in the
huddle syracuse vs.
UCONN
sept. 22, 2018
SKYTOP Wine and Liquor
Bleeding Orange and Blue since 1982
SPONSORED BY
2 in the huddle
dailyorange.com
about t h e i n de p e n de n t s t u de n t n e w s pa p e r of s y r a c u s e , n e w yor k
The Daily Orange is an independent newspaper published in Syracuse, New York. The editorial content of the paper — which originated in 1903 and went independent in 1971 — and its online platforms are entirely run by Syracuse University students. The D.O.’s coverage of the greater SU area is disseminated through 87 issues during the 2017-18 academic year with a circulation of 6,000 copies, a readership of 30,000 and online circulation of about 500,000 during publishing months. The paper is published Monday through Thursday when SU classes are in session, Fridays before home football games and select basketball games and in the cases of notable and newsworthy occasions. The D.O.’s online coverage is 24/7, including while SU is on break. To help support The D.O.’s independent journalism, please visit dailyorange.com/donate. Editor@dailyorange.com News@dailyorange.com Opinion@dailyorange.com Pulp@dailyorange.com Sports@dailyorange.com Digital@dailyorange.com Design@dailyorange.com ADVERTISING 315-443-9794 BUSINESS 315-443-2315 EDITORIAL 315-443-9798 GENERAL FAX 315-443-3689
Sam Ogozalek EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
Ali Harford MANAGING EDITOR
News Editor Editorial Editor Feature Editor Sports Editor Presentation Director Photo Editor Illustration Editor Copy Chief Digital Editor Video Editor Asst. News Editor Asst. News Editor Asst. News Editor Asst. Editorial Editor Asst. Feature Editor Asst. Feature Editor Asst. Sports Editor Asst. Sports Editor Asst. Photo Editor Asst. Photo Editor Senior Design Editor Design Editor Design Editor Design Editor
how to join us If you are a Syracuse University or State University of New York College of Environmental Science and Forestry student interested in contributing to The D.O. on either its advertising or editorial teams, please email info@dailyorange.com.
corrections policy
letter to the editor policy
Victoria Tramontana Divya Yeleswarapu
Sarah Stewart Taylor Sheehan
All contents © 2017 The Daily Orange Corporation
The D.O. prides itself as an outlet for community discussion. To learn more about our submission guidelines, please email opinion@dailyorange. com with your full name and affiliation within the Syracuse community. Please note letters should not include any personal information pertaining to other people unless it is relevant to the topic at hand. All letters will be edited for style and grammar.
Wine and Liquor
Sarah Rada KJ Edelman Brooke Kato India Miraglia Sarah Slavin Daniel Strauss Kaci Wasilewski Maeve Rule Mackenzie Sammeth Lauren Miller Eric Black Mary Catalfamo Maggie Peng Laura Angle Abby Fritz Anna Henderson Susie Teuscher Mike Dooling Michael Ceribelli Ryland Arbour Tim Bennett Amanda Boyd Allyson Toolan Sabrina Koenig Sarah Grinnell Mike Ceribelli Sarah Massa
The Daily Orange is published weekdays during the Syracuse University academic year by The Daily Orange Corp., 744 Ostrom Ave., Syracuse, NY 13210. All contents Copyright 2017 by The Daily Orange Corp. and may not be reprinted without the expressed written permission of the editor in chief. The Daily Orange is distributed on and around campus with the first two copies complimentary. Each additional copy costs $1. The Daily Orange is in no way a subsidy or associated with Syracuse University.
The D.O. strives to be as accurate in our reporting as possible. Please email editor@dailyorange.com to report a correction.
SKYTOP
Jordan Muller Aishwarya Sukesh Lydia Niles Josh Schafer Bridget Slomian Molly Gibbs Sarah Allam Sandhya Iyer Andy Mendes Rori Sachs Casey Darnell Colleen Ferguson Catherine Leffert Allison Weis Haley Robertson Kelsey Thompson Billy Heyen Michael McCleary Hieu Nguyen Max Freud Talia Trackim Diana Denney Blessing Emole Jenna Morrisey
Design Editor Asst. Copy Editor Asst. Copy Editor Asst. Copy Editor Asst. Copy Editor Asst. Copy Editor Asst. Copy Editor Social Media Director Asst. Video Editor Asst. Video Editor Asst. Digital Editor Asst. Digital Editor Asst. Digital Editor Digital Design Editor Digital Design Editor Digital Design Editor Digital Design Editor General Manager Assistant to the GM IT Manager Business Assistant Advertising Representative Advertising Representative Advertising Representative Advertising Representative Advertising Representative Advertising Representative Advertising Representative Advertising Representative Social Media Manager Special Events Coordinator
follow us
The Daily Orange Alumni Association Daily Orange Deals
608 Nottingham Rd, Syracuse, NY (315) 446-6710 www.SkytopLiquors.com
Bleeding Orange and Blue since 1982
Conveniently located in Tops Plaza Next to Manley Field House
• SU Alumni Owned • Weekly Sales • 20% OFF cases of wine and champagne • Free tasting events every Thursday and Friday
Simply cut out or take a picture of coupons to redeem
3/$18 André Champagne
$19.99 $19.99 10% off
(750 mL)
Svedka Vodka Flavors (1.75 L)
Jose Cuervo Gold or Silver (1 L)
Wine purchases of $15 or more
expires 10/6/18 • excludes other sales or discounts
expires 10/6/18 • excludes other sales or discounts
expires 10/6/18 • excludes other sales or discounts
expires 10/6/18 • excludes other sales or discounts
in the huddle 3
dailyorange.com sports@dailyorange.com
Heat check
TOMMY DEVITO has played in all three games for the Orange. The redshirt freshman saw his first action against Western Michigan and scored his first touchdown two weeks later against Florida State when he threw for 144 yards and a touchdown. He also scored on the ground. max freund asst. photo editor
Roundtable: Beat writers talk DeVito, 3-0 start and Top-25 potential
By The Daily Orange Sports Staff
American Athletic) at the Carrier Dome.
or the first time under Dino Babers, Syracuse (3-0, 1-0 Atlantic Coast) has won its first three games of the season. Last week Syracuse defeated Florida State, 30-7, for the first time since 1966. In the game, the Orange defense held the Seminoles to 240 yards and redshirt freshman Tommy Devito threw for 144 yards and a touchdown while also rushing for a score. Below, The Daily Orange football beat writers answer questions headed into Syracuse’s 4 p.m. Saturday matchup with Connecticut (1-2, 0-1
How much can you read into the FSU win?
F
Andrew Graham: A little bit. The name “Florida State” carries a lot of weight and the Seminoles roster was talented as always, but the team Syracuse beat on Saturday was horrendous. FSU’s offensive line looked lost, the run game stalled and the defense crumpled. That said, Syracuse recognized this and steadily beat back the Seminoles. In years past, I don’t know if SU did that. Syracuse’s most impressive facet on Saturday was the defense, allowing just seven points to an Atlantic Coast see roundtable page 10
4 in the huddle
dailyorange.com sports@dailyorange.com
football
Q&A with the Hartford Courant’s UConn beat writer By Andrew Graham senior staff writer
Undefeated Syracuse (3-0, 1-0 Atlantic Coast) hosts UConn (1-2, 0-1 American Athletic) on Saturday at 4 p.m. in the Carrier Dome. SU is coming off a 30-7 blowout against Florida State while the Huskies are reeling from an 0-2 start and a close game against Rhode Island. To get the lowdown on the Huskies, The Daily Orange talked with the Hartford Courant’s UConn beat writer, Alex Putterman. The Daily Orange: UConn enters this game 1-2 with a close win over FCS Rhode Island. What’s the deal with the Huskies? Alex Putterman: Where they are is they’re an extremely, extremely young team. Especially on defense where in any given game, somewhere between six to eight, nine, of the starters on defense will be freshmen, and some of them are true freshmen. As soon as someone gets hurt, it’s always a freshman coming in to replace them. It’s just really almost a preposterously young team. All these guys who have probably not taken their first college midterm are being asked to guard highpowered FBS offenses. So that has been tough. Luckily the offense has been pretty good at times, especially David Pindell, the quarterback, who has put up some pretty impressive numbers against UCF and then again against Rhode Island. Really agile, can run, but he’s also completing passes at a much, much higher rate than he did last year. What I like to say is that they have a competent offense and a pretty bad defense, at this point. We knew it was going to be a transitional year, because of how young the team was, but it has been pretty ugly at times. The D.O.: For Syracuse fans, who is a player to watch for the Huskies?
A.P.: I would say the player to watch has to be
David Pindell, the quarterback. Really UConn goes as he goes. He’s extremely athletic, really fast, really elusive, really good in open space, hard to bring down. And like I said, he can complete passes. UConn doesn’t try a lot of deep balls, you could say their offensive line doesn’t give them time to try deep balls, but it’s a lot of short passes, a lot of QB runs — some of them designed, some of them scrambles. He’s really the guy. If UConn is going to put up points against Syracuse, it’s going to be because he is converting on the ground and through the air. The D.O.: Outside of Pindell, has anyone else excelled for the Huskies, despite the poor record? A.P.: This is maybe a kind of cheat-y answer but I would say the offensive skill positions, offensive skill players as a group. I mentioned Pindell, Kevin Mensah is the starting running back, he’s had a really good season, just rushed for a career-high 144 yards against Rhode Island and has really looked great giving them another element to the offense. And the receivers are kind of a strength, led by Hergy Mayala, who is a senior. Tight ends are really good, Tyler Davis and Aaron McLean. So I would say the team’s strength is that on offense, it does have some playmakers. The D.O.: Who wins on Saturday and why? A.P.: Well, Syracuse wins, probably pretty handily, I was thinking something like — well you didn’t ask me for a score but I’ll give you one anyways — something like 48-24. I know Syracuse isn’t built around its offense, necessarily, but with how the UConn defense has been so far, I don’t think the Orange will have any trouble moving the ball. I think another thing to watch is that UConn’s only road game so far was at Boise State in a really loud atmosphere, and they committed six
ALWAYS FRESH!
OPEN 6 DAYS A WEEK TUES-FRI • 7am-2pm SAT-SUN • 8am-2pm
211 N. CLINTON ST. SYRACUSE, NEW YORK @GLAZEDSYR www.GLAZEDSYR.com
DONTAE STRICKLAND is one of several SU players that helped defeat Connecticut 31-24 in 2016. He rushed for 51 yards on 14 carries. daily orange file photo
false starts. Which is not what you want, to say the least, so it will be interesting to see how they respond to playing in a fairly loud atmosphere at the Carrier Dome. Just today in practice, they were piping in extremely loud artificial crowd noise. It was
really kind of a pain for me, so clearly they’re trying to mitigate against the impact the Carrier Dome will have, but I think that will play a role and it shouldn’t really be a tough game for Syracuse. aegraham@syr.edu | @A_E_Grhaam
in the huddle 5
dailyorange.com sports@dailyorange.com
Turning the
corner
Through three games, Syracuse has two more interceptions than it had in 2017 By Josh Schafer sports editor
S
yracuse picked off a Western Michigan pass four defensive plays into the 2018 season. It was the Orange’s first interception in nine games, dating back to September of 2017. Junior Scoop Bradshaw pounced on a WMU receiver as he brought the pass in on a short comeback route. The ball flew high in the air and freshman safety Andre Cisco snatched it, grabbing the first of two interceptions in a 55-42 win over WMU. Syracuse (3-0, 1-0 Atlantic Coast) has intercepted its opponent in three consecutive games to start the season. In 2017, the Orange tallied four interceptions in a three-game span before not intercepting an opposing quarterback’s pass for the final eight games of the season. SU finished the year ranked 115th in turnovers. Entering Saturday’s game against Connecticut (1-2, 0-1 American Athletic), which averages an interceptiocn thrown per game, Syracuse is tied for seventh in the country with six interceptions, four shy of its highest mark under Dino Babers. “It’s kind of like a batting average in baseball,” Babers said. “You go back and check how many opportunities we had for
interceptions and how many we made last year, I bet you our batting average would be really low. You go back to how many times we’ve touched the ball this year and we had a chance for interception and how many times we’ve got that ball, I bet you our batting average is really high.” Syracuse doesn’t have a turnover chain like the University of Miami or celebrate “securing the bag” like FSU, but it does have what Chris Fredrick called the “turnover tape.” The redshirt junior defensive back said defensive coordinator Brian Ward sat his unit down in the spring and played a lowlight reel which contained all of SU’s missed opportunities to take the ball away in 2017. Some were dropped interceptions. Others were forced fumbles the Orange didn’t scoop. Even the defensive line was featured when it could’ve swiped the ball from the quarterback’s arm. In practice, the secondary unit runs a turnover circuit, redshirt senior defensive back Antwan Cordy said. Among other drills, SU players run through a classic tip-drill, in which players run at an oncoming pass and tip it in the air to the person behind him in line. When the ball reaches the last player, he secures the interception. “Turnovers are important, it’s easy to get the momentum going. If we have a
ANDRE CISCO caught two interceptions against Wagner a week after snagging his first interception against Western Michigan. max freund asst. photo editor
turnover, we could be in a hole but once a turnover comes,” said Cordy as he snapped his fingers, “we got the momentum now.” Fredrick said he “can’t be sure” as to why there has been an influx in turnovers this season. He and Cordy both noted the secondary’s coverage of routes this year have been tighter. Cordy added the team’s disguised coverages — shifting from zone to man just before the snap — have led to mistakes by opposing quarterbacks. In Week 2, Cisco picked off Wagner quarterback T.J. Linta on consecutive third downs. The first came off undercutting a drag route in man coverage and the second came out of a robber look in which Cisco shifted down toward the line of scrimmage just before the snap. On both plays, Cisco started the play in a different spot than the quarterback last saw him, leading to Cisco jumping routes. Both Cisco takeaways granted the Orange possession inside the Wagner 30-yard line. SU’s interceptions have landed SU inside its opposition’s 35-yard line five of six times, leading to 17 points off turnovers. “Someone says ‘Oh that guy doesn’t have to catch, he’s a DB,’” Babers said after the Wagner game. “Well if there’s a DB that knows how to catch it can be a huge weapon.”
Babers attributes the turnover increase to an improved pass rush. When a defensive linemen is barreling at a quarterback, it limits time to make the throw with proper mechanics and judgement. Against Florida State, Syracuse’s defensive line knocked down Deondre Francois nine times, four of which were sacks. Defensive linemen Kendall Coleman noted after the 30-7 win, “It was pretty visible he was feeling us,” of the Syracuse pass rush. In the second quarter, Francois had time, but his unsteady feet, often a product of heavy pass rush, showed. The redshirt junior dropped back and threw a line drive down the seam toward a receiver running a vertical route. Fredrick, who noticed on film that Francois had a tendency to throw passes with little loft, undercut the pass for an interception. Even after the interception, Ward told his defense they needed more turnovers, Fredrick said. Syracuse could have had three more, had they recovered any of their forced fumbles this season. Perhaps those will make the tape Ward shows. For now, Syracuse’s focus hasn’t wavered. “We have to get turnovers,” Cordy said. “That’s our mindset … turnovers, turnovers, turnovers, turnovers.” jlschafe@syr.edu |@Schafer_44
#4
RUNNING BACK
DONTAE S
STRICKLAND
8 in the huddle
dailyorange.com sports@dailyorange.com
SKYTOP
SEPT. 22 TEAM ROSTER
608 Nottingham Rd, Syracuse, NY (315) 446-6710 SkytopLiquors.com
Wine and Liquor
OFFENSE
QB
2 Eric Dungey 13 Tommy DeVito
DE
94 Alton Robinson 57 Kingsley Jonathan
RB
4 Dontae Strickland 21 Moe Neal
NT
98 McKinley Williams 85 Josh Black
WR
5 Devin Butler 80 Taj Harris
DT
95 Chris Slayton 45 Kenneth Ruff
WR
10 Sean Riley 19 Sharod Johnson
DE
55 Kendall Coleman 97 Brandon Berry
WR
17 Jamal Custis 81 Cameron Jordan
WLB
12 Andrew Armstrong 24 Shyheim Cullen
TE
6 Ravian Pierce 36 Chris Elmore 89 Aaron Hackett
MLB
41 Ryan Guthrie 46 Lakiem Williams
SLB
25 Kielan Whitner 12 Andrew Armstrong
CB
18 Scoop Bradshaw 23 Ifeatu Melifonwu
FS
8 Antwan Cordy 19 Andre Cisco
SS
14 Evan Foster 34 Eric Coley
CB
3 Christopher Fredrick 21 Trill Williams
Conveniently located in Tops Plaza
Bleeding Orange and Blue since 1982
Next to Manley Field House
• SU Alumni Owned • Weekly Sales • 20% OFF cases of wine and champagne • Free tasting events every Thursday and Friday Simply cut out or take a picture of coupons to redeem
3/$18
$19.99
André Champagne
Svedka Vodka Flavors (1.75 L)
(750 mL) expires 10/6/18 • excludes other sales or discounts
expires 10/6/18 • excludes other sales or discounts
$19.99 10% off Jose Cuervo Gold or Silver (1 L)
Wine purchases of $15 or more
expires 10/6/18 • excludes other sales or discounts
expires 10/6/18 • excludes other sales or discounts
Low prices!
f
Follow us on Facebook
Huge inventory!
Proud to Support SU Athletics
DEFENSE
LT
60 Cody Conway 52 Carlos Vettorello
LG
59 Aaron Roberts 57 Dakota Davis
C
68 Aaron Servals 75 Sam Heckel
RG
63 Evan Adams 72 Andreias During
SALES & SERVICE CO. Proudly Cheering for the ORANGE for over 30 years! Serving students and staff for over 30 years! Quality Tires and Services
www.Big4Tire.com
300 East First Street E. Syracuse, NY 13057 (315) 432 - 4444 Fax (315) 434 - 9555
149 Midler Park Drive Syracuse, NY 13206 (315) 473 - 0329
in the huddle 9
dailyorange.com sports@dailyorange.com
football
Opponent preview: What to know about the Huskies By Matt Liberman staff writer
Syracuse (3-0, 1-0 Atlantic Coast) welcomes Connecticut (1-2, 0-1 American Athletic) to the Carrier Dome on Saturday at 4 p.m. In Week 3, Syracuse took down Florida State, 30-7, defeating the Seminoles for the first time in 52 years. Meanwhile, the Huskies struggled to finish off Rhode Island, edging out the Rams 56-49. Here’s what to know about UConn heading into this week’s matchup:
All-time series: UConn leads, 6-2
Last time they played: Syracuse toppled the Huskies in East Hartford, 31-24, in SU head coach Dino Babers’ first year at the helm.
Amba Etta-Tawo broke the Syracuse singlegame record for receiving yards, netting 270 on 12 catches. Eric Dungey posted a career day as well with 407 passing yards, three total touchdowns and no turnovers. The Orange never trailed and pulled away for good in the third quarter.
The UConn report:
The Huskies are an extremely young and inexperienced team on both sides of the ball. When UConn played Boise State on Sept. 8, five true freshmen started on defense and not a single upperclassman. That has been the narrative of the season thus far for the UConn defense. The Huskies are the only team in the country to have given up more than 2,000 yards in their first three games. Several teams have played four games
without giving up that number. UConn is the only team in the country to give up a little over 600 yards (673) in a game and the only team to give up more than 50 points per game (55.7). The next closest is Oregon State at 46.3. That’s understandable, to an extent, considering UConn’s first two opponents, No. 21 Central Florida and No. 20 Boise State. But Rhode Island is an FCS opponent that scored 49 points on 550 yards of offense against the Huskies. This defense is bad.
How Syracuse beats UConn:
SU wins by playing the way it has all season long: fast. A defense without a single upperclassman will struggle against Babers’ up-tempo style of play, especially with Eric Dungey’s capabilities in the air and on the ground. If the SU defense plays like it did
against Florida State, constantly giving the ball back to Dungey to run the offense all over the place, UConn will have absolutely no chance against the Orange.
Player to watch: David Pindell, quarterback, No. 5
If there’s anyone that has a chance of surprising Orange fans, it’s senior quarterback David Pindell. He is someone that certainly has big play potential. In two of his three games this season, Pindell has generated more than 400 yards of offense. Against UCF he threw for 266 and ran for 157, and those numbers were 319 and 137, respectively, against Rhode Island. He’s fast, he’s experienced and he has the capabilities to light up the scoreboard. mdliberma@syr.edu
Syracuse and Connecticut used to play against each other when both were members of the Big East. Connecticut leads the all-time series 6-2 but has struggled this year. The Huskies have allowed 49 points or more in each of thier first three games, leading to a 1-2 start. daily orange file photo
10 in the huddle
dailyorange.com sports@dailyorange.com
from page 3
roundtable Conference opponent for the first time under Dino Babers. Ultimately, how mundane the win was speaks volumes more than the opponent. Matt Liberman: The win over FSU really doesn’t mean much except for the fact that they beat “Florida State.” The Seminoles barely even resemble the team we saw last season, and that was a team that struggled to reach a bowl game. The only important takeaway that I have from this game is Syracuse beat a team that they should’ve beaten at home. The Orange have struggled to do that in years past, such as last season against Middle Tennessee State. This season, SU was the better team, and they finally proved it. Josh Schafer: Don’t put too much stock in Syracuse’s win over Florida State, at least not in the name they beat. Florida State isn’t the program it was for the majority of Jimbo Fisher’s tenure when it won three ACC titles. Through three games, the Orange have been the better team in yardage and points scored on both sides of the ball. The better team won on a Saturday and that’s the biggest takeaway. In 2017, Syracuse lost five games that were within 10 points in the fourth quarter. Against a comparable conference opponent, Syracuse finished.
What can be made of Tommy DeVito’s first couple of games?
A.G.: With about a games-worth of playing time, all I can fairly say about DeVito is that he’s exactly what SU needs him to be right now: A competent, talented backup who will be a future starter. DeVito struggled at Western Michigan, but played well against Wagner — though take that with a grain of FCS-opponent salt — and most recently took control of the FSU game. DeVito made some pretty throws, didn’t turn it over, and led SU to 27 points. He looked good. SU fans can be confident
that in a blowout, or if an injury occurs, DeVito is a capable option. But as I’ve said, this was, is, and continues to be Eric Dungey’s team. M.L: The kid has confidence. After struggling pretty handily in his first two games against two mightily lesser opponents, DeVito’s first throw against FSU was a beautiful and gutsy 29-yard lob to Jamal Custis on the one-yard line, falling against the pylon. He didn’t try to come out and throw a few dump-offs; he went straight for the end zone. DeVito has looked nervous in the pocket at times and has also looked like a seasoned veteran. With some more time under Dungey and in this offense, he’ll be a good centerpiece moving forward. J.S: It’s too early to fairly evaluate DeVito. Against Western Michigan, in his first snaps as a college quarterback, he had an inconsistent performance. Wagner, an FCS team, is just hard to pull from. FSU, on the other hand, showed DeVito is getting comfortable with time. He ran well on a designed run, looked comfortable under center and led Syracuse to 27 points. But as noted above, that wasn’t an FSU with a conference best defense and it wasn’t for a full game, none of which is the fault of DeVito. For now, SU fans should be happy to see the flashes of what DeVito can become, and wait patiently for more evidence.
What’s one thing Syracuse can’t afford to falter in?
A.G.: Running the football. Syracuse currently averages a shade over 257 yards a game on the ground, a surely unsustainable figure, but the Orange need to continue pounding the rock. In 2017, SU punched it in 16 times on the ground. Only a quarter of the way through this season, Syracuse has nine rushing scores. Moe Neal and Dontae Strickland have done most of the damage from the running back position, aided recently by freshman Jarveon Howard. And of course, there’s Syracuse’s leading rusher, Eric Dungey. Much has been
made and said about Dungey running the football over the years, but this season, he’s taken more to falling forward and getting out of bounds to protect himself, and his legs are an invaluable asset to this offense. If that unit can maintain a balance between run and pass like this, SU should be in good shape.
257
Syracuse’s average rushing yards per game
J.S: Syracuse’s defense needs to be consistent. Through three games, it’s difficult to read trends. As Matt pointed out, the Orange have two more interceptions this season than they did all of last season. After holding FSU to a touchdown, Syracuse averages 19.67 points allowed per game, about 13 fewer points than last year. In SU’s season opener, the defense showed its inexperience in a 28-point third quarter. Those f laws never showed against the Seminoles. Florida State totaled 240 yards, more than 200 yards less than Syracuse opponents averaged last season. Syracuse hasn’t played formidable opponents yet, and UConn won’t fill that role either, but when it does Syracuse’s defense can’t take a step back. M.L: If I have to pinpoint something, it’s turning the ball over. Syracuse has done a nice job protecting the ball this year and its defense has given the offense plenty of opportunities to score. But the defense also hasn’t played a high-powered offense yet like they’ll see in future conference play and the best chance SU has at beating those teams is with its offense. If suddenly we were to see Syracuse’s offense struggle against a good ACC defense, I don’t know if its defense could keep a
team like Boston College or Notre Dame in check.
Will Syracuse be ranked if they win week four against UConn?
A.G.: Will SU be ranked? Maybe. Should SU be ranked? No. I split hairs because Syracuse did earn its first AP Poll vote since 2011. If the Orange wallops UConn and the right teams lose, it’s entirely possible SU gets a number by its name. All it takes is one or two teams in the No. 20-25 range to lose and the Orange could sneak in, but should they? Syracuse isn’t one of the 25 best teams in college football, at least not right now. That can obviously change in the next nine games, but a scare against a MAC team, an FCS blowout and a solid win against the worst Florida State team in awhile is not the strongest three-game resume. As it stands, Syracuse is not currently one of the 25 best teams in college football, but it’s knocking on the door. M.L: Not a chance. UConn surrendered 49 points to Rhode Island. The last time Syracuse played Rhode Island was Eric Dungey’s first game in 2015, the season opener. In that game, a 47-0 blowout, the Rams netted just 64 total yards of offense and two first downs. Rhode Island nearly beat UConn. A win over the Huskies doesn’t mean anything in the eyes of the AP Poll, plus there are 16 teams not in the Top-25 that received more votes than SU this week. J.S: It depends on the score. Syracuse opened up Saturday’s game as 27.5 points favorites. They have to win by somewhere around that number to be at par with other FBS opponents UConn has played this season — Central Florida won by 39 and Boise State by 55. Both No. 21 Central Florida and No. 20 Boise State rank near the bottom of the Top 25 but are still in. If Syracuse wants to put their name in the conversation with those kinds of teams, they need to play like them. In my opinion, they will. sports@dailyorange.com
Pascale's Liquor Square
FRIDAY NIGHT LIGHTS The D.O.’s high school football coverage There will be features, game coverage and previews. It’s our leap into covering what’s got the Syracuse-area buzzing every weekend.
See dailyorange.com
(315) 445-0445
LOCATED ON ERIE BLVD
ALCOHOL DELIVERY
Delivery Hours:
Mon-Sat: 11AM-7PM
Delivers to University area!
Sunday: 1PM-4PM
DOWNLOAD THE FREE DRIZLY APP
CLASSIFIEDS
dailyorange.com
in the huddle 11
END OF MODEL YEAR SAVINGS WHILE INVENTORY LASTS 2018 TRAX AWD LT
BUY FOR
$18,283 PLUS TAX & DMV
Bridge St. at 690 • 315-437-3311 www.CuseChevy.com
Mom’s Diner HELP WANTED, all positions including hostess, dishwasher, cook
Apply in person at 501 Westcott St. Syracuse, NY 13210
MSRP: $25,845 Stock #13633
Must be GM Lease loyal and finance through GM Financial. Some customers will not qualify. Prior sales excluded. Offer ends 9.30.18. See us for details.
Studios, 1, 2, & 3 bedrooms Close to campus & 24-hour on call maintenance
D.N. Drucker Ltd. Please call (315) 445-1229 OR frontdesk@dndruckerltd.com www.dndruckerltd.com Serving SU Campus for more than 30 years!
2 & 4 Bedroom Apartments Private Bathrooms 10 month leases available All utilities included plus: WiFi & Cable w/ HBO Free parking Washer & Dryer in unit Fully furnished + Tempur-Pedic mattresses Learn more! www.uvcolvin.com 315-424-1047
END OF MODEL YEAR SAVINGS WHILE INVENTORY LASTS 2018 TRAX AWD LT
BUY FOR
$18,283 Bridge St. at 690 • 315-437-3311 www.CuseChevy.com
PLUS TAX & DMV
MSRP: $25,845 Stock #13633
Must be GM Lease loyal and finance through GM Financial. Some customers will not qualify. Prior sales excluded. Offer ends 9.30.18. See us for details.
SKYTOP
608 Nottingham Rd, Syracuse, NY (315) 446-6710 SkytopLiquors.com
Wine and Liquor
Conveniently located in Tops Plaza
Bleeding Orange and Blue since 1982
Next to Manley Field House
• SU Alumni Owned • Weekly Sales • 20% OFF cases of wine and champagne • Free tasting events every Thursday and Friday
Orange Madness Sale
Simply cut out or take a picture of coupons to redeem
10% off
Wine purchases of $15 or more
expires 10/6/18 • excludes other sales or discounts
$2 off
$5 off
Rum purchases of $25 or more
purchases of $50 or more expires 10/6/18 • excludes other sales or discounts
expires 10/6/18 • excludes other sales or discounts
$18.99
$19.99
$32.99
expires 10/6/18 • excludes other sales or discounts
expires 10/6/18 • excludes other sales or discounts
expires 10/6/18 • excludes other sales or discounts
3/$18
$10.99
$19.99
New Amsterdam Flavors (1.75 L)
André’s Champagne (750 mL) expires 10/6/18 • excludes other sales or discounts
Low prices!
Svedka Vodka (1.75 L)
Yellow Tail Assorted Wines (1.5 L) expires 10/6/18 • excludes other sales or discounts
f
Follow us on Facebook
Tito’s Handmade Vodka (1.75 L)
Jose Cuervo Gold or Silver Tequila (1 L) expires 10/6/18 • excludes other sales or discounts
Huge inventory!
Proud to Support SU Athletics