WEEK 9: OCTOBER 30, 2016 --- For a printer-friendly (.pdf) version of this week's report, click HERE.


2016 ODAC Football Standings
 
 
Randolph-Macon
Washington and Lee
Emory & Henry
Shenandoah
Bridgewater
Hampden-Sydney
Guilford
Catholic
  Conference Overall
GP Record Win % GP Record Win % Last 10 Streak
Randolph-Macon 7 6-1 0.857 11 9-2 0.818 8-2 Lost 1
Washington and Lee 7 5-2 0.714 10 6-4 0.600 6-4 Won 1
Emory & Henry 7 5-2 0.714 10 6-4 0.600 6-4 Won 5
Shenandoah 7 4-3 0.571 10 6-4 0.600 6-4 Lost 2
Bridgewater 7 4-3 0.571 10 5-5 0.500 5-5 Won 3
Hampden-Sydney 7 3-4 0.429 10 3-7 0.300 3-7 Lost 1
Guilford 7 1-6 0.143 10 4-6 0.400 4-6 Lost 6
Catholic 7 0-7 0.000 10 3-7 0.300 3-7 Lost 7
 
Active Coaching Records
 
 
Mike Clark, BC (22/22)
Bill Bachman, CUA (1/1)
Curt Newsome, E&H (3/3)
Chris Rusiewicz, GC (6/6)
Marty Favret, HSC (17/17)
Pedro Arruza, RMC (13/13)
Scott Yoder, SU (4/4)
Scott Abell, W&L (5/5)
  Conference Overall
 Coach (yrs/at school) Win Loss Ties Win % Win Loss Ties Win %
Mike Clark, BC (22/22) 79 54 0 0.594 144 90 1 0.615
Bill Bachman, CUA (1/1) 0 7 0 0.000 3 7 0 0.300
Curt Newsome, E&H (3/3) 14 7 0 0.667 20 10 0 0.667
Chris Rusiewicz, GC (6/6) 22 19 0 0.537 34 26 0 0.567
Marty Favret, HSC (17/17) 75 32 0 0.701 120 57 0 0.678
Pedro Arruza, RMC (13/13) 45 38 0 0.542 74 58 0 0.561
Scott Yoder, SU (4/4) 10 18 0 0.357 18 22 0 0.450
Scott Abell, W&L (5/5) 23 12 0 0.657 31 21 0 0.596

  Weekly Award Winners
WEEK 1
OFF: Tre Frederick, So., Running Back, Randolph-Macon College
DEF: Davey Hardesty, Sr., Linebacker, Bridgewater College
WEEK 2
OFF: De'Eric Bell, Jr., Running Back, Guilford College
DEF: Gibson Ziah, Jr., Defensive End, Guilford College
WEEK 3
OFF: Lucas Morley, Sr., Wide Receiver, Catholic University
DEF: Will Dyson, Sr, Cornerback, Washington and Lee University
WEEK 4
OFF: Bye Week
DEF: Bye Week
WEEK 5
OFF: Tre Frederick, So., Running Back, Randolph-Macon College
DEF: Isaac Evans, So., Cornerback, Bridgewater College
WEEK 6
OFF: Jalen Hudson, So., Running Back, Shenandoah University
DEF: Bender Vaught, So, Linebacker, Hampden-Sydney College
WEEK 7
OFF: Marshall Hollerith, Sr., Running Back, Washington and Lee Univ.
DEF: Malik Sims, Sr., Linebacker, Shenandoah University
WEEK 8
OFF: Cedrick Delaney, Sr., Running Back, Shenandoah University
DEF: Davon Keith, So., Defensive End, Emory & Henry College
WEEK 9
OFF: Malivai Barker, Jr., Running Back, Bridgewater College
DEF: Eric Long, Sr., Safety, Randolph-Macon College
WEEK 10
OFF: Mike DeMasi, Jr., Running Back, Hampden-Sydney College
DEF: Cole Burdette, Sr., Defensive End, Randolph-Macon College
WEEK 11
OFF: Charlie Nelson, Sr., Quarterback, Washington and Lee University
DEF: Muhammad Khan, So., Defensive End, Bridgewater College
 
 Offensive Player of the Week
 Malivai Barker| Bridgewater| Jr.| Running Back
Barker, a junior from Leesburg, Va., provided much of the offensive scoring punch of the Eagles as they twice recovered from large deficits to post a 42-41 win at Guilford on Saturday. Barker racked up 161 yards from scrimmage with 141 coming via the ground on 19 carries. Three of those runs put points on the board with two of those touchdowns coming in Bridgewater's final push towards victory. After scoring via a one-yard effort late in the second quarter, Barker found the end zone twice in the second half with one arguably more valuable than the other. He pulled BC to within six points of Guilford with a 49-yard touchdown run with 4:53 showing on the third quarter clock. Then with 52-seconds to play, he punched in what would become the game-winning score with a one-yard plunge over the right side. For the season, Barker is third in the ODAC with 765 rushing yards and tied for second with eight rushing touchdowns. He has crossed the century mark on four occasions this season.
   Defensive Player of the Week
 Eric Long| Randolph-Macon| Sr.| Safety
Long, a senior from Burke, Va., led a Yellow Jackets defensive unit that corralled Washington and Lee's potent rushing offense in Randolph-Macon's 18-10 victory in Lexington on Saturday. Long was in on several big plays among his season-high 13 total tackles that included nine solo stops and a pair of tackles for a loss. He forced a fumble midway thru the second quarter that led to a R-MC field goal and subsequent 16-3 lead. On the next Generals' series, Long made four straight solo tackles inside R-MC's red zone, including a stop for a two-yard loss on 4th-and-3 from his own seven-yard line. His efforts spearheaded a defensive performance that limited the Generals to 213 rushing yards and held them without an offensive touchdown for the first time since W&L's season-opener in 2008. The win put R-MC in the driver's seat in a three-way tie for first place in the ODAC with Shenandoah and W&L. For the season, Long has made 33 tackles with 26 solo stops and a pair of interceptions.


Weekly Individual Game Superlatives
PASSING   RUSHING   RECEIVING
Karsten Miller, GC 33-of-52, 389 yards, 1 TD
Alec Cobb, HSC 26-of-51, 342 yards, 2 TD
Kevin Saxton, E&H 19-of-38, 305 yards, 3 TD
Hayden Bauserman, SU 28-of-42, 277 yards, 2 TD
Jay Scroggins, BC 14-of-26, 247 yards, 2 TD
 
Hunter Causey, GC 29 for 218 yards, 3 TD
Tre Frederick, RMC 33 for 212 yards, 0 TD
Malivai Barker, BC 19 for 141 yards, 3 TD
Charlie Nelson, W&L 23 for 106 yards, 0 TD
Marshall Hollerith, W&L 16 for 91 yards, 0 TD
 
Rontavius Miller, GC 9 rec. for 148 yards, 1 TD
Jesse Santiago, E&H 9 rec. for 139 yards, 1 TD
Rayvon Johnson, E&H 7 rec. for 135 yards, 0 TD
Daniel Woodruff, GC 9 rec. for 110 yards, 0 TD
A.J. Hampton, E&H 7 rec. for 99 yards, 1 TD
 
TACKLES   TACKLES FOR LOSS (SACKS)   INTERCEPTIONS
Hunter Hoots, GC 14 tackles - 5 solo, 14 assists
Eric Long, RMC 13 tackles - 9 solo, 4 assists
Josh Compton, E&H 12 tackles - 12 solo, 0 assists
Cory Cline, BC 12 tackles - 7 solo, 5 assists
Karl Roberts, GC 12 tackles - 7 solo, 5 assists
 
Lorenza Thomas Jr., SU 2.0 TFL, 2.0 sacks, -16 yards
Jake Pinkston, RMC 2.0 TFL, 1.0 sacks, -12 yards
Griffin Davis, HSC 2.0 TFL, 1.0 sacks, -3 yards
Dominic Volpe, W&L 2.0 TFL, 1.0 sacks, -8 yards
Logan O'Neill, RMC 2.0 TFL, 1.0 sacks, -8 yards
 
Josh Compton, E&H 2 INT for 5 yards, 0 TD
Isaac Evans, BC 1 INT for 79 yards, 1 TD
Will Dyson, W&L 1 INT for 72 yards, 1 TD
Julian Cutherbertson, GC 1 INT for 24 yards, 1 TD
JP Utz, BC 1 INT for 63 yards, 0 TD
 
This Week's Results
Football
October 29, 2016 Final
31
Emory & Henry
25
at Hampden-Sydney
Football
October 29, 2016 Final
45
Shenandoah
34
at Catholic
Football
October 29, 2016 Final
18
Randolph-Macon
10
at Washington and Lee
Football
October 29, 2016 Final
42
Bridgewater
41
at Guilford
 
Team News and Notes
BRIDGEWATER recovered from 28-14 and 41-28 deficits, the latter with 11:58 showing on the third quarter clock, in defeating Guilford 42-41. The Eagles' defense intercepted Guilford three times, including one that was returned 79 yards for a first quarter touchdown by Isaac Evans, one returned 64 yards to the Guilford 18-yard line by JP Utz with BC trailing, 41-35, and the third on Guilford's final possession in the end zone with 0:02 left in regulation by Sonny Romine. Running back Malivai Barker ran for 141 and three touchdowns, two of which came during BC's final comeback attempt. He had a 49-yard run to bring BC within six points and then punched in the would-be game-winner with 0:52 on the clock. Jay Scorggins threw for 247 yards and TD passes to Keith Jennings and Zane Grudzinski. Rayvon Johnson caught seven passes for 135 yards. Defensively, Cory Cline with with 12 tackles while Chance Morris added 11 stops. Utz added a sack and six tackles to his inteception. Evans made six stops and broke up an additional pass with his interception. Romine made five stops.

NEXT WEEK: vs. Washington and Lee (5-3, 4-1 ODAC) -- 1:00 p.m.
Washington and Lee and Bridgewater will be meeting for the 47th time, with the Generals holding a 27-19 advantage in the all-time series that began during the 1964 season.  W&L has won four of the last six matchups between the two teams, but the Eagles have won seven of the past eight showdowns at Jopson Field. Last season, Washington and Lee earned a 45-23 decision in Lexington.  The Generals ran for 506 yards rushing with six touchdowns coming via the ground. Duncan Maxwell and Marshall Hollerith both ran for 101 yards and combined for three scores, while Connor Chess added 78 yards and two more touchdowns. Kevon White ran well for Bridgewater, accounting for 93 yards and a touchdown. BC's Jason Monroe led all defensive players with 11 stops and a recovered fumble in that game.
CATHOLIC roared back from a 17-0 deficit to take a 27-24 lead at the half. SU scored 21 unanswered points in the second half on the way to topping CUA. Alejandro Ros only completed 13-of-33 passes, but three went for touchdowns. Joe Taylor III caught a pair as he finished with a team-best 56 yards receiving. Lucas Morley hauled in the other on his only catch of the day. Nick Esposito led all rushers with 62 yards and the remaining CUA offensive touchdown. Justin Paige got in on the scoring via one of his two blocked punts. The second block resulted in him recovering the loose ball and taking it back 77 yards for a touchdown as the first half clock expired. That sent the Cardinals to the locker room ahead 27-24. He added five tackles defensively. Nick Della Jacono led the CUA defense with eight tackles including two for a loss. Ross Sanford forced a fumble amongst his seven stops. Dave Zarkoski registered the Cardinals lone sack of the game.

NEXT WEEK: at Emory & Henry (4-4, 3-2 ODAC) -- 1:00 p.m.
Emory & Henry and Catholic will be meeting for the 20th time on Saturday, continuing a series that began in 1982.  The Wasps own an 11-8 advantage in the previous 19 matchups.  E&H is riding a four-game winning streak against the Cardinals, including a 44-24 triumph in Emory last season.  With CUA leading 17-6 and 2:14 showing on the second quarter clock, the Wasps out-scored the Cardinals, 38-7, over the remainder of the contest. E&H quarterback Kevin Saxton threw for 320 yards and two touchdowns, both going to Tyree Ward who finished with 100 yards receiving. CUA quarterback TJ Tutone ran for 94 yards and a score while throwing for 325 yards and two touchdowns to Lucas Morley. Morley hauled in 12 passes for 90 yards overall. E&H's defense also factored into the scoring as Tre'von Lightfoot returned an interception 98 yards for a score. E&H defensive back Ryan Byrd led all players with 14 tackles.
EMORY & HENRY earned its third win in a row Saturday with a 35-21 victory at Hampden-Sydney College …  The win was the first for the Wasps over the Tigers since 2007 … Kevin Saxton went 19-for-38 through the air for 305 yards and three touchdowns, his second-most passing yards this year … Jessee Santiago caught nine balls for 139 yards and a touchdown while A.J. Hampton added seven catches for 99 yards and a score … Derrick Yates finished with two receptions and a touchdown … Kendrick Kube ran for 57 yards while Sam Wagner added 46 yards on the ground and a touchdown … Josh Compton led the way defensively with 12 solo tackles, one sack and a pair of interceptions … Jae Daniels had nine stops while Zack Manley made eight tackles, two for a loss, and an interception … Eric Johnson and Tre’von Lightfoot also posted interceptions on the day … Emory & Henry held a 502-411 lead on total offense but the difference in the game was Hampden-Sydney’s five interceptions … Over the past two weeks, E&H is +9 in turnover margin … The first five games of the year saw the Wasps at -7 on the turnover battle … In addition to Saturday’s interceptions, Emory & Henry broke up five passes and picked up seven tackles for a loss, two of which went for sacks.

NEXT WEEK: vs. Catholic (3-5, 0-5 ODAC) -- 1:00 p.m.
Emory & Henry and Catholic will be meeting for the 20th time on Saturday, continuing a series that began in 1982.  The Wasps own an 11-8 advantage in the previous 19 matchups.  E&H is riding a four-game winning streak against the Cardinals, including a 44-24 triumph in Emory last season.  With CUA leading 17-6 and 2:14 showing on the second quarter clock, the Wasps out-scored the Cardinals, 38-7, over the remainder of the contest. E&H quarterback Kevin Saxton threw for 320 yards and two touchdowns, both going to Tyree Ward who finished with 100 yards receiving. CUA quarterback TJ Tutone ran for 94 yards and a score while throwing for 325 yards and two touchdowns to Lucas Morley. Morley hauled in 12 passes for 90 yards overall. E&H's defense also factored into the scoring as Tre'von Lightfoot returned an interception 98 yards for a score. E&H defensive back Ryan Byrd led all players with 14 tackles.
GUILFORD rolled up a season-high 682 offensive yards in Saturday's loss to Bridgewater, the third-highest single-game total in school history... the Quakers executed 101 plays in the game, second-most in school history... running back Hunter Causey ran for 218 yards and three touchdowns against Bridgewater, both game and career highs... his 218 rushing yards rank eighth on Guilford's single-game list... the game marked his fourth straight contest with at least 100 rushing yards, the second-longest streak in school history... his eight rushing touchdowns this year rank seventh in school history... Causey scored on runs of 31, 5 and 9 yards.. Karsten Miller completed 33 passes for 389 yards, both career highs, and a touchdown... Daniel Woodruff made nine catches for a career-high 110 yards... Rontavius Miller made nine catches for 148 yards, both game- and career-high figures, and a touchdown... the Quakers are in the midst of their first four-game losing streak since 2011...Defensively, linebacker Hunter Hoots had a game- and season-high 14 tackles. He had a hand on a big stop on fourth and goal from the Quakers' three-yard line in the fourth quarter. Hoots also had half a sack in the game... Junior Julian Cuthbertson returned a first-quarter interception 24 yards for a touchdown, which marked the Quakers' third defensive score of the year, their most in a season since 2002... Gibson Ziah recorded his league-leading 11th sack of the year. He entered the game ranked third among NCAA Division III leaders with 1.43 sacks per game. His 11 sacks rank fifth in Guilford's single-season history.

NEXT WEEK: at Randolph-Macon (7-1, 4-1 ODAC) -- 1:00 p.m.
Guilford and Randolph-Macon meet for the 59th time next Saturday on Randolph-Macon's Day Field in Ashland, Va.  The Yellow Jackets own a 31-25-2 advantage in the all-time series, which dates back to 1930.  Neither team has taken control of the matchup in recent years, with Guilford winning five times in the last nine games. That includes a 41-21 triumph in Greensboro last season. GC quarterback Matt Pawlowski fired five touchdown passes with Adam Smith hauling in three. Rontavius Miller and Austen Thompson also registered scoring throws. Running back De'Eric Bell added more to his stock as a returner with a 47-yard punt return for a touchdown. R-MC got three combined rushing touchdowns from Dom Kaopua, Yonis Blanco, and Eric Hoy. GC linebacker Robert Smith led all players with 15 tackles, an interception, and a fumble recovery.
HAMPDEN-SYDNEY tallied 411 yards of offense on 342 passing and 69 rushing. Alec Cobb was 26-of-51 for 342 yards, two touchdowns and four interceptions. Patrick Kline had a strong outing with six catches for 76 yards. Mike DeMasi had five catches for 24 yards while also leading the ground attack with 55 yards on 18 carries. Major Morgan and Owen Costello each had four catches for a combined 127 yards, and Johnson caught three balls for 81 yards and a touchdown. Morgan also caught his first career touchdown pass. Defensively, the Tigers allowed 502 yards of offense on 351 passing and 151 rushing. Bender Vaught led the way with seven tackles, while Matt Dooley and Tanner Ramey had six and five stops, respectively. Jamal Woolridge picked off a pass, and Brian Gwaltney recovered a fumble that Griffin Davis forced.

NEXT WEEK: at Shenandoah (6-2, 4-1 ODAC) -- 12:00 p.m.
Hampden-Sydney and Shenandoah will square off for the fifth time in the young rivalry.  The Tigers own a 3-1 advantage in the series, having won two straigh outings including a tight 38-33 victory last season. H-SC weathered a late comeback attempt as SU recovered an onside-kick with 1:36 to play after pulling to within five points. The Hornets traveled to the Tigers 28-yard line before an interception ended the drive with 0:46 on the clock. Both SU quarterback Hayden Bauserman and H-SC passer Edgar Moore threw three touchdowns each. Cam Johnson caught a pair for the Tigers, finishing with game-highs of seven catches for 108 yards. Michael Mey also had a touchdown reception. SU got scoring catches from Leonard Scott, Jalen Brisco, Travis Barton Jr., and Bauserman as Barton Jr. came in for a short TD pass to Bauserman. Kyree Koonce ran for 220 yards and two touchdowns for H-SC, while Cedrick Delaney added 150 yards on the ground for SU. H-SC's Sidney Henry led all defensive players with 11 tackles, a fumble recovery, and an inteception in the end zone to preserve a halftime lead for the Tigers.
RANDOLPH-MACON put itself in the driver's seat in the ODAC standings after holding Washington and Lee to a season-low 10 points in an 18-10 triumph in Lexington on Saturday. The win puts R-MC into a three-way tie with Shenandoah and W&L at 4-1 in the conference standings. The Yellow Jackets currently own the tiebreaker in that scenario as they have defeated both SU and W&L this season. The R-MC defense surrendered just 213 rushing yards to the run-heavy Generals' offense and kept them from scoring an offensive touchdown for the first time since W&L's 2008 season-opener. Jacob Silva sealed the effort with an interception in the end zone with 1:14 to play. Eric Long led the unit with a game-best 13 tackles including two for a loss and a forced fumble. Jake Pinkston and Logan O'Neill registered sacks, while Tom Buchanan recovered a fumble.  Offensively, Tre Frederick didn't find the end zone, but he added to his league leading rushing total with 212 yards on 33 carries to give him an ODAC-best 1,118 yards. Quarterback Joseph Vairo added 60 yards on 12 rushes. He also threw for the game's only offensive touchdown with a five-yard pass to Willie Schaub. R-MC kicker Seth Yurgel was the game's high-scorer as he was perfect on seven kick attempts. He canned all four of his extra points and hit field goals of 21, 44, and 26 yards. The 44-yard boot was a season and career-long for the Jackets' senior, eclipsing a 39-yard make in 2014.

NEXT WEEK: vs. Guilford (4-4, 1-4 ODAC) -- 1:00 p.m.

Guilford and Randolph-Macon meet for the 59th time next Saturday on Randolph-Macon's Day Field in Ashland, Va.  The Yellow Jackets own a 31-25-2 advantage in the all-time series, which dates back to 1930.  Neither team has taken control of the matchup in recent years, with Guilford winning five times in the last nine games. That includes a 41-21 triumph in Greensboro last season. GC quarterback Matt Pawlowski fired five touchdown passes with Adam Smith hauling in three. Rontavius Miller and Austen Thompson also registered scoring throws. Running back De'Eric Bell added more to his stock as a returner with a 47-yard punt return for a touchdown. R-MC got three combined rushing touchdowns from Dom Kaopua, Yonis Blanco, and Eric Hoy. GC linebacker Robert Smith led all players with 15 tackles, an interception, and a fumble recovery.
SHENANDOAH won its fourth straight game va a 45-34 triumph at Catholic, but it was not without drama as the Hornets squandered a 17-0 first half lead to head into the intermission trailing 27-24. SU scored 21 unanswered points in the second half to eventually make its way to the final margin. The win marks the first winning conference season for SU since joining the ODAC in the summer of 2012. The Hornets are now in a three-way tie with Washington and Lee and Randolph-Macon for tops in the ODAC at 4-1. Hayden Bauserman became the program's all-time leading passer with 4,162 career passing yards. He threw for 277 yards and touchdowns against CUA. His TD passes went to Michael Ashwell and Justin Ayres. Leonard Scott led all receivers with six catches and 78 yards. Cedrick Delaney and Jalen Hudson combined for just 48 yards on 25 carries, but they crossed the goal line three times with Delaney chipping in two of those scores. Gladimir Dupalis led the defense with eight tackles including one for a loss. Lorenza Thomas Jr. registered two sacks and recovered a fumble. Josh White and Marlin Stevenson also picked up loose balls. White did some damage in the return game, taking a punt back 88 yards for a touchdown to give SU an early 10-0 lead midway thru the first quarter.

NEXT WEEK: vs. Hampden-Sydney (2-6, 2-3 ODAC) -- 12:00 p.m.

Hampden-Sydney and Shenandoah will square off for the fifth time in the young rivalry.  The Tigers own a 3-1 advantage in the series, having won two straigh outings including a tight 38-33 victory last season. H-SC weathered a late comeback attempt as SU recovered an onside-kick with 1:36 to play after pulling to within five points. The Hornets traveled to the Tigers 28-yard line before an interception ended the drive with 0:46 on the clock. Both SU quarterback Hayden Bauserman and H-SC passer Edgar Moore threw three touchdowns each. Cam Johnson caught a pair for the Tigers, finishing with game-highs of seven catches for 108 yards. Michael Mey also had a touchdown reception. SU got scoring catches from Leonard Scott, Jalen Brisco, Travis Barton Jr., and Bauserman as Barton Jr. came in for a short TD pass to Bauserman. Kyree Koonce ran for 220 yards and two touchdowns for H-SC, while Cedrick Delaney added 150 yards on the ground for SU. H-SC's Sidney Henry led all defensive players with 11 tackles, a fumble recovery, and an inteception in the end zone to preserve a halftime lead for the Tigers.
WASHINGTON AND LEE saw its string of 12-straight conference wins snapped in its 18-10 setback to Randolph-Macon.  It was a school-record stretch that dated back to the 2014 season.  The game also marked the first time since the 2008 season-opener that W&L had failed to score an offensive touchdown. The 213 rushing yards against R-MC on Saturday was a season-low and the Generals lowest rushing total since rushing for just 164 yards in a 24-13 loss to Bridgewater during the 2014 campaign. Senior cornerback Will Dyson picked off his league-leading sixth pass on Saturday and returned it 72 yards for a touchdown, representing W&L’s third pick-six this season and its second in as many weeks. Senior quarterback Charlie Nelson rushed for 106 yards on 23 carries and moved into 10th-place on the school’s all-time rushing list with 2,122 yards.  Nelson also passed for 100 yards in the game, his most passing yards since a 139-yard effort against Sewanee in the second game of the season.  Nelson’s interception was his first since tossing one in a loss to Thomas More in the NCAA Tournament last season. Senior running back Marshall Hollerith rushed for 91 yards on 16 carries and moved to within 254 yards of surpassing Luke Heinsohn ’13 as the all-time leading rusher at W&L.  Hollerith now has 3,264 yards and 40 touchdowns on 670 career carries.

NEXT WEEK: at Bridgewater (3-5, 2-3 ODAC) -- 1:00 p.m.
Washington and Lee and Bridgewater will be meeting for the 47th time, with the Generals holding a 27-19 advantage in the all-time series that began during the 1964 season.  W&L has won four of the last six matchups between the two teams, but the Eagles have won seven of the past eight showdowns at Jopson Field. Last season, Washington and Lee earned a 45-23 decision in Lexington.  The Generals ran for 506 yards rushing with six touchdowns coming via the ground. Duncan Maxwell and Marshall Hollerith both ran for 101 yards and combined for three scores, while Connor Chess added 78 yards and two more touchdowns. Kevon White ran well for Bridgewater, accounting for 93 yards and a touchdown. BC's Jason Monroe led all defensive players with 11 stops and a recovered fumble in that game.
 
Team-by-Team Schedules and Results

Bridgewater (5-5, 4-3 ODAC)
Date Opponent Notes Result Status Links
September
Sat. 3 at Gettysburg W, 38-22 Final
Sat. 10 Thomas More L, 41-17 Final
Sat. 17 at The Apprentice School L, 26-23 Final
October
Sat. 1 Hampden-Sydney * W, 45-35 Final
Sat. 8 at Randolph-Macon * L, 21-0 Final
Sat. 15 Shenandoah * L, 34-10 Final
Sat. 22 Emory & Henry * L, 42-33 Final
Sat. 29 at Guilford * W, 42-41 Final
November
Sat. 5 Washington and Lee * W, 30-20 Final
Sat. 12 at Catholic * W, 50-13 Final
 
Catholic (3-7, 0-7 ODAC)
Date Opponent Notes Result Status Links
September
Sat. 3 McDaniel W, 28-21 Final - OT
Sat. 10 at Rochester (N.Y.) W, 27-14 Final
Sat. 17 at Coast Guard W, 37-35 Final
October
Sat. 1 at Guilford * L, 59-0 Final
Sat. 8 Washington and Lee * L, 23-22 Final
Sat. 15 Hampden-Sydney * L, 33-28 Final
Sat. 22 at Randolph-Macon * L, 21-0 Final
Sat. 29 Shenandoah * L, 45-34 Final
November
Sat. 5 at Emory & Henry * L, 38-27 Final
Sat. 12 Bridgewater * L, 50-13 Final
 
Emory & Henry (6-4, 5-2 ODAC)
Date Opponent Notes Result Status Links
September
Sat. 3 at Ferrum L, 39-38 Final
Sat. 10 Brevard W, 28-14 Final
Sat. 17 at Maryville (Tenn.) L, 43-36 Final
Fri. 30 at Washington and Lee * L, 49-23 Final
October
Sat. 8 Shenandoah * L, 36-33 Final
Sat. 15 Randolph-Macon * W, 27-20 Final
Sat. 22 at Bridgewater * W, 42-33 Final
Sat. 29 at Hampden-Sydney * W, 31-25 Final
November
Sat. 5 Catholic * W, 38-27 Final
Sat. 12 Guilford * W, 34-7 Final
 
Guilford (4-6, 1-6 ODAC)
Date Opponent Notes Result Status Links
September
Sat. 3 Greensboro W, 69-0 Final
Sat. 10 Methodist W, 47-32 Final
Sat. 17 at Averett W, 30-28 Final
October
Sat. 1 Catholic * W, 59-0 Final
Sat. 8 at Hampden-Sydney * L, 21-15 Final
Sat. 15 Washington and Lee * L, 48-34 Final
Sat. 22 at Shenandoah * L, 33-28 Final
Sat. 29 Bridgewater * L, 42-41 Final
November
Sat. 5 at Randolph-Macon * L, 31-10 Final
Sat. 12 at Emory & Henry * L, 34-7 Final
 
Hampden-Sydney (3-7, 3-4 ODAC)
Date Opponent Notes Result Status Links
September
Sat. 3 at Averett L, 38-28 Final
Sat. 10 Chris. Newport L, 45-27 Final
Sat. 17 vs. Ferrum @ Salem Stadium L, 42-20 Final
October
Sat. 1 at Bridgewater * L, 45-35 Final
Sat. 8 Guilford * W, 21-15 Final
Sat. 15 at Catholic * W, 33-28 Final
Sat. 22 at Washington and Lee * L, 52-7 Final
Sat. 29 Emory & Henry * L, 31-25 Final
November
Sat. 5 at Shenandoah * W, 37-34 Final
Sat. 12 Randolph-Macon * L, 48-23 Final
 
Randolph-Macon (9-2, 6-1 ODAC)
Date Opponent Notes Result Status Links
September
Sat. 3 at Dickinson W, 51-0 Final
Sat. 10 Averett W, 44-10 Final
Sat. 17 Methodist W, 34-16 Final
Fri. 30 at Shenandoah * W, 24-19 Final
October
Sat. 8 Bridgewater * W, 21-0 Final
Sat. 15 at Emory & Henry * L, 27-20 Final
Sat. 22 Catholic * W, 21-0 Final
Sat. 29 at Washington and Lee * W, 18-10 Final
November
Sat. 5 Guilford * W, 31-10 Final
Sat. 12 at Hampden-Sydney * W, 48-23 Final
Sat. 19 at Johns Hopkins % NCAA First Round L, 42-21 Final
 
Shenandoah (6-4, 4-3 ODAC)
Date Opponent Notes Result Status Links
September
Sat. 3 at Gallaudet W, 43-6 Final
Sat. 10 Ferrum W, 53-33 Final
Sat. 17 N.C. Wesleyan L, 31-13 Final
Fri. 30 Randolph-Macon * L, 24-19 Final
October
Sat. 8 at Emory & Henry * W, 36-33 Final
Sat. 15 at Bridgewater * W, 34-10 Final
Sat. 22 Guilford * W, 33-28 Final
Sat. 29 at Catholic * W, 45-34 Final
November
Sat. 5 Hampden-Sydney * L, 37-34 Final
Sat. 12 at Washington and Lee * L, 59-42 Final
 
Washington and Lee (6-4, 5-2 ODAC)
Date Opponent Notes Result Status Links
September
Thu. 1 at Johns Hopkins L, 45-29 Final
Sat. 10 at Sewanee W, 21-17 Final
Sat. 17 Claremont-M-S L, 31-28 Final
Fri. 30 Emory & Henry * W, 49-23 Final
October
Sat. 8 at Catholic * W, 23-22 Final
Sat. 15 at Guilford * W, 48-34 Final
Sat. 22 Hampden-Sydney * W, 52-7 Final
Sat. 29 Randolph-Macon * L, 18-10 Final
November
Sat. 5 at Bridgewater * L, 30-20 Final
Sat. 12 Shenandoah * W, 59-42 Final