WEEK 10: NOVEMBER 5, 2017 --- For a printer-friendly (.pdf) version of this week's report, click HERE.


2017 ODAC Football Standings
 
 
Washington and Lee
Randolph-Macon
Hampden-Sydney
Shenandoah
Guilford
Bridgewater
Emory & Henry
  Conference Overall
GP Record Win % GP Record Win % Last 10 Streak
Washington and Lee 6 5-1 0.833 11 8-3 0.727 8-2 Lost 1
Randolph-Macon 6 4-2 0.667 10 7-3 0.700 7-3 Won 2
Hampden-Sydney 6 4-2 0.667 10 6-4 0.600 6-4 Lost 1
Shenandoah 6 3-3 0.500 10 6-4 0.600 6-4 Lost 2
Guilford 6 3-3 0.500 10 5-5 0.500 5-5 Won 1
Bridgewater 6 1-5 0.167 10 4-6 0.400 4-6 Lost 3
Emory & Henry 6 1-5 0.167 10 3-7 0.300 3-7 Lost 1
 
Active Coaching Records
 
 
Mike Clark, BC (23/23)
Curt Newsome, E&H (4/4)
Chris Rusiewicz, GC (7/7)
Marty Favret, HSC (18/18)
Pedro Arruza, RMC (14/14)
Scott Yoder, SU (5/5)
Scott Abell, W&L (6/6)
  Conference Overall
 Coach (yrs/at school) Win Loss Ties Win % Win Loss Ties Win %
Mike Clark, BC (23/23) 80 59 0 0.576 148 96 1 0.606
Curt Newsome, E&H (4/4) 15 12 0 0.556 23 17 0 0.575
Chris Rusiewicz, GC (7/7) 25 22 0 0.532 39 31 0 0.557
Marty Favret, HSC (18/18) 79 34 0 0.699 126 61 0 0.674
Pedro Arruza, RMC (14/14) 49 40 0 0.551 81 61 0 0.570
Scott Yoder, SU (5/5) 13 21 0 0.382 24 26 0 0.480
Scott Abell, W&L (6/6) 28 13 0 0.683 39 24 0 0.619

  Weekly Award Winners
WEEK 1
OFF: Karsten Miller, Sr., QB, Guilford
DEF: Bernie Hayes III, So., LB, Shenandoah
WEEK 2
OFF: De'Eric Bell, Jr., RB, Guilford
DEF: Nate Hill, So., FS, Shenandoah
WEEK 3
OFF: Walker Brand, Sr. RB, Washington and Lee
DEF: Isaac Evans, Jr., CB, Bridgewater
WEEK 4
OFF: Bye
DEF: Bye
WEEK 5
OFF: Hayden Bauserman, Jr., QB, Shenandoah
DEF: Justin Banks, Jr., DB, Emory & Henry
WEEK 6
OFF: Hayden Bauserman, Jr., QB, Shenandoah
DEF: Griffin Davis, So., LB, Hampden-Sydney
WEEK 7
OFF: Josh Breece, Fr., RB, Washington and Lee
DEF: Kyle Dexter, Jr., LB, Shenandoah
WEEK 8
OFF: De'Eric Bell, Jr., RB, Guilford
DEF: Vic Smith, Jr., Sr., S/LB, Guilford
WEEK 9
OFF: Josh Breece, Fr., RB, Washington and Lee
DEF: Max Garrett, Sr., LB, Washington and Lee
WEEK 10
OFF: Alec Cobb, Jr., QB, Hampden-Sydney
DEF: Grey Reames, Sr., DB, Washington and Lee
WEEK 11
OFF: 
DEF: 
 
 Offensive Player of the Week
 Alec Cobb| Hampden-Sydney| Jr.| Quarterback
Cobb, a junior from Jamestown, N.C., was excelled in both performance and managing the game in Hampden-Sydney's 49-43 victory over Shenandoah. Cobb helped the Tigers hold the ball for nearly 39 minutes of game-time while firing five touchdown passes. He went 33-of-49 thru the air, racking up 365 yards without an interception. He connected with four different receivers on his scoring throws, hitting Cam Johnson for a pair and tossing one each to Major Morgan, Carter Cunningham, and Dillon Costello. In the second half, Cobb led four consecutive drives that took more than four minutes off the game clock each, finishing two with touchdowns and a third with a field goal. The five touchdown passes are a new career-high, surpassing the four scoring throws in a game he has registered three times this season and once in 2016. For the year, Cobb is second in the ODAC in passing touchdowns (26), completions (258), attempts (372), and completion percentage (69.4). His 2,653 yards are third in the league.
   Defensive Player of the Week
 Grey Reames| Washington and Lee| Sr.| Defensive Back
Reames, a senior from Nashville, Tenn., was in on several big plays as Washington and Lee put itself in the driver's seat for the ODAC title with a 49-21 win over Bridgewater. For the second straight week, the Generals' defense pitched a second-half shutout. Reames not only aided that effort, but he put points on the board in the first quarter as he stepped in front of a receiver for an interception and returned it 36 yards for a touchdown and an early 14-0 lead. The interception marked his third of the season, which is tied for third in the ODAC. Reames wasn't done with turnovers as he also forced a pair of fumbles (one recovered), one of which the W&L offense turned into a touchdown at the outset of the second half. Reames added five tackles (all solo) including a tackle for a loss. For the season, Reames has racked up 39 total tackles including 29 solo stops.


Weekly Individual Game Superlatives
PASSING   RUSHING   RECEIVING
Karsten Miller, GC 25-of-45, 405 yards, 2 TD
Hayden Bauserman, SU 32-of-52, 401 yards, 6 TD
Alec Cobb, H-SC 33-of-49, 365 yards, 5 TD
Hunter Taylor, E&H 13-of-18, 133 yards, 2 TD
Burke Estes, R-MC 8-of-12, 112 yards, 2 TD
 
Josh Breece, W&L 27 for 249 yards, 1 TD
Tre Frederick, R-MC 30 for 199 yards, 2 TD
Collin Sherman, W&L 22 for159 yards, 4 TD
Isaiah Rodgers, E&H 15 for 143 yards, 2 TD
Mike DeMasi, HSC 32 for 102 yards, 1 TD
 
Khylil Miller, GC 6 for 138 yards, 2 TD
Cam Johnson, H-SC 13 for 120 yards, 2 TD
Tyriek Russell, GC 7 for 101 yards, 0 TD
Major Morgan, H-SC 7 for 100 yards, 1 TD
Cory Bell, SU 4 for 95 yards, 2 TD
 
TACKLES   TACKLES FOR LOSS (SACKS)   INTERCEPTIONS
Vic Smith Jr., GC 15 tackles (9 solo)
Gary Ramey Jr., BC 12 tackles (6 solo)
Max Garrett, W&L 11 tackles (6 solo)
Kyle Dexter, SU 10 tackles (9 solo)
Reggie Williams, GC 10 tackles (6 solo)
 
Joe Everette, H-SC 3.0 TFL (1.0 sacks), -14 yards
Benjamin Carson, H-SC 2.0 TFL (1.0 sacks), -12 yards
Muhammad Khan, BC 2.0 TFL (0.0 sacks), -11 yards
Randy Oliver, SU 1.5 TFL (1.0 sacks), -11 yards
Tanner Ramey, H-sC 1.5 TFL (0.0 sacks), -5 yards
 
Tyler Redmond, E&H 2 for 38 yards, 0 TD
Grey Reames, W&L 1 for 36 yards, 1 TD
Carter Harlow, E&H 1 for 38 yards, 0 TD
Ryan Burns, R-MC 1 for 31 yards, 0 TD
   
 
This Week's Results
Football
November 4, 2017 Final
37
Emory & Henry
14
at Apprentice
Football
November 4, 2017 Final
38
Randolph-Macon
22
at Guilford
Football
November 4, 2017 Final
43
Shenandoah
49
at Hampden-Sydney
Football
November 4, 2017 Final
21
Bridgewater
49
at Washington and Lee
 
Team News and Notes
BRIDGEWATER locked horms with Washington and Lee, going to the break tied 21-all before the Generals shutout the Eagles' offense in the second half to send Bridgewater to its second straight loss and fifth in its last six games. Jay Scroggins and Rayvon Johnson connected on two first-half touchdowns passes. Scroggins and Brendon Maturey combined to go 11-of-20 passing for 110 yards and those two scores. Alex Galloway led with four catches for 48 yards, while Johnson finished with three catches for 28 yards. Malivai Barker led the ground game with 56 yards on 13 carries. Raymond Goodman III scored the remaining Eagles' touchdown via a five-yard run. Defensively, Washington and Lee ran for 449 yards to account for most of its 490 yards of offense. But the Eagles forced and recovered five fumbles to stay within striking distance (W&L put the ball on the ground nine total times). Gary Ramey, Jr. led the uni with 12 tackles and a forced fumble. Muhammad Khan had a pair of tackles for a loss that cost W&L 11 yards of offense. He also forced two fumbles. William Clift III and Isaac Evans also forced fumbles.

NEXT WEEK: at Washington-St. Louis (2-6 Independent) -- 2:00 PM
Bridgewater and Washington University in St. Louis will be meeting for the first time on Saturday as both schools close their regular season schedules. A NCAA qualifier last season, WashU has won just twice this season. One of the Bears losses came to Washington and Lee (28-21) in early October. Bridgewater looks to finish its season in the win column after dropping its second straight and fifth in its last six games last week at W&L.

EMORY & HENRY got back on the winning track Saturday, snapping a four-game skid with a 37-14 win over The Apprentice School on the road. It was the Wasps first win since defeating Washington and Lee University in their ODAC opener, 45-42, on Sept. 30. E&H racked up 489 yards of total offense with 356 rushing yards, its most in the Curt Newsome era and most since running for 409 yards at Randolph-Macon College in 2001. The Wasps got out to a 23-0 lead at the half and matched scores with the Builders in the second half for the 37-14 win. It was the first meeting between the two schools since 2007, a 35-14 win for E&H. Hunter Taylor went 13-for-18 through the air for 133 yards and two touchdowns, hitting Brad Puccio and Jesse Santiago for scores. Isaiah Rodgers ran the ball 15 times for 143 yards and two scores while Taylor had 68 yards and Brady Justice notched 57 yards and a touchdown on 13 carries. Puccio had three catches for 37 yards while Santiago hauled in four passes for 28. Defensively, Tyler Redmond made a team-high six tackles and picked off a pair of passes while Jake Jessee added six stops, a tackle for loss and forced a fumble. Da’von Keith and Josh Fleenor both had five tackles including a stop behind the line each. Trel Phillips also recovered a fumble.

NEXT WEEK: at Guilford (4-5, 2-3 ODAC) -- 1:00 PM
Emory & Henry and Guilford will be meeting for the 69th time on Saturday, continuing a series that began in the 1930 season. The Wasps own a 39-29 advantage in their previous meetings. Last season, Emory & Henry forced a trio of Guilford fumbles and held the ball for nearly 36 minutes on the way to 509 yards of offense and a 34-7 victory in Emory. E&H closed the game with 27 unanswered points highlighted by a 24-point second quarter. Hunter Causey registered the lone Guilford score, while Dominic Dunnavile hit A.J. Hampton with two scoring passes to go with a 73-yard rumble to the end zone for Sam Wagner. Both teams look to close 2017 on victories. Guilford had won two straight before a loss (38-22) to Randolph-Macon last week. E&H snapped a four-game skid with a non-conference win (37-14) over Apprentice School, but the four preceding losses were all at the hands of ODAC foes.

GUILFORD quarterback Karsten Miller threw for over 400 yards for the second straight game in the Quakers' 38-22 setback versus Randolph-Macon. He logged a 141.4 efficiency rating in going 25-of-45 for 405 yards and two scores with one interception. He and his brother, Khylil Miller, connected on 14 and 17-yard touchdown plays. Karsten moved into seventh on Guilford's single-season passing list with 2,855 yards. Khylil finished the game with six catches for 138 yards, while Tyriek Russell added seven receptions for 101 yards. De'Eric Bell ran for 52 and a touchdown on 13 carries and caught four passes for 68 yards. He also returned three punts for 51 yards, giving him 171 all-purpose yards for the game. Defensively, the Quakers were gashed for 308 rushing yards by Randolph-Macon. Vic Smith, Jr. led the unit with 15 tackles, while Reggie Williams notched 10 stops. C.J. Nash III and Jarrod Russ each registered a quarterback sack. 

NEXT WEEK: vs. Emory & Henry (3-6, 1-4 ODAC) -- 1:00 PM
Emory & Henry and Guilford will be meeting for the 69th time on Saturday, continuing a series that began in the 1930 season. The Wasps own a 39-29 advantage in their previous meetings. Last season, Emory & Henry forced a trio of Guilford fumbles and held the ball for nearly 36 minutes on the way to 509 yards of offense and a 34-7 victory in Emory. E&H closed the game with 27 unanswered points highlighted by a 24-point second quarter. Hunter Causey registered the lone Guilford score, while Dominic Dunnavile hit A.J. Hampton with two scoring passes to go with a 73-yard rumble to the end zone for Sam Wagner. Both teams look to close 2017 on victories. Guilford had won two straight before a loss (38-22) to Randolph-Macon last week. E&H snapped a four-game skid with a non-conference win (37-14) over Apprentice School, but the four preceding losses were all at the hands of ODAC foes.
HAMPDEN-SYDNEY kept their ODAC Championship chances alive, downing Shenandoah 49-43 in a high scoring affair. The Tigers were able to hold off a furious rally from the Hornets that saw them score 21 fourth quarter points – including 13 in the final 1:36 of the game. It was a game of runs with Shenandoah winning the first and fourth quarters 15-7 and 21-3 and the Tigers taking the second and third quarters 18-0 and 21-7. On the day, the Tigers had 466 yards of offense on 365 passing and 101 rushing. Alec Cobb was 33-of-49 for 365 yards, five touchdowns and no interceptions. Cam Johnson and Major Morgan each had 100-yard days with Johnson catching 13 passes for 120 yards and two touchdowns and Morgan going for 100 yards and a score on seven receptions. Carter Cunningham also had seven grabs for 78 yards and a touchdown to go with four carries for nine yards and a score. Mike DeMasi had a strong outing with 102 yards and a touchdown on 32 carries. Defensively, the Tigers allowed 429 yards of offense on 401 passing and 28 rushing. Brian Gwaltney led the way with eight tackles and four pass break ups. Brendan Weinberg and Griffin Davis each had six stops, while Davis had 1.5 in the backfield. The defensive line of Joe Everette, Benjamin Carson, Tanner Ramey, and John Kline combined for 7.5 stops in the backfield for a total loss of 37 yards. Everette led the unit with 3.0 that cost SU 14 yards.

NEXT WEEK: at Randolph-Macon (6-3, 3-2 ODAC) -- 1:00 PM
Hampden-Sydney and Randolph-Macon will square off in the 122nd edition of “The Game,” the oldest small school rivalry in the South. This season's edition has title implications with both teams in the mix for championship discussions. The Tigers own a 60-50-11 advantage in the series that began in 1893. Randolph-Macon took the first meeting 12-6 in the Tigers’ second year as a program, but Hampden-Sydney returned the favor in 1896 with a 24-0 win – the second-ever victory. Randolph-Macon has gained the upper hand in recent meetings, winning five of the last six showdowns including each of the last three contests. Last season, Randolph-Macon won via a 48-23 result in Hampden-Sydney. The win clinched the ODAC title and a NCAA berth for the Yellow Jackets. In that game, Randolph-Macon got a pair of passing touchdowns from Burke Estes and four overall rushing scores by R-MC ball-carriers. That offset two passing touchdowns from Alec Cobb, one of which went to Owen Costello who posted game-high honors of 11 catches and 138 yards.
RANDOLPH-MACON returned to the win column for the fourth time in five games behind 308 rushing yards in a 38-22 victory at Guilford. Tre Frederick led the offense with 199 yards and two touchdowns on 30 carries. He also caught a pass for 12 yards. JP Redmond added 64 yards and a score and 14 carries, while Eric Hoy added another 48 yards on eight rushes. Hoy caught one of two touchdown passes from Burke Estes. Sam Tanner was the recipient of the other as he finished with two grabs for 61 yards. Estes completed 8-of-12 passes for 112 yards as the Yellow Jackets' offense leaned on the run to post 36:12 in time of possession. Defensively, R-MC allowed 400-plus yards thru the air to air. Ryan Burns did put a kink in GC's passing attack with three passes broken up and an interception. The pick was his second of the season. Yonis Blanco led the unit with eight tackles, while Norman Cade came up with a quarterback sack.

NEXT WEEK: vs. Hampden-Sydney (6-3, 4-1 ODAC) -- 1:00 PM
Randolph-Macon and Hampden-Sydney will square off in the 122nd edition of “The Game,” the oldest small school rivalry in the South. This season's edition has title implications with both teams in the mix for championship discussions. The Tigers own a 60-50-11 advantage in the series that began in 1893. Randolph-Macon took the first meeting 12-6 in the Tigers’ second year as a program, but Hampden-Sydney returned the favor in 1896 with a 24-0 win – the second-ever victory. Randolph-Macon has gained the upper hand in recent meetings, winning five of the last six showdowns including each of the last three contests. Last season, Randolph-Macon won via a 48-23 result in Hampden-Sydney. The win clinched the ODAC title and a NCAA berth for the Yellow Jackets. In that game, Randolph-Macon got a pair of passing touchdowns from Burke Estes and four overall rushing scores by R-MC ball-carriers. That offset two passing touchdowns from Alec Cobb, one of which went to Owen Costello who posted game-high honors of 11 catches and 138 yards.
SHENANDOAH lost its second straight league game despite a furious comeback attempt that came up just short in a 49-43 decision at Hampden-Sydney. SU trailed 46-22 entering the fourth quarter, but 21 points in the fourth quarter aided by a recovered on-side kick had the home-side fans sweating until the final whistle. Despite the loss, Shenandoah remains in the discussion for the ODAC title. Hayden Bauserman did most of his work in the second half as he threw for 401 yards and six touchdowns on 32-of-52 thru the air. Cory Bell caught two of the scoring passes in leading the unit with 95 yards on four catches. Dershone Hayman also had two TD receptions as he finished with six grabs for 59 yards. Casey Stewart had seven catches for 78 yards and a score, and Michael Ashwell added five receptions for 65 yards and the remaining touchdown. Bell led the ground game with 58 yards on 10 carries. Defensively, H-SC put up 466 yards of offense including 365 yards and five touchdowns thru the air. Kyle Dexter led SU's defense with 10 tackles including nine solo stops. Randy Olive had seven tackles, which feature 1.5 for a loss powered by a quarterback sack. Devontae Dunn forced and recovered a fumble, while Daquan Pridget broke up two passes.

NEXT WEEK: vs. Washington and Lee (7-2, 4-1 ODAC) -- 1:00 PM

Shenandoah and Washington and Lee will be meeting for the sixth time, with the Generals holding a 4-1 edge in the all-time series. The Hornets' lone victory was a 21-14 overtime result at Shentel Stadium during the 2013 season.  Last year, the two teams combined for 101 points and 1,145 yards of total offense.  W&L accounted for 59 points and 631 yards led by senior quarterback Charlie Nelson, who threw for 125 yards and two touchdowns and rushed for 120 yards and two more scores. SU signal-caller Hayden Bauserman threw for 352 yards and four touchdowns in that game.
WASHINGTON AND LEE first-year running back Josh Breece ran for 249 yards and one touchdown on 27 carries against the Eagles. The yardage total is the third-highest in program history.  In the process, Breece also set the W&L season record for rushing yards, eclipsing the mark of 1,325 held by Marc Watson ’02 since the 2000 season.  Breece now has 1,376 yards and 15 touchdowns on 184 carries for an average of 7.5 yards per rush. All four of those numbers lead the ODAC. Junior running back Collin Sherman also had a career day against Bridgewater. He carried 22 times for 159 yards and four touchdowns, all of which were scored in the second half. W&L fumbled an extraordinary nine times in the game, losing five of them. The W&L defense limited the Eagles to just 205 total yards in the game.  The Generals also produced two more sacks, raising the season total to 26 sacks, the eighth-best season total in school history. Grey Reames intercepted a pass and returned it for a touchdown for an early 14-0 lead. He was also in on two forced fumbles, one of which W&L recovered and eventually turned into a touchdown. The Generals extended their winning streak to five straight with the victory over Bridgewater. The Generals enter the final week of the season in a relative driver's seat for the ODAC title as one of two teams (with Hampden-Sydney) sitting at 4-1 in the league standings.

NEXT WEEK: at Shenandoah (6-3, 3-2 ODAC) -- 1:00 PM

Washington and Lee and Shenandoah will be meeting for the sixth time, with the Generals holding a 4-1 edge in the all-time series. The Hornets' lone victory was a 21-14 overtime result at Shentel Stadium during the 2013 season.  Last year, the two teams combined for 101 points and 1,145 yards of total offense.  W&L accounted for 59 points and 631 yards led by senior quarterback Charlie Nelson, who threw for 125 yards and two touchdowns and rushed for 120 yards and two more scores. SU signal-caller Hayden Bauserman threw for 352 yards and four touchdowns in that game.
 
Team-by-Team Schedules and Results

Bridgewater (4-6, 1-5 ODAC)
Date Opponent Notes Result Status Links
September
Fri. 1 Gettysburg W, 27-24 Final
Sat. 9 at Thomas More W, 25-23 Final
Sat. 16 The Apprentice School W, 52-0 Final
Sat. 30 at Hampden-Sydney * L, 37-27 Final
October
Sat. 7 Randolph-Macon * L, 52-24 Final
Sat. 14 at Shenandoah * L, 38-20 Final
Sat. 21 at Emory & Henry * W, 31-23 Final
Sat. 28 Guilford * L, 49-23 Final
November
Sat. 4 at Washington and Lee * L, 49-21 Final
Sat. 11 at Washington (Mo.) L, 41-7 Final
 
Emory & Henry (3-7, 1-5 ODAC)
Date Opponent Notes Result Status Links
September
Sat. 2 Ferrum L, 13-8 Final
Sat. 9 at Brevard W, 48-13 Final
Sat. 16 Maryville (Tenn.) L, 56-46 Final
Sat. 30 Washington and Lee * W, 45-42 Final
October
Sat. 7 at Shenandoah * L, 47-24 Final
Sat. 14 at Randolph-Macon * L, 52-29 Final
Sat. 21 Bridgewater * L, 31-23 Final
Sat. 28 Hampden-Sydney * L, 38-30 Final
November
Sat. 4 at Apprentice W, 37-14 Final
Sat. 11 at Guilford * L, 42-38 Final
 
Guilford (5-5, 3-3 ODAC)
Date Opponent Notes Result Status Links
September
Sat. 2 at Huntingdon W, 38-24 Final
Sat. 9 at Methodist W, 56-17 Final
Sat. 16 at Davidson L, 42-21 Final
Sat. 30 at Jacksonville L, 56-21 Final
October
Sat. 7 Hampden-Sydney * L, 21-18 Final
Sat. 14 at Washington and Lee * L, 47-26 Final
Sat. 21 Shenandoah * W, 45-20 Final
Sat. 28 at Bridgewater * W, 49-23 Final
November
Sat. 4 Randolph-Macon * L, 38-22 Final
Sat. 11 Emory & Henry * W, 42-38 Final
 
Hampden-Sydney (6-4, 4-2 ODAC)
Date Opponent Notes Result Status Links
September
Sat. 2 Averett W, 20-17 Final
Sat. 9 at Chris. Newport L, 20-7 Final
Sat. 16 Wis.-Platteville L, 38-29 Final
Sat. 30 Bridgewater * W, 37-27 Final
October
Sat. 7 at Guilford * W, 21-18 Final
Sat. 14 Apprentice W, 58-28 Final
Sat. 21 Washington and Lee * L, 36-6 Final
Sat. 28 at Emory & Henry * W, 38-30 Final
November
Sat. 4 Shenandoah * W, 49-43 Final
Sat. 11 at Randolph-Macon * L, 56-28 Final
 
Randolph-Macon (7-3, 4-2 ODAC)
Date Opponent Notes Result Status Links
September
Sat. 2 Dickinson W, 41-6 Final
Sat. 9 at Averett W, 17-13 Final
Sat. 16 at Catholic L, 25-20 Final
Thu. 28 Shenandoah * L, 51-38 Final
October
Sat. 7 at Bridgewater * W, 52-24 Final
Sat. 14 Emory & Henry * W, 52-29 Final
Sat. 21 at Apprentice W, 63-14 Final
Sat. 28 Washington and Lee * L, 17-14 Final
November
Sat. 4 at Guilford * W, 38-22 Final
Sat. 11 Hampden-Sydney * W, 56-28 Final
 
Shenandoah (6-4, 3-3 ODAC)
Date Opponent Notes Result Status Links
September
Sat. 2 Gallaudet W, 40-14 Final
Sat. 9 at N.C. Wesleyan W, 61-14 Final
Sat. 16 at Hobart L, 56-30 Final
Thu. 28 at Randolph-Macon * W, 51-38 Final
October
Sat. 7 Emory & Henry * W, 47-24 Final
Sat. 14 Bridgewater * W, 38-20 Final
Sat. 21 at Guilford * L, 45-20 Final
Sat. 28 Apprentice W, 50-15 Final
November
Sat. 4 at Hampden-Sydney * L, 49-43 Final
Sat. 11 Washington and Lee * L, 48-21 Final
 
Washington and Lee (8-3, 5-1 ODAC)
Date Opponent Notes Result Status Links
September
Fri. 1 Johns Hopkins L, 32-29 Final - OT
Sat. 9 Sewanee W, 63-30 Final
Sat. 16 at Claremont-M-S W, 24-14 Final
Sat. 30 at Emory & Henry * L, 45-42 Final
October
Sat. 7 Washington (Mo.) W, 28-21 Final
Sat. 14 Guilford * W, 47-26 Final
Sat. 21 at Hampden-Sydney * W, 36-6 Final
Sat. 28 at Randolph-Macon * W, 17-14 Final
November
Sat. 4 Bridgewater * W, 49-21 Final
Sat. 11 at Shenandoah * W, 48-21 Final
Sat. 18 at Mount Union % L, 21-0 Final