The Tigers finished with 221 rushing yards with Marks garnering 91, followed by McMahon with 79 and Wiethoff with 64. Wiethoff completed just 2-of-7 passes for 10 yards with both going to Jamarcus Shephard. Gorrell led Wabash with 97 rushing yards, while Lafitte was limited to just 31. Harbaugh completed nine of 21 passes for 90 yards including three to Summers for 33 yards. The defenses really told the story in this game as Lewis led DePauw with nine tackles and Elkins followed with eight. The Tigers sacked Harbaugh five times with Lewis leading the way with three, followed by Lasley with one and Barr and Luis Davila with one-half each. Adrian Pynenberg led the Little Giants with 15 tackles including two for losses. Reggie Foley had eight tackles and one of two Wabash sacks on the day. Tamarco White had the other sack. DePauw 7 7 0 0 — 14Wabash 0 0 7 0 — 7

First QuarterD — Wiethoff 40 run (Mallory kick), 11:11

Second QuarterD — Murphy 1 run (Mallory kick), 6:58

Third QuarterW — Harbaugh 3 pass from Lafitte (Server kick), 7:51

TEAM STATISTICS DPU WCFirst Downs 14 12Rushes-Yards 55-221 37-133Passing Yards 10 93Att-Comp-Int 7-2-0 22-10-1Total Plays-Yards 62-231 59-226Punts-Avg 7-39.1 6-32.5Fumbles-Lost 1-0 1-0Penalties-Yards 4-41 2-20Possession Time 30:54 29:06Sacks By: Number-Yards 5-22 2-14

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICSRUSHING — DePauw, Marks 21-91, McMahon 14-79, Wiethoff 15-64, Murphy 2-1, Team 3-(-14). Wabash, Gor-rell 13-97, Lafitte 10-31, Roop 2-5, Harbaugh 12-0.PASSING — DePauw, Wiethoff 2-7-0-10. Wabash, Har-baugh 9-21-1-90, Lafitte 1-1-0-3.RECEIVING — DePauw, Shephard 2-10. Wabash, Sum-mers 3-33, Lafitte 2-24, Clifton 2-18, Roop 1-12, Gorrell 1-3, Harbaugh 1-3.

DePauw 14, Wabash 7November 13

CRAWFORDSVILLE, Ind. — DePauw scored on its first offensive series and its defense countered with a first-quarter goal-line stand to set the tone in a 14-7 Monon Bell win at Wabash. The Tigers’ defense later forced a second-quarter turn-over deep in Wabash territory and converted it into their other score. With the victory, DePauw knotted the all-time series at 51-51-9 and extended its narrow margin in Monon Bell games to 35-32-6. For the 21 DePauw seniors, the win was their first over Wabash in their four years. The game may very well have come down to the open-ing 23 minutes. After opening the game with a three-and-out defensive stand, the Tigers began their opening drive on their own 36. Four straight carries by Matt McMahon netted 23 yards to the Wabash 41. Ross Wiethoff picked up one on a first-down run before scampering down the right sideline on second down and scoring from 40 yards. Tyler Mallory’s extra point gave the Tigers a 7-0 lead with 11:11 remaining in the first quarter. Wabash took over on its 24, converted a couple of third downs and moved into the DePauw red zone. On a second down play the Tigers tackled Wabash quarterback Russ Harbaugh for a 3-yard loss but were called for a face mask which moved the ball to the 7. Following an incomplete pass, Wabash running back Aaron Lafitte picked up five yards on second down, but Michael Elkins stopped Lafitte for no gain on third-and-goal. Harbaugh’s fourth-down pass to Brandon Clifton was tipped at the line of scrimmage and fell incomplete. Early in the second, the Tigers dug themselves out of poor field position after starting at their own nine and advancing to the Wabash 49. Punter Bill Riley pinned the Little Giants deep in their own territory with a punt that was returned to the Wabash 10. After Austin Gorrell picked up three yards on first down, Harbaugh committed the game’s only turnover when DePauw’s Brendan Berigan intercepted his pass at the 14 and dragged tacklers to the 1-yard line. Jason Murphy was stopped for no gain on first down, but got the call again on the next play and went in for the score that made it 14-0 with 6:58 left in the half. Wabash again drove inside DePauw territory to the 30 on its next series, but a Little Giants holding penalty and Darron Lasley’s 9-yard sack on third down pushed Wabash back to midfield and forced them to punt. The Tigers ran out the clock and entered halftime with a 14-0 lead. The Little Giants stopped DePauw on its opening drive of the second half and a short DePauw punt gave Wabash

Ian MacLeod applied the pressure that led to an incomplete pass on Wabash’s last offensive play in a 14-7 Monon Bell win.