Nov. 16, 2010
Complete Game Notes in PDF Format 
| LAFAYETTE vs. lehigh |
| Date | Saturday, Nov. 20 at 12:08 p.m. (ET) |
| Location | Easton, Pa. | Fisher Stadium |
| Tickets | Lafayette Athletics Ticket Office |
| TV | Lafayette Sports Network (ESPN GamePlan: DirecTV 788, DISH Network 455, RCN-4, RCN-8, WBPH-60) |
| National TV Replay | MASN (DIRECTV 640 & Dish 432) Nov. 20 at 7 p.m. (ET) |
| TV Talent | Gary Laubach, Mike Joseph '88 & John Leone |
| Radio | WJRH-FM 104.9 (Dick Hammer and Phil Ng '88)
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| Online | Live Webcast: ESPN3.com | LSN All-Access
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| More Coverage | Gameday Central | Lafayette News Stand | Blog
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MATCH-UP: The only game left is the one that matters most. Lafayette "welcomes" No. 22 lehigh to Fisher Stadium on Saturday for the 146th meeting of College Football's Most-Played Rivalry. The two teams are at completely different places in their seasons. Lafayette holds a 2-8 mark, their first losing season since 2003, with a 1-3 record in conference play. Meanwhile lehigh, winners of its last six games, is 8-2 overall and 4-0 in league meetings in their first winning season since 2006. The mountain hawks have won the last two games in the rivalry, winning 27-21 in overtime a year ago and 31-15 in 2008. Prior to that, Lafayette had won four in a row.
THE SERIES: College Football's Most-Played Rivalry dates back to 1884 when Lafayette shut out lehigh 50-0 in Easton. The two teams met twice a year from 1884-1901 (three times in 1891) and once a year (for the most part) since then with the exception of 1896 when a player eligibility dispute between the schools cancelled the game. The Leopards lead the series 76-64-5. Home field advantage plays a big role in this rivalry: Lafayette leads 41-23-5 when playing in Easton and lehigh has a 40-36-0 edge over the Leopards in Bethlehem.
SINGLE-GAME LAYTON: Senior WR Mark Layton set a Lafayette single-game record with 13 receptions against Holy Cross. His mark broke an eight-year old record held by John Weyrauch '04 who caught 12 passes at Fordham on Oct. 26, 2002. Layton finished the day with a career-best 175 yards.
UNDER CENTER: Going into the week of the Holy Cross game, Lafayette head coach Frank Tavani wasn't sure who was going to be the starting quarterback and held an open competition among junior Ryan O'Neil, senior Marc Quilling and sophomore Andrew Shoop. O'Neil stepped to the forefront by the end of the team's Wednesday practice, and with an added focus he played one of the best games of his career against Holy Cross. O'Neil completed 35 passes for 335 yards and four touchdowns while rushing for 41 yards, all career bests. He has started all but two games, completing 68 percent (183-for-270) of his passes, and has thrown for 1,960 yards with 14 touchdowns to five interceptions. He ranks 11th in the nation in completions per game (20.3) and 21st nationally in passing efficiency (142.2). His effort versus Holy Cross earned him Patriot League Offensive Player of the Week honors for the first time in his career.
THE MARK OF SUCCESS: Senior WR Mark Layton is moving up the Lafayette all-time receiving lists. With 13 catches vs. Holy Cross, Layton, who has 139 for his career, moved past Frank Corbo '85 (136) into a fifth-place tie with Joe McCourt '05. Layton has 1,715 career receiving yards, accumulating 175 yards vs. Holy Cross. He passed Joe Ort '07 (1,551), Jamal Jordan '93 (1,634) and Quincy Miller '97 (1,673) and Dave Baird '91 (1,681) during the Holy Cross game. The senior, who made 65 catches in 2009, has 57 receptions this season. With his two touchdown receptions vs. Holy Cross, Layton is now tied for third on the career receiving touchdowns list with 16.
OFFENSIVE OUTPUT: The Leopards cranked out their highest offensive output against Holy Cross on Nov. 13 with 513 yards. Lafayette had 178 yards on the ground and 335 through the air. Their previous season-high came in the first game of the season with 509 at Georgetown.
VEXING STATS: In two of Lafayette's losses, Lafayette has held the ball 20 minutes longer than its opponent. Lafayette had a 20:13 advantage against Georgetown and a 20:56 margin vs. Holy Cross.
HEAD COACHES: Frank Tavani (Lebanon Valley '75) is in his 11th season as Lafayette head coach and 24th on the Lafayette coaching staff. In his time as the head man, he has transformed Lafayette into a consistent championship contender. Lafayette has spent time in the Top 25 each of the last six seasons and is the only Patriot League program to boast a winning record in every regular season during that span. The Leopards are coming off a 2009 season in which they were 8-3 (two losses to Top 25 opponents), including a 4-0 record vs. Ivy League opponents. Tavani, who became Lafayette's 27th head coach on Dec. 11, 1999 and is under contract through 2014, led his program to a 26-10 Patriot League record over the last six years. In that span, Lafayette won three consecutive Patriot League championships from 2004 to 2006 and finished a game out of the title hunt in 2009. During that '04-'06 championship run, the Leopards made the first three postseason appearances in school history, laying claim to the Patriot League's automatic NCAA bid in 2004 and 2006, while earning the program's first at-large berth in 2005. In addition to Patriot League championships and NCAA Playoff appearances, Lafayette has taken care of business close to home, beating its cross-valley rival Lehigh four of the last six times in College Football's Most Played Rivalry. The win in 2007 at Lehigh allowed the Class of 2008 to leave College Hill without ever having lost to its archrival, a feat not achieved since the Class of 1950. Tavani has been a part of six Patriot League titles, helping guide the Leopards to crowns as an assistant coach in 1988, 1992 and 1994, to go with the last three championships as head coach. In his playing days, Tavani became the first player in Lebanon Valley College history to rush for 1,000 yards in a season. In that senior campaign, he also garnered All-America honors and has since been named to four athletic halls of fame. Tavani signed as a free agent with the Philadelphia Eagles out of college in 1976 before jumping into coaching at Franklin and Marshall. His son, Daniel, carried on the college football tradition as an all-conference selection at Wofford. Of his other three children, Liam and Meghan both graduated from Lafayette and his youngest, Bridget, is a sophomore on the women's soccer team. Tavani's career record stands at 62-61 and he is 5-5 vs. Lehigh. Andy Coen (Gettysburg '86) is in his fifth season as lehigh head coach. He is in his second stint at the school after spending six years as an offensive line coach (four as the offensive coordinator) from 1994-00. Coen is 28-26 overall at lehigh and 2-2 against Lafayette as a head coach.
ABOUT lehigh: • Lafayette leads the all-time series with lehigh 76-64-5 and holds a 41-23-5 advantage in games played in Easton. The series began Oct. 25, 1884 in Easton.
• lehigh turned around a 4-7 season in 2009 to an 8-2 campaign in 2010. The mountain hawks claimed the Patriot League title by virtue of a 4-0 record in conference play. lehigh has won six straight after starting the season 2-2. The only losses were to nationally ranked opponents, No. 2 Villanova and No. 16/18 New Hampshire.
• Junior Chris Lum is the mountain hawks' quarterback. He is 160-of-274 for 2,045 yards with 13 touchdowns and eight interceptions. Lehigh is averaging 230 yards per game through the air. Lum's top target is sophomore WR Ryan Spadola. He has 60 catches for 878 yards and six touchdowns. Junior Jake Drwal has 40 catches in 2010.
• On the ground, senior RB Jay Campbell leads the team in rushing with 566 yards and five touchdowns. lehigh garners 119 yards per game in its rushing attack.
• The lehigh defense is allowing 18.6 points per game (15th in the nation) and has sacked opposing quarterbacks 29 times, both tops statistically in the Patriot League. Junior LB Mike Groome leads the team with 92 tackles. Senior LB Al Pierce has 71 tackles and 7.5 for loss.
• Senior DB Adam Kennedy is a potent threat in the return game, averaging a conference-best 32 yards per kick-off.
THE SERIES MVP: Members of the media will vote on the game's most valuable player on Saturday, marking a tradition that began in 1960. Lehigh QB J.B. Clark won the last two MVP honors, but is no longer with the team. In 2007, Rob Curley claimed the honor after leading the game-winning drive in a 21-17 victory. Curley went 15-for-25 for 257 yards with one TD and one interception. There have been eight two-time winners: Brad Maurer (2004, 2006) Tom Costello (1988, 1989) and Erik Marsh (1992, 94) from Lafayette and Kim McQuilken (1972, 73), Marty Horn (1983, 85), Ron Jean (1998, 99) and Clark from Lehigh. In the series, there have been co-MVP's only twice (1976 and 2006).
WELL-ROUNDED: Junior CB Brandon Ellis earned a place on the ESPN Academic All-District II Football Team. Ellis is fourth on the team with 61 tackles and also added an interception in a win at Bucknell. Patriot League Defensive Player of the Week honors came Ellis' way after the Stony Brook win Oct. 16. He made a career-high 16 tackles and broke up two passes in a 28-21 triumph. An Economics major, Ellis maintains a 3.34 overall grade-point average. He is enrolled in four classes: African Cultural Institutions, Economics of Sports, Marketing Science and Intro to Film & Media Studies. Ellis serves as a peer mentor in the College's Academic Tutoring and Training Information Center and as a Gateway Ambassador for Career Services. In 2010, his learning experiences took him outside the classroom in a summer internship with Johnson and Johnson. Academic All-District selections must have reached their sophomore year academically while maintaining a minimum cumulative GPA of 3.30. They must also be a starter or key reserve on their team. District winners will be placed on a national ballot and the ESPN Academic All-America Team will be announced Nov. 23.
NICE CATCH, HAYES: Junior WR Kyle Hayes has been one of the Leopards' most consistent receivers. Hayes is second on the team with 39 receptions and 547 receiving yards. Hayes had a breakout game at Princeton, catching five balls for 136 yards, including a career-long, 78-yard reception from Ryan O'Neil, while finishing the game with a pair of touchdowns. For the season, Hayes is tied for the touchdown lead among the receivers with five. He made six catches for 81 yards against Fordham and followed with six more for 97 and two TD's at Bucknell. Hayes was injured in the first half of the Holy Cross game and did not return.
INT'S: Coming into the Fordham game (10/23), the Lafayette defense only had one interception in 2010, and that came at the hands of defensive lineman Mike Phillips who returned the pick 25 yards for a TD at Penn in week two. At Bucknell, CB Brandon Ellis stopped a late first-quarter drive with his pick near midfield. Free safety Kyle Simmons' interception and 21-yard return at Fordham came at the Lafayette two-yard line and prevented a Rams' score.
SECONDS FOR MPUTU: Freshman TB Pat Mputu only played the first half in Lafayette's 33-22 win at Bucknell, but his efforts put the Leopards off to a quick start and earned him his second Patriot League Rookie of the Week selection of the season. On the second play from scrimmage, Mputu took a short screen pass and turned it into a 75-yard TD catch. He finished with two catches for 84 yards and seven carries for 55 yards on the ground. Mputu helped Lafayette to a 16-7 lead at the half, but did not play in the second half due to an ankle injury. The freshman's 102-yard day vs. Stony Brook on Oct. 16 also garnered conference rookie of the week honors on Oct. 18. Academically, Mputu has yet to declare a major, but is taking Modeling & Differential Calculus, 21st Century Literacies, Drawing I and Public Speaking during the fall semester. Mputu faced off against his brother, Jonathan, at Colgate and managed 33 yards on the ground and 44 yards in the air.
A PROUD TRADITION...OF KICKING?: With 244 points, Davis Rodriguez occupies third place in the Patriot League annals for career kick scoring leaders. Lafayette now holds the top three spots (Jason McLaughlin - 255; Jim Hodson - 254). He also ranks fourth in career points per game for kickers with 5.9 per game.
THE SAFETY DANCE: LB Mike Schmidlein's sack of Bucknell QB Brandon Wesley was the first safety the Lafayette defense has produced since Nov. 22, 2008 against Lehigh.
DECLARING HIS CANDIDACY: In a season during which four players have been the top tailback, sophomore Alan Elder is the most recent candidate to assert himself. Elder had 27 carries for 104 yards at Bucknell. In the first game that he saw significant playing time, Elder put together his first 100-yard rushing game, carrying 28 times for 103 yards at Princeton. He has been splitting carries with Pat Mputu.
RUNNING SCARED: Lafayette's top two tailbacks have been out for most of the season with Jerome Rudolph sitting out with ill effects from a concussion and Vaughn Hebron missing because of an ACL tear. Alan Elder and Pat Mputu, who have taken over the ballcarrier duties, have also each missed time due to injury.
CLOSE, BUT...: Four of Lafayette's losses have come by a total of 16 points: 28-24 to Georgetown, 19-14 at Penn, 36-33 in double overtime at Princeton and 14-10 at Fordham.
PATRIOT PROWESS X 2 (10/18): Junior CB Brandon Ellis and freshman TB Pat Mputu secured Patriot League Defensive and Rookie of the Week honors, respectively. Ellis helped lead Lafayette to its first victory of the season by recording a career-high 16 tackles and breaking up two passes in a 28-21 triumph over Stony Brook. Nine of Ellis' tackles were solo stops. Mputu also had a breakout performance vs. Stony Brook, rushing for 102 yards on 23 carries for his first-career 100-yard outing. He racked up 48 yards on a scoring drive that gave Lafayette a 20-14 lead late in the fourth quarter.
PRESSED INTO SERVICE: With a rash of injuries in the secondary, the Lafayette coaching staff has used WR Mark Layton at corner in obvious passing situations beginning with the Harvard game.
STONING THE RUNNING BROOK: The Leopards held Stony Brook and the nation's then-20th-ranked rushing offense to 159 yards on the ground, 57 below the Seawolves' average of 216 per game coming into the game. Thirty-nine of those yards came on the last play of the first half with the Leopards in a prevent formation.
HALF WAY THERE: Lafayette has held a halftime lead in five of its eight games this season: 24-14 vs. Georgetown, 14-6 at Penn, 14-10 at Princeton, 10-7 vs. Stony Brook and 16-7 at Bucknell.
FINISHING WHAT THEY STARTED: Lafayette has maintained a double-digit lead in five of its games: 21-7 in the second quarter vs. Georgetown, 14-3 in the second quarter at Penn, 21-10 in the third quarter at Princeton, 28-14 in the fourth quarter vs. Stony Brook and for the final 22 minutes of the Bucknell game.
SPECIAL JET: Freshman kick returner Jethro "Jet" Kollie was named the Patriot League Football Special Teams Player of the Week on Oct. 11. Kollie returned five kickoffs for 114 yards at Columbia. He had a long return of 30 yards while averaging 22.8 on the five touches. Kollie has been used more frequently in recent weeks out of the slot. Kollie received the Special Teams Player of the Week award for the first time in his brief career and it follows teammate Davis Rodriguez's Patriot League Special Teams honor on Sept. 27.
WOUNDED: Sophomore TB Vaughn Hebron is out for the season after sustaining a knee injury in practice on Sept. 30. He joins senior WR Nathan Padia (broken finger), junior starting TB Jerome Rudolph (concussion), starting LB Nate Dixon (knee) and starting CB Donald Ellis (knee) on a growing list of key players who are out for the season. In total, 12 players who were on the team's preseason roster have been lost for the season due to injury.
LEOPARD CUBS: A quick look at the depth chart shows how inexperienced the Lafayette team is. On both sides of the ball, seven players are in their first seasons as full-time starters.
SPREADING IT AROUND VS. HARVARD: Lafayette completed 29 passes vs. Harvard to 11 different players. Mark Layton made six catches for 50 yards while fellow senior Mitch Bennett added five for 42 yards. Freshman FB Greg Kessel made his only catch of the afternoon count, reeling in an 18-yard touchdown pass from sophomore QB Andrew Shoop near the end of the game.
SPECIAL AWARD: Senior PK Davis Rodriguez converted all four of his field goal attempts en route to Patriot League Special Teams Player of the Week honors (9/27). Each of his field goals came in the second half or overtime at Princeton. After making field goals in regulation to put Lafayette up 24-16 and 27-24, he extended the game to a second overtime by making a 35-yarder to even the score at 30-30. Rodriguez capped his night by making a 26-yard kick on Lafayette's possession in the second overtime. He is the first Lafayette kicker to make four field goals in a game since Jim Hodson on Sept. 8, 1990. Rodriguez also connected on all three extra-point tries. He earns his first Special Teams honor of the season and extends his Patriot League record of career special teams awards to six.
START WITH A LITTLE PERSPECTIVE: Lafayette's 0-5 start put into perspective the program's success over the last eight seasons. During that time (2002-09 inclusive), the Leopards were 25-14 in their first 40 games.
WINNING NUMBERS: Lafayette football has been a consistent Patriot League contender in recent seasons. The Leopards are 35-23 since 2002 which was a breakthrough year for head coach Frank Tavani's Leopards after he took over the program in 2000 (7-5, 5-2). Since 2000, Lafayette has been at least two games above .500 in six of nine seasons.
500 CLUB (Early edition): Lafayette put up 500 yards of total offense against Georgetown, something the Leopards did not do all of last season. Junior QB Ryan O'Neil was 33-of-43 for 304 yards while junior tailback Jerome Rudolph churned out 131 yards on the ground. Lafayette finished the night with 509 yards of total offense, the highest output since Nov. 11, 2006 against Georgetown (511), a 45-14 victory.
PROUD OF THE PROGRAM: Since 2004, Lafayette is 45-33 and 26-13 in Patriot League play. Lafayette stands as the only Patriot League program to record a winning record in each of the last six regular seasons while also holding a Top 25 national ranking each year.
129th SEASON: Since fielding its first college football team in the fall of 1882 (the same year Robert Ford shot Jesse James and that Tchaikovsky's 1812 Overture debuted), Lafayette has had a proud, colorful gridiron tradition on the way to a total of 658 victories (658-554-39). Lafayette ranked 31st among all college football teams in all-time wins entering the 2010 season, posting its first win in 1883 (25-0 vs. Rutgers). Lafayette accumulated 100 victories by 1900, 200 by 1915 and 300 by 1934.
PHILLIPS TAKES IT TO THE HOUSE: Senior NT Mike Phillips had a standout game at Penn. He intercepted the first pass of his career and returned it 25 yards for a touchdown and also recovered a fumble to give the Leopards the ball back for one last offensive drive. He also finished with six solo tackles.
WHAT OTHER PEOPLE THOUGHT: Lafayette was picked second in the Patriot League Preseason Poll of head coaches and sports information directors. The Leopards (36 points) received two first-place votes. Colgate (46 points, six first-place votes) was picked first followed by Lafayette, Lehigh (35 points, three first-place votes), Holy Cross, Bucknell and Georgetown. In 2009, Lafayette was picked third and ended in a tie for second.
THE MAN IN THE MIDDLE: A constant in John Loose's defenses is stellar linebacker play. Maurice Bennett '06, current NFL player Blake Constanzo '06, Andy Romans '09 and Mark Leggiero '10 have passed the mantle (or shoulder pads in this case) to senior Mike Schmidlein. The senior co-captain led the team and ranked 23rd in the nation in tackles (100) in 2009. The Economics & Business major recorded two sacks, had an interception and also forced a fumble in 2009. In 2010, Schmidlein made 11 tackles at Penn, nine at Princeton, 10 vs. Harvard, 11 at Columbia and 12 vs. Stony Brook. He is second in the Patriot League in tackles and 26th in the nation with 10.0 per game. He made 10 tackles vs. Holy Cross. Ben Eaton may be Schmidlein's heir apparent. The 6-0, 220-pound Eaton is a physical specimen, bench pressing 425 pounds while featuring four percent body fat. Eaton had seven tackles at Penn, along with a blocked punt, made six tackles in the opener vs. Georgetown, nine stops at Princeton, six at Columbia and seven vs. Stony Brook. Eaton also led the team with 10 tackles at Fordham and eight at Bucknell while his compadre, Schmidlein had nine and eight, respectively.
ABOUT THE KICKER: Senior Davis Rodriguez is in his fourth and final season as the Leopards' starting placekicker. He has played in 42 games during his career and is 41-of-62 (66%) in field goals and 121-of-128 (95%) in PATs. He made a season-long 45-yard field goal against Harvard. Rodriguez is 21st in the nation and first in the Patriot League for field goals per game (1.2). This season, as he did for part of 2007, Rodriguez is handling kickoff duties. The St. Petersburg, Fla. native was named All-Patriot League Second Team in 2008 while collecting Sports Network All-America Honorable Mention status. Rodriguez, who is a Government and Law major, spends much of his free time volunteering with groups including the Muscular Dystrophy Association, the Saint Vincent DePaul soup kitchen, at an orphanage in Costa Rica and with Lauren's First and Goal Football Camp which raises funds for pediatric brain tumor research and for impacted families.
3-4 or 4-3???: Change is a constant in John Loose's defensive schemes. Loose perennially has adjusted formations to match up with opponents' formations and schemes. This season, the Leopards have spent more time in a 3-4 configuration than in previous seasons which have primarily featured a 4-3. In recent weeks, Loose and head coach Frank Tavani have favored the 4-3. Statistically in 2009, Lafayette was 11th in the nation in rushing defense, allowing just 99.6 yards per game. The Leopards were 45th in total defense (331.8) and just 76th in passing defense (127.6). In 2010, Lafayette surrendered 265 yards against Georgetown, 392 against Penn, 363 at Princeton, 402 against Harvard, 418 at Columbia, 359 vs. Stony Brook, 351 at Fordham and a season-low 305 vs. Bucknell. Colgate had a breakout game with 415 yards, including 288 on the ground, while Holy Cross had just 342 but scored 37 points.
CATCHING UP WITH MITCH BENNETT: Senior wide receiver Mitch Bennett is putting his fingers to the keyboard in his Catching Up blog on GoLeopards.com.
RUNNING THE BALL: In 2009, it was tailback by committee, but all but one member of that committee graduated. Junior Jerome Rudolph, who made the switch from No. 32 to No. 27 for 2010, is the lone holdover and was at the top of the depth chart. Rudolph battled a leg bruise throughout the preseason, but showed no ill effects in the season opener vs. Georgetown when he carried 24 times for 131 yards and a score. He was the team's third-leading rusher in 2009, racking up 215 yards on the ground with an average of 5.1 yards per carry. Rudolph missed the Harvard and Princeton games after sustaining a concussion but returned against Columbia to carry nine times for 55 yards. He has sat out the last five games with side effects of a concussion. On his heels was sophomore Vaughn Hebron who forced his way into the discussion during spring ball and in the preseason. A bigger, stronger back, Hebron is the son of the former NFL player of the same name who played for Philadelphia and Denver. Hebron carried five times for 21 yards vs. Georgetown and had his first career touchdown at Princeton on Sept. 25. His season came to an end with an ACL tear Sept. 30. Fellow sophomore, Alan Elder, grinded out a 103-yard rushing game at Princeton and had 104 at Bucknell. He leads the team with 109 carries. Freshman Pat Mputu, who had 102 yards vs. Stony Brook, and is second on the team with 74 carries.
PATRIOT LEAGUE TITLES: Lafayette won three titles in 2004, 2005 and 2006. The championships also led to three straight NCAA Playoff appearances, making Lafayette one of six teams in the country to appear in the 16-team field in three straight years. The Leopards have won six PL championships in the 24-year history of the league (1988, 1992, 1994, 2004, 2005, 2006).
STANDING OUT IN THE CLASSROOM: Under head coach Frank Tavani, Lafayette football players have excelled as student-athletes. Twenty-four have earned CoSIDA Academic All-District selections and 40 have earned the distinction since 1995, including Doug Gerowski in 2009 and Brandon Ellis in 2010. Lafayette had 20 student-athletes qualify for the Patriot League Academic Honor Roll in 2009 for which they must achieve a minimum of a 3.2 GPA. Lafayette also has laid claim to four Patriot League Scholar Athletes of the Year.
100+ IN 2009 AND 2010: With the Leopards' offense focused on the passing game in 2009, Lafayette had just two 100-plus rushing yard games. Maurice White '10 was responsible for both with 21 carries for 131 yards at Yale and 24 carries for 107 yards vs. Fordham. Eight games into the 2010 season, Jerome Rudolph has a 131-yard rushing performance, Alan Elder has a 103-yard effort and a 104-yard game and Pat Mputu has a 102-yard day.
200+ RUSHING GAMES: Since 1990, there have been nine 200-yard rushing performances for the Leopards, six of which were the work of Maroon Club Hall of Fame honoree Erik Marsh '95.
DATE RUSHER OPPONENT CARRIES-YARDS W/L
09/09/08 Maurice White at Marist 29-212 W
11/16/02 Joe McCourt Holy Cross 38-203 W
11/19/94 Erik Marsh Lehigh 34-214 W
11/20/93 Erik Marsh at Lehigh 25-249 L
11/06/93 Erik Marsh at Holy Cross 36-221 W
11/21/92 Erik Marsh Lehigh 46-251 W
10/31/92 Erik Marsh at Colgate 41-225 W
11/16/91 Erik Marsh Colgate 20-200 W
10/19/91 John Kahn Columbia 41-224 W
IN THE NFL RANKS: Blake Costanzo '06 is in his fourth season in the NFL. The Ramapo, N.J. native is in his second season with the Cleveland Browns. He had three defensive/special teams fumble recoveries in 2009, tying him for first in the AFC and third in the NFL. He led the team with 14 special teams tackles and was later selected as the special teamer on SI.com's All-Pro team. Costanzo, who wears No. 54 for the Browns, has played in 44 games over the past three seasons. He played his first two seasons with the Buffalo Bills.
ALL-PATRIOT LEAGUE RETURNERS: Lafayette placed 15 players on the All-Patriot League first and second teams in 2009, and five of them return in 2010: first-teamer junior WR Mark Layton, senior LB Mike Schmidlein, senior WR Mitch Bennett, senior P Tom Kondash and junior DB Brandon Ellis.
TIME OF POSSESSION: Time of possession was a crucial factor in Lafayette's success in 2009. The Lafayette offense held the ball an average of 33:10 in each game, leaving just 26:50 for opponents. The Leopards finished seventh in the nation, but and second in the Patriot League behind Colgate (35:45). This season, the Leopards have held the ball an average of 31:01 to their opponents 28:59.
Opponent LC TOP Opponent TOP Differential
Georgetown 40:13 19:47 +20:13
at Penn 22:16 37:44 -14:18
at Princeton 37:58 22:02 +15:56
Harvard 32:14 27:46 +4:28
at Columbia 25:10 34:50 -9:40
Stony Brook 32:14 27:46 +4:30
at Fordham 30:58 29:02 +1:56
at Bucknell 33:37 26:23 +7:14
at Colgate 24:31 35:29 -10:58
Holy Cross 40:28 19:32 +20:56
Average 31:58 28:02 +3:56
AND WE GO TO...OVERTIME: Lafayette has played eight overtime games all-time and is 2-6 in those contests. The Leopards were 1-1 in 2009 overtime games, the first extra session games since 2001.
DATE OPPONENT RESULT
11/11/95 Fordham 24-21 W
11/18/95 at Lehigh 37-30 L
10/18/97 at Cornell 41-34 L
10/03/98 at Dartmouth 13-10 L
09/08/01 at Towson 16-13 L
09/26/09 Penn 20-17 W
11/21/09 at Lehigh 27-21 L
09/25/10 at Princeton 36-33 L 2OT
HISTORIC FISHER STADIUM: Fisher Stadium has hosted the College's home football games since 1926. The facility underwent a $35 million transformation that gave Lafayette one of the premier FCS football venues in the nation. New spectator seating was built and additional visitors' seating was added for a maximum capacity of 13,132 fans. A state-of-the-art in-fill synthetic surface, lights, a press box and a 19-by-35 foot video board were installed, and improved restroom and vending areas were also included. The Bourger Varsity Football House includes a locker room, offices and team meeting rooms, as well as sports medicine and strength and conditioning areas. Now in its 84th season, Fisher Stadium has been host to 415 Lafayette football games with the Leopards enjoying an overall record of 246-156-13 for a winning percentage of .612. Of the previous 83 seasons, Lafayette has produced 12 undefeated home seasons with the most recent being the 1992 Patriot League champion Leopards that went a perfect 5-0 - the first undefeated home season for Lafayette at Fisher Stadium since 1970. During the 1991, 1992 and 1993 seasons, Lafayette won 10 straight home games--tying the Fisher Stadium school record for consecutive wins first set in 1926 and 1927 in the first 10 games ever played in the stadium.
LAFAYETTE ON THE RADIO: The Lafayette Sports Network radio broadcasts will be available on WJRH 104.9. Veteran broadcaster Dick Hammer is in his 44th season as the Leopards' play-by-play man and will be joined on occasion in the booth at home by Phil Ng '88.
SARTORIAL SCHEMES: The Leopards' perfect mark in black jerseys came to an end in 2008 with a one-point loss to Holy Cross on Nov. 15 and a setback vs. Lehigh (black pants and jerseys). Lafayette is now 4-3 in the black jerseys. They wore black to beat Lehigh in 2004 and again in 2006 to win Patriot League titles. Fordham was also victim to the black jerseys in 2005. The only other time they've paired black jerseys with black pants was in a driving rain storm with standing water on the old Fisher Field grass surface against Columbia in 2005, a 14-7 victory. The Leopards pulled out the black pants against Holy Cross in week 10 in 2007, beating the Crusaders 31-21. Lafayette did not wear its black jerseys or pants in 2009. In 2010, black jerseys made their debut against Harvard in a 35-10 loss. In other combinations, Lafayette donned the black pants with white jerseys at Columbia, maroon pants at Princeton, stayed with traditional white on white at Penn, Fordham, Bucknell and Colgate, and wore maroon jerseys and white pants vs. Georgetown and Holy Cross.
A HISTORY OF NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIPS: The Lafayette football program has claimed three national championships -- 1896, 1921 and 1926 -- and recorded five undefeated seasons -- 1896 (11-0-1), 1921 (9-0-0), 1926 (9-0-0), 1937 (8-0-0) and 1940 (9-0-0). Of recent note, the Leopards have won six Patriot League championships -- 1988, 1992, 1994, 2004, 2005 and 2006 -- and made their first three appearances in the NCAA FCS Playoffs.
LAFAYETTE'S FOOTBALL INVENTORS: Two primary elements of the game of football -- the helmet and the huddle -- were invented by former members of the Lafayette football program. George "Rose" Barclay from the Class of 1898, one of Lafayette's all-time great running backs, invented the helmet when the "threat of cultivating cauliflower ears" led him to piece three thick leather straps around his head for the 1896 game against Penn. Former Lafayette coach Herb McCracken (1924-35; 59-40-6) devised the first huddle system during the 1924 season after learning the Pennsylvania football team had stolen Lafayette's signals. Lafayette became the first team to huddle before each play and this system was immediately adopted by other teams.
CYBER LUNCH: All of Lafayette's media luncheons will be streamed live on GoLeopards.com beginning at approximately 12:30 p.m.
ALL SEASON ON LSN: The Lafayette Sports Network, a national leader in Division I FCS television coverage, will televise all 11 regular-season Lafayette football games for the eighth straight year. Now in its 14th year, LSN has become a staple for Leopard fans both regionally and across the country. LSN's traditional live distribution to more than 10 million homes on RCN-4 and WBPH-60 covering all of Eastern Pennsylvania will be enhanced this season by live coverage on all of RCN's cable systems in major markets along the East coast. RCN subscribers in Boston, New York City, Philadelphia and Washington, D.C. can watch all 11 Lafayette games on RCN-8. Nationally, LSN telecasts will be picked up for the 10th straight year by DIRECTV and DISH Network outlets, available to more than 90 million viewers via the Mid Atlantic Sports Network (MASN). MASN, which is available regionally and nationally on DIRECTV channel 640 and DISH Network channel 432, is the official television home of the Baltimore Orioles, Washington Nationals and Baltimore Ravens and reaches nearly 6 million homes in a seven-state region from Harrisburg, Pa. to Charlotte, N.C. A complete broadcast schedule follows.
LAFAYETTE SPORTS NETWORK ALL-ACCESS: If it doesn't air on ESPN3.com, LSN telecasts will be available live through LSN All-Access, which streams Lafayette contests and other programming worldwide to any high-speed internet connection. In all, more than 75 Lafayette athletic events are scheduled for broadcast through LSN All-Access this year at a rate of $9.95 per month and $79.95 for the entire year. The CBSSports.com ULive package, which includes content from all CBS Interactive collegiate member institutions, is available for $14.95 monthly or $119.95 annually.