SEPTEMBER 6, 2014
FOOTBALL
Maroons vs. BELOIT College Campus and Student Life Physical Education and Athletics
6 PM
SEPTEMBER 13, 2014
FOOTBALL
Maroons vs. Concordia chicago Campus and Student Life Physical Education and Athletics
6 PM
september 27, 2014
FOOTBALL
Maroons vs. Pacific university Campus and Student Life Physical Education and Athletics
12 PM
october 4, 2014
FOOTBALL
Maroons vs. rhodes collegE Campus and Student Life Physical Education and Athletics
12 PM
october 25, 2014
FOOTBALL
Maroons vs. washington-st. louis Campus and Student Life Physical Education and Athletics
1:30 PM
November 8, 2014
FOOTBALL
Maroons vs. carnegie mellon Campus and Student Life Physical Education and Athletics
12 PM
General Information 2014 Schedule Date Sept. 6 Sept. 13 Sept. 20 Sept. 27 Oct. 4 Oct. 11 Oct. 18 Oct. 25 Nov. 8 Nov. 15
Opponent Beloit Concordia Chicago at Elmhurst Pacific (Ore.) Rhodes at Trinity (Texas) at Bethel (Minn.) Washington-St. Louis * (Homecoming) Carnegie Mellon * at Case *
Table of Contents Site Home Home Elmhurst, Ill. Home Home San Antonio, Texas St. Paul, Minn. Home
Time 6 PM 6 PM 6 PM 12 PM 12 PM 1:30 PM 1 PM 1:30 PM
Home Cleveland, Ohio
12 PM 12 PM (ET)
* UAA game Home games in MAROON
General Information
Stagg Field Football Traditions The University Athletic Association The University of Chicago Athletics at UChicago
2014 Chicago Maroons
Schedule Head Coach Chris Wilkerson Assistant Coaches Player Profiles
1 6 6-7 8-17
2013 Season Review
Game by Game Scores Statistics UAA Standings UAA Postseason Honors
18 18-19 20 20
History – Early Era (1892-1939)
Welcome to Stagg Field
1 2 3 4 5
Year by Year and Coaching Records Amos Alonzo Stagg Chronological History Jay Berwanger Honor Roll
21 21 22-23 24 24
History – Modern Era (since 1969)
Year by Year and Coaching Records Return of Varsity Football Honor Roll Individual & Team Records Career & Season Leaders Opponent Series Records
25 25 26 27-28 29-30 31
Sportsmanship The University of Chicago and the members of the University Athletic Association are committed to principles of good sportsmanship. We believe that all student-athletes, coaches, and spectators should strive to represent the very best spirit and tradition of intercollegiate athletics. We request your cooperation by supporting the participants and officials in a positive manner. Intimidating actions directed at officials, student-athletes, coaches, or team representatives will not be tolerated and are grounds for removal from the site of competition. Also, consumption or possession of alcoholic beverages is prohibited.
Concessions Refreshments are available at the brick building at the south end of the stadium.
Rest Rooms Rest rooms are located in the building at the stadium’s south end.
Lost & Found Items found may be turned in to the press box. Those items may be retrieved either at the press box after the game or at the athletics office during regular business hours.
Press Box The press box is open only to media, staff, and coaches. Spectators will be admitted only to report an emergency or a vehicle with lights left on, or to turn in or pick up a lost item.
UChicago Football 2014
1
Chicago Football Traditions The “C” Logo
The Founders Cup
The University of Chicago athletics emblem underwent several changes during the institution’s early years. The first football team in 1892 sported no recognizable emblem on its uniforms. In an effort to provide the team with an identity, the letters “UC” were cut out of brown paper and pasted on the players’ uniforms. In the spring of 1893, the emblem was modified into the form of a monogram that the baseball team incorporated on its uniforms. A single letter was used for the first time in 1894 when the football and track squads displayed an oblong “C” on their uniforms. That emblem remained in existence until 1897 when it was replaced by a “C” in large, round type. Then in 1898, Maroon teams adopted the Chicago “C” emblem, which has been worn to the present day.
1892
1893
1894-96
1897
1898––
Maroon, Maroons & The Phoenix Maroon and “Maroons” became the University of Chicago’s official color and nickname, respectively, at a meeting of students and faculty on May 5, 1894. Before the University held its first classes on October 1, 1892, the Board of Trustees had selected goldenrod (yellow) as the school’s official color. By 1894, however, Chicago’s legendary football coach Amos Alonzo Stagg believed that a change was necessary. “The yellow ran, soiled easily, and had a regrettable symbolism which our opponents might not be above commenting upon,” said Stagg in his autobiography, Touchdown! Because maroon was not already in use by any major school in the Midwest, Stagg and his associate J.E. Raycroft brought a selection of maroon shades to the 1894 meeting of students and faculty. The meeting attendees made a choice from those ribbons, and the baseball team appeared in that color during its final games of the 1894 season. On July 21, 1894, the first mention of a University of Chicago athletic team as “Maroons” appeared in the Chicago Tribune in an article about the baseball team. The Phoenix – which is featured as part of the University’s official coat of arms, or shield – serves as the school’s mascot. The University of Chicago Board of Trustees adopted the shield in 1910.
Awarded annually to the winner of the Chicago/Washington-St. Louis game since 1987, the Founders Cup commemorates the first football game played between two UAA schools during the league’s initial year of existence. Washington holds a 20-7 all-time advantage in Founders Cup battles. Year 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013
Winner Washington Washington Washington Washington Washington Chicago Chicago Washington Washington Washington Washington Chicago Washington Chicago Washington Washington Washington Washington Chicago Washington Washington Chicago Washington Chicago Washington Washington Washington
Score 17-15 27-24 25-14 27-7 25-7 24-23 20-17 13-7 28-14 41-0 55-26 16-6 20-3 12-9 21-17 38-17 28-0 24-16 27-0 26-7 31-10 17-14 44-37 13-10 38-20 23-7 17-7
Site St. Louis Chicago St. Louis Chicago St. Louis Chicago St. Louis Chicago St. Louis Chicago St. Louis Chicago St. Louis Chicago St. Louis Chicago St. Louis Chicago St. Louis Chicago St. Louis Chicago St. Louis Chicago St. Louis Chicago St. Louis
Wave the Flag After each home victory, the Maroons gather at midfield and sing “Wave the Flag” by Gordon Erickson: Wave the flag of old Chicago, Maroon the color grand. Ever shall her team be victors, Known throughout the land. With the grand old man to lead them, Without a peer they’ll stand. Wave again the dear old banner, For they’re heroes, every man!
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UChicago Football 2014
UAA & NCAA Division III The University Athletic Association
NCAA Division III
In 1987, Chicago became a charter member of a new and unique NCAA Division III conference, the University Athletic Association. Comprised of some of the nation’s leading research institutions, UAA members include Brandeis University, Carnegie Mellon University, Case Western Reserve University, Emory University, New York University, the University of Rochester, and Washington University in St. Louis. Since its founding, the UAA has continued to serve as a bold statement of the vision of its founders — that the pursuit of academic and athletic excellence are complementary goals and can be achieved without the compromise of one by the other. Implicit in this vision are three assumptions: • The academic enterprise is the primary element. Studentathletes are just that — students first and athletes second. • Athletic excellence is not to be confused with a win-at-allcosts attitude. It properly relates to the caliber of experience offered to students who participate in intercollegiate athletics. • Athletics should not only complement the academic experience, but should also reflect the quality of the academic environment within which they exist. Division III is an approach to athletics — not a synonym for third-rate. Since joining the UAA, Chicago teams have captured 50 conference championships, made 66 NCAA tournament appearances, and posted nine national top-four finishes. In addition, the Maroons have claimed 15 NCAA individual titles and three have been selected as the national player of the year.
The University of Chicago has competed at the NCAA Division III level since it was established in 1973. The largest of the three NCAA Divisions, Division III counted as members 446 institutions (20 percent public, 80 percent private) in 2012-13.
The UAA in Theory • Academic excellence and athletic excellence are not mutually exclusive. • The academic enterprise is the primary element. • Athletic excellence properly relates to the caliber of experience offered to students. • Athletic programs should reflect the quality of the academic environment within which they exist. • A consistent and challenging level of athletic competition should be provided for both women and men.
The UAA in Practice • In 2013-14, 35 student-athletes from UAA institutions were recognized as CoSIDA Academic All-Americans and 13 were named NCAA Postgraduate Scholars. • 169 UAA student-athletes received All-America honors with eight garnering individual national championships. • In 2013-14 NCAA championship competition, 20 UAA teams finished in the top 10 in their national championships, while another 12 finished in the top 20.
UChicago Football 2014
What is the NCAA Division III? • Division III features student-athletes who are subject to the same admission standards, academic standards, housing, and support services as the general student body. Division III studentathletes are not permitted to receive athletically-related financial aid. • Division III offers an intense and competitive athletics environment for student-athletes who play for the love of the game, without the obligation of an athletics scholarship. • Division III athletics departments place special importance on the impact of athletics on the participants rather than on the spectators. The student-athlete’s experience is of paramount concern. • Division III athletics provides a well-rounded collegiate experience that involves a balance of rigorous academics, competitive athletics, and the opportunity to pursue the multitude of other co-curricular and extra-curricular opportunities. • Division III places primary emphasis on regional in-season and conference competition, while also offering 36 national championships annually. • Division III playing season and eligibility standards minimize conflicts between athletics and academics, allowing student-athletes to focus on their academic programs and the achievement of a degree. • Division III athletics departments are dedicated to offering broad-based programs with a high number and wide range of athletics participation opportunities for both men and women. • Division III affords student-athletes the opportunity to discover valuable lessons in teamwork, discipline, perseverance, and leadership, which in turn make student-athletes better students and responsible citizens. • Division III encourages student-athletes to take advantage of the many opportunities available to them, both within and beyond athletics, so that they may develop their full potential as students, athletes, and citizens.
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The University of Chicago The University of Chicago is one of the world’s great intellectual communities and centers of learning. It has achieved particular distinction in faculty scholarship, the training of graduate students, and for its renowned undergraduate education that emphasizes critical thinking, intellectual depth, and cultural breadth. Founded in 1890 by John D. Rockefeller, the University opened its doors for classes on October 1, 1892, with an enrollment of 594 students. President William Rainey Harper presided over a faculty of 103, which included eight former college presidents. Today, the University features a total enrollment of approximately 15,149 students — including more than 5,027 undergraduates — and a 2,211-member faculty. The University is private, nondenominational, and coeducational, and it includes the undergraduate College, four graduate divisions, six graduate professional schools, the library, the Graham Center of General Studies, and the University of Chicago Press. The University also features several cultural resources, including the Oriental Institute Museum, Court Theatre, Renaissance Society, and the Smart Museum of Art. Extending along both sides of the Midway Plaisance, which was designed by Frederick Law Olmsted and used for the World’s Columbian Exposition of 1893, the University occupies a 190-acre campus. The English collegiate Gothic style set the general tone for the design and development of the campus. Around a series of tree-shaded quadrangles, imposing buildings of gray limestone with red-tile roofs, and deep-set rectangular windows show off elaborate ornamentation, gargoyles and chimeras, and decorated towers. These quadrangles are dominated by Rockefeller Memorial Chapel, with its 207-foot tower, and by the Joseph Regenstein Library, one of the largest academic libraries in the United States. Many campus structures have been designated national historic landmarks, including Frank Lloyd Wright’s Robie House and the site of the first controlled, self-sustaining nuclear reaction marked by the Henry Moore sculpture Nuclear Energy. Chicago has had a major impact on American higher education — inventing the four-quarter system, developing extension courses and programs in the liberal arts for adults, establishing a coherent program of general education for undergraduates, and initiating a full-time medical school teaching faculty. Chicago also pioneered orientation week and gives the nation’s oldest teaching awards. Since the University’s founding, more than 80 recipients of the Nobel Prize have been students, researchers, or faculty. The University is located in the Hyde Park neighborhood of Chicago, one of the world’s most exciting and vibrant cities. About 65 percent of the University’s faculty and their families and nearly all of its students live in the Hyde Park neighborhood. One of Chicago’s biggest tourist attractions, the Museum of Science and Industry, is located here, as well as the DuSable Museum of African-American History and the Weiss Museum of Judaica. Just 15 minutes north of Hyde Park is the Chicago Loop, where students and faculty regularly attend an array of theater, movies, art exhibits, museums, and restaurants. Some of Chicago’s main cultural attractions are the Art Institute, the Lyric Opera, the Chicago Symphony, the Goodman Theatre, and the Museum of Contemporary Art. Scores of other professional and community theater, dance, and visual arts organizations are active in the city. Architecturally, Chicago is the home of many major developments in 20thcentury architecture and urban design. One of the nation’s greatest sports cities, Chicago is the home of two Major League Baseball teams – the White Sox and the Cubs – as well as the National Basketball Association Bulls, the National Football League Bears, the National Hockey League Blackhawks, the Major League Soccer Fire, and the Women’s National Basketball Association Sky.
4
University President Robert J. Zimmer On July 1, 2006, Robert J. Zimmer became the 13th President of the University of Chicago. Prior to his appointment as President, Zimmer was a University of Chicago faculty member and administrator for more than two decades specializing in the mathematical fields of geometry, particularly ergodic theory, Lie groups, and differential geometry. As a University of Chicago administrator, Zimmer served as Chairman of the Mathematics Department, Deputy Provost, and Vice President for Research and for Argonne National Laboratory. He also served as Provost at Brown University from 2002-2006, returning to Chicago in 2006 to become President of the University. As President of the University, he serves as Chair of the Board of Governors of Argonne National Laboratory and Chair of the Board of Directors of Fermi Research Alliance LLC, the operator of Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory. Among other boards, he is chairman of the Board of Directors of the Consortium on Financing Higher Education (COFHE) and a member of the Board of Directors of the Chicago Council on Global Affairs. He serves on the President’s Committee on the National Medal of Science, and is on the executive committee of the Council on Competitiveness. He is a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and the American Association for the Advancement of Science. President Zimmer is the author of two books, Ergodic Theory and Semisimple Groups (1984) and Essential Results of Functional Analysis (1990), and more than 80 mathematical research articles. The recipient of an Alfred P. Sloan Foundation Fellowship, he served on the Board of Mathematical Sciences of the National Research Council from 1992 to 1995, and was on the executive committee from 1993 to 1995. Zimmer held the title of Max Mason Distinguished Service Professor of Mathematics at Chicago before leaving for Brown, where he was the Ford Foundation Professor of Mathematics in addition to being Provost. President Zimmer earned his A.B., summa cum laude, from Brandeis University in 1968 and a Ph.D. in mathematics from Harvard University in 1975. He joined the Chicago faculty as an L.E. Dickson Instructor of Mathematics in 1977. He was also on the faculty of the U.S. Naval Academy from 1975 to 1977. He has held visiting positions at Harvard University and at institutions in Israel, France, Australia, Switzerland, and Italy. President Zimmer and his wife Terese have three sons, David, Benjamin, and Alex.
UChicago Football 2014
Athletics at UChicago The University of Chicago Athletics program complements the institution’s core mission, helping to enrich the lives of our students and contributing to a vibrant, collective, and diverse campus community that inspires excellence. Athletics and recreation are critical ways in which the University builds community and enhances opportunities for student skill development and engagement. Participation in Athletics at the University of Chicago encourages students to develop core interpersonal and communication skills, improve their analytical and strategic thinking, and engage with others with humility and confidence. It also helps students to form and strengthen bonds with their peers and with members of the university and alumni communities.
The UAA UChicago, which sponsors 19 intercollegiate sports, is a charter member of the University Athletic Association, an NCAA Division III conference formed in 1986 as a bold statement of what college athletics can and should be — that it is highly desirable and possible for a group of committed institutions to seek excellence in athletics while holding the student-athlete and the institution’s academic mission as the center of focus. The eight members of the UAA include Brandeis University, Carnegie Mellon University, Case Western Reserve University, Emory University, New York University, the University of Chicago, the University of Rochester, and Washington University in St. Louis. With its membership in the UAA, UChicago offers its student-athletes the opportunity to compete against athletes and teams from among the top research institutions in the country, as well as travel opportunities comparable to those offered by members of major Division I conferences. UChicago has played a major role in helping the UAA attain its goal of achieving the proper balance between athletics and academics. In Reclaiming the Game: College Sports and Education Values, author William Bowen –– president of the Mellon Foundation –– posed the question, “How has the UAA managed to mount what is, by all signs, a successful intercollegiate program without paying the academic price that is so evident in other similar college athletics conferences?” Bowen continued, “The active involvement of the University of Chicago, with its emphasis on core academic values, has without question been a help in achieving and maintaining this policy.”
Success on the Playing Field In 2013-14, UChicago finished 16th in the nation among 326 NCAA Division III institutions in the final standings for the Learfield Sports Directors’ Cup, which recognizes the top overall athletic programs in the country. UChicago teams notched national top-10 finishes in women’s cross country (4th), men’s swimming and diving (10th) and women’s swimming and diving (10th). The Maroons also won UAA Championships in volleyball, women’s cross country and women’s indoor track and field. That same year, the Maroons also featured 29 All-Americans, 37 national qualifiers, 13 all-region selections, four UAA MVPs and 128 All-UAA performers.
Athletes & Academic Excellence
The intercollegiate program at the University of Chicago directly supports the College’s commitment to excellence, and helps to produce scholarathletes whose primary focus is on their academic achievements. The University of Chicago has a long history of outstanding student-athletes who have distinguished themselves in the classroom. During the University of Chicago’s early years as a member of the Big Ten Conference, the athletics program counted numerous distinguished scholar-athletes among its ranks, including 1910 Rhodes Scholar Edwin Hubble, a basketball player who later became a distinguished scientist for whom the Hubble Space Telescope is named. UChicago has furthered that tradition in recent years as its student-athletes have continued to compile an extraordinary record of academic and athletic accomplishment, highlighted by four Rhodes Scholars since 1996, and 265 UAA All-Academic Recognition Award recipients in 2013-14.
Award-Winning Facility In the fall of 2003, Chicago Athletics entered a new era with the opening of the $51 million Gerald Ratner Athletics Center. Designed by famed architect Cesar Pelli, the 150,000-square-foot facility includes a 1,658-seat competition gymnasium which is home to the Chicago basketball, volleyball, and wrestling teams. In addition to the competition gymnasium, the facility features the 50-meter MyersMcLoraine Pool, the Bernard J. DelGiorno Fitness Center, a dance room, classrooms, the Athletics Hall of Fame, locker rooms, offices, and saunas. In short, the University of Chicago provides student-athletes with what might be the best balance in higher education: an extraordinary commitment to academic excellence recognized all over the world, a high-quality intercollegiate athletics program consistent with its academic mission, unique conference travel and competition, and outstanding athletics and recreational facilities.
UChicago Football 2014
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Coaching Staff Head Coach Chris Wilkerson
Chris Wilkerson enters his second season at UChicago after being named Head Football Coach in July 2013. In his debut campaign, the Maroons posted a 6-4 mark and were amongst the nation’s leaders in scoring defense (15th), total defense (22nd), turnover margin (17th), punt returns (20th) and fewest penalties per game (15th). Wilkerson begins his 20th year as a collegiate football coach. He previously served on Dartmouth College’s coaching staff from 2005-13 and was named Associate Head Coach in 2007. During his tenure at Dartmouth, Wilkerson’s broad range of responsibilities included defensive coordinator, special teams coordinator, running backs coach, linebackers coach and recruiting coordinator. Dartmouth’s special teams and running backs excelled in recent years under Wilkerson’s tutelage. The team was ranked in the top 10 nationally in a number of categories, including punt return average, blocked kicks, individual rushing average and fewest fumbles lost. His stand-out players featured a pair of All-Americans – Dartmouth’s all-time leading rusher Nick Schweiger and punt returner Shawn Abuhoff. As the Defensive Coordinator from 2005-08, Wilkerson’s highlights included a pass defense that ranked 14th in the country in his debut season. Prior to his time at Dartmouth, Wilkerson coached the defense and special teams at San Jose State University from 2002-04. In 2003, he was a nominee for the Broyles Award, given annually to the nation’s top assistant coach. Wilkerson began his coaching career at his alma mater Eastern Illinois University, serving from 1995-2001. He led the special teams unit all seven years and also had stints as defensive coordinator, linebackers coach and defensive line coach. The Panthers reached the NCAA Division I-AA playoffs four times and won a pair of conference championships during his tenure. Wilkerson’s defenses and special teams were regularly ranked in the national top 20 in numerous categories. Wilkerson earned his bachelor’s degree in physical education from Eastern Illinois University. Chris and his wife, Sharna, have three children – Isabella, Peyton and Charlotte.
Assistant Coaches
Craig Knoche
Offensive Coordinator/ Quarterbacks/Tight Ends Craig Knoche enters his sixth year at University of Chicago in 2014. Knoche is in his fourth season as the offensive coordinator and coaches the quarterbacks and tight ends. His additional roles include recruiting coordinator, video coordinator and strength and conditioning director for the team. He worked with the quarterbacks and receivers during the 2011 and 2012 seasons. Prior to being promoted to offensive coordinator in the spring of 2011, he was an assistant coach for the Maroons, coaching running backs in 2009 and receivers for the 2010 UAA Championship team. Prior to his arrival at UChicago, Knoche was a graduate assistant at the University of Wisconsin (2007-08) where he worked with the offensive line, quarterbacks and receivers. He spent the 2006 season as a staff assistant at Stanford University and worked with the offensive line. Knoche began his coaching career as the receivers coach at North Park University (2004-05). Knoche won three varsity letters at Illinois Wesleyan University, from which he earned degrees in mathematics and Spanish in 2002. The 2000 and 2001 IWU football teams were College Conference of Illinois and Wisconsin champions. Knoche earned a master’s degree in pure mathematics from the University of Illinois in 2006. He is recognized as a Certified Strength and Conditioning Specialist by the National Strength and Conditioning Association.
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Luke Cutkomp
Co-Defensive Coordinator/ Linebackers Luke Cutkomp begins his first season with the Maroons football staff in 2014. His coaching duties include Co-Defensive Coordinator and Linebackers Coach. Cutkomp previously spent nine years at Aurora University, serving as defensive coordinator, defensive line coach and special teams coordinator in his tenure. He was a finalist for the Muscle Milk/Footballscoop.com Division III Coordinator of the Year in his first season as defensive coordinator in 2008. The Spartans ranked first in Division III in takeaways, interceptions and turnover margin, third in total defense and fourth in rush defense and opponent first downs allowed. Under his direction as coordinator, Aurora’s defense totaled 28 All-Conference selections, eight all-region players, four AllAmericans and one NACC Defensive Player of the Year. Cutkomp was a graduate assistant coach on the defensive line at Carroll University (Wis.) from 2003-04. He was also a student assistant coach at Wartburg College. Cutkomp played tight end for Wartburg and graduated with a bachelor’s degree in elementary education in 2003. He later received his master’s degree in education from Carroll (Wis.) in 2007.
UChicago Football 2014
Coaching Staff Assistant Coaches John Lizak
Bo Flowers
Co-Defensive Coordinator/ Defensive Backs Bo Flowers is in his first season on the UChicago football coaching staff in 2014. He serves as the Co-Defensive Coordinator and Defensive Backs Coach for the Maroons. Previously, Flowers was the defensive graduate assistant coach at Eastern Michigan University for two years. Flowers played collegiate football at the University of Illinois (2007-09) and Illinois State University (2010). He was named to the Missouri Valley Football Conference All-Newcomer Team while at Illinois State. Additionally, Flowers was a stand-out baseball player who was drafted in the fifth round of the Major League Baseball draft by the Detroit Tigers. He played for four years in the minor league systems of the Tigers and the Chicago Cubs. Flowers was an Illinois All-State selection in football and baseball as a prep and was named the Chicago Sun-Times Male Athlete of the Year in 2002.
John Kropke Defensive Line
John Kropke enters his third season with the Maroons in 2014. Kropke played his college ball at Illinois State University where he earned a degree in political science and was an AP All-American Honorable Mention recipient in 1987. He spent nine seasons in the Canadian Football League as a defensive lineman and coached most recently for the Hamilton Tiger Cats in the CFL.
Sam Fioroni
Offensive Assistant The 2014 season marks the first for Sam Fioroni as offensive assistant with the UChicago football team. Fioroni was a four-year letter winner in football at Denison University. He was also a team captain as a senior. Fioroni collected All-Region status from D3Football.com in 2012 and was a three-time AllConference recipient as well. Fioroni graduated from Denison with a degree in economics.
UChicago Football 2014
Offensive Line John Lizak begins his fifth season at University of Chicago in 2014. Prior to coming to Chicago, Lizak served as offensive line coach at Elmhurst College for nine years, where he developed four All-CCIW selections and one honorable mention All-American. Lizak graduated from North Central College in 1995 with a degree in finance and earned All-CCIW honors as an offensive lineman in 1994. He is also the older brother of former UChicago defensive lineman Ed Lizak.
Thomas Pack
Offensive Assistant Thomas Pack is in his first season on the Maroons football coaching staff in 2014, serving as offensive assistant. Pack played for the UChicago football team in 2008-09. He has also served as an assistant football coach for Mount Carmel High School since 2011, and was part of the staff that won state championships in 2012 and 2013. Pack graduated from UChicago with a bachelor’s degree in linguistics. He went on to receive his master’s degree in education from Northwestern University.
Rob Tulcin
Defensive Assistant Rob Tulcin begins his first year at UChicago as defensive assistant for the Maroons football team in 2014. As a collegiate football player, Tulcin played linebacker for Lehigh University from 2007-10. He was a member of the 2010 team that won the Patriot League championship. He was on the Patriot League Academic Honor Roll in 2009-10 and was also a seventime scholar-athlete academic achievement award recipient. Tulcin graduated from Lehigh with a bachelor’s degree in accounting.
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Player Profiles 2014 Captains Vincent Beltrano #21
Schuyler Montefalco #34
DB • Junior Wood Dale, Ill. (Addison Trail)
LB • Senior Indianapolis, Ind. (Cathedral)
2013: Third Team All-North Region selection by D3Football.com ... UAA Co-Special Teams Player of the Year, First Team All-UAA on defense and special teams ... Led the team with five interceptions, nine passes defended, three fumbles recovered and two fumbles forced ... Totaled 42 tackles and 4.0 tackles for a loss ... Also returned 16 punts for 170 yards (10.6 per return) and 25 kicks for 468 yards (18.7 per return) ... Collected two interceptions, six tackles, one fumble forced, one fumble recovered and caught a 23-yard touchdown pass versus Carnegie Mellon ... Made a season-high 10 tackles with 1.0 tackle for a loss, one fumble forced and one fumble recovered against Kalamazoo ... UAA Athlete of the Week (9/30) ... UAA All-Academic Team. 2012: UAA Rookie of the Year and Second Team All-UAA selection ... Picked off a team-high three interceptions and also made 44 tackles, broke up four passes and blocked a kick ... Also returned 10 kickoffs for 198 yards along with seven punts for 40 yards on the season ... Made a seasonhigh nine tackles with one forced fumble versus Allegheny ... Totaled two interceptions and returned two kickoffs for 85 yards against Concordia Chicago ... Returned a blocked punt 10 yards for a touchdown at Carnegie Mellon ... Named the team’s Defensive Rookie of the Year.
twice.
2013: First Team All-UAA selection ... Led the team with 86 tackles while adding 11.0 tackles for a loss, 2.0 sacks and one forced fumble on the season ... Tallied a season-high 14 tackles and 1.0 tackles for a loss versus Carnegie Mellon ... Totaled 13 tackles with 2.0 tackles for a loss against Kalamazoo ... Made 4.0 tackles for a loss amongst his nine tackles versus Macalester ... UAA Athlete of the Week
2012: Second Team All-UAA ... Played in all 10 games ... Ended up second on the team in tackles with 70, which included eight tackles for a loss, one sack and three pass breakups ... Also returned three kickoffs for 82 yards on the year ... Recorded one sack and 13 tackles (12 solo) at Carnegie Mellon (11/3) ... Made eight tackles in three different games ... Tallied two tackles for a loss on three separate occasions. 2011: Appeared in all 10 games, starting six games at outside linebacker … All-UAA Second Team selection … Named Maroons’ top rookie on defense … Ranked third on team with 63 total tackles and second with 9.0 tackles-for-loss … Recorded a sack in three consecutive games from 10/1 to 10/22 … Returned an interception 51 yards against Case.
Scott Mainquist #73
Jake Winkel #66
DL • Senior San Diego, Calif. (Torrey Pines)
OL • Senior Batavia, Ill. (Marmion Academy)
2013: Honorable Mention All-UAA selection ... Collected 37 tackles, 5.5 tackles for a loss, 4.5 sacks, one forced fumble and one blocked kick on the season ... Made four tackles with two sacks and one forced fumble at Concordia Chicago ... Tallied four tackles with two sacks and 3.0 tackles for a loss at Washington-St. Louis ... UAA All-Academic Team.
2013: Honorable Mention All-UAA selection ... Played in nine games, primarily as a starter at offensive tackle.
2012: Second Team All-UAA ... Played in nine games ... Recorded 22 tackles and 2.5 sacks for the season ... Made six tackles, 1.5 tackles for a loss and one sack versus Allegheny (10/6) ... Tallied four tackles and 1.5 sacks versus Beloit (9/1) ... UAA All-Academic Team.
2012: Honorable Mention All-UAA ... Played in seven games at right tackle, becoming a primary starter in the second-half of the season. 2011: Played in seven games.
2011: Played in all 10 games … Recorded 12 tackles and 1.5 sacks.
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UChicago Football 2014
Player Profiles Seniors Brandon Bolock #56
Tom O’Neill #80
DL • Senior Naples, Fla. (Gulf Coast)
WR • Senior Naperville, Ill. (Culver Academy)
2013: Honorable Mention All-UAA selection ... Led the team with 11.5 tackles for a loss and 5.5 sacks while adding 58 tackles and two fumble recoveries ... Tallied seven tackles, 4.0 tackles for a loss and one sack at Beloit ... Collected eight tackles, 3.0 tackles for a loss and 2.0 sacks at Concordia Chicago ... Made nine tackles and blocked a kick at Case Western Reserve ... UAA Athlete of the Week (9/9).
2013: Played in eight games ... Caught seven passes for 74 yards (10.6 yards per catch) on the season ... Also made two tackles.
2012: Honorable Mention All-UAA ... Played in eight games ... Compiled a team-best 9.5 tackles for a loss among his 40 total tackles, along with 3.5 sacks, three pass breakups and two forced fumbles. ... Made three tackles for a loss with one sack and eight total tackles at Hiram (10/20) ... Broke up three passes and made six tackles against Allegheny (10/6) ... Collected nine tackles and one sack in season-finale against Washington-St. Louis (11/10). 2011: Played in nine games … Collected nine tackles … Recorded seasonbest performance (six tackles, 1.5 for loss, and a sack) against UAA rival Case (10/29).
Ben Cheaney #84 K/P • Senior Shelby, N.C. (Shelby) 2013: Booted 34 punts for 1,163 yards (34.2 yards per punt), including a season-high punt of 55 yards ... Produced three kickoffs for 147 yards (49.0 yards per kickoff) ... UAA All-Academic Team. 2012: Played in all 10 games ... Made two tackles for the season ... Kicked off 31 times for 1,614 yards (52.1 yards per kick) ... UAA All-Academic Team. 2011: Played in 10 games.
Miguel Maseda #35 RB • Senior Miami, Fla. (Belen Jesuit) 2013: Played in all 10 games ... Caught six passes for 43 yards (7.2 yards per catch) and rushed three times for seven yards on the season ... Also made eight tackles on the year ... Hauled in three passes for 19 yards versus Elmhurst. 2012: Played in all 10 games ... Averaged 4.9 yards per carry (148 yards on 30 carries) overall ... Also caught nine passes for 98 yards on the year ... Ran five times for 23 yards and one touchdown to go with two catches for 23 yards at Oberlin (9/22) ... Rushed for 37 yards on three carries with a 24-yard reception at Hiram (10/20) ... UAA All-Academic Team.
2012: Played in nine games ... Averaged 11.3 yards per catch (12 catches for 136 yards) on the year ... Grabbed two receptions for 30 yards versus Washington-St. Louis (11/10) ... Made three catches for 18 yards versus Concordia-Chicago (9/8). 2011: Played in eight games … Caught two passes for 24 yards.
Zak Ross-Nash #47 RB • Senior Allendale, N.J. (Northern Highlands) 2013: Second Team All-UAA selection ... Played in all 10 games ... Led the team with 705 yards rushing and three touchdowns while adding nine catches for 78 yards (8.7 yards per catch) on the season ... Rushed for a career-high 180 yards with one touchdown and caught one pass for 18 yards at Concordia Chicago ... Tallied 104 yards rushing at Beloit ... UAA Athlete of the Week (9/9). 2012: Second Team All-UAA ... Played in all 10 games ... Gained 505 rushing yards on 126 carries (4.0 yards per rush) to go with four catches for 36 yards on the season ... Ran 90 yards on 25 carries along with one touchdown at Oberlin (9/22) ... Season-high 120 rushing yards at Hiram (10/20). 2011: Played in all 10 games … Named Maroons’ top rookie on offense … Gained team-leading 473 yards on 95 carries (5.0 yards per rush), along with two TDs … Returned five kickoffs for an average 19.8 yards … Recorded first 100-yard rushing game in 38-23 win at Denison (10/8), and added a reception … Ranked fifth in UAA-only games with 163 yards on 39 rushes.
Patrick Ryan #16 QB • Senior Fort Wayne, Ind. (Bishop Dwenger) 2013: Played in all 10 games ... Caught one pass for four yards at Case Western Reserve. 2012: Played in two games ... Threw for nine yards on 1-3 passing at Hiram (10/20). 2011: Played in three games … Threw for 118 yards on 7-of-13 passing in season finale against UAA rival Washington-St. Louis (11/12).
2011: Played in nine games … Gained 20 yards on eight carries.
UChicago Football 2014
9
Player Profiles Seniors Isaac Stern #68
Ben Clark #40
OL • Senior Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. (University)
RB • Junior Newton, Mass. (Lawrenceville, N.J.)
2013: Second Team All-UAA selection ... Played in eight games, serving as the primary starter at offensive tackle.
2013: Played in all 10 games ... Totaled 14 tackles with 1.5 sacks, one forced fumble, one fumble recovery and one blocked kick ... Also returned three kicks for 25 yards ... Tallied three tackles and one sack at Pacific ... UAA All-Academic Team.
2012: Played in nine games ... UAA All-Academic Team ... Blocked for two 100-yard rushers. 2011: Played in six games.
Tom Sutrinaitis #87 TE • Senior Mt. Prospect, Ill. (Hersey) 2013: Appeared in one game ... UAA All-Academic Team. 2012: Played in four games ... Credited with one tackle against Beloit (9/1) ... UAA All-Academic Team. 2011: Played in three games.
2012: Played in nine games and blocked two kicks over the course of the season... Rushed 12 times for 31 yards (2.6 yards per carry) on the year ... Also returned two kicks for 27 yards and two punts for 32 yards... Ran for 16 yards on four carries versus Beloit.
Colton Clark #31 LB • Junior Arlington, Texas (Oakridge) 2013: Played in eight games on the season. 2012: Appeared in four games.
Bryan Tisdale #89 TE • Senior El Paso, Texas (Chapin) 2013: Played in seven games ... Caught a four-yard touchdown pass against Macalester. 2012: Played in two games. 2011: Played in three games.
Juniors Brock Appenzeller #74 OL • Junior Mesquite, Texas (John Horn) 2013: Second Team All-UAA selection ... Played in all 10 games, primarily as a starter at center. 2012: Did not appear in a varsity game.
Sam Coleman #5 WR • Junior Wetumpka, Ala. (Edgewood Academy) 2013: Honorable Mention All-UAA selection ... Played in 10 games ... Caught 29 passes for a teamhigh 475 yards (16.4 yards per catch) and five touchdowns on the season ... Totaled six catches for 139 yards and two touchdowns at Rhodes ... Hauled in two touchdowns at Beloit. 2012: Played in nine games ... Finished third on the team with 27 catches for 254 yards (9.4 yards per catch) and one touchdown ... Caught five passes for 61 yards and a touchdown versus Allegheny ... Tallied a season-best seven catches for 68 yards at Carnegie Mellon ... Named the team’s Offensive Rookie of the Year.
Paul Comet #33 DB • Junior Champaign, Ill. (St. Thomas More) 2013: Did not appear in a varsity game.
Spencer Byrne #25
2012: Did not see varsity action.
DB • Junior Des Peres, Mo. (Chaminade) 2013: Did not appear in a varsity game ... UAA AllAcademic Team. 2012: Appeared in one game and made a solo tackle at Wittenberg.
10
UChicago Football 2014
Player Profiles Juniors Christopher Dengler #24
Nathan Massey #49
DB • Junior Haddonfield, N.J. (Haddonfield)
TE • Junior Bartlett, Ill. (Bartlett)
2013: Second Team All-UAA selection ... Totaled 48 tackles, three interceptions, nine passes defended, one fumble recovered and 0.5 tackles for a loss on the season ... Made 11 tackles and returned a fumble 32 yards for a touchdown versus Kalamazo ... Tallied eight tackles with 0.5 tackles for a loss at Rhodes ... UAA All-Academic Team.
2013: Played in all 10 games ... Caught five passes for 69 yards (13.8 yards per catch) and two touchdowns on the season ... Recorded a 27-yard touchdown catch at Concordia Chicago ... Tallied a one-yard touchdown reception versus Kalamazoo.
2012: Saw action in five games and made one assisted tackle at Wittenberg.
Joe Eroyan #57 DL • Junior Novi, Mich. (St. Mary’s Prep) 2013: Played in two games ... UAA All-Academic Team. 2012: Did not see varsity action.
2012: Played in six games and rushed the ball twice for six total yards.
Ryan Oros #41 DL • Junior Freehold, N.J. (Colts Neck) 2013: Played in six games ... Totaled 19 tackles, 2.5 tackles for a loss and 1.5 sacks on the season ... Tallied a season-high seven tackles and one tackle for a loss versus Kalamazoo ... Made five tackles and one sack at Beloit ... UAA All-Academic Team. 2012: Played in five games and made five tackles on the season ... Totaled four tackles at Wittenberg.
Eric Kim #58 OL • Junior Plano, Texas (Plano) 2013: Played in seven games ... UAA All-Academic Team. 2012: Did not appear in a varsity game.
Nick Pielech #22 LB • Junior Houston, Texas (Strake Jesuit) 2013: Played in all 10 games ... Collected eight tackles on the season, including a season-high three at Rhodes ... UAA All-Academic Team. 2012: Played in eight games and made four total tackles.
Karol Kurzydlowski #39 K/P • Junior South Barrington, Ill. (Loyola Academy) 2013: Second Team All-UAA selection ... Played in all 10 games ... Converted 7 of 10 field goals, including a season-long of 42 yards ... Booted 36 kickoffs for 1,916 yards (53.2 yards per kick) ... Went 2-for-2 on field goals versus Macalester ... UAA All-Academic Team. 2012: Appeared in five games and kicked off eight times for 418 total yards (52.2 yards per kick).
Colin Macri #11 WR • Junior Asbury, N.J. (North Hunterdon)
Jacob Romeo #2 DB • Junior Lake Orion, Mich. (Notre Dame) 2013: Played in all 10 games ... Totaled 39 tackles, 2.5 tackles for a loss, four passes defended, one fumble recovered and one blocked kick on the season ... Tallied a season-high nine tackles with 1.5 tackles for a loss against Carnegie Mellon ... Recorded eight tackles with one tackle for a loss and one fumble recovered versus Kalamazoo ... UAA All-Academic Team. 2012: Played in all 10 games ... Compiled 29 total tackles with one sack and one forced fumble ... Made a season-high seven tackles and a six-yard sack at Carnegie Mellon ... Totaled five tackles at Oberlin and versus Allegheny.
2013: Played in nine games ... Caught 16 passes for 172 yards (10.8 yards per catch) and two touchdowns on the season ... Hauled in seven passes for 60 yards at Pacific ... Recorded two catches for 32 yards and a touchdown versus Elmhurst ... UAA All-Academic Team. 2012: Did not see varsity action.
UChicago Football 2014
11
Player Profiles Juniors
Sophomores Sergio Ruffolo #15
Davis Bitton #27
LB • Junior Webster, N.Y. (Webster Thomas)
DB • Sophomore Boise, Idaho (Borah)
2013: Appeared in one game ... UAA All-Academic Team.
2013: Did not appear in a varsity game.
2012: Played in eight games and made three total tackles, including two tackles versus Concordia Chicago.
Greg Thome #26 DB • Junior Valparaiso, Ind. (Valparaiso) 2013: Honorable Mention All-UAA selection ... Played in all 10 games ... Collected 45 tackles, four interceptions, two fumble recoveries, one blocked kick and 0.5 tackles for a loss on the season ... Tallied one interception and seven tackles at Case Western Reserve ... Recorded a season-high eight tackles with 0.5 tackles for a loss at Rhodes ... UAA All-Academic Team. 2012: Appeared in nine games ... Totaled 14 tackles and two pass breakups on the season ... Made a season-high nine tackles at Wittenberg.
Cole Thoms #88
Joseph Bramson #29 DB • Sophomore Dover, Mass. (Dexter School) 2013: Did not appear in a varsity game.
Rhodwin Chungag #32 RB • Sophomore Southfield, Mich. (Detroit Country Day) 2013: Played in all 10 games.
WR • Junior Round Rock, Texas (Round Rock) 2013: Honorable Mention All-UAA selection ... Played in all 10 games ... Led the team with 42 catches for 390 yards (9.3 yards per catch) and four touchdowns on the season ... Tallied 10 catches for 97 yards and two touchdowns at Rhodes ... Collected six catches for 42 yards and two touchdowns versus Macalester ... UAA All-Academic Team. 2012: Played in nine games ... Caught six passes for 85 yards (14.5 yards per catch) on the year, all coming against Washington-St. Louis.
Justin Waney #42
Jackson Garrey #4 LB • Sophomore Murphy, Texas (Plano East) 2013: Played in all 10 games ... Recorded 25 tackles on the season ... Made eight tackles versus Carnegie Mellon.
RB • Junior San Diego, Calif. (Clairemont) 2013: Played in all 10 games ... Rushed three times for 12 yards on the season. 2012: Appeared in nine games ... Rushed the ball 17 times for 45 yards (2.6 yards per carry) and caught one pass for four years on the season ... Ran for a season-high 33 yards on nine carries versus Allegheny.
12
UChicago Football 2014
Player Profiles Sophomores Eddie Giannina #53
Chris Kessling #28
DL • Sophomore Glendale, Ariz. (Mountain Ridge)
DB • Sophomore Cincinnati, Ohio (Moeller)
2013: Played in nine games ... Totaled 14 tackles, 1.0 tackles for a loss and 0.5 sacks on the season ... Made two tackles with a 0.5 sack at Concordia Chicago.
2013: Played in four games ... Made two tackles on the season.
John Gormley #8 WR • Sophomore Austin, Texas (Liberal Arts & Science Academy) 2013: Played in six games.
Andrew Maneval #67 OL • Sophomore San Diego, Calif. (Torrey Pines) 2013: Played in four games.
Joseph Greene #78
Greg Marshall #52
OL • Sophomore Bedford, N.Y. (Byram Hills) 2013: Appeared in four games.
DL • Sophomore Beaverton, Ore. (Beaverton) 2013: Did not appear in a varsity game.
Robert Hall #64
Chris Mason #6
OL • Sophomore Chicago, Ill. (Marist)
WR • Sophomore Zionsville, Ind. (Zionsville Community)
2013: Appeared in two games.
2013: Appeared in two games.
Hayden Harrow #36
Steven McGugan #55
LB • Sophomore Palm Beach Gardens, Fla. (William T. Dwyer) 2013: Played in eight games.
UChicago Football 2014
DL • Sophomore Homer Glen, Ill. (Marist) 2013: Played in all 10 games ... Collected 13 tackles, 2.5 tackles for a loss, 1.5 sacks, one interception and one blocked kick on the season ... Made four tackles with a blocked kick at Case Western Reserve ... Tallied one sack with two tackles at Rhodes.
13
Player Profiles Sophomores Alec Miller #69
Tim Veselik #9
DL • Sophomore Evergreen, Colo. (Mullen)
LB • Sophomore Hinsdale, Ill. (Benet)
2013: Did not appear in a varsity game.
2013: Appeared in five games.
Burke Moser #19
Brian Welch #85
QB • Sophomore Sewickley, Pa. (Quaker Valley)
TE • Sophomore Wheaton, Ill. (Wheaton-Warrenville South)
2013: Did not appear in a varsity game.
2013: Played in nine games.
Tyler Pierce #95
Nick Zimmerman #72
WR • Sophomore Chicago, Ill. (Lane Tech)
OL • Sophomore Elgin, Ill. (South Elgin)
2013: Did not appear in a varsity game.
2013: Appeared in two games.
Syd Reynolds #18 WR • Sophomore Aliso Viejo, Calif. (San Clemente) 2013: Played in nine games ... Caught four passes for 101 yards (25.2 yards per catch) with one touchdown on the season ... Hauled in two catches for 88 yards, including an 83-yard touchdown reception, at Rhodes.
Max Schumann #79 OL • Sophomore Old Saybrook, Conn. (Xavier) 2013: Played in six games at offensive tackle.
14
UChicago Football 2014
Player Profiles Newcomers Christian Anderson #75
Peter Casey #99
DL • Freshman Mountain Brook, Ala. (Mountain Brook)
DL • Freshman Chicago, Ill. (Whitney Young)
Raphael Bargues #48
Thomas Coates #17
DB • Freshman Palo Alto, Calif. (Palo Alto)
RB • Freshman Wellington, Fla. (Suncoast Community)
Andrew Beytagh #14
Rashad Crosby #37
DB • Freshman Dallas, Texas (Cistercian Prep)
DB • Freshman Lisle, Ill. (Naperville North)
Grant Byrne #20
Sharad Crosby #38
WR • Freshman Des Peres, Mo. (Chaminade College Prep)
RB • Freshman Lisle, Ill. (Naperville North)
Will Capitani #90
Erik Dammen-Brower #94
DL • Freshman Dover, Vt. (Northfield Mount Hermon, Mass.)
LB • Freshman Weston, Conn. (Weston)
Chandler Carroll #10
Patrick Eighmy #97
RB • Freshman Alexandria, Ind. (Yorktown)
K/P • Freshman Bethlehem, Pa. (Liberty)
UChicago Football 2014
15
Player Profiles Newcomers
16
Nick Ferraro #83
Dylan Kanaan #30
K/P • Freshman Elburn, Ill. (Marmion Academy)
DB • Freshman Birmingham, Mich. (Birmingham Seaholm)
Robert Fuentes #91
Chris Karamanos #3
K/P • Freshman Commack, N.Y. (St. Anthony)
DB • Freshman Los Gatos, Calif. (Lake Forest Academy)
Jacob Gajdzik #60
David Kerr #63
OL • Freshman Rochester, Mich. (Stoney Creek)
OL • Freshman Rochester Hills, Mich. (Stoney Creek)
Matt Galloway #46
Dominex Kovacs #93
RB • Freshman Lake Zurich, Ill. (Notre Dame Prep)
LB • Freshman Livermore, Calif. (Granada)
Tanner Houghton #54
Vlad Krobokin #65
LB • Freshman Dallas, Texas (Highland Park)
OL • Freshman Carlsbad, Calif. (Carlsbad)
Mitchell Hufnagel #98
Kyle Lee #12
K/P • Freshman Owosso, Mich. (Owosso)
RB • Freshman Seattle, Wash. (Lakeside)
UChicago Football 2014
Player Profiles Newcomers Marco Martin #50
Matthew Ringer #45
DL • Freshman Novato, Calif. (Marin Catholic)
RB • Freshman Modesto, Calif. (Central Catholic)
Owen Moore #70
Will Scolinos #23
OL • Freshman Bidwell, Ohio (Gallia Academy)
DB • Freshman Rancho Palos Verdes, Calif. (Palos Verdes)
Hayden Mortimer #81
Shelby Spence #7
WR • Freshman Carlsbad, Calif. (Carlsbad)
QB • Freshman Chicago, Ill. (De La Salle)
Luke Mueller #86
Guy Stockwell #13
TE • Freshman Chicago, Ill. (Brother Rice)
DB • Freshman Eagle, Idaho (Eagle)
Floyd Pitts III #43
Erik Wong #44
RB • Freshman Lee’s Summit, Mo. (Rockhurst)
TE • Freshman Mahwah, N.J. (Mahwah)
Jamie Rieger #82 WR • Freshman Cincinnati, Ohio (Moeller)
UChicago Football 2014
17
2013 Season Review Game by Game Results Overall: 6-4 Date Sept. 7 Sept. 14 Sept. 21 Sept. 28 Oct. 5 Oct. 19 Oct. 26 Nov. 2 Nov. 9 Nov. 16
•
UAA: 1-2
•
Opponent at Beloit at Concordia Chicago ELMHURST KALAMAZOO at Rhodes MACALESTER at Pacific (Ore.) at Case Western Reserve* CARNEGIE MELLON* at Washington-St. Louis*
Individual Statistics
Home: 4-0
•
Away: 2-4
W/L W W W W L W L L W L
Score 17-0 23-13 10-0 31-17 34-41 26-7 6-21 3-16 14-12 7-17
* UAA game
Passing Effic
Comp-Att-Int
Pct
Yds
TD
Lng
Cortina, Vincent
114.9
131-256-8
51.2
1504
16
83
Gaines, Ian
142.0
1-1-0
100.0
5
0
5
Total
115.0
132-257-8
51.4
1509
16
83
Opponents
102.9
162-297-15
54.5
1633
11
38
Rushing Att
Yds
Avg
TD
Long
Ross-Nash, Zak
219
705
3.2
3
22
Gaines, Ian
117
400
3.4
0
17
Cortina, Vincent
42
54
1.3
1
42
Brutofsky, Tom
10
30
3.0
0
7
Waney, Justin
3
12
4.0
0
7
All Others
Team Statistics
20
-71
-3.5
0
6
Total
411
1120
2.7
4
42
Opponents
349
1223
3.5
7
62
SCORING Points Per Game
UC 171 17.1
OPP 144 14.4
FIRST DOWNS Rushing Passing Penalty
155 71 68 16
158 68 81 9
RUSHING YARDAGE Rushing Attempts Average Per Rush Average Per Game TDs Rushing
1120 411 2.7 112.0 4
1223 349 3.5 122.3 7
PASSING YARDAGE Comp-Att-Int Average Per Pass Average Per Catch Average Per Game TDs Passing
1509 132-257-8 5.9 11.4 150.9 16
1633 162-297-15 5.5 10.1 163.3 11
TOTAL OFFENSE Total Plays Average Per Play Average Per Game
2629 668 3.9 262.9
2856 646 4.4 285.6
KICK RETURN AVERAGE PUNT RETURN AVERAGE INT RETURN AVERAGE
17.2 12.7 9.7
15.5 14.9 5.2
FUMBLES-LOST
11-6
12-11
PENALTIES-Yards Average Per Game
43-416 41.6
73-690 69.0
All Others
PUNTS-Yards Average Per Punt Net punt average
53-1668 31.5 22.1
50-1664 33.3 27.2
TIME OF POSSESSION/Game 3RD-DOWN Conversions 3rd-Down Pct 4TH-DOWN Conversions 4th-Down Pct
33:13 58/163 36% 13/30 43%
26:44 53/146 36% 12/23 52%
SACKS BY-Yards
21-138
16-84
SCORE BY QUARTERS Chicago Opponents
UChicago Football 2014
1st 2nd 3rd 4th 46 36 47 42 34 33 30 47
Total 171 144
Receiving Rec
Yds
Avg
TD
Long
Thoms, Cole
42
390
9.3
4
27
Coleman, Sam
29
475
16.4
5
41
Macri, Colin
16
172
10.8
2
36
Ross-Nash, Zak
9
78
8.7
0
18
O’Neill, Tom
7
74
10.6
0
30
Maseda, Miguel
6
43
7.2
0
14
Massey, Nathan
5
69
13.8
2
27
Bemenderfer, Tom
5
38
7.6
0
11
Reynolds, Syd
4
101
25.2
1
83
Waney, Justin
3
13
4.3
0
6
Beltrano, Vincent
2
34
17.0
1
23
All Others
4
22
5.5
1
9
Total
132
1509
11.4
16
83
Opponents
162
1633
10.1
11
38
Punt Returns No
Yds
Avg
TD
Long
16
170
10.6
0
40
4
84
21.0
1
35
Total
20
254
12.7
1
40
Opponents
20
298
14.9
2
51
Beltrano, Vincent
Kickoff Returns No
Yds
Avg
TD
Long
25
468
18.7
0
39
Clark, Ben
3
25
8.3
0
16
Coleman, Sam
1
17
17.0
0
17
Massey, Nathan
1
5
5.0
0
5
Total
30
515
17.2
0
39
Opponents
36
558
15.5
0
39
Beltrano, Vincent
18
2013 Season Review Individual Statistics Interceptions
Field Goals No
Yds
Avg
TD
Long
Beltrano, Vincent
5
72
14.4
0
21
Thome, Greg
4
29
7.2
0
21
Dengler, Christopher
3
42
14.0
0
41
All Others
3
0
0.0
0
0
15
146
9.7
0
41
8
42
5.2
0
22
Total Opponents
Scoring
Total
1-19
20-29
30-39 40-49
50+
Lg
Kurzydlowski,Karol
7-10
0-0
5-5
1-3
1-2
0-0
42
Total
7-10
0-0
5-5
1-3
1-2
0-0
42
Opponents
3-8
0-0
1-1
2-4
0-1
0-2
32
Punting No
Yds
Avg
Long
TB
FC
I20
Cheaney, Ben
34
1163
34.2
55
6
2
5
15
471
31.4
53
2
0
5
TD
FGs
XP1
XP2
DXP
Pts
Kurzydlowski,Karol
0
7-10
14-19
0-0
0
35
Cortina, Vincent
Coleman, Sam
5
0-0
0-0
0
0
30
Team
4
34
8.5
34
0
0
1
Thoms, Cole
4
0-0
0-0
0-0
0
26
Total
53
1668
31.5
55
8
2
11
Ross-Nash, Zak
3
0-0
0-0
0-0
0
18
Massey, Nathan
2
0-0
0-0
0-0
0
14
Opponents
50
1664
33.3
49
2
7
13
Macri, Colin
2
0-0
0-0
0-0
0
12
All Others
6
0-0
0-1
2-2
0
36
Total
22
7-10
14-20
2-2
0
171
Opponents
20
3-8
15-19
0-1
0
144
All-Purpose Yards
Defense
Solo
Ast
Tkl
Int
PD
Montefalco, Schuyler
48
38
86
TFL Sack 11
2
.
.
FR FF .
1
Blk .
Wade, Ben
43
38
81
0.5
.
1
4
.
1
.
Duffy, Brian
30
35
65
0.5
.
1
4
.
.
.
Rush
Rec
PR
KOR
IR
Tot
Avg/G
Ross-Nash, Zak
705
78
0
0
0
783
78.3
Bolock, Brandon
26
32
58
11.5
5.5
.
.
2
1
1
Beltrano, Vincent
0
34
170
468
72
744
74.4
Dengler, Christopher
27
21
48
0.5
.
3
9
1
.
.
Coleman, Sam
0
475
0
17
0
492
49.2
Thome, Greg
22
23
45
0.5
.
4
5
2
.
1
Gaines, Ian
400
9
6
0
0
415
41.5
Thoms, Cole
0
390
0
0
0
390
39.0
Cifor, Michael
20
24
44
6.5
4
.
2
.
.
1
Macri, Colin
0
172
0
0
0
172
19.1
Beltrano, Vincent
30
12
42
4
.
5
9
3
2
.
Reynolds, Syd
6
101
0
0
0
107
11.9
Romeo, Jacob
20
19
39
2.5
.
.
4
1
.
1
O’Neill, Tom
0
74
0
0
0
74
9.2
Mainquist, Scott
18
19
37
5.5
4.5
.
1
.
1
1
Massey, Nathan
0
69
0
5
0
74
7.4
Cortina, Vincent
54
5
0
0
0
59
5.9
Gilliam, Mychael
8
18
26
0.5
.
.
1
.
.
.
Maseda, Miguel
7
43
0
0
0
50
5.0
12
13
25
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
Thome, Greg
0
0
20
0
29
49
4.9
Oros, Ryan
8
11
19
2.5
1.5
.
.
.
.
.
Dengler, Christopher
0
0
0
0
42
42
4.2
Giannina, Eddie
2
12
14
1
0.5
.
1
.
.
.
Bemenderfer, Tom
0
38
0
0
0
38
4.2
Clark, Ben
8
6
14
1.5
1.5
.
.
1
1
1
Cifor, Michael
0
0
35
0
0
35
3.5
Brutofsky, Tom
30
0
0
0
0
30
3.8
McGugan, Steven
4
9
13
2.5
1.5
1
2
.
.
1
Waney, Justin
12
13
0
0
3
28
2.8
Pielech, Nick
1
7
8
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
Clark, Ben
0
0
0
25
0
25
2.5
Maseda, Miguel
4
4
8
.
.
.
.
1
.
.
Murphy, Nick
0
0
17
0
0
17
2.1
Marshall, John
1
6
7
1
.
.
.
.
.
.
Duffy, Brian
0
0
6
0
0
6
0.7
Schmidt, Richard
. 3 3 . . . . . . .
Tisdale, Bryan
0
4
0
0
0
4
0.6
Ryan, Patrick
0
4
0
0
0
4
0.4
All Others
-94
0
0
0
0
-94
-9.4
Total
1120
1509
254
515 146 3544
354.4
All Others
Opponents
1223
1633
298
558
375.4
Total
19
42 3754
Garrey, Jackson
DeMayo, Francesco 2 1 3 . . . . . . . Von Ahnen, Zach
1
2
3
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
12
3
15
.
.
.
1
.
.
.
347 356
703
52
21
15
43
11 32
7
UChicago Football 2014
2013 Season Review UAA Final Standings Overall W L Washington-St. Louis 8 3 Case Western Reserve 5 4 Chicago 6 4 Carnegie Mellon 3 7
Pct. .727 .556 .600 .300
UAA Top Individual Awards UAA W L 3 0 2 1 1 2 0 3
Pct. 1.000 .667 .333 .000
All-UAA First Team
Offense
School Case Western Reserve Washington-St. Louis Chicago Case Western Reserve Carnegie Mellon Carnegie Mellon Carnegie Mellon Washington-St. Louis Washington-St. Louis Washington-St. Louis Washington-St. Louis Case Western Reserve Carnegie Mellon Washington-St. Louis
Pos. OG WR OG OT QB WR OG C TE OT RB RB WR FB
Yr. Sr. Jr. Sr. Sr. Sr. Sr. Sr. Sr. So. Jr. So. Sr. Jr. Sr.
School Washington-St. Louis Chicago Washington-St. Louis Carnegie Mellon Carnegie Mellon Washington-St. Louis Washington-St. Louis Chicago Washington-St. Louis Washington-St. Louis Carnegie Mellon Case Western Reserve Washington-St. Louis Case Western Reserve
Pos. S CB S CB DL ILB CB OLB DL OLB ILB ILB DL DL
Yr. Jr. So. Sr. So. Sr. Sr. So. Jr. Sr. Jr. Sr. So. Sr. So.
School Chicago Washington-St. Louis Case Western Reserve Washington-St. Louis
Pos. KR/PR K PR P
Yr. So. So. Jr. So.
Defense Name Ryan Bednar Vincent Beltrano Tate Byers Vince Demarchi Ryan Jok Peter Lowery Quincy Marting Schuyler Montefalco Nelson Nwumeh Fade Oluokun Eric Rolfes Gavin Sandidge Seth Wight Justin Williams
Eric Daginella, Washington-St. Louis Nelson Nwumeh, Washington-St. Louis Vincent Beltrano, Chicago / Sean Lapcevic, Case Hank Childs, Washington-St. Louis WashU (Head Coach Larry Kindbom)
All-UAA Second Team
Offense
Name Jake Abbott Tim Bartholomew Francesco DeMayo Garrett Hartig Rob Kalkstein Tim Kikta Jacob Krause Jon Levin Mitch McMahon Connor Meneough Cody Ratermann Kenny Riordan Tim Swanson Colin Webb
Offensive Player(s) of the Year: Defensive Player of the Year: Special Teams Players of the Year: Rookie of the Year: Coaching Staff of the Year:
Name Brock Appenzeller Nathan Cheek Sean Lapcevic John Mangelluzzi Erik Olson Bryce Pardoe Zak Ross-Nash Isaac Stern Will Thompson Troy Witt
School Chicago Carnegie Mellon Case Western Reserve Case Western Reserve Case Western Reserve Carnegie Mellon Chicago Chicago Washington-St. Louis Carnegie Mellon
Pos. OL OG WR WR QB TE RB OL OL RB
Yr. So. Sr. So. Fr. Sr. Sr. Jr. Jr. Jr. So.
School Chicago Carnegie Mellon Chicago Case Western Reserve Chicago Carnegie Mellon Washington-St. Louis Washington-St. Louis Case Western Reserve Washington-St. Louis Case Western Reserve Chicago Case Western Reserve
Pos. DL OLB CB OLB ILB S DL CB DL DL S ILB ILB
Yr. Sr. Jr. So. So. Sr. So. Fr. Sr. So. Sr. So. Sr. So.
School Chicago Carnegie Mellon
Pos. K P
Yr. Jr. Sr.
Defense Name Michael Cifor Alexander D’Angelo Christopher Dengler Everett Dishong Brian Duffy Malcolm Guya Danny Nowak Andrew Skalman Dayton Snyder Jeff Stoecker Scott Suren Ben Wade Aaron Weisberg
Special Teams Name Karol Kurzydlowski Tucker Smith
Special Teams Name Vincent Beltrano Alex Hallwachs Sean Lapcevic Alec Stanke
UAA Special Teams Player of the Year Vincent Beltrano
UChicago Football 2014
Schuyler Montefalco
20
Early Era History Year by Year Records
Amos Alonzo Stagg
Independent (1892-95) Year 1892 1893 1894 1895
W 1 6 11 7
L 4 4 7 3
T 2 2 1 0
Coach Amos Alonzo Stagg Amos Alonzo Stagg Amos Alonzo Stagg Amos Alonzo Stagg
Big Ten Conference (1896-1939) Year 1896 1897 1898 1899 1900 1901 1902 1903 1904 1905 1906 1907 1908 1909 1910 1911 1912 1913 1914 1915 1916 1917 1918 1919 1920 1921 1922 1923 1924 1925 1926 1927 1928 1929 1930 1931 1932 1933 1934 1935 1936 1937 1938 1939
W 11 8 9 12 7 5 11 10 8 10 4 4 5 4 2 6 6 7 4 5 3 3 0 5 3 6 5 7 4 3 2 4 2 7 2 2 3 3 4 4 2 1 1 2
Overall L T 2 1 1 0 2 0 0 2 5 1 5 2 1 0 2 1 1 1 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 1 1 2 5 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 2 1 2 0 4 0 2 1 6 0 2 0 4 0 1 0 1 1 1 0 1 3 4 1 6 0 4 0 7 0 3 0 5 2 6 1 4 1 3 2 4 0 4 0 5 1 6 0 6 1 6 0
W 3 3 3 4 2 0 5 4 5 7 3 4 5 4 2 5 6 7 4 4 3 2 0 4 2 4 4 5 3 2 0 3 0 1 0 1 1 0 2 2 1 0 0 0
Big 10 L T 2 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 3 1 4 1 1 0 1 1 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 4 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 2 1 2 0 3 0 2 1 5 0 2 0 4 0 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 3 2 1 5 0 3 0 5 0 3 0 4 0 4 0 4 0 3 2 4 0 3 0 4 0 4 0 4 0 3 0
Place 4th 2nd 2nd 1st 6th 9th 2nd 4th 3rd 1st 4th 1st 1st 2nd 7th 2nd 2nd 1st 3rd 3rd 5th 5th 10th 3rd 8th 2nd 1st 3rd 1st 7th 10th 5th 10th 7th 10th 8th 8th 8th 7th 6th 7th 9th 10th 9th
Coach Amos Alonzo Stagg Amos Alonzo Stagg Amos Alonzo Stagg Amos Alonzo Stagg Amos Alonzo Stagg Amos Alonzo Stagg Amos Alonzo Stagg Amos Alonzo Stagg Amos Alonzo Stagg Amos Alonzo Stagg Amos Alonzo Stagg Amos Alonzo Stagg Amos Alonzo Stagg Amos Alonzo Stagg Amos Alonzo Stagg Amos Alonzo Stagg Amos Alonzo Stagg Amos Alonzo Stagg Amos Alonzo Stagg Amos Alonzo Stagg Amos Alonzo Stagg Amos Alonzo Stagg Amos Alonzo Stagg Amos Alonzo Stagg Amos Alonzo Stagg Amos Alonzo Stagg Amos Alonzo Stagg Amos Alonzo Stagg Amos Alonzo Stagg Amos Alonzo Stagg Amos Alonzo Stagg Amos Alonzo Stagg Amos Alonzo Stagg Amos Alonzo Stagg Amos Alonzo Stagg Amos Alonzo Stagg Amos Alonzo Stagg Clark Shaughnessy Clark Shaughnessy Clark Shaughnessy Clark Shaughnessy Clark Shaughnessy Clark Shaughnessy Clark Shaughnessy
One of the great innovators in the development of college football, Amos Alonzo Stagg served as head football coach at Chicago from 1892 to 1932. Stagg compiled a record of 224112-27 and led the Maroons to seven Big Ten Conference titles (1899, 1905, 1907, 1908, 1913, 1922, 1924). Under Stagg’s guidance, Chicago emerged as one of the nation’s most formidable football powers during the first quarter of the 20th century. Stagg’s impact on the game of football began during his college playing days at Yale, where he was named to the first-ever All-America team as an end in 1889. Stagg began his coaching career the next year at the Springfield, Massachusetts, YMCA, now Springfield College. Stagg formed the school’s first football team, and among his players was James Naismith, the inventor of basketball. William Rainey Harper, who was Stagg’s divinity professor at Yale, was appointed the first president of the University of Chicago and in 1892 named Stagg head football coach and director of the department of physical culture, a post Stagg would retain for 41 years. In addition to his football duties, Stagg coached track for 32 years, baseball for 19 years, and basketball for one season. He also helped to organize the Big Ten Conference, then known as the Western Conference. Among the innovations credited to Stagg are the tackling dummy, the huddle, the reverse and man-in-motion plays, the lateral pass, uniform numbers, and varsity letters. After retiring from Chicago in 1932, Stagg served as head coach at Pacific from 1932 to 1946, then served as an assistant coach to his son at Susquehanna until 1952. He passed away in 1965 at the age of 102. Stagg was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 1951 as both a player and coach. The NCAA recognized Stagg’s contributions by designating the Division III championship game the Stagg Bowl. Legendary Notre Dame coach Knute Rockne said of Stagg, “All football comes from Stagg.”
Maroons at Marshall Field (later Stagg Field) in 1895
21
UChicago Football 2014
Early Era History Chronological History 1890s 1890 William Rainey Harper, the University of Chicago’s first president, appoints Amos Alonzo Stagg the school’s first head football coach. Stagg would serve in that role for 41 years, during which time he would revolutionize college football. 1892 Chicago begins its initial year of intercollegiate football competition ... In their first game against a collegiate foe, the Maroons battle Northwestern to a scoreless tie ... Chicago defeats Illinois 10-4 to mark its first win against a major college opponent. 1893 Chicago merchant Marshall Field donates the use of campus land for home football games. Initially named Marshall Field, it would eventually become Stagg Field ... Chicago plays on Thanksgiving Day for the first time, losing to Michigan 28-10. 1894 Stagg adopts maroon as Chicago’s official color ... Chicago embarks on an unprecedented 6,200-mile tour of the Pacific Coast, during which it splits a pair of games with Stanford. After defeating the Cardinal 24-4 on Christmas Day, the Maroons fall 12-0 in Los Angeles just four days later. Many college football historians consider the Dec. 29 contest to be the genesis of the modern-day college bowl game.
The 1892 Chicago Maroons (Stagg holding ball)
1895 Chicago becomes a charter member of the Western Conference, which would later be known as the Big Ten Conference. 1896 In its inaugural Big Ten campaign, Chicago posts a 3-2 mark against conference rivals. 1898 Clarence Herschberger becomes Chicago’s first consensus All-American. 1899 Chicago wins its first Big Ten title with a 4-0 mark in league play and records its first unbeaten season with a record of 12-0-2.
1900s
Amos Alonzo Stagg
1902 Chicago re-emerges as a regional power as the Maroons win 11 of 12 games. 1903 During its 10-2-1 season, Chicago wins its first seven contests by an astounding 284-0 margin. 1905 Chicago records its first perfect record with a 10-0 mark en route to its second Big Ten title ... In their final Thanksgiving Day game, the Maroons defeat Michigan 2-0, marking Chicago’s emergence as the top football school in the West. 1905-06 Football at Chicago survives an attempt by the University Senate to discontinue the program. Serious injuries – including deaths – as well as concerns about the eroding of the amateur player ideal lead to major rule changes throughout the country.
Maroons vs. Michigan, Thanksgiving 1905
1906 In a dramatic reduction in schedule, Chicago finishes the season with a 4-1 record ... Walter Eckersall named a consensus All-American for the third straight year. 1907 Chicago sweeps its four Big Ten contests to capture its third conference championship. 1908 With a 5-0 record in conference play, Chicago collects its fourth Big Ten title and its second in as many years.
UChicago Football 2014
Walter Eckersall (with ball) in 1906
22
Early Era History Chronological History 1910s 1910 At 2-5, Chicago suffers its first losing season since its initial year of competition in 1892. 1913 Chicago finishes 7-0, all against Big Ten foes, to capture its fifth league championship ... With its seating capacity increased to approximately 32,000 by the addition of a crenelated grandstand, Marshall Field is renamed Stagg Field ... Paul Des Jardien is named a consensus All-American. 1918 At 0-6, the Maroons suffer their only winless season under Stagg.
Chicago vs. Michigan – Stagg Field 1927
1920s 1921 Chicago defeats Princeton 9-0, marking the first victory by a Western team over one of the “Big Three” of Harvard, Yale, and Princeton. According to many sports historians, the Chicago/Princeton game sparked nationwide interest in college football. 1922 For the first time, one of the “Big Three” (Harvard, Yale, Princeton) visits the Midway, as Princeton defeats the Maroons 21-18. Chicago receives more than 100,000 ticket requests for the game. 1924 With a 3-0-3 mark in conference play, Chicago wins its seventh and last Big Ten championship ... Chicago battles heavily-favored Illinois – featuring All-American “Red” Grange – to a 21-21 tie at Stagg Field.
Coach Clark Shaughnessy
1926 Stagg Field’s seating capacity is increased for the second time in 13 years, this time to more than 50,000. 1927 Center Ken Rouse becomes the first Chicago player to be selected as the Big Ten Most Valuable Player. 1929 With a 7-3 record, Chicago enjoys its last winning season of the early era.
1930s 1932 Amos Alonzo Stagg completes his 41st and final year on the Midway with a 3-4-1 finish. During his career, Stagg compiles an overall record of 224-112-27. He later becomes head coach at Pacific.
Jay Berwanger carrying the ball against Michigan in 1933
1933 Clark Shaughnessy replaces Stagg as head coach. 1935 Jay Berwanger wins the first-ever Heisman Trophy. In the spring of 1936, Jay Berwagner is the first player selected in the inaugural NFL Draft. He is chosen by Philadelphia and traded to the Chicago Bears, but decides against playing professional football. 1936 Chicago posts its last Big Ten victory in a 7-6 win over Wisconsin. 1938 Stagg’s Pacific squad defeats Chicago 32-0 at Stagg Field. 1939 At 2-6, Chicago suffers its fourth straight losing season ... The Maroons lose their three Big Ten games by a combined score of 192-0 to fall to 1-15 in conference play over the past four years ... Following the dismal campaign, the University of Chicago discontinues intercollegiate football during the presidency of Robert Maynard Hutchins ... The program would remain dormant at the varsity level until 1969.
23
On Dec. 2, 1942, beneath the abandoned west stands of Stagg Field, Enrico Fermi and a team of scientists achieved the first self-sustaining chain reaction, which led to the development of the atomic bomb. Today, the Joseph Regenstein Library stands on the site of the original Stagg Field at 1100 East 57th Street.
UChicago Football 2014
Early Era History Honor Roll Jay Berwanger Heisman Trophy Winner 1935 In November 1935, University of Chicago senior Jay Berwanger received a telegram from Manhattan’s Downtown Athletic Club, informing him that he had won a trophy for being the “most valuable football player east of the Mississippi.” The prize, then known as the Downtown Athletic Club Trophy, was renamed the Heisman Trophy the following year. Renowned for his versatility, Berwanger played nearly every position on offense and defense. During the 1935 campaign, he rushed for 577 yards, passed for 405, returned kickoffs for 359, scored six touchdowns, and added five PATs for 41 points. Following the 1935 season, the Chicago Tribune awarded Berwanger the Silver Football as the Most Valuable Player in the Big Ten. In a poll of 107 opposing players he faced during his senior year, 104 said the sixfoot, 195-pound Berwanger was the best halfback they had ever seen. Berwanger was the only Heisman recipient tackled by a future United States president – Gerald Ford – during a 1934 game between Chicago and Michigan. “Jay was most deserving of his Heisman Trophy. He could do it all,” President Ford recalled. “He was an outstanding runner as well a passer and kicker. I remember him fondly as one of the greatest athletes I’ve known.” In addition to his distinction as the first-ever Heisman Trophy recipient, Berwanger was the first player chosen in the inaugural National Football League draft in 1936. He was selected by the Philadelphia Eagles, who traded his rights to the Chicago Bears. Berwanger turned down the opportunity to pursue a professional football career, citing low pay. During World War II, he enrolled in the United States Navy’s flight-training program and became a naval officer. After the war, he established a plastic and rubber manufacturing company in Chicago’s western suburbs. In 1954, Berwanger was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame. Then in 1989, he was included on Sports Illustrated’s 25-year anniversary All-America team, which honored players whose accomplishments extended beyond the football field. Berwanger died during the summer of 2002.
College Football Hall of Fame Jay Berwanger Paul Des Jardien Walter Eckersall
Amos Alonzo Stagg Walter Steffen Andy Wyant
Consensus All-America Jay Berwanger (1935) Mark Catlin (1905) Paul Des Jardien (1913) Walter Eckersall (1904-06)
Franklin Gowdy (1924) Clarence Herschberger (1898) Joseph Pondelik (1924)
Fred Speik (1904) Walter Steffen (1908) John Thomas (1922)
Big Ten Conference MVP Jay Berwanger (1935)
Ken Rouse (1927)
All-Big Ten Jay Berwanger (1934-35) William Crawley (1909) Herb “Fritz” Crisler (1921) Paul Des Jardien (1912-14) Leo DeTray (1907) Walter Eckersall (1906) Franklin Gowdy (1924) Fred Henderson (1925) Charles Higgins (1917-19) Arthur Hoffman (1908)
Earl Huntington (1913) Harold Iddings (1907-08) Philbrick Jackson (1916) Ralph King (1922) Austin McCarty (1925) Charles McGuire (1920-21) Nelson Norgren (1913) Harlan “Pat” Page (1908-09) Ellmore Patterson (1934) Joseph Pondelik (1924)
Charles Rademacher (1911) Lloyd Rohrke (1923) Ken Rouse (1927) Pete Russell (1913-15) Clark Sauer (1911) Horace Scruby (1911) Laurens Shull (1914-15) Walter Steffen (1906-08) Harry Thomas (1924)
Maroons in the Pros Duncan Annan
Toledo Maroons (1922), Hammond Pros (1923-26), Akron Pros (1925), Akron Indians (1926)
Johnny Bryan
Chicago Cardinals (1922), Chicago Bears (1923-27), Milwaukee Badgers (1925-26)
Stuart Cochran
Milwaukee Badgers (1922)
Paul Des Jardien
Chicago Cardinals (1920), Chicago Tigers (1920), Minneapolis Marines (1922)
Gene Francis
Chicago Cardinals (1926)
Aubrey Goodman
Chicago Bulls - AFL (1926), Chicago Cardinals (1927)
Dick Halladay
Racine Legion (1923-24)
Lewis Hamity
Chicago Bears (1941)
George Hartong
Hammond Pros (1921), Racine Legion (1923), Chicago Cardinals (1924)
Fred Hobscheid
Racine Tornadoes (1926), Chicago Bears (1927)
John Hurlburt
Chicago Cardinals (1924-25)
Colville Jackson
Evansville Giants (1921), Hammond Pros (1921)
Graham Kernwein
Racine Tornadoes (1926)
Ralph King
Racine Legion (1924), Chicago Bears (1925)
Paul Leatherman
Hammond Pros (1922)
Milt Romney
Racine Legion (1923-24), Chicago Bears (1925-29)
Saul Sherman
Chicago Bears (1939-40)
Charles Weaver
Chicago Cardinals (1930), Portsmouth Spartans (1930)
John Webster
Racine Legion (1924)
Don Yeisley
Chicago Cardinals (1928)
DesJardien
UChicago Football 2014
Clarence Herschberger Bob Maxwell Clark Shaughnessy
Herschberger
Rouse
Steffen
24
Modern Era History Year by Year Records
Return of Varsity Football – 1969
Independent (1969-75) Year 1969 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975
W
2 2 3 1 0 0 1
L
4 5 4 6 6 8 7
T 0 0 0 0 1 0 0
Coach
Walter Hass Walter Hass Walter Hass Walter Hass Walter Hass Walter Hass Walter Hass
Midwest Conference (1976-86) Year 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986
W
4 2 3 2 1 2 0 2 3 5 3
Overall L T 4 6 5 6 8 6 9 7 6 4 6
W
0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0
1 1 1 1 1 2 0 0 1 3 2
MWC L T 3 3 3 3 7 6 4 4 6 4 5
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Place
Coach
10th 10th 9th 9th 9th 8th 10th 11th 11th 5th 9th
Bob Lombardi Bob Lombardi Bob Lombardi Tom Kurucz Robert Larsen Robert Larsen Robert Larsen Mick Ewing Mick Ewing Mick Ewing Mick Ewing
Thirty years after the University of Chicago discontinued intercollegiate football in 1939, the sport returned to varsity status at the NCAA Division III level. The genesis of the return of football occurred in 1956, when Walter Hass was appointed director of athletics A long-time college football coach, Hass initiated a football class as part of the physical education curriculum, which by 1960 evolved into a club program competing against other teams in the area. Prompted by Hass’s strident lobbying efforts as well as a student body petition, the University of Chicago elevated football to varsity status beginning with the 1969 season. Hass, who guided the Maroons to a 2-4 record in 1969, continued coaching through 1975 and during that span continued to upgrade the schedule with quality opponents. His efforts established the foundation for Division III football at Chicago. Hass was selected for induction into the University of Chicago Athletics Hall of Fame as part of the Class of 2007. The Maroons celebrated the 40-year anniversary of the return of varsity football during the team’s 2009 Homecoming game against Denison University. Members of the 1969 squad, the first to play varsity football after it was eliminated 30 years earlier, served as honorary team captains for the pregame coin toss.
Independent (1987-89) Year 1987 1988 1989
W
5 3 2
L
3 6 7
T 0 0 0
Coach
Mick Ewing Rich Parrinello Greg Quick
UAA (1990-present) Year 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013
W 1 0 3 5 5 8 4 5 7 5 7 6 4 2 3 5 4 4 3 5 8 5 4 6
Overall L 9 10 7 5 5 2 5 4 2 4 2 3 5 7 6 4 5 5 6 4 2 5 6 4
T 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
UAA W L T 0 4 0 0 4 0 1 3 0 2 2 0 2 2 0 2 2 0 1 3 0 1 3 4 0 1 3 4 0 1 3 2 2 1 3 0 3 3 0 0 3 0 3 1 2 1 2 3 0 0 3 0 3 1 2
Place 5th 5th 3rd 3rd 3rd 3rd 4th 3rd 1st 4th 1st 3rd 2nd 4th 4th 1st 4th 4th 2nd 2nd 1st 4th 4th 3rd
Coach Greg Quick Greg Quick Greg Quick Greg Quick Dick Maloney Dick Maloney Dick Maloney Dick Maloney Dick Maloney Dick Maloney Dick Maloney Dick Maloney Dick Maloney Dick Maloney Dick Maloney Dick Maloney Dick Maloney Dick Maloney Dick Maloney Dick Maloney Dick Maloney Dick Maloney Dick Maloney Chris Wilkerson
Coaching Records Coach Dick Maloney Mick Ewing Greg Quick Bob Lombardi Walter Hass Chris Wilkerson Rich Parrinello Robert Larsen Tom Kurucz
25
Yrs. ‘94-12 ‘83-87 ‘89-93 ‘76-78 ‘69-75 ‘13-‘88 ‘80-82 ‘79
W 94 18 11 9 9 6 3 3 2
L T 82 0 26 0 38 0 15 0 40 1 4 0 6 0 23 1 6 0
Pct. .534 .409 .224 .375 .190 .600 .333 .130 .250
UChicago Football 2014
Modern Era History Honor Roll All-America Frank Baker Derrick Brooms Colin Carrier Neal Cawi Mike Healy Bruce Montella Phil Pengiel Dan Philips Jeff Sauer Jeff Stolte Rob Tamillow
UAA Rookie of the Year Fullback Kick Returner Defensive Back Defensive End Tight End Tailback Center Linebacker Punter/Kicker Punter Defensive Line
1993 1995 2005 1991 2002 1985 2005 1999-00 2011-12 1991 2005
Academic All-America Frank Baker Steve Chudik Paul Haar Bruce Montella
Running Back Safety Offensive Line Running Back
1992-93 1991 1987-88 1985
Aztec Bowl Participant Dan Philips Rob Tamillow
Linebacker Defensive Line
2000 2005
NCAA Postgraduate Scholar Frank Baker Paul Haar Bruce Montella Ben Potts
Running Back Offensive Line Running Back Offensive Line
1994 1989 1986 2006
UAA Offensive MVP Frank Baker Dee Brizzolara Derrick Brooms Josh Dunn Brandon Way
Fullback Wide Receiver Wide Receiver Quarterback Tailback
1993 2010-11 1994-95 2000 1996, 98
UAA Defensive MVP Matt Armbruster Dan Philips Rob Tamillow
Linebacker Linebacker Defensive Line
2004 2000 2005
UAA Special Teams MVP Vincent Beltrano Jeff Sauer
Punt/Kick returner Punter/Kicker
2013 2010
Two-Time UAA Offensive MVP Derrick Brooms
UChicago Football 2014
Francis Adarkwa Vincent Beltrano Dee Brizzolara Joshua Burandt Gaby Fernandez Justin Kaderabek Todd Young
Running Back Cornerback Wide Receiver/Kick Returner Safety Linebacker Defensive Line Defensive Back
All-UAA 1st & 2nd Team (cont.) 2008 2012 2009 2010 2004 2007 2005
All-UAA 1st & 2nd Team Francis Adarkwa Mike Albian Erik Anderson Brock Appenzeller Matt Armbruster Frank Baker Rich Bartolomei Vincent Beltrano Eric Berndt Matt Braun Dee Brizzolara Derrick Brooms Frank Brown Joe Bufalino Joshua Burandt John Carey Aaron Carlock Colin Carrier Emmett Carrier Neal Cawi Kyle Cepeda Drew Christ Steve Chudik Michael Cifor Jon Cotchen Dan Crookston Bryan Cross Adam Cushing Ron Dawczak Micah Dawson Bryan Dedeker Francesco DeMayo Christopher Dengler John Dierking Sean Dillon Peter Ditchman James Dowd Tony Dragovich Brian Duffy George Dunn Josh Dunn Phil Duszczyk Alex Dzierbicki Mike Emerson Tom Evans Gaby Fernandez Matt Ficenec David Franchi Nick Freeman Leon Gordon Joe Gorowski Cameron Grimes Brian Gutbrod Matt Hadsell Jake Hajer Nick Hannigan Nate Harrell Mike Hawkins Mike Healy Mike Hettman Scott Hettman Nate Hines Steve Holtzman Tony Insalaco Jason Jagodzinski Greg Jefson Anthony Jernigan Scott Johnson Kris Jones Justin Kaderabek Kris Kahle Jim Kienzle John Kiernan Kenny Kim Jesse Knapp Kevin Kohart Leo Kowalyk Karol Kurzydlowski Matt Lawton Chris Leamy Matt Limegrover
Running Back Wide Receiver Defensive Line Offensive Line Linebacker Fullback Offensive Line Cornerback Defensive Line Defensive Line Wide Receiver/Kick Returner Wide Receiver/Kick Returner Running Back/Kick Returner Offensive Line Safety Offensive Line Running Back Cornerback Cornerback Defensive Line Running Back Cornerback Cornerback Defensive Line Linebacker Defensive Line Offensive Line Tight End Quarterback Wide Receiver Offensive Line Offensive Line Defensive Back Defensive Line Defensive Line Safety Offensive Line Wide Receiver Linebacker Punt Returner Quarterback Defensive Line Linebacker Tight End Offensive Line Linebacker Fullback Offensive Line Safety Offensive Line Wide Receiver Linebacker Wide Receiver/Punt Returner Linebacker Offensive Line Cornerback Cornerback Offensive Line Tight End Offensive Line Offensive Line Safety Offensive Line Linebacker Offensive Line Running Back Offensive Line/Defensive Line Safety Running Back Defensive Line Wide Receiver Offensive Line Wide Receiver/Quarterback Safety Linebacker Linebacker Defensive Line Kicker Fullback Cornerback Offensive Line
2008-11 2005-07 2003-04 2013 2003-04 1991-93 2005 2012 2001-02 1999 2009-12 1994-95 2001, 03-04 2005 2010 1998 2001-02 2004-05 2009-11 1990-91 2005 1994-96 1990-91 2011-13 2008 1994-95 2001-02 2000-01 1995 2004-05 2007-09 2013 2013 1990 2000-02 1993 2001-03 1995 2013 2000 2000-01 1996-97 2009-12 2009 1990 2004-05 1990 2000 1998-00 2005 1997-98 2009-10 1999, 01 2002-04 2001 1999-01 2002-03 2006 2002-03 1998-99 1994, 97 2003-04 2006 2007 2004 1999 1991, 94 2006 2000 2007-09 1997-98 1996 2006, 08 1997 1990 1991 1993 2013 1997 2007-08 1990
Chuck Little Ed Lizak Rick Lloyd Jake Longtin Scott Mainquist Andrew Maloney Brian Mangan Jon Mardo Jeff Mathews Jim McAnelly Joseph McCoy Wesley McGhee Jim McNamara Brandon Meckelberg Tom Miller Stefan Mitrovic Schuyler Montefalco Tucker Morrison Mike Morzenti Ryan Muldoon Roman Natoli David Neils Dan O’Brien George O’Brien Vinny O’Leary Marshall Oium Sam Owens Tommy Parks Phil Pengiel Stan Penkala Dan Philips Danny Polaneczky Joe Polaneczky Mark Potocki Ben Potts T.J. Rajcevich Jim Raptis Matt Rinklin Zak Ross-Nash John Ryle Matt Sargent Jeff Sauer Nick Schey Brad Shimeall Jason Slous Drew Syder Jeff Stanczak Isaac Stern Jack Stockert Jeff Stolte Joe Stoner David Swanson John Tabash Casey Talbot Rob Tamillow Sandeep Tickoo Steve Tsilimos Michael Turner Mike Van Roten Ben Wade Joe Wagner Austin Way Brandon Way Frank Walch Jimmie Wells Corey White Arlen Wiley Nate Williams Clay Wolff Todd Young Marc Zera Bryan Zindrick Jared Zuniga
Running Back Defensive Line Offensive Line Defensive Line Defensive Line Wide Receiver Linebacker Linebacker Offensive Line Offensive Line Quarterback/Running Back Offensive Line Offensive Line Tight End Defensive Line Offensive Line Linebacker Linebacker Punter/Kicker Safety Kicker Offensive Line Offensive Line Linebacker Linebacker Quarterback Running Back Running Back Offensive Line Offensive Line Linebacker Safety Wide Receiver Offensive Line Offensive Line Punt Returner Wide Receiver Quarterback Running Back Safety Defensive Line Punter/Kicker Running Back Offensive Line Linebacker Linebacker Cornerback Offensive Line Tight End Punter Punt Returner Safety Offensive Line Linebacker Defensive Line Safety Cornerback Safety/Cornerback Offensive Line Linebacker Wide Receiver Kick Returner Tailback Tight End Defensive Line Linebacker Defensive Line Offensive Line Wide Receiver/Kick Returner Safety Quarterback Safety Offensive Line
2006 1996-98 1999-01 2009-10 2012 2004 1998 1997-98 1995-96 2008 1990-93 1991-93 2000 2012 2005-06 2009 2011-13 1993 2003, 05 2000 1998-01 2000 1993-95 1992-94 2005 2009-10 2003 2010 2004-05 1990 1997-00 2008-11 2000-03 1994-95 2004-06 2004 2000-03 2005-06 2011-13 2006 2008, 10-11 2010-12 2005 1991 1999-00 1990 1990 2013 2004 1990-91 2008 1994-95 2009-12 1994-96 2003-05 1998 2010 1997-99 2009-10 2013 1990 2006 1995-98 1995 1994-95 2008 1998-01 2008-10 2007-10 2005 2004 2002 2002
All-Midwest Conference Dave Baker Steve Campbell Jim Coy Mark Daniels Bob Dickey Dale Friar Scott Jensen Kim Johnson Jim Kapotas Mark Kosminskas Mark Meier Bruce Montella Joe Mullin Joe Pierri Ted Repass Dennis Werner
Defensive Line Linebacker Defensive Line Wide Receiver Running Back Running Back Kicker Offensive Line Offensive Line Linebacker Quarterback Running Back Defensive Line Defensive Line Linebacker Defensive Back
1986 1981 1982 1978 1984 1977-78 1978 1978 1985-86 1979 1979 1985 1980 1978, 81 1983-86 1984
26
Modern Era History Individual Records Rushing
Receiving
Most Yards •Career: •Season: •Game: •Long Run:
Most Receptions
4,283 1,606 305 93
Frank Baker (1990-93) Frank Baker (1993) Bruce Montella (vs. Knox, 1985) Dale Friar (vs. Loras, ‘77)
Most Attempts •Career: •Season: •Game:
All-Purpose Yards
855 281 51
Frank Baker (1990-93) Frank Baker (1993) Tony Lee (vs. Lake Forest, 1986)
•Career: •Season: •Game:
214 77 17
Most All-Purpose Yards Jim Raptis (2000-03) Jim Raptis (2002) Jim Raptis (vs. Elmhurst, 2002)
Most Yards •Career: 3,352 •Season: 1,028 •Game: 270 •Long Catch: 94
Dee Brizzolara (2009-12) Dee Brizzolara (2009) Jim Raptis (vs. Elmhurst, 2002) Derrick Brooms (vs. Washington, 1995)
Most Touchdowns
Most Touchdowns
•Career: •Season: •Game:
•Career: •Season: •Game:
33 16 4
Brandon Way (1995-98) Joseph McCoy (1993) Francis Adarkwa (vs. Concordia Chi., 2010); Tommy Parks (vs. Lewis & Clark, 2007); Nick Schey (vs. Concordia Chicago, 2006); Brandon Way (vs. Kenyon, 1996); Dale Friar (vs. Loras, 1977)
Highest Average per Carry
39 13 4
Dee Brizzolara (2009-12) Derrick Brooms (1995) Derrick Brooms (vs. Kalamazoo, 1995)
Highest Average per Reception
5.1 6.6
Joseph McCoy (1990-93) Joseph McCoy (1993)
•Career: •Season:
18.1 21.3
Dee Brizzolara (2009-12) Derrick Brooms (1995)
•Career: •Season:
Most Yards •Career: •Season: •Game: •Long Pass:
6,922 2,605 472 94
Josh Dunn (1999-02) Marshall Oium (2009) Marshall Oium (vs. Denison, 2009) Ron Dawczak (vs. Washington, 1995)
Most Completions •Career: •Season: •Game:
558 203 33
Josh Dunn (1999-02) Josh Dunn (2002) Marshall Oium (vs. Washington, 2009)
Dee Brizzolara (2009-12) Dee Brizzolara (2009)
Kickoff Returns Highest Average •Career: 25.2 •Season: 35.2 •Long Return: 97
Derrick Brooms (1992-95) Derrick Brooms (1995) Derrick Brooms (vs. Rochester, 1995); Matt Ficenec (vs. Trinity, Texas, 1989)
Most Yards •Career: •Season:
2,139 919
Dee Brizzolara (2009-12) Dee Brizzolara (2009)
•Game:
Punt Returns Highest Punt Return Average
Scoring
•Career: 12.7 •Season: 16.1 •Long Return: 86
Most Points
Passing
6,019 1,982
(min. 50 career receptions, 25 season receptions)
(min. 300 career attempts, 125 season attempts)
•Career: •Season:
•Career: •Season:
270 96 30
Dee Brizzolara (2009-12) Derrick Brooms (1995); Joseph McCoy (1993) Dee Brizzolara (vs. Carnegie Mellon, 2010)
Kris Kahle (1995-98) Dee Brizzolara (2011) Dee Brizzolara (vs. Carnegie Mellon, 2010)
Most Punt Return Yards •Career: •Season:
495 299
Derrick Brooms (1992-95) George Dunn (2000)
Most Touchdowns •Career: •Season: •Game:
45 16 5
Dee Brizzolara (2009-12) Derrick Brooms (1995); Joseph McCoy (1993) Dee Brizzolara (vs. Carnegie Mellon, 2010)
Most Attempts •Career: •Season: •Game:
1,068 373 63
Josh Dunn (1999-02) Josh Dunn (2002) Marc Zera (vs. Washington, 2004)
Most Touchdowns •Career: •Season: •Game:
48 21 6
Josh Dunn (1999-02) Marshall Oium (2009); Josh Dunn (2001) Marshall Oium (vs. Carnegie Mellon, 2010)
Highest Completion Percentage (min. 350 career attempts, 150 season attempts)
•Career: •Season:
.549 .580
Matt Rinklin (2005-06) Matt Rinklin (2005)
2000 UAA Offensive MVP Josh Dunn
27
1985 NCAA Division III Rushing Leader Bruce Montella
Season Passing Yardage and TD Leader Marshall Oium
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Modern Era History Individual Records
Team Records
Kicking
Scoring
Most Field Goals Made
Most Points
•Career: •Season: •Game:
•10-Game Season: •9-Game Season: •Game:
38 12 4 50
•Long FG:
Roman Natoli (1998-2001) Jeff Sauer (2012) Mike Morzenti (vs. North Park, 2002) Jeff Sauer (vs. Concordia Chicago, 2012) Jim Bonebrake (vs. Monmouth, 1986)
105 34 8
Jeff Sauer (2009-12) Jeff Sauer (2010) Jeff Sauer (vs. Concordia Chicago, 2010)
Most Points Kicking •Career: •Season: •Game:
192 53 15
Jeff Sauer (2009-12) Mike Morzenti (2002); Roman Natoli (2001) Mike Morzenti (vs. North Park, 2002)
•10-Game Season: •9-Game Season:
•Career: •Season: •Long Punt:
•Season: •Game:
•Career: •Season: •Game: •Long Return:
15 10 3 100
Colin Carrier (2002-05) Colin Carrier (2005) Gaby Fernandez (vs. Macalester, 2007); Colin Carrier (vs. Case, 2005) Michael Turner (vs. Rose-Hulman, 1998)
2013 1998
•Season: •Game:
•Season: •Game:
75 10
1982 5 times; last vs. Washington, ‘99
18 6
2005 vs. Lawrence, 1987
40 16
2010 vs. Rose-Hulman, 1998
Defense Most Interceptions
Most Sacks 3,248 615
583 79
1993 vs. Lawrence, 1992
29 7
•Season: •Game:
Miscellaneous
1993 vs. Kentucky Wesleyan, 1990
Most Total Offense
1993 vs. Oberlin, 1995
Most First Downs
•Season: •Game:
•Season: •Game:
•Season:
Most Shutouts
5.6
1993
•Season:
3,833 685
219 39
2
2002 vs. Case, 2002
2002 vs. Case, 2002
2013, 1999, 1995, 1969
Most Consecutive Games Without Being Shutout
Passing
•Career: •Season:
2010 vs. Concordia Chicago, 2012
Most Punts
Highest Average per Carry
•Season: •Game:
41.4 57.0
•Season: •Game:
•Season: •Game:
Most Yards
Michael Turner (1996-99) Michael Turner (1999)
144 94
Most Touchdowns
Most Interception Return Yards 307 159
2010, 1995 vs. Carnegie Mellon, 2010
Most Yards
Most Attempts
Most Interceptions
45 9
Rushing
Punting Average
Interceptions
2010 2001 vs. Carnegie Mellon, 2010
Fewest Points Allowed
•Season: •Game:
Jeff Sauer (2009-12) Jeff Stolte (1991) Greg Schein (vs. Carnegie Mellon, 1989)
317 263 61
Most Touchdowns
Punting 40.8 42.5 76
Punting Average
•Season: •Game:
Most PATs Made •Career: •Season: •Game:
Punting
•Multiple years: 2,728 472
54
1997-2003
2002 vs. Denison, 2009
Most Completions
Sacks & Tackles
•Season: •Game:
Most Sacks
Most Attempts
•Career: •Season:
34 12
Dan Crookston (1992-95) Rob Tamillow (2004, 2005)
521 147
Ted Repass (1983-86) Ted Repass (1985)
Most Tackles for Loss •Career: •Season:
56 24
Rob Tamillow (2002-05) Rob Tamillow (2005)
Fumbles & Passes Defended Most Forced Fumbles •Career: •Season:
6 4
Dan Philips (1997-2000); Jimmie Wells (1993-96) Tony Insalaco (2006); Jimmie Wells (1994)
Most Fumble Recoveries •Career: •Season:
2002 vs. Washington, 2009
391 68
2002 vs. Washington, 2004
Most Touchdowns
Most Tackles •Career: •Season:
•Season: •Game:
211 33
9 4
George O’Brien (1991-94) George O’Brien (1993); Neal Cawi (1991)
•Season: •Game:
22 6
2010, 2009 vs. Carnegie Mellon, 2010
Highest Average per Completion •Season:
14.4
1995, 2005
Kickoff & Punt Returns Kickoff Return Average •Season:
25.1
1995
Kickoff Return Touchdowns •Season:
4
1995
Punt Return Average •Season:
14.9
1998
Punt Return Touchdowns •Season:
6
2010
Most Passes Defended
Most Blocked Punt Returns for Touchdowns
•Career: •Season:
•Season:
33 16
Nick Hannigan (1998-2001) Drew Christ (1995)
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5
2010
2005 NCAA Division III Interceptions Leader Colin Carrier
28
Modern Era History Career & Season Statistical Leaders Rushing Yards
Passing Yards
Career 4,283 3,253 2,842 2,415 2,306 2,207 1,809 1,699 1,683 1,630
Career Frank Baker Brandon Way Joseph McCoy Francis Adarkwa Dale Friar Brian Blitz Sam Owens Bruce Montella Zak Ross-Nash Tony Lee
1990-93 1995-98 1990-93 2008-11 1976-78 1986-89 2000-03 1982-85 2011-1983-86
Season 1,606 1,372 1,180 1,139 1,062 1,019 1,004 950 889 857
Frank Baker Bruce Montella Frank Baker Frank Baker Joseph McCoy Brandon Way Dale Friar Bob Dickey Nick Schey Brian Blitz
1993 1985 1991 1992 1993 1996 1978 1984 2005 1988
Rushing Touchdowns Brandon Way Joseph McCoy Frank Baker Francis Adarkwa Dale Friar
1995-98 1990-93 1990-93 2008-11 1976-78
Season 16 11 10 10 9 9 9 9 9
Joseph McCoy Brandon Way Bruce Montella Dale Friar Francis Adarkwa Tommy Parks Aaron Carlock Brandon Way Joseph McCoy
1993 1996 1985 1978 2010 2007 2002 1997 1992
Total Touchdowns
Season 16 16 14 13 12
Dee Brizzolara Clay Wolff Brandon Way Derrick Brooms Joseph McCoy Derrick Brooms Joseph McCoy Dee Brizzolara Dee Brizzolara Brandon Way
6,922 5,244 3,732 3,660 3,364 2,279 2,115 2,094 1,997 1,684
Josh Dunn Marshall Oium Vincent Cortina Ron Dawczak Matt Rinklin Matt Schaefer Brian Judd Marc Zera John Kiernan Jim Tragos
1999-02 2007-10 2010-13 1993-96 2005-06 1983-86 1995-97 2003-06 2005-08 1997-00
Season 2,605 2,550 2,466 1,920 1,781 1,764 1,708 1,668 1,593 1,504
Marshall Oium Josh Dunn Josh Dunn Matt Rinklin Marshall Oium Ron Dawczak Marc Zera Josh Dunn Brian Judd Vincent Cortina
2009 2002 2001 2005 2010 1995 2004 2000 1997 2013
2009-12 2007-10 1995-98 1992-95 1990-93 1995 1993 2011 2010 1996
Career 558 403 328 297 265 181 181 175 169 163
Josh Dunn Marshall Oium Vincent Cortina Ron Dawczak Matt Rinklin Marc Zera Brian Judd Jim Tragos Matt Schaefer John Kiernan
1999-02 2007-10 2010-13 1993-96 2005-06 2003-06 1995-97 1997-00 1983-86 2005-08
Season 203 200 193 151 143 139 134 131 131 131
Josh Dunn Marshall Oium Josh Dunn Marc Zera Josh Dunn Brian Judd Matt Rinklin Vincent Cortina Matt Rinklin Ron Dawczak
2002 2009 2001 2004 2000 1997 2005 2013 2006 1994
Dee Brizzolara Jim Raptis Clay Wolff Joe Polaneczky Derrick Brooms Eric Smith Micah Dawson Mike Albian Joe Gorowski Brian Gutbrod
2009-12 2000-03 2007-10 2000-03 1992-95 1983-86 2004-05 2004-07 1995-98 1999-01
Season 1,028 983 956 922 910 896 864 821 777 743
Dee Brizzolara Jim Raptis Dee Brizzolara Derrick Brooms Micah Dawson Derrick Brooms Micah Dawson Clay Wolff Clay Wolff Dee Brizzolara
2009 2002 2010 1994 2004 1995 2005 2010 2009 2011
Career 214 207 158 185 132 131 113 111 109 97
Jim Raptis Clay Wolff Joe Polaneczky Dee Brizzolara Mike Albian Eric Smith Joe Gorowski Micah Dawson Derrick Brooms Brian Gutbrod
2000-03 2007-10 2000-03 2009-12 2004-07 1983-86 1995-98 2004-05 1992-95 1999-01
Season 77 67 66 61 60 56 56 55 53 50 50
Jim Raptis Micah Dawson Clay Wolff Brian Gutbrod Derrick Brooms Dee Brizzolara Joe Gorowski Jim Raptis Clay Wolff Dee Brizzolara Joe Gorowski
2002 2004 2009 2001 1994 2010 1997 2003 2008 2009 1998
Receiving Touchdowns
Passing Touchdowns Career 48 44 35 29 24 19 Season 21 21 19 17 17
Career 3,352 2,715 2,692 2,081 1,889 1,825 1,774 1,721 1,272 1,173
Receptions
Pass Completions
Career 33 31 26 25 22
Career 45 35 34 32 32
Receiving Yards
Josh Dunn Marshall Oium Vincent Cortina Ron Dawczak Matt Rinklin Brian Judd
1999-02 2007-10 2010-13 1993-96 2005-06 1995-97
Marshall Oium Josh Dunn Marshall Oium Matt Rinklin Ron Dawczak
2009 2001 2010 2005 1995
Career 39 30 23 15 15 15
Dee Brizzolara Clay Wolff Derrick Brooms Mike Albian Micah Dawson Brian Gutbrod
2009-12 2007-10 1992-95 2004-07 2004-05 1999-01
Season 13 11 11 11 11 10
Derrick Brooms Dee Brizzolara Dee Brizzolara Dee Brizzolara Brian Gutbrod Derrick Brooms
1995 2011 2010 2009 2001 1994
NCAA Division III Statistical Champions
1,000-Yard Rushers Joseph McCoy (#9) and Frank Baker (#35)
29
Individual
Team
Dee Brizzolara
All-Purpose Yards (220.2/g)
2009
Rushing Defense (44.2/g)
2000
Colin Carrier
Interceptions (1.1/g)
2005
Rushing (324.8/g)
1993
Derrick Brooms
Kickoff Returns (35.2 avg)
1995
Jeff Stolte
Punting (42.5 avg)
1991
Bruce Montella
Rushing (152.4/g)
1985
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Modern Era History Career & Season Statistical Leaders Scoring
Kickoff Returns
Career 270 212 208 196 194 178 160 159 150 136
Dee Brizzolara Clay Wolff Brandon Way Derrick Brooms Joseph McCoy Roman Natoli Mike Morzenti Frank Baker Francis Adarkwa Dale Friar
2009-12 2007-10 1995-98 1992-95 1990-93 1998-01 2002-05 1990-93 2008-11 1976-78
Career 25.2 22.6 22.6 22.1 21.4
Derrick Brooms Brian Blitz Larry Woodell Matt Ficenec Dee Brizzolara
1992-95 1986-89 1969-72 1987-90 2009-12
Season 96 96 84 78 74 66 66 62 62 62
Derrick Brooms Joseph McCoy Dee Brizzolara Dee Brizzolara Brandon Way Dee Brizzolara Brian Gutbrod Derrick Brooms Bruce Montella Dale Friar
1995 1993 2011 2010 1996 2009 2001 1994 1985 1978
Season 35.2 26.8 26.1 25.8 25.5
Derrick Brooms Larry Woodell Kris Jones Derrick Brooms Dee Brizzolara
1995 1970 2000 1994 2009
All-Purpose Yards Career 6,019 4,698 4,110 3,930 3,610 3,446 3,311 3,122 2,877 2,733
Dee Brizzolara Frank Baker Derrick Brooms Brandon Way Dale Friar Clay Wolff Brian Blitz Joseph McCoy Francis Adarkwa Jim Raptis
2009-12 1990-93 1992-96 1995-98 1976-78 2007-10 1986-89 1990-93 2008-11 2000-03
Season 1,982 1,606 1,597 1,544 1,543 1,496 1,469 1,468 1,444 1,406
Dee Brizzolara Frank Baker Dee Brizzolara Bruce Montella Dale Friar Derrick Brooms Frank Baker Brian Blitz Brandon Way Derrick Brooms
2009 1993 2010 1985 1977 1995 1992 1989 1996 1994
Interceptions
Punt Returns Career 12.7 12.7 12.3 11.8 11.5
John Hayek Kris Kahle Dee Brizzolara Dale Friar Derrick Brooms
1986-87 1995-98 2009-12 1976-78 1992-95
Season 16.1 13.7 13.7 13.3 12.4
Dee Brizzolara Derrick Brooms Kris Kahle Dee Brizzolara John Hayek
2011 1993 1998 2010 1987
Career 40.8 39.6 38.2 37.6 36.7
Jeff Sauer Jeff Stolte Greg Schein Jim Bonebrake Larry Woodell
2009-12 1990-92 1989-90 1984-87 1969-72
Season 42.5 42.4 42.2 41.1 40.6 40.2
Jeff Stolte Jeff Sauer Jeff Sauer Jeff Sauer Scott Jansen Jim Bonebrake
1991 2010 2012 2010 1978 1986
Punting
Career 15 12 10 10 10 10
Colin Carrier Nick Hannigan Steve Tsilimos Michael Turner Peter Ditchman Steve Chmelik
2002-05 1998-01 2007-10 1996-99 1991-93 1985-88
Season 10 7 6 6 6 6
Colin Carrier Nick Hannigan Steve Tsilimos Michael Turner Peter Ditchman Chris Leamy
2005 1999 2010 1999 1993 2007
Career 34.0 28.0 24.0 23.5 18.0
Dan Crookston Rob Tamillow Arlen Wiley Matt Sargent Cary Starnal
1992-95 2002-05 1998-01 2008-11 1987-89
Season 12.0 12.0 11.0 10.0 9.5
Rob Tamillow Rob Tamillow Dan Crookston Brian Mangan Jake Longtin
2005 2004 1993 1998 2010
Sacks
Tackles for Loss Career 56.0 43.0 42.5 40.0 37.0
Rob Tamillow Dan Crookston Justin Kaderabek Matt Sargent Gaby Fernandez
2002-05 1992-95 2007-10 2008-11 2004-07
Season 24.0 21.0 17.0 17.0 16.5
Rob Tamillow Rob Tamillow Matt Sargent Neal Cawi Justin Kaderabek
2005 2004 2010 1991 2007
Career 521 442 432 338 321
Ted Repass Dave Baker Dan Philips George O’Brien Rob Williams
1983-86 1983-86 1997-00 1991-94 1985-88
Season 147 141 141 126 122
Ted Repass Dan Philips Dave Baker Ted Repass Edward Voorhees
1985 1999 1985 1986 1985
Tackles
Two-Time UAA Offensive MVP Brandon Way
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Two-Time All-American Dan Philips
2005 UAA Defensive Player of the Year Rob Tamillow
30
Modern Era History Series Records vs. All Opponents Opponent Allegheny Arkansas Armour Institute Army Aurora Beloit Benedictine (Ill.) Bethany (W. Va.) Blackburn Bradley Brown Butler Carleton Carlisle Carnegie Mellon Carroll Case Western Reserve Catholic Cincinnati Coe Colorado Colorado College Colorado State Concordia Chicago Concordia (Wis.) Cornell (Iowa) Cornell (N.Y.) Dartmouth Denison DePauw Dixon Drake Elmhurst Eureka Florida Georgia Grinnell Hahnemann Medical Harvard Haskell Hillsdale Hiram Illinois Illinois College Illinois Wesleyan Indiana Indiana State Iowa Iowa Wesleyan Kalamazoo Kenyon Kentucky Kentucky Wesleyan Knox Lake Forest Lawrence Lewis & Clark Lombard Loras Loyola (Ill.) Loyola Academy Macalester Marquette Maryland Michigan Michigan State Milton Milwaukee Medical Minnesota
31
Early Era 0-0-1 4-0 0-1 8-1-1
0-0-1 2-1 0-0-1 0-1 0-1 2-0 1-0 1-0 1-0 4-0 2-1-2 1-1 1-0 2-0 2-0 1-1 1-0 1-0 0-2 2-0 1-1 18-22-3 1-0 20-4-1 1-0 9-3-2
1-0 6-0 5-1-3 4-0 5-0 1-0 1-0 7-19 1-0 1-0 5-12-1
Modern Era Overall 1-0 1-0 0-0-1 4-0 0-1 0-2 0-2 7-13 15-14-1 1-1 1-1 6-0 6-0 1-1 1-1 0-0-1 2-1 0-0-1 0-5 0-6 0-1 6-20 6-20 2-0 12-12 12-12 0-1 0-1 1-0 0-2 0-2 1-0 1-0 1-0 1-0 11-5 11-5 0-1-1 0-1-1 0-2 4-2 2-1-2 1-1 3-1 3-1 1-8 2-8 2-0 0-2 0-2 3-9 3-9 4-0 6-0 1-1 1-0 3-6 3-6 1-0 0-2 2-0 1-1 1-0 1-0 18-22-3 2-3 2-3 0-4 1-4 20-4-1 1-0 9-3-2 1-1 1-1 3-6 3-6 5-1 5-1 1-0 2-2 2-2 2-4 8-4 5-17 10-18-3 7-10 11-10 1-0 1-0 5-0 2-4 2-4 0-1 0-1 1-0 5-0 5-0 6-1 6-1 1-0 7-19 1-0 0-5 0-5 1-0 5-12-1
Opponent Mississippi Missouri Monmouth (Ill.) Nebraska North Central North Park Northeastern Illinois Northwestern (Ill.) Northwestern (Minn.) Notre Dame Oberlin Ohio State Ohio Wesleyan Oklahoma Olivet Pacific Pacific (Ore.) Pennsylvania Pomona-Pitzer Princeton Principia Purdue Quincy Rhodes Ripon Rochester Rose-Hulman Rush Medical St. Ambrose St. Benedict St. Francis (Pa.) St. Norbert Sewanee South Carolina Stanford Texas Trinity (Texas) Vanderbilt Virginia Wabash Washington-St. Louis Washington, Univ. of Western Michigan Western Reserve Wheaton (Ill.) Wisconsin Wittenberg Wyoming Yale
Early Era 0-0-1 1-1 8-0 1-1
26-8-3 4-0 3-1 2-10-2 0-1 0-1 1-6-1 2-2-1 27-14-1 2-0 4-0
0-1 1-1 1-0 1-2 0-1 3-0 1-0 1-0 1-0 1-0 1-0 16-19-5 1-0 0-1-1
Modern Era Overall 0-0-1 1-1 1-3 9-3 1-1 2-2 2-2 3-1 3-1 0-6 0-6 26-8-3 1-1 1-1 4-0 5-4 8-5 2-10-2 2-0 2-0 0-1 0-1 0-1 0-1 0-1 0-1 1-6-1 0-2 0-2 2-2-1 4-1 4-1 27-14-1 0-2 0-2 0-1 0-1 4-6 6-6 6-10 6-10 7-3 7-3 4-0 2-2 2-2 1-0 1-0 0-1 0-1 1-3 1-3 0-1 0-1 0-1 1-1 1-0 1-4 1-4 1-2 0-1 0-4 3-4 10-21 11-21 1-0 1-0 1-0 1-0 16-19-5 0-1 0-1 1-0 0-1-1
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