2003 cornell football media guide

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2003 Cornell Football 1 www.cornellbigred.com Table of Contents General Information TableofContents,QuickFacts ....................................... 1 ApplyingtoCornell .............................................. 2 Cornell,RealizingaBoldDream ..................................... 3 AdministrationandFacultyAdvisors ................................. 4-5 The Ivy League .................................................. 6 SchoellkopfField ................................................ 7 The Friedman Center ............................................. 8 Coaching and Support Staff Head Coach Tim Pendergast .................................... 10-11 AssistantCoaches ............................................. 12-16 MedicalStaff .................................................. 17 SupportStaff .................................................. 18 2003 Outlook and Team OffensiveOutlook/SpecialTeamsOutlook ........................... 20-21 DefensiveOutlook ............................................ 22-23 2003PreseasonRoster ......................................... 24-25 Meet the Veterans ............................................ 26-43 2003 Newcomers ............................................. 44-48 2003 Opponents Opponent Information ......................................... 50-59 Cornellvs.AllOpponents ......................................... 60 2002 in Review/Ivy League 2002Statistics ............................................... 62-64 2002 Game Summaries ........................................ 65-67 2002IvyStandings,IvyTeamStats,All-IvyTeams ...................... 68-69 Ivy League Awards, Champions ..................................... 70 History & Records ACenturyofTradition ......................................... 72-73 IndividualRecords ............................................ 74-76 Team Records ............................................... 77-78 Single-GameBests ............................................ 79-80 AnnualLeaders .............................................. 81-82 100-Yard Game Rushing Leaders .................................... 83 Single-SeasonBests ........................................... 84-85 CareerLeaders ................................................ 86 Cornell’sLongestPlays ........................................... 87 Opponent Single-Game Records .................................... 88 The Last Time It Happened ........................................ 89 All-TimeScores .............................................. 90-95 NationalFootballHallofFame ..................................... 95 CornellAthleticHallofFame ...................................... 96 First-TeamAll-America,All-Ivy ..................................... 97 CornellFootballAwards ....................................... 98-102 CornelliansinProFootball ....................................... 103 CornellFootballLegends ..................................... 104-105 All-TimeLetterWinners ...................................... 106-112 Media Information ProminentCornellAlumni .................................... 114-115 Covering the Big Red ........................................ 116-117 DirectionstoCornell ........................................... 117 Ivy Composite Schedule ......................................... 118 FutureCornellSchedules ........................................ 118 Directory .................................................... 118 Media Outlets ................................................ 119 Commitment to Excellence ....................................... 120 Cornell Quick Facts Location .............. Ithaca,N.Y. 14853 Founded ........................ 1865 Enrollment ...................... 13,700 President ............... JeffreyS.Lehman Colors ........... Carnelian Red and White Affiliation ................... NCAA I-AA Conference .................. IvyLeague Field ............ SchoellkopfField(25,597) AthleticAdministration AthleticDirector ......... J.AndrewNoelJr. Associate AD/SWA ........... AnitaBrenner AssociateAD/Programs ...... StephenP.Erber AssociateAD/Business&Finance . FrankAraneo Dir.AthleticAlumniAffairs&Dev. JohnWebster Compliance Coordinator ...... Patty Weldon Athletic Communications Staff Director .................. LauraStange OfficePhone ............... 607-255-5627 FAX ...................... 607-255-9791 Assistant ................ JeremyHartigan OfficePhone ............... 607-255-9788 Assistant ................... BrianKelley OfficePhone ............... 607-255-4688 Intern .................... Carmela Zink OfficePhone ............... 607-255-3753 Hotline ................... 607-255-2385 PressBoxPhone ............. 607-255-3535 World Wide Web ... www.CornellBigRed.com Credits: The 2003 Cornell football media guide isapublicationoftheCornellAthletic CommunicationsOffice. Editorialcontent, layout and design by Laura Stange with assistancefromJeremyHartigan. Editorial contributionsbyMarleneCrockford,ElliHarkness andBrianKelley. On the Covers: (front) Senior co-captains Mick Razzano and Kevin Rooney; (back) Cornell’s returningAll-Ivyselections. Photography: Tim McKinney, Steve Pike, C.W. PackSports,PatrickShanahan,JonReis,Darl Zehr,CornellUniversityPhotography,Divisionof RareandManuscriptCollections-Kroch Library, CornellUniversity.

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Page 1: 2003 Cornell Football Media Guide

2003 Cornell Football 1www.cornellbigred.com

Table of ContentsGeneral Information

Table of Contents, Quick Facts....................................... 1Applying to Cornell .............................................. 2Cornell, Realizing a Bold Dream ..................................... 3Administration and Faculty Advisors................................. 4-5The Ivy League.................................................. 6Schoellkopf Field ................................................ 7The Friedman Center ............................................. 8

Coaching and Support StaffHead Coach Tim Pendergast ....................................10-11Assistant Coaches .............................................12-16Medical Staff .................................................. 17Support Staff .................................................. 18

2003 Outlook and TeamOffensive Outlook/Special Teams Outlook ...........................20-21Defensive Outlook ............................................22-232003 Preseason Roster .........................................24-25Meet the Veterans ............................................26-432003 Newcomers .............................................44-48

2003 OpponentsOpponent Information .........................................50-59Cornell vs. All Opponents ......................................... 60

2002 in Review/Ivy League2002 Statistics ...............................................62-642002 Game Summaries ........................................65-672002 Ivy Standings, Ivy Team Stats, All-Ivy Teams ......................68-69Ivy League Awards, Champions ..................................... 70

History & RecordsA Century of Tradition .........................................72-73Individual Records ............................................74-76Team Records ...............................................77-78Single-Game Bests ............................................79-80Annual Leaders ..............................................81-82100-Yard Game Rushing Leaders .................................... 83Single-Season Bests ...........................................84-85Career Leaders ................................................ 86Cornell’s Longest Plays ........................................... 87Opponent Single-Game Records .................................... 88The Last Time It Happened ........................................ 89All-Time Scores ..............................................90-95National Football Hall of Fame ..................................... 95Cornell Athletic Hall of Fame ...................................... 96First-Team All-America, All-Ivy ..................................... 97Cornell Football Awards ....................................... 98-102Cornellians in Pro Football ....................................... 103Cornell Football Legends ..................................... 104-105All-Time Letter Winners ...................................... 106-112

Media InformationProminent Cornell Alumni .................................... 114-115Covering the Big Red ........................................ 116-117Directions to Cornell ........................................... 117Ivy Composite Schedule ......................................... 118Future Cornell Schedules ........................................ 118Directory .................................................... 118Media Outlets ................................................ 119Commitment to Excellence ....................................... 120

Cornell Quick FactsLocation .............. Ithaca, N.Y. 14853Founded ........................ 1865Enrollment...................... 13,700President............... Jeffrey S. LehmanColors ........... Carnelian Red and WhiteAffiliation ...................NCAA I-AAConference .................. Ivy LeagueField ............ Schoellkopf Field (25,597)

Athletic AdministrationAthletic Director ......... J. Andrew Noel Jr.Associate AD/SWA ........... Anita BrennerAssociate AD/Programs......Stephen P. ErberAssociate AD/Business & Finance . Frank AraneoDir. Athletic Alumni Affairs & Dev. John WebsterCompliance Coordinator ...... Patty Weldon

Athletic Communications StaffDirector .................. Laura StangeOffice Phone ............... 607-255-5627FAX...................... 607-255-9791Assistant ................ Jeremy HartiganOffice Phone ............... 607-255-9788Assistant ................... Brian KelleyOffice Phone ............... 607-255-4688Intern .................... Carmela ZinkOffice Phone ............... 607-255-3753

Hotline ................... 607-255-2385Press Box Phone ............. 607-255-3535World Wide Web ... www.CornellBigRed.com

Credits: The 2003 Cornell football media guideis a publication of the Cornell AthleticCommunications Office. Editorial content,layout and design by Laura Stange withassistance from Jeremy Hartigan. Editorialcontributions by Marlene Crockford, Elli Harknessand Brian Kelley.On the Covers: (front) Senior co-captains MickRazzano and Kevin Rooney; (back) Cornell’sreturning All-Ivy selections.Photography: Tim McKinney, Steve Pike, C.W.Pack Sports, Patrick Shanahan, Jon Reis, DarlZehr, Cornell University Photography, Division ofRare and Manuscript Collections-Kroch Library,Cornell University.

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www.cornellbigred.com2 2003 Cornell Football

Application ProceduresCornell has a two-part application. Both part one and part two

(school forms, essay questions and recommendation forms) of thefreshman application are included in our viewbook, The Big Red Book.The entire transfer application (also two parts) can be found in ourTransfer Guide.

If you would like to request a viewbook or the Transfer Guide, pleasecontact the admissions office via mail, phone or internet. You’ll also needto arrange to have official records of all your secondary school and/orcollege-level work and standardized-test scores sent directly to us.(Note that we don’t accept the Common Application.)

Once your file is complete, the Undergraduate Admissions Officewill pass it along to the undergraduate college you’ve applied to atCornell, where the selection committee will review it. You may applyto only one of the seven undergraduate colleges at Cornell.When Does The Fat Envelope Arrive?

If you’re applying as a freshman for the fall semester, you’ll haveCornell’s decision by early April. Agriculture and Life Sciences, HotelAdministration and Industrial and Labor Relations roll out their deci-sions as they’re made, from February through early April. Architecture,Art, and Planning; Arts and Sciences; Engineering; and Human Ecologylet you know in early April. No matter when you receive notificationyou’ll have until May 1, or 15 days after you’ve received the offer,whichever is later, to respond.

If you’re applying as a transfer student for the fall semester, you’llreceive Cornell’s decision by mid-June. Spring transfers hear inDecember. You’ll have until June 1 (spring transfers, until January 1),or two weeks after you’ve received the offer, whichever is later torespond.

Admission to Cornell is highly selective. Typically, 20,000 students apply for the 3,000 places in the freshman class. Cornell selects womenand men from all parts of the country and around the world, and from a wide range of social, economic, racial, and educational

backgrounds.Our students are graduates of public, parochial, college preparatory, and alternative schools (including home schools). We strongly

support equality of opportunity. No one is denied admission because of race, religion, national or ethnic origin, gender, sexual orientation,age, or disability.

Outstanding grades, a strong academic program, and a thoughtfully-written personal application are very important to us in theselection process. So are written recommendations, standardized-test scores, and your special talents, strength of character, and intellectualpotential. Quite simply, we’re interested in the people who will get the most out of a Cornell education.

Applying to Cornell

A Word About Early DecisionIf Cornell is your first choice and you’re applying for freshman

admission, consider applying under the early-decision plan. Yourapplication will be read in the fall, and you’ll be notified by mid-December of Cornell’s decision. Between 25-30 percent of recentfreshman classes came to Cornell through EDP. Because enthusiasmfor Cornell is considered a plus, early-decision applicants stand a betterchance of gaining admission—a fact reflected in the statistics.

Remember that an early-decision application is a commitment.You can apply under early decision to only one college or university. Ifyou’re accepted at Cornell, you must withdraw any applications sentto other schools and send your acceptance deposit by January 10th.

Most applicants who are notified in mid-December that theywere not accepted under early decision will be reviewed againduring the regular decision process. Some applicants will receive finalnotification in December that they are being denied admission toCornell and will not be referred to the regular decision pool.

Questions?Contact the Undergraduate Admissions Office:

web: admissions.cornell.eduphone: 607 255-5241

mail: Undergraduate Admissions OfficeCornell University

410 Thurston AvenueIthaca, N.Y. 14850-2488

+The FAFSA may be filed as late as May 1 for Cornell. Other institutions, however, may require an earlier filing date.*Spring applicants file the 2003-04 PROFILE and FAFSA; all other applicants file the 2004-05 PROFILE and FAFSA.

What’s Due When?Fall Freshman Applicants Early-Decision Applicants

Item (regular decision) (Freshmen Only) Spring ApplicantsPart 1 of the application well before January 1 well before November 10 well before November 10Financial Aid Application January 1 October 12 November 1Copy of parents’ 2000 federal January 1 October 12 November 1income tax returns to Cornell’sfinancial-aid officeCSS PROFILE January 18 October 12 November 1*Part 2 of the application January 1 November 10 November 10CSS PROFILE application February 11 November 10 November 10*to the processorFAFSA to the processor February 11-May 1+ April 15 November 16*

(or when tax returns are completed)Admissions decisions to applicants Agriculture and Life Sciences, Mid-December Rolling in December

Hotel, ILR: rolling fromFebruary 15 through early April;other four colleges: early April

Financial-aid notifications Early April Mid-December Mid-Decemberto accepted applicantsYour response to Cornell May 1 or two weeks after you January 4 January 4 or two weeks

after you receive Cornell’s after you receive Cornell’soffer, whichever is later offer, whichever is later

○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○

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General Information

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2003 Cornell Football 3www.cornellbigred.com

In the mid 1800s, two New York state senators, Ezra Cornell andAndrew Dickson White, shared the bold dream of founding a“truly great university.” Cornell, a plain-spoken inventor,

wanted “an institution where any person can find instruction in anystudy,” including the mechanical arts and agriculture. White, ascholarly graduate of Oxford and Yale, yearned to establish auniversity where “truth shall be taught for truth’s sake” in the artsand sciences. Together they created a nonsectarian university thatwas the first in the eastern United States to admit women and thatpioneered the concept of elective courses. Their egalitarian visionand innovative ideas, which set Cornell apart at its opening in 1868,continue to guide the university today.

Cornell includes 13 colleges and schools. On the Ithaca campusare the seven undergraduate units—the College of Agriculture andLife Sciences; the College of Architecture, Art, and Planning; theCollege of Arts and Sciences; the College of Engineering; the Schoolof Hotel Administration; the College of Human Ecology; and theSchool of Industrial and Labor Relations—as well as four graduateand professional units: the Graduate School, the Law School, theJohnson Graduate School of Management, and the College ofVeterinary Medicine. (The Weill Medical College and the WeillGraduate School of Medical Sciences are in New York City.) An IvyLeague university that is also the land-grant institution of New YorkState, Cornell is a unique combination of public and privatedivisions committed to teaching, research, and public service.

Cornell’s 13,700 undergraduates and 6,000 graduate andprofessional students come from all 50 states and more than 100countries. Interdisciplinary study and research are Cornell hallmarks,as is attention to undergraduate education. The university’s 2,200faculty members are active teachers as well as researchers—Nobellaureates often conduct introductory courses—and the lines oftraditional disciplines are easily crossed. Engineering studentsdabble in photography; theatre arts students explore the world ofcomputers; physics majors learn landscape architecture.

National Science Foundation studies on programs in researchand development at U.S. universities consistently rank Cornellamong the top 10 or 11 in total research and developmentexpenditures, and in federally financed expenditures. Cornell rankssecond among U.S. universities in funds allocated by the NationalScience Foundation for programs in academic science and engineer-ing.

Cornell has five national research centers: the Center for HighEnergy Synchrotron Studies, the Floyd R. Newman Laboratory ofNuclear Studies, the National Astronomy and Ionosphere Center

(which operates the world’s largest radio-radar telescope, inArecibo, Puerto Rico), the Cornell Nanofabrication Facility, and theNational Science and Technology Center for Computer Graphicsand Scientific Visualization. The university also has four nationalresource centers: the Latin American Studies Program, the East AsiaProgram, the South Asia Program, and the Southeast Asia Program.

Cornell University Library’s 17 Ithaca-campus units provide anarray of reference, information, and instructional services. At thesoutheast edge of the Arts Quad, Olin and Kroch Libraries house thelargest concentration of resources in the humanities, social sciences,and area studies, including extensive Asia collections, and rarebooks, manuscripts, and archival materials. Mann Library, on the AgQuad, has materials in agriculture, biology, biotechnology, andrelated fields. Other libraries specialize in African and AfricanAmerican studies, engineering, entomology, the fine arts, hotelmanagement, industrial and labor relations, law, management,mathematics, music, the physical sciences, and veterinary medicine.

Famed for its woodlands, gorges, and waterfalls, the 745-acremain campus is on a hilltop overlooking Ithaca, a lively city of about30,000 situated at the southern end of 44-mile-long Cayuga Lake, inthe Finger Lakes region of New York state. Campus attractions ofspecial interest include the Johnson Museum of Art, CornellPlantations, and the Cornell Lab of Ornithology and SapsuckerWoods wildlife sanctuary. The heart of New York state’s wine-growing region is less than an hour away, as are the Corning GlassCenter and Museum and the Watkins Glen auto circuit. New YorkCity is about a four-hour drive from Ithaca.

Cornell University/Realizing a Bold Dream

• Founded In 1865 by Ezra Cornell and AndrewDickson White.

• Opened October 7, 1868. Morrill Hall was the firstbuilding constructed on the main Ithaca campus,which today includes 260 major buildings on 745acres.

• Affiliations Cornell is a private endowed universityand the federal land-grant institution of New Yorkstate. It is a member of the Ivy League and a partnerof the State University of New York.

• Colleges and Schools Thirteen — seven undergradu-ate units and four graduate and professional units inIthaca, and two medical graduate and professionalunits in New York City.

• Undergraduate Colleges and SchoolsCollege of Agriculture and Life SciencesCollege of Architecture, Art, and PlanningCollege of Arts and SciencesCollege of EngineeringSchool of Hotel AdministrationCollege of Human EcologySchool of Industrial and Labor Relations

• Graduate/Professional Colleges and SchoolsGraduate SchoolLaw SchoolJohnson Graduate School of ManagementWeill Medical College (New York City)Weill Graduate School of Medical Sciences (New York City)College of Veterinary Medicine

Cornell Facts

General Information

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After serving three years as an associate director of athletics at Cornell University, Andy Noel was namedthe university’s director of athletics and physical education in 1999.

Noel was the Big Red’s head wrestling coach from 1974 to 1988 and then served two years as an assistantdirector in the department’s public affairs office, implementing the athletics annual giving program.

A native of Lancaster, Pa., he graduated from Franklin and Marshall College in 1972 with a bachelor ofarts degree in history and received his master of arts degree in counseling and guidance from ColgateUniversity in 1973.

At Cornell, his wrestling teams won four Ivy League championships and placed second four times. UnderNoel’s direction, the wrestling team established a strong network of support from alumni and friends. In1990, he was recognized at the Eastern Intercollegiate Wrestling Association Championships for hisdistinguished coaching career at Cornell, and in 1992 he was inducted into the New York State WrestlingCoaches Association Hall of Fame. He is also a member of the Franklin and Marshall Sports Hall of Fame.

In addition to his coaching and administrative career, Noel served on the wrestling committee of the National Collegiate AthleticAssociation from 1997-2001. He is currently a member of the NCAA Championships Cabinet. Noel is a past chairman of the Ivy Leagueathletic directors’ committee on administration.

J. Andrew Noel Jr.Director of Athletics and Physical Education

Administration and Advisors

Jeffrey S. Lehman, Cornell’s 11th president, is a legal scholar and Cornell alumnus who also holds thetitle of professor in the Cornell Law School. He took office on July 1, 2003, after serving for nine years

as dean of the University of Michigan Law School.Lehman has strong loyalties to both Cornell and Michigan and a keen interest in intercollegiate athletics.

At Michigan, he sometimes would be one of the few spectators wearing a Cornell sweatshirt at Wolverinefootball games. Fortunately, there was no conflict of commitment since Cornell has not played Michiganin football since 1952. At Cornell, Lehman will have even more use for his Cornell sweatshirt since his sonJacob Lehman, a Cornell sophomore, coxes for the Big Red’s lightweight crew.

“I believe that intercollegiate athletics offers two important benefits to a university,” Lehman said. “Itprovides an opportunity for student-athletes to compete at a high level in their chosen sports, and it bringsthe community together, across backgrounds and professional interests, as few other activities can.”

During his deanship at Michigan, Lehman emerged as an articulate spokesman on complex legal issues of national significance,including the use of affirmative action in university admissions. The U.S. Supreme Court ruled in favor of the University of Michigan LawSchool’s approach to affirmative action in a landmark case in 2003. Lehman’s own research has addressed other issues at the intersectionof law and public policy, including higher education finance, corporate taxation and welfare reform. At Michigan, he also won acclaimas an academic innovator who introduced significant changes at the Law School to foster public service and internationalism and toimprove the teaching of legal writing.

Lehman earned a bachelor of arts degree in mathematics from Cornell in 1977, his master’s degree from the University of MichiganInstitute of Public Policy Studies in 1981 and his juris doctorate magna cum laude from the University Michigan Law School the sameyear. While in law school, he served as editor-in-chief of the Michigan Law Review and was elected to the Order of the Coif.

After earning his degrees, he served as law clerk to Chief Judge Frank M. Coffin of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the First Circuit andthen as law clerk to Associate Justice John Paul Stevens of the Supreme Court of the United States. He was an associate in the Washington,D.C., law firm of Caplin and Drysdale before joining the Michigan law faculty in 1987. In 1995, The National Law Journal named him oneof 40 “Rising Stars in the Law.”

Jeffrey S. LehmanPresident of the University

Susan H. Murphy has served Cornell University as vice president for student and academic services sinceJuly 1994. Under her direction are academic support, campus life, dean of students, Greek life, career

services, public service, religious affairs, international students and scholars, athletics and physicaleducation and health services.

A 1973 graduate of Cornell’s College of Arts and Sciences, Murphy majored in history. She subsequentlycompleted master’s degrees at Stanford University and Montclair State College. In 1994, she earned a Ph.D.in educational administration from Cornell.

Murphy joined the Cornell staff in 1978 following work as a guidance counselor and head of theguidance department at Chatham (N.J.) Borough High School. For 16 years, she worked in admissions andfinancial aid, including nine years as dean of admissions and financial aid.

In addition to her responsibilities at Cornell, Murphy serves on the policy committee of the Council ofIvy Group Presidents. Previously, she has held state-wide and national positions in the College Board and the National Association of CollegeAdmission Counselors.

Susan H. MurphyVice President, Student and Academic Services

General Information

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2003 Cornell Football 5www.cornellbigred.com

Anita BrennerAssoc. Director of Athletics/SWA

Anita Brenner was named associate athletic director/seniorwoman administrator in January 1999. Prior to her current

appointment, she had served the athletic department as an associatedirector of admissions and athletics liaison since 1995.

Brenner is the primary administrator for ice hockey, softball, rowing,track and field, cross country, volleyball, soccer, swimming and diving,and gymnastics. In addition, she oversees student-athlete services,athletic communications, athletic admissions and Spirit! magazine.

A 1987 graduate of Cornell, Brenner earned her bachelor’s degreein hotel administration. While at Cornell, she was a member of the varsity crew for four years,serving as commodore her senior season. She received the Bill Doherty Memorial Award at theconclusion of her collegiate career.

In 1993, she earned a master’s degree in corporate communications from Ithaca College’sRoy H. Park School of Communication. She was the women’s rowing coach at Ithaca Collegefrom 1989-94.

Brenner and her husband, John, reside in Lansing with their children, Elsa and Teddy.

Stephen P. ErberAssoc. Director of Athletics

Steve Erber joined the Cornell staff as an associate director ofathletics in April 2003. Prior to his appointment, he was the director

of athletics at Muhlenberg College for seven years.During his tenure at Muhlenberg, Erber was responsible for consid-

erable growth and success in the school’s 22-sport varsity intercolle-giate athletics program. Under his supervision, the college constructeda state-of-the-art AstroTurf facility and added two varsity programs.Muhlenberg also won conference titles in nine different sports and sentteams or individuals to the NCAAs in 12 sports.

On the national level, Erber served on the NCAA Amateurism Task Force since 1999 and theNCAA Wrestling Committee since 2001. In 2002, he was the only Division III athletic directorinvited to testify before the Secretary of Education’s Commission on Opportunity in Athletics.

Prior to joining the Muhlenberg staff, Erber served as an athletics administrator at BinghamtonUniversity for 14 years. He founded Binghamton’s wrestling program and coached it for 22seasons, reaching national prominence with 34 All-Americans, four NCAA champions and sixtop-10 NCAA team finishes. He was inducted into the NCAA Division III Wrestling Hall of Famein 1992, the National Wrestling Hall of Fame in 1998 and the Binghamton Hall of Fame in 1999.

At Cornell, Erber is the administrator for football, field hockey, polo, equestrian, basketball,squash, fencing, wrestling, lacrosse, baseball, golf and tennis. He also oversees athletic training,compliance, facilities management, and strength and conditioning.

Erber received his bachelor of science degree in physical education from Penn State Universityand has a master of arts degree from the University of Maryland College Park.

Patty WeldonCompliance Coordinator

Patty Weldon begins her fourth year as the compliance coordina-tor at Cornell. She leads Cornell’s efforts in the areas of student-

athlete eligibility and compliance with NCAA rules.Weldon served as a graduate assistant in the Office of Compliance

at the University of Northern Iowa from 1998-2000. She earned hermaster of arts degree in youth and human services administration inthe spring of 2000. While assisting the director of compliance duringher two years, she served on the administration of the Student Assis-tance Fund, coordinated athlete orientation and maintained 20-hourreports, recruiting and phone logs.

Prior to Weldon’s work at Northern Iowa, she spent 16 years coaching track and field and crosscountry. She began her coaching career in 1983 as the assistant coach for both teams at EdinboroUniversity. In 1985, she became the head coach of the men’s and women’s cross country teamsat Kutztown University. She also served as the assistant coach for the track teams throughout hertenure, which lasted until 1998. Along with coaching, Weldon served on numerous campuscommittees and directed a student-athlete academic success program.

Weldon earned her bachelor of arts degree in English at Slippery Rock State College (Pa.).During her three years as an assistant coach at Edinboro, she gained an additional bachelor ofscience degree in health and physical education.

Dr. Rosemary J. AveryCollege of Human EcologyWeiss Presidential Fellow

ProfessorDept. of Policy Analysis and Mgt.

Dr. Robert BabcockCollege of Human Ecology

Professor Emeritus

Dr. Matthew MillerCollege of EngineeringAssociate Professor

Eve Woodman TomineyCenter for Learning and Teaching

Lecturer

FootballFaculty Advisors

General Information

Page 6: 2003 Cornell Football Media Guide

www.cornellbigred.com6 2003 Cornell Football

The designation “Ivy League” firstappeared at the typewriter ofCaswell Adams of the New York

Tribune in 1937. The tag, premature ofany formal agreement, was immediatelyadopted by the press as a foreshadowingof an eastern football league which, atthe time, was big news to everyoneexcept the athletic directors involved.For years, the Ivy members had

already been allied in leagues in basket-ball, ice hockey, baseball and swimming.Further common competition was foundin the Heptagonal Games Association,which included Army and Navy, in thesports of baseball, track and field, andswimming. Through these otherscheduling arrangements, the Ivyathletic directors were used to dealingwith each other in matters of administra-tion or the exchange of calculatedconfidences.As a result of these dealings, and

through extensive presidential meetingsand discussions, the first “Ivy GroupAgreement” — addressing only football— was signed in 1945. While the 1945statement did not address any schedul-ing issues, it did affirm the observance atthe eight institutions of commonpractices in academic standards,eligibility requirements and the adminis-tration of financial aid for athletes. Thesetenets are what still bind the Iviestogether today and all continue to bebased on the desire to secure competi-tion with others having like philosophies.The athletic directors, at the direction ofthe presidents, were then more formallyorganized as a committee for coopera-tive endeavor in the details of athleticadministration and a dean from eachschool was appointed as a committee toexchange information on eligibility andto act for the presidents in cooperationwith the athletic directors.In February 1954, what is more

commonly accepted as the foundingdate for the Ivy League, the Ivy GroupAgreement was reissued to extend itsphilosophical jurisdiction to all sportsand to foster, insofar as possible, intra-group competition. In layman’s terms,that meant a complete round robinschedule in football, beginning with the1956 season. Such an agreement —assuring seven spots on an eight- to 10-game schedule to Ivy opponents —required numerous concessions fromeach institution and marked a highpoint in intercollegiate cooperation.

The basic intent of the original Ivyagreement was to improve and fosterintercollegiate athletics while keepingthe emphasis on such competition inharmony with the educational purposeof the institutions. While football iswhere it started, the Ivy League today isnationally recognized for its level ofsuccess — absent of athletic scholar-ships — while rigorously maintaining itsself-imposed high academic standards.The Ivy League has demonstrated a rarewillingness and ability, given the currentnational pressures on intercollegiatesuccess, to abide by these rules and stillcompete successfully in Division Iathletics.Cheering on Brown's soccer teams; the

precision and artistry of Columbia'snational powerhouse fencers; the speed

and stamina of Cornell's cross countryrunners; the 16 league football titles wonby Dartmouth; an early morningworkout on the Charles River forHarvard's crews; basketball games atPennsylvania's storied Palestra;Princeton's lacrosse teams; and thebeauty of and challenge posed by theYale golf club. These are just some of theelements that have helped the Iviesfoster a wonderful, rare spirit of competi-tion, excellence and camaraderie forathletes, spectators and alumni.Located on the campus of Princeton

University, the Ivy League (still knownofficially as the Council of Ivy GroupPresidents) continues to grow under theleadership and direction of ExecutiveDirector Jeffrey H. Orleans. Since takingthe post in 1984, Orleans has become arespected voice on the national scene ofintercollegiate athletics.

(Editor's Note: Portions of this textappeared in the first Ivy League FootballGuide in 1954 and were written byWilliam H. McCarter, Director of Athleticsat Dartmouth College from 1937-54.)

The Council of Ivy Group Presidents

Founded—1956; 47th seasonStudent Population—51,525Members—Brown, Columbia,Cornell, Dartmouth, Harvard,Pennsylvania, Princeton, Yale

Ivy-Sponsored Championships—33

IVY FAST FACTS

General Information

Executive Director:Jeffrey H. Orleans

Senior Associate Director:Carolyn S. Campbell-McGovern

Associate Director:Charles Yrigoyen III

Assistant Director:Brett Hoover

Compliance Assistant:Nathan Fry

Public Information Assistant:Eddy Lentz

Public Information Assistant:LaKesha Whitaker

Office Coordinator:Jane M. Antis

Administrative Assistant:Robin Patsey

228 Alexander St.Princeton, NJ 08544Phone: 609-258-6426Fax: 609-258-1690

Web Site: http://www.ivyleaguesports.com

Council of Ivy Group Presidents(Ivy League)

Jeffrey Orleans Carolyn Campbell-McGovern

Chuck Yrigoyen Brett Hoover

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Schoellkopf FieldSchoellkopf Field has undergone

many great changes, resulting intoday’s magnificent structure.

During the 19th century, many of Cornell’sathletic teams trained on Percy Field whereIthaca High School now stands. Duringthe early 1900s, though, Cornell’s popula-tion grew quickly and Percy Field was nolonger suitable for the growing number ofCornell athletes.

Gradually, the idea of having adequateathletic facilities on campus developed.The Alumni Field Committee was createdto consider this possibility and theypersuaded the university set aside land fora field. The committee “strove, pled, andprayed” for donations to the proposedathletic facilities.

Because of a generous donation from Willard Straight ’01,the construction of a field house was made possible. Thecontribution came in memory of his friend, Henry (Heinie)Schoellkopf ’02, an outstanding football player and a “belovedgentle giant.” It is said that he once dove 70 feet into a gorgepool to rescue a drowning dog.

The Schoellkopf family themselves then responded toStraight’s donation and helped finance the project. Finally,construction of Schoellkopf Field, which would be on thehighest point on campus, could take place.Schoellkopf Field was ready to open the fall of 1915.The University planned a huge parade from the ArtsQuad to the field for the dedication exercises andopening football game. Everyone in Cornell—undergraduates, faculty and staff, in addition toalumni and invited guests—was expected toparticipate.

On Saturday, October 9, 1915, all campusactivities were suspended at noon. An estimated crowd of6,000 quickly gathered in front of Goldwin Smith Hall asinstructed by the University. President Jacob Gould Schurmanslowly led the procession to the awaiting Schoellkopf Field. Theimpressive parade was the largest turnout of its kind in theIthaca area at the time.

Cornell football’s best season was its first on Schoellkopf.That year, the team won all of its nine games and went on to

become national champion.Exactly five years after the dedication, the General Electric

Company completed work on a flood searchlight system forthe field, which was designed to illuminate the field withoutcausing glare visible to the players. The project was of majorimportance to athletic teams, especially in the fall and wintermonths, when shortened hours of daylight cut down after-classpractice time.

Before 1915, the largest crowd to assemble for an athleticevent in Ithaca was less than 5,000. Thedevelopment of automobiles and improve-ment of roads brought larger and largercrowds to the stadium. Soon, it becameapparent that Schoellkopf’s capacity of9,000 was no longer sufficient.

In 1921, a study and report wascommissioned and in the spring of 1923,University trustees approved the plans to

reconstruct the east side stands. Construction began thatwinter and in September, 1924, the Crescent was completedincreasing capacity to 21,500. In June 1947, permanent steelstands on the west side of Schoellkopf Field were built, boost-ing total stadium capacity to 25,597. The stands, as well as anew press box, were completed in time for Cornell football’sNavy game on October 18, 1947.

Schoellkopf Field was one of the University’s most valuable,but least used areas on campus until the introduction of anartificial turf. In early 1971, it was announced that an anony-mous donor had made a gift for turf on Schoellkopf Field. Theperson who first benefited from the artificial surface wasprobably Cornell’s star tailback Ed Marinaro ’72, who eventuallybroke every school rushing record. The artificial surface wasmore flexible than natural grass and would therefore cause lessof an impact on Marinaro’s body when he went down. Also,there had been a history of improved football rushing perfor-mances on artificial turf. The field has since been resurfacedthree times, most recently in 1999.

Expansion and growth for Schoellkopf Field continued. Thenew press box was built in 1986, and the stands have beenrefurbished. Schoellkopf Field has become an irreplaceable partof Cornell’s athletic tradition and campus.

Parts of this article originally ran in The Cornell Daily Sun (Nov. 21, 1985)

Facilities General Information

Schoellkopf Field has beenthe Big Red’s home since1915. The playing surfacewas entirely refurbished withAstroTurf in 1999.

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Champions are crowned during the season, butchampionships are earned long before competitionbegins. Cornell’s 1,100 varsity athletes have exclu-

sive access to one of the newest and best training facilities inthe nation, the 8,000-square-foot Friedman Strength andConditioning Center. Completed in June of 1997, thisimpressive $2 million addition to Bartels Hall reflects theuniversity’s strong commitment to athletic excellence.Coaches and team members credit the center and its tirelessstaff with increasing the sense of teamwork that characterizesBig Red athletics.

Before designing each phase of the football strength andconditioning program in a yearly cycle, the muscular andmetabolic needs for each player position are analyzed. Whileall athletes follow a prescribed training program in the threephases of the year — in-season, off-season and preseason —this work is individualized for each player. From mid-Augustto mid-November all players train twice a week to maintainstrength and power to ensure strong performances at the end of their competitive schedule.

Immediately following the season, all players undergo comprehensive physical testing to evaluate the effectiveness of the in-season program and to determine individual strengths and weaknesses. This information, along with the position coaches’ observa-tions from the season, allow the strength and conditioning coaches to design programs to address these strengths and weaknesseswith the off-season phase of training. After the completion of this extensive evaluation, players rest through the end of the semesterand exams before heading home for the long winter break. From January through thebeginning of spring football in April, all athletes are trained to develop strength, power,muscular hypertrophy and speed. During spring practices there is a second in-season phase ofstrength training. Following the completion of spring football, there is another round oftesting and evaluation. Athletes once again rest through finals and then begin a preseasonphase of training that emphasizes conditioning, endurance and speed.

Injury prevention is also a key consideration with any strength and conditioning work done.By assessing all players frequently, and learning about them when they are freshmen, thenumber and severity of injuries are reduced. Because the strength and conditioning coachesemphasize muscular skill development, there is an important focus on all body movementsand the versatility of each athlete. If an injury does occur, the strength and conditioning staffworks closely with the sports medicine staff to ensure a safe and thorough rehabilitation withan eye toward returning an athlete to full participation as soon as possible.

This strength and conditioning program is an integral part of the way Cornell footballplayers are developed. The football coaches enthusiastically endorse Tom Howley’s and TomDilliplane’s work with players, in part because the strength and conditioning coaches hold thebar high with standards and expectations. Given the comprehensive nature of this programand its intensity, all athletes commit fully to it because they understand the impact thetraining can have on their own performances on the field, especially late in the game.

The Friedman CenterFacilities

General Information

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Coaching and Support StaffsCoaching and Support Staffs

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Tim Pendergast was named Cornell University’s 24th head football coachby Director of Athletics Andy Noel on Thursday, Jan. 18, 2001. The 2003season marks his third year with the Big Red program as head coach,

though he also served as an assistant at Cornell in the 1980s.Pendergast, 45, had served as head football coach at Hamilton College prior to

leading the Big Red. Before his appointment at Hamilton, Pendergast was anassistant coach and recruiting coordinator at the University of Memphis from 1997to 2000. In his first two seasons at Memphis, he served as the secondary coach,then switched to wide receivers in 1999.Pendergast’s Big Red team doubled its win total from his first year with a 4-6

season a year ago with a squad that was playing 17 sophomores on its two-deep.All four of the young team’s wins came in the last two minutes of play or inovertime situations and Cornell put nine players on the All-Ivy team, the most Big Red players to be honored in sixseasons.Pendergast was a member of the James Madison Univer-

sity coaching staff from 1993-96, serving as the defensivecoordinator for two seasons (’95-96), while also working asthe recruiting coordinator. He was the secondary coach atthe University of Maine from 1992-93, after coaching thewide receivers at Northwestern University from 1990 to 1991.

He began his coaching career in 1980 as a graduateassistant at Ithaca College, serving as freshman defensivecoordinator, and he was also an assistant track coach for theBombers.Pendergast was appointed to the Cornell varsity football

staff as the secondary coach in January 1983 after serving ashead freshman coach in 1982 and as a graduate assistant in 1981. He was named the Big Red’s recruiting coordinator

in May 1989. He was defensive coordinator for the Cornellfreshman team in 1981 and also worked with the specialteams and defensive backs. In addition to coaching thefreshman team, he also worked with the varsity program as adefensive coach and assisted in recruiting.A 1980 graduate of State University of New York at

Cortland, Pendergast received a bachelor of science degreein physical education and earned his master’s degree inphysical education from Ithaca College in 1986.

He was a three-year starter as a defensive back at Cortlandand was awarded the T. Fred Holloway Award, presentedannually to the senior physical education major who is the topstudent-athlete.Pendergast participated in football, basketball, track and

lacrosse at Bishop Grimes High School in Syracuse, N.Y.Pendergast and his wife, Leslie, have three children, Greg,

Taylor and Lia.

Tim PendergastThe Roger J. Weiss ’61 Coach of Football

Tim Pendergast . . .At A Glance

•The sixth Roger J. Weiss ’61 Coach of Football atCornell and the Big Red’s 24th head coach

•Born August 15, 1958•1980 graduate of SUNY-Cortland• Played defensive back for the Dragons as anundergraduate

•Pendergast and his wife, Leslie, have three children,Greg, Taylor and Lia.

Coaching StaffCoaching/Support Staffs

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The Mission of Cornell FootballLike any good organization, the Cornell Universityfootball program has and believes that we have amission to accomplish. Our staff must alwayskeep in mind that ultimately we are here to:

•Produce Championship People•People who are willing to give back after graduation

to their families, jobs, communities, etc.,make a positive statement with their lives and

have a positive impact upon society.

•Produce Championship Students•People who are willing to strive for academicexcellence and earn a meaningful degree.

We must teach our players how to find solutions.We must teach our players how to manage their

time. We must teach players how to communicatewisely. All of the tools that they need to be successful

in the classroom are right here. Our job is tohelp them “locate” these tools.

•Produce Championship Athletes•People who are willing to do all that they can inorder to produce wins. It is our job to help ourplayers maximize their ability through proper

instruction: strength training, conditioning, flexibility,agility and nutrition programs. We must be very

good at researching the “cutting edge” that will giveus an advantage. We must help our players to seek

improvement, no matter how large or small,day to day and year to year.

Coach Pendergast on the Cornell Football Philosophy

Each member of our staff must be committed to the same pursuit of excellence within the program. We must all work toachieve the same goals and keep in mind that our jobs are to build a program, not just a team. A program is built over yearsof belief in the same philosophy. A team occurs on an annual basis. Great teams produce great programs. Therefore, it is

our job to develop great teams to produce a great program — a program that all (players, support staff,administration, faculty, parents, alumni, community, etc.) can be proud to call “theirs.” We seek theinvolvement of all parties; we need their support and they need ours.

Our commitment to Cornell University and to our players is to maximize the potential of each indi-vidual in all that he will undertake (academically, socially and athletically). We must seek to push our

athletes toward a championship lifestyle — one that means he will give maximum effort in all thathe undertakes in the pursuit of any goal. We must train our athletes to be the best they canbecome, which is based upon effort. Our honesty and truthfulness with, not only our players,but everyone involved in our lives, is critical for the development of our program. We must,therefore, strive to be champions ourselves. If we cannot live championship lifestyles, wecannot expect our players to do so.

We must create an atmosphere within our program that leads toward the root of ourphilosophy. Everything that we do, every decision made, every day of our lives will begeared toward the development of our program based upon an environment that stressesa family atmosphere, championship performance and fun.

FAMILY ATMOSPHEREThe model of our program is not new. It is a model based upon the

family umbrella whereby each member of the family is special. Withinthe framework of the family, each member must give and receive thesame. The family model is comprised of two elements, which must bebelieved in for us to have success:

Respect — Starts within and moves outward; work together forcommon goals; treat each other fairly; no divisions.

Accountability — Doing things right and doing the right things;positive choices; correct priorities.

If we have respect for others and ourselves and are accountable toothers, and ourselves, we will create a “family bond,” which isextremely difficult to break. The way we treat each other will be“seen” by our players. Our coaching staff will strive to be a family.We must always keep in mind that we are here for our players — theyare our family members and should, thus, be treated as such.

CHAMPIONSHIP PERFORMANCEBeing a champion has nothing to do with the number of wins that

our program produces. On the contrary, championship performanceis measured by effort. In most instances, the more you put forth, themore you will gain back. It is our job, as coaches, to simplify work todo all that we can, to the best of our ability. We must work efficientlyand wisely, not necessarily long. We must work together to maximizeour potential and that of our players. Doing all we can do toward thegoal at hand is all that will ever be asked of you. It is our job to seekchampionship performance from our players.

FUNFun is a direct by-product of winning. Living within a family

atmosphere and performing in a championship manner will producefun. Practices and meetings are generally not associated with havingfun. Therefore, we as coaches need to be “creative” and make thisexperience for our players as fun as it can be. Families who worktogether for a common cause can and will have fun along the way.

Coaching/Support Staffs

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Jim Pletcher returns to the Big Red staff for his third season as the team’s defensive coordinatorand linebackers coach.Before coming to Cornell in 2001, Pletcher spent one season as the assistant head and outsidelinebackers coach at the University of Wyoming, where he coached a first-team All-Mountain

West selection. Along with his duties on the field, he also served as the team’s primary recruiter inCanada, the Mid-Atlantic region and western Nebraska. Previous to his stint with the Cowboys, hespent five seasons at the University of Memphis, including four as the defensive coordinator andlinebackers coach. He coached first-team all-conference selections in 1996 and 1999. In 1995, hewas the defensive coordinator when the Tigers upset No. 6 Tennessee 21-17.

Pletcher began his coaching career after graduating from the University of Delaware in 1973.After spending two years at Woodbridge High School as theassistant coach, he coached the defensive backfield at Springfield College from 1975 until1980. He received his master’s degree in guidance and psychological services from Springfieldduring that time, and he also acted as the team’s academic advisor.

In 1981, Pletcher was named the defensive coordinator and defensive backfield coach atNortheastern University. He coached the nation’s leading interceptor that season, and hisdefense was ranked No. 1 against the pass and No. 12 overall the next season. He moved to theUniversity of Connecticut, where he immediately helped lead the Huskies to the 1983 YankeeConference championship. His defensive unit set the single-season school interception mark(20) in 1983, and his team was ranked No. 10 against the pass in 1984.

After 10 years in the Northeast, Pletcher moved south and served as the defensive coordina-tor at James Madison University from 1985-1995. He also served as the secondary coach from1985-1993, and the linebackers coach from 1993-1995. His responsibilities included gameplans, signal calling, academic programs, alumni relations, spring clinics and recruiting inNorthern Virginia, Maryland and Delaware. His defense was ranked in the Top 20 in seven of the10 seasons he spent at James Madison, and he helped lead the team to the NCAA playoffs threetimes, reaching the quarterfinals in 1991 and 1994.

Pletcher and his wife, Barbara, reside in Ithaca.

Jim PletcherThe John B. and Ann M. Rogers ’45 Defensive Coordinator

John Strollo was named the offensive coordinator and offensive line coach at Cornell in the springof 2001 and returns for his third season in 2003.Prior to joining the Big Red staff, he coached the offensive line at Lafayette College for five

seasons, beginning in 1996. While at Lafayette, Strollo served as the primary recruiter in NewJersey, New England and on the West Coast.

He was the offensive line coach at the University of Massachusetts from 1991 to 1995. UnderStrollo’s direction, the UMass line helped produce two 1,500-yard rushers and five 1,000-yardrushers. The 1995 Massachusetts squad led the NCAA Division I-AA in rushing and was highlighted

by two 1,000-yard rushers, marking just the 11th time inDivision I-AA history an institution had a pair of runningbacks go over 1,000 yards.

Prior to his position at Massachusetts, Strollo coached at Northeastern University, servingas the offensive line coach from 1984 to 1990 and as the offensive coordinator from 1985-90. Under his guidance, the Huskies led the NCAA Division I-AA in rushing in 1986 and set aschool team scoring record during the 1987 and 1988 seasons.

Strollo has also served on the coaching staffs at Washburn University and SpringfieldCollege, coaching the defensive line and linebackers, in addition to the offensive line. Whileat Washburn, Strollo’s influence with the defensive line led to a season in which theIchabods allowed just 91.0 yards rushing per game.

Prior to coaching on the college level, Strollo spent three years as a teacher atMiddletown (N.J.) South High School from 1977-80. While at Middletown South, he alsoserved as a coach for the football, wrestling, and track and field teams.

A 1976 graduate of Boston College with a bachelor of arts degree in education, Strolloplayed on the gridiron for the Eagles. He earned his master of education degree in second-ary administration from Springfield College in 1986.

Strollo and his wife, Janet, have two daughters, Katie and Emily.

John StrolloOffensive Coordinator/Offensive Line

Coaching StaffCoaching/Support Staffs

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Pete DeStefano has been the defensive line coach for the Big Red since 1993, and he addedrecruiting coordinator duties in 2001. He believes that hard work brings success, and oftenpoints to his former charge, Seth Payne ’97, a defensive tackle with the Houston Texans, as

proof. After recruiting Payne, who barely weighed in over 225 pounds, DeStefano watched thetackle blossom into a fourth-round NFL draft pick, showing that the months studying film anddissecting opposing offenses is worth it.

DeStefano started his Cornell career as the head freshman coach and academic counselor for theathletic department in May 1990. Prior to coming to Cornell, he was associate head coach anddefensive coordinator in charge of the linebackers at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute from 1986-90.He was also an assistant track coach at Rensselaer.

Before going to Rensselaer, DeStefano was defensive coordinator and linebacker coach atAllegheny College from May 1984 to June 1986, and he was also head track coach.

Prior to his stint at Allegheny, Pete coached at Edinboro (Pa.) University, serving as head junior varsity coach and defensivecoordinator in 1981, with the varsity offensive line in 1982 and with the defensive ends in 1983. He was also strength coach andhelped with recruiting.

A 1978 graduate of Slippery Rock (Pa.) University with a bachelor of science degree in physical education and health, DeStefanoreceived his master’s in educational administration from Edinboro in 1982. Whilean undergraduate, he played tight end for three years and received honorablemention All-Western Pennsylvania Conference.

From 1978-81, Pete coached at Clinton (N.Y.) Central High School. As the headvarsity coach, he directed the team to the Tri-Valley League championship in 1979and was named Coach of the Year. He also coached track at Clinton.

A 1974 graduate of New Hartford (N.Y.) High School, Pete was all-league infootball and track. His brother, Jim, co-captained the 1979 Cornell football teamand was an AP All-America honorable mention linebacker in 1980.

Pete and his wife, Joanne, reside in Ithaca. Their son, Peter, is a junior at Johnsonand Wales University, studying hotel restaurant management. Joanne received hermaster’s of business administration degree from Cornell’s Johnson School ofManagement in 1997.

Pete DeStefanoDefensive Line/Recruiting Coordinator

Gerard Wilcher is in his third year with the Cornell squad as the defensive secondary coach. Wilcher had previously coached the wide receivers at the University of Massachusetts before joining the Big Red staff in 2001. He was instrumental in a very successful three-year run at

Massachusetts. In 1999, the Minutemen reached the I-AA national quarterfinals and won theAtlantic 10 championship. One year earlier, the Minutemen earned the I-AA national championshipand were named the New England Sports Network Team of the Year. In 1998, Wilcher’s group ofreceivers set school records for receptions (306) and receiving yards (4,050). His 1999 receiversfollowed that up by catching 271 passes for 3,230 yards, with both marks ranking as the second-highest totals in school history. Wilcher helped in the development of UMass’ all-time leadingreceiver who earned All-America honors and was the 1998 Atlantic-10 Rookie of the Year.

In addition, Wilcher completed an internship with the Chicago Bears in the summer of 2000,working with the Bears’ wide receivers. In 2002, he received an intern position with the Arizona Cardinals and worked with thedefensive backs.

Wilcher went to UMass after spending the 1995 and 1996 seasons as a graduate assistant coach at Boston College, where heworked with the defensive secondary and ran the scout teams. Wilcher also assisted the defensive coordinator with daily planning

and the recruitment of student-athletes.Prior to his stint at Boston College, Wilcher was the assistant football coach at

Cheyney University, where he was in charge of the defensive secondary as well asvideography and recruiting. From 1992-94, he served as an assistant football coachat Morehouse College in Atlanta, Ga., where he coached the running backs for nearlytwo years, before taking over the defensive secondary in February of 1994.

Wilcher earned his undergraduate degree in business administration with aconcentration in finance from Morehouse College in 1992 and is currently workingon his master’s of science degree in administrative studies at Boston College. While atMorehouse, Wilcher lettered in both football and baseball, while serving as the captainof the football team’s defensive backs in 1991.

Wilcher and his wife, Ayanna, have a son, Xavier, and two daughters, Jalen andJehlani.

Gerard WilcherDefensive Secondary

Coaching StaffCoaching/Support Staffs

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Brandon Stott was named quarterbacks coach in the spring of 2001 after serving as a widereceivers coach for the Big Red in 1999 and 2000. Stott joined the Cornell staff in August of1997 as an assistant coach and also worked with the junior varsity team.

Stott helped in the development of multiple school record holder Ricky Rahne ’02. Cornell’s all-time leading passer, Rahne closed out his collegiate career with 7,710 passing yards, making him theBig Red’s all-time leading passer and ranked second among all Ivy League quarterbacks.

As the receivers coach, Stott worked with one of the Big Red’s all-time leading receivers, JoeSplendorio ’01. Under Stott’s guidance, three receivers also broke into the Big Red’s all-time lists forreceptions in a season and reception yards in a season. Splendorio’s 204 yards in 1999 rank first all-time for reception yards in a game. Splendorio’s 204 yards in 1999 rank first all-time for receptionyards in a game, while Keith Ferguson ’03 had a 164-yard performance vs. Princeton in 2000, tying

him for fourth all-time at Cornell. Ferguson finished his career as Cornell’s all-time leader inreceptions and yards receiving.

Stott has plenty of experience at the quarterback position. A two-year letter winner at CalPoly in San Luis Obispo, Calif., he threw for over 1,000 yards with 10 touchdowns as a backuphis senior season. Prior to playing at Cal Poly, he was an all-conference quarterback at MountSan Antonio College in Walnut, Calif.

After graduating from Cal Poly with a bachelor of arts degree in history in 1996, Stott servedas the Mustangs’ running backs coach during the 1996 season.

Since graduating from Cal Poly, Stott has played quarterback and coached for the GrazGiants of the American Football Organization in Austria. He returned to quarterback the Grazclub in the summer of 1998, finishing the season as the No. 1 rated signal caller in Europe with66 touchdown passes in 13 games.

Stott and his wife, Jennifer, reside in Ithaca.

Brandon StottQuarterbacks

Scott Walker was named the running backs coach at Cornell in the spring of 2001. In his firsttwo seasons on the East Hill, the Big Red’s running game has turned in some of the bestground performances in recent years.

Prior to joining the Big Red staff, Walker spent five seasons at Georgia Tech, including three asthe director of academics for the football team. In 1997, he was the assistant director of footballoperations. Before joining the staff at Tech, Walker was a coach at the University of Maine for six

years, including the final two as the running gamecoordinator. After spending his first season as thelinebackers coach, Walker coached the runningbacks from 1991 until 1996. He also served as theteam’s recruiting coordinator for four years and theadministrative assistant for six years.

Previous to his time at Maine, Walker spent three years in the Big 10. He startedat Purdue in 1987 as the recruiting coordinator and tight ends/tackles coach. Hemoved to Iowa in 1989 as a graduate assistant and the running backs coach.Before his time at Purdue, Walker was an assistant coach at the University of Texas,where he worked with the tight ends for one year and the defensive ends for twoseasons. He also spent a year as the assistant recruiting coordinator.

Walker graduated from Princeton in 1984 with a bachelor of arts degree ingeology. During his time at Princeton, he worked as the freshman defensive endscoach from 1982-84.

Walker and his wife, Michelle, have a son, Kyle.

Scott WalkerRunning Backs

Coaching StaffCoaching/Support Staffs

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Jeff Brookshire joined the Cornell staff in May 2001 and will continue coaching the Big Red’s widereceivers and kickers.Brookshire coached Cornell’s all-time leading receiver Keith Ferguson ’03 for two seasons andwatched as the standout set Big Red records for career receptions (202) and career yards receiving

(2,569). In 2002, Ferguson also had 852 receiving yards, which is fourth all-time on the single-season charts.

Place-kicker Trevor MacMeekin ’05 also benefited from Brookshire’s guidance, as he earnedsecond-team All-Ivy honors in 2002.

Brookshire came to Ithaca after serving as the director of football operations at the University ofWyoming. At Wyoming, Brookshire coordinated video operations, recruiting weekends and adminis-trative details. He served as the liaison between the football program and all other athletic and campus offices and was also thecoordinator of the Cowboys’ summer camp

Brookshire went to Wyoming from the University of Tennessee at Martin, where he coached the offensive line and tight endsfrom 1997-99. Before his time at Tennessee-Martin, Brookshire served as a graduate assistant at the University of Memphis from1995-96. He was also on the football staff at James Madison University from 1993-94.

Brookshire was a three-year letterman in football at Lenoir-Rhyne College in Hickory, N.C. He received his bachelor’s degree inhistory from Lenoir-Rhyne in 1993.

Jeff BrookshireWide Receivers/Kickers

Mark Lister joined the Cornell staff in May 2002 and coaches the Big Red’s outside lineback-ers. In his first season with the team, two of his standouts, Joel Sussman and Brad Kitlowski,earned All-Ivy League honors. The duo combined for 172 total tackles (including 12 for

loss) to lead the team’s defensive ranks.Lister came to Cornell after serving for three seasons on the staff at the University of Toledo, where

he was the director of football operations and recruiting coordinator along with his coachingresponsibilities. As the director of football operations, his duties included coordinating all aspects ofrecruiting, travel, facility scheduling, video operations and camps. He also supervised the graduateassistants, coordinated walk-on tryouts and served as administrative liaison.

Lister spent the 1999 and 2000 seasons as a graduate assistant at Toledo. He worked with thedefensive backs in 2000, and in 1999 he was responsible for video production and coordination. While he was working with thedefense, the Rockets were ranked first nationally in turnover margin, third in scoring defense, third in total defense, fifth in rushingdefense and 15th in pass efficiency defense.

Prior to joining the Toledo staff, Lister worked with the Tarleton State University team as the wide receivers coach during thespring of 1999.

A 1999 graduate of Tarleton State, Lister earned a bachelor of science degree in exercise and sports studies. A four-year letterwinner for the Texans, he was the special teams captain for the 1998 season. He played three seasons as a free safety, but also sawaction as a quarterback and receiver earlier in his career. He also earned academic all-conference honors in 1998.

Mark ListerOutside Linebackers

Adam Schwartz joined the Big Red football staff in March 2001 as an offensive assistant,working with the tight ends.Schwartz spent two seasons at Hamilton College, where he served as assistant coach,

strength and conditioning coordinator, recruiting coordinator and audio-visual coordinator. Hecoached the inside linebackers in 2000 and the running backs in 1999. He also designed andimplemented a 12-month strength, speed, conditioning, flexibility and nutrition program for theteam.

Schwartz graduated from the University of Arizona in 1997 with a degree in biology and a minor inchemistry, math and physics. He played for the Wildcats during his three years as a running back,offensive lineman, defensive lineman and special teams member.

Before going to Arizona, Schwartz began his collegiate career at the University of Redlands, where he was a running back, anoffensive lineman and a special teams member.

Adam SchwartzTight Ends

Coaching StaffCoaching/Support Staffs

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Tom HowleyHead Coach, Strength and Conditioning

Tom Howley has been the strength and conditioning coach at Cornell since July 1995. In thatrole, he oversees the design and implementation of athletic performance programs forCornell’s 36 varsity sports. The comprehensive, year-round programs include strength and

power development, mobility skill training and conditioning, and are implemented in a motivating,team-oriented environment.

Prior to his arrival at Cornell, Howley was the assistant director of strength and conditioning at EastCarolina University from 1991-1995. While there, the Pirates participated in two bowl games (1992Peach Bowl and 1995 Liberty Bowl), qualified for the NCAA baseball regional tournament (1994) and

played in the NCAA basketball tournament (1993).Howley was a graduate assistant strength and conditioning

coach at Auburn University from 1989-91, where he earned hismaster’s degree in exercise physiology. The Tigers, the 1989 Southeastern Conference co-champions, were the 1990 Hall of Fame Bowl and the 1991 Peach Bowl champions, as Howleyalso served as an assistant coach with the special teams.

A 1988 graduate of Tulane, Howley earned a bachelor of arts degree in history and was athree-year letterman and two year starting offensive lineman on the football team. The GreenWave played in the 1987 Independence Bowl his senior year. He was the recipient of the NewOrleans Quarterback Club Student-Athlete Award as a senior.

Howley is an active participant in the Cornell University/Ithaca College chapter of theFellowship of Christian Athletes. He and his wife, Amanda, reside in Ithaca with their infantdaughter, Anna Corrine.

A fixture in Schoellkopf Hall for over 25 years, Pete Noyes has spent the past five seasons as thedirector of football operations. He is responsible for coordinating the day-to-day operationsas they pertain to the Big Red, including administrative duties such as alumni and parent

relations and football fundraising. He also serves as the liaison to the Cornell Football Association,and was honored with a lifetime membership to the organization in 2000. Because of Noyes’ work,the Big Red program runs like a well-oiled wheel both on and off the field.

Noyes came to Cornell in 1977 as linebacker coach and in 1981, he was given the title ofdefensive coordinator by then-head coach Bob Blackman. Up until 1998, he filled a variety of roles,serving as defensive coordinator, recruiting coordinator, offensive line coach and defensive backscoach. He was also the assistant head coach from 1986 to 1989. Noyes’ hard-nosed approach to

the game enabled him to coach the Cornelldefense to a runner-up spot for Division I-AA in fewest points allowed pergame in 1986, a seventh-place finish in I-AA in 1988, and in both 1986 and1988, it topped the Ivy League and the East in the same category. Thedefense’s 1986 performance was also the best-ever at Cornell since theformation of the Ivy League. In 1990, while Noyes was the offensive linecoach, Cornell had three first-team All-Ivy linemen for the first time ever. In1993, the Big Red defense was sixth in the nation in total defense, 13th inscoring defense, 17th in rushing defense and 21st in pass efficiency defense.

Noyes had been the defensive coordinator at Bucknell for six seasonsunder the late Fred Prender and Bob Curtis with emphasis on the linebackers.

A 1968 graduate of the University of Bridgeport, he was co-captain of thefootball team as a senior. The former linebacker was a three-year starter andwas named to the school’s all-time team in 1969.

Pete and his wife, Carol, reside in Ithaca and have three children: JenniferNoyes, a 1998 Cornell graduate; Justin Brion; and the late Ronnie Brion, a2000 Cornell graduate.

Pete NoyesDirector of Football Operations

Coaching StaffCoaching/Support Staffs

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Bernie DePalmaThe Doc Kavanagh Head Athletic Trainer/Physical Therapist

Bernie DePalma’s top priorities are the health and safety of the student- athletes,and providing them with a safe environment for training and competition. He

has been an integral member of the athletic staff as head of physical therapy,athletic training and rehabilitation for Cornell University Health Services since August1980 and head athletic trainer since 1983.

Bernie graduated from Quinnipiac College with a bachelor of science degree inphysical therapy in 1978 and received his master’s degree in athletic training-sportsmedicine from the University of Virginia in 1980.

DePalma and Coach Pendergast work together in planning the contact and non-contact practice schedules to assist in the prevention of injuries. DePalma also works closely with thestrength and conditioning staff to assist with injury prevention.

Bernie was a founding member of the Cornell Sports Nutrition Discussion group which examines therole nutrition plays in the student-athlete’s well-being and performance. He also manages programs hedeveloped for graduate assistantships with Ithaca College and athletic trainer internships from Ithaca andother area colleges. He supervises seven full-time staff members and numerous part-time assistants.

Bernie’s expertise impacts national athletics legislation. He has served on numerous NCAA committees,including the committee on competitive safeguards and medical aspects of sport safety, which he chaired;the NCAA special committee on student-athlete welfare, access and equity; and the national athletictrainer’s task force which developed medical coverage guidelines for all intercollegiate athletic programs.

He was honored in 2001 by the National Athletic Trainers’ Association (NATA) with the Most Distin-guished Athletic Trainer Award. The award recognizes the NATA’s certified members for their outstandingcontributions to the profession of athletic training and to the association.

Bernie and his wife, Mary, have a daughter, Taylor, and a son, Turner.

Jim CaseAssociate Head Athletic Trainer

Jim Case enters his 16th season as an athletic trainer for the Big Red. He joined theCornell training staff in August 1988, and his responsibilities include working with

the football and lacrosse teams.A 1986 graduate of Central Michigan University, he earned his bachelor of

science degree in sports medicine with a minor in exercise science. Case received hismaster of arts degree in physical education from Western Michigan University in June1988, with a concentration in athletic training.

Case spent the summer of 1989 as an intern with the Detroit Lions of the NFL andwas also appointed to the training staff for the 1990, 1994 and 1998 World Lacrosseteam tryouts. He served as the trainer for 1994 Team USA at the World Lacrosse Championships inManchester, England, and served in the same capacity for Team USA at the 1998 world championships inBaltimore, Md.

Case and his wife, Ladeen, reside in Ithaca with their daughter, Devin, and sons, Carson and Collin.

Dr. Russ ZelkoChair, Athletic Orthopedics at Cornell

It was a homecoming of sorts for Dr. Russ Zelko when he was appointedorthopaedic consultant and orthopaedic surgeon in charge of athletic medicine at

Cornell in 1975. Dr. Zelko was an outstanding student-athlete at Cornell from 1958-62, winning three letters each in football and lacrosse.

Zelko graduated from Cornell in 1962, attended the McGill School of Dentistry forone year then spent four years at the Cornell Medical College where he received hisM.D. in 1967.

In addition to his post in athletic medicine, he is an attending surgeon at theCayuga Medical Center and an adjunct assistant professor in orthopaedic surgery at Cornell’s Weill MedicalCollege.

Russ and his wife, Margaret Ann, have three children: Eric, Hilary and Katherine.

Marc Chamberlain, ATC

Linda Hoisington, ATC

Ed Kelly, ATC

Kathy MacCheyne, EMTChris Scarlata, ATC Allison Sampson, ATC Chad Pens, ATC/PT

Dave Ahouse, ATC

Susan Ives, ATC

Medical StaffCoaching/Support Staffs

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Karen BerkleyAdministrative Assistant

Pat GrahamDirector of Facilities

Doug VorhisEquipment Assistant

Dick RandallEquipment Assistant

Becky Hollenback-MillerRecruiting Secretary

Laura StangeDirector of Athletic Communications

Laura Stange is in her eighth year as a member of theathletic communications staff at Cornell and was promoted

to the director’s position in May 2001.She is the primary contact for Cornell football, men’s ice

hockey and baseball, while assisting with several of the Big Red’s36 varsity sports. She oversees a professional staff of four full-time employees, an intern and numerous student workers asthey all work to cover the Big Red.

In addition to her duties at Cornell, she has also served as theIvy League volleyball liaison and the league’s women’s basketball correspondent for USAToday Information Network.

A 1994 graduate of Marietta (Ohio) College with a bachelor of arts degree in journalism,Stange worked at the 1995 Special Olympics World Games as one of the media liaisons forbasketball and was also the assistant information director for the 1994 and 1995 NCAADivision III Mideast Regional Baseball Championships.

Prior to joining the Cornell staff, Stange worked as an athletic communications assistantat Princeton University for two years.

Dale StraufHead Equipment Manager

Dale Strauf has been in charge of the equipment distributionfor Cornell athletics since 1979. The 2003 season is his 25th

with Big Red football, and he has attended every football game inhis tenure, an amazing 239 straight contests.

As the head equipment manager, Strauf is responsible for theequipment purchasing for Cornell athletics, physical education,intramurals and recreation. He oversees a staff of eight, withseven holding national certification. These professionals equip24 men’s and women’s teams.

Strauf attended Cortland State and graduated magna cum laude in 1979. He received amaster’s degree in education from Cortland in 1982.

In 1992, Strauf was named National Equipment Manager of the Year by his peers. He iscurrently serving his second three-year term as the president of the Athletic EquipmentManagers Association (AEMA). A past associate executive director of the organization, hehas published 19 articles in the field of equipment management. Dale was one of fiveequipment managers who developed a certification program for athletic equipmentmanagement.

Strauf and his wife, Jerra, have a daughter, Tam, and a son, Bo, and two granddaughters,Sue and Lexi.

Chris WlosinskiThe Andrew ’78 and Margaret Paul Student-AthleteSupport Services Director

Chris Wlosinski became Cornell’s director of student-athleteservices in August 2001.Wlosinski works as an available and reliable advisor who

understands the lifestyle student-athletes lead and assists them inbalancing their academic, athletic and personal challenges. Inthis capacity she also serves as a liaison with the colleges anddirects student-athletes to appropriate campus-wide resources foracademic and personal needs.

Wlosinski came to Cornell in August 1999 and worked in compliance, student servicesand event management. In June 2000, she accepted the position of associate director ofalumni affairs and development for athletics where she served until assuming her currentposition.

Prior to joining the Cornell staff, Wlosinski spent a year each as an athletics administra-tive intern at both Bates College and Plymouth State College. She also served as a specialeducation teacher for the learning disabled for seven years in Lancaster, Pa.

Wlosinski graduated from Millersville University in 1989 with a bachelor’s degree inspecial education and from Plymouth State College in 1999 with a master’s degree ineducation.

Support StaffCoaching/Support Staffs

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2003 Outlook and Team2003 Outlook and Team

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Eight starters return from an offense that averaged nearly300 yards per game a season ago, including the quarterback,the top rusher, two of the top three receivers and the squad’stop seven linemen. Big things are expected from the offensethat features a good mix of youth (six junior starters) andexperience (five senior starters).

An important key will be increased consistency in the redzone and the ability to possess the football after committing 24turnovers a year ago.

Gone is the school’s all-time leading receiver (KeithFerguson), as well as a first-team All-Ivy fullback (NathanArcher) and the squad’s starting tight end (Matt Wise). Luckilyfor the Big Red, last year’s depth will pay off in a big way, asunderclassmen will fill the roles left by the departed seniors.

Senior quarterback Mick Razzano was granted a fifth year ofeligibility and his return shores up a position he grew into late inthe 2002 season. Razzano, in his first year as a starter, tossed for1,556 yards and seven touchdowns, including a 302-yard effortin a 21-19 win over Dartmouth. Razzano directed the Big Redoffense to four wins in the final two minutes of play or inovertime as Cornell resurrected its “Cardiac Kids” reputation.With another year of working in the offense, Razzano will be oneof the league’s top field generals.

Razzano will be backed up by senior D.J. Busch and sopho-more Ryan Kuhn. Both saw limited field time a season ago butare capable of stepping in if needed. Junior Gabe Newell, whobrings tremendous size behind center at 6-4, 207 pounds, willalso be in the four-man competition.

Standing behind every quarterback is a tailback that cankeep the defense honest, and the breakaway speed of juniorMarcus Blanks does exactly that. The honorable mention All-Ivy

The OffenseThe Big Red on OffensePrimary Offense: MultipleStarters Lost—3Nate Archer (FB); Keith Ferguson (WR);Matt Wise (TE)

Returning Lettermen—18By Position:

Quarterbacks (1)MICK RAZZANO (Sr., 6-0, 224)

Running Backs (2)MARCUS BLANKS (Jr., 5-9, 183)Andre Hardaway (So., 6-1, 210)

Fullbacks (2)Luke Hanset (Jr., 5-11, 215)Todd Newell (Sr., 6-0, 220)

Wide Receivers (5)Marschall Berkes (Sr., 6-3, 206)Carlos Hill (Jr., 6-3, 211)JOHN KELLNER (Sr., 5-10, 188)Chad Nice (Sr., 6-0, 192)Vic Yanz (Sr., 5-11, 197)

Offensive Line (7)DAVID ARCHER (Jr., 6-1, 277)ZACH BEADLE (Jr., 6-4, 305)KEVIN BOOTHE (Jr., 6-5, 308)Tim Condon (Jr., 6-4, 278)DOMINIC GARGUILE (Sr., 6-6, 303)JOHN MEGARO (Sr., 6-2, 272)Jason Stadnik (Sr., 6-5, 279)

Tight Ends (1)Pat Deyhle (Sr., 6-2, 221)

returning starters in CAPS

Junior tailback Marcus Blanks

pick a season ago rushed for 568 yards and five touchdowns,averaging a workman-like 4.4 yards per carry. An improvingpart of the passing game as well, Blanks is a versatile weaponcapable of dominating a game.

Sophomores Andre Hardaway and Joshua Johnston will alsosee carries as stronger inside backs.

When Razzano takes his drop, he will have several familiartargets despite the loss of his go-to receiver.

Seniors John Kellner and Chad Nice had solid junior cam-paigns and will look to get more balls thrown their way.

Kellner caught 36 passes for 493 yards, each ranking secondon the team, and scored two touchdowns, matching Fergusonfor the team high. A quick target, Kellner will have the opportu-nity to become the team’s top receiver.

Nice finished third on the team in receptions (15) and yards(164) as the team’s third receiver, utilizing his speed and open-field running ability that made him such a great high schoolrunning back. He is expected to open the season on theoutside.

Also in the mix at receiver will be sophomores Andy Westand Arjun Rao, junior Carlos Hill and seniors Marschall Berkes

2003 Big Red Outlook2003 Outlook and Team

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and Vic Yanz.Yanz received extensive playing time a season ago and is a burner who could emerge as the

Big Red’s deep threat. The darkhorse to see major time would be Berkes. A converted quarter-back, Berkes brings good size and athletic ability to the position and, if he can fight off injury,he could be a key contributor.

The fullback and tight end slots have talented players competing, and the coaching staffhas a decision to make as to whether one player can handle all the chores and responsibilitiesof the position, or if they will go by committee.

The empty fullback slot will go to either senior Todd Newell or junior Luke Hanset. Both aresolid blockers within the offensive structure, but are capable of carrying the ball for toughyardage between the tackles when necessary. Newell has plenty of game experience, althoughmost has been by way of special teams play. Hanset has great potential as a solid blocker.Sophomores Eduardo Garcia and Mike Hirschfield will also challenge for playing time.

Another spot that will be open for competition will be attight end, where senior Pat Deyhle has the edge. Deyhlebrings great size (6-2, 221) to the position as a blocker orpass catcher. Sophomores Chris Eckstein and Troy Follmarare also candidates to see playing time.

The offensive line is as deep and talented as any on EastHill in recent memory, with all five starters returning, plus

two others who return after serving as starters in the past. Cornell has the ability to shuttle infresh linemen throughout the game and wear out a defensive line. The line averages 6-4, 278pounds across and is adept at run or pass blocking. The biggest key may be the continuity of theyoung line, which earned valuable experience a season ago.

A pair of seniors in Dominic Garguile (6-6, 303) and John Megaro (6-2, 272) anchor the line atleft tackle and center, respectively. Juniors David Archer (6-1, 277), Zach Beadle (6-4, 305) andAll-Ivy selection Kevin Boothe (6-5, 308) will also return as incumbent starters. Senior JasonStadnik (6-5, 279), who opened up last season as the team’s starting left tackle before beinginjured, and junior Tim Condon (6-4, 278), who lettered a season ago, will also attempt to breakinto the starting lineup.

Several young guys who earned their stripes in practice hope to break into the rotation, withsophomores Daniel Legiec (6-3, 246) and Ross Hamilton (6-5, 295) leading the charge.

Junior offensive linemanZach Beadle

2003 Big Red Outlook

Special TeamsA pair of All-Ivy candidates will lead the Cornell special teams into battle. Junior place-kicker Trevor MacMeekin and punting

classmate Mike Baumgartel will shore up two of the most important positions on the field.MacMeekin was a second-team All-Ivy selection, kicking game-winning field goals in overtime and connecting on 8-of-9 field

goals, including 5-of-5 beyond 30 yards. He was also pure on 17-of-19 extra-point attempts. After entering last season as one of theteam’s biggest question marks, MacMeekin answered definitively that he can be counted on in anysituation.Baumgartel had a more inconsistent season due to injury, but showed the talent that places him

among the circuit’s top punters. The junior showed his touch by placing 14 of his 63 kicks inside the20 with just one touchback, and also showed his power with a 77-yard punt against Yale, falling justshy of his own Ivy League record of 81 yards set against Harvard as a freshman. He averaged 34.4yards on 63 punts during the season.

The snapping chores on both punts and field goals willfall into the hands of All-Ivy lineman Dominic Garguile,while senior wide receiver Vic Yanz will lend his sure handsas the team’s holder.Junior Chad Nice, who returned 20 kickoffs last year (21.0

ypr.), will again play that role, while sophomore AndreHardaway’s elusiveness and speed set him up to be a marqueepunt returner. Hardaway returned five punts for a 15.8 ypr.average as a rookie. Junior cornerbacks David Blanks and SeanNassoiy will also attempt to get in on the returns.

Cornell Special TeamsStarters Lost—0Returning — 2K-TREVOR MacMEEKIN (Jr., 6-0, 197)P-MIKE BAUMGARTEL (Jr., 5-8, 183)

Who to watch for:Ret-Chad Nice (Sr., 6-0, 192)Ret-Andre Hardaway (So., 6-1, 210) Junior punter

Mike Baumgartel

2003 Outlook and Team

Senior wide receiver John Kellner

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With only four starters returning on the defensive side of theball, many would expect a total breakdown, but several keybackups move into starting roles and the Big Red youthmovement will attack the football this season. In all, only fourseniors are listed on the spring practice depth chart, while beingoutnumbered by second-year players (six).

The four starters are no slackers, as each is fully capable ofearning All-Ivy honors. Junior linebackers Brad Kitlowski and JoelSussman have “superstar” written all over them. Both will startas bookends on the outside after combining for 172 tackles, 12tackles for loss, 3.5 sacks, four passes defended, four forcedfumbles and two blocked kicks. The duo wreaks havoc onopposing ball carriers and has made opposing receiversreluctant to come across the middle without knowing wherethey both are.

Both were All-Ivy picks as sophomores and can be expectedto raise their games even more as the leadership expectationsgrow on them.

Speaking of leaders, no word could better describe seniordefensive tackle Kevin Rooney, who made six of his eighttackles behind the line of scrimmage last year. The AcademicAll-American provides a solid, consistent effort every time outon the field and will again be a key part of filling the gaps onopposing runs.

The fourth returning starter is cover corner Kyle Thomas.The 5-10, 190-pound Thomas finished sixth on the team with61 total tackles in his sophomore campaign, intercepting a passand breaking up a team-high nine attempts. Thomas’ speed

The DefenseThe Big Red on DefensePrimary Defense: MultipleStarters Lost—7Bill Goodrich (LT); Jesse Rodriguez(RT); Pete Combe (RE); Vince Bates(CB); Jarad Madea (ILB); Nate Spitler(ILB); Jamie Moriarty (FS)

Returning Lettermen—12By Position:

Defensive Line (5)Ryan Lempa (Sr., 6-3, 260)Mike McGinty (Jr., 6-2, 260)Jason Morgan (Jr., 6-1, 209)KEVIN ROONEY (Sr., 6-3, 255)Mike Stone (Sr., 6-4, 287)

Defensive Backs (3)David Blanks (Jr., 5-8, 178)Neil Morrissey (Sr., 6-0, 176)KYLE THOMAS (Jr., 5-10, 190)

Outside Linebackers (2)BRAD KITLOWSKI (Jr., 6-0, 215)JOEL SUSSMAN (Jr., 6-4, 229)

Inside Linebackers (2)Dan Collins (Jr., 6-0, 234)Sean Sansiveri (Jr., 5-10, 209)

returning starters in CAPS

and mark-up ability make it a dangerous game to throw in hisdirection.

Although having missed most of last season with an injury,senior Mike Stone is hoping to earn important time on the line.After an outstanding sophomore campaign, Stone was lost forthe season with a back injury after starting the team’s first fourgames. He ended the shortened season with nine tackles,including one for loss.

The defensive line is flooded with non-starters who earnedplenty of action a season ago and are hungry to take overstarting roles. Along with Stone, juniors Mike McGinty andJason Morgan return.

McGinty and Morgan combined for 19 tackles, with Morganadding four tackles behind the line and a pair of sacks. McGintysaw time in the rotation, while Morgan’s explosiveness on thepass rush got him on the field. He continues to add strengthand bulk in an effort to become an every-down player.

Three players project to joining the depth chart at end insophomore Earl Richardson, junior John Padavan and seniorRyan Lempa.

Richardson is similar in size to Morgan with the same type ofexplosiveness on the pass rush. Padavan is a transfer fromMaine who is expected to fit right in with the team’s defensivescheme and could be an impact player right away. Lempa was apart-time starter a season ago, recording 20 tackles, includingfive for losses. He also had 1.5 sacks and worked hard in the

2003 Big Red Outlook2003 Outlook and Team

Senior lineman Mike Stone

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weight room during the off-season, bulking up to 260 pounds.Sophomores Matt Pollock and Kevin Bigelow could also see

time at defensive end. Both have battled injuries and hope to behealthy by the start of fall practice.

The inside linebacking corps hit the weight room hard, and itpaid off for juniors Dan Collins and Paul Pardi and sophomorePatrick Potts, who will look to claim the spots left by Jarad Madeaand Nate Spitler.

Collins had 16 tackles and an interception in earning hissecond letter a season ago. He gained nearly 15 pounds overthe off-season in working with strength coach Tom Howley,while classmate Pardi gained 20 pounds of muscle. Pardi made19 tackles with two tackles for loss and a sack in seven gameslast year. Potts, who may have the most upside, stands animposing 6-3, 227, and is known for his big hits. His maturity isa key to the effectiveness of the unit.

Also in the mix are sophomores Patrick Potts and EdwardSabia and junior Sean Sansiveri. The trio will battle it out for achance to earn playing time.

Joining Kitlowski and Sussman on the outside are sopho-mores Greg Collins and Jeff Hahn, junior Patrick Starleper andsenior Jim Hilliard.

Starleper is aiming to play up to his vast potential. Hilliard isa hard worker who earned some playing time a season ago. Heprovides an energy boost when he hits the field.

The defensive backfield will be in flux with the loss of threestarters, but plenty of talent remains. Junior David Blanks joinsrising sophomores Jason Cloyd, Matt Altomare, and JordanCalaguire and junior Sean Nassoiy in defending the pass.

Blanks saw the most playing time of the group, seeing his

2003 Big Red Outlook

Junior All-Ivy linebacker Joel Sussman

2003 Outlook and Team

Junior cornerback David Blanks

share of snaps in making 22 total tackles. He was a key compo-nent in the Big Red’s blitzing package off the end, making fivetackles for loss and sacking the quarterback twice. His speed,reaction time and instincts will give him a chance to become oneof the better covers in the league.

Nassoiy, a converted receiver, brings great knowledge ofroute-running to the position, and his speed as a returnspecialist will also be a key to his playing time.

The sophomores will all be attempting to break into thelineup after seeing a majority of their time behind graduatedseniors Jordan Hase, Rosco Newsom and Vince Bates.

The early leader for the free safety position is senior NeilMorrissey, while sophomore Kevin Rex and junior Nate Tarsiwill also battle for time.

Morrissey has seen significant action for the Big Red, makingan interception and registering 14 total tackles. He also had a pairof tackles for loss off the blitz. He was shut down in the springdue to ankle surgery. He is expected to be back at full strengthfor the fall.

Both Rex and Tarsi continue to adapt to the position. Rex is aphenomenal athlete with great desire. He was a key member ofthe special teams last year. Tarsi is a converted quarterbackwhose athleticism has helped him become a serviceablebackup. He will earn increased playing time as he gains acomfort zone in the secondary.

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No. Name Pos. Cl. Ht. Wt. School/Hometown18 Altomare, Matt CB So. 5-9 188 James W. Robinson Secondary/Fairfax, Va.64 * Archer, David OL Jr. 6-1 277 Union-Endicott HS/Endicott, N.Y.39 ** Baumgartel, Mike P Jr. 5-8 183 Mars Area HS/Mars, Pa.60 Bazzo, John OL So. 6-1 231 Rancho Cucamonga HS/Alta Loma, Calif.78 * Beadle, Zach OL Jr. 6-4 305 Queensbury HS/Queensbury, N.Y.

Beale, Nick ILB Fr. 6-3 210 Northern Secondary/Toronto, Ont.9 * Berkes, Marschall W R Sr. 6-3 206 Webster HS/Webster, N.Y.97 Bigelow, Kevin DL So. 6-3 230 Boonsboro HS/Boonsboro, Md.

Blakemore, Patrick W R Fr. 6-3 195 Fairview HS/Boulder, Colo.27 ** Blanks, David CB Jr. 5-8 178 Archbishop Moeller HS/Cincinnati, Ohio

31 * Blanks, Marcus TB Jr. 5-9 183 Archbishop Moeller HS/Cincinnati, OhioBond, Jordan FS Fr. 6-0 175 Clayton HS/St. Louis, Mo.

77 * Boothe, Kevin OL Jr. 6-5 308 Pine Crest School/Plantation, Fla.Brady, Jarrett TE So. 6-3 212 Vacaville HS/Cal Poly/Vacaville, Calif.

11 Britton, Tom W R Sr. 6-1 200 Haywards Heath Sixth Form College/West Sussex, England

2 Busch, D.J. Q B Sr. 6-4 221 Santana HS/Santee, Calif.25 Calaguire, Jordan CB So. 5-9 184 Medfield HS/Medfield, Mass.81 Carvolth, Trent W R So. 5-10 165 Santa Rosa HS/Santa Rosa, Calif.

Chicosky, Brian OLB Fr. 6-4 205 Kings Park HS/Kings Park, N.Y.24 Cloyd, Jason CB So. 5-11 201 Cardinal Ritter College Prep/St. Louis, Mo.

45 ** Collins, Dan ILB Jr. 6-0 234 Scotia-Glenville HS/Scotia, N.Y.27 Collins, Greg OLB So. 6-3 211 Newark HS/Bear, Del.53 * Condon, Tim OL Jr. 6-4 278 Victor Central School/Victor, N.Y.

Darby, Matt ILB Fr. 6-3 220 Westlake HS/Thornwood, N.Y.6 ** Deyhle, Pat TE Sr. 6-2 224 Good Counsel HS/Silver Spring, Md.

Dicks, Jeff DL Fr. 6-2 240 Bellevue HS/Bellevue, Wash.88 Dixon, Dan W R So. 5-10 181 Cascia Hall Prep/Tulsa, Okla.63 Doherty, Tim OL Jr. 6-7 246 Mount St. Joseph Academy/West Rutland, Vt.89 Eckstein, Chris TE So. 6-3 239 Harrisonburg HS/Harrisonburg, Va.41 Fashusi, Oluseyi ILB So. 6-0 232 Midwood HS/Brooklyn, N.Y.

3 Fitzsimmons, Clayton W R Jr. 5-6 180 Wheeling Central Catholic HS/Wheeling, W.Va.84 Follmar, Troy TE So. 6-3 237 Saratoga HS/Saratoga, Calif.79 Fulfree, John OL So. 6-0 247 St. Anthony’s HS/Centereach, N.Y.

Gallagher, Chirs CB Fr. 5-10 180 Mars Area HS/Valencia, Pa.22 Garcia, Eduardo FB So. 5-10 218 Klein Oak HS/Spring, Texas

69 *** Garguile, Dominic OL Sr. 6-6 303 O’Dea HS/Bremerton, Wash.Grant, Matt TB Fr. 5-10 165 Baker HS/Baldwinsville, N.Y.Green, Justin W R Fr. 5-10 160 Campbell Hall/Encino, Calif.

30 Hahn, Jeff OLB So. 6-0 190 Warwick Valley HS/Chester, N.Y.61 Hamilton, Ross OL So. 6-5 295 Voorhees HS/Califon, N.J.

70 Hanley, Tim DL So. 6-1 262 Paramus Catholic HS/Saddle Brook, N.J.1 * Hanset, Luke FB Jr. 5-11 215 Jesuit HS/Portland, Ore.14 * Hardaway, Andre TB So. 6-1 210 Milton Academy/Plymouth, Mass.80 * Hill, Carlos W R Jr. 6-3 211 Kent Denver School/Northglen, Colo.38 Hilliard, Jim OLB Sr. 5-11 194 Harrisburg HS/Harrisburg, Ill.

40 Hirschfield, Mike FB So. 6-2 229 Etowah HS/Woodstock, Ga.Homan, Stu ILB Fr. 6-2 210 Eagle HS/Meridian, IdahoJackson, Anthony W R Fr. 5-10 175 Brother Rice HS/Waterford, Mich.Jackson, Jarin CB Fr. 5-10 180 Ben Franklin HS/New Orleans, La.Jensen, Chris Q B Fr. 6-4 190 Overland HS/Denver, Colo.

47 Johnston, Joshua TB So. 6-1 207 Harborfields HS/Centerport, N.Y.83 ** Kellner, John W R Sr. 5-10 188 Greeley West HS/Evans, Colo.

Kiscadden, Ryan DL Fr. 6-1 190 Hempfield HS/Landisville, Pa.55 ** Kitlowski, Brad OLB Jr. 6-0 215 Mount Lebanon HS/Pittsburgh, Pa.12 Kuhn, Ryan Q B So. 6-5 219 New Fairfield HS/New Fairfield, Conn.

74 Legiec, Daniel OL So. 6-3 246 Governor Livingston HS/Mountainside, N.J.91 * Lempa, Ryan DL Sr. 6-3 260 Point Pleasant Beach HS/Point Pleasant Beach, N.J.

Leone, William DL Fr. 6-3 225 Nyack Senior HS/Valley Cottage, N.Y.

2003 Preseason Roster2003 Outlook and Team

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Altomare ....................... all-TA-marBeadle .......................... BEE-dleBerkes........................... BURKSCalaguire .................... cal-ah-JER-eeDeStefano (asst. coach) ........ dee-STEF-an-ohDeyhle ........................... DIE-elEckstein ....................... ECK-stineOluseyi Fashusi ........ o-lu-SHAY FA-shoe-seeGarguile ....................... GAR-jewelKiscadden ..................... kis-COD-anLegiec...........................LEDG-ik

Pronunciation GuideLeonhard ........................ LEN-ardMacaluso ................... mac-a-LOO-soMakovich ..................... ma-KO-vichMarchut ....................... mar-SHUTNassoiy .......................... NAS-oyPardi ........................... PAR-deePletcher (asst. coach) ..............PLETCH-erReinking ........................ REN-kingRusinkovich ................. rus-in-KO-vichStarleper ...................... star-LEE-per

No. Name Pos. Cl. Ht. Wt. School/HometownLeonhard, Dan OLB Fr. 6-1 200 Penfield HS/Penfield, N.Y.Lucas, Jonathan DL Fr. 6-3 225 Arvada West HS/Wheat Ridge, Colo.

Macaluso, Anthony TB Fr. 5-9 197 Middletown South HS/Middletown, N.J.20 * MacMeekin, Trevor PK Jr. 6-0 197 Dulaney HS/Phoenix, Md.62 Makovich, Stephen DL So. 6-4 241 Burnt Hills-Ballston Lake HS/Glenville, N.Y.

Marchut, Kevin OL Fr. 6-4 270 Roxbury HS/Succasunna, N.J.Martin, Kenneth CB Fr. 6-1 175 Plainwell HS/Choate Rosemary Hall/Plainwell, Mich.

56 * McGinty, Mike DL Jr. 6-2 260 St. Ignatius HS/North Royalton, OhioMcGuire, Brian OL Fr. 6-4 265 West Windsor-Plainsboro HS/Princeton Jct., N.J.McManamon, Jaime DL Fr. 6-3 275 St. Edward HS/Westlake, Ohio

54 ** Megaro, John OL Sr. 6-2 272 Mt. Carmel HS/Chicago, Ill.Miller, Eric OL Fr. 6-7 230 Highland HS/Marengo, Ohio

50 Moody, Jon OL So. 6-0 258 Northland HS/Columbus, OhioMorga, Lou OL Fr. 6-4 230 West Islip HS/West Islip, N.Y.

90 * Morgan, Jason DL Jr. 6-1 209 Eleanor Roosevelt HS/District Heights, Md.5 ** Morrissey, Neil FS Sr. 6-0 176 University School/Pepper Pike, Ohio17 Nassoiy, Sean CB Jr. 5-9 164 Monsignor Donovan HS/Toms River, N.J.

16 Newell, Gabe Q B Jr. 6-4 207 Enterprise HS/Redding, Calif.28 ** Newell, Todd FB Sr. 6-0 220 Good Counsel HS/Silver Spring, Md.23 ** Nice, Chad W R Sr. 6-0 192 Morrison HS/Morrison, Ill.99 Padavan, John DL Jr. 6-3 246 Wyoming Valley West HS/Pringle, Pa.34 Pardi, Paul ILB Jr. 6-1 233 Bishop Watterson HS/Columbus, Ohio

98 Pollock, Matt DL So. 6-1 250 G. Ray Bodley HS/Fulton, N.Y.58 Potts, Patrick ILB So. 6-3 227 Kenton Senior HS/Kenton, Ohio4 Rao, Arjun W R So. 6-0 187 Webb School of Calif./Palm Springs, Calif.8 * Razzano, Mick Q B Sr. 6-0 224 Bishop Ahr HS/South River, N.J.29 Rex, Kevin FS So. 6-2 197 Thousand Oaks HS/Thousand Oaks, Calif.

93 Richardson, Earl DL So. 6-3 213 Westfield HS/Houston, Texas65 ** Rooney, Kevin DL Sr. 6-3 255 St. Mary’s HS/Stockton, Calif.

Rusinkovich, Todd DL Fr. 6-2 230 San Clemente HS/San Clemente, Calif.43 Sabia, Ed ILB So. 6-2 225 LaSalle College HS/Lafayette Hill, Pa.73 Salem, Mohamad DL Jr. 6-2 273 Melbourne HS/Palm Bay, Fla.

32 * Sansiveri, Sean ILB Jr. 5-10 209 Elmira Southside HS/Pine City, N.Y.Sonnenberg, Ted OL Fr. 6-5 240 Holgate School/Holgate, Ohio

66 ** Stadnik, Jason OL Sr. 6-5 279 Charter School/Wilmington, Del.7 Starleper, Patrick OLB Jr. 6-0 203 North Harford HS/Jarrettsville, Md.67 *** Stone, Mike DL Sr. 6-4 287 Coronado HS/Colorado Springs, Colo.

35 ** Sussman, Joel OLB Jr. 6-4 229 Great Neck North HS/Great Neck, N.Y.Sykora, Craig TE Fr. 6-5 230 The Colony HS/The Colony, Texas

15 Tarsi, Nate FS Jr. 6-2 210 Berlin HS/Kensington, Conn.36 * Thomas, Kyle CB Jr. 5-10 190 Melbourne HS/Indialantic, Fla.92 Trumka, Rich ILB So. 6-0 202 Thomas S. Wootton HS/Rockville, Md.

46 Weitsman, A.J. PK So. 6-3 192 Saratoga HS/Saratoga, Calif.21 West, Andy W R So. 6-3 216 Carlsbad HS/Carlsbad, Calif.19 *** Yanz, Vic W R Sr. 5-11 197 Brother Rice HS/Chicago, Ill.

*Letters won

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Meet The Captains#65 KEVIN ROONEY **

Defensive Line6-3, 255, SeniorStockton, Calif.(St. Mary’s HS)Major: History

At Cornell: Kevin will be a starter on thedefensive line for a third year and will serveas one of the team’s captains. He is a versatile

player with a lot of experience and can play both end and tackle. A solidperformer against the run, he is also a good pass rusher. Rooney sawaction in all 10 games in 2002 and finished the year with 18 total tackles,including six solo efforts. Six of his tackles were for loss of 27 yards,including a 7-yard sack against Towson, is a projected starter on thedefensive line once again this year. As a sophomore, he made 11 totaltackles with eight solo efforts and three assists and also recorded threetackles for loss, including two sacks that set opponents back 19 yards.Rooney also had an interception, which he returned 22 yards for atouchdown against Columbia. It was the first time since 1993 that theBig Red had returned an interception for a TD. An Academic All-IvyLeague selection and a district Verizon Academic All-American, Kevinwas also named to the 2002 AFCA Good Works Team, which recognizedhis efforts off the field and in the community. Kevin is enrolled in theCollege of Arts and Sciences...At St. Mary’s: Kevin was a two-year letterwinner in football and basketball at St. Mary’s HS. An all-leaguehonorable mentionperformer as a junior,he was named the All-Area Defensive Playerof the Year and theAll-League Lineman ofthe Year in 1999, whileearning Scholastic All-California Interscho-lastic Federation hon-ors as a junior and se-nior. The Stockton Hallof Fame namedRooney the McKayDefensive Lineman ofthe Year in 1999...Per-sonal: Kevin JamesRooney is the son ofMiriam and Dr. J. Patrick Rooney, and he has two older brothers and ayounger brother...Born: 6-13-82.

Year GP Tackles Assists For Loss Sacks2001 9 8 3 3-22 2-192002 10 6 12 6-27 1-7Total 19 14 15 9-49 3-26

#8 MICK RAZZANO *Quarterback

6-0, 224, SeniorSouth River, N.J.(Bishop Ahr HS)

Major: General Studies

At Cornell: Razzano was awarded a fifthyear of eligibility and will return as theteam’s incumbent starter behind center.

A leader on and off the field, he is one of the team’s co-captains thisyear. Last year, he tossed for 1,556 yards and seven touchdowns,including a 302-yard effort in a 21-19 win over Dartmouth. Coolunder pressure, he directed the Big Red to four wins in the final twominutes of regulation or overtime. During spring practices, hecontinued to improve and made great strides, taking advantage ofevery practice session. A fiery competitor who has worked hard toharness his strength and to read defenses better, Razzano will bemuch more comfortable in the offense in his second year running it

and has All-Ivy potential.He is a student in theCollege of Agricultureand Life Sciences...AtBishop Ahr: Razzanoearned four letters as aquarterback, linebackerand safety for the BishopAhr HS football team,while also playingbaseball as a freshmanand sophomore. He wasa first-team all-area andall-division selection as asenior, after earning all-area honorable mentionfollowing his sophomorecampaign...Personal:Michael Stanley Razzano

is the son of Mary and Michael Razzano and has an older sister and ayounger sister...Born: 11-8-81.

Year GP Comp Att Pct. Yds TD Int1999 3 3 4 75.0 40 0 02001 2 7 12 58.3 97 0 02002 10 137 276 49.6 1556 7 7Total 15 147 292 50.3 1693 7 7

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Meet The Big Red Veterans

#64 DAVID ARCHER *Offensive Line6-1, 277, JuniorEndicott, N.Y.

(Union-Endicott HS)Major: Economics

At Cornell: David is a returning starter andwas on the line for every snap in 2002. He isa tough-minded competitor who worked

hard to improve on pass protection during the spring. He is a leaderon the line with a lot of experience who should continue to be a forcefor the Big Red this season. He is enrolled in the College of Arts andSciences...At Union-Endicott: David helped guide his Union-EndicottHS team to sectional titles in 1999 and 2000. The team’s captain, hewas a first-team all-state honoree and was selected to play in the annualGovernor’s Bowl and the Ernie Davis all-star game. David earned lettersin football, basketball and lacrosse. He was the captain of the lacrosseteam and a first-team all-league pick on defense...Personal: David JohnArcher is the son of David and Joan Archer. He has three older sistersand a younger brother. His sister, Kellianne, has her MBA fromCornell...Born: 11-5-82.

#39 MIKE BAUMGARTEL **Punter

5-8, 183, JuniorMars, Pa.(Mars HS)

Major: Government

At Cornell: Baumgartel answered a tremen-dous freshman year with another solid show-ing as a sophomore. He averaged 34.4 yards

on his 63 punts, downing 14 inside the 20-yard line with just onetouchback. He now holds two of the top four longest punts in Ivy historyafter a 77-yard effort last year against Yale, while his 81-yard punt asa freshman against Harvard stands as an Ivy League record. His touchand placement will be key to the Big Red winning the field positionbattle this year. He had surgery at the end of the 2002 season and hasbeen working hard to return to top form. He has an excellent work ethicand mental toughness and will be ready to resume his punting dutiesonce again this fall. He is enrolled in the College of Arts and Sciences...AtMars: Mike was a punter and place-kicker for Mars HS. He was a first-team all-conference selection at both positions and was a team captainhis senior year. He was selected to play in two all-star games as a juniorand a senior. Baumgartel was also the captain of the school’s basketballteam, setting the school record for career three-pointers and was an all-county pick...Personal: Michael Everett Baumgartel is the son of Dr. Iraand Michele Baumgartel and has an older sister...Born: 8-25-82.

Year GP N o Yds Avg Long2001 9 53 1939 36.6 812002 10 63 2170 34.4 77Total 19 116 4109 35.4 81

#18 MATT ALTOMARECornerback

5-9, 188, SophomoreFairfax, Va.

(James Robinson Secondary)Major: Undecided

At Cornell: Matt is a hard worker who madegreat strides during spring ball. He willcompete for a backup position in 2003. He

is a student in the College of Arts and Sciences...At Robinson: Altomarewas a two-year letterman at James W. Robinson Secondary School. Asa senior, he co-captained his team to the Virginia AAA state champi-onship. He was named first-team all-district at the end of the season.Altomare was also a member of the track and field team for twoyears...Personal: Matthew Michael Altomare is the son of Michael andSelinda Altomare and has a younger brother...Born: 8-27-84.

#60 JOHN BAZZOOffensive Line

6-1, 231, SophomoreAlta Loma, Calif.

(Rancho Cucamonga HS)Major: Applied Economics and

Management

At Cornell: John will work behind starterJohn Megaro at center. Bazzo was injured in

the off-season and will need to work hard once fall camp opens...AtCucamonga: Bazzo played football for four years at Rancho CucamongaHS, earning three varsity letters. As a senior, he was the starting righttackle, and also has experience at center and as the team’s longsnapper. As a senior, he captained the team to the league title. ANational Football Foundation and College Hall of Fame Scholar-Athlete, he was selected to play in the Australia Down Under Bowlfollowing his senior season. Bazzo was the president of his senior classand also competed for the wrestling, track and field and baseball teamsduring his high school career...Personal: John Anthony Bazzo is the sonof James and Jane Bazzo and has an older sister who attends nearbyIthaca College...Born: 10-21-84.

2003 Outlook and Team

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#78 ZACH BEADLE *Offensive Line6-4, 305, JuniorQueensbury, N.Y.(Queensbury HS)

Major: Applied Economicsand Management

At Cornell: Zach returns at the left guardposition and is slated to be a starter there for

a second straight year. He played in all 10 games as a sophomore andcontinued to make great progress during spring ball. He is an athleticand explosive player who should be one of the better linemen in theleague this season. Zach is also a member of the Big Red track and fieldteam and has been a scorer in the shot put at the Heptagonalchampionships during the indoor seasons. He was also a junior nationalqualifier in 2002. He is enrolled in the College of Agriculture and LifeSciences...At Queensbury: Beadle was a four-year letter winner infootball at Queensbury HS. He was a two-time All-Foothills Conferencepick and was also named to the all-academic team. He capped off hissenior year by being selected to play in the Governor’s Bowl. Zach alsolettered in basketball, baseball, track and field and tennis while in highschool. He set the school record in the shot put his senior year, and onthe tennis squad, he was a conference doubles champion. Beadle is alsoan avid weight lifter, winning the New York state powerlifting title inthe heavyweight division, while recording two state records...Personal:Zachary Osborn Beadle is the son of Dennis and Susan Beadle and hasa younger sister...Born: 3-29-83.

#9 MARSCHALL BERKES *Wide Receiver6-3, 206, SeniorWebster, N.Y.(Webster HS)

Major: Biological Sciences

At Cornell: Berkes is a converted quarter-back who started making the position tran-sition last fall. He has a tremendous knowl-

edge of the game and brings good size and hands to the position. Adedicated athlete, he has battled through injuries and will be lookingto break into the rotation this fall. Marschall is enrolled in Cornell’sCollege of Agriculture and Life Sciences. He is a hard worker who leadsby example on and off the field...At Webster: Berkes earned two lettersin football and one in golf at Webster HS. He was an All-Monroe Countyquarterback in 1998, but missed the majority of his senior campaignafter getting injured early in the season. Webster won the New Yorkstate Class AA championship in 1999...Personal: Marschall BrantlingBerkes is the son of Kathryn and John Berkes, and he has two older sistersand a younger brother...Born: 10-31-81.

#27 DAVID BLANKS **Cornerback

5-8, 178, JuniorCincinnati, Ohio

(Archbishop Moeller HS)Major: Applied Economics

and Management

At Cornell: Blanks is one of the favorites totake over a starting spot at cornerback after

seeing significant time as a backup in 2002. He ended his sophomoreseason with 22 tackles, including five for loss and a pair of sacks on theblitz. He also was credited with one pass breakup and a forced fumble.Blanks has the ability to do anything the position asks of him: to play arole in pass coverage, defend against the run or make an open fieldtackle thanks to his strength and quickness. He earned quality minuteson special teams as a freshman. He is a student in the College ofAgriculture and Life Sciences...At Moeller: David was a cornerback atArchbishop Moeller HS and earned three letters. He was one of theteam’s captains as a senior and earned All-GCL honors three times. Hewas also a captain of the wrestling squad and placed sixth in his weightclass in the 2000 state championships...Personal: David Earl Blanks isthe son of Earl and Patricia Blanks and has two brothers and a sister. Histwin brother, Marcus, is also playing football for Cornell. His fatherattended graduate school at Cornell...Born: 11-3-82.

PassesYear GP Tackles Assists Int Def200 15 0 1 0-0 02002 10 20 2 0-0 1Totals 15 20 3 0-0 1

Big Red Veterans

#97 KEVIN BIGELOWDefensive Line

6-3, 231, SophomoreBoonsboro, Md.(Boonsboro HS)

Major: Biology and Society

At Cornell: Kevin returns to the defensiveline in 2003 and will compete for a backupspot this fall. He is enrolled in the College

of Human Ecology...At Boonsboro: A three-year starter for the footballteam at Boonsboro HS, Bigelow saw action on both sides of the ball.During his career he was selected to the all-county, all-district and All-Herald Mail all-star teams. He served as the team’s captain for two yearsand was also the captain of the basketball team as a senior. Bigelowattended St. John’s Prospect Hall as a freshman and was a member ofthe 1998 national championship team. He also spent a post-graduateyear at Bridgton Academy in Maine...Personal: Kevin Michael Bigelowis the son of William and Virginia Bigelow and has two older brothers,Troy and Doug. Troy played football at Fairmont State, while Doug sawaction on the gridiron at James Madison University...Born: 4-22-83.

2003 Outlook and Team

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#31 MARCUS BLANKS *Tailback

5-9, 183, JuniorCincinnati, Ohio

(Archbishop Moeller HS)Major: Applied Economics

and Management

At Cornell: Marcus emerged as an every-down back as a sophomore, earning honor-

able mention All-Ivy accolades. The junior possesses breakaway speedoff the corners and is also a capable receiver. He ended his first year asa starter with 568 yards and five touchdowns, running for a workman-like 4.4 yard per carry average. He reached 80 yards in five of the ninegames he played, including a two-touchdown performance vs. Yale anda career-high 98-yard effort against Bucknell. He has great quicknessand acceleration and should once again be a force in the Ivy League.He is a student in the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences...AtMoeller: Marcus played at the tailback position and was also a captainof the football team at Archbishop Moeller HS. A three-year letterwinner in football, he holds the school’s career and single season rushingrecords. He was a two-time All-City, All-GCL and All-SW Ohioselection...Personal: Marcus Earl Blanks is the son of Earl and PatriciaBlanks and has two brothers and a sister. His twin brother, David, is alsoplaying football for Cornell. His father attended graduate school atCornell...Born: 11-3-82.

Year GP Rushes Yds Avg TD LP2002 9 129 568 4.4 5 32

#77 KEVIN BOOTHE *Offensive Line6-5, 308, JuniorPlantation, Fla.

(Pine Crest School)Major: Hotel Administration

At Cornell: The anchor of the offensive line,Boothe was named All-Ivy second team aseason ago, becoming one of just three Ivy

second-year players on offense to be named to the squad. He hastremendous size and quickness and combined with a great understand-ing of the game, makes him one of the best linemen in the league. Withall five starters returning on the offensive line for the Big Red, Boothe will

help open holes for a team thataveraged nearly 300 yards in totaloffense in 2002. Kevin is a student inthe School of HotelAdministration...At Pine Crest:Boothe played on both the offensiveand defensive lines at the Pine CrestSchool. A team co-captain as asenior, he was a first-team all-countyselection as well as a second-teamall-state pick. He had 40 tackles andcaused two fumbles in 2000...Per-sonal: Kevin Mark Boothe is the sonof Charles and Pat Boothe and has anolder brother, Charles, who playedfootball at East CarolinaUniversity...Born: 7-5-83.

Big Red Veterans

#11 TOM BRITTONWide Receiver6-1, 200, Senior

West Sussex, England(Haywards Heath Sixth FormCollege/SUNY-Morrisville)Major: Communication

At Cornell: Britton is a converted quarter-back who brings extra knowledge of the

offense to the wide receiver position. He is a solid player who madeimprovements in the spring and will look to contribute in the fall. Heis enrolled in the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences...At SUNY-Morrisville: Britton came to Cornell after attending SUNY-Morrisvillefor two years. While at Morrisville, he was the starting quarterback andwas a second-team all-conference selection in 2001...At HaywardsHeath: Britton played football for the London Capitals while attendingHaywards Heath Sixth Form College. He was a three-year starter forthe team, playing at both the quarterback and free safety positions. Heled the team to the national championship in 1999 and was named thechampionship MVP. Britton also played four years for the All-GreatBritain national team. Serving as the team’s captain, the squad wontwo sliver medals at the European championships...Personal: ThomasSamuel Britton is the son of John and Olwen Britton and has an oldersister...Born: 11-20-81.

#2 D.J. BUSCHQuarterback

6-4, 221, SeniorSantee, Calif.

(Santana HS/Colorado State)Major: Applied Economics and

Management

At Cornell: Busch served as the team’sbackup quarterback a season ago, seeing

action in two games, going 2-of-8 for 38 yards in limited action. A greatathlete, he worked hard in the off-season and greatly improved hisunderstanding of the Big Red’s offense during spring ball. D.J. is a big,strong quarterback who will challenge for playing time this fall. He isa student in the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences...At ColoradoState: Busch attended Colorado State University for two years beforetransferring to Cornell. As a sophomore, Busch was the early-seasonstarter for the Rams and completed 28-of-63 attempts for 337 yards andtwo touchdowns...At Santana: Busch was the starting quarterback forthree seasons at Santana HS and was also a member of the baseball andbasketball teams. On the gridiron, the two-year captain was first-teamGrossmont North Player of the Year, conference player of the year, first-team All-CIF, Breitbard Player of the Year and second-team all-state.He helped re-write the CIF record books, completing a record 62.3percent of his passes, throwing for 6,832 yards and 67 touchdowns. Asa senior, he completed 225 of 361 passes for 3, 708 yards. A NationalFootball Foundation and College Hall of Fame Scholar-Athlete, Buschwas named the Outstanding Offensive Player at the San Diego chapter’sannual banquet...Personal: Daniel Joseph Busch is the son of Dan andCarol Busch and has an older sister...Born: 10-15-81.

2003 Outlook and Team

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Big Red Veterans

#25 JORDAN CALAGUIRECornerback

5-9, 184, SophomoreMedfield, Mass.(Medfield HS)

Major: Hotel Administration

At Cornell: Jordan is a physical and aggres-sive player who runs very well. He had a solidspring and will provide depth to the defen-

sive backs and will challenge for playing time. Jordan is a student in theSchool of Hotel Administration...At Medfield: Calaguire playedfootball and baseball and was also a member of the track team atMedfield HS. A three-year starter and letter winner for the footballteam, he was a three-time Tri-Valley League all-star and a two-timeMetroWest all-star. The team’s captain as a senior, he was the MetroWestMVP in 2000 and 2001. Calaguire was also selected to captain thebaseball and track teams and was a league all-star on the diamond. Hewas a National Football Foundation scholar-athlete...Personal: JordanMichael Calaguire is the son of Frank and Judith Calaguire and has ayounger sister. His father graduated from Cornell in 1973 and was amember of the baseball team...Born: 4-5-84.

#81 TRENT CARVOLTHWide Receiver

5-10, 165, SophomoreSanta Rosa, Calif.

(Santa Rosa HS/UC-Berkeley)Major: Industrial and Labor

Relations

At Cornell: Carvolth joined the Big Red in thespring of 2002 after transferring from UC-

Berkeley. He had a good spring and is continuing to learn the offense.He brings quickness and good hands to the position and will have achance to contribute in the fall. He is enrolled in the School of Industrialand Labor Relations...At Santa Rosa: Carvolth was a four-year letterwinner for the football and basketball teams at Santa Rosa HS. A three-time all-league selection in football, he was also a two-time All-Empireselection. He was also an all-league and All-Empire selection inbasketball...Personal: Trent Carvolth is the son of Dr. Rick and NoreenCarvolth and has two younger brothers and an older sister. His fatherwas a varsity athlete at Dartmouth and went on to graduate fromCornell’s School of Medicine in 1978...Born: 5-4-82.

#24 JASON CLOYDCornerback

5-11, 201, SophomoreSt. Louis, Mo.

(Cardinal Ritter Prep)Major: Computer Science

At Cornell: Jason has the ability to play ateither the cornerback or free safety positions.He has size and speed and showed flashes of

big-play ability during the spring. With more consistency and contin-ued work, he will be a challenger for time at the cornerback position.He is enrolled in the College of Arts and Sciences...At Cardinal Ritter:Cloyd was a four-year starter for the football team at Cardinal RitterCollege Prep and was the squad’s captain as a junior and senior. Hesaw action as a quarterback and defensive back during his career. Asa QB, he smashed several school records as a senior, including passingyards with 2,641 (old record 1,615) and touchdown passes with 26. Afirst-team all-conference pick in 2001, he was selected as the conferenceoffensive player of the year and the North Area player of the year, whilealso earning second-team All-Metro and all-state honors. His team wonthe district title in 2001. Cloyd was also a member of the track teamand ran a leg on the state championship 4x400 relay...Personal: JasonCarroll Cloyd is the son of Harvey and Selena Cloyd and has four olderbrothers and an older sister...Born: 4-4-84.

#45 DAN COLLINS **Inside Linebacker6-0, 234, JuniorScotia, N.Y.

(Scotia-Glenville HS)Major: Industrial and

Labor Relations

At Cornell: Dan returns to the defense afterseeing action in all 10 games last year and

all nine games in 2001. He is a very intense player who should makea big impact in the Big Red’s 2003 defensive scheme. With thegraduation of starters Nate Spitler and Jarad Madea, Collins is ex-pected to step up to the challenge and take over a starting job. In 2002,he recorded 16 total tackles and had a tackle for loss against Yale. Healso had an interception in the win over Towson. As a freshman, he had21 total tackles and three tackles for loss including a 13-yard sack. Heis enrolled in the School of Industrial and Labor Relations...At Scotia-Glenville: Dan was a two-way starter for the Scotia-Glenville HSfootball team and was the squad’s captain as a junior and senior. Anall-state pick, he was selected to play in the annual Governor’s Bowl in2001. He was a three-time league all-star and was twice named to theAll-Capital District team...Personal: Daniel Collins is the son of Williamand Gail Collins and has two younger sisters...Born: 1-29-83.

Year GP Tackles Assists For Loss Sacks2001 9 9 12 3-15 1-132002 10 11 5 1-3 0-0Total 19 20 17 4-18 1-13

2003 Outlook and Team

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#63 TIM DOHERTYOffensive Line6-7, 246, JuniorWest Rutland, Vt.

(Mount St. Joseph Academy)Major: Animal Sciences

At Cornell: Tim is an athletic and toughplayer who continued to make great stridesduring spring practice at the right tackle

position. With continued improvement, he will see playing time thisfall. Tim is enrolled in the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences...AtMt. St. Joseph: Doherty was a member of the football, basketball andtrack teams at Mount St. Joseph Academy. He was named all-conference following his senior season and was selected to play in theVermont Shrine Maple Sugar Bowl all-star game in 2001. Doherty wasalso named the school’s basketball sports person of the year...Personal:Timothy Christopher Doherty is the son of James and Dawn Doherty andhas two brothers and a sister...Born: 7-23-83.

Big Red Veterans

#53 TIM CONDON *Offensive Line6-4, 278, JuniorVictor, N.Y.

(Victor Central HS)Major: Sociology

At Cornell: Tim filled in as a backup centerduring spring ball, but is likely to see time atthe left guard position during the 2003

season. He is big, agile and tough and has worked hard to get stronger.Tim saw action in six games last year, and started at center for an injuredJohn Megaro in the Colgate game. Look for him to continue workinghard and to make an impact in 2003. Tim is enrolled in the College ofArts and Sciences...At Victor: Tim was a two-year letter winner andcaptain of the football team at Victor Central HS. He earned first-teamall-state and All-Greater Rochester honors as a defensive end his senioryear. Tim was also captain of the basketball team and won MVP honorsas a member of his track and field squad...Personal: Timothy DavidCondon is the son of Dave and Jane Condon and has two sisters and abrother. His grandfather and great uncle are both Cornellgraduates...Born: 4-3-83.

#27 GREG COLLINSOutside Linebacker6-3, 211, Sophomore

Bear, Del.(Newark HS)

Major: Economics

At Cornell: Collins is a hard worker with agreat attitude. He has shown improvementin all areas of his game and made great

strides during spring ball. He is developing into a strong hitter and withcontinued effort, will challenge for time. He is enrolled in the Collegeof Arts and Sciences...At Newark: Collins was a member of the footballand basketball teams at Newark HS and was a starter for both squads.He also attended Archmere Academy for two years prior to enrollingat Newark. A three-time letter winner in football, he was a first-teamall-conference selection and a third-team all-state pick. He was also athree-time all-conference pick in basketball, earning first-team honorsin 2001...Personal: Gregory Lee Collins Jr. is the son of Gregory andCarolyn Collins and has a younger brother...Born: 5-23-84.

#88 DAN DIXONWide Receiver

5-10, 181, SophomoreTulsa, Okla.

(Cascia Hall Prep)Major: Economics

At Cornell: Dan was a member of the BigRed in 2001 as a rookie before taking a leavein 2002. He returns to the wide receiver

corps looking to compete for action...At Cascia: Dan was an all-metroand all-state running back at Cascia Hall Prep. A four-year letter winner,his team won the state title his junior year. Dixon was also a memberof the track team and was a member of two state championship relayteams...Personal: Dan Richard Dixon is the son of Richard and BeckyDixon and has an older sister. His father played football at the Universityof Tulsa. Dan is in the College of Human Ecology...Born: 1-12-83.

2003 Outlook and Team

#6 PAT DEYHLE **Tight End

6-2, 224, SeniorSilver Spring, Md.(Good Counsel HS)

Major: Applied Economicsand Management

At Cornell: A two-year letter winner, Deyhleis the early candidate to replace the de-

parted Matt Wise at tight end. A solid pass catcher and blocker witha lot of speed, the senior brings good size to the position. Deyhle, whomoved from outside linebacker to TE in 2002, has worked really hardto learn the offense and will be looking to take over the starting job. Hehas also been a key to the Big Red’s special teams. Deyhle is a studentin the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences...At Good Counsel:Deyhle was a two-year letter winner as a linebacker and fullback at OurLady of Good Counsel HS. He was a first-team All-Burtonsville Gazetteselection as a senior, while earning All-WCAC honors. A starter on bothoffense and defense, Pat received All-Maryland Small Schools and All-Montgomery Journal honorable mention as a linebacker...Personal:Patrick Michael Deyhle is the son of Janet and Bill Deyhle, and he has twoyounger sisters...Born: 3-22-82.

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#3 CLAYTON FITZSIMMONSWide Receiver5-6, 180, JuniorWheeling, W.Va.

(Wheeling Central Catholic HS)Major: Government

At Cornell: Fitzsimmons is making the changefrom tailback to wide receiver this year. Heis a tough player who made improvements

in the spring and turns in strong efforts every chance he gets. Claytonis enrolled in the College of Arts and Sciences...At Wheeling: Fitzsimmonsplayed at defensive back and tailback for Wheeling Central Catholic HS.He was a first-team all-state selection on defense and also set a ClassA championship game record with four rushing TDs, leading his squadto the state title. He was a first-team All-Valley and all-conferenceplayer, and earned MVP honors following the title game. Fitzsimmonswas also a member of the basketball team, and earned All-Valley, all-conference and all-state honors. He served as team captain for bothsports...Personal: Clayton John Fitzsimmons is the son of Robert andSunni Fitzsimmons and has an older brother and a younger sister. Hisfather played football at Allegheny College...Born: 5-3-82.

#41 OLUSEYI FASHUSIInside Linebacker

6-0, 232, SophomoreBrooklyn, N.Y.(Midwood HS)

Major: Biological Sciences

At Cornell: Oluseyi worked hard in the off-season and made great strides. He showedimprovement during spring practices and

will be a role player in 2003. He is enrolled in the College of Agricultureand Life Sciences...At Midwood: Fashusi played three years of varsityfootball at Midwood HS, playing at tight end and linebacker. He wasa NYC All-Star at both positions and was an All-Brooklyn linebacker.Fashusi was also a NYC All-Academic selection...Personal: OluseyiOlutoyin Fashusi is the son of Caroline Fashusi and has a brother and asister...Born: 12-20-84.

#84 TROY FOLLMARTight End

6-3, 237, SophomoreSaratoga, Calif.(Saratoga HS)

Major: Undecided

At Cornell: Follmar has a lot of size and is asolid blocker. He worked hard in the springto improve his understanding of the offense

and will challenge for playing time in the fall. He is enrolled in theCollege of Arts and Sciences...At Saratoga: Follmar was a member ofthe football and wrestling teams at Follmar HS. A two-year starter andletter winner on the gridiron, he earned first-team all-league honors asa tight end in 2000 and 2001. He was selected to play in the Silicon ValleyYouth Classic All-Star game. As a wrestler, he was a two-time leaguechampion at 215 pounds and finished fifth at the sectional champion-ships. Follmar captained both teams as a senior...Personal: Troy ScottFollmar is the son of Ken and Debbie Follmar and has two older brothersand a younger sister. His brother, Keith, is a 2003 Cornell graduate...Born:6-12-84.

#79 JOHN FULFREEOffensive Line

6-0, 247, SophomoreCentereach, N.Y.(St. Anthony’s HS)

Major: Industrial and LaborRelations

At Cornell: John is a quick and physical playerwho showed great potential during spring

practices. An ankle injury hampered him in the off-season, but he willbattle for playing time in 2003. He is enrolled in the School of Industrialand Labor Relations...St. Anthony’s: Fulfree played both football andlacrosse at St. Anthony’s HS, winning two varsity letters for each sport.As a senior, he captained the football team to the league title and wasan all-league, all-city and all-state selection. He was selected to playin the senior all-star game at the end of the 2001 season...Personal: JohnB. Fulfree is the son of John and Elaine Fulfree and has two youngerbrothers...Born: 11-19-83.

2003 Outlook and Team

#89 CHRIS ECKSTEINTight End

6-3, 239, SophomoreHarrisonburg, Va.(Harrisonburg HS)Major: Undecided

At Cornell: Eckstein has been working tolearn the Big Red’s offense and had a strongspring. He brings size to the position, is good

at blocking and can catch the ball. Look for him to compete for thestarting job this fall. He is enrolled in the College of Arts andSciences...At Harrisonburg: Eckstein was a two-time all-district selec-tion at both the tight end and defensive end positions while playingfootball for Harrisonburg HS. A three-year starter for the squad, hecaptained the team to the state title as a senior. He was also selectedto play in the Virginia state all-star game and was a National FootballFoundation and College Hall of Fame Scholar-Athlete. Eckstein was alsoa member of the basketball and soccer teams. The goalkeeper for thesoccer team, he was a two-time all-district and all-region pick...Personal:Christopher Michael Eckstein is the son of Bryan and Theresa Eckstein andhas three brothers and a sister...Born: 8-24-84.

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#69 DOMINIC GARGUILE ***Offensive Line6-6, 303, SeniorBremerton, Wash.

(O’Dea HS)Major: Applied Economics

and Management

At Cornell: An All-Ivy candidate on theoffensive line, Garguile returns at left tackle

and will also serve on special teams as the snapper on both punts andplacements. He has great size and mental toughness which make himan asset on the line. He is a solid performer and a leader who was partof an offensive line that opened holes for a team that averaged nearly300 yards in total offense in 2002. Dominic was a defensive lineman asa freshman and sophomore. He is a student in the College of Agriculture

and Life Sciences...At O’Dea: Dominicreceived three letters in football andtwo more in track and field at O’Dea HS.He was a first-team all-state selectionby the Washington Prep Football Re-port, while earning all-metro first-teamaccolades as a senior. Garguile placedsecond in the shot put at the 1999 Sea-King District Championships with a tossof 50-5 and competed in the Washing-ton state championship meet. He wonthe Sea-King shot put title in 2000...Per-sonal: Dominic Gianni Garguile is theson of Mary and Timothy Garguile, andhe has a younger brother and a youngersister...Born: 3-25-82.

#22 EDUARDO GARCIAFullback

5-10, 218, SophomoreSpring Texas(Klein Oak HS)

Major: Operations Research andEngineering

At Cornell: Garcia developed a betterunderstanding of the offense during spring

practice and is expected to continue making improvements this fall. Heis enrolled in the College of Engineering...At Klein Oak: Eduardoearned three varsity letters as a member of the football team at KleinOak HS. A starter, he was a fullback and linebacker for the team. Asa senior, he was the team’s captain and was an all-district honorablemention. Eduardo was also an academic all-state pick...Personal:Eduardo Julian Garcia is the son of Luis and Shari Garcia and has twobrothers...Born: 12-29-83.

#30 JEFF HAHNOutside Linebacker6-0, 190, Sophomore

Chester, N.Y.(Warwick Valley HS)

Major: Applied Economics andManagement

At Cornell: Hahn is a dedicated, hard-working player. He really stepped it up

during spring ball, but was sidelined early on with an injury. Withcontinued work, Hahn should see game action this fall. He is enrolledin the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences...At Warwick: Hahn wasa two-time all-state linebacker at Warwick Valley HS, earning second-team honors in 2000 and first-team honors as a senior. Along with thestate honors, he was also an all-tri-county first-team pick as a linebackerand running back and earned all-section honors for his performance onoffense. The team’s captain in 2001, he completed his career listedsecond on the school’s all-time rushing list and has two of the school’stop season performances for total tackles. He was selected to play inthe annual Governors’ Bowl. Hahn was also a four-year letter winner asa catcher for the baseball team and competed for the tracksquad...Personal: Jeff Phillip Hahn is the son of Mark and Christine Hahnand has an older sister...Born: 10-9-83.

#61 ROSS HAMILTONOffensive Line

6-5, 295, SophomoreCalifon, N.J.

(Voorhees HS)Major: Biology and Society

At Cornell: Ross brings great size to the lefttackle position. He showed great improve-ment during spring ball and will challenge

for playing time in 2003. He is enrolled in the College of Agricultureand Life Sciences...At Voorhees: Hamilton was a two-year starter as anoffensive and defensive lineman at Voorhees HS. He was an all-countyhonorable mention and was selected to play in the county all-star game.Hamilton was also a member of the track and field team and was thesquad’s captain as a senior. He also played basketball for twoyears...Personal: Ross Kuron Hamilton is the son of Alwine Kuron andhas two older brothers and two older sisters...Born: 11-16-83.

#70 TIM HANLEYDefensive Line

6-1, 262, SophomoreSaddle Brook, N.J.

(Paramus Catholic HS)Major: Design and

Environmental Analysis

At Cornell: Tim made some strides duringspring practice and may compete for a back-

up spot this fall. He is a student in the College of Human Ecology...AtParamus: Hanley was a two-way player for the football team atParamus Catholic HS, earning three varsity letters. He was a three-timeall-league selection and captained the team his senior year. Hanley wasalso selected to play in the Bergen County all-star game...Personal:Timothy James Hanley is the son of Tim and Stella Hanley and has ayounger sister...Born: 10-14-83.

2003 Outlook and Team

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#38 JIM HILLIARDOutside Linebacker5-11, 194, SeniorHarrisburg, Ill.(Harrisburg HS)

Major: Nutritional Sciences

At Cornell: Hilliard is a smart and funda-mentally sound player who always putshimself in the right position to make a play.

He saw action in a handful of games last year and turned in his bestperformance against Penn. He had a strong spring and will providevaluable depth on the outside. Expect him to battle for and see playingtime in 2003. Hilliard is enrolled in the College of Human Ecology...AtHarrisburg: Hilliard was a first-team all-conference pick as a senior atHarrisburg HS. A four-year letter winner, he played both linebacker andon the offensive line and was his team’s MVP as a senior. He was alsonamed to the All-South team and was recognized by both the SouthernIllinoisan and Evansville Courier. He was also named to the all-stateacademic team...Personal: James Mitchell Hilliard is the son of Davidand Julie Hilliard and has an older sister...Born: 3-11-82.

#80 CARLOS HILL *Wide Receiver6-3, 211, JuniorNorthglen, Colo.

(Kent Denver School)Major: Operations Researchand Industrial Engineering

At Cornell: Carlos is a hard worker who hasmade improvements every day since arriv-

ing on the East Hill. He brings good size and catching ability to theposition and the coaching staff will look for him to step up in the fall andmake a significant contribution. If the spring workouts are anyindication, he shouldn’t disappoint. Hill saw action in all 10 games asa sophomore, primarily on special teams. As a rookie, he played in fourgames and caught one pass for 17 yards against Harvard. He is enrolledin the College of Engineering...At Kent Denver: Hill was a wide receiverand free safety at Kent Denver. He was a first-team all-conferenceselection at both positions and was an honorable mention all-statereceiver. Hill was also a four-year letter winner on the track and fieldteam...Personal: Carlos A. Hill is the son of Steve Hill and Gale Garciaand has two brothers...Born: 12-3-82.

#1 LUKE HANSET *Fullback

5-11, 215, JuniorPortland, Ore.(Jesuit HS)

Major: Industrial andLabor Relations

At Cornell: Luke is a dedicated and versatileplayer who can play at either the fullback or

tailback positions. He has a lot of strength and a great understandingof the offense, which makes him a strong candidate for the startingfullback position this fall. He has been a significant contributor on specialteams for the past two seasons. He is enrolled in the School of Industrialand Labor Relations...At Jesuit: Hanset was a three-year letter winneron the gridiron at Jesuit HS. He was a first-team all-metro pick as a seniorand was the team’s captain, leading the squad to the state title. Hewas also a National Football Foundation and College Hall of FameScholar Athlete...Personal: Lucian James Hanset is the son of Jim andDee Hanset and has two sisters...Born: 1-9-83.

#14 ANDRE HARDAWAY *Tailback

6-1, 210, SophomorePlymouth, Mass.(Milton Academy)

Major: Communication

At Cornell: Hardaway returns for his sopho-more season looking to crack into the lineupfull-time. A tailback with the combination of

great speed, size, power and cutback ability, Hardaway is a terrificcomplement to returning starter Marcus Blanks. He rushed just fourtimes for 10 yards as a rookie, but also played a key role on special teamswith four tackles. He could return kickoffs or punts this season to get hisgame-breaking ability on the field more. He is enrolled in the Collegeof Agriculture and Life Sciences...Milton: Hardaway played footballand basketball at Milton Academy. A two-year starter and letter winneron the gridiron, he was the team’s captain as a junior and senior.Hardaway earned all-league honors in 2001 and 2002. He was also amember of the basketball team, earning four varsity letters...Personal:Andre Devon Hardaway is the son of Tiffany Cesero and has two brothersand three sisters...Born: 5-11-84.

2003 Outlook and Team

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#40 MIKE HIRSCHFIELDFullback

6-2, 229, SophomoreWoodstock, Ga.(Etowah HS)

Major: Economics

At Cornell: Mike moved to fullback duringthe spring after working with the tight endsin 2002. He worked hard during the spring

workouts and showed improvement at his new position. He willcontinue to develop this fall. Mike is a student in the College of Arts andSciences...Etowah: Hirschfield was a three-year starter and letterwinner for the football team at Etowah HS. He was named to the all-county team as a senior. Hirschfield also played basketball for twoseasons...Personal: Mike Hirschfield is the son of Henry Hirschfield andTeri Hurlburt and has a younger brother...Born: 8-3-84.

#47 JOSH JOHNSTONTailback

6-1, 207, SophomoreCenterport, N.Y.(Harborfields HS)

Major: Applied Economics andManagement

At Cornell: Josh brings size, strength andspeed to the tailback position. During spring

practices, he did a great job setting up his blocks and proved that hecan make big plays. He will challenge for the starting job this fall. Joshis enrolled in the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences...AtHarborfields: Johnston played both football and basketball atHarborfields HS, earning a total of seven varsity letters. On the gridiron,he was named to the all-league and all-county teams. As a senior, hewas the team’s captain and added All-Long Island and first-team all-state honors to his resume. As a member of the basketball team, he wasan all-league and all-conference pick. He was the team’s captain as ajunior and senior...Personal: Joshua Michael Johnston is the son ofMichael and Patti Johnston and has an older brother and a youngersister...Born: 4-23-84.

#83 JOHN KELLNER **Wide Receiver

5-10, 188, SeniorEvans, Colo.

(Greeley West HS)Major: Applied Economics

and Management

At Cornell: Kellner has the chance to be-come Cornell’s go-to receiver after a junior

campaign in which he hauled in 36 passes for 493 yards and a pair oftouchdowns. A quick target who can go inside or outside and make thecatch, Kellner caught at least two passes in every game a season agowith a season-high seven catches for 74 yards against Harvard. Hecaught touchdown passes against Dartmouth for the go-ahead score ina 21-19 Big Red win, and was on the receiving end of a 7-yard pass with25 seconds remaining in a 17-14 triumph at Columbia. Kellner is theteam’s active leading receiver entering the season with 67 receptionsfor 930 yards and five touchdowns. As a sophomore, he finished theseason with 437 yards and three touchdowns on 31 receptions. Hishighlight-reel performance came against nationally ranked Lehigh,when he blocked a punt, recovered the ball and then returned it 39 yardsfor a touchdown. A week earlier, he stepped in and racked up 116receiving yards at Colgate, which also included a 22-yard touchdownreception and a key 49-yard catch. He closed out the year with atouchdown and 81 yards on five catches in the season finale vs. Penn. Heis enrolled in Cornell’s College of Agriculture and Life Sciences...AtGreeley West: Kellner earned three letters in football at Greeley WestHS, while also lettering twice in track and once each in baseball andbasketball. A two-time first-team all-conference choice, he was a RockyMountain News first-team all-state selection as a senior, after earningsecond-team honors in 1998. John also received Denver Post All-Statehonorable mention and All-Weld County honors as a senior...Personal:Kenneth John Kellner is the son of Mary and Mick Kellner and has ayounger brother...Born: 10-13-81.

Year GP Rec Yds Avg TD LP2001 9 31 437 14.1 3 492002 10 36 493 13.7 2 49Total 19 67 930 13.9 5 49

2003 Outlook and Team

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#91 RYAN LEMPA *Defensive Line6-3, 260, Senior

Point Pleasant Beach, N.J.(Point Pleasant Beach HS)Major: Operations Researchand Industrial Engineering

At Cornell: Ryan is a returning letter winnerwho brings a lot of experience and leader-

ship to the Big Red’s defensive line. He had several strong performanceslast season and finished the year with five tackles for loss, including twosacks. He will be a starter again this fall and his size, power and speedwill make him one of the more dominant players on the line. Ryan missedthe 2001 season because of a non-football injury and saw time as alinebacker early in his career. He is a student in the College ofEngineering...At Point Pleasant Beach: Ryan received four letters infootball and three in both base-ball and basketball at Point Pleas-ant Beach HS. He was a third-team All-New Jersey selection asa senior, while also earning sec-ond-team All-Ocean County hon-ors. Lempa was named third-team All-Shore Conference, whilealso being invited to play in theNew Jersey North-South and All-Shore Classic all-stargames...Personal: Ryan AnthonyLempa is the son of Patricia andRobert Lempa and he has a twinsister and a youngerbrother...Born: 3-10-82.

Year GP Tackles Assists For Loss Sacks2002 10 10 10 5-10 2-4

#55 BRAD KITLOWSKI **Outside Linebacker6-0, 215, JuniorPittsburgh, Pa.

(Mount Lebanon HS)Major: Economics

At Cornell: An honorable mention All-Ivypick a season ago, Kitlowski teams withclassmate Joel Sussman to form the top duo

of outside linebackers in the Ivy League. Kitlowski ranked third on theteam in total stops with 82 and added seven tackles for loss (-21 yards)with four sacks. He also forced and recovered two fumbles while startingall 10 games. His top game of 2002 was in the win vs. Dartmouth, wherehe recorded 14 tackles (including a 7-yard sack), forced a fumble andbroke up a pass. Kitlowski proved himself early on and saw action inall nine games as a rookie. He was among the team’s top 10 tacklersand finished his first collegiate campaign with 35 total tackles, including18 solo efforts. He also had five tackles for loss, including a 5-yard sackvs. Yale in the season opener. He had a career-high and team-best 10tackles vs. Princeton, which included four solo efforts. A returning starter,he has become a vocal leader on defense. He is an extremely hardworker with great football sense, and the coaching staff looks for an evenbetter junior season. He is enrolled in the College of Arts andSciences...At Mount Lebanon: Brad was a three-year letter winner atMount Lebanon HS. A linebacker for the Blue Devils, his team won theWPIAL Quad-A championship his senior year. He was an all-conferenceand all-state selection in 2000. Kitlowski was also a member of thebasketball team at Mt. Lebanon...Personal: Bradley James Kitlowski isthe son of Chris and Elaine Kitlowski and has a younger sister...Born: 12-25-82.

Year GP Tackles Assists For Loss Sacks2001 9 18 17 5-9 1-52002 10 43 39 7-21 4-22Totals 19 61 56 12-30 5-27

#12 RYAN KUHNQuarterback

6-5, 219, SophomoreNew Fairfield, Conn.(New Fairfield HS)

Major: Applied Economics andManagement

At Cornell: Kuhn got thrown into the fire lastyear when starting QB Mick Razzano was

injured in the final game of the season against Ivy League championPenn. The sophomore gained valuable experience in that contest,going 5-for-12 for 31 yards. Ryan has tremendous athletic ability andis coming into his own as he continues to learn the offense. He is apromising quarterback with the ability to make plays, and he willcontinue to make strides this year. Ryan is enrolled in the College ofAgriculture and Life Sciences...At New Fairfield: Kuhn played bothfootball and basketball at New Fairfield HS, earning three varsity lettersin each. A first-team all-state football selection as a senior, he was alsoa first-team all-area and all-conference pick. The team’s captain in2001, he actually earned all-conference honors three times — honorablemention once and first-team twice. As a member of the basketballteam, he was an all-division first-team selection as a junior and senior.Kuhn was named to the conference all-academic squad for bothsports...Personal: Ryan Michael Kuhn is the son of Michael and SandraKuhn and has a younger sister...Born: 7-1-84.

#74 DAN LEGIECOffensive Line

6-3, 246, SophomoreMountainside, N.J.

(Governor Livingston HS)Major: Urban and Regional

Studies

At Cornell: Dan moved to the left guardposition in the off-season and worked hard

to learn his new position during the spring. He is an agile and toughplayer with a great work ethic. He will continue to improve as his sizeand strength increases. Dan is enrolled in the College of HumanEcology...At Livingston: Legiec was a two-way player on the footballteam at Governor Livingston HS. A three-year letter winner, he was afirst-team all-county pick as an offensive lineman and earned third-team all-state honors. At the conclusion of his senior season, he wasnamed to the “Super 100” all-state team and was selected to play inthe North-South all-star football game. Legiec was also a member ofthe indoor and outdoor track and field teams for four seasons...Personal:Daniel Robert Legiec is the son of Stanley and Helena Legiec and hastwo older sisters and a younger brother...Born: 8-20-83.

2003 Outlook and Team

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#20 TREVOR MacMEEKIN *Place-kicker

6-0, 197, JuniorPhoenix, Md.(Dulaney HS)

Major: Applied Economicsand Management

At Cornell: MacMeekin had an excellentsophomore season in earning second-team

All-Ivy accolades, connecting on 8-of-9 field goals and 17-of-19 extrapoints. He also was tested under fire, kicking a pair of overtime fieldgoals to give the Big Red wins over Towson and Brown. MacMeekin hasa lot of mental toughness and can make the tough kick when the gameis on the line. His long was a 42-yard effort against Brown to push theBig Red to a double overtime victory. He can be counted on for hisconsistency and has been working on gaining distance with his kicks. Astudent in the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences, he will beinducted into the Red Key Athletic Honorary Society this fall...AtDulaney: MacMeekin was a place-kicker for the Dulaney HS footballteam. He kicked 11 field goals as a senior, one shy of the state record,with a long of 47 yards. As a senior, he was a first- team all-state selection,as well as earning all-region, all-county, all-metro, and all-divisionhonors. He captained the team as a senior and was also the captain ofthe school’s baseball team. An all-metro pitcher, he finished his senioryear with an 8-0 record and an impressive 0.66 ERA and 59 strikeouts.He capped off his prep career by being named the school’s Male Athleteof the Year...Personal: Trevor William MacMeekin is the son of Robertand Colleen MacMeekin and has a younger sister, Ally, who is a freshmanon the Ohio State women’s lacrosse team...Born: 7-3-83.

X-PtsYear GP Made-Att FGM-FGA Lg Pts2002 10 17-19 8-9 42 41

#62 STEPHEN MAKOVICHDefensive Line

6-4, 241, SophomoreGlenville, N.Y.

(Burnt Hulls-Ballston Lake HS)Major: Applied Economics and

Management

At Cornell: Stephen made improvements tohis game during spring ball and could com-

pete for a back-up spot. He is enrolled in the College of Agriculture andLife Sciences...At Burnt Hulls-Ballston Lake: Makovich played footballand basketball for three years each at Burnt Hulls-Ballston Lake HS. Atwo-way starter on the football team, he was an all-area, all-divisionand all-region selection en route to earning first-team all-state honorson defense. He was also named to the Times Union and Troy Record all-star teams. His football team won the division title in 2001. Makovichwas a National Football Foundation and College Hall of Fame Scholar-Athlete and was selected to play in the Governor’s Bowl all-star game.As a member of the basketball team, he was a two-year captain andhelped the team to a sectional title in 2000 and two league tournamenttitles...Personal: Stephen Raymond Makovich Jr. is the son of Stephenand Cindy Makovich and has a younger sister. His aunt, Lori Burghardt,is a 1992 Cornell graduate...Born: 6-28-84.

#54 JOHN MEGARO **Offensive Line6-2, 272, SeniorChicago, Ill.

(Mt. Carmel HS)Major: Animal Sciences

At Cornell: Megaro is the returning starterat center. He has tremendous quickness andmakes all of the line calls. He is a determined

player and a proven leader. John broke his hand last year in the Harvardgame but his season did not end, as he learned to snap with his left hand.He is an invaluable leader and a key to the Big Red’s success. He firststepped into the position as a sophomore and saw action in six games.He is enrolled in the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences...At Mt.Carmel: John was a three-time letter winner in football, while earningtwo letters in track at Mt. Carmel HS. He was an All-Illinois honorablemention selection in 1999, while also earning all-area honorablemention and All-Catholic League honors as a senior. Megaro helpedMt. Carmel to Illinois state titles in 1998 and 1999...Personal: JohnAnthony Megaro is the son of Anthony and Stephanie Megaro, and hehas a younger sister and a younger brother...Born: 8-15-82.

#56 MIKE McGINTY *Defensive Line6-2, 260, Junior

North Royalton, Ohio(St. Ignatius HS)Major: Undecided

At Cornell: Mike will see action on the linein 2003 and may even see some starts. Hebrings experience to the defense and saw

time in all 10 games last year. A very athletic player, Mike had asuccessful spring camp and will enter the fall high up on the depth chart.He is enrolled in the College of Arts and Sciences...At St. Ignatius: Mikeplayed on the defensive line at St. Ignatius HS and was a three-yearstarter. As a senior, he was a second-team All-Northeast Ohio selectionand an All-Ohio honorable mention pick. A two-year letter winner, histeam won the state title his junior year...Personal: Michael O. McGintyis the son of Kevin and Patty McGinty and has an older brother...Born:8-13-82.

Year GP Tackles Assists For Loss Sacks2002 10 3 3 1-1 0-0

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Big Red Veterans

#17 SEAN NASSOIYCornerback

5-9, 164, JuniorToms River, N.J.

(Monsignor Donovan HS)Major: Biological Sciences

At Cornell: Sean is an aggressive player witha lot of quickness. He had an outstandingspring and showed that he can be a

playmaker. He is continuing to learn the defense, but will be part ofthe cornerback rotation this fall. Nassoiy, who has seen time on specialteams in the past, will continue there, but will be a primary puntreturner this year. He is enrolled in the College of Agriculture and LifeSciences...At Donovan: Sean was the captain of his football team atMonsignor Donovan HS for two seasons. He was a first-team All-Shore,all-county and all-conference selection. A four-year letter winner, hewas the team’s MVP as a senior and was named to the New Jersey “Super100” team. Sean was also a member of the school’s basketball and trackand field teams...Personal: Sean Patrick Nassoiy is the son of Michaeland Maura Testa and has a brother and two sisters...Born: 1-3-83.

#5 NEIL MORRISSEY **Free Safety

6-0, 176, SeniorPepper Pike, Ohio(University School)

Major: Hotel Administration

At Cornell: Morrissey enters the fall as thestarting free safety. He has an outstandinggrasp of the defense and provides great

onfield leadership. He had 14 total tackles last year, including two forloss against Princeton. In the year-end game vs. Penn, he had a big 23-yard interception. Neil had surgery in the off-season and didn’t

participate in the spring prac-tices. He has been workinghard over the summer andshould be in top form when fallpractices start. He is a studentin the School of HotelAdministration...At University:Morrissey earned three lettersin football and two in basket-ball at the University School.He was a Lake County NewsHerald second-team selection,while receiving Cleveland PlainDealer honorable mention. Neilwas also selected to play in theCleveland East-West Shrinegame...Personal: James NeilMorrissey Jr. is the son of Mary

Ellen and Jim Morrissey and has two brothers, Michael and Danny...Born:1-28-82.

Year GP Tackles Assists For Loss Ints2002 10 3 14 2-16 1-23

#90 JASON MORGAN *Defensive Line

6-1, 209, SophomoreDistrict Heights, Md.(Eleanor Roosevelt HS)

Major: Computer Science

At Cornell: Jason has a lot of speed andquickness and is the projected starter atdefensive end. One of the best athletes on

the line, he is a good pass rusher and should make some big plays. In2002, he saw time in nine games and had four tackles for loss, includinga big 11-yard sack in the season opener vs. Bucknell. He also had sacksin the wins against Towson and Brown and recovered a fumble vs. theBears. He is enrolled in the College of Arts and Sciences...At EleanorRoosevelt: Jason was a letter winner on the football team at EleanorRoosevelt HS. The squad finished the year 11-1 overall and won thecounty and regional championships...Personal: Jason is the son ofMaurice and Tina Morgan...Born: 2-7-83.

#50 JON MOODYOffensive Line

6-0, 258, SophomoreColumbus, Ohio(Northland HS)

Major: Architecture

At Cornell: Jon is an athletic and powerfulplayer who showed great promise duringspring ball. He is a talented player who is

working hard to improve his understanding of the game. He is enrolledin the College of Architecture, Art, and Planning...At Northland: Jonwas awarded two varsity letters as a member of the Northland HSfootball team. He was also a member of the wrestling and track andfield squads. He earned third-place in the city wrestling tournamentand third in the shot put and discus at the city meet. He was also a districtqualifier in wrestling and was awarded the Archie Griffin Sportsman-ship Award...Personal: Jonathan Douglas Moody is the son of Curtis andElaine Moody and has two older brothers...Born: 11-12-83.

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#28 TODD NEWELL **Fullback

6-0, 220, SeniorSilver Spring, Md.(Good Counsel HS)

Major: Applied Economicsand Management

At Cornell: Newell has grown into the full-back position and continued to make im-

provements during the spring. He has gotten bigger and more physicaland truly understands the offense. Todd enters the fall as the projectedstarter at fullback. He is enrolled in the College of Agriculture and LifeSciences...At Good Counsel: Newell earned two letters each in footballand baseball at Good Counsel HS. He was a football all-star as a senior,while also earning first-team All-WCAC honors in baseball following hisjunior campaign...Personal: Todd Garrison Newell is the son of Lauraand Marlin Newell, and he has two older brothers...Born: 1-26-82.

#16 GABE NEWELLQuarterback

6-4, 207, JuniorRedding, Calif.(Enterprise HS)

Major: Engineering

At Cornell: Gabe made strides during thespring camp and continues to develop withinthe offense. He has a pure throwing motion

and with more poise and maturity on the field, he could be a force forthe Big Red. Newell saw some snaps in the Penn game last year andthrew 32 yards on three completions. He is enrolled in the College ofEngineering....At Enterprise: Gabe was the starting quarterback atEnterprise HS and amassed 2,654 yards as a junior and senior. He wasa 2000 All-Northern Athletic League selection and led his team to a 10-2 overall record and the league and section titles. Gabe was also amember of the basketball team that won the section championship in2000 and 2001...Personal: Gabriel F. Newell is the son of Jim Newelland Renee Wilgus and has two older brothers...Born: 11-24-82.

#23 CHAD NICE **Wide Receiver6-0, 192, SeniorMorrison, Ill.(Morrison HS)

Major: Applied Economicsand Management

At Cornell: Nice earned a starting spot atreceiver this spring after finishing third on

the team a year ago in receptions (15) and yards (164). He had a season-high 63 yards on four catches in the season finale against Penn. A greatopen-field runner with tremendous speed, Chad is a candidate to makesignificant contributions this season.. He teams with John Kellner to giveCornell two veterans on the outside, and the coaching staff expects himto play a major role in this year’s offense. As a sophomore, Nice madethe move from running back to wide receiver and saw action in all ninegames and had 12 receptions for 134 yards, including two touchdowns.His longest catch was a 45-yarder against Brown and he came up witha big touchdown against Colgate. Chad has also seen time with theBig Red’s special teams the past few seasons. He is studying in Cornell’sCollege of Agriculture and Life Sciences...At Morrison: Chad was athree-year letter winner in both football and track, while also earningtwo letters in swimming at Morrison HS. He was a first-team all-areaselection on the gridiron...Personal: Chad William Nice is the son ofPatricia and William Nice and has an older sister and a youngerbrother...Born: 9-16-81.

Year GP Rec Yds Avg TD LP2001 9 12 134 11.2 2 452002 10 15 164 10.9 0 43Totals 19 27 298 11.4 2 45

#99 JOHN PADAVANDefensive Line6-3, 246, JuniorPringle, Pa.

(Wyoming Valley West HS)Major: Hotel Administration

At Cornell: John sat out last season aftertransferring from the University of Maine. Heworked during the spring practices to get

better and is a good run defender and pass rusher. He brings size,strength and quickness to the line and could see playing time in 2003.He is enrolled in the School of Hotel Administration...At Maine: Johnplayed football for one season at the University of Maine beforetransferring to Cornell. While playing for the Black Bears, he wasawarded the team’s Jim Butterfield Scout Team Award for his dedica-tion to the squad...At Wyoming: John was a first-team all-conferenceplayer for Wyoming Valley West HS and earned three varsity letters. Anall-star team pick and the team’s captain, he missed his senior year withan injury...Personal: John Allen Padavan is the son of John and MarcellaPadavan...Born: 10-21-81.

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#34 PAUL PARDIInside Linebacker6-1, 233, JuniorColumbus, Ohio

(Bishop Watterson HS)Major: Applied Economics

and Management

At Cornell: Paul has excellent lateral move-ment and adds depth to the inside

linebacking corps. He had a great spring and is a projected starter thisfall. The coaching staff expects him to be an impact player in 2003. Asa sophomore, he played in seven games and had 12 solo tackles andseven assists. Two of his tackles were for loss, including a 6-yard sackagainst Princeton. He also forced a fumble in that same game. He hasalso been a part of the Big Red’s special teams. He is enrolled in theCollege of Agriculture and Life Sciences...At Watterson: Paul played atboth the inside and outside linebacker positions for Bishop WattersonHS. As a senior, he was a first-team All-Central Catholic Leagueselection as well as a first-team all-district and first-team All-Ohio pick.He was also a first-team Dispatch-Agonis Club All-Star and capped offhis high school career by being selected to play in the Buckeye All-Stargame. He was also a member of the school’s basketball team and wasthe team’s captain as a senior...Personal: Paul Edward Pardi is the sonof Mark and Peggy Pardi and has two brothers and a sister...Born: 9-4-82.

Year GP Tackles Assists For Loss Sacks2002 7 12 7 2-8 1-6

#58 PATRICK POTTSInside Linebacker

6-3, 227, SophomoreKenton, Ohio

(Kenton Senior HS)Major: History

At Cornell: Patrick showed great improve-ment during spring practices and is ex-pected to make an impact in 2003. Look for

him to challenge for a starting spot in the lineup. He is a student in theCollege of Arts and Sciences...At Kenton: Potts was a four-time varsityletter winner as a middle linebacker for the Kenton Senior HS footballteam. He also played on the basketball team and was a member of thetrack and field squad. On the gridiron, he was a first-team all-league,all-region and all-state selection. He was also named the league’sdefensive back of the year and was Northwest Ohio Defensive Player ofthe Year. As a senior, he captained the team to the league and statetitles. As a member of the basketball team, he was the squad’s captainand earned all-league honors...Personal: Patrick James Potts is the sonof James and Rebecca Potts and has an older sister...Born: 6-16-83.

#4 ARJUN RAOWide Receiver

6-0, 187, SophomorePalm Springs, Calif.

(Webb School of Calif.)Major: Industrial and

Labor Relations

At Cornell: Rao has a tremendous knowl-edge of the game and has great hands. He

had an excellent spring and the coaches expect him to play a role inthe offense and contribute this fall. He is a student in the School ofIndustrial and Labor Relations...At Webb: Rao was a three-year starterfor the football team at Webb School of California, playing at the widereceiver and free safety positions. A two-year captain, he was namedfirst-team all-league three years in a row. Rao was also a member ofthe basketball and baseball teams, captaining both squads whileearning first-team all-league honors...Personal: Arjun P. Rao is the sonof Narasimha and Aruna Rao and has two older sisters...Born: 12-20-83.

#98 MATT POLLOCKDefensive Line

6-1, 250, SophomoreFulton, N.Y.

(G. Ray Bodley HS)Major: General Studies

At Cornell: Matt showed improvementduring the spring practices and bringsstrength to the defensive line. He will

compete for playing time this fall. He is enrolled in the College ofAgriculture and Life Sciences...Bodley: Pollock played on both theoffensive and defensive lines at G. Ray Bodley HS, earning two varsityletters. As a senior, he earned first-team All-CNY, all-league and all-state honors. His 2000 team won the regional title and went on to finishthird in the state. Pollock was also a member of the wrestling andlacrosse teams. The wrestling team won two Section III titles and placedfifth at the 2001 New York state championships...Personal: MatthewEdward Pollock is the son of Michael and Joanne Pollock and has ayounger brother...Born: 8-16-84.

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#29 KEVIN REXFree Safety

6-2, 197, SophomoreThousand Oaks, Calif.(Thousand Oaks HS)Major: Undecided

At Cornell: Kevin stepped up his play in thespring and showed the coaching staff that heis ready for playing time this fall. Look for him

to challenge as he continues to gain a better understanding of thedefense. He is enrolled in the College of Arts and Sciences...AtThousand Oaks: Rex was a member of the football, basketball andvolleyball teams at Thousand Oaks HS. As a member of the footballteam, he earned all-county and All-CIF honors his senior year, as hissquad won the league title. He was selected to play in the VenturaCounty East-West All-Star game. Rex was also an all-county and All-CIFbasketball pick...Personal: Kevin Gregory Rex is the son of Gregory andJane Rex and has two older sisters and a younger sister...Born: 6-24-83.

#93 EARL RICHARDSONDefensive Line

6-3, 213, SophomoreHouston, Texas(Westfield HS)

Major: Computer Science

At Cornell: Earl made great strides in the off-season and if he continues to make improve-ments, he will compete for playing time this

fall. He has a great knack for seeing plays develop and his quicknessmakes him a good pass rusher. He is enrolled in the College of Arts andSciences... Westfield: Earl was a defensive end for the Westfield HSfootball team and earned varsity letters as a junior and senior. As asenior, he was named second-team all-district and also earned second-team all-state academic honors. Richardson was also a member of thebaseball team...Personal: Earl Bernard Richardson Jr. is the son of Earland Debra Richardson and has a younger sister...Born: 10-18-83.

#43 ED SABIAInside Linebacker

6-2, 225, SophomoreLafayette Hill, Pa.(LaSalle College HS)Major: Engineering

At Cornell: Ed made strides during springball and gained a better understanding ofthe defense. If Sabia continues to work hard

over the summer, he will contribute in the fall and challenge for someplaying time. He is enrolled in the College of Engineering...At LaSalle:Sabia was a member of the football team for three years at LaSalleCollege HS, where he played at the linebacker and tight end positions.As a junior and senior, he earned first-team all-league, all-city and all-county honors as a linebacker. He was also a second-team all-SoutheastPa., selection and was picked to play in the Montgomery County all-stargame...Personal: Edward Charles Sabia is the son of John and VirginiaSabia and has an older brother and younger twin sisters. His cousin, KateSnow, is a Cornell graduate...Born: 2-17-84.

#73 MOHAMAD SALEMDefensive Line6-2, 273, JuniorPalm Bay, Fla.(Melbourne HS)

Major: General Studies

At Cornell: Mohamad returns to the defen-sive line as a tackle. He showed greatconsistency during spring ball and showed

improvement in the off-season. He brings experience to the line andwill compete for playing time this fall. Mohamad is enrolled in theCollege of Agriculture and Life Sciences...At Melbourne: Salem earnedthree letters as a defensive tackle at Melbourne HS. He was a three-time all-conference selection and a two-time all-district pick. As asenior, he was a team captain, a county all-star and was selected theMVP of the county all-star game...Personal: Mohamad H. Salem is theson of Husien and Afaf Salem and has three brothers and four sisters...Born:5-28-82.

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#67 MIKE STONE ***Defensive Line6-4, 287, Senior

Colorado Springs, Colo.(Coronado HS)

Major: Communication

At Cornell: Mike is a tough player whoreturns to the defensive line after suffering aseason-ending injury midway through 2002.

He is a projected starter who provides a big presence in the middle.He brings a lot of size, strength and experience to the line and will alsobe counted on to provide leadership. In five games, he had nine tackles,including a tackle for loss against Bucknell. Mike had a solid sophomorecampaign, seeing action in all nine games, recording 17 total tackles,including seven solos and one for a loss. As a freshman, he saw actionin just three varsity games. Mike’s size, athletic ability and work ethicmake him a player to reckon with. He is a student in the College ofAgriculture and Life Sciences...At Coronado: Mike earned two letterseach in football and track and field at Coronado HS. He was an all-cityselection as a senior, while also playing in the all-state all-star game.Stone was a two-time all-league and all-region pick...Personal: MichaelPhilip Stone is the son of Linda Hunt-Stone and Phil Stone, and he hasan older sister...Born: 4-18-82.

Year GP Tackles Assists For Loss Sacks2001 9 7 10 1-1 0-02002 5 0 9 1-1 0-0Totals 14 7 19 2-2 0-0

#66 JASON STADNIK **Offensive Line6-5, 279, SeniorWilmington, Del.(Charter School)Major: Economics

At Cornell: Stadnik is a returning starter whois capable of playing at both tackle positions.He was injured early last season but has

worked hard to return to the field. He has great mental toughness anddesire and should heat up the competition during the fall workouts.Jason became a starter midway through the 2001 season. He playedin five games that season and was part of the team’s success inestablishing the run, including the squad’s first 200+ yard performancesince 1998. As a freshman, hewas a part of the team’s de-fense. He is enrolled in the Col-lege of Arts and Sciences...AtCharter: Stadnik received fourletters in football and three eachin basketball and lacrosse atCharter School. He was thefootball team’s most valuableplayer in 1998, while earningall-state honorable mention inbasketball and lacrosse. Hewent on to earn first-team all-state honors in lacrosse as asenior...Personal: Jason JohnStadnik is the son of LindaBrugler-Buiano and FredrickBuiano and has a youngersister...Born: 2-4-82.

#7 PATRICK STARLEPEROutside Linebacker6-0, 203, JuniorJarrettsville, Md.(North Harford HS)

Major: Applied Economicsand Management

At Cornell: Starleper really stepped upduring spring practices and the coaching

staff took notice. He is establishing himself as a great blitzer, hitter andaggressive playmaker. Look for him to continue making improvementsand elevating his game, as he will challenge for playing time in 2003.He is enrolled in the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences...At NorthHarford: Starleper was a defensive back at North Harford HS. He wasa first-team all county selection in 1999 and 2000 and was selected asan all-star as a senior. Patrick was also the team’s starting quarterbackas a junior and senior. He set school records for passing yards on offenseand interceptions on defense. Starleper was also an all-county shortstopfor the school’s baseball team and was a member of the basketballteam. He was also a National Football Foundation and College Hall ofFame Scholar-Athlete...Personal: Patrick E. Starleper is the son ofCharles and Sondra Starleper and has an older sister...Born: 3-24-83.

#32 SEAN SANSIVERI *Inside Linebacker5-10, 209, JuniorPine City, N.Y.

(Elmira Southside HS)Major: Industrial and

Labor Relations

At Cornell: Sean jumped out to a promisingstart in 2002 before sustaining an injury that

took him out of the lineup. He had surgery in the off-season and has beenworking to rehab his knee so that he is ready to go in the fall. He hasthe tools to play a valuable role on the Big Red’s defense and specialteams. Sean is enrolled in the School of Industrial and Labor Relations...AtSouthside: Sean started three seasons for the Elmira Southside HSfootball team and was also a member of the basketball and track teams.He was a two-time all-section pick and was also named to the All-TwinTiers first-team twice. He capped off his senior season by being selectedto the Ernie Davis All-Star football game. Sean earned four letters intrack and placed sixth in the New York state discus finals in 2000...Per-sonal: Sean Covey Sansiveri is the son of Gary Sansiveri and Rae Coveyand has a twin brother, Adam, who is a member of the Big Red trackteam...Born: 4-14-83.

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#35 JOEL SUSSMAN **Outside Linebacker6-4, 229, JuniorGreat Neck, N.Y.

(Great Neck North HS)Major: General Studies

At Cornell: A dominant force at linebacker,Sussman earned second-team All-Ivy recog-nition as a sophomore after leading the Big

Red in tackles (90) in 10 starts. He also recorded five tackles for loss, wascredited with two forced and recovered fumbles, three passes de-fended and a pair of blocked kicks. One of his top performances of 2002was in the overtime win against Brown, where he recorded 10 tackles,including one for a loss of 15 yards. Late in the game, he stripped theball away and then recovered the fumble, giving the offense the chanceto drive down the field en route to the win. He also recorded 11 tacklesagainst Princeton and had a season-high 13 in the win over Dartmouth.Sussman saw action in all nine games for the Big Red as a rookie,primarily on special teams. He recorded 17 total tackles for the year,including five solo efforts. He had two tackles for loss vs. Harvard,

including a 5-yard sackand closed out 2001 witha blocked kick againstPenn in the season finale.An injury in the final gameof 2002 sidelined Sussmanin the off-season, but hehas made great progressand is expected to be backon track once fall camprolls around. One of themost dedicated and hard-est-working players on theteam, he is known for hishard-nosed, aggressiveplay and is the quarter-back of the defense. He isenrolled in the College ofAgriculture and LifeSciences...At Great Neck:Joel was an all-county se-lection in football at Great

Neck North HS. A two-year letter winner, he served as the team’scaptain his senior year. Sussman also played lacrosse and was a two-time all-county pick on defense. He was selected to play in the NY/LIall-star game his senior year...Personal: Joel Matthew Sussman is theson of Don and Karen Sussman and has two brothers and a sister. Joel’sparents are both Cornell graduates...Born: 6-17-83.

Year GP Tackles Assists For Loss Sacks2001 9 5 12 2-6 1-52002 10 50 40 5-19 0-0Totals 19 55 52 7-25 1-5

#15 NATE TARSIFree Safety

6-2, 210, JuniorKensington, Conn.

(Berlin HS)Major: Mechanical andAerospace Engineering

At Cornell: Nate is a former quarterbackwho is making the switch to free safety. He

has good size and speed and is developing into a solid safety. He willprovide depth and will also see time on special teams. Nate is enrolledin the College of Engineering...At Berlin: The football team’s captainas a senior at Berlin HS, Nate helped lead his team to a conference titlein 2000. He earned all-state honors as a quarterback and was alsoselected as a New Haven Register all-state defensive back. Nate was alsocaptain of the baseball team, earning all-conference honors and thestate title in 1999. He capped off his senior year with an invitation toplay in the Connecticut/Rhode Island all-star football game...Personal:L. Nathan Tarsi is the son of Michael and Sara Tarsi and has a youngersister...Born: 8-8-82.

#36 KYLE THOMAS *Cornerback

5-10, 190, JuniorIndialantic, Fla.(Melbourne HS)

Major: Undecided

At Cornell: Kyle is a hard-working playerwho was a starter in all 10 games last year.He finished the season with 61 tackles, in-

cluding 29 solo efforts. He had a big game early on against Yale, rackingup 12 total tackles. He then finished up the year with an interceptionagainst Penn. He also broke up 10 passes during the year — three inthe win vs. Dartmouth and three more vs. Penn. Kyle should really makean impact this year and could be one of the top defensive backs in theleague. Kyle is enrolled in the College of Arts and Sciences...AtMelbourne: A three-year letter winner, Kyle was captain of the footballteam at Melbourne HS his senior year. A defensive back, he helped leadhis team to a second-place finish in the district and was an all-districtselection in 1999 and 2000. Kyle also served as the captain of the trackand field team for two seasons and was a regional finalist in the 100-meter dash...Personal: Kyle Joseph Thomas is the son of Bruce and SusanThomas and has an older brother...Born: 3-23-83.

PassesYear GP Tackles Assists Int Def2001 4 1 0 0-0 02002 10 29 32 1-0 10Totals 14 30 32 1-0 10

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#19 VIC YANZ ***Wide Receiver

5-11, 197, SeniorChicago, Ill.

(Brother Rice HS)Major: Applied Economics

and Management

At Cornell: Yanz is a speedy receiver whocould see action in the slot or on the outside.

He saw action in all 10 games at receiver and on special teams last year,catching four passes for 43 yards and making three stops on the kickcoverage. He will also play an important role as a holder on all kickplacements. Vic has a lot of toughness and developed excellentleadership skills during spring practices. The coaching staff expects himto be a major contributor in 2003. After seeing no action with the varsityas a rookie, Yanz became a key part of the Big Red’s offense in his secondseason. He saw action in all nine games and had 114 yards on eightcatches. He caught a quick 5-yarder for a touchdown against Lehigh andfollowed that up with his longest reception of the year in the next game— a 28-yarder againstHarvard. Yanz closed outthe 2001 season with threecatches for 37 yards againstPenn. Yanz is a student inthe College of Agricultureand Life Sciences...AtBrother Rice: Yanz earnedtwo letters in football atBrother Rice HS. He was anall-state, all-area and all-conference selection as asenior, while also beingnamed the team’s mostvaluable player in 1998 and1999. Vic also competedwith the baseball and bas-ketball teams at BrotherRice...Personal: VictorBailey Yanz is the son of Ellenand Richard Yanz. He hastwo older sisters and threeyounger brothers...Born: 4-6-82.

Year GP Rec Yds Avg TD LP2001 9 8 114 14.2 1 282002 10 4 43 10.8 0 13Totals 19 12 157 13.1 1 28

#92 RICH TRUMKAInside Linebacker

6-0, 202, SophomoreRockville, Md.

(Thomas Wootton HS)Major: Industrial and Labor

Relations

At Cornell: Rich adds depth to the linebackingcorps. He gained a better understanding of

the defense during spring practices. He could contribute on specialteams in 2003. Rich is enrolled in the School of Industrial and LaborRelations...At Wootton: Trumka was a varsity letter winner for thefootball and baseball teams at Thomas Wootton HS. As a senior, he wasnamed to the Washington Post all-league team, the Montgomery Journalall-county team and the Potomac Almanac all-county team. He was alsohonored by the coaches when he was selected to the all-county team.The team’s captain, he finished his career with a school record 306tackles, including the single-season record of 133 sticks. He was astarting outfielder for the baseball team..Personal: Richard L. Trumkais the son of Richard and Barbara Trumka. His cousin, Fred Pagac, is alinebacker on the Ohio State football team...Born: 7-11-84.

#46 A.J. WEITSMANPlace-kicker

6-3, 192, SophomoreSaratoga, Calif.(Saratoga HS)

Major: Biological andEnvironmental Engineering

At Cornell: Weitsman has a lot of leg strengthand has been working hard to improve his

consistency. Look for him to continue making strides and possibly takeover the kickoff duties this fall. He is enrolled in the College ofEngineering...At Saratoga: Weitsman was a place-kicker for the footballteam and also played soccer at Saratoga HS. As a member of thefootball team, he was a first-team all-league pick as a junior and wasnamed the league’s outstanding kicker as a senior. He was also his soccerteam’s captain and was named the league’s MVP as a senior...Personal:Andrew John Weitsman is the son of Kevin and Kathy Weitsman and hasa younger brother. His father is a 1972 graduate of Cornell...Born: 1-25-84.

#21 ANDY WESTWide Receiver

6-3, 216, SophomoreCarlsbad, Calif.(Carlsbad HS)

Major: Policy Analysis andManagement

At Cornell: West has a lot of size and workedhard to get better during spring ball. He will

continue to make improvements in the fall and will challenge for playingtime. He is enrolled in the College of Human Ecology...At Carlsbad:West was a two-time letter winner on the football and track teams atCarlsbad HS. As a senior, he served as a co-captain for the football teamand earned all-league honors. He was a National Football Foundationand College Hall of Fame Scholar-Athlete. As a member of the trackteam, West ran the 400 and was a triple jumper...Personal: AndrewMcKinley West is the son of Bruce and Aeja West...Born: 11-15-83.

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Big Red Veterans

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Meet The Big Red NewcomersNick Beale • ILB • Fr.

6-3 • 210 • Toronto, Ont. • Northern SecondaryAt Northern: Nick was a three-year starter and letter winner on theNorthern Secondary School football team. He was the team’scaptain in 2002 and was named first-team all-city and all-provinceand was named to the Canada East first team defense. Beale alsoplayed rugby and basketball at Northern and his rugby team wonthe league championship in 2002...Personal: Nick Roy Beale is theson of Barry Beale and Anissa Bachir and has an older brother. He isenrolled in the College of Arts and Sciences...Born: 1-17-85.

Patrick Blakemore • WR • Fr.6-3 • 195 • Boulder, Colo. • Fairview HS

At Fairview: Patrick was a four-year letter winner as a wide receiverfor the Fairview HS football team. He was twice named all-leagueand finished his career with all-region, all-state and All-Coloradohonors. As the team’s captain his senior year, he was a NationalFootball Foundation College Hall of Fame Scholar-Athlete. Patrickwas also the team captain for the basketball team, where he was atwo-time all-league and all-region selection...Personal: PatrickWyatt Blakemore is the son of Kit and Wendy Blakemore and has anolder sister, Katy, who is a member of the swimming and divingteam at Stanford. He is enrolled in the College of Arts andSciences...Born: 8-5-84.

Jordan Bond • FS • Fr.6-0 • 175 • St. Louis, Mo. • Clayton HS

At Clayton: Jordan played both football and basketball whileenrolled at Clayton HS. As a member of the football team, he wasa two-time letter winner and was an all-state selection. He alsolettered in basketball...Personal: Jordan A. Bond is the son ofAnthony and Belinda Bond and has an older sister. He is majoring inapplied economics and management in the College of Agricultureand Life Sciences...Born: 9-13-85.

Jarrett Brady • TE • So.6-3 • 212 • Vacaville, Calif. • Vacaville HS

At Vacaville: Jarrett was a letter winner on the football and trackteams at Vacaville HS. Named a top-20 Bay Area football player asa senior, he also earned All-Western Region honors, was named anEast and West all-star and captained his team. He was twicenamed to the all-league and all-county teams. In track, he placedat the national Junior Olympics in the javelin and was the regionalchampion and national qualifier in the Junior Olympics in thedecathlon. He also competed in the hurdles and pole vault. Jarrettwas a California Governor Scholarship recipient and was a NationalFootball Foundation scholar-athlete...Personal: Jarrett AlexanderBrady is the son of Thomas and Sandee Brady and has an oldersister. Jarrett attended Cal-Poly in 2002-03 before transferring toCornell, but did not play football there. He is enrolled in Cornell’sCollege of Arts and Sciences, where he is majoring ineconomics...Born: 3-18-84.

Brian Chicosky • OLB • Fr.6-4 • 205 • Kings Park, N.Y. • Kings Park HS

At Kings Park: Brian played four sports during his tenure at KingsPark HS, earning a total of 11 varsity letters while leading his teamsto six championships. A two-year captain of the football teamwhere he was a linebacker and quarterback, he was a three-timeall-division selection and was named All-Long Island, all-county andall-state as a senior. He also played in the Boomer Esaison OutbackBowl and was a U.S. Army All-American Bowl nominee. Brian alsocaptained the basketball and lacrosse teams and played baseball,earning all-league honors in all three sports...Personal: Brian GalvinChicosky is the son of Frank and Janet Chicosky and has two sisters.He is majoring in applied economics and management in theCollege of Agriculture and Life Sciences...Born: 1-7-85.

Matt Darby • ILB • Fr.6-3 • 220 • Thornwood, N.Y. • Westlake HS

At Westlake: Matt was a three-year letter winner and starter forthe football and basketball teams at Westlake HS. As a linebackeron the football squad, he was a two-time all-section pick and wastwice named all-state. The team’s captain his final year, he wasnamed the league’s best defensive player as a junior and senior. Hewas also a two-year all-league pick in basketball...Personal:Matthew W. Darby is the son of Thomas and Donna Darby and has abrother and two sisters. He is a student in the College of Arts andSciences...Born: 7-1-85.

Jeff Dicks • DL • Fr.6-2 • 240 • Bellevue, Wash. • Bellevue HS

At Bellevue: Jeff helped lead his Bellevue HS football team to thestate title in 2001 and 2002. As the team’s captain his senior year,he was named the conference’s lineman of the year en route toearning all-state honors. He was a two-time all-league and all-areapick and also earned all-state honors as a junior, when he was alsonamed co-MVP of the state title game. Jeff also played basketballand was the team’s captain...Personal: Jeffrey Bingham Dicks is theson of Les and Mary Dicks and has an older brother, Daniel, who isthe starting center for the University of Washington football team.Jeff is majoring in applied economics and management in theCollege of Agriculture and Life Sciences...Born: 5-2-84.

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Big Red Newcomers

Chris Gallagher • CB • Fr.5-10 • 180 • Valencia, Pa. • Mars Area HS

At Mars: Chris was a three-year starter and letter winner for theMars Area HS football team. His team won the conference title in2001 and went on to the WPIAL championship game in 2002. Afirst-team all-conference defensive back and second-team runningback as a senior, he was also a county all-star. As a senior, he was ateam captain and finished the year as the MVP. Chris was also a toptrack and field athlete, competing at the state meet three times. In2002, he was a medalist at the state championships as a member ofthe 4x800 relay. During his career, he was on three WPIAL champi-onship relays and medaled in two individual events...Personal:Chris Brian Gallagher is the son of Dr. Larry Cimperman and Dr.Agnes Gallagher and has two brothers. His older brother, Sean, wasa track and field athlete at Westminster College. Chris is majoringin biological engineering in the College of Agriculture and LifeSciences...Born: 1-3-85.

Matt Grant • TB • Fr.5-10 • 165 • Baldwinsville, N.Y. • C.W. Baker HS

At C.W. Baker: A football letter winner for three seasons at C.W.Baker HS, Matt was also a member of the track and field team forthree years. On the gridiron, he was a three-time letter winner,earning all-league, All-CNY and all-state honors as a running backhis junior and senior years. He was also recognized as an all-leaguedefensive back in 2000. His team won the league title for threestraight years. As a member of the track team, he was a first-teamall-league high jumper and was a member of the section champi-onship 4x100 relay...Personal: Matthew A. Grant is the son ofStanley Grant and Carol Grant and has two brothers and a sister.His brother, Andrew, plays football at Mercyhurst College. Matt ismajoring in economics in the College of Arts and Sciences...Born:10-25-85.

Justin Green • WR • Fr.5-10 • 160 • Encino, Calif. • Campbell Hall

At Campbell Hall: Justin earned three varsity letters in football andsoccer at Campbell Hall. A first-team All-CIF football selection in2001 and 2002, he was also a three-time first-team all-league pick.He was named the 2002 league offensive player of the year and wasinvited to play in two all-star games in 2003. He finished his careeras the school’s record holder for most receptions (161) and receivingyards (3,233) over a three-year period. In soccer, he was a two-timeall-league first-team pick and was the team’s captain and MVP as asenior...Personal: Justin Michael Green is the son of David Greenand Laura Valan and has a younger sister. He is enrolled in theCollege of Agriculture and Life Sciences, where he is majoring inapplied economics and management...Born: 10-23-84.

Stu Homan • ILB • Fr.6-2 • 210 • Meridian, Idaho • Eagle HS

At Eagle: Stu helped lead his Eagle HS football team to the 2002 5-A Idaho state championship title with a perfect 12-0 record. One ofthe team’s captains, he was a first-team all-conference linebackerand was named to the East-West Shrine All-Star team. A two-yearletter winner and the team’s leading tackler as a senior, he was alsonamed to the conference’s all-academic team in 2001 and 2002.Stu also turned in standout performances for the baseball team,helping the squad to the 5-A state title and a No. 26 nationalranking. A first-team all-conference selection, he posted a school-record .515 batting average as a designated hitter...Personal:Stuart D. Homan is the son of John and Candy Homan and has ayounger brother. Stuart is a student in the College of Arts andSciences...Born: 7-4-85.

Anthony Jackson • WR • Fr.5-10 • 175 • Waterford, Mich. • Brother Rice HS

At Brother Rice: A three-sport athlete at Brother Rice HS, Anthonyearned three letters each in football, basketball and track. Hisfootball team won the state title in 2000 and was runner-up in2002. Jackson was captain of the team as a senior and was selectedto play in the Michigan all-star game. He was also picked to play inthe state basketball all-star game...Personal: Anthony CarnellJackson II is the son of Anthony and Kimberly Jackson and has anolder sister and two younger brothers. He is majoring in communi-cation in the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences...Born: 3-11-85.

Jarin Jackson • CB • Fr.5-10 • 180 • New Orleans, La. • Benjamin Franklin HSAt Benjamin Franklin: Jarin was a four-year starter and letterwinner for the football team at Benjamin Franklin HS and was also astarter for the basketball and baseball teams. He was the footballteam’s captain as a senior and the team’s MVP. He also earned toprookie honors as a freshman. Jarin earned three letters each inbasketball and baseball, and he served as team captain for bothsquads...Personal: Jarin Rolan Jackson is the son of Ralph and NicolaJackson and has a brother and a sister. He is enrolled in the Schoolof Industrial and Labor Relations...Born: 6-27-85.

Chris Jensen • QB • Fr.6-4 • 190 • Denver, Colo. • Overland HS

At Overland: Chris was the starting quarterback at Overland HS asa senior. He threw four touchdowns and finished the year with 674yards on 43 completions. At East: Prior to finishing his high schoolcareer at Overland, Jensen played three years of football and was amember of the track team at East HS. He was an all-conferenceperformer on the gridiron and was a two-time state qualifier on thetrack...Personal: Christopher James Jensen is the son of Jerry andColleen Jensen and has two older brothers and an older sister. Hisbrother, Jon, played football at Duke. Chris is enrolled in theCollege of Architecture, Art, and Planning, where he is majoring inurban and regional planning...Born: 11-3-84.

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Big Red Newcomers

Ryan Kiscadden • DL • Fr.6-1 • 190 • Landisville, Pa. • Hempfield HS

At Hempfield: Ryan was a member of the football, basketball andtrack teams at Hempfield HS. A three-year letter-winning linemanon the football team, he was an all-league and all-section pick andwas also a county all-star. His basketball team competed at thedistrict level and he was a three-time district qualifier on thetrack...Personal: Ryan Michael Kiscadden is the son of Richard andDebra Kiscadden and has an older brother, Justin, who is a memberof the Penn State track and field team. Ryan is majoring in ruralsociology in the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences...Born: 7-31-85.

William Leone • DL • Fr.6-3 • 225 • Valley Cottage, N.Y. • Nyack Senior HS

At Nyack: William helped lead his Nyack Senior HS varsity footballteam to a record of 34-2 over his three years as a starter. His teamwon the Class A state title in 2000 and was a finalist in 2002. As asenior, he was a first-team all-county, all-section and all-state pick atdefensive end and was the team’s captain. He also earned first-team honors (county, section, state) as a junior and second-team all-county honors as a sophomore. During his prep career, William alsoplayed lacrosse and was a member of the wrestling and trackteams...Personal: William M. Leone is the son of William andVirginia Leone and has two younger brothers. He is studying animalsciences in the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences...Born: 3-4-85.

Dan Leonhard • OLB • Fr.6-1 • 200 • Penfield, N.Y. • Penfield HS

At Penfield: Dan played four years of football for Penfield HS andearned two varsity letters. He was also a member of the lacrosseand basketball teams...Personal: Daniel Steven Leonhard is the sonof Steven and Michelle Leonhard and has a brother and two sisters.He is majoring in government in the College of Arts andSciences...Born: 12-16-84.

Jonathan Lucas • DL • Fr.6-3 • 225 • Wheat Ridge, Colo. • Arvada West HS

At Arvada: A three-year letter winner at linebacker for the ArvadaWest HS football team, Jonathan was a first-team all-state player.He was the team’s captain as a junior and senior, earning first-teamall-conference both years. He was the conference defensive playerof the year and a Denver Post Gold Helmet winner en route toearning All-Colorado honors. A member of the track team in 2003,he earned first-team all-league honors as the conference shot putchampion...Personal: Jonathan David Lucas is the son of David andNancy Lucas and has an older brother. He is majoring in economicsin the College of Arts and Sciences...Born: 4-6-85.

Anthony Macaluso • TB • Fr.5-9 • 197 • Middletown, N.J. • Middletown South HSAt Middletown: Anthony was a three-year letter winner on boththe football and wrestling teams at Middletown South HS. On thegridiron, he was a first-team all-division and all-county selection asa junior and senior. As a senior, he went on to also earn first-teamAll-Shore, Group 3 all-state honors. He was also named to thestate’s all-division third team. The team’s captain his senior year, hehelped the squad earn the Federal Division title. He also served asthe wrestling team’s captain and was a second-team All-MonmouthCounty pick...Personal: Anthony Dominick Macaluso is the son ofDominick and Nancy Macaluso and has a younger brother. He isstudying economics in the College of Arts and Sciences...Born: 12-19-84.

Kevin Marchut • OL • Fr.6-4 • 270 • Succasunna, N.J. • Roxbury HS

At Roxbury: Kevin was a member of the football and wrestlingteams at Roxbury HS. He played on both sides of the line for thefootball team and earned first-team all-county and all-area honorsand was a third-team all-state pick. He capped off his senior seasonby being selected to play in the North-South All-Star game. Hewas also a third-team all-county wrestler...Personal: Kevin JamesMarchut is the son of Gary and Kathy Marchut and has two brothers.He is enrolled in the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences, wherehe is studying science of Earth systems...Born: 8-3-85.

Kenneth Martin • CB • Fr.6-1 • 175 • Plainwell, Mich. • Plainwell HS

At Plainwell: Kenneth was a three-sport athlete at Plainwell HS,captaining the football, basketball and track teams. He was namedall-conference, all-county and all-area in all three sports. He alsospent a postgraduate year at Choate Rosemary Hall, where heparticipated in all three sports and was an All-New England pick infootball and track...Personal: Kenneth Donnell Martin is the son ofSandy Brainerd. He is majoring in human development in theCollege of Human Ecology...Born: 10-9-83.

Brian McGuire • OL • Fr.6-4 • 265 • Princeton Jct., N.J. • W. Windsor-Plainsboro HS

At West Windsor-Plainsboro: Brian was a two-way starter as ajunior and senior for the West Windsor-Plainsboro HS South footballteam. He was a first-team all-conference offensive lineman as asenior, after earning second-team honors as a junior. He was also anall-area and All-Princeton Packet selection in 2002. He capped offhis final season by being named the central New Jersey lineman ofthe year and was selected to play in the North-South all-star game.Brian also played lacrosse, earning second-team all area and all-division honorable mention honors...Personal: Brian PatrickMcGuire is the son of Kevin and Ann McGuire and has an older sister.His uncle, Vivian McGuire, received his MBA from Cornell in 1983.Brian is a student in the School of Industrial and LaborRelations...Born: 10-11-84.

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Big Red Newcomers

Jaime McManamon • DL • Fr.6-3 • 275 • Westlake, Ohio • St. Edward HS

At St. Edward: Jaime played on both the offensive and defensivelines as a junior and senior for the St. Edward HS football team. Athree-year letter winner, he was the team’s co-captain as a seniorand was a west all-star and was a Northeast Ohio honorablemention pick. Jaime was also a member of the track team and wasa four-year letter winner. He was the team’s MVP and was a two-time regional and district qualifier in the shot put. He also set aschool record in the shot put relay...Personal: James HubertMcManamon is the son of James and Kerry McManamon and hastwo younger brothers and a younger sister. He is majoring inapplied economics and business management in the College ofAgriculture and Life Sciences...Born: 4-7-85.

Eric Miller • OL • Fr.6-7 • 230 • Marengo, Ohio • Highland HS

At Highland: An All-Ohio football selection, Eric was a three-yearletter winner and starter for the Highland HS team. As a senior, hewas captain of the team and also served as the captain of hisbasketball and baseball teams. He also earned three letters in bothof those sports and was an all-district basketball pick and an all-league selection in baseball...Personal: Eric Joseph Miller is the sonof Kurt and Terri Miller and has two sisters. He is majoring inanimal sciences in the College of Agriculture and LifeSciences...Born: 6-26-84.

Louis Morga • OL • Fr.6-4 • 230 • West Islip, N.Y. • West Islip HS

At West Islip: Louis was a three-sport athlete at West Islip HS,playing football, basketball and baseball and served as the captainfor all three teams. On the gridiron, he saw action on both theoffensive and defensive lines and was an all-county selection and aSuffolk All-Star. He was also a National Football Foundation scholar-athlete...Personal: Louis Stephen Morga is the son of Louis andKathleen Morga and has two younger sisters. He is a student in theCollege of Agriculture and Life Sciences...Born: 5-29-85.

Todd Rusinkovich • DL • Fr.6-2 • 230 • San Clemente, Calif. • San Clemente HS

At San Clemente: Todd was a three-year letter winner and starterfor the San Clemente HS football team. He was an all-league pickand his team was a two-time CIF semifinalist. He captained thesquad and was named the team’s MVP. Todd was also a two-yearletter winner on the baseball and basketball teams. He was namedhis school’s male athlete of the year as a senior...Personal: ToddSchuler Rusinkovich is the son of John and Cheri Rusinkovich and hastwo younger brothers. He is a human development major in theCollege of Human Ecology...Born: 11-9-84.

Ted Sonnenberg • OL • Fr.6-5 • 240 • Holgate, Ohio • Holgate School

At Holgate: A four-year letter winner in football at Holgate School,Ted played on both the offensive and defensive lines. The team’scaptain as a senior, he was a Perrysburg All-Star and named thesquad’s MVP. He also earned first-team all-conference honors onboth sides of the ball. Ted also played basketball and was amember of the track team. His basketball team played in theregional tournament three straight years and was the leaguechampion in 2003. He was the track team’s MVP and was aregional qualifier in the discus and shot put...Personal: TheodoreSonnenberg is the son of Kent and Jan Sonnenberg and has twosisters. He is an animal sciences major in the College of Agricultureand Life Sciences...Born: 11-26-84.

Craig Sykora • TE • Fr.6-5 • 230 • The Colony, Texas • The Colony HS

At The Colony: Craig played football and was a member of thetrack team at The Colony HS. He was the football team’s captain asa senior and was a first-team all-district tight end and defensiveend. He earned all-district honorable mention his junior year at TE.As a member of the track team, he competed in the shot put anddiscus...Personal: Craig Michael Sykora is the son of Mike Sykoraand Marlena Mossberger and has three brothers. He is a student inthe College of Architecture, Art, and Planning, studying urban andregional planning...Born: 3-15-85.

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2003 Opponents2003 Opponents

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Game 1 — Bucknell BisonGENERAL INFORMATIONLocation: Lewisburg, Pa.Enrollment: 3,550Colors: Orange and BlueNickname: BisonConference: Patriot LeagueStadium: Christy Mathewson-Memorial StadiumCapacity-Surface: 13,100-FieldTurfPresident: Dr. Steffen H. RogersAthletic Director: John Hardt2002 Record: 2-92002 Patriot League Record: 0-72002 Patriot League Finish: 8th

MEDIA RELATIONSFootball Contact: Jon TerryOffice Phone: 570-577-1227Home Phone: 570-522-0840E-mail: [email protected] Office Fax: 570-577-1660Web Site: www.bucknellbison.comPress Box Phone: 570-577-1519/1522

COACHING INFORMATIONHead Coach: Tim LandisAlma Mater: Randolph-Macon ‘86Record at Bucknell: 0-0, 1st yearCareer Record: 53-52-1, 11th yearOffice Phone: 570-577-1134

Offensive Assistants (*coordinator):QB/FB *Ian ShieldsOL Tom SimiW R Brent ThompsonDefensive Assistants (*coordinator):LB *Tripp MerrittLB Jared BackusDB Steve PerryOLB Sam Fraundorf

2003 PERSONNELOffense: Spread OptionDefense: 4-4Lettermen Returning/Lost: 40/21Offensive Starters Returning: 7Defensive Starters Returning: 5RETURNING LEADERSRushing Att Yds Avg T DB. Sarnor 150 511 3.4 4D. Wilson 47 172 3.7 1

Passing Att-Com-int Yds T DD. Wilson 33-20-2 174 0

Receiving N o Yds Avg T DA. Marquardt 27 525 19.4 4B. Sarnor 21 141 6.7 0

Defensive UT-AT—Tot OtherK. Ransome 37-32—69 9 TFLW. Smith 32-26—58 5 TFL

Sept. 20 at Schoellkopf Field, 1 p.m.

•games at Ithaca

Cor . B1888• ...........20 .. 31889• ...........66 .. 01890• ...........26 .. 01891• ........... 0 .. 41892• ...........54 .. 01896• ...........54 .. 01900• ........... 6 .. 01901• ........... 6 .. 01903• ........... 6 .. 01904• ...........24 . 121905• ...........24 .. 01906• ...........24 .. 61912• ...........14 .. 01913• ...........10 .. 7

CORNELL-BUCKNELL SERIES SCORES(Won 33, Lost 9)

Cor . B1914• ...........48 .. 01915• ...........41 .. 01916• ...........19 .. 01917• ...........20 .. 01943• ........... 7 .. 61944• ...........26 .. 01945• ...........19 .. 81946• ...........21 .. 01960• ...........15 .. 71967• ...........23 .. 71974• ...........24 .. 01975............21 .. 61978• ...........24 .. 01979• ........... 0 . 10

Tim Landis

Record: Cornell leads 33-9Last Cornell Win: 1998, 23-19Last Bucknell Win: 2002, 14-3Last Tie: noneLast Shutout: 1979, Bucknell 10-0

2003 SCHEDULEAug. 30 DuquesneSept. 6 at Delaware State

20 at Cornell27 at Columbia

Oct. 4 at Fordham11 at Pennsylvania18 Towson25 at Colgate

Nov. 1 Holy Cross8 at Lafayette15 Lehigh22 Georgetown

2002 RESULTSat Duquesne L 14-35at St. Mary’s (Calif.) L 22-23Cornell W 14-3Delaware State W 27-13Colgate L 10-13 (OT)at Towson L 14-20at Georgetown L 31-32at Holy Cross L 21-38Lafayette L 3-19at Lehigh L 0-24Fordham L 7-34

Current Streak: Bucknell, 2 gamesLongest Cornell Win Streak: 23 (1892-1978)Longest Bucknell Win Streak: 2 (1979-80; 2000 & 2002)

THE CORNELL-BUCKNELL SERIES SINCE 1888

Cor . B1980............16 . 331981• ...........22 . 151984............ 7 . 101985............26 . 131986• ...........16 .. 31987• ........... 6 . 201989............20 .. 91990• ...........21 . 421991............23 .. 71994............29 . 281995• ........... 7 . 101998• ...........23 . 192000............15 . 382002............ 3 . 14

2003

Opp

onen

ts

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Game 2 — Yale BulldogsGENERAL INFORMATIONLocation: New Haven, Conn.Enrollment: 5,200Colors: Yale Blue and WhiteNickname: Bulldogs, ElisConference: Ivy LeagueStadium: Yale BowlCapacity-Surface: 64,269-Natural GrassPresident: Richard C. LevinAthletic Director: Tom Beckett2002 Record: 6-42002 Ivy League Record: 4-32002 Ivy League Finish: 3rd

MEDIA RELATIONSFootball Contact: Steve ConnOffice Phone: 203-432-1456Home Phone: 203-393-9602E-mail: [email protected] Office Fax: 203-432-1454Web Site: www.yale.edu/athletic/Press Box Phone: 203-764-9244/9245

COACHING INFORMATIONHead Coach: Jack SiedleckiAlma Mater: Union ‘74Record at Yale: 32-27, 7th yearCareer Record: 88-49-2, 16th yearOffice Phone: 203-432-8587

Offensive Assistants (#assoc. head coach;*coordinator):OL #Keith ClarkQ B *Joel LambRB Larry CiottiW R Anthony RenoTE Matthew DenceDefensive Assistants (*coordinator):

*Rick FlandersDL Duane BrooksILB Kevin CretellaDE Jeff McDonald

2003 PERSONNELOffense: MultipleDefense: 4-3Lettermen Returning/Lost: 35/23Offensive Starters Returning: 10Defensive Starters Returning: 7Special Teams Starters Returning: 4RETURNING LEADERSRushing Att Yds Avg T DR. Carr 236 1083 4.6 10D. Knox 58 279 4.8 0

Passing Att-Com-int Yds T DJ. Mroz 244-135-6 1731 14

Receiving N o Yds Avg T DR. Plumb 55 592 10.8 3N. Lawrie 41 505 12.3 4

Defensive UT-AT—Tot OtherK. Estera 52-28-80 4 sacksB. Breunig 43-31-74 1 sack

Sept. 27 at New Haven, Conn., 1 p.m.

•games at Ithaca

2003 SCHEDULESept. 20 Towson

27 CornellOct. 4 at Holy Cross

11 Dartmouth18 at Colgate25 at Pennsylvania

Nov. 1 at Columbia8 Brown15 at Princeton22 Harvard

2002 RESULTSSan Diego W 49-14at Cornell W 50-23Holy Cross W 28-19at Dartmouth L 17-20at Lehigh L 7-14Pennsylvania L 20-41Columbia W 35-7at Brown W 31-27Princeton W 7-3at Harvard L 13-20

Jack Siedlecki

In Ivy Play: Yale leads 28-19-0Record: Yale leads 38-25-2Last Cornell Win: 2000, 24-23Last Yale Win: 2002, 50-23Last Tie: 1953, 0-0

Last Shutout: 1993, Cornell 21-0Current Streak: Yale, 2 gamesLongest Cornell Win Streak: 4 (1990-93)Longest Yale Win Streak: 7 (1973-79)

THE CORNELL-YALE SERIES SINCE 1889

Cor . Y1889............ 6 . 561889• ........... 0 . 701936............ 0 . 231937............ 0 .. 91940............21 .. 01941• ...........21 .. 71942............13 .. 71944............ 7 . 161945............ 7 . 181946• ........... 6 .. 61947............ 0 . 141949............48 . 141950• ........... 7 .. 01951............27 .. 01952............ 0 . 131953• ........... 0 .. 01954............21 . 471955............ 6 . 341956............ 7 . 251957• ........... 7 . 181958............12 .. 71959• ........... 0 . 23

CORNELL-YALE SERIES SCORES(Won 25, Lost 38, Tied 2)

Cor . Y1960............ 6 . 221961• ........... 0 . 121962............ 8 . 261963• ...........13 . 101964• ...........21 . 231965............14 . 241966• ...........16 . 141967............ 7 . 411968• ...........13 . 251969............ 0 . 171970• ........... 7 . 381971............31 . 101972• ...........24 . 131973............ 3 . 201974• ........... 3 . 271975............14 . 201976............ 6 . 141977• ........... 0 . 281978............14 . 421979• ...........20 . 231980............24 .. 61981• ...........17 . 23

Cor . Y1982............26 . 201983• ...........41 .. 71984............14 . 211985............20 . 141986• ...........15 .. 01987............ 9 . 281988• ...........26 .. 01989............19 . 341990............41 . 311991• ...........31 .. 61992............35 . 141993• ...........21 .. 01994............14 . 241995• ...........38 . 101996............28 . 201997• ...........37 . 101998............21 . 281999• ...........20 . 372000• ...........24 . 232001............13 . 402002• ...........23 . 50

2003 Opponents

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Game 3 — Colgate RaidersGENERAL INFORMATIONLocation: Hamilton, N.Y.Enrollment: 2,750Colors: Maroon, Gray & WhiteNickname: RaidersConference: Patriot LeagueStadium: Andy Kerr StadiumCapacity-Surface: 10,221-Natural GrassPresident: Rebecca ChoppAthletic Director: Mark H. Murphy2002 Record: 9-32002 Patriot League Record: 6-12002 Patriot League Finish: 1st, tied

MEDIA RELATIONSDirector: Bob CornellOffice Phone: 315-228-7602Home Phone: 315-824-3637E-mail: [email protected] Office Fax: 315-228-7977Web Site: goColgateRaiders.comPress Box Phone: 315-824-3433

COACHING INFORMATIONHead Coach: Dick BiddleAlma Mater: Duke ‘70Record at Colgate: 54-26, 8th yearCareer Record: 54-26, 8th yearOffice Phone: 315-228-7603

Offensive Assistants (*coordinator)OL *Mike FoleyQ B Dan HuntW R Chris YoungRB Jon GensonDefensive Assistants (*coordinator)DS *Ed PinkhamDL James CreggLB Robert FraserOLB Ross Thoreson

2003 PERSONNELOffense: MultipleDefense: MultipleLettermen Returning/Lost: 36/26Offensive Starters Returning: 4Defensive Starters Returning: 6Special Teams Starters Returning: 1

RETURNING LEADERSRushing Att Yds Avg T DN. Thomas 51 210 4.1 1T. Lavoie 24 105 4.4 2

Passing Att-Com-int Yds T DC. Brown 62-39-1 601 1

Receiving N o Yds Avg T DL. Graham 65 1182 18.2 7J.B. Gerald 36 481 13.4 2

Defensive UT-AT—Tot OtherT. Lukabu 51-61—112 3 int., 7 TFLS. McCune 37-36—73 2 TFL, 2 fum. rec.

Oct. 4 at Schoellkopf Field, 1 p.m.

Dick Biddle

•games at Ithaca

Cor Col1896• ........... 6 .. 01897• ........... 6 .. 01898• ...........29 .. 51899............42 .. 01900• ...........16 .. 01901• ...........17 .. 01902• ........... 5 .. 01903• ...........12 .. 01904• ...........17 .. 01905• ...........12 . 111906• ........... 0 .. 01907• ...........18 .. 01908• ........... 9 .. 01911• ........... 6 .. 01912• ........... 7 . 131913• ........... 0 .. 01914• ........... 3 .. 71917• ........... 0 . 201919• ........... 0 . 211920• ...........42 .. 61921• ...........31 .. 71922• ...........14 .. 01923• ...........34 .. 71937• ...........40 .. 71938• ...........15 .. 61939• ...........14 . 121940• ...........34 .. 01941• ...........21 .. 21942• ........... 6 . 18

CORNELL-COLGATE SERIES SCORES(Won 46, Lost 36, Tied 3)

Cor Col1943............ 7 . 201944• ........... 7 . 141945• ...........20 .. 61946• ...........13 .. 91947............27 . 181948• ...........14 .. 61949• ...........39 . 271950• ...........26 . 181951............41 . 181952• ........... 7 . 141953• ...........27 .. 71954• ...........14 . 191955• ........... 6 . 211956............ 6 . 341957• ...........13 . 141958• ...........13 .. 01959............20 . 151960• ........... 8 . 281961• ...........34 .. 01962• ...........12 . 231963• ...........17 . 211964............ 3 .. 81965• ........... 0 .. 01966• ...........15 . 141967............23 .. 71968• ...........17 .. 01969• ...........24 . 281970............17 .. 7

Record: Cornell leads 46-36-3Last Cornell Win: 1992, 25-7Last Colgate Win: 2002, 42-13Last Tie: 1965, 0-0

2003 SCHEDULESept. 6 at Georgetown

13 at Buffalo20 at Dartmouth27 Towson

Oct. 4 at Cornell11 at Princeton18 Yale25 Bucknell

Nov. 1 at Lafayette8 Lehigh15 Fordham22 at Holy Cross

2002 RESULTSVillanova L 0-20at Fordham L 31-40Dartmouth W 30-26Columbia W 38-6at Bucknell W 13-10 (OT)at Princeton L 10-14at Cornell W 42-13at Towson W 9-7Lafayette W 31-24at Lehigh W 28-14Georgetown W 44-22Holy Cross W 25-20

Last Shutout: 1968, Cornell 17-0Current Streak: Colgate, 7 gamesLongest Cornell Win Streak: 10 (1896-1905)Longest Colgate Win Streak: 7 (1993-2002)

THE CORNELL-COLGATE SERIES SINCE 1896

Cor Col1971• ...........38 . 201972• ...........37 .. 71973............35 . 211974• ...........40 . 211975• ...........22 . 241976• ...........20 . 251977• ...........22 . 281978............21 . 121979• ...........36 . 211980............20 . 381981• ...........10 . 341982• ........... 6 . 211983• ........... 7 . 601984• ........... 7 . 351985• ...........20 . 211986............21 . 121987• ........... 3 . 271988• ...........17 . 141990............24 . 591991• ...........13 . 311992............25 .. 71993• ........... 6 . 221996• ...........21 . 311997• ...... (OT) 38 . 441999............16 . 552000• ...........16 . 232001............32 . 352002• ...........13 . 42

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Game 4 — Harvard CrimsonGENERAL INFORMATIONLocation: Cambridge, Mass.Enrollment: 6,704Colors: Crimson, Black and WhiteNickname: CrimsonConference: Ivy LeagueStadium: Harvard StadiumCapacity-Surface: 30,323-Natural GrassPresident: Lawrence H. SummersAthletic Director: Robert L. Scalise2002 Record: 7-32002 Ivy League Record: 6-12002 Ivy League Finish: 2nd

MEDIA RELATIONSDirector: TBAOffice Phone: 617-495-2206Home Phone: TBAE-mail: TBASID Office Fax: 617-495-2130Web Site: www.gocrimson.comPress Box Phone: 617-495-5902

COACHING INFORMATIONHead Coach: Tim MurphyAlma Mater: Springfield ‘78Record at Harvard: 49-40, 10th yearCareer Record: 81-85-1, 18th yearOffice Phone: 617-495-2207

Offensive Assistants (*coordinator):QB/WR *Dave CecchiniW R Bill GarveyRB T.B.A.OL T.B.A.Defensive Assistants (*coordinator):DB *Kevin DohertyLB *Eric WesterfieldLB John ButlerDL Pat Graham

2003 PERSONNELOffense: Multiple Pro-SetDefense: Multiple 8-Man FrontLettermen Returning/Lost: 29/16Offensive Starters Returning: 6Defensive Starters Returning: 5Special Teams Starters Returning: 1RETURNING LEADERSRushing Att Yds Avg T DR. Fitzpatrick 115 523 4.5 5R. Byrnes 47 211 4.5 3

Passing Att-Com-int Yds T DR. Fitzpatrick 150-94-0 1155 8

Receiving N o Yds Avg T DR. Byrnes 50 482 9.6 2K. Cremarosa 21 267 12.7 2

Defensive UT-AT—Tot OtherD. Balestracci 50-45—95 12 TFL, 6 BrUpC. Raftery 50-23—73 7 TFL, 2 int.

Oct. 11 at Schoellkopf Field, 1 p.m.

•games at Ithaca

2003 SCHEDULESept. 20 at Holy Cross

27 BrownOct. 4 Northeastern

11 at Cornell18 Lafayette25 Princeton

Nov. 1 Dartmouth8 at Columbia15 Pennsylvania22 at Yale

2002 RESULTSHoly Cross W 28-23at Brown W 26-24at Lehigh L 35-36Cornell W 52-23Northeastern L 14-17at Princeton W 24-17at Dartmouth W 31-26Columbia W 28-7at Pennsylvania L 9-44Yale W 20-13

Tim Murphy

In Ivy Play: Cornell leads 23-22-2Record: Harvard leads 34-31-2Last Cornell Win: 2000, 29-28Last Harvard Win: 2002, 52-23Last Tie: 1983, 3-3

THE CORNELL-HARVARD SERIES SINCE 1890

Cor . H1890............ 0 . 771892............13 . 201893............ 0 . 341894............12 . 221895............ 0 . 251896• ........... 4 . 131897............ 5 . 241909............ 0 . 181910............ 5 . 271913............ 6 . 231915............10 .. 01916............ 0 . 231938............20 .. 01941............ 7 .. 01948• ...........40 .. 61949............33 . 141950............28 .. 71951• ...........42 .. 61954• ...........12 . 131955............20 .. 71956• ........... 7 . 321957............20 .. 61958• ...........21 . 14

CORNELL-HARVARD SERIES SCORES(Won 31, Lost 34, Tied 2)

Cor . H1959............20 . 161960• ...........12 .. 01961............ 0 . 141962• ...........14 . 121963............14 . 211964............ 0 . 161965• ........... 3 .. 31966............ 0 . 211967• ...........12 . 141968............ 0 . 101969• ...........41 . 241970............24 . 271971• ...........21 . 161972............15 . 331973• ...........15 . 211974............27 . 391975• ...........13 . 341976............ 9 .. 31977• ........... 7 . 171978............25 . 201979• ...........41 . 141980............12 . 20

Cor . H1981• ...........10 . 271982............13 . 251983• ........... 3 .. 31984............18 . 241985• ...........17 . 201986............ 3 .. 01987• ...........29 . 171988............19 . 171989• ...........28 .. 01990............20 . 171991• ...........22 . 171992............31 . 131993• ...........27 .. 01994............18 . 131995• ...........28 . 271996............20 . 131997• ........... 9 . 341998............12 . 191999• ...........24 . 232000............29 . 282001............ 6 . 262002............23 . 52

Last Shutout: 1993, Cornell 27-0Current Streak: Harvard, 2 gamesLongest Cornell Win Streak: 11 (1986-96)Longest Harvard Win Streak: 10 (1890-1913)

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Game 5 — Georgetown HoyasOct. 18 at Schoellkopf Field, 1 p.m.

GENERAL INFORMATIONLocation: Washington, D.C.Enrollment: 6,080Colors: Blue and GrayNickname: HoyasConference: Patriot LeagueStadium: Harbin FieldCapacity-Surface: 2,400-Natural GrassPresident: John DeGioiaAthletic Director: Joseph Lang2002 Record: 5-62002 Patriot League Record: 2-52002 Patriot League Finish: 6th, tied

MEDIA RELATIONSFootball Contact: Kevin RiederOffice Phone: 202-687-2492Home Phone: 703-521-7478E-mail: [email protected] Office Fax: 202-687-2491Web Site: www.guhoyas.comPress Box Phone: 202-687-5120

COACHING INFORMATIONHead Coach: Bob BensonAlma Mater: Vermont ‘86Record at G’town: 61-41, 11th yearCareer Record: 61-41, 11th yearOffice Phone: 202-687-2380

Offensive Assistants (*coordinator):Q B *Joe MoorheadW R Gharun HesterRB Bob BelliOL Dan HicksonTE Mike MattiaDefensive Assistants (*coordinator):DB *Dan RattayILB David HolmDL Rob SgarlataOLB Aaron Brady

2003 PERSONNELOffense: Multiple IDefense: Multiple 5-2Lettermen Returning/Lost: 60/14Offensive Starters Returning: 7Defensive Starters Returning: 10Special Teams Starters Returning: 1RETURNING LEADERSRushing Att Yds Avg T DJ. Sims 121 369 3.0 3W. Huisking 49 216 4.4 1

Passing Att-Com-int Yds T DA. Crawford 45-21-2 277 0

Receiving N o Yds Avg T DL. McArdle 47 802 17.1 6W. Bowser 29 464 16.0 3

Defensive UT-AT—Tot OtherA. Clarke 66-53—119 4.5 TFLM. Fronczke 45-27—72 11 BrUpW. Skultety 46-26-72 5 TFL; 3 sacks

2003 SCHEDULESept. 6 Colgate

13 at Holy Cross20 Monmouth27 at VMI

Oct. 4 at Lafayette11 Stony Brook18 at Cornell25 Lehigh

Nov. 1 at Fordham8 Towson15 Davidson22 at Bucknell

2002 RESULTSat Lehigh L 0-69Holy Cross L 13-41Fairfield W 21-3at FIU L 2-27Fordham L 10-41at Davidson W 25-21at Lafayette L 17-35Bucknell W 32-31Marist W 24-17at Colgate L 22-44at Towson W 24-16

Bob Benson

Record: 0-0-0, first meetingLast Cornell Win: first meetingLast Georgetown Win: first meetingLast Tie: first meetingLast Shutout: first meeting

THE CORNELL-GEORGETOWN SERIES SINCE 2003

CORNELL-GEORGETOWN SERIES SCORES(Won 0, Lost 0, Tied 0)

First Meeting

Current Streak: first meetingLongest Cornell Win Streak: first meetingLongest Georgetown Win Streak: first meeting20

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Game 6 — Brown BearsGENERAL INFORMATIONLocation: Providence, R.I.Enrollment: 5,722Colors: Seal Brown, Cardinal Red and WhiteNickname: BearsConference: Ivy LeagueStadium: Brown StadiumCapacity-Surface: 20,000-Natural GrassPresident: Ruth J. SimmonsAthletic Director: David T. Roach2002 Record: 2-82002 Ivy League Record: 2-52002 Ivy League Finish: 6th, tied

MEDIA RELATIONSDirector: Christopher HummOffice Phone: 401-863-2219Home Phone: 401-247-2392E-mail: [email protected] Office Fax: 401-863-1436Web Site: www.BrownBears.comPress Box Phone: 401-751-2390/3370

COACHING INFORMATIONHead Coach: Phil EstesAlma Mater: New Hampshire ‘81Record at Brown: 31-18, 6th yearCareer Record: 31-18, 6th yearOffice Phone: 401-863-2424

Offensive Assistant (*coordinator)O L Frank SheehanTE Paul Boudreau, Jr.W R Kevin BourgoinRB Rapheal DowdyeQ B Chris PincinceDefenisve Assistants (#asst. head coach,*coordinator)DS #Abbott Burrell

*Michael KelleherDL Neil McGrathOLB Paul FrisoneDL Shane Allen

2003 PERSONNELOffense: ProDefense: MultipleLettermen Returning/Lost: 37/25Offensive Starters Returning: 4Defensive Starters Returning: 5Special Teams Starters Returning: 2RETURNING LEADERSRushing Att Yds Avg T DB. Grinna 29 106 3.7 0T. Murray 20 71 3.5 1

Passing Att-Com-int Yds T DK. Slager 340-230-9 2609 19

Receiving N o Yds Avg T DB. Grinna 15 123 8.2 1J. Schreck 7 99 14.1 1

Defensive UT-AT—Tot OtherA. Gutierrez 28-16—44 4 TFL; 4 BrUpJ. Ching 29-8—37 3 int.; 3 BrUp

Oct. 25 at Schoellkopf Field, 1 p.m.

Phil Estes

2003 SCHEDULESept. 20 at Albany

27 at HarvardOct. 4 Rhode Island

11 Fordham18 Princeton25 at Cornell

Nov. 1 Pennsylvania8 at Yale15 Dartmouth22 at Columbia

2002 RESULTSat Towson L 42-56Harvard L 24-26at Rhode Island L 28-38at Fordham L 17-24at Princeton L 14-16Cornell L 7-10 (2 OT)at Pennsylvania L 7-31Yale L 27-31at Dartmouth W 21-18Columbia W 35-28

In Ivy Play: Brown leads 23-22-1Record: Cornell leads 25-24-1Last Cornell Win: 2002, 10-7 (2 OT)Last Brown Win: 2001, 49-21Last Tie: 1967, 14-14

THE CORNELL-BROWN SERIES SINCE 1895

CORNELL-BROWN SERIES SCORES(Won 25, Lost 24, Tied 1)

Last Shutout: 1988, Cornell 35-0Current Streak: Cornell, 1 gameLongest Cornell Win Streak: 5 (1968-72)Longest Brown Win Streak: 8 (1973-80)

•games at Ithaca

Cor . B1895• ........... 6 .. 41914............28 .. 71955............20 .. 71956............ 6 . 131957• ...........13 .. 61958............ 8 . 121959• ...........19 .. 01960............ 6 .. 71961• ...........25 .. 01962............28 . 261963• ...........28 . 251964............28 . 311965• ...........41 . 211966............23 . 141967• ...........14 . 141968............31 .. 01969• ...........14 .. 7

Cor . B1970............35 . 211971• ...........21 .. 71972............48 . 281973• ........... 7 . 171974............ 8 . 161975• ...........23 . 451976• ...........12 . 281977............ 3 . 211978• ...........13 . 211979............ 7 . 281980• ...........25 . 321981............14 .. 91982• ...........19 . 381983............ 3 . 141984• ........... 9 . 131985............ 0 . 221986• ...........27 .. 9

Cor . B1987............15 . 231988• ...........35 .. 01989............ 7 . 281990• ...........34 .. 71991............20 . 171992• ...........16 .. 61993............21 .. 31994• ........... 3 . 161995............38 . 281996• ...........21 . 351997............12 . 371998• ........... 7 . 201999............33 . 282000............40 . 562001• ...........21 . 492002 (2 OT) ......10 .. 7

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Game 7 — Princeton TigersGENERAL INFORMATIONLocation: Princeton, N.J.Enrollment: 4,600Colors: Orange and BlackNickname: TigersConference: Ivy LeagueStadium: Princeton StadiumCapacity-Surface: 27,800-Natural GrassPresident: Shirley M. TilghmanAthletic Director: Gary D. Walters2002 Record: 6-42002 Ivy League Record: 4-32002 Ivy League Finish: 4th

MEDIA RELATIONSFootball Contact: Craig SachsonOffice Phone: 609-258-3680Home Phone: 609-716-6068E-mail: [email protected] Office Fax: 609-258- 2399Web Site: www.GoPrincetonTigers.comPress Box Phone: 609-258-0660

COACHING INFORMATIONHead Coach: Roger HughesAlma Mater: Doane ‘82Record at Princeton: 12-17, 4th yearCareer Record: 12-17, 4th yearOffice Phone: 609-258-3514

Offensive Assistants (*coordinator)*Dave Rackovan

OL Stanley ClaytonW R Cody DetiTE Brett SawyerOL Bill HickeyDefensive Assistants (*coordinator)

*Steve VerbitLB Don DobesDB Eric JacksonDL Eric Van Heusen

2003 PERSONNELOffense: Pro IDefense: Multiple FrontLettermen Returning/Lost: 38/25Offensive Starters Returning: 6Defensive Starters Returning: 7Special Teams Starters Returning: 2

RETURNING LEADERSRushing Att Yds Avg T DJ. Veach 45 180 4.0 2D. Splithoff 90 172 1.9 0

Passing Att-Com-int Yds T DD. Splithoff 142-85-4 1223 8M. Verbit 150-75-7 935 4

Receiving N o Yds Avg T DB.J. Szymanski 33 567 17.2 2B. Morrison 22 255 11.6 2

Defensive UT-AT—Tot OtherB. Perry 48-18—66 7 TFL; 5 BrUpJ. Weiss 33-29—62 18 TFL; 8 sacks

Nov. 1 at Princeton, N.J., 1 p.m.

Roger Hughes

•games at Ithaca

Cor . P1891............ 0 .. 61893• ........... 0 . 461894• ........... 4 . 121895• ........... 0 .. 61896............ 0 . 371897............ 0 . 101898............ 0 .. 61899• ........... 5 .. 01900............12 .. 01901• ........... 6 .. 81902............ 0 . 101903............ 0 . 441904• ........... 6 . 181905............ 6 . 161906• ........... 5 . 141907• ........... 6 .. 51927• ...........10 . 211928............ 0 .. 31929• ...........13 .. 71930............12 .. 71931• ...........33 .. 01932............ 0 .. 01934............ 0 . 451935• ........... 0 . 541936............13 . 411937............20 .. 71939............20 .. 71943............30 .. 01945• ........... 6 . 14

CORNELL-PRINCETON SERIES SCORES(Won 31, Lost 52, Tied 2)

Cor . P1946............14 .. 71947............28 . 211949• ...........14 . 121950............ 0 . 271951............15 . 531952• ........... 0 . 271953............26 . 191954............27 .. 01955• ...........20 . 261956• ...........21 . 321957............14 . 471958• ...........34 .. 81959............ 0 . 201960• ...........18 . 211961............25 . 301962• ...........35 . 341963............14 . 511964............12 . 171965• ...........27 . 361966............ 0 .. 71967• ...........47 . 131968............13 . 411969• ...........17 . 241970............ 6 .. 31971• ...........19 .. 81972............22 . 151973• ...........37 .. 61974............20 . 41

In Ivy Play: Princeton leads 29-17-1Record: Princeton leads 52-31-2Last Cornell Win: 2001, 10-7Last Princeton Win: 2002, 32-25 (OT)Last Tie: 1978, 14-14

2003 SCHEDULESept. 20 Lehigh

27 at LafayetteOct. 4 Columbia

11 Colgate18 at Brown25 at Harvard

Nov. 1 Cornell8 at Pennsylvania15 Yale22 at Dartmouth

2002 RESULTSat Lehigh L 24-31Lafayette W 34-19at Columbia W 35-32Colgate W 14-10Brown W 16-14Harvard L 17-24at Cornell W 32-25 (OT)Pennsylvania L 13-44at Yale L 3-7Dartmouth W 38-30

Last Shutout: 1998, Princeton 6-0Current Streak: Princeton, 1 gameLongest Cornell Win Streak: 4 (1970-73)Longest Princeton Win Streak: 7 (1891-98)

THE CORNELL-PRINCETON SERIES SINCE 1891

Cor . P1975• ........... 8 . 161976• ........... 0 .. 31977............ 0 . 341978• ...........14 . 141979............14 . 261980• ...........17 .. 71981............14 . 371982• ...........36 . 411983............32 . 301984• ........... 9 . 171985............27 . 331986• ...........39 .. 81987............ 6 . 231988• ...........17 . 261989............ 7 . 211990• ...........17 . 141991............ 0 . 181992• ...........20 . 221993............12 . 181994• ...........31 . 161995............22 . 241996• ...... (OT) 33 . 271997• ...........14 . 101998............ 0 .. 61999............20 .. 32000• ...........25 . 242001............10 .. 72002• ...... (OT) 25 . 32

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Game 8 — Dartmouth Big GreenGENERAL INFORMATIONLocation: Hanover, N.H.Enrollment: 4,200Colors: Green and WhiteNickname: Big GreenConference: Ivy LeagueStadium: Memorial FieldCapacity-Surface: 20,416-Natural GrassPresident: James WrightAthletic Director: Josie Harper2002 Record: 3-72002 Ivy League Record: 2-52002 Ivy League Finish: 6th, tiedMEDIA RELATIONSDirector: Kathy SlatteryOffice Phone: 603-646-2468Home Phone: 603-448-2103E-mail: [email protected] Office Fax: 603-646-1286Web Site: www.dartmouth.edu/athletics/Press Box Phone: 603-646-2468COACHING INFORMATIONHead Coach: John LyonsAlma Mater: Pennsylvania ‘74Record at Dartmouth: 54-54-1, 12th yearCareer Record: 54-54-1, 12th yearOffice Phone: 603-646-2467

Offensive Assistants (*coordinator)*John Perry

TE Bill PolinRB Adam HollisOL Joe LeslieW R Scott SallachDefensive Assistants (#asst. head coach;*coordinator)LB #Pat O’LearyDL Doug JohnsonDC/DB Robert TalleyDL Ed WalshDT Ted Stewart

2003 PERSONNELOffense: MultipleDefense: MultipleLettermen Returning/Lost: 38/13Offensive Starters Returning: 8Defensive Starters Returning: 8Special Teams Starters Returning: 1

RETURNING LEADERSRushing Att Yds Avg T DM. Giles 151 586 3.9 4S. Wedum 49 191 3.9 3

Passing Att-Com-int Yds T DS. Wille 3-2-0 18 0

Receiving N o Yds Avg T DJ. Barnard 83 899 10.8 8C Cramer 72 1017 14.1 7

Defensive UT-AT—Tot OtherC. Smith 67-37—104 10 BrUpL. Campbell 55-45—100 9 TFL

Nov. 8 at Hanover, N.H., 12:30 p.m.

John Lyons

•games at Ithaca

2003 SCHEDULESept. 20 Colgate

27 at New HampshireOct. 4 Pennsylvania

11 at Yale18 at Holy Cross25 Columbia

Nov. 1 at Harvard8 Cornell15 at Brown22 Princeton

2002 RESULTSat Colgate L 26-30New Hampshire L 26-29at Pennsylvania L 14-49Yale W 20-17Holy Cross W 44-36at Columbia W 24-23Harvard L 26-31at Cornell L 19-21Brown L 18-21at Princeton L 30-38

In Ivy Play: Dartmouth leads 34-13-0Record: Dartmouth leads 49-36-1Last Cornell Win: 2002, 21-19Last Dartmouth Win: 1999, 20-17Last Tie: 1937, 6-6

THE CORNELL-DARTMOUTH SERIES SINCE 1900

Cor . D1900• ...........23 .. 61912• ........... 0 . 241919............ 0 .. 91920............ 3 . 141921• ...........59 .. 71922............23 .. 01923............32 .. 71924............14 . 271925............13 . 621926• ...........24 . 231927............ 7 . 531928• ........... 0 . 281929............14 . 181930• ...........13 . 191931............ 0 . 141932• ...........21 .. 61933............ 7 .. 01934• ...........21 .. 61935............ 6 . 411936• ........... 6 . 201937............ 6 .. 61938• ...........14 .. 71939............35 .. 61940............ 0 .. 31941• ...........33 . 191942............21 . 191943............ 0 . 201944• ...........14 . 131945............20 . 13

CORNELL-DARTMOUTH SERIES SCORES(Won 36, Lost 49, Tied 1)

Cor . D1946• ...........21 .. 71947............13 . 211948• ...........27 . 261949............ 7 . 161950• ...........24 .. 01951............21 . 131952• ...........13 .. 71953............28 . 261954• ...........40 . 211955............ 0 .. 71956• ...........14 . 271957............19 . 201958• ...........15 . 321959............12 . 211960• ........... 0 . 201961............14 . 151962• ...........21 . 281963............ 7 . 121964• ...........33 . 151965............ 0 . 201966• ...........23 . 321967............24 . 211968• ........... 6 . 271969............ 7 . 241970• ........... 0 . 241971............14 . 241972• ...........22 . 311973............ 0 . 171974• ........... 9 . 21

Cor . D1975............10 . 331976• ........... 0 . 351977............13 . 171978• ........... 7 . 141979............21 . 101980• ........... 7 .. 31981............ 7 . 421982• ...........13 . 141983............17 . 311984• ...........13 . 101985• ...........17 . 201986............10 .. 71987• ...........21 . 141988............24 .. 71989• ...........14 . 281990• ........... 6 . 111991............25 . 311992• ...........26 . 161993............27 . 281994• ...........17 . 141995............24 . 191996• ...........21 . 381997............20 . 241998• ...........14 . 111999............17 . 202000• ...........49 . 312001............28 . 242002• ...........21 . 19

Last Shutout: 1976, Dartmouth 35-0Current Streak: Cornell, 3 gamesLongest Cornell Win Streak: 5 (1950-54)Longest Dartmouth Win Streak: 11 (1968-78)

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Game 9 — Columbia LionsGENERAL INFORMATIONLocation: New York, N.Y.Enrollment: 6,750Colors: Columbia Blue and WhiteNickname: LionsConference: Ivy LeagueStadium: Lawrence A. Wien StadiumCapacity-Surface: 17,000-AstroTurfPresident: Lee BollingerAthletic Director: Dr. John Reeves2002 Record: 1-92002 Ivy League Record: 0-72002 Ivy League Finish: 8th

MEDIA RELATIONSFootball Contact: Trisha MaliziaOffice Phone: 212-854-2534Home Phone: NAE-mail: [email protected] Office Fax: 212-854-8168Web: www.GoColumbiaLions.comPress Box Phone: 212-304-8023

COACHING INFORMATIONHead Coach: Bob ShoopAlma Mater: Yale ‘88Record at Columbia: 0-0, 1stCareer Record: 0-0, 1stOffice Phone: 212-854-4767

Offensive Assistants (*coordinator)OL *Rich SkroskyW R Carlton HallTE Bob MuckianQ B John DeFilippoRB Sean RyanDefensive Assistants (*coordinator)DL *Tim WeaverDL Pat MaddenLB Mike SiravoDS Shawn West

2003 PERSONNELOffense: MultipleDefense: 4-3Lettermen Returning/Lost: 37/14Offensive Starters Returning: 8Defensive Starters Returning: 6

RETURNING LEADERSRushing Att Yds Avg T DR. Biggers 110 442 4.0 3D. Smith 55 229 4.2 2

Passing Att-Com-int Yds T DS. Hunsberger 370-212-8 2023 6

Receiving N o Yds Avg T DZ. Van Zant 51 592 11.6 0T. Chmelka 48 500 10.4 2

Defensive UT-AT—Tot OtherE. Tryforos 47-26—73 3 TFLC. Carey 34-31—65 6 TFL

Nov. 15 at Schoellkopf Field, 1 p.m.

Bob Shoop

Cr . Cl1889............20 .. 01890• ...........36 .. 01899............29 .. 01901............24 .. 01903• ...........12 . 171904............ 6 . 121905• ........... 6 . 121920• ...........34 .. 71921............41 .. 71922• ...........56 .. 01923............35 .. 01924• ...........14 .. 01925............17 . 141926............ 9 . 171927• ........... 0 .. 01928............ 0 .. 01929• ...........12 .. 61930............ 7 . 101931• ...........13 .. 01932............ 0 .. 61933• ........... 6 .. 91934............ 0 . 141935• ........... 7 .. 71936............ 6 . 141937• ...........34 . 201938............23 .. 71939• ...........13 .. 71940• ...........27 .. 01941............ 0 .. 71942............13 . 14

CORNELL-COLUMBIA SERIES SCORES(Won 57, Lost 30, Tied 3)

Cr . Cl1943• ...........33 .. 61944............25 .. 71945............26 . 341946............12 .. 01947• ........... 0 . 221948............20 . 131949• ...........54 .. 01950............19 . 201951• ...........20 . 211952............21 . 141953• ...........27 . 131954............26 .. 01955• ...........34 . 191956............19 . 251957• ........... 8 .. 01958............25 .. 01959• ...........13 .. 71960............ 6 . 441961• ........... 7 . 351962............21 . 251963• ...........18 . 171964............57 . 201965• ...........20 .. 61966............31 .. 61967• ...........27 . 141968............25 . 341969• ...........10 .. 31970............31 . 201971• ...........24 . 211972............ 0 . 14

In Ivy Play: Cornell leads 32-15-0Record: Cornell leads 57-30-3Last Cornell Win: 2002, 17-14Last Columbia Win: 2001, 35-28Last Tie: 1935, 7-7

2003 SCHEDULESept. 20 at Fordham

27 BucknellOct. 4 at Princeton

11 at Lafayette18 Pennsylvania25 at Dartmouth

Nov. 1 Yale8 Harvard15 at Cornell22 Brown

2002 RESULTSFordham W 13-11Colgate L 6-38Princeton L 32-35Lafayette L 21-28Pennsylvania L 10-44Dartmouth L 23-24Yale L 7-35Harvard L 7-28Cornell L 14-17Brown L 28-35

THE CORNELL-COLUMBIA SERIES SINCE 1889

Cr . Cl1973• ...........44 . 141974............24 .. 01975• ...........19 . 421976............17 . 351977• ...........20 .. 71978............35 . 141979• ...........24 .. 71980............24 .. 01981• ...........15 .. 91982............35 . 261983• ...........31 .. 61984............19 .. 71985• ...........21 .. 81986............28 .. 01987• ...........31 . 201988............42 . 191989• ...........19 . 251990............41 .. 01991• ...........28 . 211992............30 . 351993• ...........24 . 291994............33 . 381995• ...........35 . 141996............10 . 241997• ...........33 . 221998............10 . 221999• ...........31 . 292000............35 . 312001• ...........28 . 352002............17 . 14

Last Shutout: 1990, Cornell 41-0Current Streak: Cornell, 1 gameLongest Cornell Win Streak: 12 (1977-88)Longest Columbia Win Streak: 3 (1903-05, 1932-34, 1960-62, 1992-94)

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Game 10 — Pennsylvania QuakersGENERAL INFORMATIONLocation: Philadelphia, Pa.Enrollment: 9,770Colors: Red and BlueNickname: QuakersConference: Ivy LeagueStadium: Franklin FieldCapacity-Surface: 52,593-Artificial TurfPresident: Dr. Judith RodinAthletic Director: Steve Bilsky2002 Record: 9-12002 Ivy League Record: 7-02002 Ivy League Finish: 1st

MEDIA RELATIONSFootball Contact: Rich SchepisOffice Phone: 215-898-6128Home Phone: 215-453-6953E-mail: [email protected] Office Fax: 215-898-1747Web Site: www.pennathletics.comPress Box Phone: 215-898-6159

COACHING INFORMATIONHead Coach: Al BagnoliAlma Mater: Central Conn. St. ‘75Record at Penn: 76-32, 12th yearCareer Record: 159-51, 22nd yearOffice Phone: 215-573-9229

Offensive Assistants (*coordinator)OL *Andy CoenQ B Larry WoodsRB Steve DownsW R Trey BrownTE Damian WroblewskiDefensive Assistants (*coordinator)

*Ray PrioreDL Jim SchaeferLB Cliff SchwenkeDef Drew Christ

2003 PERSONNELOffense: Multiple one-backDefense: 50Lettermen Returning/Lost: 41/14Offensive Starters Returning: 7Defensive Starters Returning: 6Special Teams Starters Returning: 2

RETURNING LEADERSRushing Att Yds Avg T DM. Recchiuti 79 330 4.2 2T. Okolovitch 43 160 3.7 0

Passing Att-Com-int Yds T DM. Mitchell 371-241-13 2,803 20

Receiving N o Yds Avg T DD. Castles 24 369 15.4 6J. Phillips 19 266 14.0 0

Defensive UT-AT—Tot OtherS. Lhotak 43-21—64 16 TFL; 7 sacksR. San Doval 18-13-31 8 TFL; 6 sacks

Nov. 22 at Philadelphia, Pa., 12:30 p.m.

Cor . P1893............ 0 . 501894............ 0 .. 61895............ 2 . 461896............10 . 321897............ 0 .. 41898............ 6 . 121899............ 0 . 291900............ 0 . 271901............23 .. 61902............11 . 121903............ 0 . 421904............ 0 . 341905............ 5 .. 61906............ 0 .. 01907............ 4 . 121908............ 4 . 171909............ 6 . 171910............ 6 . 121911............ 9 . 211912............ 2 .. 71913............21 .. 01914............24 . 121915............24 .. 91916............ 3 . 231917............ 0 . 371919............ 0 . 241920............ 0 . 281921............41 .. 01922............ 9 .. 01923............14 .. 71924............ 0 . 201925............ 0 .. 71926............10 . 101927............ 0 . 351928............ 0 . 491929............ 7 . 171930............13 .. 7

In Ivy Play: Cornell leads, 25-21-1Record: Penn leads 62-42-5Last Cornell Win: 1999, 20-12Last Penn Win: 2002, 31-0Last Tie: 1974, 28-28

2003 SCHEDULESept. 20 Duquesne

27 at LehighOct. 4 at Dartmouth

11 Bucknell19 at Columbia25 Yale

Nov. 1 at Brown8 Princeton15 at Harvard22 Cornell

2002 RESULTSat Lafayette W 52-21Lehigh W 24-21Dartmouth W 49-14at Villanova L 3-17Columbia W 44-10at Yale W 41-20Brown W 31-7at Princeton W 44-13Harvard W 44-9at Cornell W 31-0

Al Bagnoli

CORNELL-PENN SERIES SCORES(Won 42, Lost 62, Tied 5)

Cor . P1931............ 7 .. 01932............ 7 . 131933............20 . 121934............13 . 231935............ 7 . 331936............ 6 . 141937............34 . 201938............ 0 .. 01939............26 .. 01940............20 . 221941............ 0 . 161942............ 7 . 341943............14 . 201944............ 0 . 201945............ 6 . 591946............20 . 261947............ 0 . 211948............23 . 141949............29 . 211950............13 .. 61951............ 0 .. 71952............ 7 . 141953............ 7 .. 71954............20 .. 61955............39 .. 71956............20 .. 71957............ 6 . 141958............19 .. 71959............13 . 281960............ 7 . 181961............31 .. 01962............29 . 221963............17 .. 81964• ...........33 .. 01965............38 . 141966• ...........45 . 28

Cor. . P1967............33 . 141968• ........... 8 . 101969............28 . 141970• ...........32 . 311971............41 . 131972• ...........24 . 201973............22 . 311974• ...........28 . 281975............21 . 271976• ...........31 . 131977............ 7 . 171978• ...........35 . 171979............52 . 131980• ...........31 .. 91981............22 . 291982• ...........23 .. 01983............ 7 . 281984• ........... 0 . 241985............ 6 . 101986• ...........21 . 311987............17 . 131988• ...........19 .. 61989............20 .. 61990• ...........21 . 151991............13 . 141992• ........... 7 . 141993............14 . 171994• ...........14 . 181995............18 . 371996• ...........24 . 211997.......... + 20 . 331998• ...........21 . 351999............20 . 122000• ...........15 . 452001............14 . 382002• ........... 0 . 31

Last Shutout: 2002, Penn 31-0Current Streak: Penn, 3 gamesLongest Cornell Win Streak: 7 (1961-67)Longest Penn Win Streak: 8 (1893-1900,1940-47)

THE CORNELL-PENN SERIES SINCE 1893

•games at Ithaca; +game forfeited due to use of ineligible player

2003 Opponents

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First Last Cor. Opp.Opponent Games Game Game W L T Pts. Pts.Albright 2 1922 1932 2 0 0 88 28Alfred 3 1903 1936 3 0 0 154 0Allegheny 1 1911 1911 1 0 0 35 0Amherst 2 1890 1908 1 1 0 6 18Army 5 1907 1948 2 3 0 94 111

Boston Univ. 2 1982 1983 0 2 0 6 58Bowdoin 1 1906 1906 1 0 0 72 0Brown 50 1895 2002 25 24 1 955 923Bucknell 42 1888 2002 33 9 0 876 334Buffalo 6 1898 1998 4 1 1 194 102

Canisius 1 1925 1925 1 0 0 33 0Carlisle Indians 5 1898 1914 3 2 0 67 23Carnegie Tech 3 1916 1919 3 0 0 55 7Case Western Res. 6 1895 1935 5 1 0 266 37Chicago Univ. 5 1899 1911 1 2 2 36 35Chicago U.C. 2 1890 1891 1 1 0 16 20Cincinnati 1 1983 1983 0 1 0 20 48Clarkson Tech 5 1927 1931 5 0 0 255 0Colgate 85 1896 2002 46 36 3 1512 1329Columbia 90 1889 2002 57 30 3 1949 1206Crescent A.C. 1 1894 1894 1 0 0 22 0

Dartmouth 86 1900 2002 36 49 1 1352 1636Detroit A.C. 1 1891 1891 1 0 0 32 0Dickinson 1 1892 1892 1 0 0 58 0

Fordham 6 1909 1999 4 2 0 160 78Forty-Seventh Inf. 1 1917 1917 0 1 0 0 6Franklin & Marshall 2 1904 1914 2 0 0 62 8

Geneva 1 1926 1926 1 0 0 6 0Georgetown 0 2003Gettysburg 2 1893 1916 2 0 0 55 0

Hamilton 8 1898 1908 8 0 0 186 0Hampden-Sydney 3 1928 1930 3 0 0 105 18Harvard 67 1890 2002 31 34 2 1040 1221Haverford 1 1905 1905 1 0 0 57 0Hobart 6 1902 1930 6 0 0 225 0Holy Cross 5 1906 1998 5 0 0 129 44

Johns Hopkins 1 1923 1923 1 0 0 52 0

Lafayette 24 1888 1997 14 8 2 460 308Lehigh 24 1887 2001 14 8 2 518 295

Manhattan A.C. 1 1892 1892 1 0 0 16 0MIT 1 1892 1892 1 0 0 44 12Massachusetts St. 1 1916 1916 1 0 0 37 0Merchant Marine 1 1982 1982 1 0 0 34 0Michigan 18 1889 1952 12 6 0 379 254Michigan State 1 1926 1926 1 0 0 24 14

Navy 10 1941 1962 1 9 0 59 296New Hampshire 1 1922 1922 1 0 0 68 7New York Univ. 2 1912 1948 2 0 0 61 12Niagara 13 1906 1949 13 0 0 424 38Northeastern 1 1989 1989 0 1 0 0 20

Oberlin 15 1898 1919 13 1 1 324 61Ohio State 2 1939 1940 2 0 0 44 21

Palmyra 1 1888 1888 1 0 0 26 0Penn State 14 1895 1943 8 4 2 187 104Pennsylvania 109 1893 2002 42 62 5 1566 1972Pittsburgh 6 1905 1914 4 2 0 90 37Princeton 85 1891 2002 31 52 2 1201 1647

First Last Cor. Opp.Opponent Games Game Game W L T Pts. Pts.Rensselaer 2 1909 1910 2 0 0 40 3Rice Institute 2 1953 1954 0 2 0 27 69Richmond 5 1927 1934 4 1 0 135 13Rochester 9 1889 1921 9 0 0 417 12Rutgers 11 1920 1981 5 6 0 204 212

St. Bonaventure 9 1910 1928 7 0 2 342 25St. Lawrence 3 1933 1935 2 1 0 68 19Springfield 1 1921 1921 1 0 0 14 0Stanford 1 1991 1991 0 1 0 6 56Stevens Institute 2 1889 1891 2 0 0 110 4Susquehanna 3 1923 1925 3 0 0 255 0Swarthmore 3 1905 1907 2 1 0 46 14Syracuse A.C. 1 1892 1892 1 0 0 16 0Syracuse 33 1891 1958 22 11 0 696 341

Towson 1 2002 2002 1 0 0 34 31Trinity 3 1890 1908 3 0 0 91 6Tufts 3 1893 1897 2 1 0 33 12

Union 9 1887 1920 8 1 0 263 30U.S.N.T.S. (Sampson) 2 1943 1944 2 0 0 40 19U.S.S.B. (New London)1 1945 1945 1 0 0 39 0Ursinus 2 1913 1914 2 0 0 69 0

Vermont 5 1900 1910 5 0 0 150 5Virginia Tech 1 1915 1915 1 0 0 45 0

Wagner 1 1999 1999 1 0 0 31 14Washington & Jefferson4 1900 1912 4 0 0 75 5Washington & Lee 1 1915 1915 1 0 0 40 21Wesleyan 1 1890 1890 0 1 0 2 4Williams 21 1888 1926 13 5 3 423 127

Yale 65 1889 2002 25 38 2 993 1302Note: 2003 opponents are indicated in bold.

Total games: 1044Record: 589-421-34Cornell points: 20,496Opponent Points: 14,732

Cornell vs. All Opponents • 1887-2002

Opponent RecordsMost games vs. one opponent: 109, vs. PennsylvaniaMost wins vs. one opponent: 57, vs. ColumbiaMost losses vs. one opponent: 62, vs. PennsylvaniaMost ties vs. one opponent: 5, vs. PennsylvaniaOldest series: Lehigh—1st game in 1887 and last game in 2001Number of opponents: 85

2003

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2002 Statistics

TEAM STATISTICS Cornell Opp.FIRST DOWNS 163 221 Rushing 62 105 Passing 85 108 Penalty 16 8RUSHING YARDAGE 1251 1742 Yards gained rushing 1506 2018 Yards lost rushing 255 276 Rushing Attempts 378 437 Average Per Rush 3.3 4.0 Average Per Game 125.1 174.2 TDs Rushing 13 22PASSING YARDAGE 1718 2387 Att-Comp-Int 308-149-11 309-203-9 Average Per Pass 5.6 7.7 Average Per Catch 11.5 11.8 Average Per Game 171.8 238.7 TDs Passing 7 16TOTAL OFFENSE 2969 4129 Total Plays 686 746 Average Per Play 4.3 5.5 Average Per Game 296.9 412.9Kick Returns: No.-Yards 40-753 33-620Punt Returns: No.-Yards 26-184 35-165Int. Returns: No.-Yards 9-124 11-85Fumbles-Lost 20-13 15-8Penalties-Yards 51-536 75-591Punts-Avg. 64-33.9 47-35.7Tim of Possession/Game 30:03 32:543rd Down Conversions 56/155 61/1514th Down Conversions 6/17 10/22

SCORE BY QUARTERS Cornell Opp.— — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — —FIRST QUARTER 58 69SECOND QUARTER 34 55THIRD QUARTER 43 57FOURTH QUARTER 21 97OVERTIME 13 14FINAL 169 292

KICKOFF RETURNS No. Yds. Avg. T D Lg— — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — —Nice, Chad 20 421 21.0 0 44Bates, Vince 12 214 17.8 0 26Hardaway, Andre 5 79 15.8 0 25Newell, Todd 2 15 7.5 0 8Kellner, John 1 24 24.0 0 24Big Red Totals 40 753 18.8 0 44Opponent Totals 33 620 18.8 1 89

RECEIVING G P No. Yds Avg. T D Yds/G— — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — —Ferguson, Keith 10 70 852 12.2 2 85.2Kellner, John 10 36 493 13.7 2 49.3Nice, Chad 10 15 164 10.9 0 16.4Archer, Nathan 10 9 93 10.3 2 9.3Blanks, Marcus 9 5 15 3.0 0 1.7Yanz, Vic 10 4 43 10.8 0 4.3Parris, Mike 10 4 35 8.8 0 3.5Ulbricht, Brian 10 3 1 0.3 0 0.1Wise, Matthew 10 2 10 5.0 1 1.0Blanks, David 10 1 12 12.0 0 1.2Big Red Totals 10 149 1718 11.5 7 171.8Opponent Totals 10 203 2387 11.8 16 238.7

TOTAL OFFENSE G P Plays Rush Pass Total Yds/G— — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — —Razzano, Mick 10 369 108 1556 1664 166.4Blanks, Marcus 9 129 568 0 568 63.1Ulbricht, Brian 10 67 319 0 319 31.9Archer, Nathan 10 71 243 0 243 24.3Ferguson, Keith 10 4 25 49 74 7.4Busch, DJ 2 11 0 38 38 19.0Kuhn, Ryan 1 15 6 31 37 37.0Newell, Gabe 1 8 -12 32 20 20.0Hardaway, Andre 9 4 10 0 10 1.1Newell, Todd 10 2 1 0 1 0.1Big Red Totals 10 686 1251 1718 2969 296.9Opponent Totals 10 746 1742 2387 4129 412.9

PUNTING No. Yds Avg Long TB I20— — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — —Baumgartel, M. 63 2170 34.4 77 1 14Team 1 0 0.0 0 0 0Big Red Totals 64 2170 33.9 77 1 14Opponent Totals 47 1676 35.7 56 4 9

PUNT RETURNS No. Yds Avg T D Long— — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — —Bates, Vince 16 96 6.0 0 13Moriarty, Jamie 9 55 6.1 0 18Hardaway, Andre 1 15 15.0 0 0Yanz, Vic 0 18 0.0 0 18Big Red Totals 26 184 7.1 0 18Opponent Totals 35 165 4.7 0 21

Date Opponent W/L Score Att.— — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — —9/21 at Bucknell L 3-14 69229/28 YALE L 23-50 1322410/5 TOWSON W (ot) 34-31 424210/12 at Harvard L 23-52 653310/19 COLGATE L 13-42 564210/26 at Brown W (ot) 10-7 701411/2 PRINCETON L (ot) 25-32 437911/9 DARTMOUTH W 21-19 423711/16 at Columbia W 17-14 271511/23 PENN L 0-31 4090* denotes conference game

RUSHING G P No. Gained Lost Net Avg. T D Y/G— — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — —Blanks, Marcus 9 129 598 30 568 4.4 5 63.1Ulbricht, Brian 10 66 331 12 319 4.8 2 31.9Archer, Nathan 10 71 244 1 243 3.4 5 24.3Razzano, Mick 10 93 284 176 108 1.2 1 10.8Ferguson, Keith 10 3 25 0 25 8.3 0 2.5Hardaway, Andre 9 4 10 0 10 2.5 0 1.1Kuhn, Ryan 1 3 11 5 6 2.0 0 6.0Newell, Todd 10 2 1 0 1 0.5 0 0.1Busch, DJ 2 3 2 2 0 0.0 0 0.0Newell, Gabe 1 1 0 12 -12-12.0 0 -12.0Baumgartel, M. 10 1 0 13 -13-13.0 0 -1.3Team 4 2 0 4 -4 -2.0 0 -1.0Big Red Totals 10 378 1506 255 1251 3.3 13 125.1Opponent Totals 10 437 2018 276 1742 4.0 22 174.2

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PASSING G P Rating Att. Comp. Int. Pct. Yds. T D Long Yds/G— — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — —Razzano, Mick 10 100.29 276 137 7 49.6 1556 7 44 155.6Kuhn, Ryan 1 30.03 12 5 2 41.7 31 0 12 31.0Busch, DJ 2 64.90 8 2 0 25.0 38 0 33 19.0Newell, Gabe 1 52.69 7 3 1 42.9 32 0 14 32.0Baumgartel, M. 10 0.40 2 1 1 50.0 12 0 12 1.2Ferguson, Keith 10 511.60 1 1 0 100.0 49 0 49 4.9Ulbricht, Brian 10 0.00 1 0 0 0.0 0 0 0 0.0Team 4 0.00 1 0 0 0.0 0 0 0 0.0Big Red Totals 10 95.59 308 149 11 48.4 1718 7 49 171.8Opponent Totals 10 141.85 309 203 9 65.7 2387 16 70 238.7

Touchdowns FumblesSCORING Rush Rec PR KR Int Oth Opp O w n FG PAT PAT-2 Saf. Pts.— — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — - — — — — — — — — — — — — — — —Archer, Nathan 5 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 42MacMeekin, T. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 8-9 17-19 0-0 0 41Blanks, Marcus 5 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 30Ulbricht, Brian 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 12Kellner, John 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 12Ferguson, Keith 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 12Wise, Matthew 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 6Thomas, Kyle 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 6Razzano, Mick 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0-0 0-0 0-1 0 6Team 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0-0 0-0 0-1 1 2Big Red Totals 13 7 0 0 0 1 0 0 8-9 17-19 0-2 1 169Opponent Totals 22 16 0 1 0 0 0 1 4-14 36-37 1-1 0 292

ALL-PURPOSE YARDS G P Rush Rec PR KOR IR Tot Avg.— — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — —Ferguson, Keith 10 25 852 0 0 0 877 87.7Nice, Chad 10 0 164 0 421 0 585 58.5Blanks, Marcus 9 568 15 0 0 0 583 64.8Kellner, John 10 0 493 0 24 0 517 51.7Archer, Nathan 10 243 93 0 0 0 336 33.6Ulbricht, Brian 10 319 1 0 0 0 320 32.0Bates, Vince 8 0 0 96 214 0 310 38.8Moriarty, Jamie 10 0 0 55 0 68 123 12.3Razzano, Mick 10 108 0 0 0 0 108 10.8Hardaway, Andre 9 10 0 15 79 0 104 11.6Yanz, Vic 10 0 43 18 0 0 61 6.1Parris, Mike 10 0 35 0 0 0 35 3.5Morrissey, Neil 10 0 0 0 0 23 23 2.3Hase, Jordan 8 0 0 0 0 20 20 2.5Newell, Todd 10 1 0 0 15 0 16 1.6Spitler, Nate 10 0 0 0 0 13 13 1.3Blanks, David 10 0 12 0 0 0 12 1.2Wise, Matthew 10 0 10 0 0 0 10 1.0Kuhn, Ryan 1 6 0 0 0 0 6 6.0Big Red Totals 10 1251 1718 184 753 124 4030 403.0Opponent Totals 10 1742 2387 165 620 85 4999 499.9

2002 Statistics2002 in Review/Ivy League

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|------------Tackles------------| |--Sacks--| |--------Pass Def---------| |---Fumbles---| BlkdDEFENSE UT AT Total ForLoss No-Yds. Int-Yds. BrUp QBH Rcv-Yds. FF Kick Saf GP— — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — - — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — - — - — - — -Sussman, Joel 50 40 90 5-19 . . 3 . 2-0 2 2 . 10Spitler, Nate 35 50 85 6-8 1-1 3-13 3 . . . . . 10Kitlowski, Brad 43 39 82 7-21 4-22 . 1 . 2-0 2 . . 10Moriarty, Jamie 33 40 73 . . 2-68 5 . 1-0 1 . . 10Combe, Pete 35 28 63 16-59 9-39 . . . . . . . 10Thomas, Kyle 29 32 61 . . 1-0 9 . . . . . 10Madea, Jarad 30 30 60 4-13 1-8 . . . . 1 . . 10Rodriguez, J. 17 29 46 13-34 4-18 . 2 . . . . . 10Bates, Vince 19 15 34 1-1 . . 2 . . . . . 8Goodrich, Bill 10 13 23 4-4 . . 1 . . 1 . . 10Blanks, David 20 2 22 5-23 2-19 . 1 . . . . . 10Lempa, Ryan 10 10 20 5-10 2-4 . . . . . . . 10Pardi, Paul 12 7 19 2-8 1-6 . . . 1-0 1 . . 7Rooney, Kevin 6 12 18 6-27 1-7 . . . . . . . 10Collins, Dan 11 5 16 1-3 . 1-0 . . . . . . 10Morrissey, Neil 11 3 14 2-16 . 1-23 2 . . . . . 10Nelson, John 5 8 13 . . . . . . . . . 10Morgan, Jason 4 9 13 4-13 3-13 . . . 1-0 . . . 9Stone, Mike 0 9 9 1-1 . . . . . . . . 5Newsom, Rosco 5 3 8 . . . 1 . . . . . 10Hanset, Luke 4 3 7 . . . . . . . . . 10McGinty, Mike 3 3 6 1-1 . . . . . . . . 10Ferguson, Keith 4 1 5 . . . . . . 1 . . 10Nice, Chad 4 1 5 . . . . . . . . . 10Hase, Jordan 2 3 5 1-1 . 1-20 1 . . . . . 8Hardaway, Andre 3 1 4 . . . . . . . 1 . 9Yanz, Vic 3 0 3 . . . . . . . . . 10Parris, Mike 2 1 3 . . . . . . . . . 10Rex, Kevin 2 1 3 . . . . . . . . . 5Smith, Deron 1 2 3 . . . . . . . . . 10Archer, David 1 0 1 . . . . . . . . . 10Blanks, Marcus 1 0 1 . . . . . . . . . 9Hill, Carlos 1 0 1 . . . . . . . . . 10Hilliard, Jim 1 0 1 . . . . . . . . . 5Kellner, John 1 0 1 . . . . . . . . . 10Wise, Matthew 1 0 1 . . . . . . . . . 10Hart, Jake 0 1 1 . . . . . . . . . 5Pollock, Matt 0 1 1 . . . . . . . . . 1Potts, Patrick 0 1 1 . . . . . . . . . 2Team 2 0 2 . . . . . . . . . 1Big Red Totals 421 403 824 84-262 19-116 9-124 31 . 8-0 9 3 1 10Opponent Totals 347 378 725 79-228 23-129 11-85 40 . 13-26 9 2 0 10

INTERCEPTIONS No. Yds. Avg. T D T D— — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — – – – – – – – – — — — — —Spitler, Nate 3 13 4.3 0 9Moriarty, Jamie 2 68 34.0 0 38Thomas, Kyle 1 0 0.0 0 0Collins, Dan 1 0 0.0 0 0Hase, Jordan 1 20 20.0 0 20Morrissey, Neil 1 23 23.0 0 23Big Red Totals 9 124 13.8 0 38Opponent Totals 11 85 7.7 0 22

2002 Statistics2002 in Review/Ivy League

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2002 Game Summaries2002 in Review/Ivy League

LEWISBURG, Pa. — Albert Marquardt caught sixpasses for 135 yards and a touchdown to lead Bucknellto a 14-3 victory over Cornell on Sept. 21.Marquardt caught a 70-yarder from Todd Wenrich

with 4:04 left in the second quarter, giving the Bison(1-2) a 14-0 lead.Bucknell also scored in the first quarter on a 21-yard

run by Blamah Sarnor.Cornell (0-1) got on the board in the third with a 35-

yard field goal by Trevor MacMeekin.Wenrich was 15-of-21 for 208 yards. Sarnor gained

100 yards on 21 rushes.For Cornell, Mick Razzano was 10-of-27 for 125

yards and an interception. His favorite target was KeithFerguson, who caught five passes for 76 yards. MarcusBlanks added 99 yards on 19 rushes.Cornell 0 0 3 0 — 3Bucknell 7 7 0 0 — 14B—Sarnor 21 run (Lundberg kick), 9:16B—Marquardt 70 pass from Wenrich(Lundberg kick), 4:04

C—MacMeekin 35 field goal, 10:59.

Statistics C BFirst Downs 16 15Rushes-Yards 41-129 39-116Passing 125 208Comp-Att-Int 10-27-1 15-21-0Return Yards 51 27Punts-Avg. 5-37.2 6-37.8Fumbles-Lost 0-0 3-1Penalties-Yards 2-20 6-38Time of Possession 32:06 27:54

Individual StatisticsRushing: Cornell—M. Blanks 19-98, N. Archer 7-19,Razzano 14-11, Ulbricht 1-1. Bucknell—Sarnor 21-100, Brinson 7-19, Darrington 4-(-1), Wenrich 7-(minus 2).Passing: Cornell—Razzano 10-27-1 125. Bucknell—Wenrich 15-21-0 208.Receiving: Cornell—Ferguson 5-76, Kellner 3-43, M.Blanks 2-6. Bucknell—Marquardt 6-135, Sarnor 4-7,Horan 2-44, Wilson 1-8, Miller 1-8, Lockard 1-6.

ITHACA, N.Y. — The Cornell football team suffereda 50-23 loss at the hands of Yale on Sept. 28 atSchoellkopf Field. A homecoming crowd of 13,224watched the Big Red in action in the team’s homeopener.The Bulldogs were propelled by the record-setting

performance of running back Robert Carr, who gained235 yards on 28 carries and also scored four touch-downs for the win.Cornell struck first in the contest when sophomore

tailback Marcus Blanks rushed in from 5 yards out fora touchdown. The Big Red had taken the openingkickoff and used 16 plays to march 65 yards up the fieldfor the score.Yale came right back and used six plays to score its

own touchdown and then added an extra-point kickto take a 7-6 lead.The Big Red went ahead again 13-7 at the end of the

quarter, when sophomore outside linebacker JoelSussman and sophomore defensive back Kyle Thomasworked to make a little history. With just one secondleft on the clock at the end of the quarter, Yale wasattempting a 42-yard field goal, but it was blocked bySussman. The play didn’t end there, though, asThomas scooped up the ball and rambled 48 yardsdown the field for a touchdown. The touchdown wasspecial, as it marked the first time the Big Red hadreturned a blocked field goal for a TD.The Big Red kicked off to Yale to start off the second

quarter and forced the Bulldogs to punt on their firstpossession. Cornell started off its drive on its own 15and made it 17 yards up field before the Yale defensecame charging in and forced a fumble, which wasrecovered and returned 21 yards for a touchdown with10:23 on the clock. The TD, along with the extra point,put the Bulldogs ahead 14-13 and gave the team a leadit wouldn’t relinquish the rest of the game.Sophomore place-kicker Trevor MacMeekin was

called in at the end of the half and connected on a 37-yarder, but Yale scored four straight touchdowns in thesecond half to run away with the game. Blanks did crossthe goal line late in the fourth and a MacMeekin kickgave the Big Red its final tally of 23 points.Yale 7 14 22 7 — 50Cornell 13 3 0 7 — 23C—Blanks 5 run (team rush failed), 9:16Y—Carr 4 run (Troost kick), 7:41C—Thomas 48 blocked field goal return(MacMeekin kick), 00:00

Y—Beck 21 fumble recovery (Troost kick), 10:23Y—Carr 45 run (Troost kick), 6:36C—MacMaekin 37 field goal, 1:21Y—Carr 4 run (Harris pass from Mroz), 11:24Y—Carr 8 run (Troost kick), 4:47Y—Collins 40 pass from Mroz (Troost kick), 2:26Y—13:28 Bydume 6 run (Troost kick), 13:28C—Blanks 4 run (MacMeekin kick), 9:59

Statistics Y CFirst Downs 26 13Rushes-Yards 61-415 32-81Passing 142 62Comp-Att-Int 9-14-0 10-22-0Return Yards 120 56Punts-Avg. 3-31 7-41Fumbles-Lost 1-0 2-1Penalties-Yards 13-116 5-126Time of Possession 34:26 25:24

Individual StatisticsRushing: Yale—Carr 28-235, Bydume 15-125, Knox5-26, Ryan 8-17, Mroz 5-12. Cornell—Blanks 17-74,Archer 4-22, Busch 2-1, Ulbricht, 1-1, Razzano 8-(-17).Passing: Yale—Mroz 9-13-0, Cowan 0-1-0. Cornell—Razzano 10-19-0, Busch 0-3-0.Receiving: Yale—Plumb 5-80, Benigno 2-14, Collins1-40, Schulze 1-8. Cornell—Ferguson 4-29, Kellner2-19, Nice 2-13, Blanks 1-3, Ulbricht 1-(-2).

Cornell 3, Bucknell 14Sept. 21, 2002

Christy Mathewson-MemorialLewisburg, Pa.

Yale 50, Cornell 23Sept. 28, 2002

Schoellkopf FieldIthaca, N.Y.

ITHACA, N.Y. – Cornell’s Joel Sussman blocked a fieldgoal attempt by Towson in the second overtime andthen Trevor MacMeekin connected on a 19-yard fieldgoal to give the Big Red a 34-31 victory over the Tigerson Oct. 5.Cornell actually had a 24-7 lead after three quarters

of action but Towson connected on a field goal andthen capitalized after a tough Big Red penalty to getback into the game in the fourth quarter. A 59-yard passfrom Jay Amer to James Byroads with 2:17 left inregulation, followed by the extra-point kick, tied it upat 24-all.Cornell had the first possession of overtime and scored

on four plays, when Nathan Archer dove in from 1 yardout for the score. MacMeekin connected on the PAT,giving the Big Red the 31-24 lead. Towson came rightback and added a TD of its own, taking seven plays, tosend the game into a second overtime.In the second OT, the Tigers had the first possession

and made it to the Cornell 7, but the Big Red defenseheld its ground and Brad Kitlowski stopped Kerry Milesfor no yards, making it fourth-and-three. Towsonopted for a field goal but Sussman stood in the way,leaping to block Ben Whitacre’s attempt from 24 yardsout. That gave the Big Red a lot of momentum headinginto its possession.Quarterback Mick Razzano connected with John

Kellner for 7 yards and then ran for 5 to give Cornell afirst down. Brian Ulbricht then ran for another 10,before runs by Nathan Archer put the Red on the 2. TheTigers took a timeout and Cornell called in MacMeekinto attempt the kick. The sophomore connected from19 yards out to give the Big Red its 34-31 victory.The defense was a key factor for Cornell in the game,

with two big interceptions and a total of six sacks. JamieMoriarty and Dan Collins both picked off passes thatresulted in Cornell scoring drives.Towson suddenly woke up at the end of the third and

decided to orchestrate a comeback, scoring four TDsto close out regulation and tie it up at 24-all. Cornellhad the last drive of regulation, but couldn’t makeanything happen with 21 seconds left on the clock,sending the game to overtime.Towson 0 0 7 17 7 0— 31Cornell 7 3 14 0 7 3— 34C—Ulbricht 7 run (MacMeekin kick), 6:23C—MacMeekin 21 field goal, 9:23C—Archer 6 pass from Razzano (MacMeekin kick),7:44C—Archer 2 run (MacMeekin kick), 4:37T—White 32 pass from Amer (Whitacre kick), 00:00T—Whitacre 22 field goal, 7:51T—Galloway 11 pass from Amer (Whitacre kick), 4:15T—Byroads 59 pass from Amer (Whitacre kick), 2:17C—Archer 1 run (MacMeekin kick), OTT—Miles 1 run (Whitacre kick), OTC—MacMeekin 19 field goal, 2OTStatistics T CFirst Downs 19 23Rushes-Yards 44-130 56-254Passing 271 174Comp-Att-Int 17-26-2 18-36-0Return Yards 89 141Punts-Avg. 5-35.8 8-25.8Fumbles-Lost 0-0 1-0Penalties-Yards 9-60 6-52Time of Possession 24:30 35:15Individual StatisticsRushing: Towson—Miles 7-34, Galloway 5-31, Lundy8-28, Marcus 2-24, Romeo 10-19, Amer 12-(-6).Cornell—Ulbricht 27-159, Razzano 11-50, Archer 13-33, Hardaway 3-8, Ferguson 1-4, Newell 1-0.Passing: Towson—Amer 17-26-2-271. Cornell—Razzano 18-35-0-174.Receiving: Towson—White 6-85, Byroads 3-73-1,Galloway 2-26-1, Miles 2-10, White 1-32-1, Marcus 1-28, Lundy 1-13, Romeo 1-4. Cornell—Kellner 6-65,Ferguson 6-48, Yanz 4-43, Parris 1-12, Archer 1-6-1.

Towson 31, Cornell 34 (2ot)Oct. 5, 2002

Schoellkopf FieldIthaca, N.Y.

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CAMBRIDGE, Mass.—Harvard’s Ryan Fitzpatrickthrew for 353 yards and three TDs as the Crimsonbeat Cornell 52-23 on Oct. 12. Big Red QB MickRazzano was 18-of-38 passing for 193 yards andthree touchdowns while Keith Ferguson caught 12passes for 154 yards.The Crimson got on the board right out of the gate,

scoring on its first possession of the game. Cornelltook the opening kickoff and was stuck in its ownend, but on fourth-and-19, decided to fake a puntand Michael Baumgartel threw a 12-yard pass to DavidBlanks. It wasn’t enough, though, and the Crimsontook over on the Cornell 34. Three plays later,Fitzpatrick connected on a 23-yard pass to BrianEdwards for the TD.Cornell came back on the next possession and evened

it up at 7-all when Razzano hit Ferguson from 5 yardsout at 6:15 in the first.Fitzpatrick took charge on the Crimson’s next pos-

session and threw five passes for 45 yards and ranfrom 8 yards out for a TD. Anders Blewett connectedon the PAT, making it a 14-7 contest.The Big Red worked the ball back down the field at

the beginning of the second quarter, and then calledin Trevor MacMeekin for a 33-yard field goal.The Crimson’s Rodney Byrnes made the big play of

the game on the ensuing kickoff, when he returned it89 yards for a touchdown. Following the PAT kick,Harvard led 21-10, and it was a lead it wouldn’t giveup the rest of the game.Ferguson grabbed a 15-yarder from Razzano with

1:47 left on the first half clock for another Big Red TD,and a MacMeekin kick brought the team within sevenpoints of the Crimson for a 24-10 halftime score.The third quarter saw the two teams trade touch-

downs, with Harvard scoring first on a 54-yard pass.Cornell came back with a TD at 3:08 when NathanArcher caught a 3-yard pass from Razzano. The Crim-son went up by 14 once again on its next possession,when Byrnes ran in from 7 yards out.Harvard went on to score two more touchdowns in

the game, with scores at 11:03 and 1:20 in the fourthto seal the 52-23 victory.Cornell 7 10 6 0 — 23Harvard 14 10 14 14 — 52H—Edwards 23 pass from Fitzpatrick (Blewett kick), 3:28C—Ferguson 5 pass from Razzano (MacMeekin kick), 8:45H—Fitzpatrick 8 run (Blewett kick), 10:42C— MacMeekin 33 field goal, 2:40H—Byrnes 89 kickoff return (Blewett kick), 2:56H—Blewett 24 field goal, 8:56C—Ferguson 15 pass from Razzano(MacMeekin kick), 13:13

H—Morris 54 pass from Fitzpatrick (Blewett kick), 5:01C—N. Archer 3 pass from Razzano(PAT blocked), 11:52

H—Byrnes 7 run (Blewett kick), 12:28H—Thomas 25 run (Blewett kick), 13:40H—Cremarosa 27 pass from Fitzpatrick (Blewett kick), 3:57Statistics C HFirst Downs 24 31Rushes-Yards 40-135 34-200Passing 243 353Comp-Att-Int 21-44-1 24-32-0Return Yards 8 27Punts-Avg. 3-39.0 1-33.0Fumbles-Lost 0-0 0-0Penalties-Yards 7-65 13-99Time of Possession 35:28 24:32Individual StatisticsRushing: Cornell—M. Blanks 19-49, Razzano 5-35,Ulbricht 7-29, N. Archer 8-23, Busch 1-(-1). Harvard—Fitzpatrick 13-64, Palazzo 9-47, Thomas 5-35, Byrnes5-33, Morris 1-23, Balestracci 1-(-2).Passing: Cornell—Razzano 18-38-193- 1, Busch 2-5-38- 0, Baumgartel 1-1-12- 0. Harvard—Fitzpatrick 24-32-353- 0.Receiving: Cornell—Ferguson 12-154, Kellner 7-74,D. Blanks 1-12, N. Archer 1-3. Harvard—Morris 11-165, Cremarosa 3-63, Edwards 3-62, Byrnes 6-55,Palazzo 1-8.

Cornell 23, Harvard 52Oct. 12, 2002

Harvard StadiumCambridge, Mass.

ITHACA, N.Y. — Ray LaMonica and John Friesereach scored twice to lead the Colgate football team toa 42-13 victory over Cornell on Oct. 19 at SchoellkopfField. The Raiders amassed 509 yards on the day,while holding the Big Red to 301.LaMonica led the charge for the Raiders, rushing for

a total of 160 yards on 29 carries to go along with histwo touchdowns. He ran in 5 yards out in the firstquarter and then had a 2-yard TD run in the secondquarter. Frieser’s two touchdowns came when quar-terback Tom McCune found him for a 33-yard scorein the second and then a 10-yarder in the third quar-ter. Frieser had just those two receptions in the game.McCune finished the day 14-for-22 for 230 yards

and three TD passes. Luke Graham was his favoritetarget with four catches for 87 yards and a touch-down, which was a 53-yard reception in the thirdquarter.Turnovers cost the Big Red in the second quarter,

with Colgate capitalizing on two fumbles in the Red’send of the field. Josh Sabo recovered the first fumbleon the Cornell 38, and four plays and 1:04 later,Colgate scored on a 3-yard run by Justin Polk. The BigRed’s next possession also ended with a fumble, whichwas recovered by Mike Latek at the Cornell 13. twoplays covered the 13 yards, with Jamal Lamb catchingan 11-yard pass for the TD. Lane Schwarzberg con-nected on both PAT kicks, and the Raiders led 21-7with seven minutes to go in the first half.Cornell scored the game’s opening touchdown

when Nathan Archer ran in from 1 yard out at 7:05 inthe first quarter. Trevor MacMeekin added the extrapoint, and the Big Red led 7-0. Cornell’s second TD ofthe game came at 9:11 in the third, when MarcusBlanks ran in from the 5-yard line. The Big Red waspenalized after the TD, pushing MacMeekin back 15yards, and the PAT kick was wide right.Blanks was Cornell’s leading rusher in the game with

86 yards on 11 carries. Archer finished the game with56 yards on eight carries.Cornell quarterback Mick Razzano was 13-for-22

for 164 yards in the game. Keith Ferguson led theteam with five receptions for 69 yards and was fol-lowed closely by John Kellner, who also had five re-ceptions and finished the game with 66 yards.Colgate 7 21 14 0 — 42Cornell 7 0 6 0 — 13Cor—N. Archer 1 run (MacMeekin kick), 7:05Col—LaMonica 5 run (Schwarzberg kick), 2:11Col—Polk 1 run (Schwarzberg kick), 7:24Col—LaMonica 2 run (Schwarzberg kick), 7:00Col—Frieser 33 pass from McCune(Schwarzberg kick), 5:18

Col—Graham 53 pass from McCune(Schwarzberg kick), 11:27

Cor—M. Blanks 5 run (kick failed), 9:11Col—Frieser 10 pass from McCune(Schwarzberg kick), 5:43

Statistics Col CorFirst Downs 25 15Rushes-Yards 54-279 35-137Passing 230 164Comp-Att-Int 14-22-0 13-22-0Return Yards 73 118Punts-Avg. 4-42 8-36Fumbles-Lost 0-0 3-2Penalties-Yards 8-69 6-60Time of Possession 35:12 24:48Individual StatisticsRushing: Colgate—LaMonica 29-160, McCune 12-84, Polk 9-25. Cornell—M. Blanks 11-86, N. Archer 8-56, Ulbricht 5-15, Newell 1-1.Passing: Colgate—McCune 14-22-0-230. Cornell—Razzano, 13-22-0-164.Receiving: Colgate—Graham 4-87, Lamb 3-36, Frieser2-43, Gerald 2-28. Cornell—Ferguson 5-69, Kellner 5-66, Nice 2-25, Wise 1-4.

PROVIDENCE, R.I. — Place-kicker Trevor MacMeekinwas put to the test for the second time in double-overtime this season, and he came through once again,splitting the uprights on a 42-yard field goal attempt togive Cornell a 10-7 victory over Brown on Oct. 26.Playing in the rain all afternoon, Cornell tied the game

at 7-all after sophomore running back Marcus Blanksrambled in from 15 yards out to score a touchdownwith just 52 seconds left in regulation. MacMeekinconnected on the extra point to make it a 7-7 contest.The TD drive took 11 plays and covered 66 yards.

Blanks had seven runs in the series for a total of 33 yards,while senior wide receiver Keith Ferguson caught twocritical passes for 25 yards and senior fullback NathanArcher caught an 8-yarder.Ferguson’s catches were bigger than just setting up

the tying touchdown, as he broke the Cornell careerrecord for receptions in the process. He now holds thetop spot with 178 catches.The first OT had Brown get to the 20-yard line and set

up for a field goal. Paul Christian’s 37-yard attempt barelymade it off the ground, though, and the Big Red tookover. Cornell didn’t have much luck in the first overtimeeither, and it still remained tied at 7-all.Cornell had the first possession in the second overtime

and kept the ball within range for MacMeekin. Thesophomore made the kick count, and the Big Red led10-7. MacMeekin also booted the game winner earlierthis year in a double-overtime win over Towson.The Big Red’s defense did a great job on Brown’s

possession and held the Bears to just one yard. An 11-yard penalty was also a factor and quarterback Kyle Slagersaw himself facing a fourth-and-20 situation from the 35.Knowing they were out of field goal range, Slagerdropped back and went for the long pass, but seniorinside linebacker Nate Spitler stepped in and interceptedit to capture the win for Cornell.Brown opened the game with a touchdown on its first

possession, after taking over on its own 22 with aninterception. Twelve plays and 78 yards later, Slagercrossed the goal line for the score.Neither team scored until the Big Red’s last-minute TD

and the game was plagued by turnovers. The BigRed lost eight fumbles on the afternoon and threw twointerceptions, while Brown coughed up the ball fourtimes. The two teams also had difficulty getting the ballto the red zone, with the teams getting there a combinedthree times, not including their TDs.Cornell 0 0 0 7 0 3 — 10Brown 7 0 0 0 0 0 — 7B—Slager 5 run (Christian kick), 7:32C—Blanks 15 run (MacMeekin kick), 0:52C—MacMeekin 42 field goal, 2OTStatistics C BFirst Downs 20 7Rushes-Yards 36-124 43-92Passing 242 156Comp-Att-Int 22-42-2 19-32-2Return Yards 81 47Punts-Avg. 4-32.5 9-38Fumbles-Lost 7-6 2-2Penalties-Yards 8-56 7-56Time of Possession 41:40 33:20Individual StatisticsRushing: Cornell—Blanks 20-80, N.Archer 5-22,Ferguson 1-17, Ulbricht 1-5, Razzano 9-23. Brown—Rackley 20-60, Grinna 6-27, Neff 5-22, Gessner 2-7,Slager 5-(-5), Buchanan 4-(-19).Passing: Cornell—Razzano, 22-42-2-242. Brown—Slager 19-32-2-156.Receiving: Colgate—Graham 4-87, Lamb 3-36, Frieser2-43, Gerald 2-28. Cornell—Ferguson 5-69, Kellner 5-66, Nice 2-25, Wise 1-4.Cornell—Ferguson 14-177, Kellner 3-31, N.Archer 2-17, Nice 1-12, Blanks 1-3, Parris 1-2. Brown—Gessner12-91, Walther 4-24, Rackley 2-14, Grinna 1-25.

Colgate 42, Cornell 13Oct. 19, 2002

Schoellkopf FieldIthaca, N.Y.

Cornell 10, Brown 7 (2ot)Oct. 26, 2002Brown StadiumProvidence, R.I.

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ITHACA, N.Y. — Quarterback Matt Verbit threw an11-yard touchdown pass to Blair Morrison in overtimeto give the Tigers their first win over Cornell in footballsince the 1998 season. Princeton came from behindto defeat the Big Red 32-25.Cornell scored all of its points in the first half. The Big

Red’s first touchdown came just under three minutesinto the game when senior QB Mick Razzano ran infrom 3 yards out. Cornell’s drive was set up whenPrinceton fumbled the ball away on its game-openingdrive. Six plays later, including two complete passes for25 yards and four runs, put Razzano across the goal linefor a TD. Sophomore PK Trevor MacMeekin added theextra point, and it was 7-0 Cornell, at 12:06.The Tigers answered a short time later with a

touchdown of their own with a 23-yard run at 5:12.A Derek Javarone kick evened it up at 7-all.MacMeekin and Javarone then traded field goals of

32 and 21 yard, each, to make it a 10-10 contest beforethree straight Cornell scores handed the Big Red a 15-point lead.The defense earned credit for the Red’s first safety

since the 1997 season, when Paul Pardi sacked Verbitin the end zone at 8:13 in the second quarter.Cornell then scored on its ensuing drive, using 10

plays to cover 62 yards for a touchdown. Brian Ulbrichtrushed three times for 12 yards in the drive, includingthe scoring run from the 1.Cornell’s last score of the game came with 33

seconds left in the first half when Matt Wise grabbed a6-yard pass from Razzano to take a 25-10 lead into theintermission.Neither team scored in the third quarter, but Verbit

tallied at 11:58 in the fourth on a 6-yard run and thenAtkinson scored from 3 yards out to bring the game withintwo. Verbit ran in for two points on the conversion to tieit up at 25-all with 4:47 to go in regulation.Cornell’s last possession in regulation had the squad

get to the Princeton 14, but an interception with fiveseconds to go held the Big Red scoreless in the half.The Tigers had the first offensive possession in the

overtime and used five plays to get cross the goal line.Cornell got to the 7 on its drive, but that was as far as the

team could get, as the Tigers played great pass protection andknocked away two potential TDs in the process.Princeton 7 3 0 15 7 — 32Cornell 10 15 0 0 0 — 25C—Razzano 3 run (MacMeekin kick), 12:06.P—Opara 23 run (Javarone kick), 5:12.C—MacMeekin 32 field goal, 0:44.P— Javarone 21 field goal, 11:06.C—TM safety, 8:13.C—Ulbricht 1 run (MacMeekin kick), 4:03.C—Wise 6 pass Razzano (pass failed), 0:33.P—Verbit 6 run (Javarone kick), 11:58.P—Atkinson 3 run (Verbit rush).P—Morrison 11 pass from Verbit (Javarone kick), 15:00.Statistics P CFirst downs 20 11Rushes-yards 47-140 35-83Passing 204 165Comp-Att-Int 20-34-0 15-33-2Return Yards 128 146Punts-Avg. 5-24 9-31Fumbles-Lost 3-3 0-0Penalties-Yards 7-53 2-10Time of Possession 47:34 27:26Individual StatisticsRushing: Princeton—Atkinson 26-119, Opara 1-23,Benson 2-11, Veach 2-2, Verbit 13-2, Mancl 1-(-2).Cornell—Blanks 15-38, Archer 9-24, Ulbricht 3-12,Razzano 8-9.Passing: Princeton—Verbit 20-34-0-204. Cornell—Razzano 14-31-1-116, Baumgartel 0-1-1-0, Ferguson1-1-0-49.Receiving: Princeton—Marrison 8-107-1, Opara 5-46,Bryant 3-28, Dillon 2-14, Atkinson 1-7, Veach 1-2. Cornell—Ferguson 5-58, Kellner 4-74, Archer 1-11, Parris 1-9, Wise1-6-1, Blanks 1-3, Nice 1-2, Ulbricht 1-2.

ITHACA, N.Y. — Wide receiver Keith Ferguson set theCornell career receiving yards record and the Big Redheld off a late Dartmouth charge in a 21-19 win atSchoellkopf Field on Nov. 9.The first quarter saw the two teams combine for 249

yards of offense and just one punt in four possessionsas Cornell ended the first 15 minutes of play with a 14-6 edge. Dartmouth methodically moved the ball downthe field on its first possession, including converting apair of third-and-long opportunities to go ahead 6-0.Cornell answered with a long drive of its own,

highlighted by an 11-yard reception by Ferguson.Three plays later, Ferguson caught a pass at the 20,broke two tackles and made it to the 5, and NathanArcher scored two plays later. Trevor MacMeekin’s kickwas good, giving the Big Red a 7-6 lead.The Big Red defense forced a quick three-and-out,

and Ferguson caught a 33-yarder on Cornell’s first playof the drive and then John Kellner picked up 18 moreyards. On a long third-and-eight, QB Mick Razzanotook off on his own, picking up the first down to keepthe drive alive. He later connected with Kellner on a 9-yard pass to go ahead 14-6 with less than 30 secondsremaining in the quarter.Neither team scored in the second quarter, and the

Big Red went into halftime with its 14-6 lead intact.After opening the half with four successive scoreless

drives, Cornell embarked on a seven-play, 58-yard driveculminated in a 3-yard scoring plunge by Archer to putthe Big Red comfortably ahead at 21-6 with less thanthree minutes left in the quarter.Dartmouth took the kickoff and drove 77 yards on

eight plays for a score, cutting the deficit to eight with13:32 on a 12-yard pass.Cornell gave the ball right back after forcing a

Dartmouth punt, but the Big Red muffed the return andDartmouth got the ball right back. The Big Green wastedlittle time marching straight down the field and scoringon a three-yard pass from Mann to Jay Barnard to cut thelead to two. Dartmouth lined up for the two-pointconversion, but the Big Red defense held when Wedumwas tackled short of the goal line. The teams puntedaway possessions with Cornell forcing the Big Green intogiving the ball away with 4:30, and the offense ran theclock down to two minutes before giving it back. Cornelldowned the ball on the five, giving Dartmouth a 95-yardfield to cover, but after recording a pair of first downs,a fourth-down pass with 49 seconds was intercepted byJordan Hase and the Big Red ran out the clock for thevictory.Dartmouth 6 0 0 13 — 19Cornell 14 0 7 0 — 21D—Cramer 4 pass from Mann (kick failed), 9:03C—Archer, N. 5 run (MacMeekin kick), 4:53C—Kellner 9 pass from Razzano (MacMeekin kick),0:25C—Archer, N. 3 run (MacMeekin kick), 2:05D—Wedum 12 pass from Mann (Lavin kick), 13:32D—Barnard 3 pass from Mann (pass failed), 7:28Statistics D CFirst downs 29 21Rushes-yards 30-80 36-125Passing 369 302Comp-Att-Int 37-58-1 20-33-1Return Yards 88 102Punts-Avg. 5-221 7-241Fumbles-Lost 0-0 0-0Penalties-Yards 4-36 8-84Time of Possession 32:10 27:50Individual StatisticsRushing: Dartmouth—Giles 8-31, Mann 13-19,Wedum 5-19, Little 4-11. Cornell—Ulbricht 10-51,Razzano 11-38, Marcus 5-20, Archer, N. 8-20, team2-(-4).Passing: Dartmouth—Mann 37-58-1-369. Cornell—Razzano 20-33-1-302.Receiving: Dartmouth—Wedum 14-111, Barnard 10-80, Cramer 8-114, Hall 2-45, Giles 2-12, Roberts 1-7.Cornell—Ferguson 11-175, Kellner 3-55, Nice 3-36,Archer, N. 2-35; Ulbricht 1-1.

Princeton 32, Cornell 25 (ot)Nov. 2, 2002

Schoellkopf FieldIthaca, N.Y.

Dartmouth 19, Cornell 21Nov. 9, 2002

Schoellkopf FieldIthaca, N.Y.

NEW YORK, N.Y. — Junior wide receiver John Kellnercaught a 44-yard pass from senior quarterback MickRazzano to set up a last-minute touchdown, as the BigRed earned a 17-14 victory over Columbia. The Lionstook a 14-10 lead with less than four minutes to go inthe game, but the Big Red rallied for a game-winningscore with just 25 seconds left on the clock.Columbia got on the scoreboard first with a touch-

down run at 8:23 in the first quarter. Quarterback SteveHunsberger led his team 66 yards down the field,capped off by his 12-yard run into the end zone for thescore. Nick Rudd added the extra point to make it a 7-0 contest.Cornell put its points on the board in the second

quarter when Trevor MacMeekin connected on a 23-yard field goal to make it a 7-3 contest. The Big Red gotthe ball on the Columbia 30 but could only get to the5. It was fourth-and-1 when MacMeekin split theuprights for his eighth field goal of the year at 4:56.Senior free safety Jamie Moriarty gets the credit for

setting up the drive, as he intercepted a Hunsbergerpass on the Cornell 32 and returned it 38 yards to theColumbia 30.Cornell went ahead in the third quarter with sopho-

more Marcus Blanks doing all the work. The Big Redstarted its drive on the Columbia 38 and Blanks puttogether runs of 13, 15, 1 and 9 yards for the score with3:33 on the third quarter clock. MacMeekin added thekick for a 10-7 Cornell lead.After 45 minutes of play, Cornell led 10-7 heading

into the final quarter of action. Columbia went aheadlate in the fourth with a 5-yard TD run with 3:17 left onthe game clock.The Lions drove down the field using 17 plays to

cover 89 yards, with Rashad Biggers punching in from5 yards out for the score. Rudd added the extra pointto make it a 14-10 contest.With 3:07 on the clock, Cornell started its final drive

on its own 28 and it seemed that the Big Red wouldn’tmake it to the 50. The squad was facing fourth-and-17,but instead of punting its hopes away, the Big Red wentfor it. Razzano threw a 44-yard bomb — his longestcompletion of the year — to Kellner with 1:15 on theclock to put the ball on the Columbia 22. Razzano kepthis head and worked the ball for five more plays, finallyconnecting with Kellner on a 7-yarder to give the Red a17-14 lead — and eventual win — with just 25.1 secondson the clock.Cornell kicked off and Columbia brought the ball

into the Big Red’s zone, getting to the 24. Rudd wascalled in to attempt a 41-yard field goal with justseconds on the clock, but it was a botched snap andthe kick fell way short.Cornell 0 3 7 7 — 17Columbia 7 0 0 7 — 14Col—Hunsberger 12 run (Rudd kick), 8:23Cor—MacMeekin 23 field goal, 4:56Cor—Blanks 9 run (MacMeekin kick), 3:33Col—Biggers 5 run (Rudd kick), 3:17Cor—Kellner 7 pass from Razzano (MacMeekin kick), :25Statistics Cor ColFirst downs 12 20Rushes-yards 37-143 48-141Passing 109 185Comp-Att-Int 9-22-0 20-30-2Return Yards 51 9Punts-Avg. 6-32 6-27Fumbles-Lost 3-2 3-0Penalties-Yards 2-15 5-40Time of Possession 28:12 31:48Individual StatisticsRushing: Cornell—Blanks 12-89, Ulbricht 8-37,Archer, N. 5-13, Razzano 12-8. Columbia—Biggers28-98, Hunsberger 14-49, Smith 3-10.Passing: Cornell—Razzano 9-22-0-109. Columbia—Hunsberger 20-30-2-185.Receiving: Cornell—Ferguson 4-29, Kellner 3-59, Ar-cher 1-13, Nice 1-8. Columbia—Van Zant 6-62, Biggers3-39, Serowick 3-19, Smith 3-17.

Cornell 17, Columbia 14Nov. 16, 2002

Lawrence A. Wien StadiumNew York, N.Y.

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ITHACA, N.Y. — Penn broke open a tight game with24 fourth-quarter points to claim the outright IvyLeague football title for the ninth time, topping Cornell31-0 at Schoellkopf Field. The 16th-ranked Quakersended the season with a 9-1 record and a perfect 7-0Ivy League slate, while Cornell closed the campaign 4-6 overall and 3-4 in Ancient Eight play.Quaker quarterback Mike Mitchell completed 28-of-

39 passes for 269 yards and a touchdown, the majorityof passes going to Rob Milanese, who caught 15 for172 yards and the lone score in the air. Stephen Faulkled the ground attack with 20 rushes for 95 yards anda pair of scores. Penn’s defense caused five Big Redturnovers, while the offense rolled out 418 yards of totaloffense in the win.Senior Keith Ferguson of Cornell became the

seventh Ivy League wide receiver to catch 200 careerpasses, hauling in four passes for 37 yards to give him202 catches in his career. Sophomore tailback MarcusBlanks led the Big Red rushers with 29 yards on 10attempts, while three Cornell quarterbacks com-bined for 132 passing yards and four interceptions.After twice previously coming to Ithaca needing a

win to claim an outright title and dropping a contest tothe Big Red (1982 and 1998), the Quakers dominatedoffensively, but had trouble scoring against a feisty BigRed defense. The lone score of the first half came ona Milanese 11-yard scoring pass from Mitchell. Neitherteam could find the end zone in the remainder of thefirst half.The Penn defense bottled up Cornell all day, forcing

starting quarterback Mick Razzano out of the game inthe second quarter and limiting the Big Red to 168 yardsof total offense. The shutout was the first by a Cornellopponent since Princeton claimed a 6-0 victory in the1998 season opener.Penn’s offense continued to move the ball after the

half, but two missed field goals and a pair of sacks byPeter Combe that knocked the Quakers out of scoringrange highlighted the third quarter, that ended withPenn still hanging on to its seven-point lead.The Quaker offense finally came alive against a tired

Big Red defense in the fourth quarter, winning the fieldposition battle and directing three short scoring drivesof less than 40 yards and in the final eight minutes toput the game away and the Penn players and coachescelebrated its Ivy title on the field.Penn 7 0 0 24 — 31Cornell 0 0 0 0 — 0Penn—Milanese 11 pass from Mitchell (Veldmankick), 5:49Penn—Faulk 2 run (Veldman kick), 13:04Penn—Mitchell 1 run (Veldman kick), 7:56Penn—Faulk 1 run (Veldman kick), 6:36Penn—Veldman 31 field goal, 2:35Statistics Penn CorFirst downs 24 8Rushes-yards 37-149 30-36Passing 269 132Comp-Att-Int 28-40-2 11-27-4Return Yards 64 128Punts-Avg. 3-42 7-33Fumbles-Lost 1-1 3-1Penalties-Yards 3-14 5-45Time of Possession 33:06 26:54Individual StatisticsRushing: Penn—Faulk 20-95, Perskie 4-28, Recchiuti6-20, Milanese 1-4, Kapusta 2-4, Mitchell 4-(minus 2).Cornell—Blanks 10-29, Archer 5-16, Ulbricht 3-9,Kuhn 3-6, Ferguson 1-4, Hardaway 1-2, Razzano 5-(minus 5), Newell 1-(minus 12), Baumgartel 1-(minus13).Passing: Penn—Mitchell 28-39-2-269, Pillips 0-1-0-0.Cornell—Kuhn 5-12-2-31, Newell 3-7-1-32, Razzano3-7-1-69, Ulbricht 0-1-0-0.Receiving: Penn—Milanese 15-172-1, Bolinder 6-64,Adams 3-19, Kapusta 1-9, Michaleski 1-5, Faulk 1-3,Perskie 1-(minus 3). Cornell—Nice 4-63, Ferguson 4-37, Kellner 1-12, Parris 1-12, Archer 1-8.

2002 All-Ivy OffenseFirst Team Pos. Second Team*Carl Morris (Sr., Harvard) W R Jay Barnard (Jr., Dartmouth)Chas Gessner (Sr., Brown) W R Chisom Opara (Sr., Princeton)Rob Milanese (Sr., Penn) W R Keith Ferguson (Sr., Cornell)*Casey Cramer (Jr., Dartmouth) TE Nate Lawrie (Jr., Yale)*Kevin Noone (Sr., Dartmouth) OL Pat Girardi (Sr., Columbia)*Jamil Soriano (Sr., Harvard) OL Kevin Boothe (So., Cornell)Chris Clark (Jr., Penn) OL Kyle Metzler (Sr., Yale)Jack Fadule (Sr., Harvard) OL Ben Noll (Jr., Penn)David Farrell (Sr., Yale) OL Lance Baird (Sr., Princeton)Mike Mitchell (Sr., Penn) Q B Brian Mann (Sr., Dartmouth)Nate Archer (Sr., Cornell) FBScott Wedum (Jr., Dartmouth) FB*Cameron Atkinson (Sr., Princeton) RB Joe Rackley (Sr., Brown)*Robert Carr (So., Yale) RB Stephen Faulk (Sr., Penn)*Peter Veldman (Jr., Penn) K Trevor MacMeekin (So., Cornell)

2002 All-Ivy DefenseFirst Team Pos. Second Team*Chris Pennington (Sr., Penn) DL Mike Armstrong (Sr., Harvard)Joe Weiss (Jr., Princeton) DL Ryan Strahlendorff (Jr., Penn)Jason Lange (Sr., Yale) DL Tim Kirby (Jr., Princeton)Pete Combe (Sr., Cornell) DL Stuart Satullo (Sr., Yale)*Travis Belden (Sr., Penn) LB Nate Spitler (Sr., Cornell)*Zak Keasey (Jr., Princeton) LB John Perry (Sr., Harvard)Dante Balestracci (Jr., Harvard) LB Ken Estrera (Jr., Yale)Steve Lhotak (Sr., Penn) LB Joel Sussman (So., Cornell)

LB Drew Babinecz (Sr., Princeton)*Vince Alexander (Sr., Penn) DB Jay McCareins (So., Princeton)Fred Plaza (Sr., Penn) DB Clayton Smith (So., Dartmouth)Kevin Kongslie (Sr., Princeton) DB Brandon Mueller (Jr., Princeton)Philip Murray (Sr., Columbia) DB Barton Simmons (Jr., Yale)Alex Ware (Sr., Dartmouth) P Nick Rudd (So., Columbia)

Honorable Mention OffenseTight End — Chris Walther (Sr., Brown). Linemen — Chris Kupchick (Jr., Penn); Bob Reeves (Sr.,Dartmouth); Rory Hennessey (So., Yale); Matt Dukes (Sr., Penn); Roger Patterson (Sr.,Princeton). Quarterbacks — Ryan Fitzpatrick (So., Harvard); Neil Rose (Sr., Harvard). RunningBack — Marcus Blanks (So.,Cornell).Honorable Mention DefenseLinemen — Ric San Doval (So., Penn); Jeff Roether (Jr., Columbia); Erick Tyrone (Sr., Colum-bia); Luke Mraz (Sr., Yale); Mark Patterson (Sr., Yale). Linebackers — Joel Barone (Sr., Brown);Chris Carey (Jr.,Columbia); Jeremiah Watts (Sr., Brown); Brad Kitlowski (So., Cornell).Secondary — Chris Raftery (Jr., Harvard); Kevin Stefanski (Jr., Penn); Blake Perry (Jr., Princeton);Hunter Young (Sr., Brown); Niall Murphy (Sr., Harvard); Pat McManus (Jr., Penn). Punter —Josh Appell (So., Penn).

Player of the Year Rookie of the YearCarl Morris, Harvard (Sr., WR) Josh Dooley, Dartmouth (Fr., LB)

2002 Final Ivy League StandingsIvy League Overall

W L T Pct. PF PA W L T Pct. PF PAPenn 7 0 0 1.000 284 73 9 1 0 .900 363 132Harvard 6 1 0 .857 190 154 7 3 0 .700 267 230Princeton 4 3 0 .571 154 176 6 4 0 .600 226 236Yale 4 3 0 .571 173 141 6 4 0 .600 257 188Cornell 3 4 0 .429 119 205 4 6 0 .400 216 281Dartmouth 2 5 0 .286 151 200 3 7 0 .300 247 295Brown 2 5 0 .286 135 160 2 8 0 .200 223 279Columbia 0 7 0 .000 115 223 1 9 0 .100 161 295

* = unanimous selection

Penn 31, Cornell 0Nov. 23, 2002

Schoellkopf FieldIthaca, N.Y.

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2002 Final Ivy League Team StatisticsSCORING OFFENSE G TD XP 2XP DXP FG Saf Pts AvgPenn 10 46 46 0 0 13 1 363 36.3Harvard 10 38 31 0 0 2 1 267 26.7Yale 10 35 33 1 0 4 0 257 25.7Dartmouth 10 31 19 1 0 12 2 247 24.7Princeton 10 29 26 1 0 8 0 226 22.6Brown 10 32 27 0 0 1 0 222 22.2Cornell 10 21 17 0 0 8 1 169 16.9Columbia 10 20 15 3 0 6 1 161 16.1SCORING DEFENSE G TD XP 2XP DXP FG Saf Pts AvgPenn 10 17 16 0 0 4 1 132 13.2Yale 10 24 21 0 0 7 1 188 18.8Harvard 10 31 20 0 0 8 0 230 23.0Princeton 10 31 21 4 0 5 3 236 23.6Brown 10 36 28 2 0 10 0 278 27.8Cornell 10 40 36 2 0 4 0 292 29.2Columbia 10 37 34 1 0 11 2 295 29.5Dartmouth 10 40 32 0 0 7 1 295 29.5PASS OFFENSE G Att Cmp Int Pct. Yds Avg TD Yds/GBrown 10 421 274 16 65.1 2963 7.0 21 296.3Penn 10 384 250 13 65.1 2962 7.7 23 296.2Dartmouth 10 426 255 10 59.9 2931 6.9 19 293.1Harvard 10 337 218 5 64.7 2627 7.8 17 262.7Columbia 10 411 237 10 57.7 2298 5.6 7 229.8Princeton 10 296 161 11 54.4 2172 7.3 12 217.2Yale 10 270 153 6 56.7 2014 7.5 17 201.4Cornell 10 308 149 11 48.4 1718 5.6 7 171.8PASS DEFENSE G Att Cmp Int Pct. Yds Avg TD Yds/GPrinceton 10 374 199 16 53.2 2063 5.5 12 206.3Yale 10 304 178 5 58.6 2158 7.1 12 215.8Penn 10 388 215 20 55.4 2198 5.7 7 219.8Brown 10 327 200 9 61.2 2348 7.2 19 234.8Columbia 10 320 198 7 61.9 2352 7.3 16 235.2Cornell 10 309 203 9 65.7 2387 7.7 16 238.7Harvard 10 342 183 11 53.5 2416 7.1 22 241.6Dartmouth 10 341 222 7 65.1 2752 8.1 21 275.2RUSHING OFFENSE G Att Yds Avg TD Yds/GYale 10 414 1648 4.0 16 164.8Harvard 10 421 1640 3.9 20 164.0Princeton 10 429 1552 3.6 17 155.2Cornell 10 378 1251 3.3 13 125.1Dartmouth 10 341 1235 3.6 11 123.5Penn 10 365 1122 3.1 19 112.2Columbia 10 346 917 2.7 13 91.7Brown 10 316 889 2.8 11 88.9RUSHING DEFENSE G Rush Yards Avg. TD Yds/GPenn 10 301 558 1.9 7 55.8Princeton 10 342 1130 3.3 17 113.0Yale 10 373 1139 3.1 11 113.9Harvard 10 357 1142 3.2 7 114.2Dartmouth 10 390 1736 4.5 18 173.6Cornell 10 437 1742 4.0 22 174.2Brown 10 386 1760 4.6 16 176.0Columbia 10 423 1773 4.2 19 177.3TOTAL OFFENSE G Rush Pass Plays Yards Avg/P TD Yds/GHarvard 10 1640 2627 758 4267 5.6 37 426.7Dartmouth 10 1235 2931 767 4166 5.4 30 416.6Penn 10 1122 2962 749 4084 5.5 42 408.4Brown 10 889 2963 737 3852 5.2 32 385.2Princeton 10 1552 2172 725 3724 5.1 29 372.4Yale 10 1648 2014 684 3662 5.4 33 366.2Columbia 10 917 2298 757 3215 4.2 20 321.5Cornell 10 1251 1718 686 2969 4.3 20 296.9TOTAL DEFENSE G Rush Pass Plys Yards Avg TD Yds/GPenn 10 558 2198 689 2756 4.0 14 275.6Princeton 10 1130 2063 716 3193 4.5 29 319.3Yale 10 1139 2158 677 3297 4.9 23 329.7Harvard 10 1142 2416 699 3558 5.1 29 355.8Brown 10 1760 2348 713 4108 5.8 35 410.8Columbia 10 1773 2352 743 4125 5.6 35 412.5Cornell 10 1742 2387 746 4129 5.5 38 412.9Dartmouth 10 1736 2752 731 4488 6.1 39 448.8

2002 in Review/Ivy League

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1970 Jim Chasey, QB, DartmouthEd Marinaro, RB, Cornell

1971 Ed Marinaro, RB, Cornell1972 Dick Jauron, RB, Yale1973 Jim Stoeckel, QB, Harvard1974 Walt Snickenberger, RB, Princeton1975 Doug Jackson, RB, Columbia1976 John Pagliaro, RB, Yale1977 John Pagliaro, RB, Yale1978 Buddy Teevens, QB, Dartmouth1979 Tim Tumpane, LB, Yale1980 Kevin Czinger, MG, Yale1981 Rich Diana, RB, Yale1982 John Witkowski, QB, Columbia1983 Derrick Harmon, RB, Cornell1984 Tim Chambers, DB, Pennsylvania1985 Tom Gilmore, DT, Pennsylvania

1986 Rich Comizio, RB, Pennsylvania1987 Kelly Ryan, QB, Yale1988 Jason Garrett, QB, Princeton1989 Judd Garrett, RB, Princeton1990 Shon Page, RB, Dartmouth1991 Al Rosier, RB, Dartmouth1992 Jay Fiedler, QB, Dartmouth1993 Keith Elias, RB, Princeton1994 Pat Goodwillie, LB, Pennsylvania1995 Dave Patterson, LB, Princeton1996 Chad Levitt, RB, Cornell1997 Sean Morey, WR, Brown1998 Jim Finn, RB, Pennsylvania1999 James Perry, QB, Brown2000 Gavin Hoffman, QB, Pennsylvania2001 Carl Morris, WR, Harvard2002 Carl Morris, WR, Harvard

The Asa S. Bushnell Cup (Ivy League Player of the Year)The Asa S. Bushnell Cup is an annual award initiated in 1970 which honors Asa. S. Bushnell, Princeton ‘21, and commissioner of the Eastern

College Athletic Conference from 1938-70. The Bushnell Cup is presented by the Eastern Association of Intercollegiate Football Officials andis awarded by vote of the Ivy League’s eight head football coaches to that player in the league who displays outstanding qualities ofleadership, competitive spirit, contribution to the team and accomplishments on the field.

1981 Derrick Harmon, RB, Cornell1982 Mike Caraviello, QB, Dartmouth1983 Doug Butler, QB, Princeton1984 Rich Comizio, RB, Pennsylvania1985 Chris Flynn, RB, Pennsylvania1986 Craig Morton, WR, Dartmouth1987 Bryan Keys, RB, Pennsylvania1988 Solomon Johnson, RB, Columbia1989 John McNiff, RB, Cornell1990 Matt Brzica, QB, Dartmouth1991 Jay Fiedler, QB, Dartmouth

Ivy League Rookie of the YearEstablished in 1981 as the sophomore of the year, the name was changed in 1993 to reflect freshman eligibility. The award is determined

by a vote of the eight head football coaches.

1992 Pat Goodwillie, LB, Pennsylvania1993 Miles Macik, WR, Pennsylvania1994 Eion Hu, RB, Harvard1995 Sean Morey, WR, Brown1996 Isaiah Kacyvenski, LB, Harvard1997 Todd Tomich, DB/KR, Yale1998 Johnathan Reese, RB, Columbia1999 Chas Gessner, WR, Brown2000 Dante Balestracci, LB, Harvard2001 Steve Jensen, DB, Dartmouth2002 Josh Dooley, LB, Dartmouth

1956 Yale (7-0-0)1957 Princeton (6-1-0)1958 Dartmouth (6-1-0)1959 Pennsylvania (6-1-0)1960 Yale (7-0-0)1961 Columbia (6-1-0)

Harvard (6-1-0)1962 Dartmouth (7-0-0)1963 Dartmouth (5-2-0)

Princeton (5-2-0)1964 Princeton (7-0-0)1965 Dartmouth (7-0-0)1966 Dartmouth (6-1-0)

Harvard (6-1-0)Princeton (6-1-0)

1967 Yale (7-0-0)1968 Yale (6-0-1)

Harvard (6-0-1)

Ivy League Champions — 1956-20021969 Dartmouth (6-1-0)

Yale (6-1-0)Princeton (6-1-0)

1970 Dartmouth (7-0-0)1971 Cornell (6-1-0)

Dartmouth (6-1-0)1972 Dartmouth (5-1-1)1973 Dartmouth (6-1-0)1974 Harvard (6-1-0)

Yale (6-1-0)1975 Harvard (6-1-0)1976 Brown (6-1-0)

Yale (6-1-0)1977 Yale (6-1-0)1978 Dartmouth (6-1-0)1979 Yale (6-1-0)

1980 Yale (6-1-0)1981 Dartmouth (6-1-0)

Yale (6-1-0)1982 Harvard (5-2-0)

Pennsylvania (5-2-0)Dartmouth (5-2-0)

1983 Harvard (5-1-1)Pennsylvania (5-1-1)

1984 Pennsylvania (7-0-0)1985 Pennsylvania (6-1-0)1986 Pennsylvania (7-0-0)1987 Harvard (6-1-0)1988 Cornell (6-1-0)

Pennsylvania (6-1-0)1989 Princeton (6-1-0)

Yale (6-1-0)

1990 Cornell (6-1-0)Dartmouth (6-1-0)

1991 Dartmouth (6-0-1)1992 Dartmouth (6-1-0)

Princeton (6-1-0)1993 Pennsylvania (7-0-0)1994 Pennsylvania (7-0-0)1995 Princeton (5-1-1)1996 Dartmouth (7-0-0)1997 Harvard (7-0-0)1998 Pennsylvania (6-1-0)1999 Brown (6-1-0)

Yale (6-1-0)2000 Pennsylvania (6-1-0)2001 Harvard (7-0)2002 Pennsylvania (7-0)

2002 in Review/Ivy League

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History/RecordsHistory/Records

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1887The first intercollegiate game under modern rules isplayed against Union College on campus land whereDay and Stimson halls stand today. Union won 24-10.

1892Glenn (Pop) Warner ‘94 saw his first football at Cornell,thought it was “just a schoolboy scramble with a few

bloody noses,” gave it a try,and went on to become thebest known of the sport’spioneering coaches. Hecaused more rule changesthan all of the other coachescombined.

1915Charley Barrett ‘16 scores afirst-quarter TD to leadCornell to a 10-0 victory overHarvard in a game ofunbeatens. The Big Redhanded the Crimson its firstloss in four years and wasdeclared national champion.

1921-24The Big Red had a run of 26 straight from 1921 until itdropped game No. 3 in 1924 to Williams. Cornell wasdeclared national champion in 1921 and 1922.

1939Cornell overcomes a 14-0 deficit in the first quarter tobeat powerful Ohio State 23-14 in Columbus. TheBuckeyes went on to win the Big Ten championship thatyear.

Cornell’s first football team, 1887.

All-time greats Bob Dean (left) and Pete Dorset

Over A Century of Tradition

In 1951, the Big Red defeated Michigan 20-7 in front of the largestcrowd in Schoellkopf history (35,300).

History and Records

Glenn (Pop) Warner ’94 was afootball pioneer.

1938-40Its second-best winning streak was 18 without a loss froma victory over Penn State in 1938 until the Fifth Downgame at Dartmouth in 1940. The 1939 team was 8-0,ranked fourth in the nation and was the Lambert Trophywinner, with the Red defeating Syracuse, Princeton,Penn State, Ohio State, Columbia, Colgate, Dartmouthand Pennsylvania. After subduing the meat of theschedule the Red found Columbia (13-7) and Andy Kerr’sColgaters (14-12) the toughest opponents to contendwith that year.

1940The Fifth-Down Game. Cornell remains undefeated witha 7-3 victory over Dartmouth in Hanover, scoring on thelast play of the game. After reviewing game film onMonday, Coach Carl Snavely and acting athletic directorRobert J. Kane wire Dartmouth officials to tell themCornell scored on a fifth down. The Big Green acceptsthe forfeit, winning the contest 3-0.

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Ed Marinaro looks for a hole in the 1971 game againstColumbia.

The Big Red’s 1948 squad and the 1949 team (pictured here) both won Ivy championshipswhile going 8-1 both years. The 1950 unit went 7-2 for a phenomenal three-year recordof 23-4.

Pete Gogolak kicks his first field goal as amember of the Big Red, a 41-yarder atPrinceton in 1962. The Tigers won thegame 30-25.

History and Records

1948Bob Dean ‘49 scores from 1-foot out and kicks the PATwith 2:40 left, giving the Big Red a 27-26 come-from-behind victory over Dartmouth in front of 30,000 fans atSchoellkopf Field.

1951Cornell defeated Michigan, defending Big Ten Confer-ence and Rose Bowl champions, 20-7, in front of thelargest crowd in Schoellkopf history (35,300).

1961-65Tom Harp’s teams from ’61 through ’65 didn’t breakrecords but there was much fun. Quarterback GaryWood was a firebrand leader. Then there was PeterGogolak, the first of the soccer-style sidewheeling kickers.He set a national major college record of 44 consecutivekicking conversions from ’61 through ’63, and was 54x55for his career. His 50-yard field goal against Lehigh in ’63was a national record at the time.

1969-71Ed Marinaro, an All-American, provided some excitingtimes when he played for Coach Jack Musick from 1969-71, and many of his national records still stand. Formore on Marinaro, see page 104.

The Playing FieldsThe playing area before World War I was Percy Field,alongside Fall Creek, the present site of Ithaca HighSchool. The Schoellkopf site came into being in 1915 andhas been in use for 85 seasons. It wasn’t until 1924 thatthe Crescent was added to Schoellkopf, which has beenfilled to overflowing a few times. The record crowd,when there were bleachers in the end zones andbeneath the Crescent and west stands, was 35,300 forMichigan, Nov. 10, 1951.

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Total OffenseMOST PLAYSGame: 71 by Ricky Rahne at Bucknell, 9-16-00Season: 552 by Ricky Rahne, 2000Career: 1448 by Ricky Rahne, 1998-2001

MOST YARDS GAINEDGame: 440 by Ricky Rahne at Brown, 10-21-00

(66 plays)Season: 3036 by Ricky Rahne, 2000

(552 plays)Career: 7994 by Ricky Rahne, 1998-2001

(284 rushing, 7,710 passing)

MOST YARDS GAINED BY A FRESHMANGame: 126 by Terry Smith at Columbia, 11-12-94

(13 plays)Season: 671 by Terry Smith, 1994

(118 plays)

MOST YARDS GAINED BY A SOPHOMOREGame: 430 by Ricky Rahne at Brown, 10-2-99

(60 plays)Season: 2696 by Ricky Rahne, 1999

(432 plays)

MOST YARDS GAINED BY A JUNIORGame: 440 by Ricky Rahne at Brown, 10-21-2000

(66 plays)Season: 3036 by Ricky Rahne, 2000

(552 plays)

MOST YARDS GAINED BY A SENIORGame: 388 by Mark Allen at Pennsylvania, 11-24-73

(66 plays)Season: 2255 by Ricky Rahne, 2001

(457 plays)

HIGHEST AVERAGE GAIN PER PLAYGame: 10.9 by Gary Wood vs Princeton, 10-27-62 (31-337)

(min. 20 plays)Season: 6.8 by Steve Joyce, 1995 (319-2166)

(min. 175 plays)Career: 5.7 by Derrick Harmon, 1981-83 (558-3160)

(min. 330 plays)

MOST TOUCHDOWNS RESPONSIBLE FOR(TDs scored or passed for)Game: 5 by Ed Marinaro at Pennsylvania, 11-20-71

(scored 5, passed for 0)5 by Marty Sponaugle at Brown, 11-6-65(scored 2, passed for 3)

Season: 25 by Ricky Rahne, 1999(scored 0, passed for 25)

Career: 59 by Ricky Rahne, 1998-2001(scored 5, passed for 54)

Individual Rushing RecordsMOST RUSHING ATTEMPTSGame: 55 by Joe Holland at Harvard, 10-14-78 (244 yds)Season: 356 by Ed Marinaro, 1971 (1881 yds)Career: 922 by Chad Levitt, 1993-96 (4657 yds)

MOST YARDS GAINEDGame: 288 by Scott Oliaro vs. Yale, 11-3-90 (35 att)Season: 1881 by Ed Marinaro, 1971 (277 att)Career: 4715 by Ed Marinaro, 1969-71 (918 att)

MOST YARDS GAINED BY A FRESHMANGame: 126 by Terry Smith at Columbia, 11-12-94 (13 att)Season: 671 by Terry Smith, 1994 (118 att)

MOST YARDS GAINED BY A SOPHOMOREGame: 281 by Ed Marinaro vs Harvard, 10-18-69 (40 att)Season: 1409 by Ed Marinaro, 1969 (356 att)

MOST YARDS GAINED BY A JUNIORGame: 288 by Scott Oliaro vs. Yale, 11-3-90 (35 att)Season: 1428 by Chad Levitt, 1995 (292 att)

MOST YARDS GAINED BY A SENIORGame: 272 by Ed Marinaro vs Columbia, 10-30-71 (47 att)Season: 1881 by Ed Marinaro, 1971 (277 att)

MOST YARDS GAINED PER GAMESeason: 209.0 by Ed Marinaro, 1971 (1881 in nine games)Career: 174.6 by Ed Marinaro, 1969-71 (4715 in 27)

MOST YARDS GAINED BY A QUARTERBACKGame: 207 by Gary Wood at Pennsylvania, 11-24-62 (31 att)Season: 889 by Gary Wood, 1962 (173 att)Career: 2156 by Gary Wood, 1961-63 (433 att)

HIGHEST AVERAGE GAIN PER RUSHGame: 13.0 by Bill Scazzero at Columbia, 11-4-50 (12-156)

(min. 10 rushes)Season: 5.9 by Derrick Harmon, 1983 (216-1276)

(min. 150 rushes)Career: 5.6 by Derrick Harmon, 1981-83 (546-3074)

(min. 250 rushes)

MOST TOUCHDOWNS SCORED BY RUSHINGGame: 5 by Ed Marinaro at Pennsylvania, 11-20-71;

5 by Ed Marinaro vs Harvard, 10-18-69Season: 24 by Ed Marinaro, 1971Career: 50 by Ed Marinaro, 1969-71

MOST 100-YARD GAMESSeason: 9 by Ed Marinaro, 1971Career: 24 by Chad Levitt, 1993-96 (Fr. 1, So. 8, Jr. 8, Sr. 7)

MOST 200-YARD GAMESSeason: 5 by Ed Marinaro, 1971Career: 10 by Ed Marinaro, 1969-71 (So. 2, Jr. 3, Sr. 5)

MOST CONSECUTIVE 100-YARD GAMES10 by Ed Marinaro (last game of 1970 through 1971 season)

MOST CONSECUTIVE 200-YARD GAMES3 by Ed Marinaro (last game of 1970 and first two of 1971)

Individual Passing RecordsMOST PASSES ATTEMPTEDGame: 64 by Ricky Rahne at Bucknell, 9-16-00 (completed 28)Season: 479 by Ricky Rahne, 2000 (completed 252)Career: 1226 by Ricky Rahne, 1998-2001 (completed 678)

MOST PASSES COMPLETEDGame: 37 by Bill Lazor at Columbia, 11-14-92 (59 attempts)Season: 252 by Ricky Rahne, 2000 (479 attempts)Career: 678 by Ricky Rahne, 1998-2001 (1226 attempts)

MOST YARDS PASSINGGame: 446 by Ricky Rahne at Brown, 10-21-00Season: 2944 by Ricky Rahne, 2000Career: 7718 by Ricky Rahne, 1998-2001

MOST YARDS PASSING BY A SOPHOMOREGame: 443 by Ricky Rahne at Brown, 10-2-99Season: 2762 by Ricky Rahne, 1999

MOST YARDS PASSING BY A JUNIORGame: 446 by Ricky Rahne at Brown, 10-21-00Season: 2944 by Ricky Rahne, 2000

MOST YARDS PASSING BY A SENIORGame: 395 by Mark Allen at Pennsylvania, 11-24-73Season: 2255 by Steve Joyce, 1995

MOST PASSES HAD INTERCEPTEDGame: 6 by Marty Stallone at Princeton, 11-23-85Season: 21 by Chris Cochrane, 1989Career: 31 by RIcky Rahne, 1998-2001

MOST TOUCHDOWN PASSESGame: 4 by Mark Allen at Brown, 11-11-72; by Mark Allen vs.

Columbia, 11-3-73; by Mike Hood vs. Buffalo, 10-3-98;by Ricky Rahne vs. Fordham, 9-25-99; by Ricky Rahnevs. Columbia, 11-13-99; by Ricky Rahne at Harvard, 10-7-00

Season: 25 by Ricky Rahne, 1999Career: 54 by Ricky Rahne, 1998-2001

Individual RecordsHistory and Records

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HIGHEST COMPLETION PERCENTAGEGame: .821 by Mike Hood at Fordham, 10-25-97 (23-28)

(min. 15 attempts)Season: .636 by Mike Hood, 1997 (138-217)

(min. 90 attempts)Career: .607 by Mike Hood, 1996-98 (334-550)

(min. 150 attempts)

HIGHEST PASSING EFFICIENCYSeason: 135.2 Steve Joyce, 1995

MOST YARDS GAINED PER ATTEMPTGame: 12.2 by Steve Joyce at Brown, 10-28-95 (28-341)

(min. 20 attempts)Season: 8.4 by Rick Furbush, 1970 (104-876)

(min. 100 attempts)Career: 8.2 by Rocco Calvo, 1950-51 (171-1405)

(min. 170 attempts)

MOST YARDS GAINED PER COMPLETIONGame: 25.7 by Aaron Sumida at Columbia, 11-12-88

(12-231) (min. 10 completions)Season: 15.37 by Rick Furbush, 1970 (57-876)

(min. 55 completions)Career: 15.8 by Rocco Calvo, 1950-51 (89-1405)

(min. 85 completions)

MOST 200-YARD PASSING GAMESSeason: 10 by Ricky Rahne, 2000Career: 25 by Ricky Rahne, 1998-2001

(freshman-0, sophomore-9, junior-10, senior-6)

MOST CONSECUTIVE PASSES COMPLETED13 by Pete Dorset, vs. Lehigh, Navy, Columbia, 1947

MOST CONSECUTIVE PASS ATT. WITHOUT AN INTERCEPTIONGame: 59 by Bill Lazor at Columbia, 11-14-92Season: 124 by Bill Lazor, Oct. 10, 1992-Nov. 7, 1992

MOST CONSECUTIVE GAMES THROWING A TD PASS15 by Ricky Rahne, Sept. 18, 1999-Oct. 14, 2000

Individual Receiving RecordsMOST PASSES CAUGHTGame: 15 by John Tagliaferri at Princeton, 11-23-85Season: 89 by Eric Krawczyk, 1997Career: 202 by Keith Ferguson, 1999-2002

MOST PASSES CAUGHT BY A WIDE RECEIVERSeason: 89 by Eric Krawczyk, 1997Career: 202 by Keith Ferguson, 1999-2002

MOST PASSES CAUGHT BY A TIGHT ENDSeason: 37 by George Milosevic, 1972Career: 56 by Dan Suren, 1980-82

MOST PASSES CAUGHT BY A RUNNING BACKSeason: 61 by John Tagliaferri, 1985Career: 113 by Justin Dunleavy, 1998-2001

MOST YARDS GAINEDGame: 204 by Joe Splendorio at Brown, 10-2-99 (11 catches)Season: 1042 by Eric Krawczyk, 1997 (89 catches)Career: 2569 by Keith Ferguson, 1999-2002 (202 catches)

MOST YARDS GAINED BY A FRESHMANGame: 94 by Keith Ferguson vs. Fordham, 9-25-99 (4 catches)Season: 530 by Keith Ferguson, 1999 (41 catches)

MOST YARDS GAINED BY A SOPHOMOREGame: 164 by Keith Ferguson vs. Princeton, 10-28-00

(8 catches)Season: 680 by Keith Ferguson, 2000 (41 catches)

MOST YARDS GAINED BY A JUNIORGame: 204 by Joe Splendorio at Brown, 10-2-99 (11 catches)Season: 944 by Joe Splendorio, 1999 (65 catches)

MOST YARDS GAINED BY A SENIORGame: 177 by Keith Ferguson at Brown, 10-26-02 (14 catches)Season: 1042 by Eric Krawczyk, 1997 (89 catches)

HIGHEST AVERAGE GAIN PER RECEPTIONSeason: 22.5 by Shaun Hawkins, 1986 (20-449)

(min. 20 receptions)Career: 20.5 by Shaun Hawkins, 1985-87 (58-1187)

(min. 40 receptions)

MOST TOUCHDOWN PASSES CAUGHTGame: 3 by Bill Murphy vs Princeton, 10-14-67;

Eric Krawczyk at Dartmouth, 10-4-97Season: 11 by Eric Krawczyk, 1997Career: 20 by Joe Splendorio, 1997-2000

MOST CONSECUTIVE GAMES CATCHING A PASSSeason: 10 by John Tagliaferri, 1985; Jim Perrello, 1985; Scott

Oliaro, 1990; Mike Grant, 1991; Mike Jamin, 1992;Aaron Berryman, 1993; Pete Fitzpatrick, 1993; RonMateo, 1995; Steve Busch, 1995; Eric Krawczyk, 1995;Eric Krawczyk, 1996; Justin Bush, 1997; Eric Krawczyk,1997; Joe Splendorio, 1998; Keith Ferguson, 1999; JoeSplendorio, 2000; Keith Ferguson, 2000; Keith Ferguson, 2002;John Kellner, 2002

Career: 39 by Keith Ferguson, 1999-2002

Individual Scoring RecordsMOST POINTS SCOREDGame: 32 by Ed Marinaro at Pennsylvania, 11-20-71Season: 148 by Ed Marinaro, 1971Career: 318 by Ed Marinaro, 1969-71

MOST RUSHING TOUCHDOWNSGame: 5 by Ed Marinaro at Pennsylvania, 11-20-71Season: 24 by Ed Marinaro, 1971Career: 52 by Ed Marinaro, 1969-71

MOST PASSING TOUCHDOWNSGame: 4 by Mark Allen at Brown, 11-11-72; by Mark Allen vs.

Columbia, 11-3-73; by Mike Hood vs. Buffalo, 10-3-98;by Ricky Rahne vs. Fordham, 9-25-99; by Ricky Rahnevs. Columbia, 11-13-99; by Ricky Rahne at Harvard, 10-7-00

Season: 25 by Ricky Rahne, 1999Career: 54 by Ricky Rahne, 1998-2001

MOST POINTS SCORED BY A KICKERGame: 14 by Mike Cochrane vs. Lafayette, 10-3-92Season: 63 by Mathew Hepfer, 1990; Mike Cochrane, 1992;

John McCombs, 1997Career: 148 by John McCombs, 1997-99

MOST FIELD GOALS ATTEMPTEDGame: 6 by Mike Cochrane vs. Lehigh, 9-26-92Season: 23 by Dave Quarles, 1987; Mike Cochrane, 1992Career: 45 by John Rodin, 1993-96

MOST FIELD GOALS MADEGame: 3 on 11 occasions. Last: Peter Iverson vs. Colgate,

10-14-00Season: 13 by Mike Cochrane, 1992 (23 attempts)Career: 26 by John McCombs, 1997-99 (35 attempts)

MOST EXTRA POINTS ATTEMPTEDGame: 8 by Bill Kirk vs. Columbia, 10-29-49Season: 41 by Bill Kirk, 1949Career: 95 by Bill Kirk, 1949-51

MOST EXTRA POINTS MADEGame: 7 by Keith Manz at Pennsylvania, 9-22-79

7 by Pete Zogby at Lehigh, 10-2-65; Peter Iverson vs. Dartmouth,11-4-00

Season: 30 by Mathew Hepfer, 1990 (32 attempts);30 by John McCombs, 1997 (31 attempts)

Career: 71 by Bill Kirk, 1949-51 (95 attempts);71 by John Rodin, 1993-96 (77 attempts)

HIGHEST PERCENTAGE OF EXTRA POINTS MADESeason: 1.000 by Keith Manz, 1978 (23x23); John McCombs,

1999 (22x22); Pete Gogolak, 1962 (20x20); PeteGogolak, 1963 (18x18); Peter Iverson, 2001 (21x21)(min. 15 made)

Career: .982 by Pete Gogolak, 1961-63 (54x55)(min. 35 made)

MOST CONSECUTIVE EXTRA POINTS MADECareer: 44 by Pete Gogolak, Nov. 18, 1961 through 1963

MOST TWO-POINT CONVERSIONSGame: 2 by three players. Last: Dan Malone at Brown, 11-11-72Season: 3 by Rick Furbush, 1970Career: 3 by Derrick Harmon, 1981-83; Ed Marinaro, 1969-71;

Rick Furbush, 1969-70

Individual RecordsHistory and Records

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Individual Interception RecordsMOST INTERCEPTIONSGame: 3 by Scott Walter vs Brown, 10-16-82; Scott Walter at

Columbia, 11-13-82; Dave Kimichik at Columbia,11-15-80; Chris Hanson at Fordham, 9-24-94; DougKnopp vs. Holy Cross, 9-23-95

Season: 8 by Scott Walter, 1982; Chris Hanson, 1994Career: 15 by Hillary Chollet, 1945-46, 48-49

MOST YARDS ON INTERCEPTION RETURNSGame: 120 by Carl Holland vs Syracuse, Nov. 8, 1947Season: 169 by Jim Frontero, 1986Career: 218 by Hillary Chollet, 1945-46; Hillary Chollet, 1948-49

MOST TOUCHDOWNS ON INTERCEPTION RETURNSCareer: 2 by Rip Haley, 1949; Chris Ruth, 1966-68; ChrisMazoue, 1989-91

Individual Punt Return RecordsMOST PUNT RETURNSGame: 8 by Dan Jystad at Harvard, 10-11-86

8 by Peter Knight at Princeton, 11-25-72Season: 30 by Mike Raich, 1987Career: 57 by Chris Allen, 1994-97

MOST YARDS ON PUNT RETURNSGame: 113 by Hillary Chollet vs. Niagara, 9-24-49 (5 returns)Season: 261 by Hillary Chollet, 1949 (22 returns)Career: 606 by Keith Cummins, 1967-69 (44 returns)

HIGHEST AVERAGE GAIN PER PUNT RETURNGame: 25.7 by Chris Allen vs. Yale, 11-8-97 (3-77)

(min. 3 returns)Season: 14.7 by Walter Kretz, 1946 (15-220)

(min. 9 returns)Career: 13.8 by Keith Cummins, 1967-69 (44-606)

(min. 18 returns)

Individual Kickoff Return RecordsMOST KICKOFF RETURNSGame: 9 by Vince Bates at Brown, 10-21-00Season: 40 by Vince Bates, 2000Career: 79, Vince Bates, 1999-2002

MOST YARDS ON KICKOFF RETURNSGame: 198 by Vince Bates at Brown, 10-21-00 (9 returns)Season: 814 by Vince Bates, 2000 (40 returns)Career: 1443 by Vince Bates, 1999-2002 (79 returns)

HIGHEST AVERAGE GAIN PER RETURNGame: 52.7 by Bob Baker vs. Yale, 10-24-64 (3-158)

(min. 3 returns)Season: 35.1 by Bob Baker, 1964 (11-386)

(min. 9 returns)Career: 27.7 by Bob Baker, 1962-64 (23-636)

(min. 20 returns)

Individual All-Purpose Running Records(Yards gained rushing, receiving and runbacks)

MOST YARDS GAINEDGame: 395 by Scott Oliaro at Yale, 11-3-90

(288 rushing, 85 receiving, 22 returns)Season: 1932 by Ed Marinaro, 1971

(1881 rushing, 51 receiving)Career: 5036 by Chad Levitt, 1993-96

(4657 rushing, 379 receiving)

Individual Punting RecordsMOST PUNTSGame: 24 by Charles Robinson vs. Penn State, 10-17-42Season: 68 by Bill Arthur, 1968Career: 187 by Charles Watson, 1995-98

HIGHEST AVERAGE PER PUNTGame: 51.4 by Charles Watson vs. Dartmouth, 10-24-98

(min. 5 attempts)Season: 40.78 by Charles Watson, 1998 (64-2610)

(min. 25 attempts)Career: 39.7 by Charles Watson, 1995-98 (187-7416)

(min. 75 attempts)

Individual Tackle Records(officially recorded since 1977)

MOST TACKLESGame: 27 by Chris Zingo at Brown, 11-2-91Season: 179 by Chris Zingo, 1992Career: 530 by John Hanson, 1995-98

MOST TACKLES BY A LINEMANSeason: 88 by Kevin McCarthy, 1982; Steve Duca, 1981Career: 185 by Steve Duca, 1980-82

MOST QUARTERBACK SACKSSeason: 12 by Tom McHale, 1986Career: 19 by Seth Payne, 1993-96

MOST PASSES BROKEN UPSeason: 15 by Mike Raich, 1985Career: 32 by Mike Raich, 1985-87

Hillary Chollet

Individual RecordsHistory and Records

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Single Game - OffenseTOTAL OFFENSEMost Plays:103 vs. Colgate, 9-30-72 (37-7)

Most Yards Gained:640 at Brown, 10-28-95 (38-28)

Highest Average Gain Per Play8.3 vs. Princeton, 10-27-62, 50 plays, 415 yds(35-34)

RUSHINGMost Rushes:83 vs. Colgate, 9-30-72 (37-7)

Most Yards Gained:484 vs. Pennsylvania, 11-18-78 (35-17)

Highest Average Gain Per Rush:7.4 vs. Pennsylvania, 11-18-78 (35-17)

PASSINGMost Passes Attempted:64 at Bucknell, 9-16-00 (15-38)

Most Passes Completed:41 vs. Colgate, 9-27-97 (38-44 OT)

Most Yards Gained:446 at Brown, 10-21-00 (40-56)

Most Passes Had Intercepted:6 at Princeton, 11-23-85 (27-33);at Pennsylvania, 11-27-47 (0-21)

Highest Percentage Completed(min. 15 attempts):.813 vs. Princeton, 10-27-62 (35-34)

Most Touchdown Passes:5 vs. Fordham, 9-25-99 (42-14)

INTERCEPTIONSMost Interceptions:6 at Columbia, 11-15-80 (24-0);vs. Columbia, 10-29-49 (54-0)

Most Yards on Interception Returns:133 vs. Syracuse, 11-8-47 (12-6)

PUNT RETURNSMost Punt Returns:8 on 3 occasions;Last: at Harvard, 10-11-86 (3-0)

Most Yards on Punt Returns:157 vs. Bucknell, 9-28-46 (21-0)

KICKOFF RETURNSMost Kickoff Returns:10 at Princeton, 10-27-51 (15-53)

Most Yards on Kickoff Returns:228 at Princeton, 10-26-63 (14-51)

SCORING(modern - since 1937)Most Points Scored57 at Columbia, 10-31-64 (57-20)

Most Points Scored in One Quarter:35 at Brown, 11-11-72 (2nd)Most Points Scored in One Half41 at Brown, 11-11-72 (first)Most Touchdowns Scored8 at Columbia, 10-31-64 (57-20);vs. Columbia, 10-29-49 (54-0)

Most Extra Points Made by Kicking:7 at Lehigh, 10-2-65 (49-13);at Pennsylvania, 9-22-79 (52-13);vs. Dartmouth, 11-4-00 (49-31)

Most Field Goals Made3 on 11 occasions;Last: vs. Colgate, 10-14-00 (16-23)

FIRST DOWNSMost First Downs:31 vs. Merchant Marine, 10-30-82 (34-0);vs. Colgate, 9-25-71 (38-20);at Columbia, 11-14-92 (30-35);vs. Columbia, 11-15-97 (33-22)

Most First Downs Rushing:25 vs. Colgate, 9-25-71 (38-20)

Most First Downs Passing:21 at Pennsylvania, 11-24-73 (22-31);at Brown, 10-21-00 (40-56)

Most First Downs by Penalty:5 vs. Brown, 11-11-67 (14-14); at Dartmouth,10-4-97 (20-24)

PUNTINGMost Punts:24 vs. Penn State, 10-17-42 (0-0)

Highest Average Per Punt (min. 5 att.):51.4 vs. Dartmouth, 10-24-98 (14-11)

FUMBLESMost Fumbles:9 at Michigan, 11-8-52 (7-49);vs. Navy, 10-4-52 (7-31)

Most Fumbles Lost:6 on 3 occasions;Last: vs. Navy, 10-4-52 (7-31)

PENALTIESMost Penalties:16 at Harvard, 10-8-49 (33-14)

Most Yards Penalized:135 at Harvard, 10-14-50 (28-7)

Team RecordsSingle Game - Defense

TOTAL DEFENSEFewest Plays Allowed:23 vs. Lehigh, 9-27-47 (27-0)

Fewest Yards Allowed:41 vs. Lehigh, 9-27-47 (27-0)

Fewest First Downs Allowed:3 at Harvard, 10-17-64 (0-16);vs. Lehigh, 9-27-47 (27-0)

RUSHING DEFENSEFewest Rushes Allowed:20 vs. Lehigh, 9-27-47 (27-0)

Fewest Rushing Yards Allowed:-62 vs. New York Univ., 9-25-48 (47-6)

PASSING DEFENSEFewest Attempts Allowed:0 vs. Dartmouth, 11-15-58 (15-32)

Fewest Completions Allowed:0 vs. Dartmouth, 11-15-58 (15-32);at Pennsylvania, 11-25-64 (33-0)

Fewest Passing Yards Allowed:0 vs. Dartmouth, 11-15-58 (15-32);at Pennsylvania, 11-25-64 (33-0)

TURNOVERSMost Fumbles Caused:10 vs. Colgate, 9-30-72 (37-7)

Most Fumbles Recovered:5, many times; Last: vs. Colgate, 9-30-72 (37-7)

History and Records

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Single Season - OffenseTOTAL OFFENSEMost Plays: 782 in 1997 (6-4)Most Yards: 4199 in 1995 (6-4)Highest Average Gain per Play:5.94 in 1940, 496 plays, 2945 yds (6-2-0)

RUSHINGMost Rushes: 535 in 1982 (4-6)Most Yards Gained: 2884 in 1971 (8-1)Highest Average Gain Per Rush:5.14 in 1949 (8-1)

PASSINGMost Passes Attempted:482 in 2000 (5-5)

Most Passes Completed:269 in 1997 (6-4)

Most Yards Gained:2944 in 2000 (5-5)

Most Passes Had Intercepted:26 in 1987 (5-5)

Highest Percentage Completed(min. 15 attempts):.606 in 1990 (7-3)

Most Touchdown Passes:26 in 1999 (7-3)

INTERCEPTIONSMost Interceptions:25 in 1939 (8-0)

Most Yards on Interception Returns:355 in 1949 (8-1)

PUNT RETURNSMost Punt Returns: 47 in 1986 (8-2)Most Yards on Punt Returns:461 in 1946 (5-3-1)

KICKOFF RETURNSMost Kickoff Returns: 56 in 2000 (5-5)Most Yards on Kickoff Returns:1019 in 2000 (5-5)

SCORING(modern - since 1937)Most Points Scored284 in 1949 (record 8-1)

Most Touchdowns Scored42 in 1949 (8-1)

Most Extra Points Made by Kicking:30 in 1990 (7-3); 1997 (6-4)

Most Field Goals Made:13 in 1992 (7-3)

Most Field Goals Attempted:23 in 1987 (5-5); 1992 (7-3)

FIRST DOWNSMost First Downs: 224 in 1997 (6-4)Most First Downs Rushing:145 in 1971 (8-1)

Most First Downs Passing:144 in 2000 (5-5)

Most First Downs by Penalty: 24 in 1997 (6-4)

PUNTINGMost Punts: 80 �� 1952 (2�7)Highest Average Per Punt:40.2 �� 1998 (4�6)

FUMBLESMost Fumbles: 51 �� 1952 (2�7)Most Fumbles Lost:25 �� 1952 (2�7), 1950 (7�2)

PENALTIESMost Penalties: 86 �� 1949 (8�1)Most Yards Penalized:740 �� 1989 (4�6)

TURNOVERSMost Turnovers:43 in 1987 (17 fumbles, 26 interceptions)

Miscellaneous RecordsMost Games Played:12 in 1901 (11-1)

Most Victories:11 in 1901 (11-1)

Most Losses:8 in 1956 (1-8), 1975 (1-8), 1977 (1-8)

Most Games Tied:2 in 1906 (8-1-2), 1927 (3-3-2), 1928 (3-3-2)

Undefeated Seasons:5 — 1915 (9-0), 1921 (8-0), 1922 (8-0),1923 (8-0), 1939 (8-0)

Most Consecutive Victories:26 (1921-1924)

Most Consecutive Losses:10 (1975-76)

Most Consecutive Games Without BeingShutout: 69 (Sept. 28, 1991-Nov. 22, 1997)

Team RecordsHistory and Records

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MOST YARDS RUSHING(100 Yards or More)288, Scott Oliaro at Yale, 1990281, Ed Marinaro vs. Harvard, 1969272, Ed Marinaro vs. Columbia, 1971263, Joe Holland vs. Penn, 1978260, Ed Marinaro vs. Lehigh, 1970260, Ed Marinaro vs. Colgate, 1971247, Tom Weidenkopf at Dartmouth, 1979246, Ed Marinaro at Rutgers, 1971245, Ed Marinaro at Rutgers, 1969244, Joe Holland at Harvard, 1978241, Chad Levitt vs. Dartmouth, 1996230, Ed Marinaro at Penn, 1971230, Ed Marinaro at Yale, 1971227, Chad Levitt at Harvard, 1994225, Ed Marinaro at Brown, 1970222, Derrick Harmon vs. Columbia, 1983218, Chad Levitt at Yale, 1996210, Derrick Harmon vs. Yale, 1983209, Chad Levitt vs. Colgate, 1996207, Gary Wood at Penn, 1962190, Ed Marinaro vs. Penn, 1970189, Joe Holland at Columbia, 1978189, Derrick Harmon at Princeton, 1983189, John McNiff at Harvard, 1990188, Chad Levitt vs. Yale, 1995187, Chad Levitt at Buffalo, 1996186, Joe Holland vs. Princeton, 1978185, Pete Larson at Buffalo, 1966185, Jeff Johnson at Columbia, 1986181, Bill Wilson at Brown, 1965181, Ed Marinaro at Penn, 1969181, John McNiff vs. Columbia, 1991180, Don Fanelli at Colgate, 1973180, Rich Russo vs. Columbia, 1973179, Derrick Harmon vs. Penn, 1982178, Stu Merz vs. Syracuse, 1951178, Dan Malone at Columbia, 1974178, Derrick Harmon vs. Columbia, 1981178, Chad Levitt vs. Princeton, 1996176, Ed Marinaro vs. Brown, 1971173, Brad Kiesendahl vs. Lafayette, 1997172, Chad Levitt vs. Dartmouth, 1994170, Chad Levitt at Dartmouth, 1995170, Chad Levitt vs. Columbia, 1995170, Evan Simmons vs. Columbia, 2001169, Gary Wood at Brown, 1962168, Gary Wood at Yale, 1963167, Craig Jaeger vs. Harvard, 1977167, Jeff Johnson vs. Princeton, 1986165, Chad Levitt vs. Holy Cross, 1995164, Joe Holland vs. Brown, 1978162, Ed Marinaro vs. Colgate, 1969162, Dan Malone vs. Rutgers, 1972161, Gary Wood vs. Dartmouth, 1962160, John McNiff at Columbia, 1990160, Chad Levitt vs. Brown, 1996159, Brian Ulbricht vs. Towson, 2002157, Tony Baker at Yale, 1984157, Chad Levitt vs. Penn, 1994156, Jeff Fleischmann at Syracuse, 1950156, Bill Scazarro at Columbia, 1950155, Bill Wilson vs. Columbia, 1965155, Ed Marinaro vs. Princeton, 1969152, Neal Hall vs. Colgate, 1975152, Derrick Harmon at Penn, 1981151, Bob McAniff vs. Columbia, 1957151, Ed Marinaro at Colgate, 1970150, Ed Marinaro vs. Columbia, 1969149, Gary Wood at Penn, 1963149, Jeff Johnson at Yale, 1985

148, Terry Smith vs. Yale, 1995147, Ed Marinaro at Harvard, 1970147, Matt Speicher at Bucknell, 1991147, Pete Fitzpatrick vs. Harvard, 1993146, Ed Marinaro vs. Harvard, 1971146, Tony Baker vs. Dartmouth, 1984144, Ed Marinaro vs. Princeton, 1971144, Scott Oliaro vs. Brown, 1992143, Art Boland at Penn, 1956143, Pete Larson vs. Colgate, 1966143, John McNiff vs. Harvard, 1991143, Chad Levitt vs. Lehigh, 1994143, Deon Harris vs. Fordham, 1999142, Pete Larson vs. Princeton, 1965142, Dan Malone vs. Colgate, 1972142, Ken Talton vs. Columbia, 1977142, Derrick Harmon vs. USMMA, 1982142, Chad Levitt vs. Harvard, 1995139, Dick Jackson at Penn, 1955139, Tony Baker at Harvard, 1984139, Chad Levitt at Harvard, 1996138, Scott Malaga at Lehigh, 1988137, Evan Simmons vs. Dartmouth, 2000136, Bo Roberson at Columbia, 1955136, Pete Larson at Brown, 1966136, Derrick Harmon at Yale, 1982136, Jeff Johnson at Harvard, 1986136, John McNiff at Lafayette, 1990135, Horace Bradshaw vs. Yale, 1972135, John McNiff at Bucknell, 1989135, Scott Oliaro vs. Dartmouth, 1992133, John McNiff vs. Yale, 1991131, Steve Vago vs. Columbia, 1979131, Deon Harris vs. Dartmouth, 1998130, John McNiff vs. Harvard, 1989130, Brad Kiesendahl vs. Penn, 1996129, Derrick Harmon vs. Princeton, 1982128, Dan Malone vs. Dartmouth, 1972128, Deon Harris at Yale, 1998127, Ed Marinaro at Columbia, 1970127, Ed Marinaro at Dartmouth, 1971126, Bill Wilson at Pennsylvania, 1965126, Rick Furbush at Columbia, 1970126, Don Fanelli at Harvard, 1974126, Kevin Scott at Columbia, 1974126, Derrick Harmon vs. Yale, 1981126, Terry Smith at Columbia, 1994125, Bob McAniff at Columbia, 1955125, Gary Wood vs. Princeton, 1962

125, Scott Malaga vs. Penn, 1988124, Bob McAniff vs. Yale, 1957124, Ron Gervase at Lehigh, 1965124, Derrick Harmon vs. Harvard, 1983124, John McNiff at Penn, 1991123, Dan Malone vs. Penn, 1972123, Rich Russo vs. Brown, 1973122, Ed Marinaro vs. Dartmouth, 1969122, Dan Malone at Brown, 1972122, Scott Malaga vs. Yale, 1988121, Scott Malaga vs. Brown, 1988120, Chad Levitt at Lehigh, 1995119, Bill Wilson at Princeton, 1964119, Scott Malaga at Columbia, 1988118, Guy Bedrosian vs. Columbia, 1953118, Dick Jackson at Penn, 1954118, Terry Wilson at Penn, 1958118, Bob Baker at Brown, 1964118, Scott Malaga vs. Colgate, 1988118, John McNiff vs. Dartmouth, 1990117, Scott Malaga at Dartmouth, 1988117, Chad Levitt at Bucknell, 1994117, Evan Simmons vs. Yale, 2000116, Bo Roberson at Princeton, 1955116, Rick Furbush vs. Lehigh, 1970115, Scott Oliaro at Harvard, 1992114, John Tagliaferri vs. Columbia, 1985113, Chad Levitt at Penn, 1995113, Terry Smith at Brown, 1995113, Deon Harris at Princeton, 1999112, Dick Jackson at Dartmouth, 1954112, Art Boland at Penn, 1955112, Pete Larson at Princeton, 1966112, Joe Holland vs. Dartmouth, 1978112, Derrick Harmon at Princeton, 1981112, Chad Levitt vs. Princeton, 1994112, Chad Levitt at Columbia, 1994111, Bob Engel vs. Lafayette, 1950111, Bill DeGraaf at Penn, 1954111, Dan Malone at Harvard, 1972111, Don Fanelli vs. Bucknell, 1974111, Jeff Johnson vs. Bucknell, 1986111, Scott Malaga vs. Lafayette, 1987111, Terry Smith vs. Lehigh, 1994110, Ken Talton vs. Penn, 1978108, Bo Roberson at Dartmouth, 1956108, Pete Larson vs. Penn, 1966108, John McNiff vs. Princeton, 1990108, Chad Levitt at Yale, 1994107, Frank Bradley at Syracuse, 1948106, Dwayne Dowtin at Brown, 1977106, Chad Levitt vs. Fordham, 1993106, Evan Simmons vs. Princeton, 2000106, Evan Simmons vs. Princeton, 2001105, Bill Whelan vs. Columbia, 1951105, Bob Milne at Harvard, 1963105, Pete Fitzpatrick vs. Lafayette, 1992105, Pete Fitzpatrick at Brown, 1993104, Tony Baker at Bucknell, 1984104, Deon Harris vs. Buffalo, 1998103, Ken Davis vs. Yale, 1942103, Don Fanelli vs. Colgate, 1975103, John Tagliaferri vs. Dartmouth, 1985102, Terry Smith at Harvard, 1994101, Bob McAniff at Dartmouth, 1957101, Rick Furbush vs. Harvard, 1969100, Bo Roberson at Penn, 1956100, Bo Roberson at Colgate, 1957100, Bill Wilson at Penn, 1964100, Craig Jaeger vs. Rutgers, 1977100, Terry Smith at Lehigh, 1995100, Deon Harris at Holy Cross, 1998

Single-Game Bests

Scott Oliaro

History and Records

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MOST YARDS PASSING(200 Yards or More)446, Ricky Rahne at Brown, 2000443, Ricky Rahne at Brown, 1999400, Bill Lazor at Columbia, 1992395, Mark Allen at Penn, 1973391, Ricky Rahne at Harvard, 2000344, Scott Carroll at Buffalo, 1996341, Steve Joyce at Brown, 1995321, Bill Lazor at Brown, 1991320, Ricky Rahne vs. Columbia, 1999317, Bill Lazor vs. Yale, 1991314, Ricky Rahne at Bucknell, 2000314, Ricky Rahne vs. Harvard, 2001307, Chris Cochrane at Yale, 1989307, Ricky Rahne at Princeton, 1999306, Ricky Rahne vs. Penn, 2000302, Mick Razzano vs. Dartmouth, 2002297, Ricky Rahne vs. Harvard, 1999296, Mike Hood vs. Bucknell, 1998296, Ricky Rahne at Penn, 1999283, Bill Lazor vs. Columbia, 1993279, Ricky Rahne, vs. Princeton, 2000277, Bill Robertson at Columbia, 1968276, Ricky Rahne at Dartmouth, 1999273, Mike Hood vs. Penn, 1998272, Scott Carroll vs. Colgate, 1997271, Ricky Rahne at Pennsylvania, 2001267, Mike Hood at Princeton, 1998267, Marty Stallone at Princeton, 1985265, Bill Lazor vs. Colgate, 1993263, Steve Joyce vs. Holy Cross, 1995263, Ricky Rahne vs. Dartmouth, 2000263, Ricky Rahne at Colgate, 2001262, Bill Lazor at Princeton, 1993262, Bill Lazor vs. Lehigh, 1992261, Steve Joyce at Lehigh, 1995259, Dave Dase vs. Columbia, 1987258, Bill Lazor at Dartmouth, 1991258, Ricky Rahne at Columbia, 2000254, Bill Robertson at Dartmouth, 1967254, Ricky Rahne vs. Yale, 1999253, Mark Allen vs. Princeton, 1973252, Mark Allen vs. Penn, 1972252, Dave Dase at Yale, 1987252, Per Larson at Columbia, 1994250, Mike Hood vs. Buffalo, 1998251, Steve Joyce at Dartmouth, 1995248, Bill Lazor at Yale, 1992248, Dave Dase at Brown, 1987247, Scott Carroll at Lafayette, 1996244, Scott Carroll vs. Penn, 1996242, Mark Allen vs. Dartmouth, 1972242, Mick Razzano at Brown, 2002241, Bill Lazor vs. Penn, 1992240, Rocco Calvo at Yale, 1951240, Bill Lazor at Lehigh, 1993240, Steve Joyce at Princeton, 1995240, Steve Joyce vs. Harvard, 1995239, Ricky Rahne at Lehigh, 2000237, Per Larson at Yale, 1994236, Kevin Sigler vs. Colgate, 1974236, Marty Stallone at Bucknell, 1985236, Steve Joyce at Penn, 1995236, Ricky Rahne vs. Colgate, 2000233, Mike Hood at Columbia, 1998232, Ricky Rahne vs. Fordham, 1999231, Aaron Sumida at Columbia, 1988231, Per Larson at Bucknell, 1994227, Bill Lazor vs. Brown, 1992226, Kevin Sigler at Brown, 1974226, Ricky Rahne vs Brown, 2001224, Kevin Sigler at Harvard, 1974221, Bill Robertson vs. Princeton, 1967221, Ricky Rahne vs. Lehigh, 2001219, Kevin Sigler vs. Dartmouth, 1974219, Marty Stallone at Columbia, 1986219, Chris Cochrane at Brown, 1989218, Mark Allen vs. Harvard, 1973217, Dave Dase vs. Harvard, 1987216, Jim Hofher at Rutgers, 1976

214, Bill Robertson at Penn, 1967212, Gary Wood vs. Princeton, 1962212, Marty Stallone at Colgate, 1986212, Ricky Rahne vs. Yale, 2000212, Ricky Rahne at Dartmouth, 2001209, Shawn Maguire at Yale, 1984206, Ricky Rahne vs. Wagner, 1999205, Pete Dorset at Princeton, 1947203, Bill Lazor at Dartmouth, 1993202, Bill Lazor vs. Lafayette, 1992201, Scott Carroll vs. Columbia, 1997MOST RECEIVING YARDS(100 Yards or More)204, Joe Splendorio at Brown, 1999177, Keith Ferguson at Brown, 2002175, Keith Ferguson vs. Dartmouth, 2002171, Eric Krawczyk vs. Colgate, 1997164, Mike Jamin vs. Brown, 1992164, Keith Ferguson vs. Princeton, 2000163, Bill Murphy vs. Harvard, 1967161, Mike Jamin vs. Yale, 1991155, Aaron Berryman at Columbia, 1994155, Stu Merz at Yale, 1951154, Keith Ferguson at Harvard, 2002150, Chris Ritter at Columbia, 1968148, Eric Krawczyk at Lafayette, 1996146, Eric Krawczyk at Dartmouth, 1997144, Steve Busch vs. Princeton, 1996144, Steve Busch at Buffalo, 1996141, Eric Krawczyk at Fordham, 1997140, Jack Corrigan vs. Harvard, 1973139, Scott Oliaro vs. Penn, 1992139, Keith Ferguson at Brown, 2000138, George Milosevic vs. Dartmouth, 1972137, Ron Mateo at Lehigh, 1995135, Bruce Starks at Harvard, 1974131, Mike Jamin at Brown, 1991130, Bruce Starks vs. Princeton, 1973130, Joe Splendorio at Dartmouth, 1999129, Eric Krawczyk at Penn, 1997127, Bill Murphy at Penn, 1967126, Joe Splendorio vs. Penn, 1998126, Joe Splendorio vs. Columbia, 1999124, Derrick Harmon vs. Bucknell, 1981124, Chris Hahn vs. Harvard, 1987123, George Milosevic vs. Penn, 1972123, Eric Krawczyk vs. Penn, 1996120, Ron Mateo vs. Harvard, 1995120, Joe Splendorio at Penn, 1999119, Chris Ritter at Brown, 1968118, Stu Fullerton vs. Princeton, 1965118, Mike Jamin at Harvard, 1992117, Shaun Hawkins vs. Columbia, 1987117, Eric Krawczyk at Buffalo, 1996116, Rick Furbush at Princeton, 1968116, Jim Perrello at Princeton, 1985116 John Kellner at Colgate, 2001114, Eamon McEneaney at Rutgers, 1976

113, Ed Burnap vs. Princeton, 1962113, Erv Bratcher at Colgate, 1970113, Shaun Hawkins vs. Harvard, 1987113, Joe Splendorio vs. Bucknell, 1998112, Eamon McEneaney vs.Colgate, 1976112, Eric Krawczyk vs. Yale, 1997111, Bruce Starks at Penn, 1973111, Pat Dutton vs. Colgate, 1997110, Ned Burke vs. Colgate, 1993110, Eric Krawczyk at Columbia, 1996109, Mike Ready at Yale, 1987109, Steve Busch at Brown, 1995109, Ron Mateo at Brown, 1995108, Rick Furbush vs. Dartmouth, 1968108, Shaun Hawkins at Colgate, 1986108, Mike Jamin at Columbia, 1992108, Keith Ferguson vs. Harvard, 2001106, Bill Murphy vs. Princeton, 1967106, Keith Ferguson vs. Brown, 2001105, Tim Hermann vs. Penn, 2000103, Steve Busch vs. Holy Cross, 1995103, Eric Krawczyk vs. Columbia, 1997102, Joe Splendorio at Brown, 2000101, Craig Jaeger vs. Colgate, 1977101, Joe Splendorio vs. Princeton, 1999101, Joe Splendorio vs. Yale, 2000MOST YARDS TOTAL OFFENSE440, Ricky Rahne at Brown, 2000430, Ricky Rahne at Brown, 1999409, Bill Lazor at Columbia, 1992396, Ricky Rahne at Harvard, 2000388, Mark Allen at Penn, 1973387, Gary Wood at Penn, 1962351, Ricky Rahne at Penn, 2000340, Mick Razzano vs. Dartmouth, 2002338, Scott Carroll at Buffalo, 1996337, Gary Wood vs. Princeton, 1962325, Steve Joyce at Brown, 1995324, Bill Lazor vs. Yale, 1991322, Ricky Rahne vs. Harvard, 1999317, Bill Lazor at Brown, 1991316, Ricky Rahne vs. Princeton, 2000312, Ricky Rahne vs. Columbia, 1999311, Mike Hood vs. Bucknell, 1998310, Bill Lazor vs. Columbia, 1993310, Ricky Rahne at Princeton, 1999306, Chris Cochrane at Yale, 1989306, Ricky Rahne at Bucknell, 2000303, Ricky Rahne at Pennsylvania, 2001294, Ricky Rahne vs. Harvard, 2001290, Ricky Rahne at Penn, 1999288, Scott Oliaro at Yale, 1990281, Ed Marinaro vs. Harvard, 1969280, Bill Lazor vs. Colgate, 1993280, Ricky Rahne vs. Brown, 2001277, Bill Lazor at Princeton, 1993276, Ricky Rahne at Colgate, 2001272, Scott Carroll vs. Colgate, 1997272, Ed Marinaro vs. Columbia, 1971271, Ricky Rahne at Dartmouth, 2001269, Bill Lazor vs. Penn, 1992263, Joe Holland vs. Penn, 1978262, Ricky Rahne vs. Dartmouth, 2000261, Bill Lazor vs. Lehigh, 1992260, Ed Marinaro vs. Lehigh, 1970260, Ed Marinaro vs. Colgate, 1971259, Dave Dase vs. Columbia, 1987257, Ricky Rahne at Dartmouth, 1999254, Bill Robertson at Penn, 1967251, Per Larson at Columbia, 1994251, Steve Joyce at Dartmouth, 1995251, Ricky Rahne vs. Yale, 1999249, RIcky Rahne vs. Lehigh, 2001248, Scott Carroll at Lafayette, 1996248, Steve Joyce vs. Holy Cross, 1995247, Ricky Rahne at Lehigh, 2000244, Steve Joyce at Lehigh, 1995244, Ricky Rahne vs. Fordham, 1999

Eric Krawczyk

Single-Game BestsHistory and Records

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RushingYear Name Att. Yds. Avg. TD1946 Walt Kretz 88 594 6.8 51947 Norm Dawson 66 293 4.4 41948 Frank Miller 98 598 6.1 41949 Jeff Fleischmann 106 579 5.5 101950 Jeff Fleischmann 146 538 3.7 91951 Stu Merz 77 431 5.6 41952 Bob Engel 106 364 3.4 01953 Guy Bedrossian 111 336 3.1 61954 Dick Jackson 76 445 5.9 61955 Irv Roberson 83 503 6.1 41956 Irv Roberson 106 480 4.5 41957 Bob McAniff 140 700 5.0 41958 Terry Wilson 121 521 4.3 51959 Dan Bidwell 109 474 4.3 11960 Pat Pennucci 77 285 3.7 01961 Gary Wood 94 449 4.8 31962 Gary Wood 173 889 5.1 91963 Gary Wood 166 818 4.9 71964 Bill Wilson 189 659 3.5 51965 Bill Wilson 181 848 4.7 61966 Pete Larson 206 979 4.8 91967 Bill Huling 88 369 4.2 31968 Chris Ritter 87 341 3.9 21969 Ed Marinaro 277 1409 5.1 141970 Ed Marinaro 285 1425 5.0 121971 Ed Marinaro 356 1881 5.3 241972 Dan Malone 196 913 4.7 51973 Don Fanelli 99 403 4.1 51974 Dan Malone 139 532 3.8 21975 Tim LaBeau 106 482 4.5 61976 Neal Hall 91 330 3.6 21977 Craig Jaeger 103 440 4.3 31978 Joe Holland 273 1396 5.1 161979 Tom Weidenkopf 118 571 4.8 61980 Steve Vago 114 513 4.5 11981 Derrick Harmon 173 893 5.2 51982 Derrick Harmon 157 905 5.8 91983 Derrick Harmon 216 1276 5.9 121984 Tony Baker 165 847 5.1 71985 John Tagliaferri 153 583 3.8 71986 Jeff Johnson 191 902 4.7 41987 Scott Malaga 168 647 3.9 21988 Scott Malaga 256 1097 4.3 121989 John McNiff 160 753 4.7 41990 John McNiff 176 998 5.7 101991 John McNiff 203 806 4.0 81992 Scott Oliaro 181 834 4.6 111993 Pete Fitzpatrick 179 789 4.4 51994 Chad Levitt 275 1319 4.8 121995 Chad Levitt 292 1428 4.9 131996 Chad Levitt 267 1435 5.4 131997 Brad Kiesendahl 102 513 5.0 101998 Deon Harris 221 757 3.4 51999 Deon Harris 149 605 4.1 22000 Evan Simmons 145 649 4.2 72001 Evan SImmons 123 598 4.9 92002 Marcus Blanks 129 598 4.4 5

PassingYear Name Att. Comp. Yards TD1946 John Burns 99 48 593 41947 Pete Dorset 77 39 568 41948 Pete Dorset 74 28 437 31949 Pete Dorset 111 55 845 71950 Rocco Calvo 94 51 730 21951 Rocco Calvo 77 38 675 51952 John Jaeckel 96 33 453 31953 Bill DeGraaf 85 28 351 31954 Bill DeGraaf 94 31 433 81955 Bill DeGraaf 97 44 629 61956 Art Boland 107 43 572 31957 Tom Brogan 50 23 387 11958 Tom Skypeck 121 55 784 51959 Dave McKelvey 67 23 245 31960 Scott Brown 85 34 519 21961 Gary Wood 75 28 456 61962 Gary Wood 117 60 890 81963 Gary Wood 119 48 545 41964 Marty Sponaugle 55 23 319 11965 Marty Sponaugle 115 45 582 51966 Bill Abel 138 64 953 61967 Bill Robertson 175 94 1347 121968 Bill Robertson 197 81 1156 31969 Rick Furbush 37 23 294 01970 Rick Furbush 104 57 876 61971 Mark Allen 90 39 496 31972 Mark Allen 181 91 1235 91973 Mark Allen 272 119 1590 101974 Kevin Sigler 248 143 1648 81975 Garland Burns 81 21 285 21976 Jim Hofher 139 63 740 31977 Jim Hofher 118 60 745 61978 Jim Hofher 85 44 487 11979 Mike Tanner 73 41 595 41980 Mike Ryan 109 53 786 41981 Chris Metz 77 33 507 11982 Jeff Hammond 176 89 1064 51983 Shawn Maguire 205 110 1009 21984 Shawn Maguire 221 119 1112 11985 Marty Stallone 138 76 817 91986 Marty Stallone 226 110 1446 121987 Dave Dase 198 100 1302 91988 Aaron Sumida 141 69 1132 101989 Chris Cochrane 236 115 1322 51990 Chris Cochrane 175 107 1266 51991 Bill Lazor 217 129 1461 81992 Bill Lazor 328 169 2206 151993 Bill Lazor 328 172 2030 111994 Per Larson 154 76 1092 61995 Steve Joyce 274 156 2255 131996 Scott Carroll 262 125 1583 91997 Scott Carroll 239 131 1378 101998 Mike Hood 294 173 1910 111999 Ricky Rahne 388 225 2762 252000 Ricky Rahne 479 252 2944 182001 Ricky Rahne 355 199 1984 112002 Mick Razzano 276 137 1556 7

Annual Leaders • 1946-2002History and Records

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ReceivingYear Name Rec. Yards TD1946 Hillary Chollet 12 305 21947 Bernie Babula 12 301 31948 Hillary Chollet 8 106 1

Harry Cassel 8 89 11949 Walt Bruska 14 289 51950 Vic Pujo 24 420 2

Harvey Sampson 24 351 11951 Dick Cliggott 14 291 11952 Dick Cliggott 25 372 51953 Bruce Brenner 14 226 21954 Dick Jackson 17 196 21955 Stan Intihar 12 145 1

Dick Jackson 12 116 11956 Bob McAniff 15 206 21957 John Webster 12 180 01958 Norm Juvonen 16 301 11959 John Sadusky 8 116 11960 Pat Pennucci 16 222 01961 Ken Hoffman 10 159 31962 Ed Burnap 17 260 21963 Bill Ponzer 13 162 21964 Pete Larson 13 191 1

Bob Baker 13 188 01965 Ron Gervase 19 248 21966 Ron Gervase 36 559 41967 Bill Murphy 50 853 91968 Chris Ritter 30 507 31969 Erv Bratcher 8 113 11970 Tom Albright 21 300 01971 Tom Albright 21 274 21972 George Milosevic 37 564 31973 Bruce Starks 31 483 31974 Bruce Starks 47 619 21975 Bruce Starks 14 185 01976 Eamon McEneaney 35 383 31977 Dave Rupert 26 423 11978 Brad Decker 17 200 01979 Mark Turley 26 381 11980 Alva Taylor 13 199 2

Dan Suren 13 182 01981 Derrick Harmon 21 285 21982 Dan Suren 26 287 01983 Derrick Harmon 36 270 01984 John Tagliaferri 30 266 01985 John Tagliaferri 61 358 11986 Jeff Johnson 29 246 01987 Sam Brickley 56 518 21988 Sam Brickley 29 533 51989 Scott Oliaro 30 230 01990 Scott Oliaro 25 347 21991 Mike Jamin 35 486 11992 Mike Jamin 49 794 61993 Ned Burke 40 328 01994 Aaron Berryman 36 565 41995 Ron Mateo 47 695 31996 Steve Busch 57 720 41997 Eric Krawczyk 89 1042 111998 Joe Splendorio 46 677 61999 Joe Splendorio 65 944 102000 Joe Splendorio 46 630 32001 Keith Ferguson 50 507 22002 Keith Ferguson 70 852 2

ScoringYear Name TD PAT FG Points1946 Hillary Chollet 6 0 0 361947 Norman Dawson 5 0 0 30

Robert Dean 3 12 0 301948 Jeff Fleischmann 9 0 0 541949 Jeff Fleischmann 10 0 0 601950 Jeff Fleischmann 9 0 0 541951 Hal Seidenberg 10 0 0 601952 Dick Cliggott 5 0 0 301953 Guy Bedrosian 6 0 0 361954 Dick Jackson 8 0 0 481955 Bill DeGraaf 6 13 0 491956 Bo Roberson 4 0 0 241957 Tom Skypeck 5 5 0 351958 Tom Skypeck 7 9 0 511959 Philip Taylor 4 0 0 24

Marcello Tino 4 0 0 241960 George Eckstrom 3 0 0 181961 George Telesh 5 0 0 301962 Gary Wood 9 0 0 541963 Gary Wood 7 0 0 421964 Bill Wilson 7 0 0 421965 Martin Sponaugle 6 1 0 381966 Pete Larson 11 1 0 681967 Bill Murphy 9 0 0 541968 Chris Ritter 5 1 0 321969 Ed Marinaro 14 0 0 841970 Ed Marinaro 14 1 0 861971 Ed Marinaro 24 2 0 1481972 Mark Allen 7 0 0 421973 Don Fanelli 5 0 0 301974 Don Fanelli 10 0 0 601975 Tim LaBeau 7 1 0 441976 Thomas Dugdale 0 11 3 201977 Craig Jaeger 4 0 0 241978 Joe Holland 16 0 0 961979 Tom Weidenkopf 6 0 0 361980 Ron Rejda 0 19 8 431981 Derrick Harmon 7 1 0 441982 Derrick Harmon 9 1 0 561983 Derrick Harmon 12 1 0 741984 Tony Baker 8 0 0 481985 John Tagliaferri 8 0 0 481986 Tom Aug 0 19 9 461987 Dave Quarles 0 14 12 501988 Scott Malaga 12 0 0 721989 Todd Nicholson 7 0 0 421990 Scott Oliaro 11 0 0 661991 John McNiff 9 0 0 541992 Scott Oliaro 11 0 0 661993 Pete Fitzpatrick 6 1 0 381994 Chad Levitt 13 0 0 781995 Chad Levitt 15 1 0 921996 Chad Levitt 14 1 0 841997 Eric Krawczyk 11 0 0 661998 John McCombs 0 18 7 391999 Joe Splendorio 10 0 0 602000 Justin Dunleavy 8 0 0 482001 Evan SImmons 9 1 0 562002 Nathan Archer 7 0 0 42

Annual LeadersHistory and Records

History and Records

History and Records

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CHAD LEVITT (24)241 vs. Dartmouth, 1996227 at Harvard, 1994218 at Yale, 1996209 vs. Colgate, 1996201 at Brown, 1995188 vs. Yale, 1995187 at Buffalo, 1996178 vs. Princeton, 1996172 vs. Dartmouth, 1994170 at Dartmouth, 1995170 vs. Columbia, 1995165 vs. Holy Cross, 1995160 vs. Brown, 1996157 vs. Pennsylvania, 1994143 vs. Lehigh, 1994142 vs. Harvard, 1995139 at Harvard, 1996120 at Lehigh, 1995117 at Bucknell, 1994113 at Pennsylvania, 1995112 vs. Princeton, 1994112 at Columbia, 1994108 at Yale, 1994106 vs. Fordham, 1993

ED MARINARO (23)281 vs. Harvard, 1969272 at Columbia, 1971260 vs. Lehigh, 1970260 vs. Colgate, 1971246 at Rutgers, 1971245 at Rutgers, 1969230 at Yale, 1971230 at Pennsylvania, 1971225 at Brown, 1970203 at Princeton, 1970190 vs. Pennsylvania, 1970181 at Pennsylvania, 1969176 vs. Brown, 1971162 vs. Colgate, 1969155 vs. Princeton, 1969151 at Colgate, 1970150 vs. Columbia, 1969147 at Harvard, 1970146 vs. Harvard, 1971144 vs. Princeton, 1971127 at Columbia, 1970127 at Dartmouth, 1971122 vs. Dartmouth, 1969

DERRICK HARMON (12)222 vs. Columbia, 1983210 vs. Yale, 1983189 at Princeton, 1983179 vs. Pennsylvania, 1982178 vs. Columbia, 1981152 at Pennsylvania, 1981142 vs. Merch. Marine, 1982136 at Yale, 1982129 vs. Princeton, 1982126 vs. Yale, 1981124 vs. Harvard, 1983112 at Princeton, 1981

JOHN McNIFF (11)189 at Harvard, 1990181 vs. Columbia, 1991160 at Columbia, 1990143 vs. Harvard, 1991136 at Lafayette, 1990135 at Bucknell, 1989133 vs. Yale, 1991130 vs. Harvard, 1989124 at Pennsylvania, 1991

118 vs. Dartmouth, 1990108 vs. Princeton, 1990

SCOTT MALAGA (8)111 vs. Lafayette, 1987118 vs. Colgate, 1988138 at Lehigh, 1988121 vs. Brown, 1988117 at Dartmouth, 1988122 vs. Yale, 1988119 at Columbia, 1988125 vs. Pennsylvania, 1988

DAN MALONE (7)142 vs. Colgate, 1972162 vs. Rutgers, 1972123 vs. Pennsylvania, 1972111 at Harvard, 1972122 at Brown, 1972128 vs. Dartmouth, 1972178 at Columbia, 1974

DEON HARRIS (6)143 vs. Fordham, 1999131 vs. Dartmouth, 1998128 at Yale, 1998113 at Princeton, 1999104 vs. Buffalo, 1998100 at Holy Cross, 1998

JOE HOLLAND (6)263 vs. Pennsylvania, 1978244 at Harvard, 1978189 at Columbia, 1978186 vs. Princeton, 1978164 vs. Brown, 1978112 vs. Dartmouth, 1978

PETE LARSON (6)185 at Buffalo, 1966143 vs. Colgate, 1966142 vs. Princeton, 1965136 at Brown, 1966112 at Princeton, 1966108 vs. Pennsylvania, 1966

TERRY SMITH (6)148 vs. Yale, 1995126 at Columbia, 1994113 at Brown, 1995111 vs. Lehigh, 1994102 at Harvard, 1994100 at Lehigh, 1995

GARY WOOD (6)207 at Pennsylvania, 1962169 at Brown, 1962168 at Yale, 1963161 vs. Dartmouth, 1962149 at Pennsylvania, 1963125 vs. Princeton, 1962

JEFF JOHNSON (5)185 at Columbia, 1986167 vs. Princeton, 1986149 at Yale, 1985136 at Harvard, 1986111 vs. Bucknell, 1986

BO ROBERSON (5)136 at Columbia, 1955116 at Princeton, 1955108 at Dartmouth, 1956100 at Pennsylvania, 1956100 at Colgate, 1957

TONY BAKER (4)157 at Yale, 1984146 vs. Dartmouth, 1984139 at Harvard, 1984104 at Bucknell, 1984

DON FANELLI (4)180 at Colgate, 1973126 at Harvard, 1974111 vs. Bucknell, 1974103 vs. Colgate, 1975

BOB McANIFF (4)151 vs. Columbia, 1957125 at Columbia, 1955124 vs. Yale, 1957101 at Dartmouth, 1957

SCOTT OLIARO (4)288 at Yale, 1990144 vs. Brown, 1992135 vs. Dartmouth, 1992115 at Harvard, 1992

BILL WILSON (4)181 at Brown, 1965155 vs. Columbia, 1965119 at Princeton, 1964100 at Pennsylvania, 1964

PETE FITZPATRICK (3)147 vs. Harvard, 1993105 vs. Lafayette, 1992105 at Brown, 1993

RICK FURBUSH (3)126 at Columbia, 1970116 vs. Lehigh, 1970101 vs. Harvard, 1969

DICK JACKSON (3)139 at Pennsylvania, 1955118 at Pennsylvania, 1954112 at Dartmouth, 1954

EVAN SIMMONS (5)170 vs. Columbia, 2001137 vs. Dartmouth, 2000117 vs. Yale, 2000106 vs. Princeton, 2000106 at Princeton, 2001

ART BOLAND (2)143 at Pennsylvania, 1956112 at Pennsylvania, 1955

CRAIG JAEGER (2)167 vs. Harvard, 1977100 vs. Rutgers, 1977

BRAD KIESENDAHL (2)173 vs. Lafayette, 1997130 vs. Pennsylvania, 1996

RICH RUSSO (2)180 vs. Columbia, 1973123 vs. Brown, 1973

JOHN TAGLIAFERRI (2)114 vs. Columbia, 1985103 vs. Dartmouth, 1985

KEN TALTON (2)142 vs. Columbia, 1977110 vs. Pennsylvania, 1978

BRIAN ULBRICHT (1)159 vs. Towson, 2002

100-Yard Game Rushing Leaders

Chad Levitt, a fourth-round draft choice of the OaklandRaiders, rushed for over 100 yards 24 times, including a

career-high 241 yards vs. Dartmouth in 1996.

History and Records

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RushingYear Att Yards Avg T D

Ed Marinaro 1971 356 1881 5.3 24Chad Levitt 1996 267 1435 5.4 13Chad Levitt 1995 292 1428 4.9 13Ed Marinaro 1970 285 1425 5.0 12Ed Marinaro 1969 277 1409 5.1 14Joe Holland 1978 273 1396 5.1 16Chad Levitt 1994 275 1319 4.8 12Derrick Harmon 1983 216 1276 5.9 12Scott Malaga 1988 256 1097 4.3 12John McNiff 1990 176 998 5.7 10Pete Larson 1966 206 979 4.8 9Dan Malone 1972 196 913 4.7 5Derrick Harmon 1982 157 905 5.8 9Jeff Johnson 1986 191 902 4.7 4Derrick Harmon 1981 173 893 5.2 5

PassingYear Att C o m Int Pct Yds T D

Ricky Rahne 2000 479 252 13 .526 2944 18Ricky Rahne 1999 388 225 13 .580 2762 25Steve Joyce 1995 274 156 9 .569 2255 13Bill Lazor 1992 328 169 4 .515 2206 15Bill Lazor 1993 328 172 13 .524 2030 11RIcky Rahne 2001 355 199 5 .561 1984 11Mike Hood 1998 294 173 15 .588 1910 11Kevin Sigler 1974 248 143 14 .577 1648 8Mark Allen 1973 270 119 11 .441 1590 10Scott Carroll 1996 262 125 13 .477 1583 9Mick Razzano 2002 276 137 7 .496 1556 7Bill Lazor 1991 217 129 9 .595 1461 8Marty Stallone 1986 226 110 12 .487 1446 12Scott Carroll 1997 239 131 11 .548 1378 10Bill Robertson 1967 175 94 8 .537 1347 12

Passing EfficiencyYear Att C o m Int Pct Yds T D Rating

Steve Joyce 1995 274 156 9 .569 2255 13 135.2Aaron Sumida 1988 141 69 4 .489 1132 10 134.1Ricky Rahne 1999 388 225 13 .580 2762 25 132.4Bill Robertson 1967 138 64 8 .537 1347 12 131.9Rick Furbush 1970 104 57 9 .548 876 6 127.3Chris Cochrane 1990 175 107 5 .611 1266 5 125.6Pete Dorset 1949 111 55 5 .495 845 7 125.2Gary Wood 1962 117 60 8 .513 890 8 124.1Bill Lazor 1992 328 169 4 .515 2206 15 120.7Bill Lazor 1991 217 129 9 .595 1461 8 119.9Rocco Calvo 1950 94 51 3 .543 730 2 118.0Mike Hood 1998 294 173 15 .588 1910 11 115.6Mike Hood 1997 217 138 5 .636 1128 8 114.8Marty Stallone 1985 138 76 8 .551 817 9 114.7Per Larson 1994 154 76 6 .494 1092 6 114.0* 10 pass attempts per game

Total OffenseYear Plays Rush Pass Total Avg

Ricky Rahne 2000 552 92 2944 3036 5.5Ricky Rahne 1999 432 -66 2762 2696 6.2Bill Lazor 1992 405 174 2206 2380 5.9RIcky Rahne 2001 457 271 1984 2254 4.9Steve Joyce 1995 319 -89 2255 2166 6.8Bill Lazor 1993 403 44 2030 2074 5.2Mike Hood 1998 364 -3 1910 1907 5.2Ed Marinaro 1971 356 1881 0 1881 5.3Gary Wood 1962 290 889 890 1779 6.1Mick Razzano 2002 369 108 1556 1664 4.5Chris Cochrane 1990 268 387 1266 1653 6.2Kevin Sigler 1974 299 -35 1648 1613 5.4Mark Allen 1973 368 -23 1590 1567 4.3Scott Carroll 1996 286 -48 1583 1535 5.4Bill Lazor 1991 274 63 1461 1524 5.6

Single-Season Bests

Ed Marinaro

Bill Lazor

Steve Joyce

Gary Wood

History and Records

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ReceptionsYear Rec. Yards Avg. T D

Eric Krawczyk 1997 89 1042 11.7 11Keith Ferguson 2002 70 852 12.2 2Joe Splendorio 1999 65 944 14.5 10John Tagliaferri 1985 61 358 5.9 1Steve Busch 1996 57 720 12.6 4Sam Brickley 1987 56 518 9.3 2Eric Krawczyk 1996 53 786 14.8 5Bill Murphy 1967 50 853 17.1 9Keith Ferguson 2001 50 507 10.1 2Mike Jamin 1992 49 794 16.2 6Ron Mateo 1995 47 695 14.8 3Bruce Starks 1974 47 619 13.2 2Joe Splendorio 1998 46 677 14.7 6Joe Splendorio 2000 46 630 13.7 3

Yards ReceivingYear Rec. Yards Avg. T D

Eric Krawczyk 1997 89 1042 11.7 11Joe Splendorio 1999 65 944 14.5 10Bill Murphy 1967 50 853 17.1 9Keith Ferguson 2002 70 852 12.2 2Mike Jamin 1992 49 794 16.2 6Eric Krawczyk 1996 53 786 14.8 5Steve Busch 1996 57 720 12.6 4Ron Mateo 1995 47 695 14.8 3Keith Ferguson 2000 41 680 16.6 5Joe Splendorio 1998 46 677 14.7 6Joe Splendorio 2000 46 630 13.7 3Bruce Starks 1974 47 619 13.2 2Steve Busch 1995 27 581 21.5 4Jim Perrello 1985 36 566 15.7 5Aaron Berryman 1994 36 565 15.7 4

ScoringYear T D PAT FG Pts.

Ed Marinaro 1971 24 2 0 148Joe Holland 1978 16 0 0 96Chad Levitt 1995 15 1 0 92Ed Marinaro 1970 14 1 0 86Chad Levitt 1996 14 1 0 84Ed Marinaro 1969 14 0 0 84Chad Levitt 1994 13 0 0 78Derrick Harmon 1983 12 1 0 74Scott Malaga 1988 12 0 0 72Pete Larson 1966 11 1 0 68Eric Krawczyk 1997 11 0 0 66Scott Oliaro 1992 11 0 0 66Scott Oliaro 1990 11 0 0 66Howard Blose 1943 11 0 0 66John McCombs 1997 0 30 11 63Matt Hepfer 1990 0 30 11 63Mike Cochrane 1992 0 24 13 63

TacklesYear U T AT Tot. Sacks

Chris Zingo 1992 127 52 179 8Chris Zingo 1993 106 67 173 4Chris Zingo 1991 112 48 160 6Mitch Lee 1988 108 49 157 1John Hanson 1996 90 64 154 2Terry Lee 1977 98 51 149 2John Hanson 1997 95 45 140 0John Hanson 1998 100 35 135 1Mike Scully 1983 67 67 134 0Chris Allen 1996 74 58 132 0Bryan Draga 1994 77 48 125 2Jim DeStefano 1980 64 58 122 4

Eric Krawczyk

Bill Murphy

Joe Holland

Single-Season BestsHistory and Records

Chris Zingo

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RushingYears Att. Yds. Avg. T D

Ed Marinaro 1969-71 918 4715 5.1 50Chad Levitt 1993-96 922 4657 5.1 44Derrick Harmon 1981-83 546 3074 5.6 26John McNiff 1989-91 539 2557 4.7 22Gary Wood (QB) 1961-63 433 2156 5.0 19Scott Malaga 1986-88 461 1925 4.2 14Joe Holland 1976-78 370 1755 4.7 18Pete Larson 1964-66 354 1751 4.9 19Scott Oliaro 1989-92 361 1713 4.7 20Tony Baker 1982-84 330 1579 4.8 8

PassingYears Att. Comp. Int. Pct. Yds. TD

Ricky Rahne 1998-2001 1226 678 31 .553 7710 54Bill Lazor 1991-93 873 470 26 .538 5697 34Mike Hood 1996-98 550 334 22 .607 3406 20Mark Allen 1971-73 543 249 27 .459 3313 22Scott Carroll 1995-97 502 256 24 .510 2961 19Chris Cochrane 1988-90 438 234 27 .534 2784 11Shawn Maguire 1983-85 562 292 29 .520 2702 5Steve Joyce 1994-95 342 194 13 .567 2669 15Bill Robertson 1967-68 372 175 19 .470 2503 15Marty Stallone 1985-86 364 186 20 .511 2263 21

Total OffenseYears Rush Pass Yards

Ricky Rahne 1998-2001 222-284 1226-678-7710 1448-7994Bill Lazor 1991-93 209-281 873-470-5697 1082-5978Ed Marinaro 1969-71 918-4715 1-0-0 919-4715Chad Levitt 1993-96 922-4657 0-0-0 922-4657Gary Wood 1961-63 433-2156 311-136-1891 744-4047Mark Allen 1971-73 311-613 543-249-3313 854-3926Mike Hood 1996-98 181-257 550-334-3406 731-3663Chris Cochrane 1988-90 193-544 438-234-2784 631-3328Derrick Harmon 1981-83 546-3074 12-4-86 558-3160Scott Carroll 1995-97 46-(-56) 502-256-2961 548-2905

ReceptionsYears Rec. Yds. Avg. T D

Keith Ferguson 1999-2002 202 2569 12.7 14Eric Krawczyk 1995-97 176 2285 13.0 17Joe Splendorio 1997-2000 165 2337 14.1 20Justin Dunleavy 1998-2001 113 929 8.2 3John Tagliaferri 1983-85 99 696 7.0 2Ron Mateo 1992-95 95 1235 13.0 9Bruce Starks 1973-75 92 1292 13.3 5Steve Busch 1994-96 91 1435 15.8 9Sam Brickley 1986-88 88 1071 12.2 7Scott Oliaro 1989-92 87 965 11.1 2

Yards ReceivingYears Rec. Yds. Avg. T D

Keith Ferguson 1999-2002 202 2569 12.7 14Joe Splendorio 1997-2000 165 2337 14.1 20Eric Krawczyk 1995-97 176 2285 13.0 17Steve Busch 1994-96 91 1435 15.8 9Bruce Starks 1973-75 92 1292 13.3 5Mike Jamin 1990-92 84 1280 15.2 7Ron Mateo 1992-95 95 1235 13.0 9Shaun Hawkins 1985-87 58 1187 20.5 15Aaron Berryman 1992-94 80 1135 14.1 9Sam Brickley 1986-88 88 1071 12.2 7

Career Leaders

Derrick Harmon

Ricky Rahne

History and Records

Keith Ferguson

John Tagliaferri

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Rushing95 John McNiff at Columbia, 199091 Art Boland at Pennsylvania, 195688 Chad Levitt vs. Colgate, 199687 Whit Baker at Princeton, 193986 Bernie Babula at Pennsylvania, 194985 Pete Larson vs. Colgate, 196684 Bill Kirk vs. Columbia, 194983 Walt Kretz at Pennsylvania, 194681 Jeff Johnson vs. Princeton, 198680 Gary Wood vs. Yale, 196379 Ed Marinaro vs. Lehigh, 197079 Walt Scholl at Harvard, 193979 Walt Scholl at Ohio State, 193978 Bob Milne at Harvard, 1963

Passing98 Bob Dean to Norman Dawson vs. Navy, 194790 Rocco Calvo to Stu Merz at Yale, 195188 Steve Joyce to Steve Busch at Brown, 199579 Chris Metz to Jim Burry vs. Harvard, 197978 Per Larson to Chad Levitt at Bucknell, 199477 Jay LaRochelle to Tim LaBeau vs. Columbia, 197576 Bill Robertson to Chris Ritter at Brown, 196876 Dave McKelvey to Phil Taylor at Harvard, 195975 Mark Allen to George Milosevic vs. Dartmouth, 197274 Bill DeGraaf to Art Boland at Brown, 195572 Chris Metz to Terry Thomas vs. Colgate, 198171 Steve Joyce to Ron Mateo at Lehigh, 199571 Dave Dase to Shaun Hawkins vs. Columbia, 198771 Marty Sponaugle to Stu Fullerton vs. Princeton, 1965

Field Goals54 John Killian vs. Columbia, 196952 Tim McDermott vs. Harvard, 199350 John Rodin vs. Harvard, 199550 Bill Goldy vs. Princeton, 198450 Pete Gogolak vs. Lehigh, 196349 Peter Baccille vs. Harvard, 198348 Andy Bednar vs. Penn, 198846 Tom Aug at Lafayette, 198646 Mike Cochrane vs. Harvard, 199146 Mike Cochrane vs. Lehigh, 1992

Kickoff Returns100 Bo Roberson at Colgate, 195699 Pete Larson vs. Yale, 196698 Chris Ritter vs. Dartmouth, 196698 Dick Jackson vs. Dartmouth, 195497 Dan Malone vs. Lehigh, 197397 Barrett Rosser at Harvard, 1972

Punt Returns90 Dan Walker at Pennsylvania, 196782 Mike Raich vs Lafayette, 198780 Keith Cummins vs Colgate, 196980 Bill Kirk vs Dartmouth, 195073 Vincent Bates vs. Harvard, 1999

Interception Returns99 Mark Broderick vs Brown, 199097 Ken Davis at Army , 194295 Carl Holland vs Syracuse, 194781 Keith Cummins at Dartmouth, 196774 Jim Frontero vs Brown, 198672 Chip Ruth at Brown, 1968 71 John Webster at Brown, 1958

Cornell’s Longest Plays

John McNiff

Bo Roberson

History and Records

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RushingAttempts:42 by Dom Fischer, Colgate, 1969

Yards Gained:282 by Jabu Powell, Bucknell, 2000

PassingAttempts:53 by Bill Pienias, Brown, 1992

Completions:33 by Chad Andrzejewski, Columbia, 1992

Yards Gained:422 by Eric Webber, Brown, 2000

Completion Percentage:.882 by Dick Kazmaier, Princeton, 1951

Touchdowns:6 by A.J. “Swede” Oberlander, Dartmouth, 1925

Touchdowns (since 1947):4 by John Witkowski, Columbia, 19824 by Jamie Schwalbe, Columbia, 19944 by Eric Webber, Brown, 2000

ReceivingNumber:14 by Bob Farnham, Brown, 197514 by Scott Wedum, Dartmouth, 2002

Yards Gained:252 by Karl Hall, Pennsylvania, 1981

Touchdowns:3 on five occasions; Last: Sean Morey, Brown, 1997

Total OffensePlays:71 by Brian Mann, Dartmouth, 2002

Yards Gained:447 by Marty Domres, Columbia, 1968

ScoringPoints:30 by Eugene Rossides, Columbia, 1945

Touchdowns:5 by Eugene Rossides, Columbia, 1945

Field Goals:5 by Chris Ingerslev, Brown, 1985

Long PlaysRushing:92 by Rabih Abdullah, Lehigh, 1994

Passing:93 by Gary Vura to Karl Hall, Pennsylvania, 1981;93 by Eddie Chamberlain to Elbert Camp, Dartmouth, 1935

Field Goal:55 by Jim Robertson, Dartmouth, 1919

Field Goal (since 1947):54 by Charlie Gogolak, Princeton, 1965

Interception Return:100 on four occasions; Last: Jim Anderson, Princeton, 1984

Punt Return:85 by Tom Haggerty, Columbia, 1961;85 by Greg Hoffmeister, Dartmouth, 1991

Kickoff Return:100 by Ken Hill, Yale, 1978

Opponent Single-Game RecordsHistory and Records

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RUSHING — SINGLE GAMERushed 30 timesCornell: Deon Harris at Princeton, Sept. 18, 1999 (30)Opponent: Kris Ryan, Pennsylvania (at Ithaca), Nov. 17,2001 (33)

Rushed 40 timesCornell: Chad Levitt vs. Princeton, Sept. 21, 1996 (40)Opponent: Mike Milan, Brown (at Providence), Oct. 21,2000 (43)

Gained 100 yardsCornell: Brian Ulbricht vs. Towson, Oct. 5, 2002(27x159)Opponent: Cameron Atkinson, Princeton (at Ithaca),Nov. 2, 2002 (26x119)

Gained 150 yardsCornell: Brian Ulbricht vs. Towson, Oct. 5, 2002(27x159)Opponent: Ray LaMonica, Colgate (at Ithaca), Oct. 19,2002 (29x160)

Gained 200 yardsCornell: Chad Levitt at Yale, Nov. 9, 1996 (39x218)Opponent: Robert Carr, Yale (at Ithaca), Sept. 28, 2002(28x235)

Scored 3 TDsCornell: Evan Simmons at Dartmouth, Nov. 3, 2001 (3)Opponent: Robert Carr, Yale (at Ithaca), Sept. 28, 2002(4)

Run of 60 yardsCornell: Chad Levitt vs. Dartmouth, Oct. 26, 1996 (72)Opponent: Joseph Randall, Colgate (at Ithaca), Oct. 14,2000 (60)

Run of 70 yardsCornell: Chad Levitt vs. Dartmouth, Oct. 26, 1996 (72)Opponent: Jabu Powell, Bucknell (at Lewisburg), Sept.16, 2000 (79)

Run of 80 yardsCornell: Chad Levitt vs. Colgate, Oct. 19, 1996 (88)Opponent: Joe Rackley, Brown (at Ithaca), Oct. 20,2001 (80)

Run of 90 yardsCornell: John McNiff at Columbia, 1990 (95)Opponent: Rabih Abdullah, Lehigh (at Ithaca), Oct. 1,1994 (92)

PASSING — SINGLE GAMEAttempted 30 passesCornell: Mick Razzano vs. Darmouth, Nov. 9, 2002 (33)Opponent: Mike Mitchell, Penn (at Ithaca), Nov. 23,2002 (39)

Attempted 40 passesCornell: Mick Razzano at Brown, Oct. 26, 2002 (42)Opponent: Brian Mann, Dartmouth (at Ithaca), Nov. 9,2002 (58)

Completed 20 passesCornell: Mick Razzano vs. Darmouth, Nov. 9, 2002 (20)Opponent: Mike Mitchell, Penn (at Ithaca), Nov. 23,2002 (28)

Completed 25 passesCornell: Ricky Rahne vs. Harvard, Oct. 13, 2001 (31)Opponent: Mike Mitchell, Penn (at Ithaca), Nov. 23,2002 (28)

Threw for 300 yardsCornell: Mick Razzano, vs. Dartmouth, Nov. 9, 2002(20x33, 302)Opponent: Brian Mann, Dartmouth (at Ithaca), Nov. 9,2002 (37x58, 369)

Threw for 350 yardsCornell: Ricky Rahne at Harvard, Oct. 7, 2000 (28x57,391)Opponent: Brian Mann, Dartmouth (at Ithaca), Nov. 9,2002 (37x58, 369)

Threw for 400 yardsCornell: Ricky Rahne at Brown, Oct. 21, 2000 (29x62,446)Opponent: Eric Webber, Brown (at Providence), Oct. 21,2000 (28x43, 422)

Threw 3 TD passesCornell: Mick Razzano, at Harvard, Oct. 12, 2002 (3)Opponent: Brian Mann, Dartmouth (at Ithaca), Nov. 9,2002 (3)

Threw 4 TD passesCornell: Ricky Rahne at Harvard, Oct. 7, 2000 (4)Opponent: Peter Lee, Yale (at New Haven), Sept. 22,2001 (4)

Threw 5 TD passesCornell: NoneOpponent: A.J. “Swede” Oberlander, Dartmouth (atHanover), Nov. 7, 1925 (6)

Had 4 interceptionsCornell: Mike Hood vs. Dartmouth, Oct. 24, 1998 (4)Opponent: Ryan Collar, Holy Cross (at Worcester), Sept.26, 1998 (4)

Had 5 interceptionsCornell: Dave Dase at Princeton, Nov. 21, 1987 (5)Opponent: Bill Beagle, Dartmouth (at Ithaca), 1954 (5)

RECEIVING — SINGLE GAMECaught 8 passesCornell: Keith Ferguson at Princeton, Oct. 27, 2001 (8)Opponent: Casey Cramer, Dartmouth (at Ithaca), Nov.9, 2002 (8)

Caught 9 passesCornell: Keith Ferguson vs. Harvard, Oct. 13, 2001 (9)Opponent: Travis Chmelka, Columbia (at Ithaca), Nov.10, 2001 (9)

Caught 10 passesCornell: Keith Ferguson vs. Brown, Oct. 20, 2001 (10)Opponent: Steve Campbell, Brown (at Providence), Oct.21, 2000 (12)

Caught 11 passesCornell: Keith Ferguson vs. Dartmouth, Nov. 9, 2002(11)Opponent: Rob Milanese, Penn (at Ithaca), Nov. 23,2002 (15)

Gained 100 yardsCornell: Keith Ferguson vs. Dartmouth, Nov. 9, 2002(11x175)Opponent: Rob Milanese, Penn (at Ithaca), Nov. 23,2002 (15x172)

Gained 200 yardsCornell: Joe Splendorio at Brown, Oct. 2, 1999 (11x204)Opponent: Sean Morey, Brown (at Providence), Nov. 1,1997 (7x221)

Caught 3 TD passesCornell: Eric Krawczyk vs. Dartmouth (at Hanover), Oct.4, 1997 (3)Opponent: Sean Morey, Brown (at Providence), Nov. 1,1997 (3)

TOTAL OFFENSE — SINGLE GAMERan 40 playsCornell: Mick Razzano vs. Dartmouth, Nov. 9, 2002(44: 33 pass, 11 rush)Opponent: Mike Mitchell, Penn (at Ithaca), Nov. 23,2002 (43: 39 pass, 4 rush)

Gained 300 yardsCornell: Mick Razzano vs. Dartmouth, Nov. 9, 2002(340: 302 pass, 38 rush)Opponent: Brian Mann, Dartmouth (at Ithaca), Nov. 9,2002 (388: 369 pass, 19 rush)

Gained 400 yardsCornell: Ricky Rahne at Brown, Oct. 21, 2000 (440: 446pass, -6 rush)Opponent: Ryan Fitzpatrick, Harvard (at Cambridge),Oct. 12, 2002 (417: 353 pass, 64 rush)

MISCELLANEOUSIntercepted 3 passesCornell: Doug Knopp vs. Holy Cross (at SchoellkopfField), Sept. 23, 1995 (3)Opponent: Dean Cain, Princeton (at Princeton), Nov.21, 1987 (3)

Kicked 3 FGsCornell:Peter Iverson vs. Colgate, Oct. 14, 2000 (3)Opponent: Mike Murawczyk, Yale (at Ithaca), Sept. 23,2000 (3)

Fumble Return for TouchdownCornell: John Algeo at Brown, Oct. 2, 1999 (65 yards)Opponent: James Beck, Yale (at Ithaca), Sept. 28, 2002(21 yards)

Punt Return for TouchdownCornell: Vincent Bates vs. Harvard, Oct. 9, 1999 (73yards)Opponent: Todd Tomich, Yale (at Ithaca), Nov. 6, 1999(41 yards)

Blocked Punt Returned for TouchdownCornell: John Kellner vs. Lehigh, Oct. 6, 2001 (returned39 yards)Opponent: John Campbell, Dartmouth (at Hanover),Oct. 23, 1999 (recovered in end zone)

Blocked Field Goal Returned for TouchdownCornell: Kyle Thomas vs. Yale (at Ithaca), Sept. 28,2002 (returned 48 yards)Opponent: Stephen Falk, Pennsylvania (at Philadelphia),Nov. 17, 2001 (returned 68 yards)

Kickoff Return for TouchdownCornell: Justin Bush vs. Harvard (at Cambridge), Oct.10, 1998 (87 yards)Opponent: Rodney Byrnes, Harvard (at Cambridge),Oct. 12, 2002 (89 yards)

Interception for TouchdownCornell: Kevin Rooney vs. Columbia, Nov. 10, 2001 (22yards)Opponent: Jermaine Griffin, Brown (at Ithaca), Oct. 20,2001 (24 yards)

Recorded SafetyCornell: vs. Princeton (at Ithaca), Nov. 2, 2002Opponent: Brown (at Ithaca), Oct. 31, 1998

The Last Time It HappenedHistory and Records

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1887 (0-2)Coach: No regular coachCaptain: J. H. SheldonUnion• 10 24Lehigh• 10 38Totals 20 62

1888 (4-2)Coach: No regular coachCaptain: W. G. HowellPalmyra• 26 0Williams• 20 0Union• 30 0Lafayette• 0 16Bucknell• 20 0Lehigh 0 4Totals 96 20

1889 (7-2)Coach: No regular coachCaptain: D. UptonBucknell• 66 0Lafayette• 10 0Yale 6 60Rochester• 124 0Stevens Inst.• 38 4Yale• 0 70Michigan 66 0Columbia 20 0Lafayette 24 0Totals 354 130

1890 (7-4)Coach: No regular coachCaptain: E. YawgerRochester• 98 0Union 32 0Williams 8 18Harvard 0 77Amherst 0 18Trinity 26 0Wesleyan 2 4Bucknell• 26 0Michigan 20 5Columbia• 36 0Chicago U. Club 12 8Totals 260 130

1891 (7-3)Coach: No regular coachCaptain: C. JohansonSyracuse• 68 0Bucknell• 0 4Stevens Inst.• 72 0Lafayette• 30 0Lehigh• 24 0Princeton 0 6Michigan 58 12Detroit A. C. 32 0Chicago U. Club 4 12Michigan 10 0Totals 298 34

1892 (10-1)Coach: No regular coachCaptain: C. JohansonSyracuse A. C. 16 0Syracuse• 58 0Bucknell• 54 0Dickinson• 58 0Lehigh 76 0Williams 24 12Harvard 14 20Michigan• 44 0MIT.• 44 12Manhattan A. C. 16 0Michigan 30 10Totals 434 54

1893 (2-5-1)Coach: No regular coachCaptain: C. J. BarrGettysburg• 16 0Union• 18 6Princeton 0 46Williams 10 10Harvard 0 34Tufts• 0 6Lehigh• 0 14Pennsylvania 0 50Totals 44 166

1894 (6-4-1)Coach: Marshall NewellCaptain: Glenn (Pop) WarnerSyracuse• 39 0Union• 37 0Lafayette• 24 0Princeton 4 12Harvard 12 22Michigan• 22 0Crescent A. C. 22 0Williams 0 0Pennsylvania 0 6Michigan 4 12Lehigh• 10 6Totals 174 58

1895 (3-4-1)Coach: Marshall NewellCaptain: Clinton WyckoffSyracuse• 8 0Penn State• 0 0Case West. Reserve• 12 4Lafayette• 0 6Harvard 0 25Princeton 0 6Brown• 6 4Pennsylvania 2 46Totals 28 91

1896 (5-3-1)Coach: Joseph BeachamCaptain: Joseph BeachamColgate• 6 0Syracuse• 22 0Case West. Reserve• 48 0Tufts• 18 0Harvard• 4 13Princeton 0 37Bucknell• 54 0Williams 0 0Pennsylvania 10 32Totals 162 82

1897 (5-3-1)Coach: Glenn (Pop) WarnerCaptain: William McKeeverColgate• 6 0Syracuse• 16 0Tufts• 15 0Lafayette 4 4Princeton• 0 10Harvard 5 24Penn State• 45 0Williams 42 0Pennsylvania 0 4Totals 133 42

1898 (10-2)Coach: Glenn (Pop) WarnerCaptain: Allen WhitingSyracuse• 28 0Colgate• 29 5Hamilton• 41 0Trinity• 47 0Syracuse 30 0Carlisle Indians• 23 6Buffalo• 27 0Princeton 0 6Oberlin• 6 0

Williams 12 0Lafayette• 47 0Pennsylvania 6 12Totals 296 29

1899 (7-3)Coach: Percy HaughtonCaptain: Raymond StarbuckColgate 42 0Syracuse• 17 0Hamilton• 12 0Williams• 12 0Chicago 6 17Lehigh• 6 0Princeton• 5 0Columbia 29 0Lafayette• 5 6Pennsylvania 0 29Totals 134 52

1900 (10-2)Coach: Percy HaughtonCaptain: Raymond StarbuckColgate• 16 0Rochester• 6 0Bucknell• 6 0Syracuse• 6 0Wash. & Jefferson• 16 5Union• 11 0Dartmouth• 23 6Princeton 12 0Oberlin• 29 0Lafayette 0 17Vermont• 42 0Pennsylvania 0 27Totals 167 55

1901 (11-1)Coach: Raymond StarbuckCaptain: William WarnerColgate• 17 0Rochester• 50 0Bucknell• 6 0Hamilton• 39 0Union• 24 0Carlisle Indians 17 0Oberlin• 29 0Princeton• 6 8Lehigh• 30 0Columbia 24 0Vermont• 68 0Pennsylvania 23 6Totals 333 14

1902 (8-3)Coach: Raymond StarbuckCaptain: William WarnerColgate• 5 0Rochester• 31 0Union• 42 0Hobart• 57 0Williams• 37 6Carlisle Indians• 6 10Oberlin• 57 0Princeton 0 10Wash. & Jeff.• 50 0Lafayette• 28 0Pennsylvania 11 12Totals 324 38

1903 (6-3-1)Coach: William WarnerCaptain: Sanford HuntHobart• 12 0Alfred• 26 0Rochester• 11 0Colgate• 12 0Bucknell• 6 0Case West. Reserve• 41 0Princeton 0 44Lehigh• 0 0Columbia• 12 17Pennsylvania 0 42Totals 120 103

1904 (7-3)Coach: Glenn (Pop) WarnerCaptain: James LynahColgate• 17 0Rochester• 29 6Hobart• 24 0Hamilton• 34 0Bucknell• 24 12Franklin & Marshall • 36 5Princeton• 6 18Lehigh• 50 5Columbia 6 12Pennsylvania 0 34Totals 226 92

1905 (6-4)Coach: Glenn (Pop) WarnerCaptain: James CostelloHamilton• 5 0Colgate• 12 11Hobart• 28 0Bucknell• 24 0Pittsburgh• 30 0Haverford• 57 0Swarthmore• 0 14Princeton 6 16Columbia• 6 12Pennsylvania 5 6Totals 173 59

1906 (8-1-2)Coach: Glenn (Pop) WarnerCaptain: George CookColgate• 0 0Hamilton• 21 0Oberlin• 25 5Niagara• 23 6Bucknell• 24 6Bowdoin• 72 0Princeton 5 14Pittsburgh• 23 0Holy Cross• 16 6Swarthmore• 28 0Pennsylvania 0 0Totals 237 37

1907 (8-2)Coach: Henry SchoellkopfCaptain: George CookHamilton• 23 0Oberlin• 22 5Niargara• 47 0Colgate• 18 0Penn State• 6 8Princeton• 6 5Pittsburgh• 18 5Army 14 10Swarthmore• 18 0Pennsylvania 4 12Totals 176 45

1908 (7-1-1)Coach: Henry SchoellkopfCaptain: George WalderHamilton• 11 0Oberlin• 23 10Colgate• 9 0Vermont• 9 0Penn State• 10 4Amherst• 6 0Chicago 6 6Trinity• 18 6Pennsylvania 4 17Totals 96 43

1909 (3-4-1)Coach: George WalderCaptain: A. F. TydemanRensselaer• 16 3Oberlin• 16 6Fordham• 6 12Vermont• 16 0Williams• 0 3

All-Time ScoresHistory and Records

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Harvard 0 18Chicago• 6 6Pennsylvania 6 17Totals 66 65

1910 (5-2-1)Coach: Daniel ReedCaptain: LeGrand SimsonHobart• 50 0Rensselaer• 24 0Oberlin• 0 0St. Bonaventure• 47 0Vermont• 15 5Harvard 5 27Chicago• 18 0Pennsylvania 6 12Totals 165 44

1911 (7-3)Coach: Daniel ReedCaptain: William MunkAllegheny• 35 0Colgate• 6 0Oberlin• 15 3Penn State• 0 5Wash. & Jefferson• 6 0Pittsburgh• 9 3Williams• 15 14Michigan• 6 0Chicago 0 6Pennsylvania 9 21Totals 101 52

1912 (3-7)Coach: Al SharpeCaptain: E. W. ButlerWash. & Jefferson• 3 0Colgate• 7 13Oberlin• 0 13New York Univ.• 14 6Penn State• 6 29Bucknell• 14 0Williams• 10 24Dartmouth• 0 24Michigan 7 20Pennsylvania 2 7Totals 63 136

1913 (5-4-1)Coach: Al SharpeCaptain: John MunnsUrsinus• 41 0Colgate• 0 0Oberlin• 37 12Carlisle Indians• 0 7Bucknell• 10 7Pittsburgh• 7 20Harvard 6 23Michigan• 0 17Lafayette• 10 3Pennsylvania 21 0Totals 132 89

1914 (8-2)Coach: Al SharpeCaptain: John O’HearnUrsinus• 28 0Pittsburgh• 3 9Colgate• 3 7Carlisle Indians• 21 0Bucknell• 48 0Brown 28 7Holy Cross• 48 3Franklin & Marshall• 26 3Michigan 28 13Pennsylvania 24 12Totals 257 54

1915 (9-0) (national champs.)Coach: Al SharpeCaptain: Charles BarrettGettysburg• 13 0Oberlin• 34 7Williams• 46 6Bucknell• 41 0Harvard 10 0Virginia Tech• 45 0

Michigan 34 7Washington & Lee• 40 21Pennsylvania 24 9Totals 287 50

1916 (6-2)Coach: Al SharpeCaptain: L. W. MuellerGettysburg• 26 0Williams• 42 0Bucknell• 19 0Harvard 0 23Carnegie Tech.• 15 7Michigan• 23 20Mass. State• 37 0Pennsylvania 3 23Totals 165 73

1917 (3-6)Coach: Al SharpeCaptain: Arthur HoffmanOberlin• 22 0Williams• 10 1447th Infantry• 0 6Colgate• 0 20Bucknell• 20 0Carnegie Tech• 20 0Michigan 0 42Fordham• 6 27Pennsylvania 0 37Totals 78 146

1918NO TEAM

1919 (3-5)Coach: John RushCaptain: Francis (Fritz) ShiverickOberlin• 9 0Williams• 3 0Colgate• 0 21Dartmouth 0 9Lafayette• 2 21Carnegie Tech• 20 0Penn State• 0 20Pennsylvania 0 24Totals 34 95

1920 (6-2)Coach: Gil DobieCaptain: Clyde MayerRochester• 13 6St. Bonaventure• 55 7Union• 60 0Colgate• 42 6Rutgers• 24 0Dartmouth 3 14Columbia• 34 7Pennsylvania 0 28Totals 231 68

1921 (8-0) (national champs.)Coach: Gil DobieCaptain: Wilson DodgeSt. Bonaventure• 41 0Rochester• 55 0Case West. Reserve• 110 0Colgate• 31 7Dartmouth• 59 7Columbia 41 7Springfield• 14 0Pennsylvania 41 0Totals 392 21

1922 (8-0) (national champs.)Coach: Gil DobieCaptain: Eddie KawSt. Bonaventure• 55 6Niagara• 66 0New Hampshire• 68 7Colgate• 14 0Columbia• 56 0Dartmouth 23 0Albright• 48 14Pennsylvania 9 0Totals 339 27

1923 (8-0)Coach: Gil DobieCaptain: George PfannSt. Bonaventure• 41 6Susquehanna• 84 0Williams• 28 6Colgate• 34 7Dartmouth 32 7Columbia 35 0Johns Hopkins• 52 0Pennsylvania 14 7Totals 320 33

1924 (4-4)Coach: Gil DobieCaptain: Frank HendersonSt. Bonaventure• 56 0Niagara• 27 0Williams• 7 14Rutgers• 0 10Columbia• 14 0Susquehanna• 91 0Dartmouth 14 27Pennsylvania 0 20Totals 209 71

1925 (6-2)Coach: Gil DobieCaptain: Frank KearneySusquehanna• 80 0Niagara• 26 0Williams• 48 0Rutgers• 41 0Columbia 17 14Dartmouth 13 62Canisius• 33 0Pennsylvania 0 7Totals 258 83

1926 (6-1-1)Coach: Gil DobieCaptain: Emerson CareyGeneva• 6 0Niagara• 28 0Williams• 49 0Michigan State• 24 14Columbia 9 17St. Bonaventure• 41 0Dartmouth• 24 23Pennsylvania 10 10Totals 191 64

1927 (3-3-2)Coach: Gil DobieCaptain: Harold HoekelmanClarkson• 41 0Niagara• 19 6Richmond• 53 0Princeton• 10 21Columbia• 0 0St. Bonaventure• 6 6Dartmouth 7 53Pennsylvania 0 35Totals 136 121

1928 (3-3-2)Coach: Gil DobieCaptain: Dudley SchoalesClarkson• 20 0Niagara• 34 0Hampden-Sydney• 18 6Princeton 0 3Columbia 0 0

St. Bonaventure• 0 0Dartmouth• 0 28Pennsylvania 0 49Totals 72 86

1929 (6-2)Coach: Gil DobieCaptain: Sam WakemanClarkson• 60 0Niagara• 22 6Hampden-Sydney• 40 6Princeton• 13 7Columbia• 12 6Case West. Reserve• 36 0Dartmouth 14 18Pennsylvania 7 17Totals 204 60

1930 (6-2)Coach: Gil DobieCaptain: Paul HuntClarkson• 66 0Niagara• 61 14Hampden-Sydney• 47 6Princeton 12 7Columbia 7 10Hobart• 54 0Dartmouth• 13 19Pennsylvania 13 7Totals 273 63

1931 (7-1)Coach: Gil DobieCaptain: Cristobal Martinez-ZorrillaClarkson• 68 0Niagara• 37 6Richmond• 27 0Princeton• 33 0Columbia• 13 0Alfred• 54 0Dartmouth 0 14Pennsylvania 7 0Totals 239 20

1932 (5-2-1)Coach: Gil DobieCaptain: Bart VivianoBuffalo• 72 0Niagara• 7 0Richmond• 27 0Princeton 0 0Columbia 0 6Albright• 40 14Dartmouth• 21 6Pennsylvania 7 13Totals 174 39

1933 (4-3)Coach: Gil DobieCaptain: John FerraroSt. Lawrence• 48 7Richmond• 28 7Michigan 0 40Syracuse• 7 14Columbia• 6 9Dartmouth 7 0Pennsylvania 20 12Totals 116 89

1934 (2-5)Coach: Gil DobieCaptain: Walt SwitzerSt. Lawrence• 14 0Richmond• 0 6Syracuse• 7 20Princeton 0 45Columbia 0 14Dartmouth• 21 6Pennsylvania 13 23Totals 55 114

1935 (0-6-1)Coach: Gil DobieCaptain: H. S. WilsonSt. Lawrence• 6 12Case West. Reserve• 19 33Syracuse 14 21

Gil Dobie

All-Time ScoresHistory and Records

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Princeton• 0 54Columbia• 7 7Dartmouth 6 41Pennsylvania 7 33Totals 59 201

1936 (3-5)Coach: Carl SnavelyCaptain: John BattenAlfred• 74 0Yale 0 23Syracuse• 20 7Penn State• 13 7Columbia 13 20Princeton 13 41Dartmouth• 6 20Pennsylvania 6 14Totals 145 132

1937 (5-2-1)Coach: Carl SnavelyCaptain: Edward (Ted) HughesPenn State• 26 19Colgate• 40 7Princeton 20 7Syracuse• 6 14Yale 0 9Columbia• 14 0Dartmouth 6 6Pennsylvania 34 20Totals 146 82

1938 (5-1-1)Coach: Carl SnavelyCaptain: Al Van RanstColgate• 15 6Harvard 20 0Syracuse 17 19Penn State• 21 6Columbia 23 7Dartmouth• 14 7Pennsylvania 0 0Totals 110 45

1939 (8-0)Coach: Carl SnavelyCaptains: Vincent Eichler,Malvern Baker, Ken BrownSyracuse• 19 6Princeton 20 7Penn State• 47 0Ohio State 23 14Columbia• 13 7Colgate• 14 12Dartmouth 35 6Pennsylvania 26 0Totals 197 52

1940 (6-2)Coach: Carl SnavelyCaptain: Walt MatuszakColgate• 34 0Army 45 0Syracuse• 33 6Ohio State• 21 7Columbia• 27 0Yale 21 0Dartmouth 0 3Pennsylvania 20 22Totals 201 38

1941 (5-3)Coach: Carl SnavelyCaptain: Peter WolffSyracuse• 6 0

Harvard 7 0Navy 0 14Colgate• 21 2Columbia 0 7Yale• 21 7Dartmouth• 33 19Pennsylvania 0 16Totals 88 65

1942 (3-5-1)Coach: Carl SnavelyCaptain: Roy JohnsonLafayette• 20 16Colgate• 6 18Army 8 28Penn State• 0 0Syracuse 7 12Columbia 13 14Yale 13 7Dartmouth 21 19Pennsylvania 7 34Totals 95 148

1943 (6-4)Coach: Carl SnavelyCaptain: Meredith (Bud) CushingBucknell• 7 6Sampson N.T.S.• 27 13Navy 7 46Princeton 30 0Holy Cross• 20 7Colgate 7 20Columbia• 33 6Penn State• 13 0Dartmouth 0 20Pennsylvania 14 20Totals 158 138

1944 (5-4)Coach: Carl SnavelyCaptains: Frank Accorsi, Grant EllisSyracuse 39 6Bucknell• 26 0Yale 7 16Colgate• 7 14Sampson N.T.S.• 13 6Columbia 25 7Navy 0 48Dartmouth• 14 13Pennsylvania 0 20Totals 131 130

1945 (5-4)Coach: Ed McKeeverCaptain: Allen DekdebrunSyracuse 26 14Bucknell• 19 8U.S. Sub Base• 39 0Princeton• 6 14Yale 7 18Columbia 26 34Colgate• 20 6Dartmouth 20 13Pennsylvania 6 59Totals 169 166

1946 (5-3-1)Coach: Ed McKeeverCaptain: Joe MartinBucknell• 21 0Army 21 46Colgate• 13 9Yale• 6 6Princeton 14 7Columbia 12 0Syracuse• 7 14Dartmouth• 21 7Pennsylvania 20 26Totals 135 115

1947 (4-5)Coach: George (Lefty) JamesCaptain: Walt KretzLehigh• 27 0Yale 0 14Colgate 27 18Navy• 19 38

Princeton 28 21Columbia• 0 22Syracuse• 12 6Dartmouth 13 21Pennsylvania 0 21Totals 126 161

1948 (8-1)Coach: George (Lefty) JamesCaptain: Joe QuinnNew York Univ.• 47 6Navy 13 7Harvard• 40 6Syracuse 34 7Army• 6 27Columbia 20 13Colgate• 14 6Dartmouth• 27 26Pennsylvania 23 14Totals 224 112

1949 (8-1)Coach: George (Lefty) JamesCaptain: Paul GirolamoNiagara• 27 0Colgate• 39 27Harvard 33 14Yale 48 14Princeton• 14 12Columbia• 54 0Syracuse• 33 7Dartmouth 7 16Pennsylvania 29 21Totals 284 111

1950 (7-2)Coach: George (Lefty) JamesCaptains: Charles Taylor, John PierikLafayette• 27 0Syracuse 26 7Harvard 28 7Yale• 7 0Princeton 0 27Columbia 19 20Colgate• 26 18Dartmouth• 24 0Pennsylvania 13 6Totals 170 85

1951 (6-3)Coach: George (Lefty) JamesCaptain: Vic PujoSyracuse• 21 14Colgate 41 18Harvard• 42 6Yale 27 0Princeton 15 53Columbia• 20 21Michigan• 20 7Dartmouth 21 13Pennsylvania 0 7Totals 207 139

1952 (2-7)Coach: George (Lefty) JamesCaptain: Bill WhelanColgate• 7 14Navy• 7 31Syracuse 6 26Yale 0 13Princeton• 0 27Columbia 21 14Michigan 7 49Dartmouth• 13 7Pennsylvania 7 14Totals 68 195

1953 (4-3-2)Coach: George (Lefty) JamesCaptain: Bill GeorgeColgate• 27 7Rice• 7 28Navy 6 26Yale• 0 0Princeton 26 19Columbia• 27 13Syracuse• 0 26Dartmouth 28 26Pennsylvania 7 7Totals 128 152

1954 (5-4)Coach: George (Lefty) JamesCaptain: Guy BedrossianColgate• 14 19Rice 20 41Harvard• 12 13Yale 21 47Princeton 27 0Columbia 26 0Syracuse• 14 6Dartmouth• 40 21Pennsylvania 20 6Totals 194 153

1955 (5-4)Coach: George (Lefty) JamesCaptain: Dick JacksonLehigh• 14 6Colgate• 6 21Harvard 20 7Yale 6 34Princeton• 20 26Columbia• 34 19Brown 20 7Dartmouth 0 7Pennsylvania 39 7Totals 159 134

1956 (1-8; 1-6 Ivy, 8th)Coach: George (Lefty) JamesCaptain: Art BolandColgate 6 34Navy• 0 14Harvard• 7 32Yale 7 25Princeton• 21 32Columbia 19 25Brown 6 13Dartmouth• 14 27Pennsylvania 20 7Totals 100 209

1957 (3-6; 3-4 Ivy, T-4th)Coach: George (Lefty) JamesCaptain: Gerald KnappColgate• 13 14Harvard 20 6Syracuse• 0 34Yale• 7 18Princeton 14 47Columbia• 8 0Brown• 13 6Dartmouth 19 20Pennsylvania 6 14Totals 100 159

1958 (6-3; 5-2 Ivy, T-2nd)Coach: George (Lefty) JamesCaptain: Bob HazzardColgate• 13 0Harvard• 21 14Syracuse 0 55Yale 12 7Princeton• 34 8Columbia 25 0Brown 8 12Dartmouth• 15 32Pennsylvania 19 7Totals 147 135

Carl Snavely

All-Time Scores

George James

History and Records

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1959 (5-4; 3-4 Ivy, T-5th)Coach: George (Lefty) JamesCaptain: Dave FeeneyColgate 20 15Lehigh• 13 6Harvard 20 16Yale• 0 23Princeton 0 20Columbia• 13 7Brown• 19 0Dartmouth 12 21Pennsylvania 13 28Totals 110 136

1960 (2-7; 1-6 Ivy, T-7th)Coach: George (Lefty) JamesCaptain: Warren SundstromColgate• 8 28Bucknell• 15 7Harvard• 12 0Yale 6 22Princeton• 18 21Columbia 6 44Brown 6 7Dartmouth• 0 20Pennsylvania 7 18Totals 78 167

1961 (3-6; 2-5 Ivy, 6th)Coach: Tom HarpCaptains: George Telesh,Dave McKelvey

Colgate• 34 0Harvard 0 14Navy• 7 31Yale• 0 12Princeton 25 30Columbia• 7 35Brown• 25 0Dartmouth 14 15Pennsylvania 31 0Totals 143 137

1962 (4-5; 4-3 Ivy, T-3rd)Coach: Tom HarpCaptain: Tony TurelColgate• 12 23Harvard• 14 12Navy 0 41Yale 8 26Princeton• 35 34Columbia 21 25Brown 28 26Dartmouth• 21 28Pennsylvania 29 22Totals 168 237

1963 (5-4; 4-3 Ivy, T-4th)Coach: Tom HarpCaptain: Gary WoodColgate• 17 21Lehigh• 24 0Harvard 14 21Yale• 13 10Princeton 14 51Columbia• 18 17Brown• 28 25Dartmouth 7 12Pennsylvania 17 8Totals 152 165

1964 (3-5-1; 3-4 Ivy, T-5th)Coach: Tom HarpCaptain: Clarence JentesBuffalo• 9 9

Colgate 3 8Pennsylvania• 33 0Harvard 0 16Yale• 21 23Columbia 57 20Brown 28 31Dartmouth• 33 15Princeton 12 17Totals 196 139

1965 (4-3-2; 3-3-1 Ivy, 4th)Coach: Tom HarpCaptain: Phil RatnerColgate• 0 0Lehigh 49 13Princeton• 27 36Harvard• 3 3Yale 14 24Columbia• 20 6Brown• 41 21Dartmouth 0 20Pennsylvania 38 14Totals 192 137

1966 (6-3; 4-3 Ivy, 4th)Coach: Jack MusickCaptain: Fred DevlinBuffalo 28 21Colgate• 15 14Pennsylvania• 45 28Harvard 0 21Yale• 16 14Columbia 31 6Brown 23 14Dartmouth• 23 32Princeton 0 7Totals 181 157

1967 (6-2-1; 4-2-1 Ivy, 3rd)Coach: Jack MusickCaptain: Ron KopickiBucknell• 23 7Colgate 23 7Princeton• 47 13Harvard• 12 14Yale 7 41Columbia• 27 14Brown• 14 14Dartmouth 24 21Pennsylvania 33 14Totals 210 145

1968 (3-6; 1-6 Ivy, 7th)Coach: Jack MusickCaptain: Doug KleiberColgate• 17 0Rutgers• 17 16Pennsylvania• 8 10Harvard 0 10Yale• 13 25Columbia 25 34Brown 31 0Dartmouth• 6 27Princeton 13 41Totals 130 163

1969 (4-5; 4-3 Ivy, 4th)Coach: Jack MusickCaptains: Theo Jacobs, Dennis HuffColgate• 24 28Rutgers 7 21Princeton• 17 24Harvard• 41 24Yale 0 17Columbia• 10 3

Brown• 14 7Dartmouth 7 24Pennsylvania 28 14Totals 148 162

1970 (6-3; 4-3 Ivy, 4th)Coach: Jack MusickCaptain: Dennis LubozynskiColgate 17 7Lehigh• 41 14Pennsylvania• 32 31Harvard 24 27Yale• 7 38Columbia 31 20Brown 35 21Dartmouth• 0 24Princeton 6 3Totals 193 185

1971 (8-1; 6-1 Ivy, T-1st)Coach: Jack MusickCaptains: Tom Albright, Bill EllisColgate• 38 20Rutgers 31 17Princeton• 19 8Harvard• 21 16Yale 31 10Columbia• 24 21Brown• 21 7Dartmouth 14 24Pennsylvania 41 13Totals 240 136

1972 (6-3; 4-3 Ivy, T-3rd)Coach: Jack MusickCaptain: Bob JoehlColgate• 37 7Rutgers• 36 22Pennsylvania• 24 20Harvard 15 33Yale• 24 13Columbia 0 14Brown 48 28Dartmouth• 22 31Princeton 22 15Totals 238 183

1973 (3-5-1; 2-5 Ivy, 6th)Coach: Jack MusickCaptain: Bob LallyColgate 35 21Lehigh• 7 7Princeton• 37 6Harvard• 15 21Yale 3 20Columbia• 44 14Brown• 7 17Dartmouth 0 17Pennsylvania 22 31Totals 170 154

1974 (3-5-1; 1-5-1 Ivy, 7th)Coach: Jack MusickCaptains: Rick Johnson, Dan MaloneColgate• 40 21Bucknell• 24 0Pennsylvania• 28 28Harvard 27 39Yale• 3 27Columbia 24 0Brown 8 16Dartmouth• 9 21Princeton 20 41Totals 183 193

1975 (1-8; 0-7 Ivy, 8th)Coach: George SeifertCaptains: Don Fanelli, Steve HorriganColgate• 22 24Bucknell 21 6Princeton• 8 16Harvard• 13 34Yale 14 20Columbia• 19 42Brown• 23 45Dartmouth 10 33Pennsylvania 21 27Totals 151 247

1976 (2-7; 2-5 Ivy, T-5th)Coach: George SeifertGame CaptainsPrinceton• 0 3Colgate• 20 25Rutgers 14 21Harvard 9 3Brown• 12 28Dartmouth• 0 35Yale 6 14Columbia 17 35Pennsylvania 31 13Totals 109 177

1977 (1-8; 1-6 Ivy, T-7th)Coach: Bob BlackmanCaptains: Tony Anzalone, Terry LeePennsylvania 7 17Colgate• 22 28Rutgers• 14 30Harvard• 7 17Brown 3 21Dartmouth 13 17Yale• 0 28Columbia• 20 7Princeton 0 34Totals 86 199

1978 (5-3-1; 3-3-1 Ivy, 4th)Coach: Bob BlackmanCaptains: Mike Donahue, DaveKintighPrinceton• 14 14Colgate 21 12Bucknell• 24 0Harvard 25 20Brown• 13 21Dartmouth• 7 14Yale 14 42Columbia 35 14Pennsylvania• 35 17Totals 188 154

1979 (5-4; 4-3 Ivy, T-4th)Coach: Bob BlackmanCaptains: Brad Decker, Jim DeStefanoPennsylvania 52 13Colgate• 36 21Bucknell• 0 10Harvard• 41 14Brown 7 28Dartmouth 21 10Yale• 20 23Columbia• 24 7Princeton 14 26Totals 215 152

1980 (5-5; 5-2 Ivy, 2nd)Coach: Bob BlackmanCaptains: Tom Rohlfing, Dan ScullyPrinceton• 17 7

Tom Harp

Jack Musick

George Seifert

Bob Blackman

All-Time ScoresHistory and Records

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Colgate 20 38Rutgers• 3 44Harvard 12 20Brown• 25 32Dartmouth• 7 3Bucknell 16 33Yale 24 6Columbia 24 0Pennsylania• 31 9Totals 179 192

1981 (3-7; 2-5 Ivy, T-5th)Coach: Bob BlackmanCaptains: Dave Kimichik, Steve RossPennsylvania 22 29Colgate• 10 34Rutgers 17 31Harvard• 10 27Brown 14 9Dartmouth 7 42Bucknell• 22 15Yale• 17 23Columbia• 15 9Princeton 14 37Totals 148 256

1982 (4-6; 3-4 Ivy, T-4th)Coach: Bob BlackmanCaptains: Steve Duca, Dan SurenPrinceton• 36 41Colgate• 6 21Boston U.• 6 17Harvard 13 25Brown• 19 38Dartmouth• 13 14Merchant Marine• 34 0Yale 26 20Columbia 35 26Pennsylvania• 23 0Totals 211 202

1983 (3-6-1; 3-3-1 Ivy, 5th)Coach: Maxie BaughanCaptains: Frank Farace, Mark Miller, Mike ScullyPennsylvania 7 28Colgate• 7 60Cincinnati 20 48Harvard• 3 3Brown 3 14Dartmouth 17 31Boston U. 0 41Yale• 41 7Columbia• 31 6Princeton 32 30Totals 161 268

1984 (2-7; 2-5 Ivy, T-6th)Coach: Maxie BaughanCaptains: Mark Miller, Scott Sidman, Steve Garrison, John TagliaferriPrinceton• 9 17Colgate• 7 35Bucknell 7 10Harvard 18 24Brown• 9 13Dartmouth• 13 10Yale 14 21Columbia 19 7Pennsylvania• 0 24Totals 96 161

1985 (3-7; 2-5 Ivy, 7th)Coach: Maxie BaughanCaptains: Stuart Mitchell, John Tagliaferri, Dave Van MetrePennsylvania 6 10Colgate• 20 21Lafayette• 3 17Harvard• 17 20Brown 0 22Dartmouth• 17 20Bucknell 26 13Yale 20 14Columbia• 21 8Princeton 27 33Totals 157 178

1986 (8-2; 6-1 Ivy, 2nd)Coach: Maxie BaughanCaptains: Tom Bernardo, Ken Johnson, Erik BernsteinPrinceton• 39 8Colgate 21 12Lafayette 22 33Harvard 3 0Brown• 27 9Dartmouth 10 7Bucknell• 16 3Yale• 15 0Columbia 28 0Pennsylvania• 21 31Totals 202 103

1987 (5-5; 4-3 Ivy, T-4th)Coach: Maxie BaughanCaptains: Lee Reherman, Gary Rinkus, Dave QuarlesPennsylvania 17 13Colgate• 3 27Lafayette• 17 12Harvard• 29 17Brown 15 23Dartmouth• 21 14Bucknell• 6 20Yale 9 28Columbia• 31 20Princeton 6 23Totals 154 197

1988 (7-2-1; 6-1 Ivy, T-1st)Coach: Maxie BaughanCaptains: Doug Langan, Scott Malaga, Mike McGrannPrinceton• 17 26Colgate• 17 14

Lehigh 14 27Harvard 19 17Brown• 35 0Dartmouth 24 7Lafayette 21 21Yale• 26 0Columbia 42 19Pennsylvania• 19 6Totals 234 137

1989 (4-6; 2-5 Ivy, T-5th)Coach: Jack FoutsCaptains: Drew Fraser, Mitch LeeBucknell 20 9Northeastern• 0 20Lafayette• 24 23Harvard• 28 0Brown 7 28Dartmouth• 14 28Yale 19 34Columbia• 19 25Princeton 7 21Pennsylvania 20 6Totals 158 194

1990 (7-3; 6-1 Ivy, T-1st)Coach: Jim HofherCaptains: Chris Cochrane, Rob Ryder,Paul Tully

Princeton• 17 14Colgate 24 59Bucknell• 21 42Harvard 20 17Lafayette 38 16Dartmouth• 6 11Brown• 34 7Yale 41 31Columbia 41 0Pennsylvania• 21 15Totals 263 212

1991 (5-5; 4-3 Ivy, T-4th)Coach: Jim HofherCaptains: Mark Broderick,Greg Finnegan, Scott Oliaro

Princeton 0 18Colgate• 13 31Bucknell 23 7Stanford 6 56Harvard• 22 17Dartmouth 25 31Brown 20 17Yale• 31 6Columbia• 28 21Pennsylvania 13 14Totals 181 218

1992 (7-3; 4-3 Ivy, 4th)Coach: Jim HofherCaptains: John Massy, Scott Oliaro,Jeff Woodring

Princeton• 20 22Lehigh• 29 23Lafayette• 44 33Harvard 31 13Colgate 25 7Dartmouth• 26 16Brown• 16 6Yale 35 14Columbia 30 35Pennsylvania• 7 14Totals 263 183

1993 (4-6; 3-4 Ivy, T-4th)Coach: Jim HofherCaptains: Bill Lazor, Chris Zingo��������� 1 2 1 8�������� 6 2 2������ 1 3 3 5�������� 2 7 0�������� 48 6��������� 2 7 28����� 2 1 3

Coach Seasons Years W L T Pct.Marshall Newell 1894-95 2 9 8 2 .473Joseph Beacham 1896 1 5 3 1 .555Glenn (Pop) Warner 1897-98, 1904-06 5 36 13 3 .721Percy Haughton 1899-1900 2 17 5 0 .772Raymond Starbuck 1901-02 2 19 4 0 .826William Warner 1903 1 6 3 1 .600Henry Schoellkopf 1907-08 2 15 3 1 .789George Walder 1909 1 3 4 1 .375Daniel Reed 1910-11 2 12 5 1 .666Al Sharpe 1912-17 6 34 21 1 .607John Rush 1919 1 3 5 0 .375Gil Dobie 1920-35 16 82 36 7 .650Carl Snavely 1936-44 9 46 26 3 .613Ed McKeever 1945-46 2 10 7 1 .555George (Lefty) James 1947-60 14 66 58 2 .544Tom Harp 1961-65 5 19 23 3 .422Jack Musick 1966-74 9 45 33 3 .555George Seifert 1975-76 2 3 15 0 .167Bob Blackman 1977-82 6 23 33 1 .412Maxie Baughan 1983-88 6 28 29 2 .492Jack Fouts 1989 1 4 6 0 .400Jim Hofher 1990-97 8 *45 35 0 .563Pete Mangurian 1998-2000 3 16 14 0 .533Tim Pendergast 2001-present 2 6 13 0 .316Note: During the first seven years of Cornell football, the teams were coached informally by players and volunteers.

Jack Fouts

Maxie Baughan

Jim Hofher

Cornell Head Coaches • 1894-2002

All-Time Scores/Coaching RecordsHistory and Records

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Years Date ofName Position Played ElectionEddie Kaw Halfback 1920-1922 1954George Pfann Quarterback 1921-1923 1957Charles Barrett Quarterback 1913-1915 1958Jerome “Brud” Holland End 1936-1938 1965Clinton Wyckoff Quarterback 1893-1895 1970William Warner Guard 1899-1902 1971John O’Hearn End 1912-1914 1972Murray Shelton End 1913-1915 1973Frank Sundstrom Tackle 1921-1923 1978Nick Drahos Tackle 1938-1940 1981Ed Marinaro Tailback 1969-1971 1991

Cornellians in National Football Hall of Fame

Date ofName Years Coached ElectionPercy Haughton 1899-1900 1951Glenn S. (Pop) Warner 1897-1898, 1904-1906 1951Gil Dobie 1920-1935 1954Marshall Newell 1894-1895 1957Carl Snavely 1936-1944 1965Bob Blackman 1977-1982 1987Maxie Baughan 1983-1988 1988

Cornell Coaches In National Football Hall of Fame

National Football Hall of Fame

����� 2 1 0��������� 24 29������������ 1 4 1 7������ 2 1 3 1 5 8

1994 (6-4; 3-4 Ivy, T-4th)Coach: Jim HofherCaptains: Dick Emmet, Terry Golden,Mike McKean, John VitulloPrinceton• 31 16Fordham 13 6Lehigh• 21 17Harvard 18 13Bucknell 29 28Dartmouth• 17 14Brown• 3 16Yale 14 24Columbia 33 38Pennsylvania• 14 18Totals 193 190

1995 (6-4; 5-2 Ivy, T-2nd)Coach: Jim HofherCaptains: Greg Bloedorn,Doug Knopp, John Vitullo

Princeton 22 24Holy Cross• 28 19Dartmouth 24 19Harvard• 28 27Bucknell• 7 10Lehigh 23 34Brown 38 28Yale• 38 10Columbia• 35 14Pennsylvania 18 37Totals 261 222

1996 (4-6; 4-3 Ivy, T-3rd)Coach: Jim HofherCaptains: Steve Busch, Chad Levitt,Seth Payne, Brian WeidelPrinceton• (OT) 33 27Lafayette 19 30Buffalo 24 41Harvard 20 13Colgate• 21 31Dartmouth• 21 38

Brown• 21 35Yale 28 20Columbia 10 24Pennsylvania• 24 21Totals 221 280

1997 (6-4; 4-3 Ivy, T-3rd)Coach: Jim HofherCaptains: Chris Allen, Justin Bird,Scott Carroll, Eric Krawczyk, Rich

SheerinPrinceton• 14 10Colgate• (OT) 38 44Dartmouth 20 24Harvard• 9 34Lafayette• (2OT) 41 34Fordham 45 13Brown 12 37Yale• 37 10Columbia• 33 22Pennsylvania + 20 33Totals 269 261+Penn forfeited game

1998 (4-6; 1-6 Ivy, T-7th)Coach: Pete MangurianCaptains: John Hanson, Mike HoodPrinceton 0 6Holy Cross 17 9Buffalo• 34 31Harvard 12 19Bucknell• 23 19Dartmouth• 14 11

Pete Mangurian

Eddie Kaw

Glenn (Pop) Warner

Brown• 7 20Yale 21 28Columbia 10 22Pennsylvania• 21 35Totals 159 200

1999 (7-3; 5-2 Ivy, 3rd)Coach: Pete MangurianCaptains: Nate Fischer, Deon HarrisPrinceton 20 3Fordham• 42 14Brown 33 28Harvard• 24 23Colgate 16 55Dartmouth 17 20Wagner• 31 14Yale 20 37Columbia• 31 29Pennsylvania 20 12Totals 254 235

2000 (5-5, 5-2 Ivy, 2nd)Coach: Pete MangurianCaptains: Joe Splendorio, Dan WeyandtBucknell 15 38Yale• 24 23Lehigh 16 35Harvard 29 28Colgate• 16 23Brown 40 56Princeton• 25 24Dartmouth• 49 31Columbia 35 31Pennsylvania• 15 45Totals 264 334

2001 (2-7, 2-5 Ivy, 6th)Coach: Tim PendergastCaptains: Justin Dunleavy, RickyRahne, Nate Spitler

Yale 13 40Colgate 32 35Lehigh• 35 38Harvard• 6 26Brown• 21 49Princeton 10 7Dartmouth 28 24Columbia • 28 35Pennsylvania 14 38Totals 187 292

2002 (4-6; 3-4 Ivy, 5th)Coach: Tim PendergastCaptains: Nate Spitler, Nathan ArcherBucknell 3 14Yale• 23 50Towson• (2OT) 34 31Harvard 23 52Colgate• 13 42Brown (2OT) 10 7Princeton• (OT) 25 32Dartmouth• 21 29Columbia 17 14Pennsylvania• 0 31Totals 169 292

Tim Pendergast

All-Time Scores/Football Hall of Fame

•Games played in Ithaca

History and Records

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Started in 1978, the Cornell Athletic Hall of Fame now has 442 members. The Big Red football program has 126former players and coaches in the Hall. The following people, in alphabetical order, represent the football program.Charter members are indicated with an asterisk.

Derrick Harmon ’84Frank Henderson ’25Bob Henrickson ’78*Brud Holland ’39Joe Holland ’78Dick Jackson ’56Craig Jaeger ’78Lefty James, CoachDave Johnson ’77*Eddie Kaw ’23Alva Kelley ’41Walt Kretz ‘48Bob Lally ’74Pete Larson ’67Mitch Lee ’90Dick Loynd ’50Charles Lueder ’02*James Lynah ’05*Tom MacLeod ’70Scott Malaga ‘89*Ed Marinaro ’72Bill Marino ’76Cristobal Martinez-Zorrilla ’31Jose Martinez-Zorrilla ’33Walt Matuszak ’41Hal McCullough ’41Eamon McEneaney ’77Tom McHale ’87*Bill McKeever ’39*John McKeown ’73Dick Meade ’56Frank Miller ’51Peter Paul Miller ’18Jack Morris ’55Bill Murphy ’68Bill Murray ’74Jack Musick, Coach*William Newman ’07*John O’Hearn ’15Len Oniskey ’55Bruce Pattison ’69George Peck ’39

Pat Pennucci ’62*George Pfann ’24Mike Phillips ’74John Pierik ’51Joe Quinn ’49Dick Ramin ‘51Floyd Ramsey ’24Phil Ratner ’66Daniel Reed 1898*Irvin (Bo) Roberson ’58Paul Robeson Jr. ’48Jack Rogers ’45Sid Roth ’39Harvey Sampson ‘51Ed Savitsky ’59Dudley Schoales ’29*Henry Schoellkopf ’02Walt Scholl ’41Mike Scully ’84Dr. Albert Sharpe, Coach*Murray Shelton ’16Francis Shiverick ’18John Skawski ’48Bob Smith ’68Carl Snavely, CoachCarl Spang ’39Ray Starbuck 1900*Frank Sundstrom ’24Ted Thoren, Asst. CoachRay Van Orman ’08Al Van Ranst ’39Reeve Vanneman ‘67*Bart Viviano ’33Sam Wakeman ’30Glenn (Pop) Warner 1894*William Warner ’03Fred West ’41Bill Whelan ’53George Witherbee 1894Gary Wood ’64*Clinton Wyckoff 1896Tar Young 1899

Mark Allen ’74John Anderson ’29Allan Balch 1889*Charles Barrett ’16Erik Bernstein ‘87Art Boland ’57Frank Bradley ’50George Brayman ’22Walt Bruska ’50Rocco Calvo ’52Emerson Carey ’27Charles Cassidy ’24*Hillary Chollet ’50Dick Clark ’51Carlton Collins ’16Lou Conti ’41Gib Cool ’16Meredith (Bud) Cushing ’44Lou Daukas ’44Norm Dawson ’46Bob Dean ’49*Bill DeGraaf ’56Allen Dekdebrun ’47Jim DeStefano ‘81Gil Dobie, CoachPete Dorset ’50Nick Drahos ’41Howard Dunbar ’41Dave Dunlop ’59Tom Fennell ’96Tom Fennell II ’26*John Ferraro ’34Bud Finneran ’41Jeff Fleischmann ’51John Furman ’39Abe George ’33Henry Godshall ’36Pete Gogolak ’64Jake Goldbas ’34Rip Haley ’51Neal Hall ’78Swede Hanson ’23

Cornell Athletic Hall of Fame

Brud HollandCharles Barrett Nick Drahos

History and Records

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Cornell All-America First-Team Selections

Year Player, Pos.1955 Stan Intihar, E

Bill DeGraaf, QB1956 Art Boland, HB1957 Bob McAniff, HB1958 Ed Savitsky, G

Norm Juvonen, E1959 Dave Feeney, G1962 Gary Wood, HB1963 Gary Wood, HB1964 Clarence Jentes, DG

Phil Ratner, DTGeorge Norman, DEBob Baker, HBJoe Ryan, CGeorge Arangio, OGDick Williams, OE

1965 Phil Ratner, DTBill Wilson, FB

1966 Pete Larson, HBGeorge McWeeney, OGReeve Vanneman, OTRon Gervase, OE

1967 Bill Murphy, OEJohn Sponheimer, DT

1968 John Sponheimer, DTBill Arthur, P

1969 Paul Marcucci, OTDennis Huff, OGTheo Jacobs, DGEd Marinaro, HB

Cornell All-Ivy First-Team SelectionsYear Player, Pos.1970 Ed Marinaro, HB1971 Ed Marinaro, HB

Craig Lambert, OTDon Jean, DBBob Lally, LB

1972 Bob Lally, LBBob Joehl, FBMike Phillips, LB

1973 Mike Phillips, MGBob Lally, LB

1974 Bruce Starks, SE1975 Bob Hall, DT

Steve Horrigan, MG1977 Terry Lee, LB1978 Joe Holland, TB

Virgil Cotton, DB1979 Brad Decker, TE

Tom Donnelly, OGMike Cobb, DB

1980 John Kilcoyne, CJim DeStefano, LBTodd Florey, DB

1981 Phil Loyd, DS1982 Dan Suren, TE

Derrick Harmon, TBSteve Duca, DTScott Walter, DB

1983 Derrick Harmon, TBRalph Scholz, DTMike Scully, LBRick Dailey, DB

Year Player, Pos.1984 Tony Baker, TB

Keith Bakowski, LB1985 Ken Johnson, OG

Mike Wagner, C1986 Tom Aug, PK

Erik Bernstein, PJim Frontero, DBJeff Johnson, FBKen Johnson, OGWard Johnson, LBTom McHale, DEMike Raich, DBGary Rinkus, DT

1987 Sam Brickley, WRJeff DeLamielleure, DBLee Reherman, OTMike Raich, DBGary Rinkus, DT

1988 Sam Brickley, wRScott Malaga, RBMitch Lee, LBMike McGrann, LBEvan Parke, DB

1989 Jay Bloedorn, OTMitch Lee, MLB

1990 Jay Bloedorn, OTChris Field, OGGreg Finnegan, CJohn McNiff, TBTim Cronin, DT

Year Player, Pos.1895 Clint Wyckoff, QB1900 Ray Starbuck, FB1901 Bill Warner, G

Sanford Hunt, G1902 Bill Warner, G1906 Elmer Thompson, G

Bill Newman, C1908 Bernie O’Rourke, G1914 John O’Hearn, E

Charles Barrett, QB1915 Charles Barrett, QB

Murray Shelton, E1921 Eddie Kaw, HB1922 Eddie Kaw, FB1923 George Pfann, QB

Frank Sundstrom, T

Year Player, Pos.1932 Jose Martinez-Zorrilla, E1937 Brud Holland, E1938 Brud Holland, E

Bill McKeever, TSid Roth, G

1939 Nick Drahos, T1940 Nick Drahos, T1970 Ed Marinaro, TB1971 Ed Marinaro, TB1982 Dan Suren, TE*1986 Tom McHale, DE*1992 Chris Zingo*1993 Chris Zingo*

*Division I-AA

Chris Zingo

Year Player, Pos.1991 Kevin Marcus, DT

Ramon Watkins, DB1992 Troy Thompson, C

Jeff Woodring, DEChris Zingo, LBSteve Haggerty, FS

1993 Geoff Cochrane, PChris Zingo, LB

1994 Aaron Berryman, WRChris Hanson, DBChad Levitt, RB

1995 Greg Bloedorn, OCNick Bombach, DBChad Levitt, RBRon Mateo, WRJimmy Seifert, TE

1996 Chad Levitt, RBSeth Payne, DEBrian Weidel, OT

1997 Eric Krawczyk, WR1998 John Hanson, LB1999 Joe Splendorio, WR2002 Nathan Archer, FB

Pete Combe, DL

History and Records

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1950 John Pierik, CJeff Fleischmann, FB

1951 Frank Vitale, G1952 Bill Whelan, HB1953 Poe Fratt, T1954 Len Oniskey, T

Jim Van Buren, G1955 Bill DeGraaf, QB1956 Art Boland, QB1957 Bob McAniff, HB1958 Ed Savitsky, T1959 Dave Feeney, G1960 John Hanly, T1961 George Telesh, HB

Dave Thomas, G1962 Ed Burnap, E1963 Gary Wood, QB1964 Bob Baker, HB1965 Bill Wilson, FB1966 Pete Larson, HB1967 Bill Murphy, SE1968 Doug Kleiber, LB1969 Paul Marcucci, OT1970 Rick Furbush, QB1971 Ed Marinaro, TB1972 Bob Joehl, FB1973 Mark Allen, QB1974 Rick Johnson, DE

Dan Malone, HB1975 Steve Horrigan, DG

1976 Joe Meaney, OTDon Papich, LB

1977 Terry Lee, LB1978 Joe Holland, TB1979 Brad Decker, TE1980 Jim DeStefano, LB1981 Phil Loyd, DS1982 Dan Suren, TE1983 Derrick Harmon, TB1984 Tony Baker, TB1985 John Tagliaferri, HB1986 Erik Bernstein, P1987 Lee Reherman, OT1988 Scott Malaga, RB1989 Mitch Lee, MLB1990 Chris Cochrane, QB1991 John McNiff, TB1992 Scott Oliaro, TB1993 Bill Lazor, QB

Chris Zingo, LB1994 Aaron Berryman, WR1995 John Vitullo, LB1996 Chad Levitt, TB1997 Eric Krawczyk, WR1998 John Hanson1999 Ricky Rahne, QB

Joe Splendorio, WR2000 Ricky Rahne, QB2001 Ricky Rahne, QB2002 Keith Ferguson, WR

Pop Warner Most Valuable Football Player Award

1966 Reeve Vanneman, OT1967 Ron Kopicki, DG1968 Larry Rafalski, DB1969 Tom MacLeod, DB1970 Vic Livingston, LB1971 Tom Albright, HB1972 Paul Hanly, C1973 Sam Costa, FB1974 Kevin Sigler, QB1975 Don Fanelli, FB1976 Cal Washington, MG1977 Joe Holland, TB1978 John Curran, DS1979 Mike Staun, LB1980 Dave Chalk, DT1981 Ken Rubenstein, PK1982 Derrick Harmon, TB1983 Derrick Harmon, TB1984 Dave Van Metre, DT1985 Dave Van Metre, DT

1986 Tom Aug, PK1987 Mal Humphrey, DT1988 Brent Felitto, DS1989 Joe Pych, WR1990 Rick Hindman, OT1991 Jeff Diehl, DE1992 Jack Dankert, DE

Charlie Beard, FSTony Villella, WR

1993 Pat Paquette, OG1994 Tim McDermott, P1995 Ron Mateo, WR1996 Cody Crawford, OG1997 Christian DiPaola, OT

Matthew DiPaola, OT1998 Kip Melstrom, DT1999 Joe Splendorio, WR2000 Derek Kingrey, LB2001 Phil Rigueur, OLB2002 Luke Hanset, FB

Victor Grohmann Scholar-Athlete Award

Cornell Football Awards

Recipient shall be, in the words of thelate Glenn S. (Pop) Warner ’94 whoplayed and coached at Cornell, “thesenior who during his football careerat Cornell has shown the greatest

playing ability, leadership, inspirationalqualities and sportsmanship.”

Given for academic and footballproficiency in honor of the late

Mr. Grohmann

History and Records

Keith Ferguson

Luke Hanset

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Robert Fenton Patterson Award1951 Reginald Marchant, DS1952 Art Harre, LB1953 Al Sebald, C1954 John Morris, E1955 Frank Vadney, T1956 Tom Itin, C1957 Dick Eales, E1958 John Webster, HB1959 Howard Picking, E1960 John Beeby, FB1961 Tony Pascal, FB1962 Tony Turel, C1963 Don McCarthy, E1964 Gabe Durishin, HB1965 Jim Docherty, DS1966 George McWeeney, OG1967 Bill Huling, HB1968 Tim Battaglia, DE1969 Jeff Ruby, DT

1970 Dennis Lubozynski, LB1971 Tony Orel, OG1972 Mike Fleming, OG-OT1973 Lamont Garnett, DB1974 Kevin Sigler, QB1975 Dan Dwyer, DT1976 Charlie Payne, DE1977 Tip Macdonald, OG1978 Bob Weggler, DE1979 Mike Tanner, QB1980 Todd Florey, DB1981 Kurt Walterhouse, LB1982 Scott Walter, DB1983 Rick Dailey, DS1984 Tom Cifrino, OT1985 Jim Perrello, WR1986 Jeff Johnson, FB

Tom Bernardo, LB1987 Sam Brickley, WR

1986 Marty Stallone, QBJim Frontero, CB

1987 Shaun Hawkins, WRJeff DeLamielleure, DS

1988 Steve Lutz, HBCorky Webb, WS

1989 Chris Cochrane, QBPaul Tully, CB

1990 John McNiff, TBTim Cronin, DT

1991 Mike Jamin, WRKevin Marcus, DT

1992 Bill Lazor, QBChris Zingo, LB

1993 Pete Fitzpatrick, TBBob Garvey, DE

1994 Chad Levitt, TBChris Hanson, FS

1995 Chad Levitt, TBDoug Knopp, CB

1996 Chad Levitt, TBSeth Payne, DE

1997 Eric Krawczyk, WRChris Allen, FS

Stone Travel "Big Play" Men of the Year1998 Joe Splendorio, WR

Nate Fischer, LB1999 Joe Spendorio, WR

David Caputo, SS2000 Keith Ferguson, WR

Derek Kingrey, LB2001 John Kellner, WR

Jamie Moriarty, DB2002 Nate Archer, FB

Pete Combe, DL

1957 Bob Czub, G1958 Tom Skypeck, QB1959 Dan Bidwell, HB1960 Larry Fraser, T1961 Bernie McHugh, T1962 Jake Page, G1963 Joe Robinson, FB1964 George Norman, E1965 Ted Sprinkle, DE1966 Fred Devlin, LB1967 Bob Horn, SE1968 Bob Pegan, DE1969 Brooks Scholl, SE1970 Rick Furbush, QB1971 Craig Lambert, OT1972 George Milosevic, OE1973 Jon Tracosas, LB1974 Wes Hicks, DT1975 Bob Hall, DT1976 Jeff Brown, C1980 Jeff Kaplan, OT1981 Bill Zittel, FB1982 Kevin McCarthy, DE1983 Art Keith, DE1984 Tom Cifrino, OT

1985 Steve Pozzobon, DE1986 Mark Collins, OT

Jim Frontero, DB1987 Dave Quarles, PK1988 Costa Harbilas, DT1989 Brian Files, DE1990 Blu Whipple, DE1991 Greg Knopp, FS1992 Troy Thompson, OC1993 Geoff Cochrane, P

Pete Fitzpatrick, TB1994 Bryan Draga, LB1995 Brian Gormley, OG1996 Seth Payne, DE1997 Brad Kiesendahl, RB1998 Tom Richards, DT1999 Chris Morosetti, C

Bryan Sacco, DE2000 Tim Hermann, WR

George Paraskevopoulos, DL2001 Vic Yanz, WR

Kevin Rooney, DL2002 Kevin Boothe, OL

David Blanks, CB

Mansour Jewelers Award

Presented by the Class of1925, the recipient of thisaward shall be, like halfbackPatterson in 1923 and 1924,the player who has shown themost improvement in theface of physical or other

handicaps

Formerly Cornell Club of Ithaca Award;given to the player who has shownthe most improvement on offense

and on defense

To the offensive anddefensive players making

the “big play”

Cornell Football Awards

1988 Brent Felitto, DS1989 Frank Monago, WR1990 Gerry Willinger, SS1991 Mark Broderick, LB1992 Pete Case, FB

Scott Reade, OG1993 Ryan Blattenberger, SS1994 Garrett Gardi, SS1995 Nick Bombach, FS1996 Chad Hunter, FB1997 Chris Harrison, DT1998 J.B. Moresco, WR1999 Kevin Farese, WR2000 Nathan Archer, RB2001 Jason Stadnik, OL2002 Ryan Lempa, DL

History and Records

Kevin Boothe

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1963 Mike Strick, HB1964 Clarence Jentes, G1965 Phil Ratner, DT1966 Joe Homicz, DG1967 Rich Musmanno, OG1968 Jim Heeps, HB1969 Keith Cummins, DB1970 Dick Storto, FB1971 Don Jean, DB1972 Keith Daub, OE1973 Mike Phillips, DG1974 Rick Johnson, DE1975 Don Wierbinski, OE1976 Jim Lorditch, DT1977 Terry Lee, LB1978 Virgil Cotton, DB

1990 Paul Tully, FSJay Bloedorn, OT

1991 Mike Grant, WRRamon Watkins, CB

1992 Steve Haggerty, FSMike Jamin, WR

1993 Bill Lazor, QBChris Zingo, LB

1994 Jeff Gilkinson, OTDick Emmet, DE

1995 Steve Joyce, QB1996 Steve Busch, WR

John Rodin, PK1997 Rich Sheerin, DT

Tom Bickett, C

1979 Tom Donnelly, OG1980 Tom Rohlfing, C1981 Alva Taylor, SB1982 Paul Michalewicz, C1983 Mike Scully, LB1984 Frank Farace, DB

Steve Garrison, TE1985 Lyndon Gross, DS

Mike Wagner, C1986 Ken Johnson, OG1987 Chris Hahn, WR

Mike Raich, DB1988 Sam Brickley, WR

Mike McGrann, LB1989 Mitch Lee, MLB

Todd Nicholson, FB

1973 Glen Dempsey, OE1974 Bruce Starks, OE1975 Don Papich, LB1976 Terry Lee, LB1977 Virgil Cotton, DB1978 Jim DeStefano, LB1979 Tom Rohlfing, C1980 Dave Kimichik, DB1981 Derrick Harmon, TB1982 Mike Scully, LB1983 Frank Farace, DB1984 John Tagliaferri, FB

1985 Mike Raich, DB1986 Chris Hahn, WR1987 Mike McGrann, LB

Scott Malaga, FB1988 Mitch Lee, LB1989 John McNiff, FB1990 Mark Broderick, LB

Scott Oliaro, TB1991 Bill Lazor, QB

Chris Zingo, LB1992 Bill Lazor, QB

Chris Zingo, LB

1993 Terry Golden, FS1994 Chad Levitt, TB1995 Chad Levitt, TB1996 John Hanson, LB

Eric Krawczyk, WR1997 Mike Hood, QB1998 Justin Bush, HB1999 Dan Weyandt, LB2000 Vincent Bates, DB2001 Keith Ferguson, WR2002 Joel Sussman, LB

Cornell Football Coaches Award

Charles Colucci Award

1992 Pete Case, FBJohn Massy, TEGeorge Wood, OT

1993 Aaron Berryman, WRNed Burke, FBRich George, OC

1994 Erik Bjerke, WRDoug Ingham, FBMike McKean, OG

1995 Greg Bloedorn, OCDoug Ingham, FBJimmy Seifert, TE

1996 Eric Krawczyk, WRChad Levitt, TBBrian Weidel, OT

1997 Eric Krawczyk, WRMatthew DiPaola, OTMark Dittman, TE

1998 Joe Splendorio, WR1999 Ricky Rahne, QB2000 Joe Splendorio, WR2001 Evan Simmons, RB2002 Trevor MacMeekin, PK

Offensive Red Helmet Award

1993 Bob Garvey, DETerry Golden, FSChris Zingo, LB

1994 Garrett Gardi, SSJohn Vitullo, LBDavid Woods, DT

1995 John Vitullo, LBNick Bombach, FSSteve Bus, DE

1996 Justin Bird, RJohn Hanson, LBSeth Payne, DE

1997 Chris Allen, FSJorge Alvarez, LB

1998 Tom Nunes, SS1999 David Pitman, LB2000 Dan Weyandt, LB2001 George Paraskevopoulos, DT2002 Pete Combe, DL

Defensive Red Helmet Award

Most valuable player forseason

Recipient shall be anon-senior who contributed

most to the success ofthe team. Colucci, whodied in 1973, was anavid Cornell fan

To the outstanding varsityplayer on offense

To the outstanding varsityplayer on defense

Cornell Football AwardsHistory and Records

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1977 Craig Jaeger, TB1978 Dave Kintigh, LB1979 Mark Selsmeyer, OG1980 Mike Johnson, DE1981 Paul Mullenhoff, DT1982 Dave Menapace, FB1983 Rick Dailey, DS

Mike Scully, LB1984 Tony Baker, TB

Scott Sidman, DSMark Miller, FB

1985 Shawn Maguire, QBJohn Tagliaferri, HBDave Van Metre, DT

1986 Ken Johnson, OGJim Knowles, DESteve Lipic, OG

1987 Dan Miller, LB1988 Len Tokish, LB1989 Rob Buccini, HB

Mark Rooks, HB

Jim Monken, FB1990 Rob Ryder, DE1991 John Massy, TE1992 Scott Oliaro, TB

John Massy, TESteve Haggerty, FS

1993 Ryan Blattenberger, SSDoug Knopp, CBMike McKean, OT

1994 Dick Emmet, DEPer Larson, QB

1995 Nick Bombach, FSTerry Smith, TB

1996 John Hanson, LBRich Sheerin, DT

1997 Rich Sherrin, DT1998 Mark Dittman, TE1999 Nate Fischer, LB2000 Tim Hermann, WR2001 Matt Holleran, C2002 Mike Baumgartel, P

Doc Kavanagh Training Room Athlete of the Year Award

Bernie Olin Award1985 Marty Stallone, QB1986 Stuart Mitchell, TE1987 Donnell Johnson, DB1988 Aaron Sumida, QB1989 Eugene Dallas, WS1990 Pat Fagan, CB1991 Pete Reynolds, WR1992 Ethan Levitas, CB

Mike Cochrane, PK1993 Tim Simpson, DT1994 Jon Kuhman, TE

Kevin Maney, LB

1995 Dave Rickell, DE1996 Mahingus Silver, DT1997 Scott Carroll, QB

Justin Bird, SS1998 Mark Donley, DT1999 John Algeo, WS2000 Charles Mitchell, OL2001 Tom Kaplun, OL

Cory Ziskind, OLB2002 Dominic Garguile, OL

1981 Steve Ross, OT1982 Steve Duca, DT1983 Gene Edwards, C1984 John Passalacqua, DT1985 Rick George, OT1986 Tom McHale, DE1987 Gary Rinkus, DT1988 Howie Capek, C

Doug Langan, OGMark Burden, OGMike Haseltine, OGJohn Sieger, OTMarc Warrington, TE

1989 Rob Ryder, DEGreg Finnegan, C

1990 Tim Cronin, DTChris Field, OG

1991 Kevin Marcus, DTJason Jenkins, OG

1992 George Wood, OTJeff Woodring, DE

1993 Bob Garvey, DERich George, OC

1994 Greg Bloedorn, OCDavid Woods, DT

1995 Greg Bloedorn, OCSeth Payne, DT

1996 Seth Payne, DEBrian Weidel, OT

1997 Christian DiPaola, OTJohn Hanson, LB

1998 Tom Crone, DE1999 Jay Bolton, DT2000 Jay Bolton, DT2001 George Paraskevopoulos, DT2002 John Megaro, OL

Sid Roth Award

1995 Dave Ahouse, LB1996 Chris Allen, FS1997 John Hanson, LB

David Pitman, LB1998 Frank Giglio, SS

Jeff Stenstrom Special Teams Player Award1999 Mike Parris, TE2000 Tony Vitullo, LB2001 Joel Sussman, DB2002 Vince Bates, CB

Formerly Trainers Tough Guy Award;given to the varsity player whogives his all throughout the

season, distinguishing injury from pain

To the down lineman who, throughhis attitude and play, has contributedthe most to the success of the team

For the non-kicker who contributesthe most to the performance of

special teams

To the player who, although anunderdog, showed determinationand grit and in the end persevered

Cornell Football AwardsHistory and Records

John Megaro

Mike Baumgartel

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Harvey Sampson Award1998 Charles Watson, P1999 John McCombs, PK2000 Tom Crone, DL

1988 Dave Dase, QB1989 Mike Strigel, OLB1990 Doug Gamble, CB1991 Greg Finnegan, OC1992 Matt Speicher, TB

Jeff Taylor, LB

Mike Texido Award1994 Ned Burke, FB

Terry Golden, FS1997 Jeff Eland, DE1998 Jorge Alvarez, LB1999 Mike Buray, FB

1986 Tom Kobin, QB1987 David Marshall, OL1988 Jeff Diehl, OLB1989 Charlie Beard, DB1990 Kevin Koehler, RB1991 Per Larson, QB1992 David Rickell, TE-DE1993 Steve Bus, DE1994 Mahingus Silver, DT

Daniel N. Bondareff Freshman Scholar-Athlete Award1995 Pat O’Shaughnessy, LB1996 Kip Melstrom, DT1997 Tom Richards, DT1998 Matt Crowe, LB1999 Derek Kingrey, LB

Ryan Burhorn, TE2000 Eric Jones, DB2001 Luke Hanset, FB2002 Cameron Marchant, LB

Paul N. Hunt Citizenship Award1987 Mike Farley, LB1988 Len Tokish, LB1989 Steve Hettrich, TE1990 Phil Mahoney, CB1991 Dan Branon, TE1992 Andy Hite, QB1993 Bill Lazor, QB1994 Gerry Lajoie, OG

1995 Ron Mateo, WR1996 Ian Wilson, WR1997 Eric Krawczyk, WR1998 Mike Hood, QB1999 Justin Bush, RB2000 Jesse Rodriguez, DL2001 Rich Zacek, DL2002 Jarad Madea, LB

Enzo Montemurro Award1981 Frank Farace, DS1982 Pete Griffin, SE1983 Jim Frontero, CB1984 Brent Felitto, DB1985 Brandon Roth, DB1986 Evan Parke, DB1987 Pat Leahy, C1988 Jason Shaffer, OT-DE1989 Anthony Tabasso, OL1990 Pat Paquette, OL1991 Bryan Draga, LB

1992 Jeff Cortez, LB1993 Brian Weidel, TE1994 Rich Sheerin, DT1995 Justin Byrd, LB1996 David Caputo, CB1997 Dru Vaughn, DL1998 Mike Hood, QB1999 David Pitman, LB2000 Justin Dunleavy, RB2001 Justin Dunleavy, RB2002 Jesse Rodriguez, DL

To the senior who has unselfishlycontributed his time and energy to help

others beyond the playing field

Given in honor of the late EnzoMontemurro for spirit and leadership

Given to the freshman player foracademic and football proficiency

To the senior player of greatpromise whose career was

unfortunately ended due to injury

To the player with the most consistencythroughout his career

Most Valuable Back Award1998 Deon Harris, HB1999 Justin Dunleavy, FB2000 Evan Simmons, RB

2001 Nate Spitler, LB2002 Mick Razzano, QB

2001 Tim Hermann, WR2002 Nate Spitler, LB

Dick Schaap Award

Cornell Football Awards

2001 Brad Kitlowski, OLBMichael Baumgartel, P

2002 John Nelson, LBTo the freshman who contributed the

most to the varsity

History and Records

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Cornellians in Pro Football

Seth Payne

Ed Marinaro

Draftees (Cl., Pos.) Year Team Round PickHoward Blose ‘44 (HB) 1944 Brooklyn 30 309Hillary Chollet ’50 (HB) 1949 Los Angeles Rams 18 177Chick Davidson ’45 (B) 1945 Washington 22 226Chick Davidson ’45 (B) 1946 Green Bay 25 236Bob Dean ’49 (B/P/PK) 1949 Philadelphia 8 81Bill DeGraaf ’56 (QB) 1956 Pittsburgh 28 327Al Dekdebrun ’47 (QB) 1946 Boston 9 72Nick Drahos ’41 (T) 1941 Cleveland 11 94Vince Eichler ’41 (B) 1940 Green Bay 21 194Jeff Fleischmann ’51 (FB) 1951 Chicago Cardinals 26 307John Gerdes ’54 (T) 1954 Philadelphia 28 333Pete Gogolak ’64 (PK) 1964 Buffalo (AFL) 12 92Derrick Harmon ’84 (RB) 1984 San Francisco 9 248Kirk Hershey ’41 (E) 1941 Cleveland 17 154Stan Intihar ’57 (E) 1956 Green Bay 18 212Walt Kretz ’48 (B) 1945 Boston 22 223Bob Lally ’74 (LB) 1974 Miami 9 234Mort Landsberg ’41 (FB) 1941 Pittsburgh 22 204Pete Larson ’67 (HB) 1967 Washington 9 222Chad Levitt ’97 (RB) 1997 Oakland 4 123Ed Marinaro ’72 (RB) 1972 Minnesota 2 50Andy Martin ’92 (WR) 1992 Winnipeg (CFL) 4Walt Matuszczak ’41 (B) 1941 New York Giants 10 87Bill McKeever ’39 (T) 1939 Philadelphia 10 84Len Oniskey ’55 (T) 1955 Washington 13 48Seth Payne ’97 (DT) 1997 Jacksonville 4 114Mike Phillips ’74 (MG/LB) 1974 Cincinnati 14 360Sid Roth ’39 (G) 1939 Cleveland 11 93John Sponheimer ’69 (DT) 1969 Kansas City 10 257Gary Wood ’64 (QB) 1964 New York Giants 8 109Frank Wydo ’50 (T) 1947 Pittsburgh 5 29

Players (Cl., Pos.) Team, Year(s)Greg Bloedorn ’96 (C) Seattle, 1996-01Chris Cochrane ’91 Ohio (CFL), 1992; Frankfurt (NFL-Europe), 1992Al Dekdebrun ’47 (B) Boston, 1948; Toronto (CFL), 1949-54Jim DeStefano ’81 (LB) Cincinnati, 1981Joe DiStasio ’48 (B) New York Giants, 1948Nick Drahos ’41 (T) New York Americans (New AFL), 1941Hal Ebersole ’23 (G) Cleveland, 1923Furlong Flynn ’24 (G) Hartford, 1926Fred Gillies ’18 (T) Chicago, 1920-26, ‘28Pete Gogolak ’64 (PK) Buffalo, 1964-65; New York Giants, 1966-75Derrick Harmon ’84 (RB) San Francisco, 1984-86Kirk Hershey ’41 (E) Cleveland, 1941Reno Jones ’22 (G) Toledo, 1922Eddie Kaw ’23 (HB) Buffalo, 1924Bob Lally ’74 (LB) Green Bay, 1976Mort Landsberg ’41 (FB) Philadelphia, 1941Pete Larson ’67 (RB) Washington, 1967-69Chad Levitt ’97 (RB) Oakland, 1997Ed Marinaro ’72 (RB) Minnesota, 1972-75; New York Jets, 1976Andy Martin ’92 (WR) Winnipeg (CFL), 1992-99Hal McCullough ’41 (B) Brooklyn, 1942Tom McHale ’87 (DE) Tampa Bay, 1987-92; Philadelphia, 1993-94; Miami, 1995Ignacio Molinet ’27 (B) Frankford, 1927Bob Morris ’25 (G) Brooklyn, 1926Bill Murphy ’68 (E) Boston, 1968Bob Nash ’15 (T) Akron, 1920; Buffalo, 1921-23; Rochester, 1924; New York Giants, 1925John O’Hearn ’15 (E) Cleveland, 1920; Buffalo, 1921Len Oniskey ’55 (T) Washington and New York Giants, 1955Seth Payne ’97 (DE) Jacksonville, 1997-2001; Houston Texans, 2002-Irvin (Bo) Roberson ’58 (B) San Diego, 1961; Oakland, 1962-65; Buffalo 1965; Miami, 1966Ralph Scholz ’84 (DL) Hamilton (CFL), 1984-90Harry Shaub ’34 (G) Philadelphia, 1935-38Murray Shelton ’16 (E) Buffalo, 1920Ken Stofer ’46 (B) Buffalo, 1946John Tagliaferri ’86 (HB) Miami, 1987Ken Talton ’79 (FB) New England, 1979; Kansas City, 1980-81; Birmingham (USFL), 1983-84Jim Wilson ’21 (E) Buffalo, 1922Gary Wood ’64 (QB) New York Giants, 1964-66, 1968-69; New Orleans, 1967; Ottawa (CFL), 1970Frank Wydo ’49 (T) Pittsburgh, 1947-51; Philadelphia, 1952-57Chris Zingo ’94 (LB) Shreveport (CFL), 1995

Behind the Scenes . . .Mike Huyghue ’84 (SE)Attorney, NFL ManagementCouncil, 1987-90; GeneralManager, Birmingham Fire,1990-91, Vice President ofAdministration and GeneralCounsel, World League, 1991-93; Vice President of Adminis-tration and General Counsel,Detroit Lions, 1993-95; GeneralManager and Vice President ofFootball Operations, Jackson-ville Jaguars, 1995-2002;Owner, Axcess Entertainment(manager for pro athletes),2002-present

Greg Finnegan ‘91Asst. Strength & ConditioningCoach with Jacksonville Jaguars

History and Records

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In his three seasons as Cornell’s tailback (1969-70-71), Ed Marinaro setrushing and scoring records wholesale and won every major honor withthe exception of the Heisman Trophy for which he placed a close second

to quarterback Pat Sullivan of Auburn University.In the 24th game of his 27-game career, against Columbia at Ithaca, he

broke Steve Owens’ all-time career rushing record of 3,867 yards, set in 1969,by gaining 272 yards for a total of 4,132—the first player to go over the 4,000mark in three seasons. He finished up with 4,715.During his three years at Cornell, he set an NCAA season record of 1,881

yards and a season per-game average of 209.0. His career average of 174.6 isalso an NCAA record.Overall he established eight NCAA career records and tied another, six NCAA

single-season records and three other NCAA records.Ed won the national triple-crown in 1971—rushing, all-purpose running and

scoring, each based on game-average. All-purpose running includes passreceiving and kick returning. He averaged 214.7 yards with 51 on passreceptions.He holds 12 Ivy League records, including career and season rushing yardage

(3,391 and 1,375), carries (707 and 275), touchdowns (36 and 16) and pointsscored (224 and 100). He was inducted into the National FootballFoundation’s College Football Hall of Fame in 1991.

Ed Marinaro • An Era to Remember

Glenn Scobey (Pop) Warner was a colorful individual during hisplaying days at Cornell and then during an illustrious,uninterrupted 45-year coaching career.

Warner was born in Springville, N.Y., on April 5, 1871, only two daysafter the first college football game between Princeton and Rutgers.Not only was he one of Cornell’s outstanding football players, but healso excelled in track and field, and was its heavyweight boxingchampion in 1893.Upon graduation from Cornell Law School in 1895, Warner began

his coaching career at Georgia. He returned to his alma mater for the1897-98 seasons, then went to Carlisle from 1899-1903. “Pop” cameback to Ithaca for a second stint coaching the Big Red from 1904-06,before heading back to Carlisle, where he coached legendary JimThorpe.After leaving Carlisle in 1914, Warner later coached at Pittsburgh (1915-23), Stanford (1924-32) and Temple (1933-38). At the

age of 67, he returned to his permanent residence of Palo Alto, Calif., and served as an advisory coach at San Jose State from 1939-40.After coaching 44 All-Americans and introducing so many of the football practices that we still use today, Warner returned to his

oil and water paints, and to his work bench. His imaginative mind produced the screen pass, the rolling block, the naked reverse,series plays and the unbalanced line. He also introduced the numbering of players, huddle, wearing of headgear, spiral punt and theblocking dummy. Warner was the only coach ever to actually invent a system of offense. “Pop” died on Sept. 7, 1954, at age 83.Thirty-nine years after his death, Warner passed the late Amos Alonzo Stagg and became the second winningest coach in major

college football. In 1993, Warner was credited by the NCAA with six more victories, increasing his total to 319, with Stagg having314. His overall 44-year coaching record was 319-106-29. On July 25, 1997, the U.S. Postal Service issued four stampscommemorating Warner, Vince Lombardi of the Green Bay Packers, George Halas of the Chicago Bears and Paul “Bear” Bryant ofthe University of Alabama.

Glenn Scobey (Pop) Warner • Gridiron’s Greatest Strategist

Cornell Football LegendsHistory and Records

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From walk-on to three-time All-Ivy selection, defensive end Seth Payne ’96remains the school’s career leader in sacks with 19 and has gone on tomake a name for himself with the NFL’s Houston Texans.

As a member of the Big Red, Payne was named first-team All-Ivy as a seniorafter leading the team with a career-best nine sacks and ranking among the topfive on the team in tackles with 85. During his career he earned the defense’s“Big Play Award”, Most Improved Player, the Sid Roth Award twice (designatedfor the team’s most valuable down lineman), and the Red Helmet Award for theoutstanding varsity player on defense. The four-year letter winner capped offhis career by being selected by the Jacksonville Jaguars in the fourth round ofthe 1997 NFL Draft.

After five productive seasons with the Jaguars, including 51 starts, Paynewas selected by the Texans in the league’s expansion draft and made animmediate impact. He started all 16 games in 2002-03, leading the Texansdefensive line with 147 tackles to rank third on the team. His only sack of theseason was a safety late in the fourth quarter that led Houston its first win infranchise history, a triumph over the storied Dallas Cowboys. He was voted byteammates as the recipient of NFL Player’s Association 2002 Unsung HeroAward, and was selected to USA Today’s 11th annual “All-Joe Team” as one ofthe most underrated players in the NFL who makes a difference with their workethic and demeanor.

The 6-4, 303-pounder has made a home for himself in Houston, where he iswell known for his work with many charitable organizations, including TeachFor America and both the Children’s and Shriner’s Hospitals.

A general studies major from Victor, N.Y., Payne was a graduate of Victor Central High School.

Seth Payne • From the Big Red to Success in the NFL

Tailback Derrick Harmon excelled on both the playing field and in theclassroom. He was a two-time Academic All-American and made theAssociated Press Division I-AA All-America second team as a senior.

In his final season, Derrick won the Asa Bushnell Award as the Ivy League’sPlayer of the Year, after being named the league’s Sophomore of the Year in 1981.He became only the fourth person in the history of the league to go over 1,000yards in one season when he ran for 1,056 markers in seven Ivy games in 1983.A two-time All-Ivy first-team selection, Harmon rushed for 3,074 yards on 546

carries in three years and ranks third on Cornell’s all-time rushing list and in careerrushes. He set the school’s single season record for yards per carry (5.9 in 1983)and the career record for yards per carry (5.6, 1981-83). During his three years, hehad 14 games of over 100 yards rushing. He also ranks third in career all-purposerunning with 3,800 yards.An engineering physics major from New York City, Harmon was the recipient of

an NCAA postgraduate scholarship. He was drafted in the ninth round by the SanFrancisco 49ers of the NFL and played in the 1985 Super Bowl against the MiamiDolphins.

Derrick Harmon • From the Ivies to the Super Bowl

History and Records

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AAbel, William G. – 1964, 65, 66Accorsi, Frank J. – 1943, 44Ackerknect, Clarence F. – 1917Affeld, Frank O. – 1923, 24, 25Ahouse, David J. – 1994, 95, 96, 97Ainslie, Robert H. – 1977, 78Aird, Alexander N. – 1925Akins, Thomas A. – 1955, 57Albanese, Damiano S. – 1984, 85Albright, Thomas E. – 1970, 71Alexander, Edward R. – 1898, 99, 1900Alexander, Robert E. – 1927, 29Alexy, R. J. – 1961Algeo, John P. – 1998, 99, 2000Alleavitch, Doug – 1981Allen, Amos G., Jr. – 1929, 31Allen, Christopher M. – 1994, 95, 96, 97Allen, John H., Jr. – 1914Allen, Mark R. – 1971, 72, 73Alvarez, Jorge – 1996, 97, 98Anderluh, John R. – 1955Anderson, Donald E. – 1932Anderson, Edward E. – 1914, 15, 16Anderson, Edward L. – 1925Anderson, John F. – 1926, 27, 28Anderson, Robert H. – 1941, 42Andrus, Walton R. – 1942Annunziata, Mark L. – 1982, 83Anzalone, Anthony – 1975, 76, 77Apfel, Richard C. – 1973, 75Appling, William E. – 1991, 92Aragona, Alfred A. – 1961, 62Arangio, George A. – 1962, 63, 64Archer, David – 2002Archer, Nathan – 2000, 01, 02Arin, Larry – 1985Armbruster, George W. – 1942Arthur, William M. – 1967, 68, 69Artymovich, Charles D. – 1982Aug, Thomas R. – 1985, 86Avery, Patrick M. – 1977

BBabcock, Langdon – 1905, 06Babula, Bernard S. – 1947, 48, 49Baccile, Peter E. – 1982, 83Bacon, George W. – 1890, 91Bacon, Kevin K. – 1986Bailey, Andre P. – 1995Bailey, Clarence W. – 1914, 15Bainbridge, David F. – 1991Baker, Anthony J. – 1982, 83, 84Baker, Donald W. – 1921Baker, Douglas V. – 1984, 85Baker, George R. – 1891Baker, Malvern W. – 1937, 38, 39Baker, Richard A. – 1936Baker, Robert E. – 1962, 63, 64Bakowski, Christopher L. – 1979, 80, 81Bakowski, Keith E. – 1982, 83, 84Balch, Allan C. – 1887Balderston, Eugene P., Jr. – 1926, 27Baldwin, Arthur J. – 1889, 90Ballas, Frank W. – 1977Balough, Andrew – 2000, 01Bancoff, Carl – 1957, 58, 59Banik, Steven J. – 1970Barbato, Dennis J. – 1973Barber, Thomas K. – 1996, 97, 98Bard, George P. – 1916Barnhisel, Arthur H. – 1893Barone, Michael J. – 1987, 88Barr, Charles J. – 1890, 91, 92, 93Barr, Daniel C. – 1983Barr, Dean S. – 1981, 82Barrett, Charles C. – 1913, 14, 15Bassell, Jeffrey J. – 1982, 83, 84Bassford, Abram , Jr. – 1896Bates, Edward S. – 1910Bates, Vincent – 1999, 2000, 01, 02Battaglia, Timothy J. – 1966, 67, 68Batten, John M. – 1934, 35, 36Baudendistel, Michael J. – 1990Baughan, C. Mark – 1985, 86, 87Baumann, Andy – 2002Baumgartel, Michael – 2001, 02Bayer, Edward I. – 1908

Beacham, Joseph W., Jr. – 1893, 94, 95, 96Beadle, Zach – 2002Beall, William C. – 1931Beard, Charles S. – 1992Beck, Sidney D. – 1926, 27, 28Bednar, Andrew F. – 1988, 89Bedrossian, Guy H. – 1952, 53, 54Beebee, Alexander M. – 1943, 44Beeby, John E. – 1959, 60Beekman, Michael D. – 1981, 83Beggs, Lyman M. – 1959, 60Bell, Floyd W. – 1908Bell, Richard N. – 1944, 45Benedict, Herschel A. – 1888, 89Benedict, Horace G. – 1916Benjamin, Brien R. – 1995Bennett, Edwin H., Jr. – 1887Bennett, Frank E. – 1967, 69Bennett, Kevin L. – 1992, 93, 94Bennett, Wendell H. – 1912Benson, Cyrus , Jr. – 1954, 55, 56Berean, John H. – 1923Berkes, Marschall – 2002Berlacher, Robert A. – 1973Bernardo, Thomas P. – 1984, 85, 86Bernstein, Erik M. – 1984, 85, 86Berryman, Aaron R. – 1992, 93, 94Beyer, Richard H. – 1930, 31, 32Bickett, Thomas C. – 1995, 96, 97Bidwell, Daniel L. – 1958, 59Bievenour, Michael J. – 1979Bird, Edward J. – 1904Bird, Justin E. – 1995, 96, 97Bird, Michael K. – 1996Bishop, James D. – 1979Bjerke, Erik M. – 1993, 94Black, Thomas H. – 1967Blackburn, Thomas A. – 1943Blake, Robert E. – 1955, 56Blanks, David – 2001, 02Blanks, Marcus – 2002Blasko, Paul J. – 1939, 40Blattenberger, Ryan A. – 1991, 92, 93Bloedorn, Gregory S. – 1992, 94, 95Bloedorn, John D. – 1989, 90Blose, Howard W. – 1943Boddie, Thurman M. – 1949Boehlert, Carl J. – 1989, 90Bogar, George W., III – 1958Boguski, Paul K. – 1955, 56Bohenick, John – 1980, 81Bohn, F. V. – 1889Boland, Arthur L. – 1954, 55, 56Bolger, Matthew J., Jr. – 1946, 47Bolton, Michael J. (Jay) – 1998, 99, 2000Bombach, Nicolas A. – 1993, 94, 95Boochever, Robert – 1937Bool, Herbert J. – 1951, 52, 53Boothe, Kevin – 2002Borden, William A. – 1982, 83, 84Borger, William H. – 1933, 34, 35Borges, Victor M. – 1994Borhman, John W., Jr. – 1939, 40Borland, Thomas C. – 1932, 33, 34Borroff, Robert C. – 1984, 85Boruch, John N. – 1961, 62, 63Bottini, Thomas J. – 1978, 79, 80Boyle, James R., Jr. – 1997Bozich, Bruce M. – 1971, 72, 73Bozich, John M. – 1970, 71, 72Bracken, Matthew C. – 1990Bradley, Frank L., Jr. – 1946, 47, 48, 49Bradshaw, Horace L. – 1972, 73, 74Bragg, Everett C. – 1934, 35Branon, Daniel M. – 1989, 90, 91Braun, John D. – 1954Brayman, George I. – 1921Brayton, Charles L. – 1920, 21Brenner, Bruce V. – 1953Brereton, Thomas G. – 1968, 69, 70Brewster, Alfred A., Jr. – 1900, 01, 02, 03Brezinsky, Allen E. – 1954Brickley, Samuel D., II – 1986, 87, 88Brinton, Charles C. – 1906, 07Bristol, Earl G. – 1927, 28Brock, Jerome – 1932, 33Broderick, Mark J. – 1989, 90, 91Brogan, Thomas M. – 1957

Brooke, John A. – 1956Brooks, Michael A. – 1984Brown, Ernest H. – 1888, 89Brown, Jeffrey – 1974, 75, 76Brown, John S. – 1933Brown, Kenneth G. – 1937, 38, 39Brown, Michael J. – 1987, 88, 89Brown, R. S. – 1960Brown, Sam – 1977, 78, 79Brown, Wiser – 1916Brozina, Joseph – 1944, 45Bruska, Walter G. – 1948, 49Bryant, Arthur P. – 1899Buccini, Robert E. – 1987, 88, 89Buck, Brian L. – 1979, 80Buckley, Elias F. – 1922, 23Buell, Burton C. – 1934Bufalino, Louis C. – 1939, 40, 41Bugni, Joseph A. – 1997, 98, 99Bullis, Gary W. – 1981, 82Buray, Michael A. – 1998, 99Burden, Mark M. – 1987, 88Burke, Alexander – 1939Burke, Edmund M. – 1992, 93, 94Burnap, Edward G. – 1960, 61, 62Burnap, John K. – 1970Burns, Edward , Jr. – 1902Burns, Garland – 1975, 76, 77Burns, John D. – 1946Bus, Randall W. – 1967, 68Bus, Stephen G. – 1993, 94, 95Busch, Stephen T. – 1994, 95, 96Busch, William H. – 1946, 47Bush, Harold M. – 1889, 90Bush, Justin J. – 1997, 98, 99Butler, Edmund W. – 1910, 11, 12Butterfield, Victor L. – 1925, 26Byrne, James G. – 1998

CCahill, Michael – 1981, 82, 83Calcagni, Ralph C. – 1943Caldwell, Robert K. – 1907, 08Caldwell, William A. – 1896, 98, 99Calhoun, Richard J. – 1986, 87Calvo, Rocco J. – 1950, 51Canfield, A. H. – 1895Capek, Howard G. – 1987, 88Capra, Edward A. – 1959, 60Caputi, Stephen – 1976Caputo, David A. – 1997, 98, 99Carey, Emerson , Jr. – 1924, 25, 26Carey, William D.P. – 1920Carl, David A. – 1956, 57Carlson, David R. – 1969Carolan, Edgar A. – 1889, 90Carpenter, Albert G. – 1925Carpenter, Selleck J. – 1949Carr, Bryan – 1991Carrington, James H. – 1943Carroll, Scott C. – 1996, 97Carry, Charles W. – 1917, 19Carry, Joseph C. – 1916Carter, James – 1943Case, Peter A. – 1989, 90, 92Casey, David A. – 1990Casey, James B. – 1948Cassel, Harry E. – 1947, 48, 49Cassidy, Charles E. – 1921, 22, 23Cerand, Gerard A. – 1958Cervasio, Joseph R. – 1967, 68Chalk, David E. – 1978, 79, 80Chamberlin, Richard A. – 1949Champaign, Donald K. – 1910, 11, 12Champaign, Leigh M. – 1903Champion, Phillips K. – 1928Chapman, George M. – 1904Chenevey, Mark F. – 1978, 79, 80Chipouras, Strati – 1949Chollet, Hillary A. – 1945, 46, 48, 49Christensen, Norman L. – 1940, 41Church-Smith, Henry A. – 1967Cifrino, Thomas R. – 1983, 84Claggett, Samuel O. – 1929, 30Claggett, Strabo V., Jr. – 1942Clark, Richard G. – 1947, 48, 49Clark, Richard W. – 1962Clasby, Richard J., Jr. – 1978, 79, 80

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Cliggott, Richard T. – 1950, 51, 52Clymer, Paul K. – 1949, 50Cobb, Edmund A. – 1928Cobb, Michael A. – 1978, 79Cochran, Philip C. – 1969, 70Cochrane, Christopher P. – 1989, 90Cochrane, Geoff M. – 1992, 93Cochrane, Michael – 1991, 92Coffin, Albert R. – 1900, 01, 02, 03Cohen, Irving – 1927Cohn, Jerome H. – 1939, 40Cokins, Gary M. – 1968, 69Colaruotolo, Charles F., Jr. – 1986Colbeck, William R. – 1962, 63Collins, Carlton P. – 1914, 15Collins, Daniel – 2001, 02Collins, James L. – 1911Collins, Mark C. – 1985, 86Collins, Scott E. – 1996Collyer, William C. – 1913, 14Colnon, Aaron J. – 1889, 90, 91, 94Coltrin, D. G., Jr. – 1983, 84Colvin, William H., Jr. – 1917, 19Combe, Peter – 1999, 2000, 01, 02Condon, Timothy – 2002Condon, William – 1934Constantino, John N. – 1981, 83Conti, Frank W. – 1952Conti, Louis J. – 1939, 40Cook, George T. – 1905, 06, 07Cool, Frank W. – 1895Cool, Willard C. – 1913, 14, 15Cooper, H. R. – 1900Coren, Bruce R. – 1977Corrigan, John J. – 1971, 72, 73Cortez, Jeffrey B. – 1993, 94, 95Cosgrove, James J. – 1907, 08Costa, Samuel R. – 1971, 72, 73Costello, James H. – 1902, 03, 04, 05Costlow, Donald L. – 1984Cotter, James V. – 1945Cotton, William Virgil – 1976, 77, 78Courtright, David S. – 1925Coutts, Steven E. – 1986Craig, John W. – 1919Craven, Kent A. – 1979Crawford, Cody B. – 1996Creahan, John W., Jr. – 1978, 79, 80Crocco, Walter C., Jr. – 1950Croker, Michael H. – 1992, 93Crone, Thomas E. – 1998, 99, 2000Cronin, George F. – 1946Cronin, Timothy C. – 1988, 89, 90Crosby, Edwin S. – 1908, 09Cross, Charles W. – 1898, 99, 1900Cross, George E. – 1917Crum, Blair R. – 1961Cullen, John N. – 1944Cummins, William Keith – 1967, 68, 69Curran, John J. – 1976, 77, 78Curtis, Greeley S., Jr. – 1892Cushing, Donald S. – 1943Cushing, John P., Jr. – 1969, 70, 71Cushing, Meredith R. – 1941, 42, 43Czub, Robert J. – 1957

DD’Agostino, Anthony – 1951, 52, 53D’Onofrio, Nicholas A. – 1942, 46, 1947Dailey, Brian – 2001Dailey, Richard R. – 1981, 82, 83Dale, Paul A. – 1978, 79, 80Daley, W. B. – 1893Dallas, Eugene A. – 1988, 89Dameron, Wilbur R. – 1944Dankert, John H. – 1991, 92Dann, Alexander W. – 1906Dase, David H. – 1987, 88Daub, Keith W. – 1970, 71, 72Daukas, Louis J. – 1941, 42, 46Davall, Harold J. – 1898, 99Davidson, Charles L. – 1921Davidson, Charles R. – 1944Davidson, John K. – 1944Davies, Horace F. – 1919Davies, William R. – 1967, 68Davis, Bruce D. – 1946, 47Davis, Douglas B. – 1987Davis, Henry E. – 1904Davis, Kenneth R., Jr. – 1942Davis, Lonnie D. – 1993, 94Davis, Theron D. – 1890Davis, Vincent J. – 1983Davitt, John W. – 1900, 02, 03

Dawson, Norman , Jr. – 1943, 46, 47Dean, Robert T. – 1946, 47, 48Decker, Brad E. – 1977, 78, 79DeCou, James M. – 1982DeGraaf, William – 1953, 54, 55Degulis, Simon T. – 1944, 45DeJesus, Paul A. – 1977, 78, 79Dekdebrun, Allen E. – 1943, 44, 45Del Signore, James R. – 1945DeLamielleure, Jeffrey D. – 1985, 86, 87Delaney, John L. – 1987, 88Delano, Curtis – 1910DeLaTorre, Anthony – 2000DeMaurice, G. – 1900Deming, P. H. – 1893Dempsey, Glen M. – 1972, 73Dempsey, John J. – 1896, 97Dentes, John M. – 1965, 66, 67DeSantis, Robert M. – 1983, 84DeStefano, James T. – 1978, 79, 80DeStefano, Ralph T. – 1953, 54Deuel, Michael M. – 1958Devine, Daniel K. – 1985Devine, Gregory E. – 1992Devlin, Frederick M. – 1964, 65, 66Devold, Harold – 1945Devoy, J. – 1888DeVries, Shon G. – 1989Dewey, George S. – 1904Deyhle, Patrick – 2001, 02Dickinson, William H. – 1968, 69, 70Diehl, George P. – 1893Diehl, Jeffrey T. – 1989, 90, 91Diehl, Thomas M. – 1966, 67Dietrich, Richard R. – 1928DiGiacomo, Carmine W. – 1960, 61DiGrande, Vincent – 1948, 49, 50Dilatush, Robert M. – 1952DiNunzio, Marc J. – 1980, 81DiPaola, Christian P. – 1996, 97DiPaola, Matthew J. – 1996, 97DiSalvo, Samuel A. – 1967, 68Dishaw, J. David – 1984, 85DiStasio, Joseph R. – 1944, 45, 46, 47DiTondo, Mark – 1981Dittman, Mark M. – 1996, 97, 98Docherty, James B. – 1963, 64, 65Dodge, Wilson S. – 1920, 21Doe, Whitney C. – 1941, 42Doherty, Patrick F. – 1996Dohr, Michael R. – 1977Dolan, Timothy J. – 1981, 82Dollar, William M. – 1887Donahoe, Timothy M. – 1983Donahue, Michael R. – 1977, 78Donley, Mark E. – 1997, 98Donnan, George S. – 1909Donnelly, Thomas R. – 1977, 78, 79Dorius, Noah E. – 1938Dorner, William F. – 1898, 1900Dorrance, John G. – 1949, 50, 51Dorset, Lynn P. – 1947, 48, 49Dow, James P. – 1990Dowdell, Scott J. – 1980, 81Downes, Charles L. – 1904, 05Dowtin, Dwayne G. – 1977, 79Draga, Bryan P. – 1993, 94Dragon, Henry S. – 1941Drahos, Nicholas – 1938, 39, 40Drogin, Alexander – 1944Drost, Henry C. – 1948, 49DuBois, Mark A. – 1973, 74, 75Duca, Steven A. – 1980, 81, 82Duff, Thomas O. – 1951Dugal, James J. – 1973Dugdale, Thomas W. – 1976Dunbar, Howard S. – 1939, 40Dunklin, Marvin L. – 1985, 87Dunleavy, Justin M. – 1998, 99, 2000, 01Dunlop, David R. – 1957, 58Dunn, Ernest C. – 1965, 66, 67Dunn, Thomas C. – 1887, 89Dunston, Robert E. – 1948Duren, Matthew L. – 1997, 98Durishin, Gabriel M. – 1964Dutchyshyn, Thomas P. – 1990, 91Dutton, Patrick T. – 1997Dwyer, Daniel F. – 1973, 74, 75Dwyer, Joseph C. – 1949Dyar, William O. – 1980, 81Dyer, George P. – 1893, 94

EEales, V. Richard – 1956, 57Earl, Kevin D. – 1973Earle, Edwin , Jr. – 1905, 06, 07Easterly, David G. – 1990Ebersole, Harold L. – 1920, 22Eckley, Paul W. – 1915, 16Eddy, Winslow – 1925Edwards, Eugene T. – 1981, 82, 83Egan, John A. – 1974Ehle, Louis C. – 1888, 89Ehman, Kenneth H. – 1952Eichler, Edmund V. – 1937, 38, 40Eisenbrandt, Frederick H. – 1917Ekstrom, George A. – 1959, 60Eland, Jeffrey A. – 1996, 97Elliott, Robert R. – 1997Ellis, Grant R. – 1943, 44Ellis, Robert C. – 1948, 49Ellis, William C. – 1969, 70, 71Emmet, Richard S. – 1992, 93, 94Engel, Robert G. – 1950, 51, 52Engle, John H. – 1962, 63, 64Eramo, Mark A. – 1982, 83, 84Ervick, Gary D. – 1968, 69, 70Evans, Samuel S., Jr. – 1924, 25, 26Eyrich, Harold R. – 1910, 11, 12

FFagan, Patrick E., Jr. – 1989, 90Fahey, James H. – 1993Faist, Charles J. – 1968Fanelli, Donald A. – 1973, 75Farace, Franklyn J. – 1982, 83, 84Farese, Kevin E. – 1998, 99, 2000Farley, Michael P. – 1986, 87Farrell, James R. – 1947Farrington, Thomas H. – 1909Fauntleroy, Clarence G. – 1951, 52Faville, Mark R. – 1897Feagles, Prentiss E. – 1970Feeney, David W. – 1957, 58, 59Feiler, Howard R. – 1984, 85Felitto, Brent W. – 1985, 86, 88Fennell, Thomas F. – 1894, 95, 96Fennell, Thomas F., II – 1925Fenton, John J. – 1959, 60Ferguson, Keith – 1999, 2000, 01, 02Ferraro, John J. – 1931, 32, 33Ferraro, Louis C. – 1963, 64Ferree, E. H. – 1888Fetzer, Morrison – 1903Field, Christopher W. – 1989, 90Files, Brian E. – 1988, 89Finley, Brent – 1979, 80Finley, Mark A. – 1988Finn, Christopher J. – 1987, 88, 89Finn, Thomas D., Jr. – 1919, 20Finnegan, Gregory S. – 1989, 90, 91Finneran, Frank K. – 1939, 40Finucane, Thomas R. – 1900Fischer, Nathan D. – 1997, 98, 99Fischler, Kenneth J. – 1951Fitch, Edward H., Jr. – 1895, 96Fitch, Warren P. – 1973, 74Fithen, Scott – 1999, 2000, 01Fitzpatrick, Peter G. – 1991, 92, 93Flack, John E. – 1888Fleischmann, Jeffrey R. – 1948, 49, 50Fleming, Charles A. – 1985Fleming, Francix X. – 1944, 45Fleming, J. E. – 1889Fleming, Michael – 1970, 71, 72Fleming, Robert B. – 1969, 71Flemming, Don D. – 1991Florey, Todd F. – 1979, 80Floy, Henry – 1890, 91Flynn, Furlong H. – 1922Flynn, James W. – 1970Fochesato, Paul A. – 1983Foley, Lawrence H., III – 1986, 87Foley, Michael J. – 1996Folger, T. W. – 1899Follett, Donald S. – 1951Forbes, William R. – 1954Foreman, L. Scott – 1977, 78, 79Forgy, John E. – 1903Forlano, Bartholomew – 1990Foster, Arthur N. – 1941Foster, J. William – 1978, 80Franklin, Paul A. – 1912Fraser, Andrew S. – 1988, 1989Fraser, Lawrence A. – 1960Fratt, Charles K. – 1950, 1952, 1953

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Fratt, Norbert Q. – 1925Frawley, James F. – 1991Frederick, Albert J. – 1933, 1934Freeborn, Angelo C. – 1893Freeborn, Faun W. – 1893, 1894, 1895Freeman, John P. – 1983French, Jeffrey H. – 1966Frick, Allen J. – 1913Fritz, William H., Jr. – 1911, 1912, 1913Frontero, David M. – 1992Frontero, James S. – 1984, 1985, 1986Frontero, John D. – 1981, 1983Fuller, John D. – 1992Fullerton, Stuart H. – 1964Furbush, Richard I., Jr. – 1968, 1969, 1970Furman, Fred J. – 1904, 1905Furman, Harry B. – 1942, 1943, 1946Fusco, Douglas D. – 1981Fusco, James E. – 1961, 1962

GGabel, John H., Jr. – 1983, 1984Gaige, Robert J. – 1948, 1949, 1950Galbreath, Louis H. – 1888, 1889, 1890, 1891Galeazzi, Thomas E. – 1996, 1997, 1998Gallogly, Edward J. – 1914, 1915Gamble, Douglas R. – 1990Gannon, George Craig – 1965, 1966Garcia, Stephen P. – 1973Gardi, Garrett M. – 1992, 1993, 1994Gardner, Fred E. – 1907, 1908Gargan, Thomas V., Jr. – 1948, 1949Garguile, Dominic – 2000, 01, 02Garman, Harry S. – 1965, 1966Garnett, Lamont W. – 1971, 1972, 1973Garnsey, John K. – 1888Garrett, Roger L. – 1955, 56, 57Garrison, Stephen M. – 1982, 83, 84Garvey, Robert V. – 1992, 93Gasparello, Ralph N. – 1945Gassner, Harold – 1925, 26Gavin, Daniel J. – 1985, 86Geib, Jay R., Jr. – 1941, 42Geiser, Douglas W. – 1989Gellert, George G. – 1959Geoffrion, Homer R. – 1932George, Abraham – 1930, 32George, Michael J. – 1998George, Richard E. – 1984, 85George, Richard T. – 1992, 93George, Stephan – 1975George, William I. – 1951, 52, 53Gerdes, John H. – 1952, 53Gerken, Richard R. – 1965, 66Gervase, Ronald M. – 1965, 66Gettins, Steven M. – 1995Giarrusso, Vincent P. – 1951, 52Gibson, Edwin T. – 1904, 05, 06Gibson, Robert J. – 1986Giglio, Francis M. – 1997, 98Gilkinson, Jeffrey M. – 1992, 93, 94Gillies, Fred M. – 1915, 16Gilman, William E. – 1934Ginder, Jason – 1985Girolamo, Paul C. – 1948, 49Godshall, Henry S., Jr. – 35Goetz, William P. – 1920Gogolak, Peter K. – 1961, 62, 63Goldbas, Jacob I. – 1932, 33Golden, Richard M. – 1944Golden, Terence L. – 1992, 93, 94Goldy, William J. – 1982, 83, 84Goodberlet, Paul – 1978, 79, 80Goodrich, Bill – 2000, 01, 02Gordon, Arthur – 1903Gormley, Brian S. – 1994, 95Gouinlock, Edward V. – 1920, 21, 22Grace, Kenneth A. – 1970Grady, Patrick M. – 1994Graham, James C. – 1997Grant, Michael J. – 1989, 90, 91Grant, Robert S. – 1932, 33Grasso, Robert M. – 1973, 75Green, Richard R. – 1991Greene, Fred D. – 1977Greene, Gregory P. – 1991Griffin, Lawrence J. – 1987Griffin, Peter J. – 1985Griffith, E. A. – 1890, 91, 92Grimshaw, Frederick G. – 1898Grkovic, Wilson Duke – 1963, 64Gross, Frederick H. – 1962Gross, Lyndon B. – 1984, 85Groszewski, Edward G. – 1991, 92

Gruendyke, Rod – 1978Gryska, Richard E. – 1946, 47Guba, Thomas K. – 1969, 70, 71Gugino, Frank – 1966Guise, Thomas J. – 1964, 65Gunsch, Leonard P. – 1936Guyer, Edward R. – 1912, 13

HHackett, Charles F. – 1897Hackstaff, Bruce W. – 1929, 30Hackstaff, Frederick W. – 1903, 04Hadley, Jon P. – 1966Hagenauer, Richard G. – 1949, 50, 51Haggerty, Steve F. – 1990, 91, 92Hahn, Christopher A. – 1985, 86, 87Hale, Stephen C. – 1910Haley, Robert J. – 1948, 49, 50Hall, Neal E. – 1975, 76, 77Hall, Robert P. – 1974, 75Hall, Ronald L. – 1959, 60Hall, Thomas – 1893, 94, 95Halliday, Morris S. – 1903, 04, 05Hammond, Jeffrey S. – 1981, 82Hanaka, Martin E. – 1970Handleman, Lester M. – 1929, 30, 31Hanley, Andrew F. – 1952Hanlon, David P. – 1964, 65Hanly, John K. – 1958, 59, 60Hanly, Paul J., Jr. – 1970, 71, 72Hansen, Harry A. – 1983Hansen, Patrick W. – 1976, 77, 78Hanset, Lucian – 2002Hanson, B. – 1891Hanson, Christopher M. – 1993, 94Hanson, John W. – 1995, 96, 97, 98Hanson, Leonard C. – 1921, 22Hapanowicz, Taddaus – 1946Harbilas, Costa – 1987, 88Hardaway, Andre – 2002Hardie, Charles G. – 1900Hargrave, Harold H. – 1946Harmon, Carl E. – 1977, 78Harmon, Derrick T. – 1981, 82, 83Harre, Arthur F. – 1951, 52Harris, Benjamin M. – 1889Harris, Deon M. – 1995, 96, 98, 99Harris, Francis L. – 1917Harris, Sherwood L. – 1968Harris, William – 1907Harrison, Chris J. – 1996, 97Harrison, T. Daniel – 1994Harvey, George R. – 1891Harvey, Henry L., Jr. – 1957Hase, Jordan – 1999, 2000, 01, 02Haseltine, Michael P. – 1987, 88Hatton, Christian P. – 1955, 56, 57Haucke, Frank – 1916Hawkins, Robert W. – 1973, 74Hawkins, Shaun C. – 1985, 86, 87Hayden, Samuel L. – 1962Haydon, Paul – 1974, 75, 76Hazzard, Robert D. – 1956, 57, 58Heath, Richard L. – 1967, 68Hedden, Raymon R. – 1931, 32Heeps, James W. – 1966, 67, 68Heinith, William W., Jr. – 1942, 45, 46Helmick, Louis G., Jr. – 1941, 42Hemingway, John C. – 1936, 37, 38Henderson, Frank L. – 1922, 23, 24Henderson, Gary A. – 1971Hendry, Clifford D. – 1971Henrickson, Robert L. – 1975, 76, 77Henry, Edward U. – 1893Henry, James – 1975Hepfer, Mathew W. – 1990, 91Hermann, Timothy – 1999, 2000, 01Hernandez, R. – 1890Herriman, Morris W. – 1917Herron, Douglas A. – 1971Hershey, Kirk – 1938, 39, 40Heskett, Richard M. – 1952Hettrich, Steven T. – 1989Hicks, David N. – 1981Hicks, George C. – 1888Hicks, Wesley L. – 1972, 73, 74Hilbush, Donald F. – 1944Hild, Michael C. – 1995Hill, Carlos – 2002Hill, David E. – 1973, 74Hill, David S. – 1925Hill, Edward A. – 1911, 12, 14Hill, Harrold H. – 1896Hill, Theodore W. – 1890

Hindman, Richard E. – 1990Hinman, William W. – 1966Hipolit, Kasimer E. – 1940Hirsch, Robert J. – 1942, 45Hite, Andrew C. – 1992Hoaglin, George Frederick, III – 1992Hodson, Spencer J. – 1987Hoekelman, Harold – 1926, 27Hoff, Edwin J. – 1919, 20Hoffman, Arthur L. – 1916, 17Hoffman, Carl T. – 1928Hoffman, Kenneth G. – 1959, 60, 61Hoffman, Sargent G. – 1909Hofher, James M. – 1976, 77, 78Hofstetter, Gregg A. – 1983, 84Holland, Carl R. – 1946, 47Holland, Jerome H. – 1936, 37, 38Holland, Joseph H. – 1976, 77, 78Holleran, Matthew – 1999, 2000, 01Homicz, A. Joseph, Jr. – 1964, 65, 66Hood, Michael T. – 1997, 98Hooker, Danny W. – 1992Hooper, Elliot H. – 1935, 36, 37Hoover, Donald P. – 1954, 55Hoover, Joseph M. – 1977Horn, Robert W. – 1967Horrell, Stephen B. – 1919, 20Horrigan, Stephen P. – 1973, 74, 75Horton, Elmer G. – 1890, 91Howell, William G. – 1887, 88Hrtko, Daniel – 1944Hubbell, Nelson E. – 1943Huff, Dennis A. – 1967, 68, 69Hughes, Edward E., II – 1935, 36, 37Huling, William W. – 1967Hull, Joseph – 2000Hull, Lyndon C. – 1949, 50, 51Hummel, Frank K. – 1951, 52, 53Hummer, Eugene J. – 1948Humphrey, Larry A. – 1975, 77Humphrey, Malcolm J. – 1987Hunt, Paul N. – 1928, 29, 30Hunt, Sanford B. – 1900, 01, 02, 03Hunter, Chad E. – 1994, 95, 96Hunter, George P. – 1928Hunter, Oscar L. – 1893Huntington, Lowell S. – 1917Hurlburt, Russell B. – 1908, 09Hutchinson, Alfred H. – 1908Hutchinson, Edward M. – 1933, 34, 35Huyghue, Michael L. – 1981, 82, 83Hyman, John W. – 1951, 55

IIdziur, Stephen – 1983Iliff, Bernard F. – 1958, 59, 60Ingham, Doug J. – 1993, 94, 95Inserra, John G. – 1986Intihar, Stanley V. – 1953, 55Irving, Frank J. – 1932, 33, 34Isaly, Henry W. – 1924, 25, 26Itin, Thomas W. – 1955, 56Iverson, Peter E. – 1998, 99, 2000, 01

JJackson, Fred E., Jr. – 1987Jackson, Hiram E. – 1985Jackson, Richard C. – 1953, 54, 55Jacobs, Theodolph H. – 1967, 68, 69Jaeckel, John E. – 1950, 51, 52Jaeger, Craig R. – 1976, 77Jaicks, Frederick G. – 1939James, Lewis R. – 1902Jameson, William H., Jr. – 1915Jamieson, J. H. – 1906Jamin, Michael F. – 1991, 92Jandrain, Jay J. – 1988Jaso, John P., Jr. – 1945, 46, 48, 49Jean, Donald C. – 1969, 70, 71Jenkins, Irving A. – 1935Jenkins, Jason G. – 1989, 90, 91Jenkins, Raymond – 1939, 40, 41Jennings, Bruce D. – 1978Jensen, Eric F. – 1948, 49, 50Jentes, Clarence E. – 1962, 63, 64Jerome, James F. – 1949, 50, 51Jewett, Rexford W. – 1915, 16Joehl, Robert A. – 1970, 71, 72Johanson, C. M. – 1890, 91, 92Johnson, David E. – 1974, 75, 76Johnson, Donnell A. – 1985, 87Johnson, Howard S. – 1927, 28, 29Johnson, Jeffrey T. – 1985, 86Johnson, Kenneth A. – 1984, 85, 86

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Johnson, Mauritz I. – 1928Johnson, Michael E. – 1978, 79, 80Johnson, Paul N. – 1969Johnson, Richard W. – 1972, 73, 74Johnson, Roy V. – 1940, 41, 42Johnson, Ward C. – 1985, 86Johnston, Malcolm W. – 1958Jolly, John R. – 1972Jones, Michael W. – 1982, 83, 84Jones, Reno V. – 1921Jordan, Joseph B. – 1989Joyce, Stephen L. – 1994, 95Juvonen, Frank Norman – 1957, 58

KKadivar, Kam – 1985Kaiser, Frederick M. – 1964, 65Kalinich, Paul T. – 1952, 53, 54Kamon, Mark S. – 1974Kanich, Joseph J. – 1928, 29Kaplan, Jeffrey M. – 1979, 80Kaplun, Thomas P. – 1998, 99, 2001Kapsky, Mark S. – 1973, 74, 75Kasparian, Jack H. – 1939Kasserman, Ronald W. – 1951, 52Katz, Bernard – 1927Kaufman, Dudley S. – 1964, 65Kavensky, Kenneth J. – 1960, 61Kaw, Edgar L. – 1920, 21, 22Kay, Harry R. – 1920Keane, Kevin A. – 1988, 89Kearney, Francis , Jr. – 1923, 24, 25Kefgen, J. Keith – 1983Keith, Arthur – 1981, 82, 83Kelley, Alva E. – 1938, 39, 40Kellner, John – 2001, 02Kelly, Edward J. – 1911Kelly, John C. – 1996, 97Kemp, Robert W. – 1992Kennedy, Andrew R. – 1985Kennedy, John P. – 1991Kennedy, William E., Jr. – 1935, 36Kenny, Sean M. – 1982, 83, 84Kensinger, Timothy – 1982, 83Kent, Ralph S. – 1901Kessler, Howard F. – 1931Kiesendahl, Bradley J. – 1996, 97Kilburn, Lyman A. – 1900Kilcoyne, John T. – 1979, 80Killian, John C. – 1969, 70, 71Kilmartin, William W. – 1968Kimichik, David J. – 1980, 81Kincaid, John H. – 1966, 67, 68King, James V. – 1986Kingrey, Derek – 2000Kinne, H. E. – 1900Kintigh, David A. – 1976, 77, 78Kirk, Rodney E. – 1952Kirk, William T. – 1949, 50, 51Kirsanow, Peter – 1974Kitlowski, Brad – 2001, 02Kleiber, Douglas A. – 1966, 67, 68Kline, Philip S. – 1931Knapp, Christopher D. – 1985, 86Knapp, Gerald T. – 1955, 56, 57Knauss, Walter P. – 1919, 20Knauss, Walter P. – 1951, 52Kneen, Ferris P. – 1927, 28Kneen, Harold F. – 1923, 24Knight, Charles F. – 1955, 56Knight, Peter S. – 1970, 71, 72Knopp, Doug M. – 1993, 94, 95Knopp, Gregory W. – 1991Knowles, James G. – 1984, 85, 86Knuff, James M. – 1971, 73Knuff, John P. – 1971, 72, 73Kobin, Thomas R. – 1987Koehler, Kevin J. – 1993Koerber, Jeb – 1984Kolb, Todd L. – 1950, 51, 52Konstanty, Jared A. – 1993, 94Kopicki, Ronald J. – 1965, 66, 67Koska, John A. – 1949Kossack, Nathaniel E. – 1931, 32, 33Kostes, William V. – 1946, 47, 49, 50Kotler, Steve – 1981Kovach, John M. – 1962Kowalski, Raymond – 1972, 73Koza, Terrence R. – 1994, 95Kozel, Michael S. – 1969Kramer, Irvin A. – 1949, 50, 51Kratch, William H., III – 1981Krawczyk, Eric M. – 1995, 96, 97Kretz, Walter A. – 1942, 46, 47

Krutzsch, Armin , Jr. – 1909Kuhman, Jonathan L. – 1994Kunit, Eugene R. – 1963, 64Kutz, Richard H. – 1942Kwiatkoski, Paul C. – 1974

LLaBeau, Timothy R. – 1974, 75, 76LaBonte, Clarence V. – 1956Ladas, George T. – 1958Lafey, Curtis W. – 1939Lahr, Charles – 1913, 14Lahr, Steven C. – 1971, 72, 73Lajoie, Gerry L. – 1994Lally, Michael J. – 1984, 85Lally, Robert M. – 1971, 72, 73Lamb, John P. – 1935Lamb, Thomas , III – 1977, 78, 79Lambert, Craig E. – 1970, 71Lampkins, James W. – 1961, 62Landrum, Jason P. – 1998, 99, 2000Landsberg, Mortimer W., Jr. – 1939, 40Lang, Robert H. – 1947Langan, Douglas J. – 1986, 87, 88Lanker, Greg – 1979, 80Lanman, Henry A. – 1935Lansing, Theodore H. – 1941, 42, 46Larkin, Patrick E. – 1902LaRochelle, Paul J., Jr. – 1975Larrowe, Dwight M. – 1912Larson, Albert L. – 1930Larson, H. Peter, III – 1964, 65, 66Larson, Per B. – 1994LaScala, Anthony J. – 1942, 43Lautz, Edward G. – 1914Laux, Clinton C. – 1945LaVoy, Russell E. – 1971Lawence, Norman S. – 1903Lazor, Daniel J. – 1995Lazor, William V. – 1991, 92, 93LeBorgne, Thomas M. – 1997Lechler, George P. – 1921Lee, Charles R. – 1960Lee, Harold B. – 1896, 97Lee, Mitchell D. – 1987, 88, 89Lee, Peter J. – 1981, 82, 83Lee, Terrence – 1975, 76, 77Leggiero, James C. – 1992Lempa, Ryan – 2002Leo, Edward – 1951Leonard, Daniel J. – 1976, 77, 78Lesczinski, Michael R. – 1976Leven, Robert J. – 1990Leventry, Ray L. – 1908Levine, Ronald R. – 1983Levitas, Ethan – 1991, 92Levitt, Chad A. – 1993, 94, 95, 96Lewis, David H. – 1989Lewis, James N. – 1977Lewis, John A. – 1939Lewis, John T., Jr. – 1980, 81, 82Lewis, Richard N. – 1954Licht, George – 1976, 77, 78Lies, Bennett F. – 1902Lightcap, Kerry M. – 1985Lill, Charles G. – 1978Linagen, Robert J., IV – 1978, 80Lins, Donald M. – 1944Lipic, Stephen J. – 1984, 85, 86Lipinski, Richard – 1958, 59, 60Little, Gordon R. – 1982Litwin, Seth E. – 1993Litzelman, John H. – 1950Livingston, Victor M. – 1969, 70Lofton, Jimmy T. – 1977Logue, C. R. – 1987, 88, 89Lomax, Clarence S. – 1890Lombardo, Daniel W. – 1972Lorditch, James T., Jr. – 1974, 75, 76Loux, Albert J. – 1947Lowe, G. – 1888Loyd, Philip A. – 1979, 80, 81Loynd, Richard B. – 1944, 45, 48, 49Lubozynski, Dennis J. – 1969, 70Lucas, Thomas G. – 1965, 66Lueder, Archie B. – 1896, 97Lueder, Charles A. – 1898, 1900, 01, 02Lueder, Francis A., Jr. – 1929, 30Lundin, Harry W. – 1931Lutz, Steven E. – 1986, 87, 88Lyle, H. M. – 1895Lynah, James – 1903, 04Lynch, Charles B. – 1957Lynch, John A. – 1907

Lyon, Charles A. – 1905Lyon, Robert N. – 1928Lyons, Mark E. – 1980

MMacArthur, Edward G. – 1908MacDonald, Alan – 1904MacDonald, Murdo G. – 1943Macdonald, Thomas – 1976, 77Maceyko, William S. – 1943Machikas, Michael C. – 1981MacKenzie, William D. – 1919MacLachlan, Mark A. – 1995MacLeod, Russell A. – 1950, 51, 52MacLeod, Thomas D. – 1967, 68, 69MacMeekin, Trevor – 2002Madea, Jarad – 1999, 2000, 01, 02Maentz, Hans S. – 1991Magee, John A. – 1988Magee, Noah D., Jr. – 1972Maglisceau, Ralph Edwin – 1958, 59Maguire, Shawn F. – 1983, 84, 85Mahoney, Philip J. – 1990Mahony, John J. – 1990Majeske, Michael A. – 1977Mako, Mark D. – 1991, 92Malaga, Scott S. – 1986, 87, 88Malavarca, Steven – 1974Mallett, Mark G. – 1984Mallory, Henry R. – 1913Malm, Robert – 1950Malone, Daniel P. – 1972, 73, 74Malone, Thomas J. – 1984, 85, 86Maney, Kevin M. – 1993, 94Mannings, Ardrell A. – 1988, 89, 90Manz, Keith R. – 1978, 79Marchant, Reginald C. – 1949, 50, 51Marciniak, Theodore A. – 1952, 54Marcucci, Paul A. – 1968, 69Marcus, Kevin M. – 1990, 91Marcus, Peter M. – 1935Marinaro, Edward F. – 1969, 70, 71Marino, William G. – 1975Marotta, Joseph L. – 1954Martin, Andrew G. – 1990, 91Martin, Joseph L. – 1941, 46Martin, Paris – 1905Martinez-Zorrilla, Cristobal M. – 1929, 30, 31Martinez-Zorrilla, Jose – 1930, 31, 32Marzec, Karl S. – 1985Mason, C. B. – 1894Massy, John P. – 1990, 91, 92Masterson, Ryan C. – 1993, 94Mateo, Ronald M. – 1992, 93, 95Mathewson, Richard S. – 1953, 54Matthews, Kevin L. – 1992Matuszczak, Allen W. – 1969, 70, 71Matuszczak, Walter J. – 1938, 39, 40Maxwell, J. Brandon, III – 1981, 82, 83May, Charles C. – 1907Mayer, Clyde – 1919, 20Mazoue, Christopher G. – 1990, 91McAllister, Patrick E. – 1903McAniff, Robert J. – 1955, 56, 57McArthur, Frank – 1944McAtee, Richard S. – 1989, 90McAuley, Sean M. – 1988McCallie, Edward L. – 1907McCandless, Peter – 1974McCarthy, John D. – 1961, 62, 63McCarthy, John R. – 1950, 51, 52McCarthy, Kevin C. – 1981, 82McCollum, Joseph G. – 1908McCombs, John W. – 1997, 98, 99McCullen, Arthur – 1966, 67, 68McCullough, Harold F. – 1938, 39, 40McCurdy, Ronald J. – 1975, 76, 77McCutcheon, Kenneth C. – 1914McDermott, Timothy R.D. – 1992, 93, 94McDevitt, Timothy M. – 1987McDonnell, James C. – 1976McDowell, John G. – 1887, 88, 89McEnderfer, Timothy D. – 1968McEneaney, Eamon J. – 1974, 76McFarlin, Brian – 1979McFarren, Michael H. – 1968, 69McGinty, Michael – 2002McGowin, John – 1928McGrann, Michael N. – 1985, 87, 88McGuire, Robert A. – 1986McHale, Thomas – 1986McHugh, Bernard J. – 1961McIntosh, Brick E. – 1969McKean, Michael – 1992, 93, 94

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McKeever, William – 1895, 96, 97McKeever, William W. – 1936, 37, 38McKelvey, David E. – 1959, 61McKeown, John P. – 1971, 72McKinney, Timothy D. – 1982, 83McLaughlin, Daniel M. – 1895, 97McMahon, Bruce – 1976McMahon, Daniel J. – 1983, 84, 85McMillan, Londell – 1985, 86McNiff, John M. – 1989, 90, 91McWeeney, George E. – 1965, 66Mead, Jerry W. – 1942Meade, E. Richard – 1953, 54, 55Meagher, Robert G. – 1935, 36, 37Meaney, Joseph J. – 1974, 75, 76Meeker, Martin W. – 1977Megaro, John – 2001, 02Mehaffey, Albert B. – 1914Meiss, Frederick L. – 1934Mellon, David L. – 1962, 63, 64Melstrom, Kurt A. – 1997, 98Menapace, David M. – 1981, 82Merdes, Edward A. – 1946Merz, Stuart O. – 1950, 51Metz, Christopher F. – 1981Metzler, Charles W. – 1949, 50, 51Michalewicz, Paul J. – 1980, 81, 82Micklavzina, Frank C. – 1949, 50, 51Milanes, Angel – 1981Miles, David G. – 1964Miles, Stephen W. – 1954, 56Miller, Dan R. – 1987, 88Miller, Frank M. – 1948, 49, 50Miller, Granbery – 1911, 12Miller, Jay B. – 1967, 68Miller, Jeff – 1979, 80Miller, Mark G. – 1981, 82, 84Miller, Moreno G., II – 1977, 78Miller, Peter P. – 1915, 16, 19Miller, Richard J. – 1969, 70, 71Miller, Scott A. – 1988Miller, William R. – 1896Millhouse, Scott A. – 1973, 74, 75Milne, Robert S. – 1961, 62, 63Milosevic, George – 1970, 71, 72Miner, Harry G. – 1920Mitchell, Charles J. – 1998, 99, 2000Mitchell, Stuart A. – 1985, 86Mockapetris, David L. – 1973, 74Molinet, Ignacio S. – 1924, 26Mollica, Joseph – 1975Monago, Frank A. – 1987, 88, 89Monahan, David J. – 1975, 76, 77Montgomery, Louis , Jr. – 1978Moore, Michael C. – 1966Moore, Patrick B. – 1990, 91Moran, Dennis P. – 1968Moran, Henry A. – 1939Moran, John M. – 1962, 63Morehouse, Edward J. – 1969, 70Morello, David A. – 1992Moresco, Christopher J. – 1980, 81Moresco, Joseph B. – 1997, 98Moresko, John C. – 1969, 71Moretti, James M. – 1972, 74Morgan, Jason – 2002Moriarty, Jamie – 1999, 2001, 02Moricco, Michael V. – 1998Mork, Kyle – 1999, 2000, 01Morosetti, Christopher J. – 1998, 99, 2000Morris, David P. – 1967, 68Morris, John F. – 1954Morris, Robert – 1923, 24Morrison, A. B. – 1898, 99, 1900Morrissey, Neil – 2001, 02Morrissey, William D. – 1981, 82Morton, C. C. – 1896Mosely, E. A. – 1891Mosser, Stacy C., Jr. – 1941, 42, 46Moulton, William H. – 1936, 37Mowe, Homer G. – 1908Mower, Ronald W. – 1970Muccio, Mike S. – 1998, 99Mueller, Lucien W. – 1915, 16Muha, Robert A. – 1979Muldowney, Christopher A. – 1993, 94Mullenhoff, Paul J. – 1981Munk, William E. – 1909, 10, 11Munns, David A. – 1920, 21Munns, John J. – 1911, 12, 13Munns, Ralph B. – 1924, 25, 26Munsick, Donald B. – 1914Murdock, Frank K. – 1931, 32, 34

Murphy, Dennis J. – 1952, 53, 54Murphy, John F. – 1957, 58Murphy, William J., III – 1965, 66, 67Murphy, William J., Jr. – 39, 40Murray, William – 1972Musmanno, Richard A. – 1965, 66, 67Musquiz, Gilbert – 2000

NNamack, W. H. – 1900Nash, Robert A. – 1912Navarre, Jeff J. – 1986, 87Nazarro, Sam – 1981Nedde, Norman A. – 1954Nees, Louis A. – 1982Nehrer, Daniel C. – 1941Nelson, John – 2002Nelson, Karl J. – 1935, 36, 37Nelson, Phillip M. – 1933, 34Nethercot, David G. – 1917Neuman, Scott J. – 1991Newell, Todd – 2001, 02Newhall, John – 1904, 05Newman, William S. – 1903, 05, 06Newsom, Rosco – 1999, 2000, 01, 02Newton, Malcolm R. – 1967, 68Newton, Mark L. – 1973Nice, Chad – 2001, 02Nichols, Guy H. – 1943Nichols, John S. – 1910Nichols, Reginald W. – 1971, 72Nicholson, Todd A. – 1987, 88, 89Nicoletti, Richard A. – 1958, 59Noel, Steve – 1982Norman, George C. – 1963, 64Norris, Joseph M. – 1996, 97Noziglia, Dave – 1981Nunes, Thomas M. – 1995, 96, 97, 98Nunn, Harold F. – 1933, 34, 35

OO’Connor, Bernard – 1911, 12O’Connor, John J. – 1909, 10O’Hagan, Michael J. – 1974O’Hearn, John E. – 1912, 13, 14O’Neill, William B. – 1977O’Rourke, Bernard J. – 1905, 06, 07, 08O’Rourke, Frank H. – 1910, 11O’Shaughnessy, Patrick E. – 1995Oderkirk, Charles C. – 1904, 05Ohl, W. F. – 1893, 94Oliaro, Scott M. – 1989, 90, 92Olney, Carl W. – 1921Olszowka, Paul T. – 1988, 89Oniskey, Leonard J. – 1952, 53, 54Opre, Brian G. – 1996Orel, Anthony J. – 1969, 70, 71Ortega, Jose L. – 1977Osgood, Winchester D. – 1888, 89, 91, 92Osterhout, Glenn R. – 1975, 76Otis, James C. – 1899, 1900Otto, Samuel C. – 1925Owen, Chauncey C. – 1909

PPage, Gerald F. – 1961, 62Paige, Tommaso J. – 1995Palazzese, Jeffrey P. – 1983, 84Palmer, Charles A. – 1944Palmisciano, Robert M. – 1961Palumbo, Robert C. – 1979, 80, 81Papich, Donald – 1974, 75, 76Paquette, Patrick L.P. – 1992, 93Paraskevopoulos, George – 1999, 2000, 01Parke, Evan D. – 1987, 88, 89Parker, Charles E. – 1928Parker, James S. – 1887Parr, Charles C. – 1969Parris, Michael – 1999, 2000, 02Pascal, Anthony A. – 1959, 60, 61Pascavage, Peter P. – 1946, 47Passalacqua, John E. – 1982, 83, 84Pastuck, Henry F. – 1946, 47Patterson, Jeffrey P. – 1967, 68Patterson, Robert F. – 1923, 24Pattison, D. B. – 1966Patulski, Richard – 1981, 82Paul, Anthony C. – 1985Paul, Francis G. – 1941, 42Payne, Charles T. – 1974, 75, 76Payne, Seth C. – 1994, 95, 96Pearlman, Marc J. – 1985, 86, 87Peck, George W. – 1936, 37, 38

Pegan, Robert L. – 1966, 67, 68Pegnetter, Eugene F. – 1963, 64Peirce, Andrew W. – 1934, 35Pendleton, Fields S., Jr. – 1917, 19, 20Pennucci, Patrick J. – 1960Penny, Wilford B. – 1930, 31Penttinen, Eric W. – 1990, 91Perkins, Fred C. – 1897, 98Perrello, James V. – 1983, 84, 85Pfann, Bruce W. – 1957, 58Pfann, George R. – 1921, 22, 23Pfeffer, Walter F. – 1941Pfeiffer, Egbert W. – 1934, 35, 36Philippi, Carl A. – 1913, 14Phillips, John D. – 1973, 74Phillips, Michael E. – 1971, 72, 73Pick, Herbert L. – 1951Picking, Howard M. – 1958, 59Pickup, Robert F. – 1992Pierce, Burdick W. – 1935Pierce, Samuel R., Jr. – 1941Pierik, John G. – 1948, 49, 50Pierik, Peter G. – 1949, 51Pierson, Douglas C. – 1952Pierson, John C. – 1899Pinnie, Mark S. – 1977Piscitelli, Mark M. – 1970, 71Pitkin, David W. – 1960Pitman, David I. – 1996, 97, 98, 99Pogorzala, Arthur E. – 1984Polichene, Joel W. – 1981Politi, Frank J. – 1934, 36Politi, George J. – 1941, 42Pollak, Julian A. – 1905, 06Pollin, David B. – 1987, 88Pond, Edward F. – 1930Ponsaran, Bruce – 2000Ponzer, William D. – 1961, 62, 63Popielinski, James G. – 1971, 72, 73Portuondo, Kevin L. – 1996Posner, Jay – 1999, 2000, 01Potash, Kenneth N. – 1989, 90, 91Potter, Richard J. – 1952Powers, John E. – 1945Pozzobon, Steve V. – 1984, 85Pratt, Douglas J. – 1982, 83Pressley, Todd O. – 1983, 84, 85Prevost, John – 1990Printy, Dale B. – 1988, 89Printy, Donald C. – 1988, 90Profuseck, Robert — 1969Prospero, Michael J. – 1981, 82Pugh, Sol – 1986Pujo, Victor A. – 1949, 50, 51Purcell, Henry , Jr. – 1900, 01, 02Purdy, William J. – 1954Puterbaugh, John L. – 1933, 34Pych, Joseph T. – 1989Pyle, Cyrus – 1927Pyle, James W. – 1965Pyott, Albert E. – 1950, 51, 52

QQuarles, David A. – 1986, 87Quigg, Richard L. – 1941Quinby, James D. – 1950, 51, 52Quinn, Brian – 1978Quinn, Joseph F., Jr. – 1945, 46, 47, 48

RRackeman, William F. – 1887Radway, Homero J.F. – 1998Rafalski, Larry D. – 1966, 67, 68Raga, Tom – 1987Rahne, Ricky – 1999, 2000, 01Raich, Michael – 1985, 86, 87Rakowski, John T. – 1945Rakowski, Thomas J. – 1970, 71Ramin, Richard M. – 1948, 49, 50Ramsey, Floyd D. – 1921, 22, 23Rand, Richard N. – 1988, 89Randall, Glenn D. – 1990, 91Rankin, George C. – 1934, 35Rapuano, Michael – 1925, 26Ratner, Phillip – 1963, 64, 65Rauch, Martin W. – 1984, 85Raymond, Richard T. – 1923Razzano, Michael – 2002Reade, Scott C. – 1991, 92Ready, Michael J. – 1987, 88Reardon, Kurt F. – 1983, 84Reback, Brad R. – 1991Reed, Daniel A. – 1896, 97, 98

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Reed, Henry M., Jr. – 1924Rees, Arthur F., Jr. – 1913Reese, David L. – 1960Reherman, Leo J., Jr. – 1985, 86, 87Reiber, Richard H. – 1931Reilly, Brendan M. – 1995, 96Reimund, Todd E. – 1985, 86, 87Reinking, Daane – 2000, 01Rejda, Ronald R. – 1979, 80Rems, Jeffrey I. – 1982Renzi, Eugene M. – 1951, 52Reuther, Bernard P. – 1917Revak, Thomas W. – 1957, 58, 59Reynolds, Peter M. – 1990, 91Reynolds, Thomas C. – 1979Rice, Lawrence J. – 1903, 04Richard, Rob – 1988Richards, Bartlett – 1922Richards, Thomas C. – 1997, 98, 99Richards, William R. – 1927Richberg, Michael R. – 1979Richie, David R. – 1895, 96Rickell, David A. – 1993, 94, 95Ridley, Jason S. – 1996Riekert, Herbert J. – 1929, 30Riescher, Robert J. – 1989Rigueur, Philip – 1997, 98, 2000, 01Riley, Johnny – 1976Ring, Timothy M. – 1976, 77, 78Rinkus, Gary J. – 1985, 86, 87Riordan, Michael R. – 1949Ripley, Robert H. – 1896Ritchie, Graham M., Jr. – 1981, 82Ritter, Christopher – 1966, 67, 68Ritz, Robert J. – 1960, 61Roadhouse, Chester L. – 1905Roark, Michael – 1991Robb, Stewart E. – 1909, 10Robbins, Percy A. – 1893Roberson, Irvin – 1955, 56, 57Robertson, William B. – 1967, 68Robeson, Paul , Jr. – 1944, 45, 47Robinhold, Daniel G. – 1925Robinson, Charles R. – 1941, 42Robinson, Joseph R. – 1962, 63Rochow, Frank R. – 1941Rochow, Richard F. – 1941Roderick, William M. – 1955Rodin, John – 1994, 95, 96Rodriguez, Jesse – 1999, 2000, 01, 02Rogers, C. E. – 1894, 95Rogers, John B. – 1942, 46, 47, 48Rohlfing, Thomas J. – 1978, 79, 80Roland, Paul – 1979Roll, Charles S., Jr. – 1965, 66, 67Rollo, Walter R. – 1922Roman, Marshall – 1978Romano, Wayne – 1988Romney, Edgar H. – 1998, 99, 2000Roney, Matthew J. – 1995Rooks, Mark – 1989Rooney, Kevin – 2001, 02Rooney, Thomas S. – 1952, 53, 54Rooney, Thomas S., Jr. – 1981Rose, Charles N. – 1995Rose, Robert M. – 1936, 37, 38Rosecrans, James A. – 1984Rosenberg, Lester J. – 1925, 26Ross, Steve P. – 1980, 81Rosser, Barrett E. – 1970, 72Rossiter, William G. – 1934, 36Roth, A. Sidney – 1936, 37, 38Roth, Brandon A. – 1987, 88Roth, Thomas H. – 1978, 79, 80Rothstein, Nathan – 1930, 31Rousseau, Henry H., Jr. – 1929Rowe, Norman L. – 1954Rowlands, Thomas P. – 1969, 71Royer, Paul A. – 1981, 82, 83Rubenstein, Kenneth J. – 1981Rubin, Harry – 1944Ruby, Jeffrey B. – 1968, 69Rucker, James C. – 1942Ruddy, Michael J. – 1939, 40Rudiman, Andrew , Jr. – 1975Rupert, David C. – 1976, 77, 78Russell, Robert H. – 1944Russo, Richard J. – 1971, 72, 73Ruth, Lloyd D., Jr. – 1966, 68Rutledge, James E. – 1938Ryan, John F. – 1987, 88Ryan, Joseph E. – 1963, 64Ryan, Joseph R. – 1956

Ryan, Michael W. – 1978, 79, 80Ryder, Robert O. – 1988, 89, 90Ryerson, Robert E. – 1916

SSacco, Bryan – 1999, 2000, 01Sadusky, John J. – 1957, 58, 59Sampson, Harvey E. – 1948, 49, 50Sampson, Peter G. – 1967Sanford, Steven P. – 1972Sansiveri, Sean – 2002Santamaria, Frank A. – 1977, 78Santone, Thomas J. – 1973, 74Saussy, Gordon – 1895Savage, Bernard A. – 1923Savitsky, Edward J. – 1956, 57, 58Saylor, John E. – 1942, 46Scarton, Charles M. – 1963Scazzero, William F. – 1950, 51Schaefer, Frederick A. – 1941Scherr, Nathan – 1944Schlichter, Fred P. – 1915Schmid, Christopher – 1955Schmuck, James T. – 1939, 40Schneider, Edward – 1943Schneider, Joseph F. – 1963, 64Schnuck, Craig D. – 1969Schnuck, Scott C. – 1969, 70Schoales, Dudley N. – 1926, 27, 28Schoch, L. M. – 1897Schock, Arthur P. – 1915Schoellkopf, Henry – 1900, 01Schoellkopf, Paul A. – 1903Scholl, W. Brooks – 1969Scholl, Walter A. – 1939, 40Scholz, Ralph – 1982, 83Schrauth, Amandus J. – 1947Schreck, Leonard B. – 1926Schreiber, Robert A. – 1963Schroder, Andrew J. – 1956Schroeder, Robert A. – 1990, 91Schuh, Charles R. – 1948, 49, 50Schumacher, August – 1926, 27Schumacher, Edward C. – 1933Schuster, Frank J. – 1973Schwartz, Herbert – 1944Schweizer, Michael F. – 1988Scott, John W. – 1934Scott, Kevin – 1974Scott, Martin A. – 1997, 98, 99Scott, Norman E. – 1927, 28, 29Scott, Thomas – 1976, 77Scroger, Rollin – 1980Scullin, John P. – 1964Scullin, Richard P., Jr. – 1998Scully, Daniel T. – 1978, 79, 80Scully, Michael J. – 1981, 82, 83Scully, Robert J. – 1944, 45Seagrave, Clarence N. – 1909, 10Sebald, J. A. – 1951, 52, 53Seeley, Harold K. – 1909Seidenberg, Harold – 1949, 50, 51Seider, John P. – 1944Seifert, James W. – 1993, 94, 95, 98Selsmeyer, Mark P. – 1978, 79Sepessy, R. Keith – 1977, 78, 79Shaffer, John M. – 1965Shank, Paul W. – 1961Shappee, Robert D. – 1960Sharafanowich, Edward S. – 1944Shaub, Harry – 1931, 32, 33Shavers, John – 1974, 75, 76Shay, Edward A. – 1969Shayler, Randy M. – 1970, 71Shea, David J. – 1980, 81, 82Shearer, George K. – 1907, 08Shearn, T. Michael – 1980Sheble, John H. – 1902Sheerin, Richard T. – 1995, 96, 97Sheffer, John W., Jr. – 1936Sheil, David – 1975Sheldon, James H. – 1887Shelton, Murray N. – 1913, 14, 15Shepard, Alvin W. – 1889, 90Shepard, Kirk V. – 1970Shepard, William C. – 1902Sherman, Larry R. – 1970, 71Sherrill, James L., Jr. – 1981, 82, 83Sherwood, Jules D. – 1996, 97, 98Shields, Carl D. – 1972Shirley, Paul – 1991Shiverick, Francis T. – 1915, 16, 19Short, John C. – 1898, 99

Shuler, Charles – 1913, 14Shuler, John D. – 1919Shulman, Matthew A. – 1993, 94Sibson, Walter W., Jr. – 1927Sidman, Scott E. – 1982, 83, 84Sieger, John – 1988Sigler, Kevin J. – 1974Silver, Mahingus R. – 1995, 96Simic, Paul M. – 1989Simmons, Adrian – 1987, 88Simmons, Evan – 2000, 01Simon, Joseph P. – 1953, 54Simpson, Joseph R. – 1961, 62Simpson, Timothy A. – 1993Simson, LeGrand D. – 1909, 10Skawski, John – 1945, 47Skillman, David M. – 1960Skoczylas, Larry J. – 1975, 77Skypeck, Thomas J. – 1956, 57, 58Slisky, Edward J. – 1961, 62Slocum, Andrew H. – 1993, 94Slocum, George S. – 1960Smith, Darryl F. – 1998, 2000Smith, Deron – 2001, 02Smith, Eric K. – 1991Smith, James L. – 1948, 49Smith, Joseph H. – 1911, 12Smith, Larry – 1986Smith, Manasseh , Jr. – 1901, 02Smith, Randall L. – 1978Smith, Robert A., Jr. – 1904Smith, Robert T. – 1967Smith, Rodney R. – 1964Smith, Terrence D. – 1994, 95, 97Snavely, Carl G., Jr. – 1941Snavely, Francis B., Jr. – 1944Snider, Warren G. – 1902, 03Snyder, Cecil O. – 1944Snyder, Herbert – 1915Snyder, Kenneth A. – 1969Solecki, John J. – 1974Sorochinsky, Frank C. – 1953Sosenko, Arthur – 1954Souchek, Donald R. – 1945, 46Soumas, Charles A. – 1951South, L. Cawood – 1994Spaller, Jim – 1985Spang, Carl F. – 1936, 37, 38Speece, William E. – 1945, 46Speed, Christopher M. – 1916Speicher, Matthew A. – 1990, 91Sperry, Phillip F. – 1967, 68Spitler, Nate – 1999, 2000, 01, 02Splendorio, Joseph P. – 1998, 99, 2000Sponaugle, Martin Y. – 1963, 64, 65Sponaugle, S. Woodrow – 1959, 60Sponheimer, John P. – 1966, 67, 68Spooner, LaVoy , Jr. – 1969, 70Spoth, David C. – 1976Sprinkle, Theodore A. – 1965Sprow, Otis W. – 1968Stadnick, Jason – 2001, 02Stahl, Russell – 1976Stahl, Samuel S. – 1937Stallone, Martin J. – 1985, 86Stancampiana, Louis – 1943Starbuck, Frank M. – 1894, 95Starbuck, Raymond D. – 1898, 99, 1900Stark, Lawrence – 2000, 01Starks, Claude Bruce – 1973, 74, 75Staun, Michael A. – 1978, 79, 80Steinberg, Richard W. – 1928Stenstrom, Jeffrey D. – 1994Stento, Gregory V. – 1981Stephens, William H. – 1968, 69, 70Stevens, Joel – 1988Stevens, Miles R. – 1929Stiles, Earl W. – 1934Stilwell, Winslow W. – 1941Stimson, Richard L. – 1940Stimson, Silas N. – 1911Stofer, Gordon F. – 1934, 35Stofer, Kenneth L. – 1940, 41Stone, Michael – 2000, 01, 02Storto, Richard M. – 1969, 70Stoviak, Francis S. – 1945Strait, H. B., Jr. – 1890, 91Stranahan, William – 1887Straus, Henry H. – 1917, 19Stremick, Jerome H. – 1961, 62Strick, Michael E. – 1962, 63Strigel, Michael J. – 1987, 88, 89Stroud, Michael D. – 1994

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Stuckert, Michael J. – 1991Studnicka, James R. – 1982, 83, 84Suiter, James W. – 1956Sulc, Brian – 1986Sumida, Aaron R. – 1987, 88Sundstrom, Frank L. – 1921, 22, 23Sundstrom, Warren E. – 1958, 59, 60Supulski, Jeffrey J. – 1977, 78Suren, Daniel J. – 1980, 81, 82Susnak, Joe – 1980Sussman, Joel – 2001, 02Suter, Albert E. – 1954, 55, 56Sutton, Francis M., Jr. – 1919Swan, Kenneth G. – 1992Swanson, Jarl R., Jr. – 1941, 42Swanson, Ralph E. – 1917Swartzwelder, Stephen – 1975Sweeney, Charles R. – 1941Sweeney, Jonathan – 2001Sweetland, Edwin R. – 1895, 96, 98Swift, David J. – 1949Switzer, Walter D., Jr. – 1932, 33, 34Szynalski, Bronislaw – 1973, 74, 75

TTabasso, Anthony P. – 1991Taber, David F., Jr. – 1912, 14Taddei, Ernest E. – 1975, 76, 77Tagliaferri, John S. – 1983, 84, 85Talierco, John B. – 1955Talton, Kenneth B. – 1976, 77, 78Tamulonis, Frank L. – 1965, 66, 67Tangman, C. H. – 1897Tanner, Michael A. – 1976, 77, 79Tansey, John – 1983Taplin, Dwayne O. – 1979Tattersfield, James P. – 1929Taussig, Charles A. – 1899, 1900, 01Taussig, J. Hawley – 1893, 94, 95, 96Taylor, Alva – 1980, 81Taylor, Charles W. – 1948, 49, 50Taylor, Daniel O. – 1949, 50, 51Taylor, J. W. – 1896Taylor, Jeffrey P. – 1991Taylor, Philip G. – 1957, 58, 59Taylor, Wilberforce – 1919Teagle, Ernest H. – 1910Teeple, George L. – 1887Telesh, George G. – 1959, 60, 61Templeton, Will D. – 1941Tennant, Thomas E. – 1944Tenuta, Benjamin G. – 1978, 79, 80Tenuta, Joshua P. – 1981Terry, John W. – 1932, 33Texido, Michael A. – 1986, 87Thayer, Guy H. – 1887, 89Thelmas, Larry – 1986Theodorakos, James T. – 1970, 71, 72Thomas, David R. – 1900Thomas, David R. – 1959, 60, 61Thomas, Kyle – 2002Thomas, Terence L. – 1981, 82, 83Thompson, Bryan G. – 1981Thompson, Elmer I. – 1905, 06, 07Thompson, Troy F. – 1991, 92Thornell, Douglas V. – 1997Tilley, Clarence – 1914, 15Tilton, Benjamin E. – 1925Timon, Stephen J. – 1992Tino, Marcello A. – 1958, 59, 61Tisdale, Jason – 1999Toczylowski, Stephen A. – 1945Tokish, Leonard J. – 1986, 87, 88Toppe, Robert – 1982Totten, William H. – 1970Tourison, George B. – 1903Towson, Arthur L. – 1927Tracosas, Jon E. – 1971, 72, 73Tracy, Lyndon S. – 1896, 97Tredennick, Harry L. – 1941Tretter, David J. – 1975, 77Trimberger, George M. – 1964Tross, Stuart A. – 1986, 87Trousdell, James N. – 1939Troutner, James F. – 1945Trowbridge, Sherman – 1917, 19Tsapis, Stanley – 1951, 52, 53Tull, Christopher R. – 1985, 86Tullar, Irving V. – 1929, 30, 31Tully, John M. – 1943, 44Tully, Paul H. – 1988, 89, 90Turel, Anthony P. – 1960, 61, 62Turley, Mark S. – 1978, 79, 80

Turnbull, R. A. – 1901Tuths, Philip M. – 1937Tydeman, Arthur F. – 1908, 09Tydeman, William A. – 1901, 02

UUlbricht, Brian – 1999, 2001, 02Underhill, Harry E. – 1911Unterzuber, Zane R. – 1950Upcraft, Mark A. – 1987, 88Upton, Daniel – 1888, 89

VVadney, Frank R. – 1953, 54, 55Vago, Steve – 1979, 80Van Buren, James K. – 1952, 53, 54Van Order, Edmund , Jr. – 1940, 41Van Ranst, Alfred F. – 1936, 37, 38Van Ranst, Alfred F. – 1972Van Sweringen, Raymond A. – 1970, 71, 72VanderKaay, Aaron M. – 1994, 95, 96, 97VanHorn, Ralph C. – 1917VanMetre, David C. – 1984, 85Vanneman, Reeve D. – 1965, 66VanOrman, Ray – 1904, 05, 06, 07Vattes, Dimitris F. (Jimmy) – 1998, 99, 2000Vaughn, Dru G. – 1998, 99, 2000Vegh, Anthony J. – 1975, 76Verna, Peter J. – 1944Versteeg, Donald J. – 1974, 75, 76Villella, Anthony D. – 1991, 92Vinciguerra, Stephen P. – 1939Visniski, Ryan – 1999, 2000Vitale, Frank N. – 1949, 50, 51Vitullo, Anthony J. – 1998, 99, 2000Vitullo, John T. – 1992, 93, 94, 95Vitullo, Ronald A. – 1990, 91, 92Viviano, Bartholomew J. – 1930, 31, 32Voris, William S. – 1900, 03

WWade, Henry S. – 1924Wagner, George F. – 1891, 92, 93Wagner, John D. – 1992, 93, 94Wagner, Michael R. – 1984, 85Wahl, John E. – 1920Waite, James M. – 1970, 71, 72Wakeman, Samuel – 1927, 28, 29Walbridge, George B. – 1899Walder, George H. – 1905, 06, 07, 08Walker, Daniel M. – 1967Wallace, George C. – 1929, 30Wallace, John J., Jr. – 1965, 66Wallace, John M. – 1932, 33Walsh, Eamon M. – 1989Walter, Scott F. – 1981, 82Walterhouse, Kurt D. – 1981Walters, Lloyd R. – 1951, 52, 53Warner, Glenn S. – 1892, 93, 94Warner, William J. – 1899, 1900, 01, 02Warren, James R. – 1961, 62Warrington, John M. – 1987, 88Washington, Calvin W. – 1974, 75, 76Wasilewski, Robert J. – 1960, 61Waterbury, Jackson D. – 1927, 28Watkins, Ramon L. – 1989, 90, 91Watson, Charles H. – 1907Watson, Charles L. – 1996, 97, 98Waud, Ernest P. – 1902Webb, Christopher J. – 1986, 87, 88Webb, H. G. – 1902Webster, John W. – 1957, 58Weekes, Charles P., Jr. – 1909, 10Weggler, Robert K. – 1975, 76, 78Weidel, Brian C. – 1995, 96Weideman, Edward A. – 1965Weidenkopf, Thomas W. – 1978, 79, 80Weidenthal, Harold G. – 1912Weinstein, David – 1993, 94Weiss, Charles P. – 1941Welles, Theodore W. – 1945Wenmoth, Robert – 1974Wesson, Andy – 1984West, Frederick W. – 1938, 39, 40Westcott, Mark E. – 1972Wester, Frederick E. – 1924, 25Westfield, Bryan J. – 1962, 63Westphal, Frederick A., Jr. – 1942, 46, 47Wetherell, Steve – 1982Wetzel, Eric D. – 1981, 82Weyandt, Daniel J. – 1998, 99, 2000Whalen, Jon – 1988Wheeler, William S. – 1942, 46

Whelan, William J. – 1950, 51, 52Whetstone, Walter , Jr. – 1923, 24Whipple, Kirt R. – 1989, 90White, Rollin H. – 1890, 91, 92Whiting, Allen E. – 1896, 97, 98Whitney, George S. – 1900Whyte, Jessel S. – 1910, 11, 12Whyte, Robert B. – 1911, 12Wickham, Woodward A. – 1926, 27Wierbinski, Donald S. – 1973, 74, 75Wight, Harry C. – 1908Wilder, LaVerne A. – 1904Wildes, Christopher – 1989Wilkes, Jeff – 1990Wilkinson, John – 1887, 88Williams, Alfred D. – 1913Williams, Dana P. – 1971, 72Williams, George E. – 1943, 44Williams, Kenneth W. – 1980, 81Williams, Richard D. – 1963, 64Williamson, George – 1911, 13Willinger, Gerald F. – 1988, 89, 90Willmott, Derrick L. – 1987, 88Wilson, Christopher W. – 1897, 98, 99Wilson, Edward P. – 1910Wilson, Griswold , Jr. – 1935Wilson, Harrison S. – 1933, 34, 35Wilson, Ian P. – 1996, 97Wilson, James B. – 1919Wilson, Ken – 1979Wilson, P. A. – 1896Wilson, R. H. – 1888Wilson, Richard H. – 1972, 73, 74Wilson, Ronald D. – 1934, 35Wilson, Terrance M. – 1956, 57, 58Wilson, William J. – 1951Wilson, William L. – 1964, 65Windsor, Philip B. – 1897, 99Wingerson, Richard N. – 1950Wise, Matthew – 1999, 2001, 02Witherbee, George P. – 1891, 92Witwer, Dale E. – 1965, 66Wleklinski, Robert E. – 1992Wolfe, Philip W. – 1955Wolff, Peter M. – 1940, 41Wood, Berwick B. – 1908, 09Wood, Gary F. – 1961, 62, 63Wood, George A. – 1991, 92Wood, H. N. – 1889Wood, Nollie P. – 1973, 74Woodring, Jeffrey E. – 1990, 91, 92Woods, David M. – 1992, 93, 94Worcester, William H. – 1939Worden, Warren L. – 1927, 28Woznicki, Julius J. – 1945Wrampelmeier, Fred J. – 1927, 28Wright, Winfred B. – 1942, 46, 47Wyckoff, Clinton R. – 1895Wydo, Frank – 1946Wyvell, Manton M. – 1898

YYablonski, Robert F. – 1960Yanz, Victor B. – 2000, 01, 02Yavinsky, Merrill – 1985Yawger, Edwin – 1889, 90Yerg, Jay E. – 1995Young, Charles V.P. – 1898Young, Courtney D. – 1942Young, E. P. – 1891, 1893, 95Young, George H. – 1897, 98, 99Young, George H., Jr. – 1898Young, George O. – 1930Young, J. T. – 1888Young, Spencer C., III – 1975Young, William W. – 1988

ZZacek, Richard J. – 1998, 99, 2000, 01Zack, William – 1974Zak, Edward P. – 1966, 67, 68Zander, Roy J. – 1915, 16Zankowski, John – 1966Zechman, Russel P. – 1951, 53Zelko, Russell R. – 1959, 60, 61Ziegler, William W. – 1936Zielinski, Bob – 1978Zielinski, James W. – 1961, 62, 63Zingo, Chris J. – 1991, 92, 93Zirkle, Douglas E. – 1963, 64, 65Ziskind, Cory – 1999, 2000, 01Zittel, William A. – 1981Zogby, Peter S. – 1965, 66, 67

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www.cornellbigred.comGeneral/Media InformationGeneral/Media Information

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AEROSPACEMartin Fettman ’76, ’80, DVM ’80Veterinarian and astronaut; payload specialist for Spacelab LifeSciences 2 missionEd Lu ’84Mission specialist for the Space ShuttleAtlantis, which docked with theRussian Space Station Mir

ARTSRichard Meier ’57Internationally known architectRobert A. Moog PhD ’65Musician and inventor of the Moogmusic synthesizerSusan Rothenberg ’67PainterJason Seley ’40Sculptor; Cornell faculty memberJennifer Tipton ’58Award-winning theatre and dance lighting designerPeter Yarrow ’59Musician; Peter, Paul & Mary

BUSINESSAdolph ’07 and Joseph Coors ’39Founder/executives of the nation‘s largest single breweryPeter Coors ’69President, Coors Brewing CompanyLeroy R. Grumman ME ’16Founder of Grumman Aircraft Engineering CorporationLaurens Hammond ME ’16Inventor of the Hammond organ and other electronic devicesHerbert F. ’22 and Samuel C. Johnson ’50Founder/executives of Johnson Wax CompanyDrew Nieporent ’77Owner of the Myriad Restaurant Group, which operates 16restaurants (including the Tribeca Grill, Nobu, and Layla) in six U.S.citiesSanford I. Weill ’55Financier and philanthropist; CEO of Citigroup

EDUCATION AND HUMANITIESUrie Bronfenbrenner ’38Pioneer in human development studies; Cornell faculty memberRobert W. Fogel ’48Co-winner of the 1993 Nobel Prize in economic sciencesJerome H. Holland ’39, MS ’41Former Ambassador to Sweden; former president of HamptonInstitute and Delaware State University; businessmanFlemmie Kittrell MS ’30, PhD ’36Educator; early advocate of preschool education programsJeffrey S. Lehman ’77First alumnus to be president of Cornell (current); dean of Univer-sity of Michigan Law School 1994-2003; active proponent ofaffirmative action in higher educationWilliam Strunk PhD 1896Educator and editor; co-author of Elements of Style

ENTERTAINMENTAllen Funt ’34Producer and host of Candid Cameratelevision seriesArthur Laurents ’37Tony Award-winning playwright,screenwriter, director, and author;wrote West Side Story and directed LaCage Aux FollesBill Maher ’78Comedian, author; host of PoliticallyIncorrect panel show on ABCEdward Marinaro ’72Actor, Hill Street Blues, SistersChristopher Reeve ’74Actor, Superman I, II, III and IV movies; award winning director;activist for medical researchThelma Schoonmaker ’61Oscar-winning film editor; worked on every Martin Scorsese filmJimmy Smits MFA ’82Actor, L.A. Law and NYPD Blue

GOVERNMENTSamuel (Sandy) R. Berger ’67International consultant; national security advisor 1993-2000Stephen Friedman ’59Assistant for economic policy to President George W. Bush, anddirector of the National Economic CouncilRuth Bader Ginsburg ’54U.S. Supreme Court Justice; member of National Women’s Hall ofFameSol M. Linowitz JD ’38, LLB ’38Attorney, statesman; U.S. ambassador-at-large 1979-81; PanamaCanal Treaty negotiator 1977; received Medal of Freedom 1998Edmund Muskie LLB ’39Governor of Maine 1955-59, U.S. senator 1959-80, presidentialcandidate 1968, and U.S. secretary ofstate 1980-81Samuel Pierce, Jr. ’47, JD ’49Former Secretary of Housing and UrbanDevelopmentJanet Reno ’60U.S. attorney general, 1993-2000;member of National Women’s Hall ofFameWilliam P. Rogers LLB ’37U.S. attorney general 1958-61; U.S.secretary of state 1969-73Lee Teng-hui PhD ’68President of TaiwanElbert Tuttle ’18, LLB ’23Chief judge, U.S. Court of Appeals; ruled on many fundamental1954 civil-rights cases

LITERATUREDiane Ackerman MFA ’73, PhD ’79Best-selling author, poet, and naturalistKenneth Blanchard ’61, PhD ’67Author, The One-Minute Manager; management consultantSusan Brownmiller ’56Feminist author and activist

Prominent Cornell AlumniMedia Information

Stephen Friedman ’59

Ed Lu ’84

Christopher Reeve ’74

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Pearl S. Buck M.A. ’25Winner of 1932 Pulitzer Prize and 1938 Nobel Prize for literatureToni Morrison ’55Winner of 1988 Pulitzer Prize and 1993 Nobel Prize for literatureTom Peters ’65, MEC ’66Best-selling author and management consultantKurt Vonnegut Jr. ’44Author (Cats Cradle, Slaughter House Five); prisoner of war inGermany during World War IIE. B. White ’21Author (Charlotte‘s Web, Stuart Little) and editor; co-author ofElements of Style

MEDIAMargaret Bourke-White ’27Award-winning photojournalist and war correspondentJane Brody ’62Science reporter and authorCharles Collingwood ’39Broadcast journalist and foreign correspondentAnn H. Coulter ’84Lawyer, political analyst, and authorFrank Gannett 1898Newspaper publisher; founder of the Gannett chainAustin H. Kiplinger ’39Editor, publisher, and journalistBill Nye ’77Award-winning popular-science mediahost and authorKeith Olbermann ’79Television sports anchor and commen-tatorDick Schaap ’55Emmy Award-winning television sportscommentator , sports commentator,journalist, and authorKate Snow ’91Political reporter; White House corre-spondent for ABC’s “Good Morning America”Sheryl WuDunn ’81Journalist; winner of the 1990 Pulitzer Prize for coverage of theTiananmen Square protests in Beijing

SCIENCE, MEDICINE AND HEALTHGeorge W. Beadle PhD ’30Co-winner of the 1958 Nobel Prize in physiology/medicineJoyce Brothers ’47Psychologist, author, and media personalitySheldon L. Glashow ’54Co-winner of the 1979 Nobel Prize in physicsHenry Heimlich ’41, MD ’43Developer of the Heimlich maneuver and of esophagoplastyRobert W. Holley PhD ’47Co-winner of the 1968 Nobel Prize in physiology/medicineHelen Lewis Irlen ’67Developer of a treatment for dyslexiaMae Jemison M.D. ’81Chemical engineer, scientist, physician, teacher, and former space-shuttle astronaut; member of National Women’s Hall of FameC. Everett Koop MD ’41U.S. surgeon general 1981-89Philip Levine MD ’23Immunohematologist; discovered the Rh factor in blood in 1939Barbara McClintock ’23, ’25, PhD ’27genetics researcher; winner of the 1983 Nobel Prize in physiology/medicine

Douglas Osheroff MS ’71, PhD ’73Co-winner of the 1996 Nobel Prize in physicsIsidor Isaac Rabi ’19Winner of the 1944 Nobel Prize in physicsSteven Weinberg ’541991 National Medal of Science winner, and co-winner of the1979 Nobel Prize in physics

SPORTSJon Anderson ’711972 Olympian, track; winner of 1973 Boston MarathonBruce Arena ’73Coach of U.S. National soccer team;coached 1996 U.S.Olympic teamGary Bettman ’74First National Hockey League commis-sionerDarren Eliot ’83Former NHL player, Los Angeles Kings,Detroit Red Wings, Buffalo Sabres; 1984OlympianKen Dryden ’69Former NHL player, MontrealCanadiens, 1971-79; inducted into theHockey Hall of Fame, 1983; current Vice Chairman, TorontoMaple LeafsPete Gogolak ’64Former NFL player, Buffalo Bills (1964-65) and New York Giants(1966-75)Al Hall ’56Four-time Olympian (1956, 1960, 1964, 1968), hammer throwDerrick Harmon ’84Former NFL player, San Francisco 49ers (1984-86); played in SuperBowl XIXRobert Trent Jones ’30Golf course architect; constructed over 450 courses around theworld; inducted into PGA World Golf Hall of Fame, 1987Robert J. Kane ’34Former U.S. Olympic Committee president, 1976-80; inducted intoU.S. Olympic Hall of Fame, 1986; served as director of athletics atCornell for 36 years.Kent Manderville ’93Drafted in second round by NHL Calgary Flames, 1989; playedseveral NHL teams and currently plays for the Pittsburgh Penguins;1992 OlympianPedro Pablo Morales JD ’94Two-time 1992 Olympic gold medalist, swimmingCharles H. Moore ’511952 Olympic gold medalist (hurdles) and silver medalist (1600-meter relay); honored as Golden Olympian, 1996; Cornell Directorof Athletics, 1994-99Joe Nieuwendyk ’88Drafted in second round by the NHL Calgary Flames, 1985;currrently plays for the New Jersey Devils; three-time Stanley Cupwinner; 1998 Olympian; 2002 Olympic gold medalist; 1999 ConnSmythe Trophy winnerSeth Payne ’97Drafted in fourth round by Jacksonville Jaguars, 1997; currently adefensive lineman with the Houston TexansGlenn (Pop) Warner 1894Football coach at Cornell, Georgia, Carlisle (where he coached JimThorpe), Pittsburgh, Stanford and Temple. Overall 44-yearcoaching record was 319-106-29.

Media Information

Bruce Arena ’73

Dick Schaap ’55

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CredentialsRequests for working press credentials at Cornell home football games should be

made in writing on station/newspaper/magazine letterhead to Elli Harkness in theCornell Athletic Communications Office. The mailing address is: Teagle Hall, CampusRoad, Ithaca, NY 14853-6501. Requests may be sent via fax, but all requests, mailedor faxed, should be sent so that they reach the athletic communications office at least10 days prior to the game.Media agencies which cover Cornell and the visiting school on a regular basis will

receive top priority. Other credentials will be issued on the basis of circulation andthe availability of space. Credentials will be mailed if at all possible. Otherwise, theymay be picked up before 5 p.m. on Friday at the athletic communications office. Thosecredentials not picked up by 5 p.m. on Friday will be left for Saturday pickup at theSchoellkopf Field Will Call booth, located at the northwest end of the west stands.

Press Box ServicesPrograms, flip cards, statistics and notes will be provided before each game. A play-

by-play and out-of-town scores will be distributed at the conclusion of each quarter.Halftime statistics will also be available. A scoring summary and complete team andindividual statistics will be provided after each game. Lunch will be served at halftime.Soft drinks, coffee and tea will be available throughout the game.

Sideline PolicyPhotographers will not be allowed on the sidelines without proper credentials.

Photo credentials are limited to daily newspaper, student newspaper, wire service andteam photographers, along with a limited number of special passes which are givenout on a space available basis. Freelance photographers must provide the CornellAthletic Communications office with a proof sheet and four (4) complimentary 8x10sof the game.Under NCAA and Ivy League guidelines, photographers are not allowed between

the 25-yard lines and must remain outside the restraining lines surrounding the field.Credential holders not working will be asked to leave the sidelines. We ask for the safetyof others please do not leave equipment unattended on the sidelines. If you areshooting with a tripod, please keep a safe distance from the playing field.

Radio BoothsWe have space in the press box for three radio stations. Priority is always given to

Cornell’s commercial station. All visiting stations should contact the AthleticCommunications Office at least one month before the game for informationconcerning phone lines. The fee is $90 per game for line rental and all calls must becollect.

Game Day ParkingAll media people will be issued parking passes for the parking garage roof behind

the west stands. All parking passes are mailed out 10 days before the game.

Postgame InterviewsAfter the game, the media will meet in the press room located on the third floor of

Schoellkopf Memorial Hall. The visiting coach will be brought in after the required10-minute “cooling-off” period. Coach Pendergast will follow the visiting coach,along with selected players. Requests for players should be directed to a member ofthe Athletic Communications staff during the fourth quarter of each game. Onlymembers of the working press with proper credentials will be allowed in the pressroom. The Big Red locker room is closed.

Frequently Called Numbers(607 area code)

Athletic Communications .... 255-3752Athletic Communications Fax . 255-9791Football Office ............ 255-0003Athletic Department ........ 255-5520Press Box (game day only) ... 255-3535

Mailing AddressTeagle Hall, Campus RoadIthaca, NY 14853-6501Overnight AddressSchoellkopf HouseCampus RoadIthaca, NY 14853-6501Cornell Athletics Webwww.cornellbigred.com

Covering the Big RedLaura StangeDirector ofAthletic Communications

Office: 607-255-3752Direct: 607-255-5627Home: 607-257-5434E-mail: [email protected]

Elli HarknessAdministrative Assistant

Office: 607-255-5626E-mail: [email protected]

Marlene CrockfordAccounts Representative

Office: 607-255-3752E-mail: [email protected]

Area AccommodationsBest Western University Inn ..... 607-272-6100Clarion Inn ..................... 257-2000Comfort Inn .................... 272-0100Courtyard by Marriott ............ 330-1000Econo Lodge .................... 257-1400Holiday Inn..................... 272-1000Ramada Inn-Ithaca Airport ......... 257-3100Statler Hotel ................... 257-2500Super 8 Motel .................. 273-8088

Jeremy HartiganAssistant Director ofAthletic Communications

Office: 607-255-3752Direct: 607-255-9788Home: 607-257-7146E-mail: [email protected]

Brian KelleyAssistant Director ofAthletic Communications

Office: 607-255-4688Direct: 607-255-3753Home: 607-257-2177E-mail: [email protected]

Media Information

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2003 Cornell Football 117www.cornellbigred.com

Radio CoverageAll 10 Cornell football

games will be broadcastby WHCU 870 AMIthaca. Barry Leonardreturns for his sixth yearin the booth and fifthseason in the play-by-play chair. Buck Briggsreturns as the Big Red’sanalyst.

Cornell on the InternetWHCU's broadcasts of Cornell football can

also be heard via the internet. To hear thegame from your computer via the internet,go to http://www.CornellBigRed.com andfollow the links to the broadcast, which arelocated on the football schedule page.

Keep checking CornellBigRed.comfor broadcast updates

Big Red On The AirTelephonesThere will be one telephone for media use (607-255-2982) and one for Athletic

Communications use during the game (255-3535). Several telephones areavailable to members of the working press in the Athletic Communications Officein Paul Schoellkopf House. Anyone desiring a private line should call MarleneCrockford at least one month before the game. Cost of the line is $90.

Midweek Sports LuncheonEach Tuesday, the Tompkins County Chamber of Commerce will sponsor a

luncheon at the Ramada Inn-Ithaca Airport with the head coaches of Cornell,Ithaca College and Ithaca High School.

Availability of CoachAll requests for interviews with Coach Pendergast must be received by the

Athletic Communications Office at least 24-hours in advance. He will acceptinterviews in his office, over the phone and prior to practice sessions as long asa request has been made in advance.

Player InterviewsAll player interviews must be arranged through the Athletic Communications

Office so we can arrange a time that will not interfere with the student’s academicschedule. Players have been instructed to conduct no interviews unless they havebeen set up in this manner. All interviews are to be conducted on Wednesday only.Telephone interviews are conducted at the players’ convenience. Usually they

are handled by players returning calls immediately after practice on Wednesday(approximately between 8 and 10 p.m.). No home numbers for players will begiven out and players have been told not to accept calls from anyone askingfootball-related questions.Please do not show up and wait for players unannounced on campus, at players’ housing or Schoellkopf Memorial. The players have

been instructed to politely decline the request and refer the person to the Athletic Communications Office.Advance notice of your intentions to attend a practice session is appreciated.

I-81 (from the south): Take exit 8 at Whitney Point; follow Route 79 West all the way to Ithaca. At the flashing yellow light(intersection with Pine Tree Road), turn right onto Pine Tree Road; continue to the end of Pine Tree Road at the intersection withRoute 366 (flashing red light). Turn left onto Route 366; continue to the flashing yellow light and proceed straight onto Hoy Road;the parking garage and stadium will be on your right. Hoy Road ends at the intersection with Campus Road; turn right onto CampusRoad to reach Schoellkopf Field.

I-81 (from the north): Take exit 12 at Homer/Cortland, turn left onto Route 281 and continue on 281 until it merges withRoute 13 South. Take Route 13 South through the Village of Dryden. Near the NYSEG facility, bear left onto Route 366; take Route366 to the flashing yellow light and proceed straight onto Hoy Road; the parking garage and stadium will be on your right. HoyRoad ends at the intersection with Campus Road; turn right onto Campus Road to reach Schoellkopf Field.

I-90 (from the west): Take exit 42 and pick up Route 96 South all the way to Ithaca. Watch for signs to Route 79 East (GreenStreet); take Route 79 (Green Street) through downtown Ithaca. Green Street merges with State Street (still Route 79 East); continueup State Street to the top of the hill and turn left onto Mitchell Street (watch for signs directing you to Cornell). Follow signs toRoute 366 (Ithaca Road) and to Cornell; bear left onto Ithaca Road and continue on Ithaca Road to a “Y” intersection with a flashingred light. Turn left onto Hoy Road; the parking garage and stadium will be on your right. Hoy Road ends at the intersection withCampus Road; turn right onto Campus Road to reach Schoellkopf Field.

Route 13 (from the east): Take Route 13 into the City of Ithaca; turn East on Route 79 (Green Street). Take Route 79 (GreenStreet) through downtown Ithaca. Green Street merges with State Street (still Route 79 East); continue up State Street to the top ofthe hill and turn left onto Mitchell Street (watch for signs directing you to Cornell). Follow signs to Route 366 (Ithaca Road) and toCornell; bear left onto Ithaca Road and continue on Ithaca Road to a “Y” intersection with a flashing red light. Turn left onto HoyRoad; the parking garage and stadium will be on your right. Hoy Road ends at the intersection with Campus Road; turn right ontoCampus Road to reach Schoellkopf Field.

Buses: Team buses and tour buses should follow a slightly different route onto campus from Route 366. Call TransportationServices at Cornell during business hours Monday through Friday for directions onto campus and to other athletic facilities, (607)255-5692.

Directions to Cornell

Media Information

Barry Leonard

Page 118: 2003 Cornell Football Media Guide

www.cornellbigred.com118 2003 Cornell Football

Saturday, September 20Colgate at DartmouthBrown at AlbanyColumbia at FordhamBucknell at CornellHarvard at Holy CrossTowson at YaleDuquesne at PennLehigh at PrincetonSaturday, September 27Dartmouth at New Hampshire*Brown at Harvard*Cornell at YalePenn at LehighPrinceton at LafayetteBucknell at Columbia

Saturday, October 4*Penn at DartmouthRhode Island at BrownColgate at CornellNortheastern at HarvardYale at Holy Cross*Columbia at PrincetonSaturday, October 11Bucknell at Penn*Harvard at Cornell*Dartmouth at YaleFordham at BrownLafayette at ColumbiaColgate at Princeton

Saturday, October 18*Princeton at BrownGeorgetown at CornellDartmouth at Holy CrossLafayette at HarvardYale at Colgate*Penn at ColumbiaSaturday, October 25*Columbia at Dartmouth*Brown at Cornell*Princeton at Harvard*Yale at PennSaturday, November 1*Penn at Brown*Yale at Columbia*Dartmouth at Harvard*Cornell at Princeton

2003 Ivy League Composite Schedule

2004Sept. 18 at Bucknell

25 YaleOct. 2 at Towson

9 at Harvard16 Colgate23 at Brown30 Princeton

Nov. 6 Dartmouth13 at Columbia20 Penn

2005Sept. 17 Bucknell

24 at YaleOct. 1 at Colgate

8 Harvard15 Georgetown22 Brown29 at Princeton

Nov. 5 at Dartmouth12 Columbia19 at Penn

Future Cornell Schedules (2004-2007)

Schedule Information/DirectorySaturday, November 8*Brown at Yale*Cornell at Dartmouth*Princeton at Penn*Harvard at ColumbiaSaturday, November 15*Dartmouth at Brown*Penn at Harvard*Columbia at Cornell*Yale at PrincetonSaturday, November 22*Brown at Columbia*Cornell at Penn*Princeton at Dartmouth*Harvard at Yale*Ivy League games

2006Sept. 16 at Bucknell

23 Yale30 at Georgetown

Oct. 7 at Harvard14 Colgate21 at Brown28 Princeton

Nov. 4 Dartmouth11 at Columbia18 Penn

Football Staff Name Office PhoneHead Coach Tim Pendergast 607-255-0003Offensive Coordinator/Offensive Line Coach John Strollo 255-5639Quarterbacks Coach Brandon Stott 255-5640Running Backs Coach Scott Walker 255-5635Wide Receivers Coach Jeff Brookshire 255-5222Tight Ends Coach Adam Schwartz 255-5222Defensive Coordinator/Linebackers Coach Jim Pletcher 255-5637Defensive Line Coach/Recruiting Coordinator Pete DeStefano 255-5638Defensive Secondary Coach Gerard Wilcher 255-5636Outside Linebackers Coach Mark Lister 255-5222Director of Football Operations Pete Noyes 255-3486Strength and Conditioning Coach Tom Howley 255-3953Administrative Assistant Karen Berkley 255-0003Recruiting Secretary Becky Hollenback-Miller 255-4391AdministrationAthletic Director J. Andrew Noel Jr. 255-8832Associate Director/Senior Woman Administrator Anita Brenner 255-8283Associate Director/Programs Stephen P. Erber 255-7442Associate Director/Business & Finance Frank Araneo 255-1317Associate Director/Alumni Affairs John Webster 255-5631Compliance Coordinator Patty Weldon 255-8874Director of Athletic Communications Laura Stange 255-3752Director of Cornell Sports Marketing Jeff Hall 255-6680Head Athletic Trainer Bernie DePalma 255-4237Director of Tickets, Events and Sports School Gene Nighman 255-7333Facilities Manager Pat Graham 255-1321Equipment Manager Dale Strauf 255-4115

Cornell Athletics Directory

2007Sept. 15 Bucknell

22 Yale29 at Georgetown

Oct. 6 Harvard13 Colgate20 Brown27 at Princeton

Nov. 3 at Dartmouth10 Columbia17 at Penn

Media Information

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2003 Cornell Football 119www.cornellbigred.com

NewspaperChris Feaver, Sports EditorIthaca JournalP.O. Box 430Ithaca, NY 14851-0430Telephone: 607-274-9214Fax: 607-272-4248

Alex Ip, Sports EditorCornell Daily Sun139 West State St.Ithaca, NY 14850Telephone: 607-273-3606Fax: 607-273-0746

Steve Carlic, Sports EditorSyracuse NewspapersP.O. Box 4818Syracuse, NY 13221Fax: 315-470-3019

Bud Poliquin, ColumnistSyracuse NewspapersP.O. Box 4818Syracuse, NY 13221Fax: 315-470-3019

Charlie Jaworski, SportsPress & Sun BulletinP.O. Box 1270Binghamton, NY 13902

Jim Mandelaro, SportsDemocrat & Chronicle55 Exchange Blvd.Rochester, NY 14614Fax: 716-258-2776

John Moriello, SportsRochester Newspapers55 Exchange Blvd.Rochester, NY 14614Fax: 716-258-2776

Roger Neumann, Sports EditorStar-GazetteP.O. Box 285Elmira, NY 14902Fax: 607-734-3004

RadioSports DirectorWVBR 93.5 FM227 Linden Ave.Ithaca, NY 14850Telephone: 607-273-4000Fax: 607-273-4069

Bob SteinkampNews DirectorEagle Broadcasting1751 Hanshaw RoadIthaca, NY 14850Telephone: 607-257-6400Fax: 607-257-6497

Bob MichaelsWELM Radio1705 Lake St.Elmira, NY 14901Fax: 607-733-5627

Sports DirectorWSYR Radio500 Plum St.Syracuse, NY 13204Fax: 315-472-1904

Cornell Broadcast CrewBarry LeonardPlay-by-play27 West Meadow DriveIthaca, NY 14850Home Telephone: 607-257-5938Fax: 607-257-5938

Buck BriggsColor analystc/o Cornell AthleticsTeagle Hall, Campus RoadCornell UniversityIthaca, NY 14853-6501Telephone: 607-255-9598Fax: 607-255-2969

TelevisionSports DirectorNewsCenter 10517 W. State St.Ithaca, NY 14850Telephone: 607-277-4543Fax: 607-272-7692

Sports DirectorWBNG-TVP.O. Box 12Johnson City, NY 13790Fax: 607-729-4022

Sports DirectorWETM-TVP.O. Box 1207Elmira, NY 14902Fax: 607-733-4739

A’Don Allen, Sports DirectorWENY-TVP.O. Box 208Elmira, NY 14902Fax: 607-796-6171

Doug Logan, Sports DirectorWIXT-TV5904 Bridge St.Syracuse, NY 13057Fax: 315-446-9283

Jason Bristol, Sports DirectorWSTM-TV1030 James St.Syracuse, NY 13203Fax: 315-474-5122

Kevin Maher, Sports DirectorWTVH-TV980 James St.Syracuse, NY 13203Fax: 315-425-0129

Cornell Football Media OutletsMedia Information

Page 120: 2003 Cornell Football Media Guide

www.cornellbigred.com120 2003 Cornell Football

Commitment to ExcellenceThose who seek an undergraduate education at an Ivy

League school do so because of the promise of aca-demic challenge, of quality teaching and of diverse and plen-

tiful resources. It was a shared perspective on the proper balance ofathletics and academics that led to the creation of the Ivy League in1954. When the member schools formally united, it was agreed thatathletes are admitted as students and should be awarded financialaid only on the basis of economic need. As a result, students today arenot bound to their sports because of athletic scholarships, rather theychoose to participate in athletics because they relish competition andphysical challenges.

Cornell is especially attractive to those who seek a school committedto both academic and athletic excellence. With 36 varsity sports, theuniversity’s athletic department is one of the most comprehensive in thecountry. Along with a schedule that pits Cornell against its Ancient Eightrivals, Big Red teams compete in Division I of the NCAA and the ECAC.

An impressive staff of coaches leads the Big Red teams and recruitssome of the finest student-athletes from a national and internationalpool of accomplished young men and women. The coaches demon-strate a commitment to teaching and a willingness to share their owncompetitive experiences with their teams. Their individual achieve-ments and accomplishments include playing and coaching time in theprofessional and international ranks as well as numerous all-starperformances during their own collegiate careers.

Set against a backdrop of the natural beauty of Cayuga Lake and thesurrounding hills, an extensive array of facilities provides a tremendousenvironment for practice and competition for Cornell’s varsity teams.Schoellkopf Field and its distinctive crescent-shaped stadium may beCornell’s most familiar sports venue, but since the mid-’90s, a numberof new facilities have become landmarks as well. The FriedmanStrength and Conditioning Center, a state-of-the-art facility dedicatedto the support and improvement of athletes’ performances, is a placewhere all teams gather to train. The Kane Sports Complex, with itsBerman Field for soccer and the Simon Track, and the Niemand•RobisonSoftball Field are also impressive facilities. The Reis Tennis Center andthe Oxley Equestrian Center, home of the equestrian and polo teams,are part of an expanding complex that will include new homes for otherteams as Cornell continues to realize its plan for renovation and buildingof athletic facilities.

Spacious and historic Barton Hall is home to the indoor track and fieldteams. The volleyball and basketball teams compete in Bartels Hall’s4,473-seat Newman Arena and the fencing team’s home, the StifelFencing Salle, is located on the lower level of the facility. Adjacent tothe Bartels Hall is famed Lynah Rink, where the Big Red hockey teamsperform before sellout crowds for most home games. The FriedmanWrestling Center, new to campus in 2002, is located to the north ofBartels. The gymnastics and swimming teams are housed in Teagle Hallwhere Cornell crews also train during the winter months. Just down the

hill from campus are the Collyer Boat House and the Doris Robison ShellHouse, which are scheduled for renovation and expansion.

Cornellians have been national champions in ice hockey, lacrosse,polo, rowing, track and field and wrestling. They have also earnedspots in halls of fame, on All-America teams, on the Olympic medalpodium and have written their names in record books as Wimbledontennis champions and major league players in baseball, basketball,football and hockey. Six years ago, Seth Payne ’97 was selected in thefourth round of the NFL draft and now plays for the Houston Texans.Ken Dryden ’69, former star goalie of the Montreal Canadiens andcurrent vice chairman of the Toronto Maple Leafs, and Joe Nieuwendyk’88, a 2002 Olympic gold medalist, Stanley Cup champion and cur-rent player for the New Jersey Devils, are Cornell hockey alumni.

Last year a number of teams and individuals competed in NCAAtournament action, including the men’s ice hockey team that wasranked No. 1 in the country during the season and advanced to theFrozen Four. Sophomore wrestler Travis Lee earned a national title at125 pounds and was named Ivy League wrestler of the year. The men’slacrosse team won a share of the Ivy League title, while the womenwon the ECAC crown. Both the men’s and women’s indoor and out-door track and field teams won Heptagonal championships, markingthe first time in Heps history that the same school captured all fourteam titles. David LeNeveu ’05 was a finalist for the Hobey BakerAward, the highest honor in men’s collegiate hockey, and the women’spolo team captured its fourth straight national title and 11th overall.In all, seven Big Red teams captured Ivy League titles, 14 individualswere named All-Americans and 59 rose to first-team All-Ivy status.

Cornell is proud that, as a group, varsity athletes regularly matchor exceed the student body’s overall GPA for academic performance.The University is especially proud that every semester a number ofundergraduates—more than 30 on average—achieve a 4.0 GPA whileparticipating in varsity sports. These scholar-athletes are inductedinto the athletic department’s 400 Club at a semiannual breakfastattended by President Jeffrey Lehman, Vice President for Student andAcademic Services Susan Murphy and Director of Athletics Andy Noel.These dedicated student-athletes demonstrate that the ideal is achiev-able, that it is possible to excel both in the classroom and in thesporting arena.

In 2002-03, three student-athletes were named to Verizon Aca-demic All-America teams, tied for the most members of any of the IvyLeague schools.

The collegiate experience at Cornell is a rich one for varsity ath-letes because the University supports their passion to excel.

W o m e nBasketballCross CountryEquestrianFencingField HockeyGymnasticsIce HockeyLacrossePoloRowingSoccerSoftballSquashSwimming and DivingTennisTrack and Field, IndoorTrack and Field, OutdoorVolleyball

M e nBaseballBasketballCross CountryFootballGolfIce HockeyLacrossePoloRowing, HeavyweightRowing, LightweightSoccerSprint FootballSquashSwimming and DivingTennisTrack and Field, IndoorTrack and Field, OutdoorWrestling

Varsity Teams

Department of Athletics and Physical EducationMission Statement

The Department of Athletics and Physical Education strives toprovide students with powerful and meaningful participatoryexperiences that forge enduring bonds with Cornell, and toprovide for the well-being of members of the faculty, staff, andcommunity.We offer a diverse program of physical and outdoor education,

recreational services, and intercollegiate athletic competition,equitably administered with special attention to the needs ofwomen and members of under-represented minority groups. Wefoster the values of physical fitness, total well-being, and enduringparticipation in athletics; teach leadership skills, teamwork,responsibility, and accountability; and administer programs thatcan be critical to the educational and personal development ofstudents in keeping with the high standards of Cornell, the IvyLeague, the Eastern College Athletic Conference, and the Na-tional Collegiate Athletic Association.The department promotes pride and unity within the university

community and provides opportunities to develop, strengthen,and maintain ties to external audiences such as alumni, friends,the educational community, and the general public by attractinginterest, recognition, and support.

Media Information