Tuesday 31 October 2006

Early UNH stuff

The Manchester Union Leader has an article here .

The Springfield Republican parses the playoffs here.

The Boston Herald has a UMass-UNH game article here .

The Odds Guy Keeper has UMass as a 13.5 point favorite (gasp!).

UPDATE:

UMass has its UNH game notes here .

New Hampshire has its UMass game notes here .

Alex Miller Dinn Bros. UMass Athlete-of-the-Week

This Blog has already posted an entry about Alex Miller's game saving tackle against Northeastern (scroll down). He has been chosen the UMass athlete-of-the-week.

This might be a good time to mention the terrific performance of the UMass offensive line this year. We are undefeated in I-AA and leading in most offensive stats in both the A10 and nationally. Our running game is hitting on all cylinders and Coen lead the nation in pass efficiency.

The O-line has only given up 8 sacks in 8 games and 190 pass attempts!

A lot of that is due to the O-line:
What a great year they're having.

Monday 30 October 2006

The bleeding has stopped and the wounds are healing

By Mike Gibson
Last night there was an interview with Vince Papale broadcast over the Bravo Network.
Papale, the former Philadelphia Eagles' walk-on, talked a little about the movie Invincible, made about his life.
The more I watched, the closer I listened.
"This isn't a movie about me or about the Eagles or even about pro football," Papale said. "It's about everybody who has been told they couldn't or that they can't or that they won't or that they should just stop trying and give up."
It's about Temple football, the movie Invincible is, in its own way.
How many of us in the Temple family have been told to give up, to stop trying, that they couldn't or wouldn't be able to succeed?
Just about everyone, I'd imagine.
"This is a story about underdogs," Papale said.
That's what made Saturday so great _ not that a 19-point underdog rose up and won by two touchdowns, but that the same program people said wouldn't or couldn't win a game did just that.
It's the first of many.
The pain of being a Temple football person has been a deep and cutting one, and writing about it while in this 16-year intensive care state has been catartic for me, as evidenced in this post about going to Heaven and this one about Lost in Space but the bleeding has stopped and the wounds are beginning to heal.
The losses aren't over, but this patient is no longer in critical condition.
In fact, the long-term prognosis is good.
Very good.

Steve Baylark runs to records!

UMass' Steve Baylark ran himself into the NCAA record books Saturday as he became only the third player in I-AA history to run for 1,000 yards in four straight seasons.

His career totals as of Saturday are: GP 42/34 carries 913 yards 4,264 ave 4.7 36 TD longest 58 yards.

He joins former Georgia Southern RB Adrian Peterson and former UNH RB Jerry Azumah in the 1,000 yard/season club .

Baylark is currently 8th in rushing in I-AA this year (and with only one yard/game separating 6th through 8th positions).

Baylark is current 3rd all time in rushing in UMass history. He needs 360 yards to pass UMass legend Rene Ingoglia for second place.

Congratulations to Steve from all UMass fans!

UPDATE: Matty Vautour of the Hampshire Gazette adds two articles; the first on Steve Baylark and the second on the Northeastern game (registration required, but worth it)

More Northeastern game material

Matt Dougherty of Sports Network has a review of week nine (including UMass-Northeastern in his Extra Point column here .

The Springfield Republican has another article here .

Despite the weather Liam Coen kept his position as the #1 rated passer in I-AA .

UMass is 3rd in I-AA total offense (and leads the A10).

Also you will remember UMass led I-AA in scoring defense last year. Guess what. We're up to #2 in I-AA in scoring defense in 2006.

Sunday 29 October 2006

UMass wins in the rain 7-0 at Northeastern

It's hard to find a game that turned on two plays like yesterday's game against northeastern did.

Brad Anderson and James Ihedigbo's stop of Northeastern's Maurice Murray on the Huskies only offensive scoring threat was huge. Murray had been running through UMass tackles all day.

And again when UMass center Alex Miller somehow made a shoestring tackle on a Huskie DB who had the whole field ahead of him on Baylark's fumble.

The Boston Globe has a story here .

The Boston Herald has a story here . And the Herald has another story on Baylark and Miller's tackle here .

The Springfield Republican has a article here .

The UMass Athletic site's writeup is here . The Northeastern Athletic Dept's report is here .

Dave Coulson of I-AA.org has his I-AA recap the the events in I-AA (including UMass-Northeastern) here .

The image above is from the UMass Athletic dept site. I could not find who took it. If the photographer would e-mail me, I will attribute it.

Saturday 28 October 2006

Temple 28, Bowling Green 14: This one's for you, Karl Smith

By Mike Gibson
Watching Travis Shelton show his backside to the entire Bowling Green kickoff team, I thought about a lot of people.
Most of all, I thought about Karl Smith.
And all of the other small-minded narrow-thinkers like him.
Smith is the executive editor of PhillyBurbs.com.
You need only read a few excerpts from this piece of crap he wrote about Bowling Green putting up 70 on the Owls.
Things have changed a little since then, Karl.
..."how nice to have an extended scrimmage every year ...against an overmatched opponent that actually counts in the standings," Smith wrote ...
A brief synopsis is in order. He went on to thank Temple for this and thank Temple for that and then concluded by thanking Temple for accepting an invitation to the MAC so that the Owls can be Bowling Green's whipping boy for the next few years.
"... how nice to have an extended scrimmage against an overmatched opponent every year that actually counts in the standings," Smith wrote.
Hmmm.


I guess he doesn't know collegefootballnews.com named the Owls 2006 freshman recruiting class at the top incoming class among MAC schools, current or future.
I guess he doesn't care many of those recruits, as many as 18, are seeing significant playing time for the Owls this season or that these same players pushed around Bowling Green's sophomore- and junior-dominated lineup.
He might not know that the 2007 recruiting class is ranked significantly higher than that one and that it might dwarf any recruiting class of any MAC team in recent memory.
Or maybe he doesn't care.
And, if he can count, he knows that this same Owls will be around for the next three years. Yes, the same Owls that beat his beloved Bowling Green by two touchdowns yesterday.
We won't assume that Bowling Green will be Temple's whipping boy for the next few years, as he assumed the other way.
The evidence is there.
Temple is getting better.
Bowling Green is getting worse.
Get used to watching Shelton's backside. You've got two more years of watching that 4.27-40 speed.
We have six players coming in with that kind of speed and the evidence suggests that Temple could literally leave Bowling Green looking permanently in its rear view mirror.
Al Golden is a young, charismatic, recruiter who kids identify with and will rally behind. He came to Temple with a deserved reputation of being a recruiter without peer and he has only enhanced that reputation so far in his year on the job.
Thank you, Karl Smith.
Thank you very much.


Whew! Great win for UMass

Baylark runs 33 times for 152 yards. Goes over 1,000 yards for four straight years.

Maine looses and UMass is alone on top of the A10 North.

Blogger is having troubles and won't let me republish to change the game count-down clock to the New Hampshire game.

Will try again later.

Bad Weather for Northeastern

The weather prediction for the game is flat out bad . Rain and driving wind with gusts to 60 mph .

Bruce Dowd reviews last week's games (including Northeastern-UNH) and looks at this weeks games (including UMass-Northeastern) in his weekly column A10 Den .

The Boston Globe has an article about the game with the focus on Huskies TE Kendrick Ballantyne .

The Springfield Republican has a game day article here .

Matty Vautour has an inspiring article about Steve Baylark here . Be sure to read Matty's UMass Sports Blog for more Baylark stuff here (regestration required, but worth it)

Well, this game will be a test. Northeastern in Boston with horrible weather is a load. Winning or loosing this game will make a big impact on UMass' post-season chances.

Let's take care of the ball and get a big win in Brookline. Go UMass!

TV of the game is available here or through the UMass website .

Friday 27 October 2006

KAEO Shannon James and Keron Williams

Two former UMass stars are playing for the Calgary Stampeders of the CFL.

Shannon James' Stampeders bio is here .

Keron William's Stampeders bio is here .

James is staring at outside LB. Keron is inactive due to an injury.

Friday Northeastern game stuff


The Atlantic 10 has their gameday article up . Note that UMass-Northeastern is the only TV game.

Watch is live over the internet here (if you have a fat pipe).

The Boston Herald has an article here .

There will probably be more articles later. I'll add them as they come up.

Recruiting 2007 DE Jason Foster

UMass is recruiting Jason Foster a 6-5 222 DE from Mt. St. Joseph in Rutland VT.

The Rutland Herald has an article here .

Also being recruited by Boston College, UNH, Maine, URI and San Diego.

Jason UMass' defense is the best outfit in New England!

Thursday 26 October 2006

A look at the A10


The A10 football conference will be playing its eight week on saturday. With four games to go there is still plenty of drama left.

Three teams are undefeated in A10 play.
  • Maine 4-0 and 5-2 overall
  • UMass 4-0 and 6-1 overall
  • James Madison 4-0 and 6-1 overall
Four teams are 2-2 in league play and still could quality for the playoffs if they win out.
  • UNH 2-2 and 5-2 overall
  • Delaware 2-2 and 4-3 overall
  • Richmond 2-2 and 5-2 overall
  • Towson 2-2 and 5-2 overall
All teams finish out playing within their respective divisions.

All remaining UMass games are big. A loss at Northeastern would mean UMass HAS to beat Maine or UNH (and Hofstra) to make the playoffs. Finishing 10-1 means a home field all the way through the playoffs. 9-2 with wins over UNH and Maine and the loss coming against Northeastern or Hofstra still means a home playoff game.

Going 8-3 (loosing two of the final four) would mean a road playoff game if UMass beats Maine and UNH looses another game. If UMass would loose to BOTH Maine and UNH we would almost certainly be out of the playoffs.

In the South, the big game is JMU @ Richmond. The Spiders must win this game or they have a very good chance of being left out of the playoffs unless JMU should come apart in their last three games.

Matt Doughtery looks ahead to Saturday's games (including the A10 games) in his weekly column Extra Point here .

Wednesday 25 October 2006

This week, anything less than a win is unacceptable

By Mike Gibson
In about six weeks, Al Golden will be on the job as Temple University's head football coach for a year.
In the time since Dec. 6, Golden has said and done all the right things.
He's talked about changing the culture of losing, about pounding that rock until it cracks, about even coaching the pre-game warmups.
In less than two months, he's recruited the top incoming football class in the MAC.
All signs so far that this current class, which includes North Catholic superstar Daryl Robinson, will be off the charts as far as recent MAC recruiting classes go.
Now Robinson is recruiting fellow Philadelphia superstars for the Owls.
All good signs.
At some point, though, Al Golden is going to have to do what he's been brought in to do:
Win games.
This would be as good a week to start as any against a Bowling Green team that scored 70 points _ twice _ against recent Bobby Wallace teams.
If fact, anything less than a win against Bowling Green is unacceptable.
Consecutive 62-0 losses to Louisville and Minnesota were eye-openers, especially in light of North Dakota State's ability to take Minnesota into overtime.
North .... FREAKING ... Dakota ... FREAKING ... State.
Giving up 63 points to Clemson was another stomach-turner.
Yet a 28-17 loss to Kent seemed to show some progress because the Owls were toe-to-toe for the most part with one of the MAC's best teams.
Bowling Green, on the other hand, lost to Kent, 38-3.
...At some point, you've got to stop receivers from running free through your secondary like roaches in a ghetto kitchen ...
Bowling Green, like the Owls, took Buffalo to overtime.
The Owls, unlike Bowling Green, were short six key players in the loss at Buffalo, while Bowling Green did not have equivalent personnel shortages in an overtime win over Buffalo.
The Owls are back at full strength for the first time all season.
That SHOULD be bad news for Bowling Green.
It's up to Al Golden and his staff to deliver that news.
At some point, you've got to win.
At some point, you've got to stop dropping third-down passes.


At some point, you've got to put your best talent in position to win the game for you. One way would be using Tim Brown on punt returns, too, giving him the space to do what he does best.
At some point, you've got to stop receivers from running free through your secondary like roaches in a ghetto kitchen.
It's up to Al to formulate a game plan to win this week against Bowling Green.
A bold game plan, much like the one against Kent State.
Two tight ends, power-I, use Tim Brown's talents to move the chains and shorten the game. Use Brown's running ability to set up Adam DiMichele play-action passes to Travis Shelton and Mike Holley downfield.
On defense, Mark D'Onofrio has to come up with a gambling-style game plan that utilizes the Owls' strength _ their front seven _ and protects the weak back four.
Blitzes, particularly from the blind side, and up the middle to create protection problems for the Bowling Green quarterback.
The best defense is putting the other guy's quarterback on his ass _ or, as Jim Rome says, his ARSE _ and it's high time the Owls adopt that philosophy as the core of their defensive approach.
Use the speed of the young linebackers to smack the quarterback around and, hopefully, come up with the ball a time or two.
Philly-style football. Only a win would open eyes in a cynical and skeptical Philadelphia.
At some point, Al, you've got to win.
This week, in front of a Homecoming Day crowd, would be an acceptable place to start.

Caoch Brown's Radio moved to tonight

Remember that Coach Brown's radio show has been moved to tonight at 8:00 pm.

Wednesday Stats

Under the category of "Gee Sir, how do I decline the honor of leading the charge" UMass is now rated #1 in the GPI.

Steve Baylark continues to lead the A10 and is #7 in I-AA with a 127.43 yards/game .

Liam Coen continues to be #1 in I-AA in passing efficiency .

UMass is 4th in Total Offense in I-AA .

And the UMass defense is now rated #2 in I-AA in scoring defense .

In the A10 UMass leads the league in Pass Efficiency Defense, Kickoff Returns, Net Punting, Pass Efficiency, Pass Defense and Scoring Defense .

More Northeastern articles

The image to the left is Alex Bloomfield, the Northeastern RB who caught the 2-point conversion pass to defeat New Hampshire last week. The images is by Jim Pierce off the Northeastern Athletic Dept page.

The Boston Globe has an article here about the surging Huskies .

Northeastern has a football booster group Friends of Northeastern Football . Their website has a coach's newsletter from Head Coach Rocky Hager. In the latest edition Hagar talks about the Huskies big win over New Hampshire.

Tuesday 24 October 2006

Northeastern Game notes up

UMass has its game notes for Northeastern up.

So does Northeastern. Their game notes are here .

Fact from the Northeastern game notes: So far, the Huskies have played the toughest schedule in I-AA with a combined opponent winning average of .651 (43-23). They have also played seven straight top-25 teams.

The Springfield Republican has a general UMass football article here .

Matt Dougherty recaps last week's action with his Extra Point column here .

The Odds Guy Keeper has UMass as a 20+ point favorite .

Monday 23 October 2006

Baylark A10 Offensive Player-of-the-Week

You knew Steve Baylark was going to be A10 Offensive Player-of-the-Week didn't you?

The UMass press release is here .

The A10 notice is here (pdf format) .

UMass fans will note that UMass has played seven games and won seven A10 Player-of-the-Week awards...

Image is by J. Anthony Roberts. Link to the image gallery is in the previous Blog post.

UMass-Rams game articles

The above image is by J. Anthony Roberts and it's part of an image gallery in the Springfield Republican here (in the center of the page, I can't link to the gallery directly)

The Republican has a game article here .

The Boston Herald here .

The Providence Journal here .

The Boston Globe here .

The Worcester Telegram here .

This article in the Herald is mostly about Northeastern's overtime victory over New Hampshire, but it includes a quote from Coach Brown that the win got UMass' attention .

UPDATE:

Matty Vautour has two game articles in the Monday's Gazette. The game article is here . And an article about the O-line's plans to put a dent in Baylark's pocketbook here .

Sunday 22 October 2006

Blogger down?

Been getting e-mails that Blogger is down.

UMass-Rhode Island 2006

Homecoming game images 10/21/06

As usual, right click on an image and Blogger displays a larger view. Lately blogger has been clipping some views in some circumstances. If one of the images is clipped, click on it to show the full view. The image is there, the bug is in Blogger's presentation.

A great homecoming day. Another huge crowd of 15,000+

UMass fumbled the opening kickoff and in Rhody's second series the UMass safety bit on the fake for a Ram gain to the UMass 2 yard line. After three offensive series it was 13-6 Rams.

The rest of the game was 41-3 UMass. Baylark a career game of 235 yards. Coen was near perfect--again.

Captains meet

Tony Nelson fumbled the opening kickoff

Coen had another great day

Baylark starts a monster day

O-Line kicked butt all day

A beautiful day for Homecoming 2006

Baylark gets 175 yards in the first half

Dance Troop

Dance Troop II

Time out Offense

DB's and LB's huddle

Defense reacts

Alumni Band-Homecoming 2006

2006 Band

Another great crowd of 15,000+

UMass Drum Line

Look at the concentration!

The option pitch

Galligher hit this one

Brad Listori had a nice run after a catch

Tony Nelson Runs in the 4th quarter

Final Score

Saturday 21 October 2006

UMass-Rhode Island Homecoming


The Springfield Republican has a game day article here .

The UMass Alumni Association has a list of game day activities here .

Friends of Football to Meet at Homecoming

The UMass Friends of Football will be meeting at Homecoming . This Blog is a member and a big fan of the Friends.

Since their formation by Coach Whipple, the Friends have been a driving force in UMass Football excellence.

If you enter Friends of Football in the "search this blog" button in the Blogger menu bar at the top you will find 14 blog posts about the Friends. The last one was here .

This Blog believes all UMass football fans should belong to the Friends. Please join. Please. Stop by and meet them. Be part of UMass football and help the team.

It's not just the $$$. Having a large and active membership in Friends of Football really, really helps the team in the Byzantine world of campus politics.

Friday 20 October 2006

Friday morning odds & ends

UMass is currently rated #2 in the I-AA universe in the Gridiron Power Index.

That's fine with me. Let's stay under the radar until we hit the playoffs.

The Atlantic 10 is also rated 2nd in the GPI.

Matt Vautour has a UMass-Rhode Island game article here (registration required, but worth it).

Bruce Dowd has his week article A10 Den on the state of the A10 (including insights on UMass-Towson and UMass-Rhode Island) here .

KAEO former UMass coaches Eddy Morrissey and Dave Hoover

Former UMass Coach Dave Hoover is now head coach at Victory Valley College (JUCO). He was a member of Coach Whipple's staff in our 1998 Championship year. Hoover was recruiting coordinator and OL Coach. The Daily Bulletin has a story on him here .

The image above is a scan from the 1998 UMass press guide.

I've Blogged before about former UMass Coach Eddy Morrissey. There is a new article about his move to the University of Oregon by the Nashua Telegram here .

Thursday 19 October 2006

UMass-Rhode Island A10 TV Game


The 1:00 pm game UMass-Rhode Island game at McGuirk will be an A10 TV game .

From the A10 write-up "the series will be aired live on NESN and WSGR in Winston-Salem, NC. In addition, the contest will be aired on tape delay Saturday on Cox (4:30pm) and Comcast SportsNet Philadelphia (7:00pm). The game will be aired on tape delay Sunday on College Sports Television (2:00pm) and Comcast SportsNet DC (3:30pm)."

The A10 Gameday Article is here .

More Rhode Island game stuff

Matt Dougherty of the Sports Network has his weekly prognostication of this week's games (including UMass-Rhode Island) in Extra Point.

Rhode Island lost to Richmond 31-6 last week.

The Rams Athletic Director resigned October 12th after a long dispute with the school administration.

Richmond has an excellent defense. As you know, Rhody runs the spread option. They were missing their starting QB Derek Cassidy (ankle injury) and their backup QB John Butler also left the game with a shoulder injury. That left them running a true freshman QB. Both may be available for the UMass game.

This article from the Providence Journal talks about the UMass-Rhody game and UMass QB Liam Coen who's from North Providence. Rhode Island's coach Tim Stowers son played on the same high school team as Liam.

Note the Providence Journal has registration. I use Bugmenot.com to get passwords.

Wednesday 18 October 2006

Lambert Trophy History

Special thanks to Heidi Kravchuk, Assistant Commissioner for Communications ECAC for the following History of the Lambert Trophy.

"

The Lambert Trophy was established by brothers Victor and Henry Lambert in memory of their father, August. The Lambert�s were the principals in a distinguished Madison Avenue jewelry house and were prominent college football boosters.

The University of Pittsburgh, under the direction of coach Jock Sutherland, was the first recipient of the trophy. After World War II, college football proliferated but with increasing disparity in goals and policies. In response, the Lambert Cup was created in 1957 to recognize non-Division I-A programs. The Division III award was added in 1966. The NCAA�s reclassification of a number of Eastern teams into Division I-AA allowed for the creation of the Division II award. In 1983, the Lambert family decided the Meadowlands Sports Complex would be the best organization with a sincere and involved interest in college athletics to sponsor and manage the award. Since that time, the awards have been known as the Lambert Meadowlands Award.

To be eligible for the Lambert Award, a school must be located in the East or play half of its schedule against eligible Lambert teams. The territory includes New York, New Jersey, New England and Pennsylvania while teams in the bordering states of Delaware, Maryland, Virginia and West Virginia and the District of Columbia qualify if half of their schedule features eligible teams. With the creation of the Big East Conference, Miami and Virginia Tech were added as eligible teams, although in 2004, these teams were not eligible as they changed their conference allegiance to the Atlantic Coast Conference. There were 156 schools eligible in the four divisions including 11 in Division I-A, 44 in Division I-AA, 27 in Division II and 74 in Division III. Four separate panels of media, one in each division, participate in a weekly poll and final poll to determine the winners. Playoffs and bowl games are included in the polling. The Lambert Trophy and Lambert Cup are rotating awards that remain in the winning school�s possession for the subsequent year. "

UMass-Rhode Island game notes up

UMass has its game notes (html) here .

Rhody has its game notes (pdf) here .

The Odds Guy Keeper has UMass as a 37 point favorite .

Recruiting 2007--- Jose Gumbs


UMass is recruiting Jose Gumbs a 5-8 160 pd RB/Athlete from Hebron in LewistonMe.

The Sun-Journal has an article here .

The image is Jose (on the right, with his brother Greg Gumbs who plays football for Bates).



Jose, UMass would be a great place for you!

UMass leads in Lambert Cup voting


UMass leads in the voting for the Lambert Cup the symbol of Eastern I-AA supremacy.

The ECAC press release is here (pdf). The ECAC home page is here .

The top five:
  • UMass 50 points all 5 first place votes
  • Tied JMU-New Hampshire 41 points
  • Richmond 37 points
  • Princeton 24 points.
UMass has won the Lambert Cup twice (1978 and 1998)

Coen wins Gold Helmet Award

UMass QB Liam Coen has won his second Gold Helmet award by the New England Sports Writers.

The UMass Athletic site has an article here.

Incidentally, there does not seem to be any webpage/site that has any material on this award.

Even Wikipedia does not have an article. The history of the award (famous recipients: Doug Flutie, etc) would be interesting.

Could some New England football fan with some time on their hands at least do a Wikipedia article?

Tuesday 17 October 2006

Temple recruiting: The best is yet to come

By Mike Gibson
The sign is on the wall at the Edberg-Olson Complex for all to see:
"HUNTING A MAC CHAMPIONSHIP WITH LOCAL TALENT."
If you know anything about Al Golden so far in his almost one year on the job, it's this:
Allie G. means what he says and says what he means.
It's evident in the verbals so far.
One, Daryl Robinson, might be the best player in North Catholic's long and sometimes glorious football history.
Another, Kit Anderson, scored three long touchdowns in a big Neshaminy win last week.
There is a school of thought that there isn't enough talent in the Philadelphia area and Eastern Pennsylvania to support a winning Division IA football team.
The Headmaster of that same school likes to say there's more talent in a five-mile square area of Florida than there is in Southeastern Pennsylvania or South Jersey.
Hogwash, Phooey and any two-syllable word you can think of that begins with a B and ends with a T.
Wayne Hardin and Bruce Arians proved you could field WINNING football teams at TEMPLE with primarily local talent.
Take the 1979 team, which finished 10-2 and ranked No. 17 in both final polls.
Brian Broomell, the quarterback who led the nation in passing efficiency for most of that season, was from Sterling. Mark Bright, the fullback who was MVP of Temple's bowl win over California, was from William Tennent. Kevin Duckett, the slippery halfback, was from Northeast.
We could go on and on but won't.
The proof is in the history, past and present.
The sons of these great players, figuratively, did not forget how to play football.
The football is Southeastern Pennsylvania and nearby might not be Florida but it is good enough.
If you like what Golden has done so far, the best is yet to come if the recruiting of D.J. Lenehan is any indication.
I had the pleasure of watching Lenehan of Wilson Area near Easton compete in the Class AA championship game last year.
I saw a number of his games on Service Electric Cable TV and on WFMZ Channel 69 in Allentown.
This kid is the real deal.
Much like Adam DiMichele of the current Owls, this young man has the "it" factor.
"I like to say this about all great quarterbacks, they have IT," ESPN commentator Lee Corso said. "I can't put into words precisely what it is, but when you see a quarterback who has it, you'll know.
"I'm going to say it like this: IT is the sense of when to throw the ball and when not to, it's the ability to throw the ball deep on a dime while sitting in the pocket or running at full speed and IT is toughness and the sixth sense to stay in the pocket until the last split second in order to make a play."
If you don't believe me, look at the Lenehan highlight films on Rivals.com and judge for yourself.
This kid can play and he's perfect for the Temple offense. DiMichele's presence, and to an extent Vaughn Charlton's, gives Lenehan a chance to develop at a pace that will accelerate his production.
The first school to offer Lenehan was Temple.
If anything, that indicates Golden is paying attention to the films and his two eyes and not letting some recruiting service tell him who the players are.

More UMass-Towson Images

I-AA.org has a gallery of UMass-Towson images by photographer Mark W. Campbell.

Coen wins A10 player-of-the-week

UMass sophomore QB Liam Coen is having a monster year. He just won the A10 Player-of-the-week. The UMass write-up is here .

As a side note, UMass has played six games and has won six A10 Player-of-the-week awards .

The A10 notes are here (pdf format) .

Coen is #1 in the A10 and #1 Nationally in passing efficiency with an incredible 188.5 rating (10 points higher than the runner-up).

Note that UMass is 3rd nationally in total offense (ahead of the highly touted UNH offense)

Not to forget the defense, we're up to 3rd in the nation in scoring defense .