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2014 FOOTBALL

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Page 1: Widener 2014 Football Media Guide

2 0 1 4 F O O T B A L L

Page 2: Widener 2014 Football Media Guide

GENERAL INFORMATIONPress releases, feature material, photographs or other information can be obtained by contacting Sports Information Director Derek Crudele at 610-499-4436 or [email protected].

CREDENTIALSCredentials for Widener football games can be arranged by contacting the Sports Information Office. All passes may be picked up at the ticket booth on game day and must be visible at all times. Those with sideline passes may not pass in front of either team or their benches. Credentials are limited to working media only and must be requested no later than the Monday of game week.

RADIOThose wishing to broadcast from the press box must contact Sports Information Director Derek Crudele at 610-499-4436 or [email protected]. This request must be made no later than the Monday of game week. Two phone lines are available on a first-come, first-serve basis.

MEDIA INFORMATION / INTERVIEWSMedia notes, media guides, programs, halftime stats, final stats and a full book of the game will be available to all media. After every game, coach Mike Kelly and selected players will be available for interviews. Following a 10-minute “cooling-off ” period, coach Kelly will field questions in his office followed by the players in the locker room. All media requests will be handled within the locker room and not outside. If you wish to interview a specific player after the game, please notify SID Derek Crudele. At home games, media members are asked to enter the Quick Stadium press box through the door furthest from the scoreboard. (If you are walking up the bleachers toward the press box with your back to the field, it is the door on your left. Thanks for your cooperation.)

DIRECTIONS TO LESLIE C. QUICK JR. STADIUMFrom Blue Route South (Interstate-476 South): Take Exit 1 to MacDade Boulevard West. Turn left at Melrose Avenue (third light). Go to the fourth stop sign and turn left at 17th street. Go through gate, past the first parking lot, past Schwartz Center and park in the back lot. The stadium is 1/4 mile down the road past the field house.From Interstate-95: Take Exit 7 (Interstate-476) and immediately get off Exit 1 for MacDade Boulevard West. Turn left at Melrose Avenue (fourth light). Go to the fourth stop sign and turn left at 17th street. Go through gate, past the first parking lot, past Schwartz Center and park in the back lot. The stadium is 1/4 mile down the road past the field house.

MEDIA CONTACTSAssociated Press1835 Market St #1700Philadelphia, PA 19103215-561-1133 (o)215-561-3544 (f)

Delaware Co. Daily Times500 Mildred AvenuePrimos, PA 19018610-622-8880 (o)610-622-8059 (f)

Philadelphia Daily News801 Market StreetPhiladelphia, PA 19107215-854-5700 (o)215-854-5524 (f)

Philadelphia Inquirer801 Market StreetPhiladelphia, PA 19107215-854-4550 (o)215-854-4795 (f)

WPVI-TV 6 (ABC)4100 City Line AvenuePhiladelphia, PA 19131215-581-4595 (o)215-581-4530 (f)

WTXF- TV 29 (FOX)330 Market StreetPhiladelphia, PA 19106215-923-6397 (o)215-592-1535 (f)

Wilmington News JournalPO Box 15505Wilmington, DE 19850-5505302-324-2805 (o)302-324-5509 (f)

Norristown Times HeraldPO Box 591Norristown, PA 19404-9980610-272-2322 (o)610-272-0660 (f)

Camden Courier PostPO Box 5300Cherry Hill, NJ 08034856-486-2424 (o)856-663-2831(f)

[email protected]

KYW-TV 3 (CBS)1555 Hamilton StreetPhiladelphia, PA 19130215-238-4646 (o)215-238-4783 (f)

WCAU-TV 10 (NBC)10 Monument RoadBala Cynwyd, PA 19004610-668-5660 (o)610-668-3706 (f)

Comcast SportsNet1 Wachovia ComplexPhiladelphia, PA 19148215-952-5308 (o)215-952-5953 (f)

Credits: The 2014 Football Media Guide was produced by the Widener University Sports Information Department. Photography by John Ferko ‘80, Greg Carroccio, Al Zacharka, JT Higgins and Dave Darichuk. Printed by Gazette Printing; Indiana, PA. Information current as of July 29, 2014.

PHILADELPHIA SPORTS WRITERS LUNCHEONHead Coach Mike Kelly is available each Wednesday at noon during the luncheon for interviews. The tentative schedule is as follows...

Villanova University University of PennsylvaniaSeptember 3, 10, 24 September 17October 8, 22 October 1, 15, 29November 5, 19 November 12

MEDIA INFORMATION

Page 3: Widener 2014 Football Media Guide

2014 FOOTBALL 1

2014 FOOTBALL

TABLE OF CONTENTSMedia Information ....................................................................IFCTable of Contents / Quick Facts ...................................................12014 Roster ................................................................................2-3Head Coach Mike Kelly ................................................................4Assistant Coaches .......................................................................5-82014 Preview ...........................................................................9-10The 2014 Pride ......................................................................11-142013 Stats / Results ................................................................15-162013 Recaps ...........................................................................17-21Widener University .....................................................................22Middle Atlantic Conference / 2013 Review .................................23Year-by-Year Awards ...................................................................24Pro Signings / Honor Roll ...........................................................25All-Americas ................................................................................26Records ..................................................................................27-30Year-by-Year Leaders ...................................................................31NCAA Tournament Records .......................................................321977, 1981 National Champions ................................................332014 Opponents / 2014 MAC Schedule ................................34-37Widener vs. .................................................................................38Year-by-Year Results ...............................................................39-44Leslie C. Quick Jr. Stadium.........................................................45Administration ............................................................................46Athletic Training / Equipment ....................................................47Facilities ......................................................................................48

GENERAL INFORMATIONLocation ......................... One University Place / Chester, PA 19013Enrollment ..................................................... 3,200 undergraduates Founded ...................................................... 1821, Wilmington, DEColors ........................................................... Widener Blue & GoldNickname ................................................................................PrideAffiliation ........................................................ NCAA (Division III)Conference .............................................................. Middle AtlanticStadium .................................... Leslie C. Quick Jr. Stadium (1994)..................................................Capacity: 4,000, Surface: FieldTurf2013 Records ................................................6-4 (6-3 MAC, T-3rd)Offensive Set / Defensive Set ......................................Multiple / 4-3Starters Returning / Lost ...........................Offense 5/6, Defense 7/4Letterwinners Returning / Lost ................................................80/50ADMINISTRATIONPresident ......................................................Dr. James T. Harris IIIAthletic Director .............................................................Jack ShaferAssistant A.D./Sr. Woman Admin. ....... Larissa Gillespie ‘98, M ’00Assistant Athletic Director .................................... Chris Carideo ‘96Head Athletic Trainer (Football) ........ A.J. Duffy III, MS, ATC, PTAssistant Athletic Trainer ........................................Amy RichmondEquipment Manager (Football) .................................. Charlie EvansAdministrative Assistant (Football) .............................. Peggie CoreyOffice Phone ............................................................. 610-499-4444Sports Information Director ......................................Derek CrudeleOffice Phone / Fax .........................................610-499-4436 / 4481Cell / Home Phone ................................................... 215-880-4377E-Mail .........................................................dacrudele@widener.eduPress Box Phone ........................................................ 610-499-1310Press Box Radio Lines ....................................610-499-4537 / 4538Sports Information Line .......................................610-499-4600 (2)Web Address ..............................................www.WidenerPride.comFacebook .....................................Facebook.com/WidenerUniversityTwitter .................................................. Twitter.com/WidenerPrideFOOTBALL FACTSHead Coach/Special Teams ............................................Mike KellyAlma Mater ..................................................................Bluffton ‘80Office Phone ............................................................. 610-499-4444E-Mail Address ............................................ [email protected] Overall / Widener ............................16-15 (3) / first seasonAssistants.................................. Bill Shuey (defensive coordinator/front seven)...........................Brian Picucci (offensive coordinator/offensive line)..........................John O’Donnell (recruiting coordinator/secondary).......... Nate Sassaman (academic coordinator/quarterbacks/receivers)..........................Jason Henshaw (junior varsity coach/defensive line)...................................................................Greg Burns (linebackers)...................................................... Terence Thomas (running backs)....................Fred Baxter (director of player development/tight ends)..................................... Gary Vinciguerra (assistant defensive coach)...........................................Matt Conboy (assistant defensive coach)................................................Bill Magee (assistant offensive coach).......................................... Keith Wilford (strength & conditioning)Seth Klein

NCAA Division III Champions (2): 1977, 1981NCAA Tournament Appearances (13): 1975, 1977, 1979, 1980, 1981, 1982, 1988, 1994, 1995, 2000, 2001, 2007, 2012

Middle Atlantic Conf. Champions (19): 1954, ‘58, ‘75, ‘77, ‘78, ‘79, ‘80, ‘81, ‘82, ‘84, ‘87, ‘88, ‘94, ‘95, 2000, ‘01, ‘02, ‘07, ‘12ECAC Bowl Wins (3): 2005, 2006, 2011

Undefeated Regular Seasons (11): 1888, 1909, 1913, 1934, 1954, 1975, 1979, 1980, 1981, 2001, 2012

Page 4: Widener 2014 Football Media Guide

WIDENER PRIDE2

No. Name Cl. Pos. Ht. Wt. Hometown/Previous School1 Brandon Harper Sr. LB 6-1 235 Blackwood, NJ/Highland2 Seth Klein So. QB 6-0 188 Wernersville, PA/Wilson West Lawn3 Montrell Hicks-Taylor So. WR 5-11 170 Newark, DE/North Carolina A&T Univ.4 Jamal Goodman Jr. DB 5-8 180 Baltimore, MD/Calvert Hall5 Anthony Davis Sr. WR 6-1 196 Upland, PA/Chester6 Stacey Sunnerville Jr. DL 6-1 220 Freehold, NJ/Freehold7 Martin Turner Sr. DB 6-0 182 New Castle, DE/Chester8 Shakore Philip Jr. DL 6-1 280 Bay Shore, NY/Bay Shore9 Jarard Stewart Sr. DB 5-11 195 Bowie, MD/Bowie10 Sean Titus So. DB 6-2 190 Lancaster, PA/Lancaster Catholic11 Travon Barnes So. DB 5-11 190 Randallstown, MD/Calvert Hall12 Tyrone Bundy Jr. LB 5-10 210 Woodbury, NJ/Woodbury13 Ameer Sorrell Sr. DB 5-10 170 Port Norris, NJ/Penns Grove14 Dijon Davidson Sr. DB 5-8 170 Poughkeepsie, NY/Poughkeepsie15 Michael O’Neill So. QB 6-2 205 Glen Rock, NJ/Glen Rock16 Philip Ragona Jr. WR 5-7 175 Oceanside, NY/Oceanside17 Adam Marcucci Sr. WR 5-10 165 Sicklerville, NJ/Washington Twp.18 Alex Krivda So. QB 6-5 215 Sellersville, PA/Pennridge19 Max Kutler So. WR 5-6 185 Cranbury, NJ/Hightstown20 Terrant Morrison Sr. RB 5-7 190 Smyrna, DE/Smyrna21 Jake Irving Fr. RB 5-8 185 Garnet Valley, PA/Garnet Valley22 Couve LaFate Sr. RB 5-7 188 Wilmington, DE/Henderson23 Kevin Sabo So. RB 5-8 200 Lansdale, PA/Lansdale Catholic24 Vaughn Nichols-Taylor Jr. DB 5-11 193 Newark, DE/West Chester Univ.25 Nicholas White Sr. TE 6-3 230 Bellmore, NY/Mepham26 Colby McMaster Jr. RB 5-9 210 New Oxford, PA/Delone Catholic27 Devon Hewitt So. RB 5-9 186 Trenton, NJ/Lawrenceville28 Blaine Price So. WR 5-10 180 Jefferson, MD/Brunswick29 Christopher Wickes Jr. RB 5-11 190 Bear, DE/Caravel Academy30 Anthony Robertson Fr. RB 5-11 215 Penns Grove, NJ/Penns Grove31 Kyle Lowery Fr. DB 5-10 180 Audubon, PA/Methacton32 Drew Jemison Jr. DB 6-0 200 Montgomery, NY/Valley Central33 Jack Vitale Jr. LB 6-0 215 Point Pleasant, NJ/Point Pleasant Boro34 Myles Pressey Jr. RB 5-9 195 Lumberton, NJ St. Francis (PA)35 Rodney Larmore Fr. DB 5-9 165 Easthampton, NJ/Rancocas Valley36 Robert Getz Jr. RB 5-8 200 Kunkletown, PA/Pleasant Valley37 Christian Maiden Fr. DB 6-0 170 Sewell, NJ/Washington Twp.38 Devin Wilson So. DB 6-0 175 Montclair, NJ/Montclair39 Rashon Sorrell So. WR 6-0 190 Port Norris, NJ/Millville40 Steve Gozur So. LB 5-11 210 Hatfield, PA/North Penn41 John Seeds So. DB 5-11 181 Somers Point, NJ/Mainland42 Joe Fox Fr. LB 6-1 217 Beverly, NJ/Holy Cross43 Jacob Behornar So. LB 6-1 217 New Castle, DE/William Penn44 Emmanuel Fields Jr. LB 5-11 208 Drexel Hill, PA/Upper Darby45 Anthony Green Sr. DL 6-1 260 Penns Grove, NJ/Penns Grove46 Kyle Twitty Sr. LB 5-9 205 Blackwood, NJ/FDU-Florham47 Caleb Moretz So. DL 6-2 195 Abingdon, MD/C. Milton Wright48 Craig Moretz So. LB 6-2 205 Abingdon, MD/C. Milton Wright49 Kevin Burns Sr. LB 6-0 220 Collingdale, PA/West Catholic50 Craig Johnson Fr. DL 6-1 220 Clarksville, MD/Atholton51 Jacob Jones So. OL 6-0 285 Philadelphia, PA/Bishop McDevitt52 Brandon Jones Jr. DL 6-2 230 Baltimore, MD/Baltimore53 Josh Rapp Jr. OL 5-11 240 Drexel Hill, PA/Upper Darby54 Derek Brandt So. DL 5-10 225 Lansdale, PA/North Penn55 Frank Wendling So. DL 6-2 270 Aston, PA/Sun Valley56 Shane Munro Jr. DL 6-1 250 West Grove, PA/Avon Grove57 Tyler Glover Sr. DL 6-0 208 Darby, PA/Penn Wood58 Alex Kauffman Fr. DL 6-0 210 Lansdale, PA/North Penn59 Josh Marcu Sr. LB/LS 6-0 195 Philadelphia, PA/George Washington60 Luke DiElsi Fr. DL 6-0 240 Collegeville, PA/Perkiomen Valley61 Gavin Freeman Fr. DL 6-1 255 Millersville, PA/Penn Manor62 John Koch Fr. OL 5-11 270 Langhorne, PA/Neshaminy63 Justin Welsh Fr. DL 5-9 240 Sewell, NJ/St. Augustine64 Roger Martin Fr. OL 6-1 250 Chester Springs, PA/Downingtown East65 Bryan Solomon Fr. OL 6-0 285 Columbia, PA/Hempfield66 Anthony Brooks So. OL 6-0 275 Easthampton, NJ/Rancocas Valley67 Matthew Donahue Jr. OL 6-3 272 Milton, MA/Milton

Alphabetical74 Austin Anderson OL11 Travon Barnes DB43 Jacob Behornar LB97 Michael Bennett K/P69 Trevor Bickel OL90 Tom Black LB80 Matthew Boland WR54 Derek Brandt DL66 Anthony Brooks OL12 Tyrone Bundy LB49 Kevin Burns LB75 Zachary Chatman OL14 Dijon Davidson DB5 Anthony Davis WR71 Antoine Delano OL95 John DiBiase DL88 Brian DiGiovanni TE60 Luke DiElsi DL68 Matthew Dockery OL73 Stephen Domonoski OL67 Matthew Donahue OL91 Richie Eppleman K/P44 Emmanuel Fields LB42 Joe Fox LB61 Gavin Freeman DL36 Robert Getz RB57 Tyler Glover DL4 Jamal Goodman DB40 Steve Gozur LB45 Anthony Green DL89 Tyler Hall TE1 Brandon Harper LB85 Reggie Harris WR27 Devon Hewitt RB3 Montrell Hicks-Taylor WR79 Chris Howard OL78 Chris Hower OL21 Jake Irving RB87 Nick Isola TE32 Drew Jemison DB50 Craig Johnson DL52 Brandon Jones DL51 Jacob Jones OL58 Alex Kauffman DL99 Casey Kerschner DL 2 Seth Klein QB62 John Koch OL18 Alex Krivda QB19 Max Kutler WR22 Couve LaFate RB98 David Lamar DL35 Rodney Larmore DB94 Ian Lewandowski DL

2014 ROSTER

Page 5: Widener 2014 Football Media Guide

2014 FOOTBALL 3

2014 ROSTER

68 Matthew Dockery Fr. OL 6-0 250 Somerdale, NJ/Sterling69 Trevor Bickel So. OL 6-7 319 Montvale, NJ/Pascack Hills70 Dan Viereck Fr. OL 6-4 300 Berlin, NJ/Eastern71 Antoine Delano Fr. OL 6-1 265 District Heights, MD/Suitland72 Evan Tootle Fr. DL 6-1 252 Cherry Hill, NJ/Paul VI73 Stephen Domonoski So. OL 6-3 295 Egg Harbor Twp., NJ/Holy Spirit74 Austin Anderson Fr. OL 6-4 325 Morton, PA/Ridley75 Zachary Chatman Jr. OL 6-2 275 Pennsburg, PA/Upper Perkiomen76 Shane Philips So. OL 6-5 310 Levittown, PA/Conwell-Egan Catholic77 Anthony Ruffin Fr. OL 6-3 260 Forestville, MD/Suitland78 Chris Hower Fr. OL 6-1 300 Brodheadsville, PA/Pleasant Valley79 Chris Howard So. OL 6-0 275 Philadelphia, PA/Chestnut Hill Academy80 Matthew Boland Jr. WR 6-2 175 Harrisburg, PA/Valley Forge Military81 Jabre Nicholson Fr. WR 6-2 190 Chester, PA/Chester82 Eric Sharpe Jr. WR 5-7 180 Odenton, MD/Meade83 Matthew Locotos Jr. WR 6-2 210 Seaville, NJ/Ocean City84 Haydn Warren Jr. TE 6-4 235 East Brunswick, NJ/East Brunswick85 Reggie Harris Fr. WR 5-6 170 Upper Marlboro, MD/Riverdale Baptist86 Daniel Matel-Okoh So. WR 5-10 180 Monroe Twp., NJ/Monroe Twp.87 Nick Isola So. TE 6-3 210 Monroe Twp., NJ/Monroe Twp.88 Brian DiGiovanni Sr. TE 6-4 230 Glen Mills, PA/Temple Univ.89 Tyler Hall So. TE 6-4 225 Bel Air, MD/C. Milton Wright90 Tom Black So. LB 6-4 225 Winnipeg, MB/Oregon St. Univ.91 Richie Eppleman Sr. K/P 6-3 180 Chester Springs, PA/Great Valley92 James Rendle So. DL 6-3 265 Wilmington, DE/St. Elizabeth93 Ryan O’Hara Jr. K 5-10 175 Royersford, PA/Spring-Ford94 Ian Lewandowski Fr. DL 6-2 210 Greensburg, PA/Hempfield95 John DiBiase Sr. DL 6-0 265 Mount Laurel, NJ/Lenape96 Alex Stewart So. DL 6-3 245 Pittsgrove, NJ/Arthur P. Schalick97 Michael Bennett Jr. K/P 6-1 220 Maple Glen, PA/Ursinus Coll.98 David Lamar Fr. DL 5-11 260 Hamilton, NJ/Hamilton North99 Casey Kerschner Fr. DL 6-2 240 Adamstown, PA/Cocalico Muhammad Abdur-Razzaq Fr. RB/DB 5-9 190 Sicklerville, NJ/Winslow Township Matt Arthur Fr. RB 5-9 180 Pine Hill, NJ/Paul VI Christopher Aust Fr. LB 5-11 225 Sterling, VA/Bullis Jonathan Bracero So. WR 5-11 170 Parlin, NJ/Sayreville War Memorial Justin Casey So. RB 5-10 210 Camp Hill, PA/Camp Hill John Deaner Fr. LB 5-10 190 Collingswood, NJ/Collingswood Ja’Quan Dollard So. WR 5-10 180 Wilmington, DE/Howard Brad Dougherty So. LB 6-0 230 Toms River, NJ/Toms River North Joseph Fitzsimmons So. DB 5-10 165 Point Pleasant, NJ/Point Pleasant Boro Ka’shawn Garnes Sr. DB 6-1 180 Poughkeepsie, NY/Roosevelt Gavin Gerold Fr. QB 6-1 190 Merchanville, NJ/Paul VI Andrey Green Fr. LB 6-1 210 New London Twp., PA/Avon Grove Terrill Heath Fr. OL 5-10 235 Baltimore, MD/Baltimore Ethan Herb Fr. QB 6-3 180 Oxford Area, PA/Oxford Brendan Juengert Fr. OL 6-5 320 Mount Laurel, NJ/Lenape Daniel Kelble So. OL 5-8 225 Bel Air, MD/John Carroll Joe Keyes Fr. QB 6-0 175 Ocean City, NJ/Ocean City Jermaine Knotts Fr. DB 5-9 155 Wilmington, DE/Tower Hill Aaron Mastriani Fr. LB 6-0 210 Schnecksville, PA/Allentown Cent. Catholic Chris McKendry So. DB 5-11 185 Williamstown, NJ/Williamstown Michael Mead Fr. LB 5-9 175 Collegeville, PA/Pope John Paul II Nate Miller Fr. RB 6-0 175 Hanover, PA/Delone Catholic Kingsley Obasi So. WR 5-11 180 Camden, NJ/Camden Catholic Trevor O’Brien Fr. RB 5-5 170 Burke, VA/Lake Braddock Stephen Oxendine So. LB 5-8 205 Winchester, VA/Millbrook John Raifsnider Fr. DB 5-8 184 West Lawn, PA/Wilson West Lawn Jermaine Reyes Sr. DB 6-0 200 Matawan, NJ/Lycoming Coll. Troy Riley Fr. OL 6-0 235 Lindenwold, NJ/Lindenwold Joe Ruszkowski Fr. DB 5-9 167 Staten Island, NY/St. Joseph by the Sea Connor Schlegel Jr. WR 5-10 180 Denver, PA/Garden Spot Max Schrom Fr. WR 6-0 160 Lititz, PA/Ephrata Joseph Sink Fr. WR 5-10 160 Royersford, PA/Spring-Ford Erik Smeltz Fr. WR 6-2 200 Dornsife, PA/Mercersburg Kurt Van Benschoten So. LB 5-8 180 Point Pleasant, NJ/Point Pleasant Boro Bailey Young Fr. LB 5-11 190 Williamsport, PA/Loyalsock

83 Matthew Locotos WR31 Kyle Lowery DB37 Christian Maiden DB59 Josh Marcu LB/LS17 Adam Marcucci WR64 Roger Martin OL86 Daniel Matel-Okoh WR26 Colby McMaster RB47 Caleb Moretz DL48 Craig Moretz LB20 Terrant Morrison RB56 Shane Munro DL24 Vaughn Nichols-Taylor DB81 Jabre Nicholson WR93 Ryan O’Hara K15 Michael O’Neill QB8 Shakore Philip DL76 Shane Philips OL34 Myles Pressey RB28 Blaine Price WR16 Philip Ragona WR53 Josh Rapp OL92 James Rendle DL30 Anthony Robertson RB77 Anthony Ruffin OL23 Kevin Sabo RB41 John Seeds DB82 Eric Sharpe WR65 Bryan Solomon OL13 Ameer Sorrell DB39 Rashon Sorrell WR96 Alex Stewart DL9 Jarard Stewart DB6 Stacey Sunnerville DL10 Sean Titus DB72 Evan Tootle DL7 Martin Turner DB46 Kyle Twitty LB70 Dan Viereck OL33 Jack Vitale LB84 Haydn Warren TE63 Justin Welsh DL55 Frank Wendling DL25 Nicholas White TE29 Christopher Wickes RB38 Devin Wilson DB

Page 6: Widener 2014 Football Media Guide

WIDENER PRIDE4

COACHING STAFF

Mike Kelly • Head Coach It would have been very difficult for

Widener to find someone more qualified

to be the University’s 24th football coach

than Mike Kelly. His eye-opening resume

with over 30 years of coaching experi-

ence, his passion for the game and desire

to make others around him better made

him the obvious choice last February to take the reins of this storied

program.

In addition to his coaching experience, Kelly has been very active

in the community, having served as the honorary chairperson for the

Canadian Diabetes Association and the Juvenile Diabetes Founda-

tion of Canada. A former faculty member in the sport management

program at Drexel University from 2005-08, Kelly was recognized

by the University’s Student/Athletes Committee with the Make a

Difference Award for outstanding mentoring and teaching.

“We are very fortunate to hire a coach with Mike Kelly’s vast foot-

ball experience and a demonstrated commitment to the community

and teaching and mentoring college students,” Widener Director of

Athletics Jack Shafer said. “With his background, we look forward

to continuing the success of our football team both on the gridiron

and in the classroom.”

At the collegiate level, Kelly served as head football coach at NCAA

Division II Valdosta State University in Georgia from 1997-99 where

Resume2014- ...... Widener ................................................ Head Coach2010........ New York Giants (NFL) ..Game Advance Consultant2009........ Winnipeg Blue Bombers (CFL) ............ Head Coach2008 ....... Edmonton Eskimos (CFL) .....Wide Receivers Coach2003-05 .. Washington Redskins (NFL) ......Personnel Assistant2001-02 .. Philadelphia Eagles (NFL) .......... Offensive Assistant2000........ Orlando Rage (XFL) ..............Offensive Coordinator2000........ Edmonton Eskimos (CFL) Off. Consultant/NFL Scout1997-99 .. Valdosta State ....................................... Head Coach1992-96 .. Winnipeg Blue Bombers (CFL) .....Offensive Coord.1990-91 .. San Francisco State ................ Associate Head Coach1987-89 .. Capital ....................................Offensive Coord./QB1986........ Ohio Wesleyan ...................... Offensive Coord./WR1983-85 .. Marietta .................................Running Backs Coach

he led the team to a 16-15 record in coaching three All-America and

23 All-Gulf South Conference players. He also served as associate

head coach at San Francisco State University (1990-92), offensive

coordinator/quarterbacks coach at Capital University in Columbus,

OH (1987-90), offensive coordinator/wide receivers coach at Ohio

Wesleyan University (1986-87), running backs coach at Marietta Col-

lege in Marietta, OH (1983-86), and wide receivers coach at Edinboro

University of Pennsylvania (1982-83).

Since leaving Valdosta State, Kelly spent most of his career in

the professional ranks, serving as head coach of the Winnipeg Blue

Bombers of the Canadian Football League in 2009. Kelly also served

as offensive coordinator for the Blue Bombers (1992-96), offensive

consultant and NFL Scout for the CFL’s Edmonton Eskimos (2000)

and Eskimos receivers coach (2008).

In the National Football League, Kelly was a scout and offensive

assistant coach for the Philadelphia Eagles (2001-02), a personnel as-

sistant with the Washington Redskins (2003-05) and a game advance

consultant for the New York Giants (2010). He also served as offensive

coordinator for the Orlando Rage of the now defunct XFL in 2000.

Kelly played collegiately at Bluffton University in Ohio, where he

was a three-year letter winner at quarterback. He received a bachelor’s

degree in Health, Physical Education and Recreation from Bluffton

in 1980, and earned his Master’s degree in Secondary School Admin-

istration from Edinboro University of Pennsylvania in 1983.

Page 7: Widener 2014 Football Media Guide

2014 FOOTBALL 5

COACHING STAFF

Brian Picucci • Offensive Coordinator/Offensive Line

Brian Picucci is in his first year as Widener’s offensive coordinator and offensive line coach. Picucci served last year as the offensive line coach and interim head coach for Central Connecticut State. His unit led the NCAA FCS with only five sacks allowed, paced the Northeast Conference in total offense and broke the school record for total yards, passing touchdowns and rushing touchdowns. Of his players, Rob Holloman led the FCS in all-purpose yards and offensive lineman Taylor Fuller was tabbed All-NEC. Before that, Picucci worked with the University of Massachusetts as the offensive coordinator and tight ends coach from 2009-11, the run-game coordinator from 2004-08 and the offensive line coach all eight seasons. He helped the Minutemen win the FCS national champi-onship in 2006, conference titles in 2006 and 2007, twice lead the Colonial Athletic Association in total offense, lead the league in fewest sacks allowed six times, lead the CAA in pass offense in 2010 and coach eight All-Americas during his time. Picucci also was the run-game coordinator and offensive line coach at Northeastern from 2000-03. He coached an All-America, seven all-league players and helped the Huskies in 2002 to their first league title and NCAA Tournament berth. His first stint at UMass saw his serve as the assistant offensive line coach in 1998 and the interior defensive line coach in 1999. Picucci also was the offensive tackles and tight ends coach at Southern Connecticut State from 1994-95. Picucci competed at Syracuse four seasons (1989-92) as a fullback and tight end. He was a member of three squads which ended the season nationally ranked and all four teams posted bowl victories. Picucci graduated from Syracuse in 1994 with a B.S. in Education.

Bill Shuey • Defensive Coordinator/Front Seven

Bill Shuey is in his first year as Widener’s defensive coordinator and defensive front coach. Shuey worked the last two seasons as the linebackers coach for West Chester, serving under former Widener coach Bill Zwaan. He was responsible all responsibilities for the group ranging from warm-ups, drill periods and conditioning. Shuey also had a huge hand in helping the defensive coordinator with game plans, implementation, in-game adjustments and play calling. The Golden Rams last season amassed a 13-2 record that included three NCAA Tournament victories and a trip to the Division II semifinals. Arguably Shuey’s most high-profile run came with the Philadel-phia Eagles, with whom he had various responsibilities from 2001-11. Shuey served from 2008-11 as the Eagles’ linebackers coach, meeting with the players on a daily basis and implementing everything from different schemes, identifying personnel, organizing substitutions, planning off-season responsibilities, evaluating rosters and working with the defensive co-ordinator. That run was highlighted by Philadelphia in the 2008 season advancing to the NFC Championship game at Arizona. With the Eagles loss in the NFC final, Shuey went with Andy Reid’s staff to Honolulu to coach in the Pro Bowl. He was the conference’s linebackers coach, working with all-game day preparation and helped the squad to a 30-21 victory over the AFC. Shuey’s role from 2007-08 involved being the squad’s defensive assistant and quality control coach. There, he provided a weekly analysis of the opponents’ offensive schemes and protections, assisted with the linebackers coach in position meetings and film study, and provided tendency information to the defensive coordinator. From 2003-07, Shuey was the Eagles’ offensive assistant and quality control coach. He helped organize the offense’s playbook, created Power Point presentations, assisted the running backs coach during warm-ups and drills, charted the play calls and handled the play-ers’ evaluations. The squad’s high point in that span was advancing to Super Bowl XXXIX against the New England Patriots. Shuey from 2001-03 served as a training camp coordinator for the squad and a liaison to Reid on all football matters. He competed professionally for the Lehigh Valley Panthers of the Colonial Football Alliance and the Pittsburgh Colts of the Grassroots Football League. Shuey received his B.S. in Sport Management from Slippery Rock in 1995 with a minor in Business Administration and his Masters in Physical Education from West Virginia in 1998.

Page 8: Widener 2014 Football Media Guide

WIDENER PRIDE6

COACHING STAFF

Gary Vinciguerra • Assistant Defensive Backs

Gary Vinciguerra is in his fourth season as Widener’s assistant secondary coach. Vinciguerra competed as a defensive back for both the Naval Academy Prep School and the United States Naval Academy. He is coming off a stint as the Midshipmen’s defensive backs coach and has worked with other programs to help with their defensive techniques. Vinciguerra has attended numerous seminars in the area to better his coaching, including the Nike and Glazier Camps. In 2013 and 2014, Vinciguerra served as coach for the Navy Veterans in an arena football game against the Army Veterans. The game was part of Military Appreciation Night for the Philadelphia Soul of the Arena Football League.

John O’Donnell • Defensive Backs/Recruiting Coordinator

John O’Donnell is in his first season as the defensive backs coach for Widener. O’Donnell comes on board after serving as a student assistant coach in the spring of 2013 at West Chester University, working with former Widener coach Bill Zwaan. O’Donnell worked with the Rams’ safeties and also was a volunteer coach at West Chester Henderson High School. He played four seasons at West Chester, was picked 2012 second team All-PSAC at defensive back and was selected to play in the All-American Bowl in Minneapolis. The team captain his senior season, O’Donnell was picked to the 2011 Philadelphia Inquirer Academic All-Area Team, was named to WCUs Dean’s List in the fall of 2009 and was a member of the school’s Student-Athlete Advisory Committee. O’Donnell graduated West Chester in 2013 with a B.S. in Liberal Studies/Professional Studies and minored in Psychology/Athletic Coaching.

Fred Baxter • Tight Ends/Dir. of Player Development

Fred Baxter is in his second season as the Pride’s tight ends coach. A 12-year veteran of the National Football League, he spent the 2010 campaign with the Cleveland Browns as part of the NFL’s Coaching Internship Program after working with the New England Patriots in the same capacity in 2006. He also spent time as the offensive coordinator and special teams coach for Camden High School in 2009, the tight ends and special team coach for Camden Catholic High School in 2007 and as an assistant men’s basketball coach at Burlington County College in 2006. Baxter competed in the NFL with the New York Jets, the Chicago Bears, the New England Patriots and the Washington Redskins, earning a ring with the Patriots after the team won Super Bowl XXXVIII. Baxter, who also is Widener’s golf coach, graduated from Auburn University with a B.S. in Education.

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2014 FOOTBALL 7

COACHING STAFF

Nate Sassaman • Quarterbacks/Receivers/Academic Coord.

Nate Sassaman is in his second season as an assistant coach for Widener. He spent two seasons as the quarterback and wide receivers coach as well as the JV head coach for Liberty High School in Colorado Springs. Sassaman coached two different all-league players and had the team ranked seventh in the state in passing in 2011. He also was the head coach and offensive coordinator for The Classical Academy High School in Colorado Springs from 2007-09. The team went 8-3 each of the last two years, advanced to the Colorado AA playoffs and he was tabbed Southern Colorado Coach of the Year in 2008. Sassaman was tabbed Honorable Mention All-America by the Associated Press in 1984 and was the first Army quarterback to gain 1,000 yards rushing. The three-year letterwinner was the MVP of the Mirage Bowl in Tokyo, the Cherry Bowl in Pontiac, MI and the Army-Navy game. Sassaman graduated the U.S. Military Academy in 1985 with a B.S. in International Business and earned his Master’s in Public Administration from the University of Washington in 1995.

Jason Henshaw • Defensive Line/Head JV Coach

Jason Henshaw is in his second season as defensive line coach for the Pride. He spent the 2012 campaign as an offensive and defensive line coach for Henderson High School in West Chester, in addition to helping with the strength and conditioning program. Henshaw also was a coach with the Valor Bowl Chester County Senior All-Star Game and was a volunteer assistant with West Chester University in the spring of 2012. He played his college ball at Kutztown, where he was a Beyond Sports Network All-America as well as an All-PSAC selection. Henshaw was part of the 2011 squad that won the PSAC and the 2010 and 2011 teams which advanced to the NCAA Tournament. Henshaw graduated Kutztown in 2011 with a B.S. in Speech Communication.

Greg Burns • Linebackers

Greg Burns is in second season as an assistant coach and his first with the linebackers. He served in 2012 as a student assistant at The College of New Jersey upon finishing his playing career. Burns assisted in the Lions’ strength and conditioning, academic advising and video breakdown. He also was a recruiting assistant, prepared all camps and produced the team’s highlight video. Within community service, he assisted with Cupid’s Chase 5K Run and Unified Flag Football for Special Olympics. Burns played linebacker for four years at TCNJ, graduat-ing as the team’s career tackle leader. The three-time All-New Jersey Athletic Conference pick was tabbed second team Beyond Sports Network All-America and second team D3Football.com All-East Region in 2012. Burns also was the 2012 NJAC Defensive Player of the Year, a member of the National Football Foundation Hampshire Honor Society and a two-year captain. Burns graduated TCNJ in 2013 with a B.S. in Health and Exercise Science.

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WIDENER PRIDE8

COACHING STAFF

Terence Thomas • Running Backs

Terence Thomas is in his first season as an assistant coach for Widener, working with the running backs. Thomas served from 2011-12 as an assistant at West Windsor-Plainsboro, working with the running backs, linebackers and special teams. He presently serves as a membership consultant and manager for the Aquatics and Fitness Center in Jenkintown. Thomas competed at Villanova, where he was named second team Sports Network All-America, first team All-Colonial Athletic Association and was part of the 2009 NCAA FCS national champions. He also helped in the Wildcats’ effort in the team’s annual Bone Marrow Drive. Thomas graduated Villanova in 2011 with a degree in Communication.

Bill Magee • Assistant Offensive Coach

Bill Magee is in his first season in his second stint as an assistant coach for Widener. He will be an offensive assistant, working primarily with the offensive tackles and tight ends. Magee previously was the offensive coor-dinator for Valley Forge Military Academy from 2011-12, the assistant offensive line coach at West Chester in 2009 and the offensive line coach at Delaware Valley in 2005. Prior to serving as Widener’s assistant offensive line coach in 1997, he was the tight ends coach at Rowan from 1991-92 and the running backs coach at Swarthmore in 1988. On the high school level, he was the quarterbacks coach at Cardinal O’Hara in 2013, an assistant coach at Penncrest in 2007, the offensive line coach at Radnor in 2006, an assistant at Monsignor Bonner from 1989-90 and an assistant at Haverford High School from 1985-86. Magee received his B.A. in Health and Physical Education from Rowan and his M. Ed. From Cabrini.

Matt Conboy • Assistant Defensive Front

Matt Conboy is in his first season as an assistant coach for the Pride and will lead the defensive front. He coached from 2008-13 at The Haverford School, helping the squad to Inter-AC League championships in 2009, 2010 and 2013. He coached players who have gone on to play at standout programs like Syracuse, Virginia, Temple and Lehigh. Conboy also was the defensive coordinator for St. Bernadette’s CYO from 2002-08. Conboy graduated Delaware in 1984 with a B.S. in Business Management.

Keith Wilford • Strength & Conditioning

Keith Wilford, a legend in the annals of Widener men’s lacrosse, is in his first season with the football squad and is responsible for the team’s strength and conditioning. Wilford was the men’s lacrosse team’s first All-America in 1999 and was picked All-Middle Atlantic Conference in both 1998 and 1999. His standout play on defense helped him to be one of six for Widener named to the league’s All-Century Team. He helped the squad amass a 26-6 record during his time with a pair of MAC championships. Wilford presently is an assistant Dean of Students for Saint Joseph’s Prep and also has worked at AIM Academy in Conshohocken and Malvern Prep. Wilford graduated Widener in 2000 with a B.S. in Business Administration and Sport Management. He earned his Master’s in Counseling Education from Widener in 2004.

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2014 FOOTBALL 9

2014 PREVIEW

A new era has begun for Widener football. The 134th season will be like none other with Mike Kelly taking the reins as the program’s 24th coach. Sprinkle in the fact that many talented players are back in the fold and you have the recipe for what should be yet another successful campaign in Chester. The offense this year gets one last boost from the incomparable All-America Anthony Davis, who has solidified his place among Widener’s elite athlete in its storied history. His speed, talent and athleticism set him apart and automatically make the Pride one of the nation’s elite heading into the campaign. The wide receiver/returner has been named preseason All-America for a third straight year, this time by Lindy’s Sports Magazine, the Sport-ing News, the Beyond Sports Network and D3Football.com. Last season, he was picked an All-America by BSN and D3Football.com, was the ECAC South and Middle Atlantic Conference Offensive Player of the Year as well as first team All-MAC for a third straight season. Davis enters this year fifth in team history with 35 touchdowns, second with 5,035 all-purpose yards, second with 31 touchdown receptions, second with 187 receptions, tied for fourth with 2,711 receiving yards, first with 67 kickoff returns and first with 1,515 kickoff return yards. He will get plenty of help on offense that begins with sophomore quarterback Seth Klein, who last season blossomed into a leader for the future. The MAC Rookie of the Year and ECAC South Offensive Rookie of the Year also was picked Honorable Mention All-MAC in a campaign that gave Widener plenty of hope for the future. Klein last year broke the school and MAC single-season record with 285 completions. He also set a new school record September 14 against Lebanon Valley with 40 completions. Sophomore Blaine Price looks to compete in more than the five games he played in a season ago in seeking a staring role at wide receiver. Senior Adam Marcucci and junior Eric Sharpe also will compete for time at wide receiver. Sophomores Michael O’Neill and Alex Krivda will battle for the role of Klein’s backup. Widener’s running game is not to be forgotten, especially with

the play of senior Couve LaFate after he was picked second team all-league a season ago. The Pride’s leading rusher a second straight year ended with 537 yards on 96 carries and five touchdowns. He had a career-high 174 yards November 9 against King’s, including a 91-yard touchdown sprint for the program’s longest run in 41 years. Junior Robert Getz returns at fullback after amassing 137 all-pur-pose yards last year. Christopher Wickes looks for time at running back and fellow junior Myles Pressey will vie for a spot at fullback. The offensive line saw many depart following graduation, but talented players remain that include sophomore Stephen Domonoski at left tackle and junior Matt Donahue at right tackle. They are back to help an offense which last year was third in the country with a .733 completion percentage, 17th with 291.9 yards passing per game and second in the MAC with 439.7 yards of total offense per contest. Sophomores Jacob Jones and Shane Phillips also will compete for

a spot at tackle. Sophomore Anthony Brooks and junior Zach Chatman are among those in position to gain a starting role at guard. Sophomore Trevor Bickel is coming back from injury to make a run at either guard spot. Christopher Howard has the inside track to gain the starting role at center. Senior Brian DiGiovanni last season competed in all 10 games at tight end and is back for what should be another solid year. Sophomore Haydn Warren will give him a run for the starting nod. Widener for many years has put forth a solid defense that is among the nation’s best. This defense was fourth in the MAC a season ago and will stick with the 4-3 alignment that has made it so successful in recent memory. One of the keys on the interior line is junior Shakore Philip, who is back at tackle after being named first team All-MAC and second team All-ECAC last season. A starter since midway through his freshman year, he ended tied for fifth on the team

with 40 tackles last season with two sacks.

John DiBiase

Page 12: Widener 2014 Football Media Guide

WIDENER PRIDE10

2014 PREVIEW

Anthony Davis

Senior tackle John DiBiase was tabbed Honorable Mention all-league a season ago and also will be a factor. He ended the year with 30 tackles, 5 1/2 tackles for a loss and three sacks. Sophomores Frank Wendling and James Rendle also will vie for time at tackle. Junior Stacey Sunnerville was picked second team to give the line three players named all-conference. A starter since late in his freshman campaign, he has been a dominant player at end. Despite only playing seven games due to injury, he closed last year third in the MAC with nine sacks, tied for third with 12 1/2 tackles for a loss and seventh on the squad with 39 tackles.

Senior Anthony Green certainly can make his way into the con-versation this year among the top ends. Another gifted player who will be highly looked upon this year, the track & field star played in 10 games last season and ended with 24 tackles. Junior Brandon Jones and senior Tyler Glover, who each competed in all 10 games last season, also will see plenty of time at end. Senior Brandon Harper is back at weak-side linebacker where he was a force last season, ending tied for the team lead with 66 tackles. He creates match-up problems for many and that will continue to be a trend this season. Senior Kevin Burns played great at middle linebacker with 55 tackles over nine games. He is back once again to form what should be another dominating linebacking core. Sophomore Steve Gozur looks to have the edge at strong-side linebacker and should play a lot more than the three games he was in last season. Emmanuel Fields, fellow junior Tyrone Bundy and soph-omore Jacob Behornar also will be factors in this lineup and look for extended playing time. Replacing All-America safety Colin Masterson will be a challenge, but Widener is confident it has the answers.

Junior Drew Jemison saw action in seven contest last season and his 19 tackles should be surpassed this season at strong safety. Sophomore Sean Titus also is a standout player who played nine games last year and looks for the starting nod at free safety. Vaughn Nichols-Taylor and fellow junior Travon Barnes will get playing time this year at safety. Senior Ameer Sorrell is a multi-sport athlete with exceptional ath-leticism who once again looks to be a major player at cornerback. The only returnee with multiple interceptions from last year, he amassed 18 tackles that included 17 solos. Junior Jamal Goodman is not to be forgotten at the other corner spot, giving offenses a lot to worry about with his great play. He finished with 24 tackles and should once again be a key entering this year. Seniors Dijon Davidson and Jarard Stewart also return looking for time at cornerback. Junior Ryan O’Hara is back to handle the kicking duties after hit-ting seven field goals last season, including a 42-yard boot vs. Lebanon Valley. Sophomore Michael Bennett is the favorite once again to be the punter. He averaged 36.6 yards per punt last year, including a 39.2 yard average at Stevenson after which he was named MAC Special Teams Player of the Week. The 2014 schedule is not a kind one for Widener, which plays its first two games against NCAA Tournament squads from last season. The unit beings things September 5 under the lights at Rowan, cham-pions of the New Jersey Athletic Conference, and opens league play the following week at reigning MAC titleist Lebanon Valley. The home opener is September 20 vs. Albright, the only game in the first five Widener plays at Leslie C. Quick Jr. Stadium. Three of the last five games are at home, beginning with Home-coming on October 18 against Wilkes. Widener the following week visits Lycoming in which always is an exciting battle. Senior Day, coupled with the Keystone Cup game, vs. Delaware Valley is November 15.

Page 13: Widener 2014 Football Media Guide

2014 FOOTBALL 11

THE 2014 PRIDE

Trevor Bickel • 69So. • OL • 6-7 • 319

Montvale, NJPascack Hills

Education

Anthony Brooks • 66So. • OL • 6-0 • 275Easthampton, NJRancocas ValleyCivil Engineering

Zachary Chatman • 75Jr. • OL • 6-2 • 275

Pennsburg, PAUpper Perkiomen

Marketing

Anthony Davis • 5Sr. • WR • 6-1 • 196

Upland, PAChester

Sport Management

Stephen Domonoski • 73So. • OL • 6-3 • 295

Egg Harbor Twp., NJHoly Spirit

Criminal Justice

Travon Barnes • 11So. • DB • 5-11 • 190Randallstown, MD

Calvert HallEconomics

Jacob Behornar • 43So. • LB • 6-1 • 217

New Castle, DEWilliam Penn

Physical Therapy

Matthew Boland • 80Jr. • WR • 6-2 • 175

Harrisburg, PAValley Forge Military

Accounting

Tyrone Bundy • 12Jr. • LB • 5-10 • 210

Woodbury, NJWoodbury

Finance

John DiBiase • 95Sr. • DL • 6-0 • 265Mount Laurel, NJ

LenapeCriminal Justice

Michael Bennett • 97Jr. • K/P • 6-1 • 220

Maple Glen, PAUrsinus Coll.

Business

Derek Brandt • 54So. • DL • 5-10 • 225

Lansdale, PANorth Penn

International Business

Kevin Burns • 49Sr. • LB • 6-0 • 220

Collingdale, PAWest Catholic

Mechanical Engineering

Dijon Davidson • 14Sr. • DB • 5-8 • 170Poughkeepsie, NY

PoughkeepsieCriminal Justice

Brian DiGiovanni • 88Sr. • TE • 6-4 • 230

Glen Mills, PATemple Univ.

Mechanical Engineering

Richie Eppleman • 91Sr. • K/P • 6-3 • 180Chester Springs, PA

Great ValleyCriminal Justice

Matthew Donahue • 67Jr. • OL • 6-3 • 272

Milton, MAMilton

Mechanical Engineering

Emmanuel Fields • 44Jr. • LB • 5-11 • 208

Drexel Hill, PAUpper Darby

Mechanical Engineering

Robert Getz • 36Jr. • RB • 5-8 • 200Kunkletown, PAPleasant Valley

Civil Engineering

Joseph FitzsimmonsSo. • DB • 5-10 • 165Point Pleasant, NJPoint Pleasant Boro

Business

Tyler Glover • 57Sr. • DL • 6-0 • 208

Darby, PAPenn Wood

Criminal Justice

Page 14: Widener 2014 Football Media Guide

WIDENER PRIDE12

THE 2014 PRIDE

Tyler Hall • 89So. • TE • 6-4 • 225

Bel Air, MDC. Milton Wright

Business

Montrell Hicks-Taylor • 3So. • WR • 5-11 • 170

Newark, DENo. Carolina A&T U.

Management

Nick Isola • 87So. • TE • 6-3 • 210Monroe Twp., NJ

Monroe Twp.Exploratory Studies

Brandon Jones • 52Jr. • DL • 6-2 • 230

Baltimore, MDBaltimore

Biology/Pre-PT

Jamal Goodman • 4Jr. • DB • 5-8 • 180

Baltimore, MDCalvert Hall

Finance

Steve Gozur • 40So. • LB • 5-11 • 210

Hatfield, PANorth PennEngineering

Brandon Harper • 1Sr. • LB • 6-1 • 235

Blackwood, NJHighland

Sport Management

Jacob Jones • 51So. • OL • 6-0 • 285Philadelphia, PABishop McDevitt

Business Marketing

Anthony Green • 45Sr. • DL • 6-1 • 260Penns Grove, NJ

Penns GroveBusiness

Devon Hewitt • 27So. • RB • 5-9 • 186Lawrenceville, NJ

LawrencevilleBusiness

Chris Howard • 79So. • DL • 6-0 • 275Philadelphia, PA

Chestnut Hill Acad.Political Science

Drew Jemison • 32Jr. • DB • 6-0 • 200Montgomery, NY

Valley CentralPsychology/Pre-PT

Daniel KelbleSo. • OL • 5-8 • 225

Bel Air, MDJohn Carroll

Mechanical Engineering

Seth Klein • 2So. • QB • 6-0 • 188

Wernersville, PAWilson West Lawn

Management

Alex Krivda • 18So. • QB • 6-5 • 215

Sellersville, PAPennridge

Exploratory Studies

Max Kutler • 19So. • WR • 5-6 • 185

Cranbury, NJHightstown

Business Admin.

Couve LaFate • 22Sr. • RB • 5-7 • 188Wilmington, DE

HendersonBusiness

Matthew Locotos • 83Jr. • WR • 6-2 • 210

Seaville, NJOcean City

Criminal Justice

Josh Marcu • 59Sr. • LB/LS • 6-0 • 195

Philadelphia, PAGeorge Washington

Communication Studies

Adam Marcucci • 17Sr. • WR • 5-11 • 165

Sicklerville, NJWashington Twp.

Sport Management

Daniel Matel-Okoh • 86So. • WR • 5-10 • 180

Monroe Twp., NJMonroe Twp.

Exploratory Studies

Page 15: Widener 2014 Football Media Guide

2014 FOOTBALL 13

THE 2014 PRIDE

Chris McKendrySo. • DB • 5-11 • 185Williamstown, NJ

WilliamstownExploratory Studies

Craig Moretz • 48So. • LB • 6-2 • 205

Abingdon, MDC. Milton Wright

Engineering

Ryan O’Hara • 93Jr. • K • 5-10 • 175

Royersford, PASpring-Ford

Exploratory Studies

Colby McMaster • 26Jr. • RB • 5-9 • 210

New Oxford, PADelone Catholic

Sport Management

Shane Munro • 56Jr. • DL • 6-1 • 250

West Grove, PAAvon GroveEducation

Michael O’Neill • 15So. • QB • 6-2 • 205

Glen Rock, NJGlen RockBusiness

Caleb Moretz • 47So. • DL • 6-2 • 195

Abingdon, MDC. Milton Wright

Engineering

Terrant Morrison • 20Sr. • RB • 5-7 • 190

Smyrna, DESmyrnaBusiness

Vaughn Nichols-Taylor • 24Jr. • DB • 5-11 • 193

Newark, DEWest Chester Univ.Sport Management

Stephen OxendineSo. • LB • 5-8 • 205

Winchester, VAMillbrook

Psychology/Pre-PT

Shakore Philip • 8Jr. • DL • 6-1 • 280

Bay Shore, NYBay Shore

Business Admin.

Shane Phillips • 76So. • OL • 6-5 • 310

Levittown, PAConwell-Egan Catholic

Management

Blaine Price • 28So. • WR • 5-10 • 180

Jefferson, MDBrunswick

Engineering

Philip Ragona • 16Jr. • WR • 5-7 • 175

Oceanside, NYOceanside

Criminal Justice

Myles Pressey • 34Jr. • RB • 5-9 • 195

Lumberton, NJSt. Francis (PA)

Marketing

Josh Rapp • 53Jr. • OL • 5-11 • 240

Drexel Hill, PAUpper Darby

Criminal Justice

James Rendle • 92So. • DL • 6-3 • 265

Wilmington, DESt. Elizabeth

Civil Engineering

Kevin Sabo • 23So. • RB • 5-8 • 200

Lansdale, PALansdale Catholic

Psychology/Pre-PT

John Seeds • 41So. • DB • 5-11 • 181

Somers Point, NJMainlandBusiness

Eric Sharpe • 82Jr. • WR • 5-7 • 180

Odenton, MDMeade

Criminal Justice

Connor SchlegelJr. • WR • 5-10 • 180

Denver, PAGarden Spot

Communication Studies

Page 16: Widener 2014 Football Media Guide

WIDENER PRIDE14

THE 2014 PRIDE

Martin Turner • 7Sr. • DB • 6-0 • 182

New Castle, DEChester

Criminal Justice

Rashon Sorrell • 39So. • WR • 6-0 • 190

Port Norris, NJMillville

Exploratory Studies

Stacey Sunnerville • 6Jr. • DL • 6-1 • 220

Freehold, NJFreehold

Communication Studies

Kyle Twitty • 46Sr. • LB • 5-9 • 205

Blackwood, NJFDU-Florham

Sport Management

Ameer Sorrell • 13Sr. • DB • 5-10 • 170

Port Norris, NJPenns Grove

Criminal Justice

Alex Stewart • 96So. • DL • 6-3 • 245

Pittsgrove, NJArthur P. SchalickPsychology/Pre-PT

Sean Titus • 10So. • DB • 6-2 • 190

Lancaster, PALancaster Catholic

Biology

Kurt Van BenschotenSo. • LB • 5-8 • 180Point Pleasant, NJPoint Pleasant Boro

Civil Engineering

Jarard Stewart • 9Sr. • DB • 5-11 • 195

Bowie, MDBowie

Computer Science

Haydn Warren • 84Jr. • TE • 6-4 • 235

East Brunswick, NJEast Brunswick

Communication Studies

Christopher Wickes • 29Jr. • RB • 5-11 • 190

Bear, DECaravel Academy

Biology

Nicholas White • 25Sr. • TE • 6-3 • 230

Bellmore, NYMepham

Criminal Justice

Devin Wilson • 38So. • DB • 6-0 • 175

Montclair, NJMontclair

Accounting

Jack Vitale • 33Jr. • LB • 6-0 • 215Point Pleasant, NJPoint Pleasant Boro

Accounting

Page 17: Widener 2014 Football Media Guide

2014 FOOTBALL 15

INDIVIDUAL STATSRUShINg g ATT gAIN LoSS YARDS AVg. TD LoNg YPgCouve LaFate 9 96 548 11 537 5.6 5 91 59.7Chris Wickes 9 74 422 16 406 5.5 4 54 45.1Terrant Morrison 6 62 276 17 259 4.2 3 20 43.2Richard Brown 7 46 167 6 161 3.5 5 15 23.0Colby McMaster 8 18 109 1 108 6.0 2 35 13.5Andrew Patterson 2 7 37 2 35 5.0 0 23 17.5Kyle Shostek 10 5 29 0 29 5.8 0 18 2.9Jermaine Quattlebaum 10 3 22 0 22 7.3 0 13 2.2Anthony Davis 10 2 19 0 19 9.5 0 19 1.9Rashon Sorrell 7 2 19 0 19 9.5 1 10 2.7Myles Pressey 2 6 16 1 15 2.5 0 6 7.5Jarard Stewart 7 1 7 0 7 7.0 0 7 1.0Robert Getz 9 5 8 2 6 1.2 2 3 0.7Michael Thompson 3 2 1 0 1 0.5 1 1 0.3Connor Schlegel 10 1 0 3 -3 -3.0 0 0 -0.3Seth Klein 10 70 119 250 -131 -1.9 0 15 -13.1ToTAL 10 408 1799 321 1478 3.6 23 91 147.8oPPoNeNTS 10 442 1816 346 1470 3.3 15 65 147.0PASSINg g CmP-ATT INT PCT YARDS TD LoNg YPgSeth Klein 10 285-383 9 74.4 2809 17 55 280.9Michael Thompson 3 11-20 0 55.0 110 0 39 36.7Jermaine Quattlebaum 10 0-1 0 0.0 0 0 0 0.0ToTAL 10 296-404 9 73.3 2919 17 55 291.9oPPoNeNTS 10 177-313 9 56.5 2361 13 70 236.1ReCeIVINg g ReC YARDS AVg TD LoNg YPgAnthony Davis 10 91 1056 11.6 10 55 105.6Jermaine Quattlebaum 10 47 407 8.7 2 39 40.7Adam Marcucci 10 29 367 12.7 1 37 36.7Couve LaFate 9 27 138 5.1 1 16 15.3Chris Wickes 9 25 147 5.9 0 19 16.3Terrant Morrison 6 17 133 7.8 1 35 22.2Connor Schlegel 10 15 177 11.8 1 39 17.7Philip Ragona 6 6 100 16.7 0 31 16.7Kyle Shostek 10 6 75 12.5 0 21 7.5Richard Brown 7 6 33 5.5 0 11 4.7Robert Getz 9 5 54 10.8 0 20 6.0Blaine Price 5 4 68 17.0 1 22 13.6Brian DiGiovanni 10 4 51 12.8 0 17 5.1Anthony Jackson 3 2 20 10.0 0 10 6.7Jabree Kemp 3 2 19 9.5 0 14 6.3Matthew Locotos 2 2 18 9.0 0 10 9.0Brett Flannery 3 2 13 6.5 0 7 4.3Myles Pressey 2 2 9 4.5 0 13 4.5Colby McMaster 8 1 15 15.0 0 15 1.9William Dahm 4 1 12 12.0 0 12 3.0Seth Klein 10 1 4 4.0 0 4 0.4Matthew Boland 2 1 3 3.0 0 3 1.5ToTAL 10 296 2919 9.9 17 55 291.9oPPoNeNTS 10 177 2361 13.3 13 70 236.1 ToUChDowNSSCoRINg (PLAYeRS wITh AT LeAST 12 PTS.) ReC RUSh ReT XP1 XP2 Fg PoINTSAnthony Davis 10 0 0 0 1 0 62Ryan O’Hara 0 0 0 39 0 7 60Couve LaFate 1 5 0 0 0 0 36Richard Brown 0 5 0 0 0 0 30Chris Wickes 0 4 0 0 0 0 24Terrant Morrison 1 3 0 0 0 0 24Jermaine Quattlebaum 2 0 0 0 0 0 12Robert Getz 0 2 0 0 0 0 12Colby McMaster 0 2 0 0 0 0 12ToTAL 17 23 2 39 2 7 318oPPoNeNTS 13 15 1 23 0 9 224

NCAA STATSAnthony DavisReceptions Per Game 9.1 (6th)Receiving Yards Per Game 105.6 (19th)Receiving Yards 1,056 (25th)Receiving Touchdowns 10 (29th)All Purpose Yards Per Game 144.4 (48th)

Dylan DitmerForced Fumbles 0.4 (9th)

Seth KleinCompletion Percentage .744 (2nd)Completions Per Game 28.5 (5th)Passing Yards Per Game 280.9 (16th)Passing Yards 2,809 (20th)Total Offense Per Game 267.8 (50th)

gAme-BY-gAme ReSULTS9/6 at #3 Wesley L 21-33 0-19/14 LEBANON VALLEY * W 35-28 1-1 1-0 (MAC)9/21 at Wilkes * W 21-0 2-1 2-09/28 LYCOMING * L 14-16 2-2 2-110/5 at Stevenson * W 31-10 3-2 3-110/19 MISERICORDIA * W 38-20 4-2 4-110/26 FDU-FLORHAM * W 59-14 5-2 5-111/2 at Albright * L 19-33 5-3 5-211/9 KING’S * W 52-20 6-3 6-211/16 at Delaware Valley * L 28-50 6-4 6-3* Middle Atlantic Conference game

2013 STATS

Adam Marcucci

Tyrone Bundy

Page 18: Widener 2014 Football Media Guide

WIDENER PRIDE16

TEAM STATISTICS WIDeNeR oPPoNeNTS

Scoring 318 224Points Per Game 31.8 22.4First Downs 231 203Rushing-Passing-Penalty 86-133-12 90-97-16Rushing Carries-Yards 408-1478 442-1470Average Per Rush 3.6 3.3Average Per Game 147.8 147.0Touchdowns 23 15Passing Yards 2919 2361Att-Comp-Int 404-296-9 313-177-9Average Per Catch 9.9 13.3Average Per Game 291.9 236.1Touchdowns 17 13Total Offense 4397 3831Total Plays 812 755Average Per Game 439.7 383.1Kick Returns-Yards-Avg. 42-745-17.7 54-890-16.5Punt Returns-Yards-Avg. 17-76-4.5 27-250-9.3Interception Returns-Yds.-Avg. 9-133-14.8 9-32-3.8Fumbles-Lost 12-5 18-10Penalties-Yards-Avg. 67-573-57.3 51-453-45.3Punts-Average 53-34.3 60-36.6Time of Possession Average 25:14 34:46Third-Down Conversions 80/171 59-161Percentage 47% 37%Fourth-Down Conversions 12/26 11/24Percentage 46% 46%Sacks-Yards 32-206 42-247Touchdowns 42 29Field Goals-Attempts 7-9 9-12Red-Zone Scores 35-41 23-33Red-Zone Touchdowns 29-41 16-33PAT-Attempts 39-40 26-32

Score by Quarters 1 2 3 4 TotalWidener 110 87 75 46 -- 318Opponents 33 65 49 77 -- 224

GAME HIGHSRushing: Carries: 25, Terrant Morrison vs. Lebanon Valley (9/14) Yards: 174, Couve LaFate vs. King’s (11/9) Longest Run: 91, Couve LaFate vs. King’s (11/9) Touchdowns: 2, Richard Brown vs. Lebanon Valley (9/14) Couve LaFate vs. King’s (11/9) Chris Wickes vs. King’s (11/9) Terrant Morrison at Delaware Valley (11/16) Carries, Team: 49, vs. Misericordia (10/19) & King’s (11/9) Yards, Team: 314, vs. King’s (11/9)Passing: Attempts: 55, Seth Klein at Delaware Valley (11/16) Completions: 40, Seth Klein vs. Lebanon Valley (9/14) Yards: 392, Seth Klein vs. Lebanon Valley (9/14) Touchdowns: 3, Seth Klein at Stevenson (10/5) Longest Pass: 55, Seth Klein at Stevenson (10/5) Attempts, Team: 55, at Delaware Valley (11/16) Completions, Team: 40, vs. Lebanon Valley (9/14) Yards, Team: 392, vs. Lebanon Valley (9/14)Receiving: Receptions: 14, Anthony Davis at Albright (11/2) Yards: 162, Anthony Davis at Stevenson (10/5) Touchdowns: 2, A. Davis at Stevenson (10/5) & at Del. Val. (11/16) Longest Reception: 55, Anthony Davis at Stevenson (10/5)Punting: Punts: 7, Michael Bennett (three times) Longest Punt: 48, M. Bennett at Wilkes (9/21) & at Del. Val. (11/16) Highest Avg.: 42.8, Michael Bennett at Wilkes (9/21)Defense: Interceptions: 1, (nine times -- Colin Masterson, three times) Tackles: 15, Kevin Burns at Delaware Valley (11/16) Sacks: 3.0, Stacey Sunnerville vs. Lycoming (9/28)Field Goals: Field Goals: 2, Ryan O’Hara vs. Leb. Val. (9/14) & at Albright (11/2) Longest: 42, Ryan O’Hara vs. Lebanon Valley (9/14)Longest Returns: Kickoff: 60, Anthony Davis at Wesley (9/6) Punt: 17, Anthony Davis at Delaware Valley (11/16)

The LAST TIme WIDeNeR hAD A... AN oPPoNeNT hAD A...interception return TD Colin Masterson, 59 yards, at Wilkes, 9/21/13 Robert Edwards, Thiel, 44 yards, 9/10/11kickoff return TD Laquan Robinson, 69 yards, at Albright, 10/29/11 Larry Beavers, Wesley, 89 yards, 9/14/07punt return TD Terrant Morrison, 62 yards, at Misericordia, 9/15/12 Matt Christ, Albright, 26 yards, 11/8/08blocked punt return TD Martin Turner, 0 yards, vs. Bridgewater State, 11/17/12 Sean Cunningham, Albright, 36 yards, 11/2/13100-yard rusher Couve LaFate, 174 yards, vs. King’s, 11/9/13 Kyle Schuberth, Delaware Valley, 235 yards, 11/16/13200-yard rusher Adam Smith, 201 yards, at Wilkes, 11/7/09 Kyle Schuberth, Delaware Valley, 235 yards, 11/16/13100-yard receiver Anthony Davis, 119 yards, at Delaware Valley, 11/16/13 Dan Kempa, King’s, 156 yards, 11/9/13200-yard receiver Anthony Davis, 201 yards, vs. Salisbury, 11/24/12 Steve Koudossou, Wesley, 266 yards, 9/6/13300-yard receiver never Matt Eisenberg, Juniata, 397 yards, 11/13/99300-yard passer Seth Klein, 308 yards, at Delaware Valley, 11/16/13 Aaron Wilmer, Delaware Valley, 310 yards, 11/16/13400-yard passer Chris Haupt, 415 yards, vs. Wilkes, 9/22/12 Joe Callahan, Wesley, 510 yards, 9/6/13500-yard passer never Joe Callahan, Wesley, 510 yards, 9/6/1350-yard run Chris Wickes, 51 yards, vs. King’s, 11/9/13 Kyle Schuberth, Delaware Valley, 65 yards, 11/16/1390-yard pass Mike Lomas-Khalee Prothro, 91 yds .(TD) vs. Susqu., 10/15/05 Christian Jackson-Josh Graham, Waynesburg, 97 yds., 11/19/11Shutout at Wilkes (21-0), 11/16/13 at Alfred (37-0), 9/4/10

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2014 FOOTBALL 17

Wesley 33, Widener 21 • Sept. 6, 2013 • Dover, DEWidener 14 7 0 0 -- 21Wesley 7 13 6 7 -- 33

Wid 7:10/1 Quattlebaum 10 pass from Klein (O’Hara kick)Wes 3:21/1 Koudossou 10 pass from Callahan (Storck kick)Wid 1:21/1 Wickes 2 run (O’Hara kick)Wid 9:19/2 LaFate 2 run (O’Hara kick)Wes 4:04/2 Howe 25 pass from Callahan (Storck kick)Wes :11/2 Koudossou 5 pass from Callahan (Storck kick failed)Wes :00/3 Koudossou 26 pass from Callahan (Baynard rush failed)Wes 11:30/4 Koudossou 70 pass from Callahan (Storck kick)

Widener WesleyFirst Downs 16 31Rushes-Yards 40-81 40-134Passing Yards 189 510Passes Comp-Att-Int 26-31-1 37-52-0Offensive Plays-Yards 76-270 92-644Fumbles-Lost 1-0 5-3Penalties-Yards 2-17 4-40Possession Time 23:17 36:33Third-Down Conversions 7-18 7-17Fourth-Down Conversions 1-4 3-4

Rushing: WU: LaFate 15-52; Wickes 6-33; Morrison 2-10; Shostek 1-4; Getz 1-3; Team 1-0; Klein 14-(-21). WC: Wright 9-60; Byrd 12-36; Squirrell 3-24; Callahan 7-13; Shade 1-3; Maxwell 1-2; Baynard 2-1; Moat 3-(-1); Team 2-(-4). Passing: WU: Klein 26-35-1-189; Quattlebaum 0-1-0-0. WC: Callahan 37-52-0-510. Receiving: WU: Davis 8-106; Quattlebaum 7-47; LaFate 5-(-4); Marcucci 2-18; Shostek 1-12; Schlegel 1-6; Klein 1-4; Wickes 1-0. WC: Koudossou 17-266; Howe 7-103; Bundy 4-42; Squirrell 3-22; Gerlitz 2-27; Malcolm 2-24; Shade 1-22; Byrd 1-4.

No. 15 Widener built a 14-point lead in the second quarter and impressed more than a few peo-ple before No. 3 Wesley took over. Widener’s second drive under new head coach Bobby Acosta resulted in a 99-yard scoring march that included four third-down conversions and Seth Klein completing 9-of-10 passes for 68 yards. The last had Klein find Jermaine Quattlebaum, who caught one up the middle and scampered 10 yards for the score and a 7-0 lead. The Wolverines got a 10-yard touchdown pass of their own with 3:21 to play in the first for a 7-7 draw. The Pride were playing stingy defense, but quarterback Joe Callahan had time to step back in the red zone and found Steve Koudossou, who hauled one in over the middle for the equalizer. Widener bounced right back on its next drive, continuing its fast-paced offense that at times was tough to keep up with. Christopher Wickes blossomed in camp and continued to show promise, getting a two-yard scoring run for a 14-7 Pride cushion. The Pride got the game’s first major break as an exchange for the Wolverines was fumbled and recovered by Stacey Sunnverville at the home team’s 35 yard line. Klein converted a 33-yard pass on third down to Anthony Davis at the one yard line and Couve LaFate, two plays later, got a two-yard touchdown run for a 21-7 lead with 9:21 remaining in the half. Wesley later in the quarter benefitted from a short field as Sean Hopkins returned a punt 27 yards to Widener’s 25 yard line. The one-play drive ended when Callahan found Jeremiah Howe wide open for a touchdown and a 21-14 deficit with 4:04 to play. The Wolverines’ offense continued to churn when Callahan threw his third touchdown pass of the half, a five-yard fade pass to Koudossou with 11 seconds left. Brandon Jones blocked the extra point for a 21-20 Widener margin at halftime. The Wolverines’ offense began to wear down the Pride in the third quarter and, after much resistance, finally kicked in the door on the final play of the period. Callahan got time to throw and once again found Koudossou, this time on a 26-yard scoring pass for a 26-21 Wesley lead before a two-point conversion failed. The Wolverines offense once again looked to the lethal combination of Callahan and Koudossou, who hooked up on a fade route for a 70-yard scoring pass and a 33-21 lead for the duo’s fourth shared touchdown. Klein completed 26-of-35 passes for 189 yards and a score and Davis had eight catches for 106 yards. Brandon Harper notched 12 tackles with Tyrone Bundy getting eight and a half sack for the Pride.

Widener 35, Lebanon Valley 28 • Sept. 14, 2013 • Chester, PALebanon Valley 0 7 7 14 -- 28Widener 14 10 0 11 -- 35

W 9:57/1 Brown 1 run (Ryan O’Hara kick)W 2:33/1 Davis 27 pass from Klein (O’Hara kick)L 11:21/2 Sweeper 24 pass from Murphy (Fakete kick)W 6:01/2 Morrison 1 run (O’Hara kick)W :37/2 O’Hara 19 field goalL 2:37/3 Murphy 5 run (Fakete kick)W 14:49/4 O’Hara 42 field goalL 14:30/4 Miller 70 pass from Murphy (Fakete kick)W 8:17/4 Brown 1 run (Davis pass from Klein)L 1:30/4 Franck 2 run (Fakete kick)

Lebanon Valley WidenerFirst Downs 22 28Rushes-Yards 41-104 45-126Passing Yards 291 392Passes Comp-Att-Int 20-39-0 40-51-0Offensive Plays-Yards 80-395 96-518Fumbles-Lost 1-1 1-1Penalties-Yards 4-37 3-20Possession Time 31:17 28:43Third-Down Conversions 3-16 9-20Fourth-Down Conversions 1-3 1-2

Rushing: L: Irving 6-34; Murphy 13-26; Bennett 1-14; Fink 6-13; Richmond 5-10; Hartman 4-8; Franck 5-1; Kasper 1-(-2). W: Morrison 25-89; Brown 10-34; Klein 6-4; Quattlebaum 1-4; Team 2-(-2); Schlegel 1-(-3). Passing: L: Murphy 16-28-0-222; Franck 4-10-0-69; Team 0-1-0-0. W: Klein 40-51-0-392. Receiving: L: Zeigler 7-68; Sweeper 3-65; George 3-30; Luckenbill 3-28; Miller 2-78; Richmond 2-22. W: Davis 13-120; Marcucci 9-87; Quattlebaum 7-66; DiGiovanni 2-32; Getz 2-21; Brown 2-19; Schlegel 2-13; Ragona 1-18; Kemp 1-14; Morrison 1-2.

Seth Klein broke the school and MAC single-game record for most completions for No. 24 Widener, which won a record 15th straight game at Quick Stadium. Things looked real good on Widener’s first drive, as it methodically went 65 yards in just over three minutes for a 7-0 lead with 9:57 left in the first. Terrant Morrison notched 27 yards rushing on the drive before Richard Brown punched it in from one yard. The Pride’s offense continued in gear later in the quarter when Klein found Anthony Davis on a 27-yard fade route for a 14-0 lead with 2:33 to play. The Dutchmen closed to 14-7 early in the second when Brian Murphy hooked up with Darryl Sweeper for a 24-yard TD pass. The Pride got it back with 6:01 left in the half when Morrison’s one-yard TD run ended a 68-yard drive that required only 66 seconds. Ryan O’Hara kicked a 19-yard field just before halftime for a 24-7 margin. It punctuated a half in which the Pride got 296 yards on 50 plays. The second half stated slow for both offenses, but LVC struck first in the third. After stopping Widener on downs at midfield, Murphy seven plays later ran one in from five yards with 2:37 to play for a 24-14 deficit. O’Hara kicked his second field goal of the day, a 42-yard boot, just 11 seconds into the fourth quarter for a 27-14 lead. But the Dutchmen were not done. On their first play of their next drive, Joey Miller caught a pass from Murphy, eluded a defender and raced 70 yards down the left sideline for a 27-21 contest. After each team was forced to punt, Widener needed a successful march to regain momentum and got it. A 69-yard drive that required three third-down conversions ended when Brown got his second one-yard TD for a 35-21 lead with 8:17 to play. LVC backup quarterback Jeremy Franck was inserted and took charge, producing a stat on 11 of the team’s 12 plays in that drive. He had four rushes in the march, including a two-yard sneak with 1:30 left for a 35-28 deficit. With the onside kick coming, Sean Fakete’s attempt was recovered by Emmanuel Fields that all but ended the contest. Klein ended with 40 receptions, breaking the mark of 37 set by Mike Lomas against Lycoming on November 8, 2003. During his 51 attempts, he threw for 392 yards for the 12th-highest total in school annals. Davis had 13 receptions for 120 yards, Adam Marcucci had nine catches for 87 yards and Morrison amassed 25 carries for 89 yards. Widener ran an alarming 96 plays for 518 yards of offense and converted 9-of-20 third-down chances. Brandon Harper had nine tackles and Stacey Sunnerville notched 2 1/2 sacks. The new winning streak at the 20-year-old stadium bettered the old mark set from 2000-03.

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WIDENER PRIDE18

Widener 21, Wilkes 0 • Sept. 21, 2013 • Edwardsville, PAWidener 7 0 7 7 -- 21Wilkes 0 0 0 0 -- 0

Wid 1:30/1 Brown 2 run (O’Hara kick)Wid 2:31/3 Masterson 59 interception return (O’Hara kick)Wid 9:52/4 Getz 3 run (O’Hara kick)

Widener WilkesFirst Downs 23 13Rushes-Yards 43-189 47-107Passing Yards 203 58Passes Comp-Att-Int 27-35-3 5-17-4Offensive Plays-Yards 78-392 64-165Fumbles-Lost 1-1 0-0Penalties-Yards 9-99 5-32Possession Time 25:36 34:24Third-Down Conversions 10-17 6-16Fourth-Down Conversions 1-2 0-1

Rushing: Wid: Morrison 16-70; Wickes 9-62; Brown 8-32; Quattlebaum 1-13; Sorrell 1-9; Getz 1-3; Shostek 1-3; Klein 6-(-3). Wil: Ingulli 29-102; Garvin 2-8; Smith 2-6; Incremona 3-5; Ber-ntsen 3-2; Young 3-(-3); Van Mater 5-(-13). Passing: Wid: Klein 27-35-3-203. Wil: Van Mater 2-9-2-19; Young 2-7-2-28; T. Berntsen 1-1-0-11. Receiving: Wid: Davis 11-111; Schlegel 3-14; Quattlebaum 3-12; Wickes 3-2; Ragona 2-31; Morrison 2-18; Marcucci 2-9; Brown 1-6. Wil: George 2-21; Devitt 1-15; Curry 1-13; Behrmann 1-9.

Colin Masterson returned an interception for a touchdown in the third quarter that changed the momentum for Widener, which took control in the second half at Wilkes. Widener’s lethal offense cracked the scoreboard first with 90 seconds to go in the first quarter on a two-yard touchdown run from Richard Brown for a 7-0 lead. The score was possible because of Anthony Davis, who hauled in a 22-yard pass from Seth Klein to the Wilkes 26 yard line. Widener’s defense did its job in the first half, allowing just 98 yards of offense and only 20 yards passing. Stacey Sunnerville and Brandon Harper each had seven tackles in that time. The Colonels defense was the Pride’s albatross in the first half, limiting the visitors to just over 11 minutes in time of possession and only 34 plays. The Pride’s defense in the quarter made numerous big plays, led by Darius Johnson, John DiBiase and Shakore Philip, who each plugged the line and held the Colonels offense at bay. That was before Masterson did his thing, return an interception off back-up quarterback Dan Van Mater. Masterson took the pick, eluded several tackles and sprinted 59 yards down the left side line for a 14-0 Pride lead with 2:31 left in the quarter. At this point, the momentum was all Pride and it was a matter of time before the squad’s offense would get it going. Christopher Wickes had a 26-yard run to the Colonels 25 yard line and Robert Getz capped it on a three-yard touchdown run with 9:52 left, giving Widener a 21-0 lead. The defense was the story, holding the Colonels to a mere 165 yards of offense that included just 67 yards in the second half. Harper, Dylan Ditmer and Ameer Sorrell each had an interception for the Pride, who forced the home team to complete only 5-of-17 passes for 58 yards. Sunnerville again got the job done with 12 tackles and 1 1/2 sacks, Harper closed with 10 tackles and Philip added seven for Widener. Junior Tyler Glover also had two of the Pride’s six sacks. Klein played solidly, completing 27-of-35 passes for 203 yards. Davis closed with 11 catches for 111 yards and Terrant Morrison posted 16 carries for 70 yards.

Lycoming 16, Widener 14 • Sept. 28, 2013 • Chester, PALycoming 3 10 0 3 -- 16Widener 0 0 14 0 -- 14

L 1:17/1 Czap 44 field goalL 12:57/2 Umpleby 33 pass from Jenny (Czap kick)L 2:00/2 Czap 31 field goalW 6:34/3 Morrison 35 pass from Klein (O’Hara kick)W 3:24/3 Davis 8 pass from Klein (O’Hara kick)L 2:24/4 Czap 33 field goal

Lycoming WidenerFirst Downs 15 19Rushes-Yards 36-59 26-15Passing Yards 176 316Passes Comp-Att-Int 18-29-0 37-52-1Offensive Plays-Yards 65-235 78-331Fumbles-Lost 1-1 1-1Penalties-Yards 7-59 8-56Possession Time 35:46 24:14Third-Down Conversions 7-17 7-18Fourth-Down Conversions 0-0 2-3

Rushing: L: Needhammer 26-108; Bowman 1-0; Team 2-(-4); Jenny 7-(-45). W: LaFate 6-16; Morrison 6-13; Wickes 1-4; Brown 1-1; Shostek 1-1; Getz 2-(-1); Klein 9-(-19). Passing: L: Jenny 18-29-0-176. W: Klein 37-52-1-316. Receiving: L: Umpleby 8-112; Atkinson 4-33; Needhammer 1-9; Kovacs 1-9; Sibel 1-5; Talerico 1-5; Mongiello 1-3; Cookson 1-0. W: Davis 9-64; LaFate 7-61; Morrison 5-50; Marcucci 3-42; Wickes 3-36; Shostek 3-30; Getz 2-13; Quattlebaum 2-11; Kemp 1-5; Schlegel 1-4; Brown 1-0.

In yet another classic between these two long-time rivals, No. 24 Widener gave up a field goal to Zack Czap with 2:24 left in a tough loss. Trailing 13-0 midway through the third quarter, Widener needed its offense to kick into gear and got it. The Pride got the ball down to the Warriors 35 yard line before Seth Klein found Terrant Morrison, who caught a short pass and turned it into a TD with 6:34 left for a 13-7 deficit. Lycoming on its next possession went three-and-out by gaining one yard and Widener again was in business, this time at its 44 yard line. Seven plays into a drive that included a 19-yard completion to Christopher Wickes, Klein hit Anthony Davis on an eight-yard scoring pass for a 14-13 lead with 3:24 left in the quarter. The adventurous fourth quarter saw its first huge play when Czap’s punt was mishandled and recovered by Andrew McGreevy at the Pride 39-yard line. Lycoming drove to the two and appeared certain to take the lead, but John DiBiase sacked Tyler Jenny and the ensuing fumble was recovered by Emmanuel Fields for another huge game-changing play. The Pride on the next drive gained only 16 yards before being forced to punt. Lycoming took over on its own 38 and went on a drive in which it converted three first downs. Widener’s defense stopped a third down and eight at the 16, but Czap was called upon and drilled a 33-yard field goal to give the visitors a 16-14 lead. The Pride showed great poise and began its march, getting a 14-yard completion to Davis at the 43 yard line and an 11-yard completion to Wickes at the Warriors 41 yard line. Klein then hit Adam Marcucci on a 10-yard completion to the 36 yard line and Davis on a third-down pass to the 27 yard line. The Warriors defense only allowed the Pride eight more yards before it was left up to kicker Ryan O’Hara. Lycoming had two timeouts left and used only one to ice O’Hara, but the 36-yard attempt sailed wide left with 16 seconds left. The loss ended Widener’s team-record 15-game winning streak at Quick Stadium and it was the squad’s first home loss since a 35-27 setback to Albright on October 23, 2010. It only was the Pride’s 26th loss at the 20-year-old stadium in 104 all-time games. Klein completed 37-of-52 passes for 316 yards and two scores. Stacey Sunnerville had a whale of a game for the Pride, getting six tackles and three of the team’s six sacks. Widener ended with a 331-235 edge in total offense and converted 7-of-18 third downs.

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2014 FOOTBALL 19

Widener 31, Stevenson 10 • Oct. 5, 2013 • Owings Mills, MDWidener 9 8 7 7 -- 31Stevenson 3 7 0 0 -- 10

W 9:13/1 Team safetyW 7:00/1 Davis 40 pass from Klein (O’Hara kick)S 3:22/1 Cornell 40 field goalS 11:14/2 Pensamiento 1 run (Cornell kick)W 1:01/2 Quattlebaum 16 pass from Klein (Marcucci pass from Klein)W 14:13/3 Davis 55 pass from Klein (O’Hara kick)W 7:01/4 LaFate 17 run (O’Hara kick)

Widener StevensonFirst Downs 24 24Rushes-Yards 38-140 53-179Passing Yards 303 241Passes Comp-Att-Int 27-33-0 17-31-2Offensive Plays-Yards 71-443 84-420Fumbles-Lost 1-1 4-2Penalties-Yards 7-57 9-74Possession Time 25:04 34:56Third-Down Conversions 4-11 6-14Fourth-Down Conversions 1-2 1-4

Rushing: W: Wickes 11-107; LaFate 15-62; Stewart 1-7; Morrison 2-5; 3-(-7); Klein 6-(-34). S: Lee 21-111; Holley 13-69; Stanford 12-54; Pensamiento 1-1; Cornell 1-(-7); Jefferson 1-(-14); Gasparovic 4-(-35). Passing: W: Klein 27-33-0-303. S: Gasparovic 17-31-2-241. Receiving: W: Davis 9-162; Quattlebaum 4-40; Morrison 4-31; LaFate 3-13; Marcucci 2-10; Wickes 2-5; Price 1-22; Shostek 1-12; Schlegel 1-8. S: Miller 5-81; Townley 5-78; Wysocki 2-42; Holley 2-25; Harps 2-14; Pensamiento 1-1.

Widener set the tempo in the first half and pulled away in the second to hold off Stevenson. Michael Bennett had an immediate impact after Widener’s first drive when his 44-yard punt went out of bounds at the Stevenson seven yard line. On the ensuing play, Stacey Sunnerville sacked quarter-back John Gasparovic in the end zone for a safety and a 2-0 Pride lead. Seth Klein was 6-for-6 on the next drive that ended with a 40-yard fade to pass to a wide-open Anthony Davis with exactly seven minutes left in the first. Stevenson got some momentum back on the next drive by going 49 yards in 11 plays, before Widener’s pass defense forced a long field goal. After Charlie Cornell did not get to attempt Stevenson’s first try thanks to a bad snap, he converted on a 40-yard boot with 3:22 remaining in the first for a 9-3 deficit. The Mustangs decided to gamble on fourth and goal at the one yard line and it paid off. William Hill-Pensamiento ran off tackle and his second effort got him in the end zone with 11:14 left in the first half for a 10-9 Stevenson lead. Stevenson on its next drive got to the Widener six after Gasparovic hit Madison Townley on a 36-yard pass. But the defense came through on the following play as Dylan Ditmer stripped running back Marcus Holley and Colin Masterson recovered with 5:18 left in the half for a mammoth turnover. When the Mustangs got the ball back, a second botched field goal attempt gave the Pride the ball and a shorter field. This time, Widener capitalized with Klein finding Jermaine Quattlebaum over the middle for a 16-yard TD with 61 seconds to go in the half. Klein then hit Adam Marcucci on the two-point conversion for a 17-10 cushion going into halftime. Klein in the first half completed an astonishing 20-of-22 passes for 225 yards. Three plays after Rashon Sorrell returned the second-half kickoff 42 yards to the Pride’s 45 yard line, Klein hit a wide-open Davis for a 55-yard scoring pass 43 seconds into the half for a 24-10 margin. Couve LaFate added to the scoring with a 17-yard run up the middle with 7:01 left for a 31-10 contest. That burst was set up when Christopher Wickes busted down the left sideline for a 54-yard run to the Mustangs 26 yard line. The Mustangs had 167 yards of offense in the second half, but it seemed far fewer than that. Tyrone Bundy had 11 tackles, Ditmer and Masterson notched 10 apiece and Sunnerville amassed two sacks. Ditmer forced two fumbles, Joshua Cooper had one with Masterson and Stephon Singleton each getting an interception. Klein completed 27-of-33 passes for 303 yards and three TDs. Davis had nine catches for 162 yards. Wickes closed with 11 rushes for a career-best 107 yards.

Widener 38, Misericordia 20 • Oct. 19, 2013 • Chester, PAMisericordia 0 0 14 6 -- 20Widener 10 7 14 7 -- 38

W 12:54/1 Marcucci 23 pass from Klein (O’Hara kick)W 9:19/1 O’Hara 36 field goalW 5:46/2 Brown 1 run (O’Hara kick)W 11:33/3 Wickes 1 run (O’Hara kick)M 6:12/3 Puckett 7 run (Newins kick)M 2:04/3 Lucchesi fumble recovery in end zone (Newins kick)W :34/3 Davis 28 pass from Klein (O’Hara kick)W 10:11/4 Jones 65 fumble recovery (O’Hara kick)M 1:37/4 Kurtz 1 run (Pheasant rush failed)

Misericordia WidenerFirst Downs 20 23Rushes-Yards 59-234 49-188Passing Yards 133 253Passes Comp-Att-Int 12-22-0 22-29-0Offensive Plays-Yards 81-367 78-441Fumbles-Lost 3-1 4-1Penalties-Yards 2-20 5-50Possession Time 36:42 23:18Third-Down Conversions 11-20 9-17Fourth-Down Conversions 1-1 3-4

Rushing: M: Puckett 25-92; Kurtz 9-51; Grausso 3-34; Santarsiero 11-33; Custodio 6-22; Adeye-mo 3-8; Kirkland 1-3; Team 1-(-9); Lucchesi 0-0. W: LaFate 18-85; Brown 12-52; Wickes 9-38; McMaster 3-15; Quattlebaum 1-5; Shostek 1-3; Klein 5-(-10). Passing: M: Puckett 12-22-0-133. W: Klein 21-27-0-249; Thompson 1-2-0-4. Receiving: M: Stelzer 5-27; Petties-Jacks 3-84; Pyne 2-13; Kirkland 1-6; Kowalski 1-3. W: Davis 7-108; Wickes 5-34; Marcucci 3-61; Quattlebaum 3-25; DiGiovanni 2-19; Schlegel 1-4; Brown 1-2.

Widener scored the game’s first 24 points and held off a pesky Misericordia on Homecoming Weekend. After forcing the Cougars into a three-and-out on their first drive, the Pride needed just four plays to go 40 yards on their initial march following a bad punt that stayed away from Anthony Davis. The drive ended when Seth Klein found Adam Marcucci wide open on a 23-yard touchdown pass for a 7-0 lead. After another three-and-out, it was back to the grind for Widener’s offense and its latest march resulted in a 36-yard field goal from Ryan O’Hara with 9:19 left in the first quarter for a 10-0 cushion. The Pride were pinned back at their two yard line early in the second quarter, but did not need to worry. An 18-play drive, 98-yard drive that featured 14 runs ended when Richard Brown bulldozed in from the one with 5:46 left in the half for a 17-0 margin. Widener received the second half kickoff and continued its dominance for a 24-0 lead. The run game again was prevalent against Misericordia, which entered last in the league in rushing defense. Ten rushing plays over a 13-play drive culminated when Christopher Wickes scored on a one-yard run with 11:33 remaining in the third. The Cougars then made things interesting, scoring touchdowns on each of their next two drives for a 24-14 deficit. Quarterback Jeff Puckett ran outside for a seven-yard run and Dean Lucchesi recovered Puckett’s fumble in the end zone with 2:04 to play in the third. Widener on its next march got back to business and Klein continued his solid play, finding a wide-open Davis for a 28-yard scoring pass with 34 seconds left in the period for a 31-14 lead. The fourth quarter featured the game’s signature play. Puckett went back to pass and got crushed by Dylan Ditmer, forcing a fumble. Brandon Jones picked up the loose ball and ran 65 yards untouched for the score and Widener’s second defensive touchdown of the year. Ryan Kurtz ran one in for the Cougars from one yard to close the scoring. Klein completed 21-of-27 passes for 249 yards. Davis ended with seven catches for 108 yards. Couve LaFate totaled 18 carries for 85 yards for the Pride, who had 441 yards of total offense, converted 9-of-17 third downs and 3-of-4 fourth downs. Colin Masterson had a game with 11 tackles for the Pride, who held the Cougars to just 133 yards passing.

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Widener 59, FDU-Florham 14 • Oct. 26, 2013 • Chester, PAFDU-Florham 0 7 0 7 -- 14Widener 14 28 10 7 -- 59

W 14:28/1 LaFate 44 run (O’Hara kick)W 3:31/1 Brown 2 run (O’Hara kick)W 13:41/2 Getz 1 run (O’Hara kick)W 10:39/2 McMaster 2 run (O’Hara kick)F 6:10/2 Kimbrough 2 run (Gavin kick)W 5:35/2 Davis 52 pass from Klein (O’Hara kick)W 1:31/2 Price 16 pass from Klein (O’Hara kick)W 10:57/3 O’Hara 32 field goalW 10:05/3 Sorrell 10 run (O’Hara kick)F 6:15/4 Ognibene 1 run (Gavin kick)W 2:53/4 Thompson 1 run (O’Hara kick)

FDU-Florham WidenerFirst Downs 15 31Rushes-Yards 41-156 44-227Passing Yards 162 382Passes Comp-Att-Int 19-33-1 32-41-0Offensive Plays-Yards 74-318 85-609Fumbles-Lost 2-1 1-0Penalties-Yards 1-15 10-73Possession Time 33:59 26:01Third-Down Conversions 4-17 9-14Fourth-Down Conversions 3-5 0-1

Rushing: F: Ognibene 3-59; Kimbrough 10-39; Stewart 14-25; Krough 7-23; Santos 3-7; Fruncillo 2-7; Team 1-(-2); Pastor 1-(-2). W: LaFate 9-69; Patterson 4-36; Wickes 6-30; McMaster 5-30; Brown 7-29; Pressey 6-15; Sorrell 1-10; Klein 1-9; Getz 1-1; Thompson 2-1; Team 2-(-3). Pass-ing: F: Santos 19-32-1-162; Fruncillo 0-1-0-0. W: Klein 22-24-0-276; Thompson 10-17-0-106. Receiving: F: Kimbrough 4-0; Mobley 3-38; Lara 3-29; Van Orden 2-40; Stewart 2-22; Swankoski 2-11; Fruncillo 1-21; Ognibene 1-2; DeFeo 1-(-1). W: Davis 5-101; Wickes 4-23; Schlegel 3-61; Quattlebaum 3-17; Price 2-31; Jackson 2-20; LaFate 2-19; Locotos 2-18; Flannery 2-13; Pressey 2-9; Shostek 1-21; Marcucci 1-19; McMaster 1-15; Dahm 1-12; Boland 1-3.

Widener put up 42 points in the opening half and the defense once again played solidly in win over FDU-Florham. A mere 32 seconds was needed for Widener to open a 7-0 lead. One play after catching an 11-yard pass, Couve LaFate rushed the ball down the right sideline 44 yards for a score. On the next drive, Richard Brown had the last five carries on the 70-yard march that included a two-yard plunge for a 14-0 lead with 3:31 remaining in the period. The second quarter was more of the same as Widener put away the contest. Robert Getz barreled in from one yard early in the stanza and Colby McMaster added a two-yard burst with 10:39 left for a 28-0 margin. Though Widener’s defense had another outstanding game, it was breached with 6:10 to play in the half when Craig Kimbrough ended a 79-yard drive with a two yard run for a 28-7 margin. That merely was an interruption of the Pride’s solid afternoon. Seth Klein hit Anthony Davis on an eight-yard pass to start the next drive and then connected with him on a 52-yard TD strike for a 35-7 Widener lead. The Pride then got a fortuitous break with 91 seconds remaining in the half. Klein’s pass over the middle was deflected by a Devils linebacker and hauled in by Blaine Price for a 16-yard score and a 42-7 halftime margin. This culminated a half in which the Pride owned a decisive 412-192 edge in total offense, amassed a 22-10 advantage in first downs and limited the Devils to just 76 yards rushing. Klein, who only played in the first half, completed 22-of-24 passes for 276 yards. Ryan O’Hara booted a 32-yard field goal early in the third quarter for a 45-7 margin. After Sean Titus returned an interception 21 yards to the FDU 10 yard line, Rashon Sorrell ran one in on the next play for a 52-7 contest. Anthony Ognibene had a one-yard TD run for the Devils and Michael Thompson followed suit for the Pride to end the scoring. Davis had all of his production in the first half, getting five receptions for 101 yards. LaFate ended with nine carries for 69 yards for the Pride, who closed with a 609-318 edge in total offense and were playing the Devils one week after notching their 666th win in program history. Vaughn Nichols-Taylor and Brandon Harper had five tackles each for Widener, which allowed just 156 rushing yards.

Albright 33, Widener 19 • Nov. 2, 2013 • Reading, PAWidener 7 3 9 0 -- 19Albright 3 14 3 13 -- 33

W 8:40/1 LaFate 9 pass from Klein (O’Hara kick)A 3:53/1 Sobolewski 49 field goalA 5:49/2 Hughes 1 run (Sobolewski kick)A :55/2 McNair 27 pass from Luddy (Sobolewski kick)W :01/2 O’Hara 27 field goalW 13:57/3 Davis 9 pass from Klein (O’Hara kick failed)W 11:28/3 O’Hara 37 field goalA 7:08/3 Sobolewski 25 field goalA 13:43/4 Sobolewski 21 field goalA 9:58/4 Sobolewski 38 field goalA 8:15/4 Cunningham 36 blocked punt ret. (Sobolewski kick)

Widener AlbrightFirst Downs 18 17Rushes-Yards 33-24 39-45Passing Yards 350 256Passes Comp-Att-Int 35-44-1 16-25-0Offensive Plays-Yards 77-374 64-301Fumbles-Lost 1-0 0-0Penalties-Yards 5-35 6-50Possession Time 26:27 33:33Third-Down Conversions 8-19 3-13Fourth-Down Conversions 0-2 0-1

Rushing: W: LaFate 10-65; Wickes 6-10; Brown 4-(-1); Klein 13-(-50). A: Hughes 20-46; Luddy 11-3; Clark 1-2; Brickhouse 5-0; Team 2-(-6). Passing: W: Klein 35-44-1-350. A: Luddy 16-25-0-256. Receiving: W: Davis 14-99; LaFate 7-40; Marcucci 5-104; Quattlebaum 5-61; Schlegel 1-23; Price 1-15; Brown 1-6; Wickes 1-2. A: McNair 7-109; Clark 6-99; Williams 2-27; Wade 1-21.

Anthony Davis broke the school’s single-season receptions record, but Widener came up short at Albright. Widener’s offense on the first drive was in full gear thanks to Seth Klein. The march was highlighted by a 37-yard pass to Adam Marcucci and a 38-yard completion to Davis. The 89-yard drive ended when Klein found Couve LaFate on a nine-yard TD pass for a 7-0 lead with 8:40 remaining in the first. The Pride’s defense shutdown the Lions on the next possession that resulted in a seven-play, 10-yard drive. But Albright has Dan Sobolewski as its kicker and he was able to drill a line-drive 49-yard field goal with 3:53 remaining in the first for a 7-3 contest. Albright finally breached Widener’s defense midway through the second. TJ Luddy completed a 33-yard pass to Daniel McNair at the one yard line and Ty Hughes, two plays later, had a one-yard dive with 5:49 to play to give the Lions a 10-7 lead. The Lions then hit the Pride with the latter’s greatest deficit in more than a month, a 17-7 margin with 56 seconds left in the half. Seven plays after Klein was intercepted by Drew Peterson, Luddy found McNair wide open on a 27-yard TD pass. Klein on Widener’s next possession hit Jermaine Quattlebaum on a 35-yard fade route to the Albright 30. Ryan O’Hara gave the Pride much-needed points on a 27-yard field goal with one second left for a 17-10 halftime score. Klein in the first half completed 16-of-19 passes for 179 yards for the Pride, who held a 227-148 edge in total offense in that span. The Pride opened the second half taking advantage of a short field and a 26 yard pass from Klein to Marcucci. The march culminated with Klein’s nine-yard TD pass to Davis 63 seconds into the half, but the extra point was missed for a 17-16 deficit. Albright on its next possession had fourth down in its territory when Luddy, who doubles as the team’s punter, dropped a short snap and Widener took over at the home team’s 24 yard line. O’Hara closed the drive with a 37-yard field goal with 11:28 to play in the third for a 19-17 Widener lead. The Lions got those points back on the next drive when Sobolewski nailed a 25-yard field goal with 7:08 to play in the third for a 20-19 margin. Sobolewski drilled a 21-yarder 1:17 into the fourth and then converted the unconventional natural hat trick by hitting a 38-yard boot with 9:58 left for a 26-19 Lions advantage. Albright had enough with the field goals and let its special teams go to work. After a low snap to Widener punter Michael Bennett, Sean Cunningham blocked it and raced 23 yards for the TD with 8:15 remaining for the final. Davis ended with 14 receptions and now has 76 to break the school’s single-season mark set by Jeff Chick, who had 73 in 2005. Klein completed 35-of-44 passes for 350 yards and two TDs for Widener, which ended with a 374-301 edge in total offense. Kevin Burns amassed eight tackles.

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Widener 52, King’s 20 • Nov. 9, 2013 • Chester, PAKing’s 7 0 0 13 -- 20Widener 21 10 14 7 -- 52

W 11:48/1 Wickes 1 run (O’Hara kick)W 5:54/1 LaFate 91 run (O’Hara kick)K 2:33/1 Burke fumble recovery in end zone (Mulvihill kick)W 1:06/1 Wickes 3 run (O’Hara kick)W 8:45/2 Davis 20 pass from Klein (O’Hara kick)W :06/2 O’Hara 18 field goalW 13:29/3 LaFate 3 run (O’Hara kick)W 2:22/3 Schlegel 28 pass from Klein (O’Hara kick)K 14:50/4 Kempa 61 pass from Hartranft (Kevin Mulvihill kick blocked)W 14:33/4 McMaster 35 run (O’Hara kick)K 2:24/4 Hehre 6 run (Mulvihill kick)

King’s WidenerFirst Downs 20 22Rushes-Yards 37-130 49-314Passing Yards 224 223Passes Comp-Att-Int 15-34-0 15-28-1Offensive Plays-Yards 71-354 77-537Fumbles-Lost 2-1 0-0Penalties-Yards 8-80 10-80Possession Time 35:21 24:39Third-Down Conversions 2-13 7-16Fourth-Down Conversions 1-3 3-3

Rushing: K: Robinson 7-60; McGrath 22-58; Hehre 6-23; Hartranft 2-(-11). W: LaFate 19-174; Wickes 12-80; McMaster 4-36; Shostek 1-18; Brown 4-14; Davis 1-0; Patterson 3-(-1); Klein 5-(-7). Passing: K: Hartranft 15-31-0-224; Hehre 0-3-0-0. W: Klein 15-27-1-223; Thompson 0-1-0-0. Receiving: K: Kempa 7-156; Sanders 2-24; Robinson 2-19; McGrath 1-9; Thomas 1-9; Albano 1-8; Grampp 1-(-1). W: Quattlebaum 5-80; Davis 3-66; Marcucci 2-17; LaFate 2-9; Schlegel 1-28; Getz 1-20; Wickes 1-3.

Couve LaFate broke off a 91-yard TD run early in the contest that set the tone in a victory over King’s. Afraid to kick to Anthony Davis, the Monarchs booted the opening kickoff out of bounds before surrendering a one-yard TD run by Chris Wickes for a 7-0 lead. On the Pride’s next pos-session, LaFate took a handoff on the drive’s second play, ran up the middle and cruised into the end zone for the game’s signature play and a 14-0 margin with 5:54 left in the first. It is Widener’s longest run since the legendary Billy “White Shoes” Johnson had a 93-yard TD scamper at Ursinus on October 28, 1972. King’s got a huge break on its next drive. Tyler Hartranft completed a pass to Josh Sanders and was crushed by Kevin Burns, forcing a fumble. But Justin Burke was there in the end zone for the recovery with 2:33 to play and a 14-7 deficit. Wickes on the Pride’s next march had a 51-yard run to the Monarchs’ 18 yard line and then scored on a three-yard burst with 1:06 left in the quarter for a 21-7 margin. The defenses in the second quarter began to take shape with several stalled drives. Widener was able to capitalize on a short field after Hartranft’s quick kick went four yards to the King’s 45. Three plays later, Seth Klein found Davis on a 20-yard fade pass with 8:45 left in the half for a 28-7 margin. The Pride then used a 14-play drive late in the half to lead into Ryan O’Hara booting an 18-yard field goal with six seconds remaining for a 31-7 halftime score. LaFate already was at 142 yards in the opening half on 14 carries, helping Widener gain 231 yards on the ground in the half en route to a 344-109 edge in total offense. King’s first drive in the second half ended after just two plays when Jamal Goodman forced and recovered a fumble at the visitors’ 27 yard line. LaFate got his second TD of the contest on a three-yard run for a 38-7 Widener lead. Connor Schlegel hauled in a 28-yard TD pass from Klein later in the third and Colby McMaster added a 35-yard TD run early in the fourth for the Pride. Dan Kempa caught a 61-yard TD pass from Hartranft and backup quarterback Tom Hehre scored on a six-yard TD run for the Monarchs. LaFate ended with 174 rushing on 19 carries for his first career 100-yard game. This helped the Pride close with 314 yards rushing, their greatest total since getting 321 in a snowstorm at Albright on October 29, 2011. Klein, who for the second straight week entered leading the nation in completion percentage, completed 15-of-27 passes for 223 yards. Jermaine Quattlebaum hauled in five receptions for 80 yards for Widener, which closed with a 537-354 edge in total offense. Dylan Ditmer had 11 solo tackles for the Pride, who permitted just 130 rushing yards and forced the Monarchs to go just 2-of-13 on third-down conversions.

Delaware Valley 50, Widener 28 • Nov. 16, 2013 • Doylestown, PAWidener 14 14 0 0 -- 28Del. Val. 10 7 19 14 -- 50

D 13:16/1 Snyder 30 field goalW 10:39/1 Morrison 20 run (O’Hara kick)D 7:32/1 Bailey 32 pass from Aaron Wilmer (Snyder kick)W 5:41/1 Davis 31 pass from Klein (O’Hara kick)D 11:59/2 Bailey 21 pass from Wilmer (Snyder kick)W 5:25/2 Morrison 9 run (O’Hara kick)W :29/2 Davis 10 pass from Seth Klein (O’Hara kick)D 10:10/3 Wilmer 6 run (Snyder kick blocked)D 4:10/3 Parrott 8 run (Wilmer pass failed)D :52/3 Schuberth 65 run (Snyder kick)D 5:49/4 Schuberth 1 run (Snyder kick)D 1:43/4 Schuberth 59 run (Snyder kick)

Widener Del. Val.First Downs 27 26Rushes-Yards 41-174 49-322Passing Yards 308 310Passes Comp-Att-Int 35-55-2 18-31-2Offensive Plays-Yards 96-482 80-632Fumbles-Lost 1-0 0-0Penalties-Yards 8-86 5-46Possession Time 26:23 33:37Third-Down Conversions 10-21 10-18Fourth-Down Conversions 0-3 1-2

Rushing: W: Morrison 11-72; Wickes 14-42; McMaster 6-27; Davis 1-19; LaFate 4-14; Klein 5-0. D: Schuberth 26-235; Wilmer 18-75; Parrott 1-8; Bing 1-7; Team 3-(-3). Passing: W: Klein 35-55-2-308. D: Wilmer 18-30-2-310; Anusky 0-1-0-0. Receiving: W: Davis 12-119; Quattlebaum 8-48; Wickes 5-42; Morrison 5-32; Ragona 3-51; Schlegel 1-16; LaFate 1-0. D: Smallwood 6-68; Bailey 4-104; Vincent 4-75; Bing 2-2; Parrott 1-47; Lopez 1-14.Seth Klein broke the school’s single-season completions record, but Widener saw its season come to an end at Delaware Valley. The Aggies on their first two drives used two long passes from Aaron Wilmer to Lewis Vincent that went 31 and 32 yards. The Pride’s defense stopped the home team up the middle before Brandon Snyder kicked a 30-yard field goal less than two minutes into the contest for a 3-0 Aggies lead. Widener’s fast-paced offense scored a TD on its opening drive for the fifth straight game. Terrant Morrison ended it with a 20-yard TD and a 7-3 Pride lead with 10:35 to play in the first. Rasheed Bailey took his turn on center stage for the Aggies on consecutive plays. He blocked a punt that was recovered at the Pride 32 yard line and then hauled in a TD reception from Wilmer with 7:32 left in the quarter for a 10-7 Del Val lead. Klein did not panic on the next drive, completing a 16-yard pass to Connor Schlegel and then a 31-yard touchdown pass to Anthony Davis. The latter avoided several tacklers and worked his way inside the left pylon for a 14-10 Pride lead with 5:41 remaining in the first. Del Val regained the lead at 17-14 just over three minutes into the second quarter. Bailey again showed his athleticism by catching Wilmer’s pass over the middle and racing 21 yards for the TD. Colin Masterson has made many big plays in his career and he added another with an interception at the Aggies 40 yard line. Mor-rison capped the drive with his second TD, a nine-yard run with 5:25 remaining for a 21-17 Pride lead. Widener, which for the third straight year entered this game with a chance to win at least a share of the conference title, then got another TD for the half ’s biggest lead thanks to an efficient 74-yard drive that took under two minutes. Klein found a leaping Davis at the left pylon for a 10-yard TD catch with 29 seconds left in the half and a 28-17 Pride advantage. The Aggies on the first drive in the second half took advantage of penalties and a questionable fourth-down spot to close to 28-23 with 10:10 to play in the third. Wilmer scored on a six-yard keeper up the middle, but Kevin Burns blocked the extra point. Darren Parrott gave Del Val the lead with 4:10 to play in the third by scampering eight yards to make it 29-28 for the home team after the two-point conversion failed. The Aggies then took a 36-28 lead with 53 seconds left in the third thanks to Kyle Schuberth. He took a handoff, darted up the middle and went untouched 65 yards for the TD. Schuberth then scored on a two-yard TD run, making it 43-28 Aggies with 5:49 remaining. Schuberth put away the contest on a 59-yard run with 1:43 left for the final. Klein completed 35-of-55 passes for 308 yards and two scores to give him 285 completions, breaking the mark of 282 set last season by Chris Haupt. He also closes the year with 2,809 passing yards, good for fifth best in school history. Davis amassed 12 catches for 119 yards and two TD.

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WIDENER PRIDE22

WIDENER UNIVERSITY

Widener University takes pride in devel-oping leaders. Founded in 1821, Widener has grown through 190 years of leadership. The univer-sity has graduated great leaders throughout its history—alumni who have served as generals, members of Congress, judges, CEOs, engi-neers, authors, and teachers. Widener continues to turn out graduates who enter their chosen fields and not only succeed, but are also quickly recognized as standouts who show the rare skills needed to reshape their companies, industries, and communities. How does Widener do this? By being an innovative metropolitan university that

It is the policy of Widener University not to discriminate on the basis of sex, age, race, national origin or ethnicity, religion, disability, status as a veteran of the Vietnam era or other covered veteran, sexual orientation, gender identity, marital status, or genetic information in its educational programs, admissions policies, employment practices, financial aid, or other school-administered programs or activities. This policy is enforced under various federal and state laws, including Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 as amended by the Civil Rights Act of 1991, Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972, Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, the Age Discrimination in Employment Act, and the Americans with Disabilities Act. Further, in compliance with state and federal laws, Widener University will provide the following information upon request to the Senior Vice President, Administration and Finance, Widener University, One University Place, Chester, PA 19013, (610) 499-4151: (a) copies of documents pertinent to the university’s accreditations, approvals, or licensing by external agencies or governmental bodies; (b) reports on crime statistics and information on safety policies and procedures; and (c) information regarding gender equity relative to intercollegiate athletic programs. Comments or requests for information regarding services and resources for disabled students should be directed to: Director of Disability Services, Widener University, One University Place, Chester, PA 19013, 610-499-1270; or Office of Student Affairs, Delaware Campus of Widener University, P.O. Box 7474, Wilmington, DE 19803, 302-477-2142.

Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972 prohibits discrimination based on gender in educational programs and activities that receive federal financial assistance. Such programs include recruitment, admissions, financial aid, scholarships, athletics, course offerings and access, hiring and retention, and benefits and leave. Title IX also protects students and employees from unlawful sexual harassment (including sexual violence) in university programs and activities. In compliance with Title IX, the university prohibits discrimination and harassment based on sex in employment, as well as in all programs and activities. The university’s Title IX coordinator monitors compliance with Title IX and its accompanying regulations. Individuals with questions or concerns about Title IX or those who wish to file a complaint of noncompliance may contact the university’s Title IX coordinator, Denise Gifford, Associate Provost for Student Life and Dean of Students. The U.S. Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights (OCR) is the division of the federal government charged with enforcing compliance with Title IX. Information regarding OCR can be found at: www.ed.gov/about/offices/list/ocr/index.html. This publication contains information, policies, procedures, regulations, and requirements that were correct at the time of publication. In keeping with the educational mission of the university, the information, policies, procedures, regulations, and requirements contained herein are continually being reviewed, changed, and updated. Consequently, this document cannot be considered binding and must be used solely as an informational guide. Students are responsible for keeping informed of official policies and meeting all relevant requirements.

The university reserves the right and authority at any time to alter any or all of the statements contained herein, to modify the requirements for admission and graduation, to change or discontinue programs of study, to amend any regulation or policy affecting the student body, to increase tuition and fees, to deny admission, to revoke an offer of admission, and to dismiss from the university any student at any time, if it is deemed by the university to be in the best interest of the university, the university community, or the student to do so. The provisions of this publication are subject to change without notice, and nothing in this publication may be considered as setting forth terms of a contract between a student or a prospective student and Widener University.

connects curricula to societal issues through civic engagement. Dynamic teaching, active scholarship, personal attention, and expe-riential learning are key components of the Widener experience. The university provides a unique combination of liberal arts and pro-fessional education in a challenging, scholarly, and culturally diverse learning environment. Academic offerings include more than 100 undergraduate and graduate programs pro-vided through eight schools and colleges—the College of Arts and Sciences; the Schools of Business Administration, Engineering, Hospitality Management, Human Service Professions, Law, and Nursing; and the School of Education, Innovation and Continuing

Studies. Faculty members provide the personal attention students need to succeed in their studies. Widener enhances solid academic programs with opportunities for career preparation through internships, extensive career counseling, and experiential learning, including student projects, faculty-mentored student research, practicum placements, and service learning. Widener has continued its longstanding commitment to leadership with a variety of programs offered through the Oskin Leader-ship Institute on the Main Campus in Chester. The institute enables Widener students leader-ship development opportunities and programs focused on developing the character, courage, and competencies to implement positive change throughout the world. In addition, the institute offers an executive leadership program, providing opportunities for corpo-rate and nonprofit executives to enhance their global leadership skills. Widener serves a wide range of students—from traditional undergraduates to adults returning to complete their degrees to graduate and law students, as well as retirees seeking continuing education programs. The university offers a student-centered ex-perience that helps students balance academics with their daily lives. On the Main Campus, the home base of almost 3,000 day undergrad-uate students, a wide range of extracurricular activities are available. Adult undergraduate and graduate students receive the flexibility they need to combine their studies with work and family obligations. Continuing Studies students can take classes in person and online. The Main Campus offers graduate courses in all non-law subjects while the Harrisburg Campus offers graduate courses in law and nursing. Law students can choose between the Delaware and Harrisburg Campuses. Many programs offer summer classes, as well as flexibility in pacing and course sequencing. The Osher Lifelong Learning Institute (OLLI) on the Exton Campus fulfills both the educational and social needs of adults aged 50 and over. An educational cooperative, OLLI provides members with noncredit classes taught by their peers. To learn more about these and many other initiatives and programs, visit www.widener.edu.

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First Team All-Middle Atlantic ConferenceAnthony Davis ......................................................WidenerMike Pacitti ..........................................................WidenerDylan Ditmer........................................................WidenerColin Masterson ....................................................WidenerShakore Philip .......................................................Widener

Second Team All-Middle Atlantic ConferenceStacey Sunnerville .................................................WidenerCouve LaFate ........................................................Widener

Honorable Mention All-Middle Atlantic ConferenceSeth Klein .............................................................WidenerDarius Johnson .....................................................WidenerJermaine Quattlebaum ..........................................WidenerJohn DiBiase .........................................................Widener

Offensive Player of the Year: Anthony Davis, WidenerRookie of the Year: Seth Klein, WidenerCoach of the Year: Jim Monos, Lebanon ValleyDefensive Player of the Year: Frank Gaffney, Widener

Middle Atlantic Conference Postseason ResultsNCAA Tournament (November 23)Wittenberg 59, Lebanon Valley 17

ECAC Southeast Bowl (November 23)Franklin & Marshall 38, Delaware Valley 14

ECAC Southwest Bowl (November 23)Albright 45, Juniata 34

Middle Atlantic Conference Standings TeAm mAC oVeRALL

1. Lebanon Valley 7-2 .778 8-3 .727 Lycoming 7-2 .778 7-3 .700 3. Widener 6-3 .667 6-4 .600 Albright 6-3 .667 8-3 .727 Delaware Valley 6-3 .667 7-4 .636 King’s 6-3 .667 6-4 .6007. Wilkes 3-6 .333 4-6 .400 Stevenson 3-6 .333 4-6 .400 9. Misericordia 1-8 .111 1-9 .100 10. FDU-Florham 0-9 .000 1-9 .100

The Middle Atlantic Conference, formerly the Middle Atlantic States Collegiate Athletic Conference and commonly known as the MAC, orig-inated in 1912 as a loose confederation of colleges. It was unified into an actual all-sports playing conference in 1952 and became the oldest and largest Division III conference holding NCAA membership. In 1999, spurred by changes in the NCAA championship structure, the corporation formed as an umbrella for three conferences: Commonwealth, Freedom, and Middle Atlantic (all 17 institutions). The Commonwealth is made up of Albright, Arcadia, Alvernia, Hood, Lebanon Valley, Lycoming, Messiah, Stevenson and Widener. The Freedom is comprised of Delaware Valley, DeSales, Eastern, FDU-Florham, King’s, Manhattanville, Miseri-cordia and Wilkes. The earliest records indicate that the Middle Atlantic States Collegiate Athletic Association was organized December 11, 1912. The first annual meeting was held May 16, 1913, followed by the first annual track meet at Lafayette College the next day. In subsequent years, the association grew and many leagues sprang within it. The Middle Atlantic Collegiate Wrestling Association, formed in March 1925, was the first to name a Middle Atlantic champion. The first basketball conference, formed as three divisions (North, West, South), had winners join an at-large selection for a four-team playoff. The three-section alignment eventually dissolved, but the Southern Division remained intact. Alignments were further altered when the NCAA created Divisions I, II and III. The MAC added women’s athletics in 1978-79. The steady incor-poration of senior women’s administrators into the conference hierarchy reached its zenith when Dr. Carol Fritz, associate athletic director at Western Maryland, was elected president in 1986. During the first 76 years, several athletic directors served as conference coordinators on a part-time basis. David B. Eavenson, a MAC legend, served as president, publicity director and executive director from 1972-1988. Nathan Salant in 1998 became the conference’s first full-time executive director. Major changes were made for the 1993-94 year. Ten schools left to form their own association. Their departure served as a catalyst for the presidents and athletic administrators of the remaining 16 schools to form a streamlined, efficient, dual-league organization. This “new look” was part of a national movement to consolidate similar institutions for competitive

athletic opportunities while increasing presidential involvement in the setting of athletic policy. It also was the year Linda Hopple became the league’s first female executive director, serving from 1993-2000. Ken Andrews took over for Hopple, becoming the conference’s third full-time executive director. The conference office was housed at Widener University from 1988-93. It was moved to the campus of Lebanon Valley College upon the hiring of Hopple and remains there today. A moratorium on new membership ended in June 1995. In December of that year, the board accepted Allentown College (now DeSales Universi-ty) as a new member of the conference, effective for the 1997-98 academic year. DeSales was placed in the Freedom Conference and replaced Upsala College, which closed in 1995. Stevenson and Hood joined the MAC in 2012-13 as full-time members and were placed in the Commonwealth Conference. Stevenson began competing in the league for football in 2011. Elizabethtown left the conference after the 2013-14 academic year. The conference sponsors competition in baseball, basketball, cross country, field hockey, football, golf, indoor and outdoor track and field, lacrosse, soccer, softball, swimming, tennis and volleyball.

MIDDLE ATLANTIC CONFERENCE / 2013 REVIEW

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C. ROBERT CHERVANIK ‘37 AWARD(Leadership and Academics)

2013 Mike Pacitti, OL2011 Andrew Philpott, OL2010 Joe Favinger, LB2009 Chris Waldron, OL2008 Mike Chambers, OL2007 Jamie Schild, WR2006 Jamie Schild, WR2005 Mike Lomas, QB2004 Larry Hendrickson, OL2003 Jeff Shahan, DL2002 Steve Hutchison, LB2001 T.J. Hess, DB2000 Matt Witmer, LB1999 Jason Bottoms, OL

1998 Chris Hutchison, FB1997 Jesse Merscher, DB1996 Clarence Giles, LB1995 Doug MacLaughlin, FB1994 Blaise Coleman, LB1993 Dave Braksator, OL1992 Keith Dukes, SE1991 Scott Russell, LB1990 David Wood, DB1989 Kevin Beetel, LB1988 Mike Betts, LB1987 Joe Baker, G1986 Dan Hiester, T1985 Ted Johannssen, SS

MOST VALUABLE PLAYERS BY POSITION Offensive Line Receiver Offensive Back2013 Mike Pacitti Anthony Davis Couve LaFate2011 Gerry Pacitti Cedrick Clayton Terrant Morrison2010 Harry Rannels Cedrick Clayton Brendan Curran2009 Justin Leipert Justin Horning Adam Smith2008 Chris Waldron Tim Kilkenny Ian Decker2007 Michael Fagnani Mike Falkenstein Ian Decker2006 Michael Fagnani Jamie Schild Matt Campbell2005 Michael Fagnani Jeff Chick James Fagnani2004 Joe Taylor Tyreak Saviour Mike Lomas2003 Joe Taylor Tyreak Saviour Raymond Keshel2002 Butch Bender Mike deMarteleire Mike Warker Andy Clark2001 Tom Worrilow Michael Coleman Mike Ambrose Jim Jones 2000 Jeff Faust Michael Coleman Mike Ambrose Bill Woodburn Jim Jones Sean Selover1999 Jason Bottoms Jim Jones Jerome Robinson1998 Jeff Kuc Trent Everett Leon Payne1997 Jeff Kuc Trent Everett Leon Payne1996 Jeff Kuc Joe Brangan Leon Payne1995 Jeff Bell Boonta Kheuangthirath Robsawne Little1994 Dave Braksator Boonta Kheuangthirath Anthony Gossette1993 Dave Braksator Keith Dukes Anthony Gossette1992 Bob Cooper Keith Dukes Bill Bailey1991 Bill Ford Tom Needham Bill Bailey1990 Scott Cummings Joe Sweeley Brian Lower1989 John Davidson Dan Santhouse Alan Robinson Defensive Line Linebacker Defensive Back2013 Darius Johnson Dylan Ditmer Colin Masterson2011 Chad Gravinese Joe Wojceichowski Nick Rodriguez2010 Shane Szumski Joe Wojceichowski N/A2009 James Woodley Joe Favinger Kevin Franklin2008 James Woodley Joe Favinger TD Davis2007 Tom Gallo Dan MacDonald Orlando Brown2006 Tom Gallo Mike McFadden Todd Fairlie2005 Adam Parcell Matt Yost Todd Fairlie2004 Dave Barger Nick Rubino B.J. Hogan2003 Thomas DeMoss Mike Stewart B.J. Hogan2002 Ryan Killian Steve Varrasse B.J. Hogan2001 Ryan Killian Mark Del Tin T.J. Hess2000 Duke Sparrow Matt Witmer T.J. Hess Dante Trader1999 Dan McClain Tom Eisenhower Dominic Dinisio1998 Bill Nourse Bill Collins Mark Lowman1997 Jack Signor Jason Raysor Mark Lowman1996 Lloyd Hill Clarence Giles Sean Stoner1995 Dan Ademski Blaise Coleman Jeff Steigerwalt1994 O.J. McElroy Blaise Coleman Joe Scarpati1993 O.J. McElroy Blaise Coleman Joe Scarpati1992 Jerry Atchison Jim Pitts Jeff Allison1991 Art Serano Dave Elison Joe Scarpati1990 Mark McKenna Scott Russell David Wood1989 Mark McKenna Kevin Beetel David Wood

OFFENSIVE MOST VALUABLE PLAYER2013 Anthony Davis, WR 2011 Chris Haupt, QB 2010 Adam Smith, RB

DEFENSIVE MOST VALUABLE PLAYER2013 Dylan Ditmer, LB 2011 Dylan Ditmer, LB 2010 Shane Szumski, LB

SPECIAL TEAMS MOST VALUABLE PLAYER2013 Ryan O’Hara 2006 Rob McHugh2011 Martin Turner 2005 Doug Schlack2010 Laquan Robinson 2004 Doug Schlack2009 Kevin Huelster 2003 Jeff Chick2008 Tim Shaub 2002 Brendan Heron2007 Rob McHugh 2001 Jim Jones

ECAC PLAYER OF THE YEAR AWARDS2001 Jim Jones, WR 1986 John Mininno, LB2000 Mike Granato, QB 1982 Tony Stefanoni, DL1999 Mike Granato, QB 1980 Tom Deery, DB1995 Vic Ameye, QB 1988 Al Azzari, DB1977 Eugene Zawoiski, RB

JOE D’ANGELO, JR., ‘81 MEMORIAL AWARD(The person who loves to practice and has integrity without compromise)

2013 Kyle Shostek, TE2011 Brad Waltman, S2010 Alex Smith, WR2009 Frank Bizzari, CB2008 Jesse Jayne, FB2007 HJ Lombardi, ILB James Fitzgerald, DE Charles Ridewood, OL2006 Adam Parcell, QB

F. EUGENE DIXON, JR., BOWL(Dedication and unselfish contribution by a senior)

2013 Mike Thompson, QB2011 John Philpott, DT2010 Harry Rannels, OL2005 Jeff Chick, WR2004 Jeff Pilling, DL2003 Thomas DeMoss, DL2002 Mike Warker, QB2001 Michael Coleman, WR Jim Jones, WR2000 Mike Granato, QB1999 Dan McClain, DL1998 Brandon Richards, DL

1997 Jack Signor, DL1996 Stephen Perez, FB 1995 Blaise Coleman, LB1994 Dave Braksator, OL1993 Mark Fitzgerald, LB1992 Jeff Wilmot, DE1991 Art Serano, DE1990 David Wood, DB1989 John Collins, OLB1988 Mike Betts, LB1987 Michael Soffel, FS1986 Joe Leach, LB

LEO ORLOWSKY ‘59 DEDICATION AWARD(Service, Commitment, Loyalty and Inspiration)

2013 Jermaine Quattlebaum, WR2011 Carmen Imbalzano, WR2010 Michael Penna, TE2009 Tim Shaub, TE2008 Keith Wilson, DL2007 John Martorell, DB2006 Matt Yost, LB2005 Todd Fairlie, DB2004 B.J. Hogan, DB2003 Mike Stewart, LB2002 Steve Varrasse, LB2001 Mark Del Tin, LB2000 Sean Selover, FB1999 Charlie Finnegan, TE

1998 Joe Turchi, DB1997 Calvin Tull, WR1996 Lloyd Hill, DL1995 Anthony Gossette, RB1994 Jim Clements, DL1993 Chris MacHenry, LB1992 Jerry Atchison, DL1991 Jeff Nyikos, LB Rob Lockhart, LB1990 Dave Bell, DB1989 Dan Santhouse, SB1988 Al Azzari, DB1987 Kim Harris, TB1986 Joe Leach, LB

2005 Moises Perez, RB2004 Brad Trentzsch, OLB2003 Bo Fischer, WR2002 Brendan Heron, LB2001 Kevin McCann, QB2000 Jason Haitkin, DL1999 Larry Bartel, TE1998 Brett Riley, OL

YEAR-BY-YEAR AWARDS

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2014 FOOTBALL 25

NFF & COLLEGE FOOTBALL HALL OF FAME PRO ATHLETES ANDDRAFT CHOICES

JIM MAGNER 1931 Frankford Yellowjackets

ED KAWAL 1931; 33-36 Chicago Bears1937 Washington Redskins

BILL “REDS” POLLOCK 1935-36 Chicago Bears

1937; 42-43 Philadelphia Eagles

ED WALSH 1961 New York Titans

JACK KLOTZ 1956 Los Angeles Rams • 18th Round

1960-62 New York Titans1962 San Diego Chargers

1963 New York Jets1964 Houston Oilers

TOM NOLAN1962 New York Titans • 22nd Round

WALT “DUKE” CRATE1962 Boston Patriots • 23rd Round

BILLY “WHITE SHOES” JOHNSON1974 Houston Oilers • 15th Round

1974-80 Houston Oilers1981 Montreal Alouettes1982-87 Atlanta Falcons

1988 Washington Redskins

JOE FIELDS1975 New York Jets • 14th Round

1975-87 New York Jets1988 New York Giants

TOM DEERY1982 Baltimore Colts • 10th Round

MICHAEL COLEMAN2002 Atlanta Falcons • 7th Round

2003 St. Louis Rams • Practice squad

OTHER PRO SIGNINGS1974 Mike Anderson, Memphis Southmen * Billy Johnson, Houston Oilers Larry McGuire, Buffalo Bills1975 Eric Alston, New York Giants Donnie Watkins, Philadelphia Eagles1976 John Warrington, Philadelphia Eagles1977 Gibson Ivery, Philadelphia Eagles1978 Walker Carter, Buffalo Bills Ron Hodge, Cleveland Browns Chip Zawoiski, Philadelphia Eagles1979 Wayne Pierce, New York Jets Mike Piersol, Philadelphia Eagles

1981 Hal Johnson, Oakland Raiders Doug Schmitz, Philadelphia Eagles1982 Tom Deery, Baltimore Colts Tom Kincade, Philadelphia Stars ^1983 Tony Stefanoni, Montreal Concordes &1986 John Roche, Green Bay Packers1991 Joe Sweeley, Philadelphia Eagles Dave Bell, Philadelphia Eagles1992 Joe Sweeley, Toronto Argonauts Dave Bell, Toronto Argonauts1998 Bill Nourse, New York Giants2002 Michael Coleman, Atlanta Falcons Jim Jones, Cincinnati Bengals

Billy “White Shoes” Johnson was among the first class of divisional football players inducted into the

National Football Foundation and College Hall of Fame in August 1996. Fellow All-America Tom Deery

became Widener’s second inductee in 1998, entering the hall’s third class. Bill Manlove, who coached

Widener from 1969-91, was enshrined in 2011.

PRO SIGNINGS / HONOR ROLL

One of the most explosive and amazing open-field runners in college

football, Johnson still holds 28 school game, season and career records.

During his time at Widener he shattered no less than nine all-time

NCAA marks and 12 Middle Atlantic Conference records. During

his career (1971-73), Johnson scored 62 touchdowns, rushed for 3,737

yards and accounted for 5,404 all-purpose yards. He part of the inau-

gural class into the MAC Hall of Fame in 2012 and was named to the

NFL’s 75th Anniversary Team in 1994.

Deery sparked many Widener comebacks with key interceptions and

long kick returns, leading his team to a four-year record of 42-3 and an

NCAA Division III title in 1981. A three-time All-America (1979-81),

Deery still holds four school records, including career interceptions

(24), career punt return yards (1,007), career interception return yards

(293) and longest kickoff return yards (100).

* World Football League, ^ United States Football League, & Canadian Football League

Manlove was the molder and shepherd for one of the elite programs to

hit the gridiron on any level. His mild-mannered approach and belief

in a team philosophy helped this proud program win NCAA titles in

1977 and 1981. Manlove also was a part of 10 MAC championships,

seven NCAA Tournament appearances and four undefeated regular

seasons during his tenure. He coached 31 All-Americans during his

23 years (1969-91) and posted 21 straight winning seasons. Manlove

also has been inducted into the MAC, Pennsylvania Sports, Delaware

County Sports and Camden County Sports Halls of Fame.

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ASSOCIATED PRESSLittle All-America

1948 Tony Caia, B HM1949 Walt Udovich, E HM1956 Cappy Hill, E 3rd Yommie Costello, QB HM1958 Herm Sweeney, C HM1960 Dick Dundee, G HM Bill Mahoney, C HM Gary Piff, E HM1961 John Dishaw, C HM Tom Nolan, T HM1962 John Dishaw, C 3rd 1971 Richie Weaver, RB HM1972 Billy Johnson, RB 1st 1973 Billy Johnson, RB 1st 1975 Jackie Long, RB HM John Warrington, DB HM 1976 Gibson Ivery, WR HM1977 Chip Zawoiski, RB 3rd Walker Carter, WR HM Jim Connor, DL HM1979 Tom Deery, DB HM Hal Johnson, RB HM 1980 Tom Deery, DB HM Hal Johnson, RB HM Ernie Moyer, OL HM Doug Schmitz, C HM1981 Tom Deery, DB 3rd Tom Kincade, WR HM Mark Stephan, K HM1982 Tony Stefanoni, DL 2nd Mike Forward, RB HM Tom Sutton, OL HM1984 John Roche, WR HM Jack Wuerstle, LB HM1985 Joe Leach, LB HM John Roche, WR HM1986 John Mininno, LB HM1988 Dave Duffy, DL 3rd1995 Blaise Coleman, LB 3rd1998 Bill Nourse, DL 1st2001 Michael Coleman, WR 2nd 2003 Thomas DeMoss, DL 1st

ACADEMIC ALL-AMERICA1994 Dave Braksator 2nd1998 Brandon Richards 1st1999 Matt Witmer 2nd2000 Andrew Waxman 2nd2001 T.J. Hess 1st Academic All-America of the Year College Division and Football2005 Doug Schlack 1st

WOODY HAYES NATIONAL SCHOLAR-ATHLETE

1999 Brandon Richards, LB2002 T.J. Hess, DB

POSTGRADUATE SCHOLARSHIPSNATIONAL FOOTBALL FOUNDATION

AND COLLEGE HALL OF FAME 1990 Steve Cianci, QB $10,0002001 T.J. Hess, DB $18,000

NCAA2001 T.J. Hess, DB $5,000

SID ALL-AMERICA(Sponsored by Pizza Hut, Champion and HP)

1980 Tony Anderson, LB 1st Tom Deery, DB 1st Doug Schmitz, C 1st Hal Johnson, RB 2nd Guy Martin, DL 2nd Mike Orio, G 2nd Bill Fulton, T 3rd 1983 Jack Wuerstle, LB HM1985 John Roche, WR 2nd Joe Leach, LB HM1986 Dan Hiester, T HM Joe Leach, LB HM1987 Joe Baker, G HM Michael Soffel, DB HM1988 Dave Duffy, DL 1st Al Azzari, DB 2nd Mike Downs, P 3rd John Collins, LB HM Michael Rose, K HM1989 John Collins, LB 3rd Joe Tahmoosh, T HM1990 Mark McKenna, DL HM David Wood, DB HM1993 O.J. McElroy, DL 2nd 1994 O.J. McElroy, DL 1st Antonio Moore, DB 1st Dave Braksator, OL 2nd Blaise Coleman, LB 2nd 1995 Blaise Coleman, LB 1st Jeff Bell, OL 2nd1996 Clarence Giles, LB HM1997 Jason Raysor, LB HM1998 Bill Nourse, DL 1st Jeff Kuc, OL 2nd Jason Raysor, LB 2nd Jeff Noonan, K HM Leon Payne, RB HM1999 Tom Eisenhower, LB 3rd2000 Jim Jones, WR 1st T.J. Hess, DB 2nd2001 T.J. Hess, DB 1st Michael Coleman, WR 2nd Jim Jones, WR 2nd Tom Worrilow, OL 2nd Mike Warker, QB HM2002 Ryan Killian, DL 1st2003 Thomas DeMoss, DL 1st

COLLEGE FOOTBALL CHRONICLEUNSUNG HERO ALL-AMERICA

1997 Calvin Tull, WR 1st

MELBERGER AWARD FINALIST2001 Jim Jones, WR

GAGLIARDI TROPHY FINALISTSservice and academic components

1994 Vic Ameye, QB2001 T.J. Hess, DB2011 Chris Haupt, QB

AZTEC BOWL PARTICIPANTS1998 Bill Nourse, DL2001 Jim Jones, WR2002 Mike Warker, QB2003 Thomas DeMoss, DL

UNITED PRESS 1948 Walt Udovich, E HM1949 Walt Udovich, E HM

COACHES ASSOCIATION1972 Billy Johnson, RB 1st1973 Billy Johnson, RB 1st1975 John Warrington, DB 1st1976 Al Senni, OL 1st1977 Chip Zawoiski, RB 1st1979 Tom Deery, DB 1st1980 Tom Deery, DB 1st1981 Tom Deery, DB 1st1982 Tony Stefanoni, DL 1st1988 Dave Duffy, DL 1st1998 Bill Nourse, DL 1st2001 Jim Jones, WR 1st2003 Thomas DeMoss, DL 1st

DON HANSEN’S FOOTBALL GAZETTE 1988 Al Azzari, DB 1st John Collins, LB HM Dave Duffy, DL 1st 1989 John Collins, LB 1st 1991 Art Serano, DL HM1993 Blaise Coleman, LB HM O.J. McElroy, DL HM1994 O.J. McElroy, DL 1st Antonio Moore, DB 1st Dave Braksator, OL 2nd Blaise Coleman, LB 3rd1995 Vic Ameye, QB 3rd Blaise Coleman, LB 3rd Brian Hamill, K 3rd1997 Jack Signor, DL HM1998 Bill Nourse, DL 1st Jason Raysor, LB 2nd Leon Payne, RB 3rd Jeff Noonan, K HM1999 Tom Eisenhower, LB 1st2000 T.J. Hess, DB 2nd Jim Jones, WR 2nd Michael Coleman, WR 3rd Bill Woodburn, OL 3rd2001 Michael Coleman, WR 1st T.J. Hess, DB 1st Defensive Player of the Year Jim Jones, WR 2nd Tom Worrilow, OL 2nd2002 Ryan Killian, DL 2nd Steve Varrasse, DL 1st2005 Todd Fairlie, DB 1st East Reg. Def. Player of the Year2006 Todd Fairlie, DB HM

D3FOOTBALL.COM2000 Michael Coleman, WR 2nd Jim Jones, WR 2nd2001 Michael Coleman, WR 1st T.J. Hess, DB 1st Jim Jones, WR 2nd2003 Thomas DeMoss, DL 3rd2005 Todd Fairlie, DB HM2007 Orlando Brown HM2010 Laquan Robinson 2nd2013 Anthony Davis, WR/PR/KR 1st

BEYOND SPORTS COLLEGE NETWORK2012 Chris Haupt, QB 2nd2012 Anthony Davis, WR/PR/KR 2nd2013 Anthony Davis, WR/PR/KR 1st2013 Colin Masterson, S HM

WILLIAMSON RATING SYSTEM1956 Cappy Hill, E 2nd1958 Herm Sweeney, C HM

ALL-AMERICAS

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RECORDS

Rushing Attempts (Game)1. Leon Payne 36 v. Albright, 10/17/982. Steve Forward 34 v. Upsala, 1985 Leon Payne 34 v. Juniata, 10/5/964. Adam Smith 33 v. Wilkes, 11/7/09 Leon Payne 33 v. Wilkes, 9/12/98 Donnie Watkins 33 v. Dickinson, 10/12/74

Rushing Attempts (Season)1. Leon Payne 266 19982. Leon Payne 220 19963. Jackie Long 202 19754. Richie Weaver 195 19715. Chip Zawoiski 186 1977

Rushing Attempts (Career)1. Leon Payne 647 1996-982. Hal Johnson 433 1977-803. Donnie Watkins 412 1971-744. Billy Johnson 411 1971-73

Rushing Yards (Game)1. Richie Weaver * 363 v. Moravian, 10/17/702. Billy Johnson 286 v. Swarthmore, 11/10/733. Leon Payne 263 v. Del. Val., 11/9/964. Billy Johnson 246 v. Leb. Val., 11/17/73

Rushing Yards (Season)1. Billy Johnson $ 1556 19722. Billy Johnson $ 1496 19733. Leon Payne 1402 19984. Richie Weaver 1267 1971

Rushing Yards (Career)1. Billy Johnson ^ 3737 1971-732. Leon Payne 3436 1996-983. Hal Johnson 3087 1977-804. Richie Weaver 2604 1969-71

Rushing Yards Per Attempt (Game)1. Billy Johnson # 19.1 v. Swarthmore, 11/10/732. Billy Johnson 18.0 v. St. John’s, 9/22/723. Hal Johnson 17.3 v. Del. Val., 9/13/80

Rushing Yards Per Attempt (Season)1. Billy Johnson # 10.5 19722. Hal Johnson 9.1 19803. Billy Johnson 8.9 1973

Rushing Yards Per Attempt (Career)1. Billy Johnson # 9.1 1971-732. Hal Johnson 7.1 1977-803. Rich Roberts 6.9 1972-75

Rushing Touchdowns (Game)1. Tony Caia * 5 v. Swarthmore, 19482. Billy Johnson * 5 v. Muhlenberg, 11/4/723. Billy Johnson * 5 v. Swarthmore, 11/10/73

Rushing Touchdowns (Season)1. Billy Johnson $ 23 19722. Billy Johnson $ 21 19733. Leon Payne 20 19984. Chip Zawoiski 17 1977

Rushing Touchdowns (Career)1. Billy Johnson ^ 51 1971-732. Leon Payne 38 1996-983. Hal Johnson 27 1977-80

100-Yard Rushing Games (Season)1. Billy Johnson 9 1972 Chip Zawoiski 9 1977

3. Leon Payne 8 1998

100-Yard Rushing Games (Career)1. Billy Johnson 21 1971-732. Leon Payne 19 1996-98

200-Yard Rushing Games (Season)1. Billy Johnson 4 1972, 19732. Leon Payne 2 1996, 1998

200-Yard Rushing Games (Career)1. Billy Johnson 8 1971-73

Passing Attempts (Game)1. Mike Lomas * 67 v. Lycoming, 11/18/032. Chris Haupt 63 v. Mount Union, 12/1/123. Mike Lomas 60 v. King’s, 9/25/04 Mike Lomas 60 v. Susquehanna, 9/11/045. Mike Granato 58 v. Susquehanna, 11/14/986. Chris Haupt 57 v. Wilkes, 9/24/11 Chris Haupt 57 v. Waynesburg, 11/19/118. Vic Ameye 56 v. Lycoming, 10/21/95 Steve Cianci 56 v. Lycoming, 10/6/9010. Seth Klein 55 v. Del. Val., 11/16/13 Chris Haupt 55 v. Lycoming, 10/20/12

Passing Attempts (Season)1. Chris Haupt 450 20122. Chris Haupt 429 20113. Mike Lomas 418 20054. Mike Lomas 396 20045. Seth Klein 383 20136. Matt Campbell 369 20077. Mike Lomas 353 20038. Vic Ameye 333 1995

Passing Attempts (Career)1. Chris Haupt 1412 2009-122. Mike Lomas 1170 2002-053. Mike Granato 854 1996, 1998-20004. Brian Greene 708 1994-975. Vic Ameye 696 1992-956. Matt Campbell 591 2004-077. Mike Warker 568 2001-02

Passing Completions (Game)1. Seth Klein * 40 v. Leb. Val., 9/14/132. Seth Klein 37 v. Lycoming, 9/28/13 Mike Lomas ^ 37 v. Lycoming, 11/8/034. Vic Ameye ^ 36 v. Lycoming, 10/21/955. Seth Klein 35 v. Del. Val., 11/16/13 Seth Klein 35 v. Albright, 11/2/13 Chris Haupt 35 v. Waynesburg, 11/19/118. Chris Haupt 34 v. Lycoming, 10/20/129. Mike Warker 30 v. Moravian, 9/28/02 Chris Haupt 30 v. Wilkes. 9/24/11 Chris Haupt 30 v. Albright, 10/27/12

Passing Completions (Season)1. Seth Klein * 285 20132. Chris Haupt ^ 282 20123. Chris Haupt 255 20114. Mike Lomas 229 20045. Mike Lomas 227 20056. Matt Campbell 203 20077. Vic Ameye 195 19958. Mike Lomas 180 20039. Mike Warker 157 200110. Steve Cianci 153 1990 Brian Greene 153 1996

Passing Completions (Career)1. Chris Haupt 801 2009-122. Mike Lomas 637 2002-053. Mike Granato 422 1996, 1998-20004. Vic Ameye 383 1992-955. Brian Greene 343 1994-976. Matt Campbell 326 2004-077. Mike Warker 309 2001-02

Passing Yards (Game) -- 53 300+-Yd. Passing Gms.1. Chris Haupt 470 v. Waynesburg, 11/19/112. Mike Warker 462 v. Moravian, 9/22/013. Mike Granato 435 v. Leb. Val., 11/4/004. Chris Haupt 432 v. Misericordia, 9/15/125. Mike Granato 425 v. FDU-Madison, 9/11/996. Vic Ameye 419 v. Del. Val., 11/4/957. Chris Haupt 415 v. Wilkes, 9/22/12 Mike Granato 415 v. Springfield, 12/2/009. Mike Lomas 413 v. King’s, 9/25/0410. Chris Haupt 395 v. Lycoming, 10/20/12 Mike Granato 395 v. Susquehanna, 11/14/9812. Seth Klein 392 v. Leb. Val., 9/14/1313. Brian Greene 388 v. Moravian, 10/12/9614. Mike Lomas 387 v. Leb. Val., 9/24/0515. Mike Granato 381 v. Juniata, 11/13/9916. Mike Lomas 379 v. Lycoming, 11/8/0317. Mike Lomas 377 v. Susquehanna, 10/15/0518. Mike Warker 374 v. Moravian, 9/28/0219. Brian Greene 366 v. Leb. Val., 11/12/9420. Mike Warker 364 v. Susquehanna, 10/6/01 Yommie Costello 364 v. Leb. Val., 11/17/56

Passing Yards (Season)1. Chris Haupt 3827 20122. Chris Haupt 3025 20113. Mike Lomas 3024 20054. Mike Granato 2870 19995. Seth Klein 2809 20136. Mike Granato 2802 20007. Mike Lomas 2764 20048. Mike Warker 2751 20019. Vic Ameye 2669 199510. Mike Warker 2616 2002

Passing Yards (Career)1. Chris Haupt 9907 2009-122. Mike Lomas 8163 2002-053. Mike Granato 7824 1996, 1998-20004. Mike Warker 5367 2001-025. Brian Greene 5342 1994-976. Vic Ameye 5340 1992-957. Matt Campbell 4096 2004-07

Passing Touchdowns (Game)1. Mike Warker 6 v. Moravian, 9/22/01 Chris Haupt 6 v. Wilkes, 9/22/123. Vic Ameye 5 v. Del. Val., 11/4/95 Mike Granato 5 v. Albright, 10/9/99 Mike Granato 5 v. Leb. Val., 11/4/00 Mike Granato 5 v. Springfield, 12/2/00 Mike Warker 5 v. Wilkes, 9/8/01 Mike Warker 5 v. Albright, 11/10/01 Mike Lomas 5 v. Leb. Val., 9/20/03 Chris Haupt 5 v. King’s, 10/1/11 Chris Haupt 5 v. Western CT, 9/1/12 Chris Haupt 5 v. Misericordia, 9/15/12

Passing Touchdowns (Season)1. Chris Haupt 38 20122. Mike Warker 32 2001

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RECORDS

3. Mike Granato 31 2000 Chris Haupt 31 20115. Mike Granato 25 1999 Brian Greene 25 19977. Mike Warker 24 2002 Mike Lomas 24 2005

Passing Touchdowns (Career)1. Chris Haupt 88 2009-122. Mike Granato 72 1996, 1998-20003. Mike Lomas 63 2002-054. Mike Warker 56 2001-025. Brian Greene 47 1994-976. Bob Cole 35 1978-81

Completion Percentage (Game)1. Dan Guy ^ .833 v. Del. Val., 10/13/842. Yommie Costello .818 v. Leb. Val., 11/17/56

Completion Percentage (Season)1. Seth Klein .744 20132. Chris Haupt .627 20123. Vic Ameye .615 19944. Chris Haupt .594 20115. Vic Ameye .586 19956. Glenn Bennett .585 19857. Mike Lomas .578 20048. Mike Warker .577 2001 Al Humes .577 200810. Greg Melton .550 1976 Matt Campbell .550 2007 Chris Haupt .550 2010

Completion Percentage (Career)1. Glenn Bennett .585 19852. Chris Haupt .567 2009-123. Matt Campbell .552 2004-074. Vic Ameye .550 1992-955. Mike Lomas .544 2002-05 Mike Warker .544 2001-02

200-Yard Passing Games (Season)1. Chris Haupt 12 20122. Seth Klein 9 2013 Chris Haupt 9 2011 Mike Lomas 9 20055. Vic Ameye 8 1995 Mike Granato 8 1999 Mike Granato 8 2000 Mike Warker 8 2001 Mike Warker 8 2002

200-Yard Passing Games (Career)1. Chris Haupt 26 2009-122. Mike Lomas 24 2002-053. Mike Granato 20 1996, 1998-20004. Mike Warker 16 2001-025. Vic Ameye 11 1992-95 Brian Greene 11 1994-97

300-Yard Passing Games (Season)1. Chris Haupt 7 20122. Seth Klein 5 20133. Mike Granato 4 2000 Mike Warker 4 2002 Mike Lomas 4 2004 Chris Haupt 4 2011

300-Yard Passing Games (Career)1. Chris Haupt 13 2009-122. Mike Lomas 10 2002-053. Mike Granato 9 1996, 1998-2000

4. Mike Warker 7 2001-02

Receptions (Game)1. Mike Duggan ^ 15 v. Drexel, 10/24/69 Joe Sweeley ^ 15 v. Albright, 10/13/90 Mike deMarteleire 15 v. Moravian, 9/28/02

Receptions (Season)1. Anthony Davis 91 20132. Jeff Chick 73 20053. Tyreak Saviour 71 20034. Cedrick Clayton 68 20115. Tyreak Saviour 66 20046. Anthony Davis 64 20127. Mike Falkenstein 63 20078. Jim Jones 62 2000 Cedrick Clayton 62 201010. Joe Sweeley 59 1990

Receptions (Career)1. Tyreak Saviour 188 2001-20042. Anthony Davis 187 2011-3. Jeff Chick 171 2002-054. Jim Jones 170 1999-20015. Boonta Kheuangthirath 159 1992-956. Cedrick Clayton 156 2008-117. Michael Coleman 139 1998-20018. John Roche 128 1982-859. Jamie Schild 94 2005-07

Receiving Yards (Game)1. Jim Jones 252 v. Moravian, 9/22/012. Jim Jones 250 v. Leb. Val., 11/4/003. Jim Jones 243 v. Juniata, 11/11/004. Michael Coleman 238 v. Juniata, 11/3/015. Jim Jones 225 v. W. Maryland, 10/28/00 Michael Coleman 225 v. Del. Val., 9/23/007. Michael Coleman 213 v. FDU-Madison, 10/27/018. Justin Horning 207 v. Curry, 9/12/099. Anthony Davis 201 v. Salisbury, 11/24/1210. B. Kheuangthirath 200 v. Susquehanna, 10/24/92

Receiving Yards (Season)1. Jim Jones 1439 20002. Michael Coleman 1274 20003. Anthony Davis 1236 20124. Michael Coleman 1201 20015. Tyreak Saviour 1138 20036. Anthony Davis 1056 20137. Jim Jones 1047 19998. Jim Jones 1037 2001

Receiving Yards (Career)1. Jim Jones 3523 1999-20012. Michael Coleman 3254 1998-20013. Tyreak Saviour 2820 2001-044. Anthony Davis 2711 2011- B. Kheuangthirath 2711 1992-956. John Roche 2331 1982-857. Jeff Chick 2315 2002-058. Cedrick Clayton 2003 2008-119. Trent Everett 1640 1995-98

Yards Per Reception (Game)1. Michael Coleman * 56.7 v. FDU-Madison, 9/11/99

Yards Per Reception (Season)1. Michael Coleman * 27.7 20002. Jim Jones 23.2 2000

Yards Per Reception (Career)1. Michael Coleman * 23.4 1998-20012. Gordon Stewart 21.9 1977-803. Cappy Hill 21.5 1954-574. Jim Jones 20.7 1999-2001

100-Yard Receiving Games (Season)1. Anthony Davis 7 2013 Michael Coleman 7 2000 Jim Jones 7 20004. Michael Coleman 6 2001 Jim Jones 6 20016. Tyreak Saviour 5 2002 Matt Giello 5 1999 Jim Jones 5 1999 Tyreak Saviour 5 2003 Jeff Chick 5 2005 Anthony Davis 5 2012

100-Yard Receiving Games (Career)1. Jim Jones 17 1999-20012. Michael Coleman 15 1998-20013. Anthony Davis 13 2011-4. Tyreak Saviour 10 2001-045. John Roche 9 1982-856. Jeff Chick 8 2002-057. Trent Everett 7 1995-98

200-Yard Receiving Games (Season)1. Jim Jones 3 20002. Michael Coleman 2 2001

200-Yard Receiving Games (Career)1. Jim Jones 4 1999-20012. Michael Coleman 3 1998-2001

Receiving Touchdowns (Game)1. Jamie Schild 4 v. Leb. Val., 9/23/06 Tyreak Saviour 4 v. Juniata, 11/9/02 Michael Coleman 4 v. Springfield, 12/2/004. Luther Bowen 3 v. FDU-Florham, 11/2/02 Michael Coleman 3 v. Moravian, Juniata, 2001; v. Lycoming, Del. Val., 2000; v. Del. Val., 1999 Jim Jones 3 v. Wilkes, Moravian, Albright, 2001; vs. Leb. Val., 2000 Tom Kincade 3 v. F & M, 10/25/80 B. Kheuangthirath 3 v. Wilkes, Del. Val., 1995 Robsawne Little 3 v. King’s, 10/28/95 Trent Everett 3 v. King’s, 11/1/97 Tyreak Saviour 3 v. FDU-Florham, 10/25/03 Khalee Prothro 3 v. Moravian, 10/1/05 Cedrick Clayton 3 v. King’s, 10/9/10 Anthony Davis 3 v. Misericordia, 9/15/12

Receiving Touchdowns (Season)1. Michael Coleman 18 20002. Anthony Davis 16 20123. Michael Coleman 15 20014. Jim Jones 14 20005. Trent Everett 13 19976. Boonta Kheuangthirath 11 1995 Michael Coleman 11 1999 Jim Jones 11 2001 Cedrick Clayton 11 2011

Receiving Touchdowns (Career)1. Michael Coleman ^ 44 1998-20012. Anthony Davis 31 2011-3. Jim Jones 30 1999-20014. Trent Everett 27 1995-98

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RECORDS

5. Boonta Kheuangthirath 22 1992-95

Total Offense (Game)1. Mike Warker 473 v. Moravian, 9/22/012. Chris Haupt 466 v. Waynesburg, 11/19/113 Chris Haupt 443 v. Misericordia, 9/15/124. Mike Granato 435 v. Leb. Val., 11/4/005. Chris Haupt 424 v. Wilkes, 9/22/126. Chris Haupt 420 v. Lycoming, 10/20/127. Vic Ameye 417 v. Del. Val., 11/4/958. Mike Warker 415 v. Moravian, 9/28/029. Chris Haupt 407 v. King’s, 10/1/1110. Brian Greene 402 v. Moravian, 10/12/96

Total Offense (Season)1. Chris Haupt 4007 20122. Chris Haupt 3098 20113. Mike Lomas 2950 20054. Mike Warker 2720 20015. Mike Granato 2707 20006. Mike Granato 2687 19997. Seth Klein 2678 20138. Vic Ameye 2644 19959. Mike Warker 2624 2002

Total Offense (Career)1. Chris Haupt 10256 2009-122. Mike Lomas 7904 2002-053. Mike Granato 7388 1996, 1998-20004. Mike Warker 5344 2001-025. Vic Ameye 5295 1992-956. Brian Greene 5081 1994-977. Matt Campbell 3975 2004-07

Total Offense Plays (Game)1. Mike Lomas * 72 v. Lycoming, 11/8/032. Steve Cianci 68 v. Lycoming, 10/6/903. Chris Haupt 65 v. Mount Union, 12/1/124. Vic Ameye 64 v. Lycoming, 10/21/955. Steve Cianci 62 v. Leb. Val., 9/16/90 Chris Haupt 62 v. Lycoming, 10/20/12

Total Offense Plays (Season)1. Chris Haupt 500 20122. Chris Haupt 480 20113. Seth Klein 453 20134. Mike Lomas 449 20055. Mike Lomas 432 20046. Steve Cianci ^ 430 19907. Matt Campbell 415 20078. Vic Ameye 380 19959. Mike Lomas 373 2003 Mike Warker 373 2002

Total Offense Plays (Career)1. Chris Haupt 1614 2009-122. Mike Lomas 1294 2002-053. Mike Granato 930 1996, 1998-20004. Vic Ameye 861 1992-955. Brian Greene 829 1994-976. Mike Warker 693 2001-02

All-Purpose Yards (Game)1. Billy Johnson 450 v. St. John’s, 9/22/722. Richie Weaver 363 v. Moravian, 10/17/70

All-Purpose Yards (Season)1. Anthony Davis 2331 20122. Billy Johnson $ 2265 19723. Jim Jones 1992 20004. Billy Johnson 1868 1973

All-Purpose Yards (Career)1. Billy Johnson 5404 1971-732. Anthony Davis 5035 2011-3. Jim Jones 4647 1999-20014. Michael Coleman 3638 1998-20015. Jeff Chick 3579 2002-056. Hal Johnson 3415 1977-807. Boonta Kheuangthirath 3337 1992-95

Kickoff Returns (Game)1. Kim Harris 8 v. Lycoming, 10/1/832. Kim Harris 6 v. Juniata, 9/27/86 Robsawne Little 6 v. FDU-Madison, 9/15/95 Bree Cobb 6 v. Juniata, 10/5/96

Kickoff Returns (Season)1. Anthony Davis 32 20122. Jerome Robinson 28 19993. Laquan Robinson 24 2010 Anthony Davis 24 20115. Jeff Chick 23 20036. Kim Harris 20 1983 Robsawne Little 20 19958. Bill Eisele 19 1985

Kickoff Returns (Career)1. Anthony Davis 67 2011-2. Bill Eisele 62 1985-883. Mike Schmidt 42 2004-064. Jerome Robinson 37 1998-995. Jeff Chick 33 2002-056. Robsawne Little 32 1994-95 Laquan Robinson 32 2010-118. Kim Harris 27 1983, 1985-87

Kickoff Return Yards (Game)1. Anthony Davis 222 v. Mount Union, 12/1/122. Steve Hayko 167 v. Albright, 10/19/913. Joe Carter 164 v. Kings Point, 11/28/64 Kim Harris 164 v. Lycoming, 10/1/83

Kickoff Return Yards (Season)1. Anthony Davis 762 20122. Jerome Robinson 625 19993. Laquan Robinson 529 20104. Jeff Chick 467 20035. Kevin Fisher 457 2007 Anthony Davis 457 20117. Howard Hudson 421 19848. Kim Harris 420 1983

Kickoff Return Yards (Career)1. Anthony Davis 1515 2011-2. Bill Eisele 1296 1985-883. Mike Schmidt 913 2004-064. Jerome Robinson 848 1998-995. Robsawne Little 785 1994-956. Laquan Robinson 757 2010-117. Jeff Chick 633 2002-058. Kim Harris 556 1983, 1985-879. Kevin Fisher 481 2006-07

Kickoff Return Yards Per Game1. Robsawne Little 45.5 v. FDU-Madison, 11/5/942. Joe Carter 41.0 v. Kings Point, 11/28/64 Mike deMarteleire 41.0 v. Lycoming, 10/5/02

Kickoff Return Yards Per Season 1. Robsawne Little 32.5 19942. Gus Hodson 27.7 1991

Kickoff Return Yards Per Career1. Robsawne Little 32.5 19942. Kevin Fisher 26.7 2006-07

Punt Returns (Game)1. Bob Mangold 9 v. Albright, 11/3/84

Punt Returns (Season)1. Kevin Fisher 42 20062. Geroge Johnson 40 19823. Bob Mangold 33 1984

Punt Returns (Career)1. Bill Eisele 93 1985-862. Tom Deery 87 1978-81

Punt Return Yards (Game)1. Billy Johnson # 265 v. St. John’s, 9/22/722. Steve Warrington 143 v. Ursinus, 9/23/78

Punt Return Yards (Season)1. Billy Johnson 511 19722. George Johnson 444 19823. Kevin Fisher 385 20064. Anthony Davis 362 20115. Steve Warrington 358 1977

Punt Return Yards (Career)1. Tom Deery 1007 1978-812. Billy Johnson 989 1971-733. Steve Warrington 787 1977-80

Punt Returns Yards Per Game1. Billy Johnson # 66.3 v. St. John’s, 9/22/722. Anthony Davis 65.5 v. Moravian, 9/3/11

Punt Returns Yards Per Season1. Billy Johnson $ 34.1 19722. Anthony Davis 25.9 20113. Billy Johnson 20.9 19734. Billy Johnson 17.7 1971

Punt Returns Yards Per Career1. Billy Johnson # 24.7 1971-732. Steve Warrington 11.9 1977-803. Tom Deery 11.6 1978-81

Punt Return Touchdowns (Game)1. Billy Johnson # 3 v. St. John’s, 9/22/72

Punt Return Touchdowns (Season)1. Billy Johnson # 4 1972

Punt Return Touchdowns (Career)1. Billy Johnson # 7 1971-73

Blocked Punts (Season)1. Bob Furca 2 1988 Dave Bell 2 1990 Dave Wood 2 1990

Blocked Punts (Career)1. Dave Wood 4 1988-90

Touchdowns (Game)1. Billy Johnson * 6 v. St. John’s, 9/22/722. James Jones 5 v. Hobart, 11/25/00 Billy Johnson 5 v. Swarthmore, 11/10/73 Billy Johnson 5 v. Muhlenberg, 11/14/72 Tony Caia 5 v. Swarthmore, 1948

Touchdowns (Season)1. Billy Johnson $ 27 19722. Billy Johnson $ 23 19733. Jim Jones 20 2001 Leon Payne 20 19985. Jim Jones 19 2000

Touchdowns (Career)1. Billy Johnson ^ 62 1971-732. Leon Payne 47 1996-98

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* MAC record; ^ former MAC record# NCAA record; $ led nation

3. Michael Coleman 44 1998-2001 Jim Jones 44 1999-20015. Anthony Davis 35 2011-

Points (Game)1. Billy Johnson * 36 v. St. John’s, 9/22/722. Billy Johnson 30 v. Swarthmore, 11/10/73 Billy Johnson 30 v. Muhlenberg, 11/9/72 Tony Caia 30 v. Swarthmore, 1948

Points (Season)1. Billy Johnson $ 162 19722. Billy Johnson 138 19733. Jim Jones 124 20014. Leon Payne 120 19985. Jim Jones 114 20006. Michael Coleman 110 2000

Points (Career)1. Billy Johnson ^ 372 1971-732. Leon Payne 282 1996-983. Michael Coleman 270 1998-20014. Jim Jones 268 1999-20015. Anthony Davis 214 2011-6. Boonta Kheuangthirath 184 1992-95

Scoring By Kicking (Game)1. Brian Hamill ^ 15 v. Lycoming, 10/21/952. Frank Vinci 13 v. Del. Val., 11/15/03 Michael Rose 13 v. Wilkes, 19884. Michael Rose 12 (twice), 1988 Jeff Noonan 12 v. Moravian, 10/12/96 James McFadden 12 v. Wilkes, 9/22/12

Scoring By Kicking (Season)1. James McFadden * 84 20122. Michael Rose ^ 71 19883. Jeff Noonan 68 1998 Mark Stephan 68 19815. Ryan O’Hara 60 2013 Brian Hamill 60 1995

Scoring by Kicking (Career)1. Jeff Noonan 175 1995-982. Paul Ragan 145 2000-03 Frank Vinci 145 2002-054. Brian Hamill 143 1992-95 Matt Breslin 143 2008-116. Michael Rose 136 1986-897. Mark Stephan 125 1978-818. John Ferko 120 1976-79

Field Goals (Game)1. Brian Hamill * 5 v. Lycoming, 10/21/95 (5)2. Michael Rose 4 v. Moravian, 1988 (4)3. Mark Stephan 3 v. Moravian, 10/24/81 (3) Mark Manera 3 v. Albright, 11/9/85 (3) Brad Sorkin 3 v. Leb. Val., 9/15/90 (4) Tom Laurich 3 v. FDU, 10/19/07 (3)

Field Goals (Season)1. Mark Stephan ^ 13 1981 (17) Michael Rose ^ 13 1988 (22)3. Tom Laurich 12 2007 (17)

Field Goals (Career)1. Michael Rose 25 1986-89 (40)2. Jeff Noonan 23 1995-98 (42)3. Frank Vinci 20 2002-05 (30)4. Tom Laurich 18 2005-08 (31)5. Mark Stephan 17 1978-81 (28) Brian Hamill 17 1992-95 (29)7. Matt Bereslin 13 2008-11 (24)

8. John Ferko 12 1976-79 (30)

Extra Points (Game)1. James McFadden * 12 v. Wilkes, 9/22/12 (12)2. Matt Breslin ^ 10 v. King’s, 10/1/11 (10)3. James McFadden 9 v. Western CT, 9/1/12 (9)4. Ryan O’Hara 8 v. FDU-Florham, 10/26/13 (8) James McFadden 8 v. Stevenson, 10/6/12 (8) John Ferko 8 v. Ursinus, 10/29/77 (8)

Extra Points (Season)1. James McFadden * 69 2012 (71)2. Paul Ragan 44 2001 (53)3. Mark Stephan 42 1980 (46)4. Ryan O’Hara 39 2013 (40) Brian Hamill 39 1995 (42) 6. Paul Ragan 38 2000 (47)7. Jeff Noonan 36 1996 (39)8. Jeff Noonan 35 1998 (42) Frank Vinci 35 2005 (40)

Extra Points (Career)1. Paul Ragan * 121 2000-03 (147)2. Jeff Noonan 106 1995-98 (121)3. Matt Breslin 104 2008-11 (117)4. James McFadden 94 2009-12 (98)5. Brian Hamill 92 1992-95 (102)6. Frank Vinci 85 2002-05 (95)7. John Ferko 84 1976-79 (91)8. Mark Stephan 74 1978-81 (82)9. Nick Pulos 73 1981-84 (82)

Punts (Game)1. Jim Wark 12 v. Susquehanna, 10/20/902. Tony DiBiasse 11 v. Moravian, 10/18/69 Jim Wark 11 v. Juniata, 10/5/91

Punts (Season)1. Jim Wark 76 19912. Robert McHugh 73 2007

Punts (Career)1. Jim Wark * 242 1990-932. Kevin Wyszynski 200 1995-993. Doug Schlack 163 2003-054. Kevin Huelster 162 2008-115. Tony DiBiasse 150 1967-696. John Ferko 144 1976-79

Punt Yards Per Game1. Mark Stephan 48.0 v. W. Maryland, 10/18/802. Jim Wark 47.3 v. Juniata, 10/3/92

Punt Yards Per Season 1. Ken O’Brien 39.3 19742. Walt Crate 39.2 19593. Kevin Wyszynski 38.9 1999

Punt Yards Per Career 1. Ken O’Brien 37.6 1971-742. Christian Kearns 37.3 2000-023. Kevin Wyszynski 36.9 1995-994. Robert McHugh 36.8 2005-075. Walt Crate 36.3 1958-616. Kevin Huelster 36.4 2008-117. John Ferko 35.9 1976-79

Interceptions (Game)1. Todd Fairlie 3 v. Moravian, 9/30/06 B.J. Hogan 3 v. Juniata, 11/3/01 Bill Walsh 3 v. Del. Val., 9/23/00 Antonio Moore 3 v. Del. Val., 10/8/94 Antonio Moore 3 v. FDU-Madison, 11/5/94 Al Azzari 3 v. Susquehanna, 1988

Jim Smith 3 v. Del. Val., 9/12/81

Interceptions (Season)1. Antonio Moore $ 13 19942. John Warrington 9 19753. Tom Deery 8 1981 Orlando Brown 8 2007

Interceptions (Career)1. Tom Deery ^ 24 1978-812. Al Azzari 20 1985-883. John Warrington 17 1973-75

Interceptions Return Yards (Game)1. Fred Baumert 135 v. Nichols, 9/27/692. Andrew Waxman 100 v. Moravian, 9/30/003. Mike Cockill 99 v. Drexel, 10/26/57

Interceptions Return Yards (Season)1. Dennis Quinn 145 19742. Colin Masterson 139 20123. Fred Baumert 135 19694. Orlando Brown 131 20075. Andrew Waxman 129 2000

Interceptions Return Yards (Career)1. Tom Deery 293 1978-812. John Warrington 274 1973-753. Orlando Brown 257 2004-074. Bruce Eveleth 242 1970-72

Tackles (Game)1. Clarence Giles 21 v. King’s, 11/2/962. Bill Collins 20 v. Del. Val., 9/25/993. James Woodley 19 v. Leb. Val., 10/31/09 Tom Eisenhower 19 v. Susquehanna, 11/14/98 Bill Collins 19 v. King’s, 11/1/97

Tackles (Season)1. T.J. Hess 130 20002. Tom Eisenhower 129 19993. Blaise Coleman 124 19954. Todd Fairlie 123 20055. Bill Collins 122 1999

Tackles (Career)1. Blaise Coleman 438 1992-952. Bill Collins 384 1996-993. Clarence Giles 308 1993-964. Mark McKenna 292 1987-90

Sacks (Game)1. Bill Nourse * 6.5 v. Lycoming, 10/24/982. Jason Raysor 5.0 v. Lycoming, 10/25/973. David Barger 4.0 v. Albright, 10/9/04 Jeff Shahan 4.0 v. Moravian, 9/30/00 Clarence Giles 4.0 v. Susquehanna, 11/16/96

Sacks (Season)1. Bill Nourse^ 18.0 19982. O.J. McElroy 15.5 19933. John Collins 13.0 1989 Bill Nourse 13.0 1997

Sacks (Career)1. Bill Nourse 40.0 1995-982. John Collins 38.0 1986-893. O.J. McElroy 36.0 1992-94

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RUSHINGYear No. Yards TD1956 Don McCabe 64 393 21957 Harry Feinberg 88 408 21958 Eddie Cocco 108 626 61959 Bobby Coe 77 364 31960 Walt Crate 70 315 31961 Walt Crate 134 832 31962 Joe Carter 99 484 41963 Joe Carter 93 420 21964 Joe Carter 106 511 41965 Joe Piela 94 487 41966 Joe Piela 142 708 31967 Joe Mossa 120 406 21968 Pierce King 103 386 31969 Wayne Blalark 94 316 01970 Richie Weaver 174 1258 131971 Richie Weaver 195 1267 71972 Billy Johnson 148 1556 231973 Billy Johnson 168 1496 211974 Donnie Watkins 174 873 91975 Jackie Long 202 1208 61976 Dom Mancini 134 828 91977 Chip Zawoiski 186 1214 171978 Hal Johnson 161 990 41979 Hal Johnson 148 1005 101980 Hal Johnson 113 1025 121981 Jerry Irving 138 975 101982 Mike Forward 169 732 121983 Jerry Irving 110 661 71984 Kevin Savage 123 689 81985 Steve Forward 120 571 101986 Kim Harris 129 509 41987 Mike Gatto 85 500 51988 Mike Marrone 70 392 71989 Alan Robinson 135 784 91990 Brian Lower 73 257 31991 Bill Bailey 122 399 21992 Bill Bailey 78 325 61993 Anthony Gossette 103 482 51994 Anthony Gossette 114 797 71995 Robsawne Little 99 587 51996 Leon Payne 220 1062 81997 Leon Payne 161 972 101998 Leon Payne 266 1402 201999 Jerome Robinson 140 656 42000 Mike Ambrose 129 826 52001 Michael Gandy 111 669 82002 Michael Gandy 135 609 62003 Michael Gandy 146 640 72004 Dominic Rock 100 441 42005 Khalee Prothro 131 911 62006 Khalee Prothro 190 996 52007 Ian Decker 111 437 32008 Ian Decker 123 474 52009 Adam Smith 122 542 72010 Adam Smith 130 606 42011 Terrant Morrison 92 518 82012 Couve LaFate 85 309 42013 Couve LaFate 96 537 5

INTERCEPTIONSYear No. Yards TD1974 Dennis Quinn 7 145 01975 John Warrington 9 82 01976 Gerry Gaeta/Randy Wise 3 44/18 0/01977 Steve Warrington/Bill Johnson 3 11/11 0/01978 Tom Deery 4 24 01979 Mark Valerio/Tom Deery 5 108/83 1/11980 Tom Deery 7 108 11981 Tom Deery 8 78 01982 Jim Smith/Lew Irving 5 84/40 0/01983 Dan Dougherty 6 63 01984 Dave Walls 5 0 01985 John Quillinan/Al Azzari 4 29/7 0/0

PASSINGYear Cmp. -Att. Yards TD1956 Yommie Costello 74- 149 1702 171957 Mike Cockill 5- 34 85 21958 Lyn Marozin 8- 37 149 11959 Bob McElroy 33- 56 452 11960 Bob McElroy 46- 105 543 71961 Albie Filoreto 21- 50 332 31962 Al Brewster 34- 80 442 11963 John Hamilton 41- 89 398 31964 Bill Yarnall 64- 125 770 61965 Bill Yarnall 98- 243 1120 41966 Bill MacQueen 79- 202 989 41967 Steve Pahls 100- 196 1061 71968 Steve Pahls 66- 141 828 71969 Steve Pahls 77- 173 875 41970 Tom Byrne 37- 80 427 41971 Tom Byrne 25- 62 504 51972 Ken O’Brien 22- 55 289 11973 Ken O’Brien 17- 44 258 21974 Ken O’Brien 47- 100 754 81975 Greg Melton 26- 58 479 61976 Greg Melton 55- 100 971 141977 Mark Walter 40- 76 878 111978 Mark Walter 33- 80 411 51979 Bob Cole 44- 86 690 121980 Bob Cole 60- 111 1231 161981 Bob Cole 49- 114 967 71982 Bob Mangold 31- 84 598 31983 Dan Guy 50- 96 1054 91984 Dan Guy 104- 205 1577 171985 Glenn Bennett 137- 234 1663 101986 Joe Bakey 46- 140 651 01987 Dan Stoffere 49- 90 683 71988 Dan Stoffere 69- 158 1123 131989 Dan Stoffere 46- 113 664 61990 Steve Cianci 153- 314 1994 101991 Scott MacHenry 62- 136 854 31992 Vic Ameye 56- 111 857 41993 Scott MacHenry 91- 185 1191 81994 Vic Ameye 83- 135 1236 91995 Vic Ameye 195- 333 2669 211996 Brian Greene 153- 299 2415 181997 Brian Greene 133- 284 2022 251998 Mike Granato 147- 280 2041 151999 Mike Granato 143- 300 2870 252000 Mike Granato 123- 254 2802 312001 Mike Warker 157- 272 2751 322002 Mike Warker 152- 296 2616 242003 Mike Lomas 152- 353 2363 202004 Mike Lomas 229- 296 2764 192005 Mike Lomas 227- 418 3024 242006 Matt Campbell 119- 218 1882 182007 Matt Campbell 203- 369 2114 132008 Al Humes 90- 156 1207 102009 Chris Haupt 127- 273 1620 102010 Chris Haupt 143- 260 1435 92011 Chris Haupt 255- 429 3025 312012 Chris Haupt 282- 450 3827 382013 Seth Klein 285- 383 2809 17

RECEIVINGYear No. Yards TD1956 Cappy Hill 39 852 101957 Cappy Hill 3 48 11958 Walt Crate 4 59 11959 Walt Crate 10 186 01960 Gary Piff 23 209 21961 Walt Crate 20 347 51962 Joe Fineman 9 141 11963 Joe Giampalmi 17 144 11964 Joe Carter 25 260 11965 Bob Grosch 46 509 11966 Spike Pierson 26 429 21967 Dave Mancini 30 409 31968 Wayne Blalark 21 285 41969 Mike Duggan 40 328 11970 Mike Duggan 39 428 11971 Billy Johnson 5 202 31972 Tony Simmons 9 154 11973 Paul Gardiner 5 83 01974 Gibson Ivery 24 381 41975 Gibson Ivery 16 338 51976 Gibson Ivery 29 527 71977 Walker Carter 26 440 61978 Gordon Stewart 6 149 11979 Tom Kincade 21 247 21980 Tom Kincade 31 547 91981 Tom Kincade 34 702 61982 John Roche 10 226 11983 John Roche 27 548 41984 John Roche 35 749 91985 John Roche 56 795 21986 Kim Harris 22 330 01987 Dan Santhouse 18 382 31988 Dan Santhouse 30 441 51989 Dan Santhouse 23 427 41990 Joe Sweeley 59 728 41991 Tom Needham 23 345 31992 Boonta Kheuangthirath 40 712 41993 Keith Dukes 48 738 41994 Boonta Kheuangthirath 34 654 31995 Boonta Kheuangthirath 50 898 111996 Joe Brangan 32 526 41997 Trent Everett 32 673 131998 Trent Everett 37 625 91999 Jim Jones 50 1047 52000 Jim Jones 62 1439 142001 Michael Coleman 55 1201 152002 Tyreak Saviour 39 851 92003 Tyreak Saviour 71 1138 72004 Tyreak Saviour 66 831 72005 Jeff Chick 73 1025 62006 Jamie Schild 46 838 82007 Mike Falkenstein 63 902 22008 Tim Kilkenny 29 339 02009 Justin Horning 37 536 52010 Cedrick Clayton 62 700 42011 Cedrick Clayton 68 990 112012 Anthony Davis 64 1236 162013 Anthony Davis 91 1056 10

1986 Al Azzari 6 23 01987 Al Azzari 5 45 01988 Earle Masciulli 6 70 01989 Earle Masciulli 5 0 01990 Mike Lenge 5 36 01991 Keith Morey 3 14 01992 Jeff Allison 5 26 01993 Four tied with 2 -- 01994 Antonio Moore 13 116 11995 Sean Stoner 4 78 11996 Travis Sims 3 34 01997 Jesse Merscher 3 7 01998 Joe Turchi/Ryan Ricedorff 5 97/79 2/01999 Tom Eisenhower 4 73 1

2000 T.J. Hess 4 47 02001 B.J. Hogan/Darren Sinclair 6 109/70 0/12002 Three players with 22003 B.J. Hogan 5 84 12004 B.J. Hogan 6 72 02005 Todd Fairlie 5 108 02006 Todd Fairlie 6 45 02007 Orlando Brown 8 131 12008 TD Davis 4 21 02009 Kevin Franklin/Zach Smith 2 10/0 02010 Laquan Robinson 2 0 02011 Four players with 22012 Nick Rodriguez 6 64 02013 Colin Masterson 3 63 1

YEAR-BY-YEAR LEADERS

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IndIvIdual RecoRds

Rushing AttemptsG: 31 Chip Zawoiski at Central, 1977T: 73 Chip Zawoiski 1977C: 90 Gary Clofine 1979-81

Rushing YardsG: 187 Mike Ambrose v. Wash. & Jeff., 2001T: 362 Chip Zawoiski 1977C: 474 Mike Ambrose 2000-01

Rushing TouchdownsG: 3 Gary Clofine at Bethany, 1980 Jim Jones v. Hobart, 2000T: 6 Jim Jomes 2000C: 9 Jim Jones 2000-01

Passing AttemptsG: 67 Vic Ameye at Lycoming, 1995T: 130 Chris Haupt 2012C: 130 Chris Haupt 2012

Passing CompletionsG: 29 Vic Ameye at Lycoming, 1995 29 Chris Haupt at Mount Union, 2012T: 74 Chris Haupt 2012C: 74 Chris Haupt 2012

Passing YardsG: 415 Mike Granato at Springfield, 2000T: 1147 Mike Granato 2000C: 1147 Mike Granato 2000

Passing TouchdownsG: 5 Mike Granato vs. Hobart, 2000T: 13 Mike Granato 2000C: 13 Mike Granato 2000

ReceptionsG: 11 Anthony Davis vs. Salisbury, 2012T: 23 Jim Jones 2000C: 45 Jim Jones 2000-01

Receiving YardsG: 201 Anthony Davis vs. Salisbury, 2012T: 560 Michael Coleman 2000C: 1040 Michael Coleman 2000-01

Receiving TouchdownsG: 4 M. Coleman at Springfield, 2000T: 8 Michael Coleman 2000C: 12 Michael Coleman 2000-01

Offensive PlaysG: 70 Vic Ameye at Lycoming, 1995T: 140 Chris Haupt 2012C: 200 Bob Cole 1979-81

Total OffenseG: 414 Mike Granato at Springfield, 2000T: 1117 Mike Granato 2000C: 1117 Mike Granato 2000

Punt ReturnsG: 6 Steve Warrington v. Wabash, 1977T: 13 Steve Warrington 1977C: 13 Steve Warrington 1977

Punt Return YardsG: 81 Jim Jones v. Bridgewater, 2001T: 148 Steve Warrington 1977C: 148 Steve Warrington 1977-80

TouchdownsG: 5 Jim Jones v. Hobart, 2000T: 11 Jim Jones 2000C: 20 Jim Jones 2000-01

PointsG: 30 Jim Jones v. Hobart, 2000T: 66 Jim Jones 2000C: 120 Jim Jones 2000-01

Points KickingG: 13 Paul Ragan at Springfield, 2000T: 26 Paul Ragan 2000C: 26 Paul Ragan 2000

PuntsG: 10 John Ferko v. Albany, 1977 10 Robert McHugh at CWR, 2007T: 21 Mark Stephan 1981C: 31 John Ferko 1976-79

InterceptionsG: 2 Steve Warrington at Wittenberg, 1979 2 Bob O’Toole v. Dayton, 1980T: 3 Tom Deery 1981C: 6 Tom Deery 1978-81

Interception Return YardsG: 95 Jamal Goodman vs. Bridgewater St., 2012T: 95 Jamal Goodman 2012C: 95 Jamal Goodman 2012

Team Game RecoRds

Rushing Attempts 76 v. Albright, 1975Rushing Yards 354 at Central, 1977Passing Attempts 67 at Lycoming, 1995Passing Completions 29 at Lycoming, 1995 29 at Mt. Union, 2012Passing Yards 415 at Springfield, 2000Total Offense 647 at Springfield, 2000Points 61 at Springfield, 2000

ResulTs

197511/22 Albright (QF) W 14-611/29 at Ithaca (SF) L 14-23

197711/19 at Central (QF) W 19-011/26 Albany (SF) W 33-1512/3 vs. Wabash (F) ^ W 39-36

197911/17 Baldwin-Wallace (QF) W 29-811/24 at Wittenberg (SF) L 14-17

198011/22 at Bethany (QF) W 43-1211/29 Dayton (SF) L 24-28

198111/21 at West Georgia (QF) W 10-311/28 Montclair State (SF) W 23-1212/5 vs. Dayton (F) ^ W 17-10

198211/20 at West Georgia (QF) L *** 24-31

198811/19 at Moravian (1R-16) L 7-17

199411/19 at Dickinson (1R-16) W 14-011/26 at Wash. & Jeff. (QF) L 21-37

199511/18 at Lycoming (1R-16) L 27-31

200011/18 at Union (1R) W 33-2611/25 Hobart (2R) W 40-1412/2 at Springfield (QF) W 61-2712/9 at Mount Union (SF) L 30-70

200111/17 Chris. Newport (1R) W 56-711/24 Wash. & Jeff. (2R) W 46-3012/1 at Bridgewater-VA (QF) L 32-57

200711/17 at Case Western Reserve (1R) L 20-21

201211/17 Bridgwater State (1R) W 44-1411/24 Salisbury (2R) W 28-712/1 at Mount Union (QF) L 17-72

all-TIme RecoRds

Round of 32 ............................................... 3-1Round of 16 ............................................... 4-2Quarterfinals (QF) ..................................... 6-4Semifinals (SF) ........................................... 2-4Final (F) ^ .................................................. 2-0Totals ....................................................17-11^ Amos Alonzo Stagg Bowl (Phenix City, AL)* each overtime period

NCAA TOURNAMENT RECORDS

G: Game, T: Tournament, C: Career

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1977, 1981 NATIONAL CHAMPIONS

The 1977 season provided more than just the school’s first NCAA cham-pionship in any sport. It left many memorable moments for a team who stuck together throughout the campaign after beginning in less than ideal shape. The offense looked in disarray with just one returning starter. The defense was in a worse predicament after three standouts decided, respectively, to quit, become a state trooper and enter the Marines. Leave it to perennially optimistic Hall-of-Fame coach Bill Manlove (pictured) to turn the tide and create one of the school’s most magical runs. Manlove was not the only one wearing blue and gold in high spirits. After Widener’s season-opening 28-0 victory over Lebanon Valley, All-America running back Chip Zawoiski told Manlove, “I’ll see you in Alabama, Coach” (site of the national championship game). Zawoiski’s prognostication did not look profound after the following week’s loss to Fordham, but little did anyone know that would be the Pioneers’ final setback of the year. The Pioneers (11-1) rolled through the remainder of the regular season and into the NCAA Tournament for the second time in three years. A quarterfinal date at Central in Pella, Iowa turned out to be no match. The home team sported the nation’s leading rusher, but Zawoiski stole the show with a then tournament-record 31 carries along with 171 yards in Widener’s 19-0 victory. The semifinal against Albany State was played in the mud at Memorial Stadium, coupled with a brutal wind. The Pioneers squandered an early 12-0 lead, but Steve Warrington’s 52-yard punt return for a touchdown was the catalyst in a 33-15 victory, confirming Zawoiski’s insight and Manlove’s belief in his unit. The Stagg Bowl in Phenix City, AL against Wabash saw Widener fall into a 10-0 hole. But in a contest which featured five lead changes, the Pioneers’ biggest play gave them an insurmountable advantage. The usually cautious Manlove called for quarterback Mark Walter to hit Walker Carter on a bomb, which worked for a 70-yard touchdown pass late in the game and a 39-28 lead. Upon the conclusion of Widener’s 39-36 victory, students who witnessed the nationally televised game on a rented seven-foot screen in Alumni Auditorium poured out of the hall and on to nearby Memorial Stadium in jubilation. The offense that looked skeptical, at first, saw Zawoiski finish the season with 1,576 rushing yards and 21 touchdowns, and Walter close with 1,312 yards passing and 15 touchdowns. The defense, minus all the defections, held seven opponents in single figures and yielded just 11.6 points per game.

The 1981 undefeated season was as much about a team celebration than anything else. After all, the senior class could claim at year’s end a 42-3 record over four seasons, four conference championships, three NCAA Tournament appearances and a national championship. But it was one player who stood out. Tom Deery (pictured), a three-time All-American and one of three Pioneers in the College Football Hall of Fame, not only was the spark plug on defense and special teams a fourth straight season, but again provided the big moments when needed. Unlike the 1980 season when the Pioneers cruised to most of their victories, the 1981 campaign was a scratch-and-claw effort that saw the team defeat some game opponents and prepare them for bigger tests. The first big test was the last game of the regular season at Swarthmore with the MAC Southern Division title and an NCAA berth at stake.

The Garnet fans were seeking a huge upset on their home turf, but the Pioneers’ defense came through by allowing just 53 yards rushing in a 16-6 victory. The national quarterfinals the following week at West Georgia this time provided an op-portunity for the pass defense to shine. Widener surrendered just 89 yards through the air and held on for a 10-3 triumph. Enter Montclair State to Memorial Stadium for the semifinals. Enter Tom Deery. The Indians scored early in the fourth quarter to close within 14-12. Deery made sure it would once again be a two-possession game. Breaking a school record that stood since 1926, Deery returned the ensuing kickoff 100 yards for a touchdown and a 21-12 game. The 23-12 victory once again had the Pioneers packing their bags for Phenix City. This time, the final opponent would be one a little more familiar. Dayton not only was the defending national champion, but it had rallied from a 24-point deficit the year before for a stunning 28-24 semifinal victory over Widener in Chester. Just like 1977, the Pioneers found themselves in a 10-0 quagmire in the Stagg Bowl. They found a way again and this time, it would be Deery to the rescue. Deery came through by returning a punt 76 yards for a touchdown and a 10-7 deficit. Tony Britton gave Widener the lead for good on a 20-yard touchdown run and Mark Stephan added a 23-yard field goal for a 17-10 victory, capping a 13-0 season. Deery ended the campaign with 11 interceptions along with 833 return yards.

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Albright • Sept. 20 at Chester, PA • 1:00 pmLocation: Reading, PAEnrollment: 1,700 • Nickname: LionsColors: Red, White and BlackConference: Middle AtlanticStadium: Gene L. Shirk Stadium (5,000)President: Dr. Lex O. McMillan III, Ph.D.Co-Athletic Directors: Janice Luck, Rick Ferry2013 Records: 8-3, (6-3 MAC, T-3rd)Head Coach: John MarzkaRecords • Career / School: 53-25 (7) / sameSID: Jimmy McCumber ([email protected])Phone: 610-921-7786 • Fax: 610-921-7566Press Box Phone: 610-929-6754Hotline: 610-929-6668Web Site: albrightathletics.comSeries: Widener leads, 42-18Streak: Widener has won six of the last 10

2013 Results (8-3, 6-3 MAC)

9/7 Kean W 30-14

9/14 at Stevenson * L 18-24

9/21 Delaware Valley * L 17-20

9/28 at King’s * W 48-29

10/5 at FDU-Florham * W 52-7

10/19 Wilkes * W 30-12

10/26 at Lycoming * L 17-20

11/2 Widener * W 33-19

11/9 at Misericordia * W 42-19

11/16 at Lebanon Valley * W 40-25

11/23 Juniata (ECAC) W 45-34

2014 Schedule

9/5 at Kean 7:00

9/13 Lycoming * 1:00

9/20 at Widener * 1:00

9/27 Stevenson * 1:00

10/4 at Delaware Valley * 1:00

10/11 FDU-Florham * 1:00

10/25 King’s * 1:00

11/1 at Wilkes * 1:00

11/8 Misericordia * 1:00

11/15 at Lebanon Valley 1:00

Delaware Valley • Nov. 15 at Chester, PA • 1:00 pmLocation: Doylestown, PAEnrollment: 1,700 • Nickname: AggiesColors: Forrest Green and GoldConference: Middle AtlanticStadium: James Work Memorial Stadium (4,000)President: Dr. Joseph S. BrosnanAthletic Director: Steve Cantrell2013 Records: 7-4 (6-3 MAC, T-3rd)Head Coach: Jim ClementsRecords • Career / School: 66-24 (8) / sameSID: Matt Levy ([email protected])Phone: 215-489-2937 • Fax: 215-230-2963Press Box Phone: 215-489-2383Hotline: 215-489-4855 (1946)Web Address: athletics.delval.eduSeries: Widener leads, 27-9Streak: Del. Val. has won eight of the last 11

2013 Results (7-4, 6-3 MAC)

9/7 Rowan W 35-27

9/14 at Misericordia * W 42-17

9/21 at Albright * W 20-17

9/28 Stevenson * W 41-23

10/5 at Lycoming * L 16-19

10/18 at FDU-Florham * W 45-30

10/26 King’s * L (ot) 14-21

11/2 Lebanon Valley * L (ot) 31-34

11/9 at Wilkes * W 31-27

11/16 Widener * W 50-28

11/23 F&M (ECAC) L 14-38

2014 Schedule

9/6 at Montclair State 1:00

9/20 Wilkes * 7:00

9/27 at Lebanon Valley * 1:00

10/4 Albright * 1:00

10/11 Lycoming * 12:00

10/18 at Stevenson * 1:00

10/25 Misericordia * 1:00

11/1 at King’s * 1:00

11/8 FDU-Florham * 1:00

11/15 at Widener * 1:00

FDU-Florham • Sept. 27 at Madison, NJ • 1:00 pmLocation: Madison, NJEnrollment: 2,600 • Nickname: DevilsColors: Cardinal and BlueConference: Middle AtlanticStadium: Robert T. Shields Field (4,000)President: Sheldon DruckerAthletic Director: Bill Klika2013 Records: 1-9 (0-9 MAC, 10th)Head Coach: Brian SuraceRecords • Career / School: 4-26 (3) / sameSID: Bryan Jackson ([email protected])Phone: 973-443-8965 • Fax: 973-443-8796Press Box Phone: 973-443-8968Web Address: fdudevils.comSeries: Widener leads, 16-2Streak: Widener has won 15 straight

2013 Results (1-9, 0-9 MAC)

9/13 at TCNJ W 18-12

9/20 Stevenson * L 22-55

9/28 at Lebanon Valley * L 21-65

10/5 Albright * L 7-52

10/12 at King’s * L 21-52

10/18 at Delaware Valley L 30-45

10/26 at Widener * L 14-59

11/1 Wilkes * L 16-38

11/9 at Lycoming * L 12-55

11/16 Misericordia * L 40-63

2014 Schedule

9/12 TCNJ 7:00

9/20 at Misericordia * 1:00

9/27 Widener * 1:00

10/4 at Wilkes * 1:00

10/11 at Albright * 1:00

10/18 King’s * 1:00

10/25 at Stevenson * 1:00

11/1 Lebanon Valley * 1:00

11/8 at Delaware Valley * 1:00

11/14 Lycoming * 7:00

2014 OPPONENTS

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King’s • Nov. 8 at Wilkes-Barre, PA • 1:00 pmLocation: Wilkes-Barre, PAEnrollment: 1,700 • Nickname: MonarchsColors: Red and GoldConference: Middle AtlanticStadium: McCarthy Stadium (3,000)President: Rev. Jack Ryan C.S.C., Ph.D.Athletic Director: Cheryl Ish2013 Records: 6-4 (6-3 MAC, T-3rd)Head Coach: Jeff KnarrRecords • Career / School: 10-30 (4) / sameSID: Bob Ziadie ([email protected])Phone: 570-208-5934 • Fax: 570-208-5937Press Box Phone: 570-823-5879Web Address: kingscollegeathletics.comSeries: Widener leads, 18-3Streak: Widener has won nine of the last 11

2013 Results (6-4, 6-3 MAC)

9/7 William Paterson L 19-21

9/21 at Lebanon Valley * L 17-38

9/28 Albright * L 29-48

10/5 at Misericordia * W (2ot) 41-40

10/12 FDU-Florham * W 52-21

10/19 at Stevenson * W 31-24

10/26 at Delaware Valley * W 21-14

11/2 Lycoming * W 28-24

11/9 at Widener * L 20-52

11/16 Wilkes * W 35-28

2014 Schedule

9/6 at Moravian 1:00

9/13 Stevenson * 1:00

9/20 at Lycoming 1:30

9/27 Misericordia * 1:00

10/4 Lebanon Valley * 1:00

10/18 at FDU-Florham * 1:00

10/25 at Albright * 1:00

11/1 Delaware Valley * 1:00

11/8 Widener * 1:00

11/15 at Wilkes * 12:00

Lebanon Valley • Sept. 13 at Annville, PA • 1:00 pmLocation: Annville, PAEnrollment: 1,600 • Nickname: Flying DutchmenColors: Blue and WhiteConference: Middle AtlanticStadium: Arnold Field (4,000)President: Dr. Lewis ThayneAthletic Director: Rick Beard2013 Records: 8-3 (7-2 MAC, T-1st)Head Coach: Jim MonosRecords • Career / School: 101-110-2 (21) / sameSID: Tim Flynn ([email protected])Phone: 717-867-6033 • Fax: 717-867-6035Press Box Phone: 717-867-6836Web Address: godutchmen.comSeries: Widener leads, 43-24-2Streak: Widener has won 17 of the last 21

2013 Results (8-3, 7-2 MAC)

9/7 Montclair State W 15-14

9/14 at Widener * L 28-35

9/21 King’s * W 38-17

9/28 FDU-Florham * W 65-21

10/5 at Wilkes * W 17-6

10/12 Lycoming * W 14-7

10/26 at Misericordia * W 31-14

11/2 at Delaware Valley * W (ot) 34-31

11/9 Stevenson * W 30-6

11/16 at Albright * L 25-40

11/23 at Wittenberg (NCAA) L 17-59

2014 Schedule

9/6 at Franklin & Marshall 1:00

9/13 Widener * 1:00

9/20 at Stevenson * 1:00

9/27 Delaware Valley * 1:00

10/4 at King’s * 1:00

10/11 Misericordia * 1:00

10/25 Wilkes * 1:00

11/1 at FDU-Florham * 1:00

11/8 at Lycoming * 1:00

11/15 Albright * 1:00

Lycoming • Oct. 25 at Williamsport, PA • 1:30 pmLocation: Williamsport, PAEnrollment: 1,400 • Nickname: WarriorsColors: Blue and GoldConference: Middle AtlanticStadium: David Person Field (3,700)President: Dr. Kent C. TrachteAthletic Director: Mike Clark2013 Records: 7-3 (7-2 MAC, T-1st)Head Coach: Mike ClarkRecords • Career / School: 40-21 (6) / sameSID: Joe Guistina ([email protected])Phone: 570-321-4028 • Fax: 570-321-4158Press Box Phone: 570-323-5765Hotline: 570-321-4188Web Address: athletics.lycoming.eduSeries: Lycoming leads, 21-15Streak: Widener has won five of the last 10

2013 Results (7-3, 7-2 MAC)

9/7 at Brockport L 2-30

9/14 Wilkes * W 34-18

9/21 Misericordia * W 52-14

9/28 at Widener * W 16-14

10/5 at Delaware Valley * W 19-16

10/12 at Lebanon Valley * L 7-14

10/26 Albright W (ot) 20-17

11/2 at King’s * L 24-28

11/9 FDU-Florham * W 55-12

11/16 at Stevenson * W 36-20

2014 Schedule

9/6 Susquehanna 1:00

9/13 at Albright * 1:00

9/20 King’s * 1:30

9/27 at Wilkes * 1:00

10/4 Stevenson * 1:00

10/11 at Delaware Valley * 12:00

10/25 Widener * 1:30

11/1 at Misericordia * 1:00

11/8 Lebanon Valley * 1:00

11/14 at FDU-Florham * 7:00

2014 OPPONENTS

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Misericordia • Oct. 4 at Dallas, PA • 1:00 pmLocation: Dallas, PAEnrollment: 1,886 • Nickname: CougarsColors: Royal Blue and GoldConference: Middle AtlanticStadium: Mangelsdorf Field (1,500)President: Dr. Thomas BotzmanAthletic Director: David Martin2013 Records: 1-9 (1-8 MAC, 9th)Head Coach: Mark RossRecords • Career / School: 1-19 (2) / sameSID: Scott Crispell ([email protected])Phone: 570-674-6398 • Fax: 570-674-6493Web Address: athletics.misericordia.eduSeries: Widener leads, 2-0Streak: Widener has won two straight

2013 Results (1-9, 1-8 MAC)

9/7 Gettysburg L 40-62

9/14 Delaware Valley * L 17-42

9/21 at Lycoming * L 14-52

9/28 Wilkes * L 14-33

10/5 King’s * L (2ot) 40-41

10/19 at Widener * L 20-38

10/26 Lebanon Valley * L 14-31

11/2 at Stevenson * L 3-48

11/9 Albright * L 19-42

11/16 at FDU-Florham * W 63-40

2014 Schedule

9/6 Utica 1:00

9/13 at Wilkes * 1:00

9/20 FDU-Florham * 1:00

9/27 at King’s * 1:00

10/4 Widener * 1:00

10/11 at Lebanon Valley * 1:00

10/25 at Delaware Valley * 1:00

11/1 Lycoming * 1:00

11/8 at Albright * 1:00

11/15 Stevenson * 1:00

Rowan • Sept. 5 at Glassboro, NJ • 7:00 pmLocation: Glassboro, NJEnrollment: N/A • Nickname: ProfsColors: Brown and GoldConference: New Jersey AtlanticStadium: Coach Richard Wacker (5,000)President: Dr. Ali HoushmandAthletic Director: Dan Gilmore2013 Records: 9-3 (6-1 MAC, T-1st)Head Coach: Jay AccorsiRecords • Career / School: 96-35 (12) / sameSID (Football): Dan Drutz ([email protected])Phone: 856-256-4252 • Fax: 856-256-4433Press Box Phone: 856-256-4905Web Address: rowanathletics.comSeries: Rowan leads, 1-0

2013 Results (9-3, 6-1 NJAC)

9/7 at Delaware Valley L 27-35

9/14 Framingham State W 29-19

9/27 Montclair State * W 7-0

10/5 at Brockport W 20-16

10/12 at Morrisville * L 21-41

10/19 Wesley W 24-17

10/26 at Wm. Paterson * W 20-9

11/2 SUNY Cortland * W 10-9

11/9 at Kean * W 7-6

11/15 TCNJ * W 45-21

11/23 Endicott (NCAA) W 24-0

11/30 M. Hardin-Baylor (NCAA) L 8-59

2014 Schedule

9/5 Widener 7:00

9/13 at Framingham State 12:00

9/20 at Wesley 1:00

10/4 at SUNY Cortland * 1:00

10/11 William Paterson * 1:00

10/18 Morrisville State * 2:00

10/25 at Montclair State * 1:00

11/1 Southern Virginia * 1:00

11/8 Kean * 1:00

11/15 at TCNJ * 12:00

Stevenson • Nov. 1 at Chester, PA • 1:00 pmLocation: Owings Mills, MDEnrollment: 4,000 • Nickname: MustangsColors: Forest Green and BlackConference: Middle AtlanticStadium: Stevenson Stadium (3,500)President: Kevin Manning, Ph. D.Athletic Director: Brett Adams2013 Records: 4-6 (3-6 MAC, T-7th)Head Coach: Ed HottleRecords • Career / School: 35-42 (8) / 8-22 (3)SID: Jason Eichelberger ([email protected])Phone: 443-352-4253 • Fax: 443-352-4278Press Box Phone: TBAWeb Address: gomustangsports.comSeries: Widener leads, 3-0Streak: Widener has won three straight

2013 Results (4-6, 3-6 MAC)

9/6 NC Wesleyan W 19-9

9/14 Albright * W 24-18

9/20 at FDU-Florham * W 55-22

9/28 at Delaware Valley * L 23-41

10/5 Widener * L 10-31

10/19 King’s * L 24-31

10/26 at Wilkes * L 17-21

11/2 Misericordia * W 48-3

11/9 at Lebanon Valley * L 6-30

11/16 Lycoming * L 20-36

2014 Schedule

9/6 at NC Wesleyan 7:00

9/13 at King’s * 1:00

9/20 Lebanon Valley * 1:00

9/27 at Albright * 1:00

10/4 at Lycoming * 1:00

10/18 Delaware Valley * 1:00

10/25 FDU-Florham * 1:00

11/1 at Widener * 1:00

11/8 Wilkes * 1:00

11/15 at Misericordia * 1:00

2014 OPPONENTS

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Wilkes • Oct. 18 at Chester, PA • 1:00 pm (Homecoming)Location: Wilkes-Barre, PAEnrollment: 2,300 • Nickname: ColonelsColors: Navy and GoldConference: Middle AtlanticStadium: Schmidt Stadium (2,500)President: Dr. Patrick F. LeahyAthletic Director: Addy Malatesta2013 Records: 4-6 (3-6 MAC, 7th)Head Coach: Trey BrownRecords • Career / School: 0-0 (first season) / sameSID: Vince Scalzo ([email protected])Phone: 570-408-4777 • Fax: 570-408-4028Hotline: 570-408-4778Web Address: gowilkesu.comSeries: Widener leads, 23-15-1Streak: Wilkes has won eight of the last 11

2013 Results (4-6, 3-6 MAC)

9/7 Morrisville State W 41-26

9/14 at Lycoming * L 18-34

9/21 Widener * L 0-21

9/28 at Misericordia W 33-14

10/5 Lebanon Valley * L 6-17

10/19 at Albright * L 12-30

10/26 Stevenson * W 21-17

11/1 at FDU-Florham W 38-16

11/9 Delaware Valley * L 27-31

11/16 at King’s * L 28-35

2014 Schedule

9/6 Muhlenberg 1:00

9/13 Misericordia * 1:00

9/20 at Delaware Valley * 7:00

9/27 Lycoming * 1:00

10/4 FDU-Florham * 1:00

10/18 at Widener * 1:00

10/25 at Lebanon Valley * 1:00

11/1 Albright * 1:00

11/8 at Stevenson * 1:00

11/15 King’s * 12:00

2014 Middle Atlantic Conference ScheduleSeptember 5 / September 6(Bye: FDU-Florham)Widener at Rowan 7:00Albright at Kean 7:00Lebanon Valley at Franklin & Marshall 1:00Susquehanna at Lycoming 1:00King’s at Moravian 1:00Utica at Misericordia 1:00Delaware Valley at Montclair State 1:00Muhlenberg at Wilkes 1:00Stevenson at NC Wesleyan 7:00

September 12 / September 13(Bye: Delaware Valley)TCNJ at FDU-Florham 7:00Widener at Lebanon Valley * 1:00Stevenson at King’s * 1:00Lycoming at Albright * 1:00Misericordia at Wilkes * 1:00

September 20Albright at Widener * 1:00Lebanon Valley at Stevenson * 1:00FDU-Florham at Misericordia * 1:00King’s at Lycoming * 1:30Wilkes at Delaware Valley * 7:00

September 27Widener at FDU-Florham * 1:00Lycoming at Wilkes * 1:00Stevenson at Albright * 1:00Misericordia at King’s * 1:00Delaware Valley at Lebanon Valley * 1:00

2014 OPPONENTS / 2014 MAC SCHEDULE

October 4Widener at Misericordia * 1:00Lebanon Valley at King’s * 1:00Stevenson at Lycoming * 1:00 Albright at Delaware Valley * 1:00FDU-Florham at Wilkes * 1:00

October 11(Byes: King’s, Stevenson, Widener, Wilkes)Lycoming at Delaware Valley * 12:00Misericordia at Lebanon Valley * 1:00FDU-Florham at Albright * 1:00

October 18(Byes: Albright, Lebanon Valley, Lycoming, Misericordia)Wilkes at Widener * 1:00Delaware Valley at Stevenson * 1:00King’s at FDU-Florham * 1:00

October 25Widener at Lycoming * 1:30FDU-Florham at Stevenson * 1:00Misericordia at Delaware Valley * 1:00Wilkes at Lebanon Valley * 1:00King’s at Albright * 1:00

November 1Stevenson at Widener * 1:00Lebanon Valley at FDU-Florham * 1:00Lycoming at Misericordia * 1:00Delaware Valley at King’s * 1:00Albright at Wilkes * 1:00

November 8Widener at King’s * 1:00Wilkes at Stevenson * 1:00Lebanon Valley at Lycoming * 1:00Misericordia at Albright * 1:00FDU-Florham at Delaware Valley * 1:00

November 14 / November 15Lycoming at FDU-Florham * 7:00Delaware Valley at Widener * 1:00King’s at Wilkes * 12:00Stevenson at Misericordia * 1:00Albright at Lebanon Valley * 1:00

November 22NCAA Tournament • First RoundECAC Bowls

November 29NCAA Tournament • Second Round

December 6NCAA Tournament • Quarterfinals

December 13NCAA Tournament • Semifinals

December 19NCAA Tournament •Amos Alonzo Stagg Bowl XLII

* Middle Atlantic Conference gameSchedule is subject to change

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ACTIVe DIVISIoN IIIOpponent (formerly known as) ...........Began Record Last WU WinAlbright...............................................1916 42-18 2012 (34-29)Alfred ...................................................2010 0-1Baldwin-Wallace ..................................1979 1-0 1979 (29-8)Bethany ................................................1980 1-0 1980 (43-12)Bridgewater (VA) .................................2001 0-1Bridgewater State .................................2012 1-0 2012 (44-14)Case Western Reserve ...........................2007 0-1Central .................................................1977 1-0 1977 (19-0)Christopher Newport ...........................2001 1-0 2001 (56-7)Coast Guard .........................................1968 0-1Curry ...................................................2009 1-0 2009 (22-17)Delaware Valley ..................................1977 27-9 2011 (42-23)Dickinson ............................................1912 14-11-2 1994 (14-0)FDU-Florham (FDU-Madison) ..........1993 16-2 2013 (59-14)Franklin & Marshall ............................1905 16-13-1 1982 (16-7)Frostburg State .....................................2003 4-0 2009 (35-16)Gallaudet .............................................1914 4-2 1931 (20-0)Gettysburg ...........................................1929 6-4-1 1991 (27-6)Hampden-Sydney ................................1958 0-1Hartwick ..............................................1940 2-0 1942 (40-7)Hobart .................................................2000 1-0 2000 (40-14)Ithaca ...................................................1975 0-3Johns Hopkins .....................................1885 11-3 1982 (23-6)Juniata..................................................1923 26-8 2006 (35-13)Kean .....................................................1994 0-1King’s ..................................................1993 18-3 2013 (52-20)Kings Point ..........................................1960 1-8 1961 (35-14)Lebanon Valley ...................................1933 43-24-2 2013 (35-28)Lycoming ............................................1954 15-21 2012 (28-23)McDaniel (Western Maryland) ............1902 18-13 1980 (49-7)Misericordia ........................................2012 2-0 2012 (38-20)Montclair State ....................................1981 2-1 2005 (27-18)Moravian..............................................1946 40-21 2011 (44-6)Mount Union ......................................2000 0-2Muhlenberg .........................................1916 8-7-1 1982 (31-12)Nichols.................................................1969 2-0 1970 (24-7)North Carolina Wesleyan .....................2007 2-0 2008 (7-6)Norwich ...............................................1985 2-0 1986 (10-6)Rowan .................................................2007 0-1Salisbury...............................................1983 3-2 2012 (28-7)Springfield ............................................2000 1-0 2000 (61-27)Stevenson ............................................2011 3-0 2013 (31-10)Susquehanna ........................................1915 28-13-1 2006 (31-14)Thiel ....................................................2010 2-0 2011 (44-14)Trinity (CT) ........................................1968 0-2Union ..................................................2000 1-0 2000 (33-26)Ursinus ................................................1893 23-9 2006 (14-7)Wabash ................................................1977 1-0 1977 (39-36)Washington & Jefferson .......................1991 1-3 2001 (46-30)Wesley..................................................1989 2-3 1990 (19-14)Western Connecticut ...........................2012 1-0 2012 (63-17)Wilkes .................................................1956 24-15-1 2013 (21-0)Wittenberg ...........................................1979 0-1

2013 Opponents in Bold

ACTIVe DIVISIoN I & IIArmy ....................................................1933 0-1Bowie State ..........................................1983 1-0 1983 (39-12)Bucknell ...............................................1934 0-1-1Connecticut .........................................1921 0-0-1Dayton .................................................1980 1-1 1981 (17-10)Delaware ..............................................1896 20-19-3 1948 (13-7)Fordham ..............................................1971 7-1 1978 (16-7)Lehigh ..................................................1917 0-7-1Maryland .............................................1912 1-2-1 1913 (26-6)Mercyhurst ...........................................1984 0-1Pennsylvania ........................................1879 1-3-1 1888 (6-0)Rutgers .................................................1922 1-4-1 1925 (13-12)SUNY-Albany ......................................1977 1-0 1977 (33-15)Temple .................................................1910 5-0-1 1925 (13-0)Villanova ..............................................1896 1-9 1920 (13-6)Wagner ................................................1950 10-2 1962 (15-8)West Chester ........................................1933 5-13-3 1939 (23-8)West Georgia .......................................1981 1-1 1981 (10-3)All Opponents ..................................... 668-407-38

INACTIVeOpponent ...........................................Began Record Last WU WinAdelphi ................................................1952 0-1Alpha Boat Club ..................................1890 1-0 1890 (18-0)Ardmore ...............................................1892 0-0-1Baltimore .............................................1929 5-0 1935 (20-0)Banks Business .....................................1902 4-0 1905 (12-0)Belmont AA .........................................1888 1-0 1888 (48-0)Belmont AA Second Team ...................1893 1-0 1893 (22-0)Blue Ridge ...........................................1940 2-0 1941 (20-0)Bordentown Military ...........................1903 1-0 1903 (34-0)Bridgeport ............................................1956 2-0 1957 (13-6)Brown Prep ..........................................1905 1-1 1906 (22-0)Cambridge AA .....................................1895 1-0 1895 (14-6)Carlisle Reserves ...................................1913 1-1 1913 (7-0)Central High School ............................1911 1-1 1912 (7-0)Central Manual Training School ..........1901 1-0 1901 (24-6)Chester Cricket Club ...........................1885 1-0 1886 (12-0)Chester High School ............................1894 3-0 1898 (22-0)Chester High School Alumni ...............1897 0-1Chester YMCA ....................................1896 1-0 1896 (6-0)Columbia Business ...............................1904 1-1 1904 (11-0)Crescents .............................................1879 2-0-1 1883 (30-0)Delaware Field Club ............................1888 1-0 1888 (22-0)Dickinson Reserves ..............................1911 1-0 1911 (53-0)Drexel ..................................................1901 12-16-2 1971 (40-19)Episcopal Academy ..............................1902 1-0 1902 (35-0)George Washington .............................1924 1-0 1924 (13-0)Hahnemann Medical ...........................1909 1-0 1909 (5-0)Haverford ............................................1884 8-4 1971 (36-0)Jefferson ...............................................1900 1-0 1900 (10-5)Jefferson Medical..................................1900 3-2-1 1905 (17-11)Lakehurst Naval Air Station .................1942 0-1La Salle .................................................1936 1-5 1936 (6-2)Medico-Chirurgical ..............................1903 2-3 1909 (10-5)Melrose Academy .................................1892 1-0 1892 (24-6)Mount St. Mary’s .................................1926 0-2-1New York University ............................1935 0-6 New York Tech ....................................1976 2-0 1977 (35-6)Northeast Manual Training School ......1912 1-0 1912 (32-0)Park Avenue Wheelmen .......................1894 1-0 1894 (20-0)Pennington Seminary ...........................1883 3-1 1908 (16-6)Pennsylvania College Department ........1901 0-1Pennsylvania Dental .............................1903 5-1 1909 (14-0)Pennsylvania Frosh ...............................1894 5-4 1900 (6-0)Pennsylvania Law .................................1898 3-0 1903 (17-6)Pennsylvania Medical ...........................1900 1-0 1900 (11-6)Pennsylvania Military Alumni ..............1890 1-0 1890 (21-0)Pennsylvania Reserves ..........................1888 2-0 1915 (10-0)Pennsylvania Scrubs .............................1898 0-2Pennsylvania Sophs ..............................1903 0-0-1Philadelphia Amateur Swim Club ........1892 1-0 1892 (44-0)Philadelphia Dental ..............................1898 2-0 1904 (36-0)Philadelphia Institute for the Deaf .......1896 0-1 Philadelphia Pharmacy .........................1902 4-0 1911 (29-0)Philadelphia Textile..............................1900 3-0 1902 (18-0)Princeton Frosh ....................................1884 0-3Princeton Reserves ...............................1887 1-3 1888 (6-0)Princeton Sophs ...................................1880 0-4 Prospect Field Club ..............................1925 4-1 1930 (13-0)Rivertons ..............................................1891 1-0 1891 (18-0)St. John’s (MD) ...................................1900 16-12-1 1932 (22-0)St. John’s (NY) .....................................1971 2-0 1972 (55-14)Saint Joseph’s .......................................1912 15-1-2 1939 (10-2)Scranton ...............................................1950 0-4Shortlidge-Media Academy .................1885 3-0 1897 (8-5)Stevens Tech ........................................1912 1-1 1912 (18-6)Swarthmore ..........................................1879 24-18-1 1988 (36-3)Tioga AA ..............................................1888 1-0 1888 (20-0)Upland AA ...........................................1886 2-2 1893 (28-0)Upsala ..................................................1931 9-3 1993 (27-24)Villanova Prep ......................................1908 1-1-2 1908 (6-5)Villanova Scrubs ...................................1902 1-0 1902 (22-0)Vineland ..............................................1888 1-0 1888 (56-0)Viscose AC ...........................................1920 1-0 1920 (7-0)Warren AC ..........................................1893 1-0 1893 (4-0)Washington (MD) ...............................1906 10-2-1 1941 (22-6)Williamson Trade ................................1903 4-3-2 1909 (5-3)

WIDENER VS.

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YEAR-BY-YEAR RESULTS

Si Pauxtis1916-29, 1936-46

82-74-8

Judd Timm1930-3836-37-10

George Hansell1953-61

50-23

Rock Royer1962-63

8-11

Art Raimo1964-66

8-19

Ed Lawless1967-68

5-13

Bill Manlove1969-91182-53-1

Bill Cubit1992-9634-18-1

Bill Zwaan1997-2002

54-14

David Wood2003-09

41-32

PA MILITARY ACADEMY

No known coach 1879-91

1879 (0-1-1) Crescents T 0g0t-0g0tPennsylvania L 0g-6gSwarthmore SNA

1880 (0-1)Princeton Sophs L 0g-1g3t

1881 (1-1) Crescents W 3g2t-0g3sPrinceton Sophs L 0g-4g3t

1882no scores available

1883 (2-1)Crescents W 30-0Pennington Seminary W 11-0Princeton Sophs ^ L 0-32

1884 (1-1)Princeton Frosh L 6-16Pennington Seminary ! W 16-2Haverford SNA

1885 (2-3)Swarthmore L 4-56Shortlidge-Media Acad. W 15-5Princeton Frosh L 0-40Shortlidge-Media Acad. W 16-2Johns Hopkins L 0-30Chester Cricket Club SNA

1886 (2-1-1)Princeton Frosh L 0-16Chester Cricket Club W 12-0Pennsylvania ! (NR) T 6-6Upland AA W 18-0

1887 (0-1)Princeton Reserves L 0-23Johns Hopkins SNAOxford AC SNA

1888 (9-0)Pennsylvania Reserves W 18-0Haverford W 14-0Vineland W 56-0Tioga AA W 20-0 Princeton Reserves ! W 6-0Pennsylvania ! (NR) W 6-0Johns Hopkins W 12-0Belmont AA W 48-0Delaware Field Club W 22-0

1889 (1-2) Haverford L 14-16Princeton Reserves L 0-22Johns Hopkins W 12-0

1890 (2-2)PMA Alumni W 21-0Princeton Reserves L 0-46Haverford ^ L 0-18Alpha Boat Club W 18-0

1891 (1-1)Haverford SNASwarthmore L 0-52

Rivertons W 18-0

PA MILITARY COLLEGE

No known coach 1892-93; 95-96; 1899; 1908-10

1892 (2-1-1) Melrose Academy W 24-6Phila. Am. Swim Club W 44-0Swarthmore L 4-8Ardmore AA T 6-6

1893 (4-1)Belmont AA 2nd Team W 22-0Ursinus W 62-0Swarthmore L 16-34Warren AC W 4-0Upland AA W 28-0

1894 (3-2)HARRY MACKEY

Chester High School W 10-0Pennsylvania Frosh W 32-0at Swarthmore L 0-50Park Avenue Wheelmen W 20-0Upland AA L 0-6

1895 (2-3)Cambridge AA W 14-6Pennsylvania Frosh W 6-4Pennsylvania Frosh L 0-14Swarthmore L 12-16Upland AA L 0-12

1896 (5-3)Chester YMCA W 6-0Chester High School W 26-0Pennsylvania Frosh W 8-0Philadelphia Inst. Deaf L 12-18at Swarthmore L 6-12Villanova L 6-24Delaware W 14-0Haverford W 16-12

1897 (3-2-1) FRANK DELABARRE

Pennsylvania Frosh W 4-0Chester HS Alumni L 0-16Swarthmore T 6-6Delaware W 18-0Shortlidge-Media Acad. W 8-5Haverford L 0-10

1898 (5-2)BUSH

Delaware W 6-0Pennsylvania Scrubs L 0-37Philadelphia Dental W 16-0Chester High School W 22-0at Swarthmore L 0-22Pennsylvania Law W 23-6Delaware W 11-5Temple % W 15-8

1899 (0-2)Pennsylvania Scrubs W 5-11Delaware L 0-23

1900 (7-3)NATHAN STAUFFER

Pennsylvania Law W 23-0Philadelphia Textile W 18-6Swarthmore L 5-28

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YEAR-BY-YEAR RESULTS

Delaware !& (0-17) W 6-0Jefferson College W 10-5Pennsylvania Frosh W 6-0Pennsylvania Medical W 11-6Jefferson Medical W 18-0Philadelphia Dental L 12-36St. John’s-MD L 0-12

1901 (3-5)NATHAN STAUFFER

Drexel W 6-5Philadelphia Textile W 24-0Ursinus L 0-29Central Manual Training W 24-6at Swarthmore L 0-33Princeton Sophs L 0-17Johns Hopkins SNAPennsylvania Col. Dept. L 0-5St. John’s-MD L 0-11

1902 (8-1)EDWIN STEARNS

Episcopal Academy W 35-0Villanova Scrubs W 22-0Banks Business W 11-6Drexel W 35-0Western Maryland L 10-11Philadelphia Pharmacy W 13-0Delaware W 17-12Philadelphia Textile W 18-0St. John’s-MD W 23-6

1903 (6-3-1)EDWIN STEARNS

Williamson Trade ! W 6-0Bordentown Military W 34-0Pennsylvania Frosh L 0-10Banks Business W 12-0Medico-Chirurgical L 0-10Jefferson Medical L 0-22Pennsylvania Law W 17-6Pennsylvania Sophs T 0-0Pennsylvania Dental W 35-0St. John’s-MD W 23-11

1904 (8-1-1)EDWIN STEARNS

Williamson Trade W 5-0Delaware W 4-0Medico-Chirurgical W 30-6Philadelphia Dental W 12-0Jefferson Medical W 6-0Banks Business W 40-0Philadelphia Dental W 36-0Columbia Business W 11-0Villanova L 6-23St. John’s-MD T 12-12Temple % W 3-0

1905 (5-3)EDWIN STEARNS

Williamson Trade W 6-0Columbia Business L 0-15Jefferson Medical W 17-11Delaware W 12-5Brown Prep L 0-15Banks Business W 12-0Franklin & Marshall W 12-11St. John’s-MD L 5-6

1906 (2-4-2)JOE MESSICK

Jefferson Medical T 0-0Williamson Trade L 0-20

Washington College T 0-0Delaware L 0-12Drexel L 0-17Brown Prep W 22-0Drexel L 5-12St. John’s-MD W 9-0

1907 (0-8)JOE MESSICK

Villanova (NR) L 0-18Jefferson Medical L 0-6Pennington Seminary L 0-12Williamson Trade L 6-15Pennsylvania Frosh L 0-47Medico-Chirurgical L 0-16Drexel L 0-5St. John’s-MD L 4-21Temple % L 6-17

1908 (4-2-1)Pennington Seminary W 16-6Phil. Dental/Temple W 22-0Williamson Trade T 0-0Medico-Chirurgical L 6-7Drexel W 22-0Villanova Prep W 6-5St. John’s-MD L 0-11

1909 (6-0-1)Jefferson Medical SNAHahnemann Medical W 5-0Medico-Chirurgical W 10-5Phil. Dental/Temple W 14-0Williamson Trade W 5-3Drexel T 0-0Philadelphia Pharmacy W 23-0St. John’s-MD W 6-0

1910 (2-3)Temple W 22-0Williamson Trade L 0-5Villanova Prep L 0-5Philadelphia Pharmacy W 35-5St. John’s-MD L 0-42

1911 (3-2-1)JACK HOLLENBACK

Central High School L 0-12Villanova Prep T 0-0Pennsylvania Frosh L 0-6Philadelphia Pharmacy W 29-0Delaware W 8-6Dickinson Reserves W 53-0Temple % W 30-0

1912 (5-1-2)BILL HOLLENBACK

Central High School W 7-0Dickinson L 0-31Saint Joseph’s W 20-6Stevens Tech W 18-6Temple W 28-0Northeast Manual Training W 32-0Villanova Prep T 13-13Maryland T 13-13

1913 (5-0-2)DUTCH SOMMER

at Delaware T 0-0Carlisle Reserves W 7-0Western Maryland W 37-0St. John’s-MD W 27-0Williamson Trade T 0-0Maryland W 26-6

Temple W 18-0

1914 (0-6-1)DANNY HUTCHINSON

Temple T 0-0St. John’s-MD L 0-35Delaware L 0-13at Ursinus L 0-54Carlisle Reserves L 6-17Gallaudet L 6-55Maryland L 0-26

1915 (4-3)BILL HOLLENBACK

Delaware L 6-7Pennsylvania Reserves W 10-0at Delaware L 6-13at Maryland L 13-14Susquehanna W 26-0at Saint Joseph’s W 20-0St. John’s-MD W 38-13

1916 (4-3)SI PAUXTIS

Delaware L 0-21at Muhlenberg L 6-34St. John’s-MD W 6-0Gallaudet W 27-13 Washington College W 17-0at Ursinus L 6-30Albright W 24-7

1917 (5-3)SI PAUXTIS

Temple ! W 1-0at Muhlenberg L 7-18St. John’s-MD W 7-0Gallaudet W 14-6at Pennsylvania L 0-23Washington College W 32-0at Lehigh L 6-34Albright W 29-0

1918 (0-3-1)SI PAUXTIS

at Delaware T 0-0St. John’s-MD L 0-25Gallaudet L 0-31Swarthmore L 0-7

1919 (4-2-2)SI PAUXTIS

at Pennsylvania L 0-54at Swarthmore L 0-14Franklin & Marshall T 0-0St. John’s-MD T 14-14Ursinus W 9-6Albright W 26-0Washington College W 26-0Delaware W 16-0

1920 (5-3-1)SI PAUXTIS

Viscose AC W 7-0at Stevens Tech L 10-12Villanova W 13-6at Franklin & Marshall W 17-14St. John’s-MD L 7-10Susquehanna L 0-35Ursinus W 9-0Washington College W 35-7Delaware T 0-0

1921 (4-4-1)SI PAUXTIS

Albright L 20-27Villanova L 7-19Gallaudet W 12-0Washington College W 26-7at Franklin & Marshall L 14-41Ursinus W 12-0Connecticut T 0-0Delaware (Wilmington, DE) L 0-6St. John’s-MD W 3-0

1922 (4-6)SI PAUXTIS

at Rutgers L 0-13Saint Joseph’s W 12-6Albright L 6-13Washington College W 12-0Delaware W 6-2Franklin & Marshall L 0-42at Ursinus L 7-19Dickinson L 7-19Western Maryland W 6-0St. John’s-MD L 6-14

1923 (5-5)SI PAUXTIS

at Rutgers L 0-27Saint Joseph’s W 18-0Albright W 16-0Washington College L 0-3Susquehanna L 0-6at Franklin & Marshall L 0-20Ursinus W 29-17at Dickinson L 6-7Juniata W 6-0St. John’s-MD W 12-6

1924 (7-2)SI PAUXTIS

Washington College L 5-7Albright W 20-0Saint Joseph’s W 25-3Ursinus (Norristown, PA) W 23-0Susquehanna W 31-3George Washington W 13-0at Dickinson L 0-7Juniata W 20-0St. John’s-MD W 26-0

1925 (9-1)SI PAUXTIS

Prospect Field Club W 39-0Washington College W 9-3Albright W 31-6Saint Joseph’s W 19-0Temple W 13-0at Rutgers W 13-12Susquehanna W 7-0at Dickinson L 0-34Juniata W 38-24St. John’s-MD W 20-7

1926 (7-1-1) SI PAUXTIS

Washington College W 12-3Albright L 0-13Mount St. Mary’s T 13-13Saint Joseph’s W 13-6at Franklin & Marshall W 13-0at Susquehanna W 20-7Ursinus W 29-7Juniata W 25-0St. John’s-MD W 14-0

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YEAR-BY-YEAR RESULTS

1927 (6-3)SI PAUXTIS

Prospect Field Club W 7-0Albright L 0-7at Mount St. Mary’s L 0-7Saint Joseph’s W 25-6at Dickinson L 0-25Susquehanna W 12-0Franklin & Marshall W 12-6Juniata W 38-7St. John’s-MD W 13-7

1928 (1-9)SI PAUXTIS

Prospect Field Club L 0-2at Lehigh L 7-14Saint Joseph’s L 3-6Dickinson L 6-19at Franklin & Marshall L 0-6at Susquehanna L 20-26Albright L 0-19Mount St. Mary’s L 0-20Juniata W 6-0St. John’s-MD L 0-13

1929 (6-3-1)SI PAUXTIS

Prospect Field Club W 18-0at Lehigh T 20-20at Saint Joseph’s W 7-6Gettysburg L 0-7Baltimore W 26-0Franklin & Marshall L 7-14at Dickinson W 7-6Delaware W 18-6Susquehanna W 12-6St. John’s-MD L 6-26

1930 (6-3-1) JUD TIMM

Prospect Field Club W 13-0at Lehigh L 0-25at Gettysburg L 0-56Saint Joseph’s W 27-0at Albright L 7-42Dickinson T 7-7Johns Hopkins W 7-0Baltimore W 21-0Susquehanna W 24-13Delaware W 10-2

1931 (4-3-2)JUD TIMM

at Lehigh L 0-13Upsala W 25-7at Albright L 0-58at Dickinson T 0-0Gallaudet W 20-0Baltimore W 2-0at Delaware L 7-13Susquehanna W 13-0Saint Joseph’s T 6-6

1932 (3-4-2)JUD TIMM

at Rutgers L 6-20at Lehigh L 0-7at Albright L 0-13at Saint Joseph’s W 25-0Dickinson W 25-0at Susquehanna T 0-0Delaware (Atl. City, NJ) L 6-7at Muhlenberg T 0-0St. John’s-MD W 22-0

1933 (5-2-1)JUD TIMM

West Chester W 38-6at Rutgers L 0-10at Dickinson W 13-0Saint Joseph’s W 37-6Delaware (Atl. City, NJ) W 25-0at Army L 0-12at Susquehanna W 16-0Lebanon Valley T 0-0

1934 (7-0-2) JUD TIMM

at Rutgers T 0-0at Bucknell T 0-0at West Chester W 20-0Juniata W 26-0at Saint Joseph’s W 25-0Delaware (Atl. City, NJ) W 12-0Susquehanna W 39-0Baltimore W 31-0Lebanon Valley W 12-7

1935 (5-5)JUD TIMM

at Villanova L 0-41at Bucknell L 0-7at Franklin & Marshall L 0-14West Chester W 12-0at New York L 17-33at Lebanon Valley L 0-7Delaware (Atl. City, NJ) W 7-0at Susquehanna W 13-7Baltimore W 20-0Ursinus W 6-0

1936 (2-7) JUD TIMM

at Villanova L 7-32at New York L 0-26at West Chester W 8-0Franklin & Marshall 0-26Lebanon Valley L 6-7Delaware (Atl. City, NJ) L 0-6La Salle (Atl. City, NJ) W 6-2Susquehanna L 0-6Ursinus L 6-12

1937 (1-8-1) JUD TIMM

at West Chester L 0-19at New York L 6-37at Villanova L 0-42Saint Joseph’s T 0-0at Franklin & Marshall L 0-12at Lebanon Valley L 0-3Delaware (Atl. City, NJ) W 3-0La Salle L 0-9West Chester L 3-6Ursinus L 0-6

1938 (3-5-1) JUD TIMM

at West Chester L 14-27at Lehigh L 13-16at Franklin & Marshall L 0-27Ursinus W 26-0Lebanon Valley L 13-15Delaware (Atl. City, NJ) W 32-20La Salle L 0-20at Saint Joseph’s W 7-6West Chester T 0-0

1939 (3-5-1) SI PAUXTIS

at West Chester W 23-8at New York L 0-43at Ursinus L 0-4Franklin & Marshall L 0-6Leb. Valley at Hershey L 0-31Saint Joseph’s W 10-2Delaware (Atl. City, NJ) W 20-0West Chester T 6-6La Salle L 0-20

1940 (4-5) SI PAUXTIS

Hartwick W 40-0at New York L 6-32Villanova (Shibe Park) L 14-53at West Chester L 0-9Blue Ridge W 20-0at Lebanon Valley W 19-16Washington College W 6-0Delaware (Wilmington, DE) L 7-14La Salle L 6-31

1941 (3-5)SI PAUXTIS

at New York L 7-25Delaware (Wilmington, DE) L 0-20Blue Ridge W 20-0at West Chester L 0-13Lebanon Valley W 14-0Washington College W 22-6at Albright L 20-27La Salle L 212

1942 (4-3-1)SI PAUXTIS

Hartwick W 40-7at West Chester T 6-6at Lehigh L 0-13Lakehurst NAS L 7-20Delaware (Wilmington, DE) L 14-19Albright W 18-0Juniata W 14-13Lebanon Valley W 7-0

1943 and 1944Seasons canceled due to WWII

1945 (0-2)

SI PAUXTISat Ursinus L 6-53at Haverford L 0-37

1946 (1-6)SI PAUXTIS

Delaware (Wilmington, DE) L 0-25at West Chester L 0-40at Johns Hopkins L 0-27Ursinus L 0-13at Moravian L 6-14Lebanon Valley L 0-13at Albright W 6-0

1947 (3-4-1) WOODY LUDWIG

Delaware (Wilmington, DE) L 13-25at West Chester L 0-33Johns Hopkins L 6-19at Drexel W 25-0at Ursinus W 20-0at Moravian L 0-13at Lebanon Valley T 0-0Albright W 27-19

1948 (8-1)WOODY LUDWIG

Delaware (Wilmington, DE) W 13-7at West Chester L 0-10Swarthmore W 38-26at Johns Hopkins W 12-7Drexel W 33-6at Susquehanna W 19-12Haverford W 33-14at Ursinus W 31-0Albright W 39-0

1949 (6-2-1)WOODY LUDWIG

Delaware (Wilmington, DE) L 0-29West Chester L 14-20at Swarthmore W 28-0Johns Hopkins W 21-7Drexel T 12-12Susquehanna W 54-0at Haverford W 20-0Ursinus W 54-7at Albright W 19-7

1950 (3-5) WOODY LUDWIG

at West Chester L 0-21Albright W 12-7Delaware (Wilmington, DE) L 20-32at Drexel L 7-19Scranton L 0-26Moravian W 21-0Lebanon Valley L 6-7Wagner W 33-8

1951 (2-6) WOODY LUDWIG

at West Chester L 6-19at Albright L 6-12at Scranton L 0-21Delaware (Wilmington, DE) L 2-46Drexel L 0-16at Moravian W 35-13Lebanon Valley L 6-15at Wagner W 13-0

1952 (2-6) WOODY LUDWIG

at West Chester L 6-21Adelphi L 13-19at Drexel W 12-7at Lebanon Valley L 7-19Moravian W 22-0Western Maryland L 20-24Delaware (Wilmington, DE) L 20-43at Albright L 0-20

1953 (2-4)GEORGE HANSELL

West Chester L 8-27Lebanon Valley L 14-25at Moravian W 13-7at Juniata L 7-24at Western Maryland L 7-33Albright W 7-0

1954 (7-0)MAC CHAMPIONSGEORGE HANSELL

Western Maryland W 24-0Moravian W 27-20at Wagner W 21-12Lycoming W 21-0at Dickinson W 6-2

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YEAR-BY-YEAR RESULTS

Lebanon Valley W 39-14at Albright W 28-6

1955 (5-3)GEORGE HANSELL

at Western Maryland W 25-6at Lebanon Valley W 33-0at Moravian L 0-13Wagner W 38-14at Lycoming W 14-13Dickinson W 39-0Scranton L 6-32Drexel L 6-20

1956 (7-2)GEORGE HANSELL

at Wagner W 14-7Western Maryland W 19-0at Bridgeport W 28-6Moravian W 14-13at Drexel L 21-44Lycoming W 14-13at Wilkes W 25-13Scranton L 21-34Lebanon Valley W 40-25

1957 (5-3) GEORGE HANSELL

Wagner W 14-12Bridgeport W 13-6at Western Maryland W 41-26at Moravian W 6-0Drexel W 26-6at Lycoming L 7-13Juniata L 0-14at Swarthmore L 8-14

1958 (7-2, 3-0 MAC)MAC CHAMPIONSGEORGE HANSELL

at Wagner W 13-8Western Maryland * W 13-0at Wilkes W 20-14Moravian W 14-8at Drexel * W 15-6Lycoming L 12-13Lebanon Valley W 27-7Swarthmore ! * W 1-0at Hampden-Sydney L 18-24

1959 (6-2, 2-1 MAC)GEORGE HANSELL

Wagner W 20-12at Western Maryland * L 7-14Wilkes W 21-6at Moravian L 12-26Drexel * W 20-7at Lycoming W 8-7at Swarthmore * W 28-12Lebanon Valley W 19-6

1960 (5-4, 3-1 MAC)GEORGE HANSELL

at Wagner L 20-25Western Maryland * W 26-12at Wilkes W 12-0Moravian W 20-12at Drexel * W 13-12at Haverford * W 20-6at Kings Point L 0-15Swarthmore * L 7-18at Lebanon Valley L 16-37

1961 (6-3, 3-2 MAC)GEORGE HANSELL

Wagner W 14-0at Western Maryland * W 18-8Wilkes W 7-0at Moravian L 6-14Drexel * L 2-9Haverford * W 50-6at Swarthmore * W 18-7Lebanon Valley * L 14-15Kings Point (Atl. City, NJ) W 35-14

1962 (5-5, 3-3 MAC)ROCK ROYER

at Wagner W 15-8Western Maryland * L 7-12at Wilkes W 30-0Moravian L 3-17Dickinson * W 15-8at Drexel * L 8-31at Franklin & Marshall * W 20-16Swarthmore * W 19-7at Lebanon Valley * L 0-12Kings Point (Atl. City, NJ) L 0-9

1963 (3-6, 2-3 MAC)ROCK ROYER

Wagner L 0-27at Western Maryland * L 6-31Wilkes W 15-12at Moravian L 7-17at Dickinson * L 13-21Drexel * W 10-0Franklin & Marshall * W 21-6at Swarthmore * L 6-7Kings Point (Atl. City, NJ) L 13-27

1964 (4-5, 4-3 MAC)ART RAIMO

Western Maryland * W 24-14at Muhlenberg * L 6-7Moravian L 0-21Dickinson * W 7-3at Drexel * L 0-34at Franklin & Marshall * L 17-19Swarthmore * W 27-8at Lebanon Valley * W 20-6Kings Point (Atl. City, NJ) L 16-20

1965 (2-7, 2-5 MAC)ART RAIMO

at Western Maryland * L 14-15Muhlenberg * W 41-14at Moravian L 6-19at Dickinson * L 7-14Drexel * L 6-14Franklin & Marshall * W 17-7at Swarthmore * L 7-33Lebanon Valley * L 7-29Kings Point (Atl. City, NJ) L 12-22

1966 (2-7, 2-4 MAC)ART RAIMO

Dickinson * W 21-9Western Maryland * W 10-6at Muhlenberg * L 15-28Moravian L 7-27at Drexel * L 6-14at Wilkes L 9-36Swarthmore * L 6-7at Lebanon Valley * L 6-31Kings Point (Atl. City, NJ) L 7-46

1967 (3-6, 3-3 MAC)ED LAWLESS

at Dickinson * L 13-15at Western Maryland * L 7-14Muhlenberg * W 28-24at Moravian L 6-35Drexel * L 6-19Wilkes L 0-27at Swarthmore * W 42-13at Lebanon Valley * W 14-13Kings Point (Atl. City, NJ) L 6-37

1968 (2-7, 1-3 MAC)ED LAWLESS

Western Maryland * L 0-30at Upsala L 6-21Moravian W 7-2Trinity-CT L 7-45at Drexel * L 13-35at Wilkes L 0-34Swarthmore * W 22-9at Lebanon Valley * L 6-21Coast Guard (Atl. City, NJ) L 14-40

1969 (2-7, 0-5 MAC)BILL MANLOVE

Nichols W 25-6at Western Maryland * L 6-17Upsala W 14-13at Moravian * L 6-33Trinity-CT L 14-37Drexel * L 10-16Wilkes L 0-34at Swarthmore * L 6-7Lebanon Val. (Atl. City, NJ) * L 0-28

1970 (5-4, 4-2 MAC)BILL MANLOVE

at Nichols W 24-7Western Maryland * W 14-3at Upsala L 7-32Moravian * W 41-12at Haverford * W 52-6at Drexel L 0-6Muhlenberg * L 6-14Swarthmore * W 40-18Lebanon Val. (Atl. City, NJ) * L 13-16

1971 (7-3, 3-3 MAC)BILL MANLOVE

St. John’s-NY W 26-9Fordham W 21-14at Western Maryland * L 7-38Upsala W 21-0at Moravian * L 14-24Haverford * W 36-0Drexel W 40-19at Muhlenberg * L 7-13at Swarthmore * W 21-8Lebanon Valley * W 24-16

WIDENER COLLEGE1972 (8-1, 6-1 MAC)

BILL MANLOVEat Lebanon Valley * W 19-0St. John’s-NY W 55-14Western Maryland * W 35-6at Fordham W 21-7Moravian * W 28-14at Franklin & Marshall * L 21-24Ursinus * W 32-6Muhlenberg * W 48-2Swarthmore * W 28-8

1973 (8-1, 7-1 MAC)BILL MANLOVE

at Western Maryland * W 27-0Dickinson * W 33-8at Moravian * W 34-0Franklin & Marshall * W 21-20at Ursinus * W 54-0at Muhlenberg * L 19-21at Swarthmore * W 61-13Lebanon Valley * W 40-8Fordham (Atl. City, NJ) W 49-20

1974 (8-1, 7-1 MAC)BILL MANLOVE

at Lebanon Valley * W 41-22at Fordham W 30-6Western Maryland * W 28-0at Dickinson * W 46-28Moravian * W 14-7at Franklin & Marshall * L 22-26Ursinus * W 28-7Muhlenberg * W 22-9Swarthmore * W 39-6

1975 (10-1, 8-0 MAC)MAC CHAMPIONS

BILL MANLOVELebanon Valley * W 28-7Fordham W 9-7at Western Maryland * W 42-14Dickinson * W 28-6at Moravian * W 21-13Franklin & Marshall * W 33-21at Ursinus * W 40-0at Muhlenberg * W 24-0at Swarthmore * W 54-6Albright # W 14-6at Ithaca # L 14-23

1976 (8-1, 6-1 MAC)BILL MANLOVE

at Lebanon Valley * W 16-6at Fordham W 51-28New York Tech W 30-0at Dickinson * L 6-17Moravian * W 26-9at Franklin & Marshall * W 27-18Ursinus * W 42-0Muhlenberg * W 21-6Swarthmore * W 42-14

1977 (11-1, 6-0 MAC)NCAA III CHAMPIONS

MAC CHAMPIONSBILL MANLOVE

Lebanon Valley * W 28-0Fordham L 14-19at Moravian * W 13-9at New York Tech W 35-6Johns Hopkins * W 17-6Franklin & Marshall * W 42-12at Ursinus * W 56-6at Delaware Valley W 50-27at Swarthmore * W 32-3at Central # W 19-0Albany # W 33-15Wabash (Phenix City, AL) # W 39-36

1978 (8-1, 5-1 MAC)MAC CHAMPIONS

BILL MANLOVEFordham (E. Rutherford, NJ) W 16-7at Ursinus * W 35-7Moravian * L 0-7

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2014 FOOTBALL 43

YEAR-BY-YEAR RESULTS

at Albright W 13-7at Johns Hopkins * W 35-9Franklin & Marshall * W 7-3at Gettysburg * W 46-3Delaware Valley W 21-18Swarthmore * W 30-8

WIDENER UNIVERSITY1979 (10-1, 8-0 MAC)MAC CHAMPIONS

BILL MANLOVEJohns Hopkins * W 30-0Ursinus * W 35-7at Moravian * W 17-10Albright W 35-14at Western Maryland * W 14-6at Franklin & Marshall * W 21-7Gettysburg * W 57-29at Lebanon Valley * W 44-0at Swarthmore * W 35-17Baldwin-Wallace # W 29-8at Wittenberg # L 14-17

1980 (11-1, 8-0 MAC)MAC CHAMPIONS

BILL MANLOVEat Delaware Valley W 23-7at Johns Hopkins * W 48-7at Ursinus * W 49-8Moravian * W 49-0at Albright W 54-0Western Maryland * W 49-7Franklin & Marshall * W 35-0at Gettysburg * W 51-35Lebanon Valley * W 42-15Swarthmore * W 33-8at Bethany # W 43-12Dayton # L 24-28

1981 (13-0, 8-0 MAC)NCAA III CHAMPIONS

MAC CHAMPIONSBILL MANLOVE

Delaware Valley W 21-6at Juniata W 37-13Johns Hopkins * W 26-13at Muhlenberg * W 17-3Gettysburg * W 38-19Dickinson * W 31-0at Moravian * W 23-0at Franklin & Marshall * W 17-7Ursinus * W 43-14at Swarthmore * W 16-6at West Georgia # W 10-3Montclair State # W 23-12Dayton (Phenix City, AL) # W 17-10

1982 (9-2, 7-1 MAC)MAC CHAMPIONS

BILL MANLOVEat Delaware Valley W 10-7Juniata W 10-0at Johns Hopkins * W 23-6Muhlenberg * W 31-12at Gettysburg * L 10-17at Dickinson * W 42-6Moravian * W 56-21Franklin & Marshall * W 16-7at Ursinus * W 21-3Swarthmore * W 24-7at West Georgia # (3ot) L 24-31

1983 (7-3, 6-2 MAC)BILL MANLOVE

at Moravian * W 7-0Bowie State W 39-12at Juniata * W 38-7Lycoming * L 0-37at Susquehanna * L 14-17Delaware Valley * W 35-13at Upsala * W 29-14Wilkes * W 41-7Albright * W 14-7at Salisbury State L 7-23

1984 (8-3, 6-1 MAC)MAC CHAMPIONS

BILL MANLOVEMoravian * W 30-21Mercyhurst L 7-17Juniata * W 45-22at Lycoming * L 20-22Susquehanna * W 27-12at Delaware Valley * W 36-3Upsala * W 46-22at Wilkes * W 28-6at Albright W 38-14Salisbury State W 24-16at Kings Point $ L 6-38

1985 (7-3, 6-3 MAC)BILL MANLOVE

Norwich W 10-0at Moravian * W 27-6at Lebanon Valley * W 45-7at Juniata * L 15-17Lycoming * L 10-18at Susquehanna * W 38-21Delaware Valley * W 25-13at Upsala * L 7-9Wilkes * W 14-7Albright * W 36-10

1986 (7-4, 6-3 MAC)BILL MANLOVE

at Norwich W 10-6Moravian * W 3-0Lebanon Valley * W 31-0Juniata * L 9-24at Lycoming * W 14-13Susquehanna * L 13-28at Delaware Valley * W 17-0Upsala * W 42-8at Wilkes * L 15-24at Albright * W 13-10at Villanova L 9-28

1987 (8-2, 7-2 MAC)MAC CHAMPIONS

BILL MANLOVESwarthmore W 35-0at Lebanon Valley * W 24-7at Moravian * L 19-24Juniata * W 27-16at Lycoming * W 24-17Albright * W 19-0Susquehanna * W 29-18at Wilkes * L 16-24at Upsala * W 47-7Delaware Valley * W 36-12

1988 (9-2, 7-1 MAC)MAC CHAMPIONS

BILL MANLOVESwarthmore W 36-3Lebanon Valley * W 21-7

Moravian * L 12-19at Juniata * W 29-19Lycoming * W 17-5at Albright * W 38-3at Susquehanna * W 16-10Wilkes * W 61-0Upsala W 46-8at Delaware Valley * W 23-12at Moravian # L 7-17

1989 (8-2, 6-2 MAC)BILL MANLOVE

Gettysburg W 38-14at Lebanon Valley * W 22-10at Moravian * L 9-14Juniata * W 27-10at Lycoming * L 0-21Albright * W 40-0Susquehanna * W 10-9at Wilkes * W 27-0Wesley W 42-14Delaware Valley * W 24-20

1990 (7-2-1, 6-2 MAC)BILL MANLOVE

at Gettysburg T 14-14Lebanon Valley * W 9-6Moravian * W 33-3at Juniata * L 0-21Lycoming * L 14-16at Albright * W 18-14at Susquehanna * W 28-0Wilkes * W 25-7at Wesley W 19-9at Delaware Valley * W 19-14

1991 (3-7, 2-6 MAC)BILL MANLOVE

Gettysburg W 27-6at Washington & Jefferson L 0-7at Moravian * L 13-17Juniata * L 0-13at Lycoming * L 0-31Albright * W 26-25Susquehanna * L 10-34at Wilkes * W 14-3Lebanon Valley * L 24-28at Delaware Valley * L 8-21

1992 (3-6-1, 3-4-1 MAC)BILL CUBIT

at Gettysburg L 6-40Washington & Jefferson L 0-35Moravian * W 16-7at Juniata * L 7-13Lycoming * L 16-28at Albright * W 35-33at Susquehanna * L 21-35Wilkes * T 14-14at Lebanon Valley * L 3-30Delaware Valley * W 31-16

1993 (6-4, 3-2 MAC)BILL CUBIT

Upsala W 27-24at King’s W 24-15at Moravian * L 16-37Juniata * W 40-12Delaware Valley W 31-9at Albright * W 33-13Wilkes L 15-36at Susquehanna * L 10-12at FDU-Madison L 3-35Lebanon Valley * W 28-26

1994 (10-2, 5-0 MAC)MAC CHAMPIONS

BILL CUBITat Kean ! L 14-15King’s W 36-13Moravian * W 39-16at Juniata * W 33-7at Delaware Valley W 49-7Albright * W 46-20at Wilkes W 35-21Susquehanna * W 28-7FDU-Madison W 34-17at Lebanon Valley * W 24-13at Dickinson # W 14-0at Washington & Jefferson # L 21-35

1995 (8-3, 5-0 MAC)MAC CHAMPIONS

BILL CUBITWilkes W 42-35at FDU-Madison L 36-38at Lebanon Valley * W 66-8Juniata * W 56-21Moravian * W 31-10at Albright * W 31-17at Lycoming L 15-16King’s W 50-14Delaware Valley W 49-14at Susquehanna * W 28-26at Lycoming # L 27-31

1996 (7-3, 4-1 MAC)BILL CUBIT

at Wilkes L 21-47FDU-Madison W 23-7Lebanon Valley * W 41-14at Juniata * W 35-28at Moravian * W 48-28Albright * L 16-19Lycoming L 31-37 at King’s W 22-21at Delaware Valley W 49-21Susquehanna * W 31-28

1997 (7-3, 3-2 MAC)BILL ZWAAN

Wilkes W 20-14at FDU-Madison W 27-14at Lebanon Valley * W 28-6 Juniata * W 56-20Moravian (ot) * L 24-27at Albright * L 21-28at Lycoming L 17-19King’s W 30-24Delaware Valley W 34-7at Susquehanna (2ot) * W 35-28

1998 (8-3, 4-1 MAC)BILL ZWAAN

at Wilkes W 20-13FDU-Madison W 30-8Lebanon Valley * W 43-0at Juniata * W 47-7at Moravian * W 45-13Albright * W 33-0Lycoming L 13-15at King’s W 41-20at Delaware Valley W 38-19Susquehanna * L 24-28Montclair State $ L 7-15

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WIDENER PRIDE44

ALL-TIME COACHING RECORDSName at Widener Yrs. W L T Pct.Unknown Coach ^ 21 46 30 5 .599Harry Mackey 1894 1 3 2 0 .600Frank Delabarre 1897 1 3 2 1 .583Bush 1898 1 5 2 0 .714Nathan Stauffer 1900-01 2 10 8 0 .555Edwin Stearns 1902-05 4 27 8 2 .757Joe Messick 1906-07 2 2 12 2 .142Jack Hollenback 1911 1 3 2 1 .583Bill Hollenback 1912; 15 2 9 4 2 .667Dutch Sommer 1913 1 5 0 2 .857Danny Hutchinson 1914 1 0 6 1 .071Si Pauxtis 1916-29; 39-46 * 20 82 74 8 .524Jud Timm 1930-38 9 36 37 10 .494Woody Ludwig 1947-52 6 24 24 2 .500George Hansell 1953-61 9 50 23 0 .685Rock Royer 1962-63 2 8 11 0 .421Art Raimo 1964-66 3 8 19 0 .296Ed Lawless 1967-68 2 5 13 0 .277Bill Manlove 1969-91 23 182 53 1 .773Bill Cubit 1992-96 5 34 18 1 .651Bill Zwaan 1997-2002 6 54 14 0 .794David Wood 2003-09 7 41 32 0 .562Isaac Collins 2010-12 3 25 8 0 .756Bobby Acosta 2013- 1 6 4 0 .600Totals (1,113 games) 133 668 407 38 .617

^ no known coach 1879-93; 1895-96; 1899; 1908-10* 1943 and 1944 seasons were canceled due to World War II

SNA Score Not AvailableNR School Not Recognized! Forfeit^ Unfinished game% Unconfirmed score$ ECAC Bowl# NCAA Tournament game& Delaware left leading 17-0. PMC wins forfeit.

YEAR-BY-YEAR RESULTS

1999 (6-4, 3-2 MAC)BILL ZWAAN

at FDU-Madison W 25-23at Lycoming L 0-30Delaware Valley W 40-27Moravian * W 40-14at Albright * W 35-27at Susquehanna * L 7-28King’s W 45-14at Western Maryland L 20-57at Lebanon Valley * W 32-0Juniata * L 45-59

2000 (12-2, 5-0 MAC)MAC CHAMPIONS

BILL ZWAANFDU-Madison W 20-19Lycoming (2ot) W 50-49at Delaware Valley W 52-7at Moravian * W 46-20Albright * W 27-14Susquehanna * W 42-21at King’s W 32-20Western Maryland L 21-35Lebanon Valley * W 46-14at Juniata * W 37-22at Union # W 33-26Hobart # W 40-14at Springfield # W 61-27at Mount Union # L 30-70

2001 (12-1, 10-0 MAC)MAC CHAMPIONS

BILL ZWAANWilkes * W 52-13at Lebanon Valley * W 48-20Moravian * W 44-26at Lycoming * W 35-0at Susquehanna * W 25-13King’s * W 48-14Delaware Valley * W 48-27at FDU-Madison * W 42-7Juniata * W 69-26at Albright * W 47-33Christopher Newport # W 56-7Washington & Jefferson # W 46-30at Bridgewater (VA) # L 32-57

2002 (9-1, 8-1 MAC)MAC CHAMPIONS

BILL ZWAANat Wilkes * W 29-17Lebanon Valley * W 49-21at Moravian (ot) * W 27-20Lycoming (ot) * W 20-14Susquehanna * W 52-35at King’s * L 6-24at Delaware Valley * W 44-14FDU-Florham * W 53-7at Juniata * W 68-33Albright W 13-12

2003 (5-5, 4-5 MAC)DAVID WOOD

Susquehanna * L 7-26at Lebanon Valley * W 74-17King’s * W 27-24at Wilkes * L 14-16Albright * L 29-30at Frostburg State (ot) W 26-19FDU-Florham * W 41-7at Moravian * W 22-12at Lycoming * L 22-45Delaware Valley * (ot) L 55-56

2004 (6-4, 5-4 MAC)DAVID WOOD

at Susquehanna * L 13-35Lebanon Valley * L 0-3at King’s * W 34-31Wilkes * L 13-18at Albright * W 52-35Frostburg State W 54-19at FDU-Florham * W 24-10Moravian * W 35-31Lycoming * W 7-0at Delaware Valley * L 20-27

2005 (8-3, 6-3 MAC)ECAC SOUTH ATLANTIC CHAMPS

DAVID WOODat Wilkes * L 0-13Lycoming * W 15-7at Lebanon Valley * W 41-38Moravian * W 34-24at Albright * W 33-19Susquehanna * W 42-7at King’s * L 24-31Juniata * W 52-7at Salisbury W 31-28at Delaware Valley * L 21-36Montclair State $ W 27-18

2006 (7-4, 6-3 MAC)ECAC SOUTHWEST CHAMPS

DAVID WOODWilkes * L 20-23at Lycoming * L 12-15Lebanon Valley * W 31-14at Moravian * W 20-16Albright * W 33-12at Susquehanna * W 31-14King’s * W 25-20at Juniata * W 35-13Salisbury L 14-17Delaware Valley * L 0-16at Ursinus $ W 14-7

2007 (8-3, 7-0 MAC)MAC CHAMPIONS

DAVID WOODat NC Wesleyan W 27-17Wesley L 17-31at Rowan L 0-41at Lycoming * W 16-14King’s * W 21-17Lebanon Valley * W 20-13at FDU-Florham * W 23-3Delaware Valley * W 13-10Albright * W 28-24at Wilkes * W 20-17at Case Western Reserve # L 20-21

2008 (4-6, 2-5 MAC)DAVID WOOD

NC Wesleyan W 7-6at Wesley L 9-41at Frostburg State W 30-24Lycoming * L 17-21at King’s * W 17-3at Lebanon Valley * (ot) L 13-20FDU-Florham * W 27-7at Delaware Valley * L 28-34at Albright * L 10-21Wilkes * L 27-30

2009 (3-7, 1-6 MAC)DAVID WOOD

at Curry W 22-17

at Ithaca L 17-41Frostburg State W 35-16at FDU-Florham * W 41-14King’s * L 24-35Lycoming * L 16-28at Albright * L 17-31Lebanon Valley * L 0-24at Wilkes * L 24-29Delaware Valley * L 16-28

2010 (5-5, 4-3 MAC)ISAAC COLLINS

at Alfred L 0-37Thiel W 21-0Ithaca L 7-31FDU-Florham * W 35-20at King’s * W 36-21at Lycoming * L 7-31Albright * L 27-35at Lebanon Valley * L 38-42Wilkes * W 41-21at Delaware Valley * W 28-27

2011 (9-2, 6-2 MAC)ECAC SOUTH ATLANTIC CHAMPS

ISAAC COLLINSMoravian W 44-6at Thiel W 44-14Lycoming * W 31-28at Wilkes * L 27-35King’s * W 70-0FDU-Florham * W 55-3at Stevenson * W 54-19Lebanon Valley * W 57-33at Albright * W 60-20at Delaware Valley * L 28-56Waynesburg $ W 48-27

2012 (11-1, 8-0 MAC)MAC CHAMPIONSISAAC COLLINS

Western Connecticut W 63-17

at King’s * W 41-6at Misericordia * W 67-0Wilkes * W 90-0at Lebanon Valley * (ot) W 40-37Stevenson * W 56-20at Lycoming * W 28-23Albright * W 34-29Delaware Valley * W 42-23Bridgewater State # W 44-14Salisbury # W 28-7at Mount Union # L 17-72

2013 (6-4, 6-3 MAC)BOBBY ACOSTA

at Wesley L 21-33Lebanon Valley * W 35-28at Wilkes * W 21-0Lycoming * L 14-16at Stevenson * W 31-10Misericordia * W 38-20FDU-Florham * W 59-14at Albright * L 19-33King’s * W 52-20at Delaware Valley * L 28-50

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2014 FOOTBALL 45

The capstone of the Widener athletic facilities is Leslie C. Quick Jr. Stadium, which was unveiled for the 1994 football season. Located in the wooded hollow that has grown from a 19th century quarry, the stadium is adjacent to the Schwartz Center complex. Dedicated on October 15, 1994, the stadium is named for alum and former University Chairman of the Board Leslie C. Quick Jr., ‘50. During his undergraduate years, Mr. Quick served as manager of the football and basketball teams for three years under Woody Ludwig. Quick Stadium towers over a new turf field (installed in 2005) designed with the flexibility in size to accom-modate football, soccer, men’s lacrosse and track & field. Encircling the turf is an eight-lane, synthetic-surfaced, championship track, known as the George A. Hansell Jr. Track. The track, dedicated in 1984, is named for the former athletic director and coach. The mezzanine sports a Wall of Recognition, which features the dedication plaque and the names of over 400 alumni, faculty and friends so recognized for contributions to the stadium construction fundraising campaign. Of historical significance, the Wall of Recognition fea-tures three medallions removed from Memorial Stadium reading: “Pennsylvania Military College, 1926,” “Sound Mind in Sound Body” and “Dedicated to Youth.” Me-morial Stadium, located behind Old Main, was the site of the University’s home football games for nearly 70 years. Widener fans, coaches and student-athletes share an enormous sense of pride in Quick Stadium, which provides one of the finest NCAA Division III facilities for players, press and spectators in the United States. The Pride on November 10, 2012 played their 100th football game at Quick Stadium when they hosted Delaware Valley. It also was on the same day Widener played its 1,100th contest in school history.

STADIUM FACTSCapacity: 4,000First Game: September 17, 1994 Widener 36, King’s 13Stadium Dedication: October 15, 1994 Widener 46, Albright 20Widener’s All-Time Stadium Record: 81-26 (.757 winning pct. - 107 games)Undefeated Years at Stadium: (7) 1994, ‘95, 2001, ‘02, ‘05, ‘11, ‘12Longest Unbeaten Streak: 15 games (2010-13)

RECORDSRUShINg INDIVIDUAL TeAm

Attempts 36 Leon Payne, Widener, 10/17/98 60 King’s, 11/1/97 Yards 232 Leon Payne, Widener, 10/17/98 356 Widener, 11/24/01 Touchdowns 4 Josan Holmes, Albright, 10/23/10 6 Widener, 10/15/94; 9/30/95; 11/03/01; 9/22/12PASSINg

Completions 40 Seth Klein, Widener, 9/14/13 40 Widener, 9/14/13 Attempts 66 Bryan Snyder, Albright, 10/19/96 66 Albright, 10/19/96 Yards 589 Joe Montrella, Juniata, 11/13/99 589 Juniata, 11/13/99 Touchdowns 6 Joe Montrella, Juniata, 11/13/99 6 Juniata, 11/13/99 6 Mike Warker, Widener, 9/22/01 6 Widener, 9/22/01 6 Chris Haupt, Widener, 9/22/12 6 Widener, 9/22/12ReCeIVINg

Receptions 17 Ryan Ditze, Albright, 10/15/94 35 Albright, 10/15/94 35 Widener, 11/19/11 Yards 397 Matt Eisenberg, Juniata, 11/13/99 589 Juniata, 11/13/99 Touchdowns 5 Matt Eisenberg, Juniata, 11/13/99 6 Juniata, 11/13/99 5 Mark Bartosic, Susquehanna, 10/12/02KICKINg

Field Goals 3 Bill Miller, Delaware Valley, 11/11/06 3 Del. Val., 11/11/06 3 Zach Czap, Lycoming, 9/28/13 3 Lycoming, 9/28/13 Extra Points 12 James McFadden, Widener, 9/22/12 12 Widener, 9/22/12 Largest Victory 90 Widener vs. Wilkes (90-0), 9/22/12

LESLIE C. QUICK JR. STADIUM

1994...5-01995...5-01996...3-21997...4-11998...3-3

1999...3-12000...6-12001...7-02002...5-02003...2-3

YEAR-BY-YEAR AT QUICK

above: circa 2008RIGhT: circa 1985

2004...3-22005...5-02006...3-32007...4-12008...2-2

2009...1-4 2010...3-22011...6-02012...7-02013...4-1

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WIDENER PRIDE46

ADMINISTRATION

Jack Shafer • Director of Athletics Jack Shafer is in his ninth season as Widener’s director of athletics after serving the previous six as its assistant director. Shafer primarily is responsible for overseeing the school’s 20 sports and the overall growth of the department. As the director of athletics, Shafer has helped oversee upgrades to the Schwartz Center gym, pool and field house, an up-

grade of various needs within the department and a greater community outreach among student-athletes. The summer of 2013 saw Shafer put forth further change with a complete overhaul of the weight room at Schwartz Center in addition to the pool undergoing renovations. The Pride also took another major step toward reaching to the Chester community by seeing its men’s and women’s soccer teams play a regular-season game at PPL Park, starting in 2010. Under Shafer’s watch, the Pride have had 10 CoSIDA Academic All-Americas, 10 named MAC Scholar-Athletes of the Year for their sport, 10 tabbed Philadelphia Inquirer Performer of the Year for academ-ic and athletic excellence, and 95 picked to the Philadelphia Inquirer Academic All-Area Teams. As assistant director of athletics, Shafer was responsible for over-seeing all indoor sports, event management and facilities. He played a huge role in fundraising activities, including the school’s annual golf

LarissaGillespie

Asst. Athletic Dir. Larissa Gillespie is in her 11th year as Widener’s assistant athletic director and senior woman administrator. In addition to her administrative du-ties at her alma mater, Gillespie is in her

15th year as field hockey coach. She also coached women’s lacrosse from 2004-06. Gillespie owns a 132-108 record as field hockey coach, which in 2006 included a run to the ECAC Mid-Atlantic Tournament for the program’s first postseason appearance. Widener that year broke the school record for most victories (13-6) and notched double figures in wins for a school-best fourth straight season. One of Gillespie’s career highlights occurred September 21, 2006, when Widener upended Neumann for her 64th victory to make her the program’s winningest coach. During her time as field hockey coach, 13 players have been named first team all-conference and 27 have been tabbed second team. Gillespie in June 2012 was one of just 126 coaches in the country who received an all-expense trip to the NCAA Women Coaches Acade-my, which provides skills training for coaches at all levels to assist them in being more efficient, productive, resourceful and successful. In June 2013, she participated in a conference by the NCAA and the NACWAA intended for leadership development among female administrators. A standout player on Widener’s field hockey team as an under-graduate, Gillespie closed her career with a then-school-record 16 goals along with seven assists for 39 points. She also was a two-time honoree on the Middle Atlantic Conference Academic Honor Roll. Gillespie received a B.S. in Sport Management from Widener in 1998 and an MBA in 2000.

outing, and managing student involvement with the Special Olympics and Big Brothers-Big Sisters program. He stepped down in 2008 after five years as men’s soccer coach. The Pride in 2006 finished second in the Commonwealth Conference and notched their first home league tournament game in school history. For his effort, Shafer was named conference Coach of the Year. He took over the men’s team after guiding the women’s squad for four years (2000-03). He helped Widener to a then-school-record 34 victories in that time, including a run to the ECAC Mid-Atlantic Region final in 2002. In his first season with the men’s squad in 2004, Shafer led Widener to the conference tournament for the first time in school history. Shafer arrived in Chester following a tenure from 1996-99 as the men’s and women’s soccer coach at Lycoming, posting a 71-64-8 com-bined record. He was tabbed Freedom Conference Coach of the Year in 1999 by leading the men to the MAC final. He earned the same honor with the women in 1997 one year after starting the program. The stint with Lycoming followed a two-year run as assistant men’s soccer coach at his alma mater, Bethany College. He helped guide the team to the 1994 Division III national championship and the ECAC South title the following year. Shafer graduated Bethany in 1992 with a B.A. in English, helping lead the squad to the NCAA Tournament all four years. He earned his MA from Washington (MD) College in English after serving as the school’s graduate assistant coach for two seasons.

ChrisCarideo

Asst. Athletic Dir. Chris Carideo is in his ninth year as Widener’s assistant athletic director. Carideo also serves as the Pride’s men’s basketball coach, helping it to three

Commonwealth Conference titles. Widener in 2007-08 and 2008-09 posted a 23-6 record, advancing to the second round of the NCAA Tournament three straight seasons in addition to 2006-07. Carideo entered after five successful seasons as head coach of the United States Merchant Marine Academy in Kings Point, NY. Second on the Academy’s wins list with an 86-51 mark, Carideo helped guide the Mariners to NCAA Tournament appearances in 2002 and 2003, including a trip to the second round in 2003. He began coaching after one of the most storied athletic careers in school annals from 1991-95, capped with an All-America campaign his senior season. He became the eighth player in the program’s history so honored after being named first team All-MAC all four seasons. He graduated after hitting 402 three-pointers, then an NCAA Division III record and now third best, and still holds the nation’s top mark by hitting a 3-pointer in 75 straight games. Carideo is second in school history with 2,067 points, fourth with 699 baskets and owns the top four single-season marks in 3-pointers made and attempted. Carideo in March 2012 became the third for Widener to be in-ducted into the Philadelphia Small College Basketball Hall of Fame. Carideo graduated in 1996 with a B.A. in Psychology and Secondary Education.

Page 49: Widener 2014 Football Media Guide

2014 FOOTBALL 47

ATHLETIC TRAINING / EQUIPMENT

A.J. Duffy IIIAthletic Trainer610-499-4445

The athletic training staff is located in the Wellness Center, which opened in the spring of 2006. The staff is

responsible for the conditioning and rehabilitation of over 500 Widener University’s student-athletes representing

20 sports.

The staff consists of two full-time athletic trainers as well as several graduate and athletic training student interns.

The athletic trainers have at their disposal a bevy of equipment ranging from separate MD exam rooms, two walk-

in whirlpools with one cold plunge and one warm, up-to-date electromodalities and rehabilitation equipment.

The department is headed by A.J. Duffy, in his 25th year in this capacity at Widener and 32nd in collegiate

athletics. Duffy is primarily responsible for the football and men’s lacrosse teams as well as overseeing the entire

athletic training staff. He also teaches athletic training classes at Widener and Temple University.

He has been very active in the profession, serving various elected offices since 1993. Among those areas include

President of the Eastern Athletic Trainers’ Association and the Pennsylvania Athletic Trainers’ Society. Duffy also

has given talks on both the regional and national level.

Duffy has been cited as the 2002 Interboro Education Associ-

ation Volunteer of the Year, the 2002 NATA Most Distinguished

Athletic Trainer, the 2003 EATA Cramer Award winner, the 2005

Philadelphia Sports Medicine Congress Ted Quedenfeld Award

recipient, the 2007 Donald Grover Award by the ECAC, the 2011

Division III Athletic Trainer of the Year, the 2013 Pennsylvania

Athletic Trainers’ Society (PATS) Distinguished Merit Award and

the 2014 Dan Libera Service Award

Duffy, along with the Widener athletic training staff, helped

create the “MAC ATtaCk on Hunger” in 2010. The initiative,

which involves all 16 schools from the Middle Atlantic Con-

ference, was instituted to help collect food and money for each

school’s local food banks.

Prior to arriving at Widener, Duffy was an assistant athletic

trainer at the University of Michigan from 1984-90 and an assistant at Temple University from 1981-83. He earned his B.S. from the Uni-

versity of Michigan in 1980, his M.S. from the University of Arizona in 1981 and his Physical Therapy Certificate from Drexel University

(Hahnemann) in 1984.

Duffy and his wife, Monica, a Widener graduate in Nursing, reside in Norwood, PA with their sons, Joseph, 24, and Connor, 23.

The equipment staff is located primarily on the lower level of Schwartz Athletic Center. The football and men’s lacrosse teams have their

equipment room located at Leslie C. Quick Jr. Stadium.

The staff is comprised of two full-time managers as well as a plethora of student workers. The staff has played a major role in providing

upgraded locker rooms at both Schwartz Center and Quick Stadium as well as maintaining the equipment rooms to meet the needs of Wid-

ener’s student-athletes.

Charlie Evans is in his seventh year as Widener’s head equipment manager. Evans entered after eight years at West Chester University,

serving as the lone support for the department’s 23 teams. His tenure from 2000-08 had him oversee mostly Division II teams and some

Division I. This came after he was the equipment manager at Franklin & Marshall College from 1989-99. He was the primary contact for

the department’s 26 varsity sports. Evans has been a certified member of the Athletic Equipment Managers Association since 1994.

Peggie Corey is in her third full year in Widener’s Athletics Department. She serves as the football team’s administrative assistant.

Page 50: Widener 2014 Football Media Guide

WIDENER PRIDE48

FACILITIES

Widener University’s standout facilities and the school’s commitment to moving forward are not limited to Leslie C. Quick Jr. Stadium (page 45), the athletic training room (page 47) or the equipment rooms (page 47). Schwartz Athletic Center is home to our men’s and women’s basketball, women’s volleyball, men’s and women’s swimming, and men’s and women’s indoor track teams. It also houses Widener’s athletic administration and coaching staff in a third-floor suite. Schwartz Center offers members of the Widener community access to a gymnasium, weight room, multi-purpose field house with a new resurfaced floor and a championship size eight-lane swimming pool. The center is open from Noon-8:00 pm Monday through Friday and from Noon-5:00 pm on weekends. The facility is closed Saturdays of home football games and the Borislow Weight Room and swimming pool are subject to proper staffing. The Wellness Center, opened in April 2006, resonates with Widener’s school spirit and

pride, providing an inviting and motivating at-mosphere that promotes better health. The state-of-the-art 20,000 square-foot facility is located ad-jacent to Schwartz Center. The center also houses our athletic trainers and provides student-athletes the opportunity to rehabilitate and condition in one of the area’s finest collegiate facilities. The baseball team plays its home games at a on-campus field that opened in 2006 adjacent to Schwartz Center. The facility sports dugouts, bleachers, scoreboard, press box, three batting cages, four pitchers mounds and the same grass used by the Philadelphia Phillies at Citizens

Bank Park. The field is one of the finest college baseball facilities in the Philadelphia area. The softball team plays its home games on a beautiful field which opened in 2006 just off Bullens Lane. The facility features dugouts, a scoreboard and ample seating area for spectators. Edith R. Dixon Field is home to our field hockey and women’s lacrosse squads. Equipped with artificial turf, lights and a scoreboard, the field is easily accessible for fans and students. Opened in 2005, the field also is home for our intramural teams.

Page 51: Widener 2014 Football Media Guide
Page 52: Widener 2014 Football Media Guide

W I D E N E R P R I D E

Fri. Sept. 5 at Rowan 7:00 pm

Sat. Sept. 13 at Lebanon Valley * 1:00 pm

Sat. Sept. 20 Albright * 1:00 pm

Sat. Sept. 27 at FDU-Florham * 1:00 pm

Sat. Oct. 4 at Misericordia * 1:00 pm

Sat. Oct. 18 Wilkes * (Homecoming) 1:00 pm

Sat. Oct. 25 at Lycoming * 1:30 pm

Sat. Nov. 1 Stevenson * 1:00 pm

Sat. Nov. 8 at King’s * 1:00 pm

Sat. Nov. 15 Delaware Valley * 1:00 pm

* Middle Atlantic Conference game

Home games in Bold

Schedule is subject to change