Categories
Sports

Wrestling performs well in challenging Midwest tour

By Joe Ruby

Writer

The Bison wrestling team went 1-2 on its Midwestern trip this weekend, defeating South Dakota State 39-3 before losing 19-16 to No. 22 Nebraska and 39-3 to No. 2 Oklahoma State. Kevin LeValley ’11, ranked fourth in the nation at 149 lbs., won all three of his matches, including a 6-2 decision over seventh-ranked  Jamal Parks of Oklahoma State for his 100th career victory.

Against South Dakota State on Saturday, Derek Reber ’13, Alex Pellicciotti ’14, Zac Hancock ’13, LeValley, Brantley Hooks ’11, Corey Lear ’13, David Thompson ’12, Joe McMullan ’13 and Jay Hahn ’11 all claimed victories. Thompson and McMullan earned major decisions, and LeValley scored a technical fall.

Later that afternoon, the Bison persisted against the No. 22 Cornhuskers but ultimately fell to the hosts. Each squad won five bouts, with Reber, LeValley, Hooks, Thompson and Hahn earning victories for the Bison, but Nebraska’s No. 2 Jordan Burroughs and No. 8 Tucker Lane earned enough bonus points to give their side the edge.

On Sunday, the Bison faced No. 2 Oklahoma State and could not break through a lineup full of nationally ranked wrestlers, including top-ranked Jordan Oliver at 133 lbs. LeValley managed the sole bout victory for the Bison. His win over Parks brought his record to 7-0 on the season, including 2-0 against ranked opponents.

The Bison take on their EIWA rival No. 15 Lehigh at home today at 7:00 in Davis Gym.

Categories
Sports

Men’s soccer loses in NCAA tourney

By Joe Ruby

Writer

The men’s soccer team saw its season come to a close two weeks ago as the men fell in overtime to host Penn 1-0 in the first round of the NCAA tournament. The Bison finish the year 10-9-2.

The deciding goal came 1:38 into the first overtime period. Zach Barnett of Penn lofted the ball into the 18. Both teams attempted to play the ball, but Christian Barreiro earned a throw-in deep into Bison territory, and ended the game by firing a shot past Bison goalkeeper Marc Hartmann ’12 to clinch the victory for the Quakers.

I thought we played well,” forward Brendan Burgdorf ’13 said. “Penn was a very good Ivy League team, and it took them almost 100 minutes to score on us.”

During the scoreless regulation, both defenses shined, led by goalkeepers Hartmann and Ben Berg. Both teams had chances to score in the first half stopped by diving keepers, and the Bison’s defense held strong as Penn gained momentum in the second half. In the second half, Penn out-shot the Bison seven to two and earned four corner kicks while the Bison had none.

The loss marked only the second time this season the Bison failed to score.

Burgdorf ended the season with a team-high six goals, while Tommy McCabe ’11 had three goals and 10 assists for a team-high 16 points. Next year’s squad will return eight of 11 starters, saying goodbye to McCabe, Ross Liberati ’11 and Travis Rand ’11. This group of seniors enjoyed 44 wins, three Patriot League Tournament appearances, and two Patriot League Championships.

In the second round of the NCAA tournament, No. 2 Maryland defeated Penn 4-0. The Quakers finished their season with a record of 13-6-0.

Categories
Sports

Club hockey revives struggling program

By Cooper Sutton

Sports Editor

Four years ago, when Connor Curry ’11 first joined the University’s club hockey team, he found himself a part of a floundering program going in no particular direction. Now, as a senior, he is the president of a team that is well-organized, well-coached and, most importantly, well-respected.

Curry follows a line of club hockey presidents who have completely changed the atmosphere of the program. Alex Rascoe ’10 and Alex Pron ’09, with the help of Club Sports Director Joe Santorini, program advisor Lewis Marrara and JT Ptacek, head coach and professor of psychology, were able to turn a disrespected, failing program into one of the most competitive club teams on campus.

Five years ago, when Pron and Rascoe were just starting out, the team played in an adult non-checking league, did not have a coach and had almost no backing from the administration.

“[The team] was about one incident away from being scrapped by the University,” Ptacek said.

The team always had talent but lacked devotion. Five years ago, only five players showed up for a game: four skaters and a goalie. They played a man down for the entire game and were not able to substitute. The Bison still won 19-5, even though less than half of the team cared enough to play.

This was not an uncommon occurrence for the fledgling Bison. By the end of the season, the team would have qualified for the playoffs except that it could not play after being kicked out of the league for excessive forfeits.

“It was an unfortunate circumstance for a bunch of kids,” Rascoe said. “Four or five kids on that team had played on national championship club teams in high school. It was kind of like being laughed at, playing against that competition. It was terrible.”

At this point some of the players, including Rascoe and Pron, decided something needed to change.  They realized that to become a legitimate program, they needed structure. They needed to be in an actual college league, to have an actual coach and to be respected in the eyes of the administration.

“It was hard. It wasn’t like I had any formal training in running a business. I was in cell biology, not management,” Rascoe said. “We had to kind of learn as we went along.”

The first and possibly most important feat necessary to improve the program was to win the trust of the administration. Without that, the team struggled to gain approval for anything. Finally Dean Marrara offered to be an official adviser to the program.

“[Marrara] was more than just a signature on a piece of paper,” Rascoe said.

With his backing, the team began to search for a coach for the 2007 season. Few options were available to a small club team like the Bison, but they eventually found a person for the job.

Unfortunately, the man they hired failed to add any legitimacy to the program. In their first practice  the Bison were made to sprint the entire time. No drills were employed and no game strategies were learned.

“We thought he was just trying to set the tone for what he was going to bring as a coach,” Curry said.

But, as the practices went on and the sprinting continued, Curry began to get a different idea.

“We were all convinced that [he made us sprint] because he didn’t know any drills. This went on for a couple weeks, then he would stop showing up periodically. Then he came to one game and didn’t say a word to the team the whole time. He didn’t even say one thing,” Curry said. “Then after that game we never saw him again.”

The team was fortunate when it was able to convince Ptacek to coach the following year.

“I decided to take on the coaching position because I saw a group of really good people working really hard on something they valued,” Ptacek said.

Under his leadership, the program was able to improve and gain structure and respectability.

Since playing in the adult league, the team has changed leagues twice. Four years ago it joined the Mason-Dixon League, where it played for two years. Now it plays in one of the most competitive Division Two leagues on the East Coast, the Great Northeast Collegiate Hockey Conference.

The newfound structure of the program has shown in other ways as well. The team now has buses to every game and practice. It also has its own website that it uses not only to promote the program but also to recruit high school players to come play as Bison.

As it stands today, the team is 5-6-1 and is in the hunt to make the playoffs. They are continually gaining recognition around the region and are becoming a better program each year. On campus, the program is even seen as one of the most competitive club sports.

Thanks to the work done by Rascoe and Pron, and now by Curry, the once fledgling club hockey program is now quickly becoming a regional powerhouse. Almost completely driven by students, the program has changed its image and its personality in only four years.

Curry is excited about his team’s improbable turn-around.

“Bottom line is, I think we have a unique story to tell,” he said. “I just know that a lot of people on campus don’t know our story and I think a lot of other club sports would be amazed to hear how much he have accomplished in so little time.”

“Being able to look back and say, ‘I did that, I did something important’—that’s what’s valuable about Bucknell,” Rascoe said. And Rascoe has done something important: with the help of a few other motivated individuals he has shown that despite all odds students can make a difference.

Over the past five years, Curry, Rascoe and their teammates have proven a cliché we have all heard so many times but often fail to see exemplified: if you truly care about something and put your mind to it, you can make it happen.

Categories
Sports

The exciting first half of the NFL season: parity reigns supreme

By Justin Cohen

Contributing Writer

For the last several years, one or two NFL teams have asserted dominance over the rest of the league by being undefeated or having one loss by the halfway point of the season. This year, a shocking 12 teams have played well enough to earn at least six wins after nine games played.

In many games, teams have won at the end of regulation or in overtime as recently last Sunday. Some teams predicted at the beginning of the season to go nowhere, including the Chiefs, Rams, Seahawks and Raiders, are all in the thick of their respective divisional races for the first time in years. Playoff teams from last year, like the Vikings and Cowboys, have endured turmoil early on and are virtually out of the playoffs already. The “best team in the league” title has changed hands practically every week this season.

In the AFC, the usual stalwarts, like the New England Patriots and the New York Jets, who are currently tied in leading the conference, are reminding everyone they live in the postseason. Not far behind are the Colts, Steelers and Ravens.

Along with the backbone of the conference, the Jets are making headlines almost every week for either their on-field performance or off-the-field antics. Most people figured they would be the talk of the league with all of the high-caliber free agents they signed in the offseason, such as Santonio Holmes, Antonio Cromartie, Jason Taylor and LaDainian Tomlinson.  Their star power, along with their outspoken coach Rex Ryan, have them at the top of the conference, but joining them are several teams, like the Chiefs and Raiders, who have usually been seen by other teams as not much of a challenge. Their rebuilding phases are starting to show progress and if they keep up at this rate, they will return to the elite of the NFL.

In the NFC, all of the top teams are defeating each other, so a cluster of strong teams resides at the higher echelon of the conference. But a larger group of teams is right behind them sitting at 6-3, waiting for an opportunity to permanently show they belong at the top.

The NFC South division has impressive depth with the Super Bowl champion Saints, Buccaneers, and conference leading Falcons all making strong pushes for the postseason.

The NFC North brings the upstart Bears and injury-ridden Packers to the mix, and while the Bears are winning with their strong defense, the Packers are showing their depth and resilient will that will keep them in the hunt for the coming weeks.

The NFC West teams have beaten each other so much that the 49ers, who started the season 0-5, are still in contention for their divisional title. Finally, the NFC East, which has sent two teams to the postseason for the last four seasons, has the Giants and Eagles making claims for the top spot this year.

This season has seen players such as Michael Vick, LaDainian Tomlinson and Mike Williams all experience spectacular campaigns in order to earn back the elite status they had lost in the last several years. Teams have put on historic performances and this generation’s spectacular players have met milestones set by those historic players who helped make the NFL what it is today. A season of parity will only bring more of it, which will make the second half of the 2010 season even more exciting than the first.

Categories
Sports

Men’s swimming 3-1 in Patriot League

By Andrew Arnao

Contributing Writer

The men’s swimming and diving team flattened Colgate in a 160-52 victory on Saturday, improving to 5-1 on the year and 3-1 in the Patriot League.

After finishing second in the quad meet against Navy, American and Lafayette the previous week, the Orange and Blue knew they could compete with Colgate this week.

“We came out strong last week with our quad meet … and we wanted to transfer that energy over into this week,” Jonathan Podniesinski ’12 said.

Podniesinski won the 500-yard freestyle by 4.88 seconds with a time of 4:45.96 and the 1,000 freestyle by 8.07 seconds with a time of 9:50.15.

The Bison defeated Colgate in every event except the 200 freestyle relay, in which they missed first by .55 seconds. They started strong by claiming the top two spots in four of the first five events and had at least two finishes in the top three spots for every event. The Bison fared especially well in the 200 free, 200 back and 500 free, where they won the top three spots.

“I think that overall it was our best performance as a team so far this year, with everyone doing their job from top to bottom and not easing up even as our lead increased,” Mike Nicholson ’14 said.

Nicholson, a first-year standout, went on to easy victories in the 400 individual medley (4:03.78 seconds) and the 200 breaststroke (2:07.63 seconds), giving him nine wins so far this season.

Eric Sokolosky’12 and Matthew Segar ’12 also claimed two wins each. Sokolosky sprinted his way to season best times in both the 50 free (21.01 seconds) and the 100 free (46.75 seconds). Segar took first in both the 200 free (1:42.38 seconds) and the 200 fly (1:55.03 seconds).

“It was our goal going in, and one which we attained, to perform well against these individuals and continue our consistent improvement week to week,” Sokolosky said.

“Hopefully we’ll carry the momentum into this weekend at the Rutgers Invitational,” Segar said.

Dave Magaro’13, the only men’s diver for either team, finished with a score of 242.03 for the one-meter diving.

Magaro was named the Patriot League Male Diver of the Week and Nicholson was named Patriot League Male Swimmer of the Week.

The Bison are in second place in the Patriot League with 646 points, behind first place Navy by 401 points. They lead third-place Army by 117 points and fourth place Lehigh by 219 points.

Next week the Bison will compete in the three-day Rutgers Invitational, which will be held Nov. 19-21.

Categories
Sports

Women’s swimming loses to Colgate, falling to 4-2

By Chris McCree

Writer

The women’s swim team suffered a huge loss against Patriot League rival Colgate at Kinney Natatorium this past Saturday. The Bison fell to the Raiders 156-87, which is a dramatic change from the last time the two teams encountered each other. At the last year’s Patriot League Championship, the Bison beat out Colgate for second place.

The Colgate women won every individual event except the 50- and 100-yard freestyle races, both of which Molly Goebel ’11 won. With the loss, the Bison fell to 2-2 in the Patriot League and 4-2 for the year.

Despite the team’s struggles, the Orange and Blue produced several impressive individual performances, including a notable race by freestyler Kelly Pontecorvo ’14. Pontecorvo’s performance during the 1,000 free gave her the fifth fastest time in school history with a time of 10:25.39 seconds. She shaved about two seconds off her previous best time.

Goebel also anchored the 200 freestyle relay, which was comprised of Emily Wright ’14, Kaitlyn Utkewicz ’14 and Elizabeth Porcellio ’13. The four won the relay with a time of 1:37.37, their fastest time of the year. The relay actually only helped to tighten the point margin between the two teams, as Colgate had already clinched the win by the time the race started.

“The team swam well against Colgate,” Goebel said. “They are one of the best teams in the league and they came out very strong.”

The Bison will not encounter Colgate again until the Patriot League Championships in February, and Goebel acknowledged the team has room to improve.

“We did well but know we have our work set out for us in order to accomplish our goals at the end of the season. We are trying to focus on ourselves and what is in our control,” Goebel said. “This was a good test to see where we are and what we still have to do to get to where we want to be in February.”

The team expects to have a good week of practice before it heads off to New Jersey for the Rutgers Invitational. The three-day event will take place from Nov. 19-21 and will feature teams from all over the East Coast.

Categories
Sports

Football loses home finale despite stellar special teams

By Greg Stevenson

Senior Writer

A record-setting performance on special teams by Josh Eden ’12 was not enough for the Bison football team to overcome a powerful rushing attack from the Colgate Raiders on Saturday. The Bison fell 31-7 in their final home game of the 2010 campaign. The defeat dropped the Orange and Blue to 1-9 overall and 1-3 in the Patriot League.

“Josh is a great athlete and can do many things,” head coach Joe Susan said. “Josh has great timing and is relentless in his ability to penetrate and elevate.”

On three separate occasions, Eden responded to touchdown runs by Colgate’s Nate Eachus with a blocked extra point, limiting the Raiders to six points on each scoring possession. Eden now has eight blocked kicks on the season, including five in the last two games.

Eachus carried the ball 160 yards for Colgate (his ninth game over 100 yards this season) on 20 carries and three touchdowns, including the opening score of the contest just six minutes in.

“We knew Eachus would get his yardage,” Susan said. “He is one of the most physical runners we will face. The combination of Eachus and [Colgate quarterback Greg] Sullivan as runners gives Colgate a two-back attack that enables them to balance carries and makes them very difficult to defend.”

A quick three-and-out and punt by the Bison on the first series of the game gave the Raiders possession near midfield. Seven plays later, Eachus eluded Orange and Blue defenders for a 38-yard touchdown, giving the Raiders an early 6-0 advantage. The deficit remained at six as Eden rejected Colgate kicker Evan Colborne’s extra point try, his first block of the day.

It took just two minutes after their first touchdown for Colgate to extend their advantage to 13. Bison quarterback Brandon Wesley ’14 made just one mistake in the contest, but it turned out to be a costly one. Colgate’s Nat Bellamy returned an interception 51 yards for a touchdown, extending the Colgate lead.

Eachus scored twice more in the contest, on a one-yard run right before halftime and again with one minute remaining in the third quarter, which proved to be the knockout blow for the Bison. The deficit reached 31 before the Orange and Blue found the endzone with two minutes left in the fourth quarter to bring the final score to 31-7.

“It was a difficult day offensively as there were times when we drove the ball, then combined sacks or negative yardage plays to put ourselves in unmanageable third down situations,” Susan said. “We were inconsistent in our execution, hence our ineffectiveness in finishing drives.”

The Bison head into their final weekend of the season in need of another victory to close out a tough season. The Orange and Blue will be on the road against their bitter rival, the Holy Cross Crusaders, in their 2010 finale. Last season, the Bison upset the Patriot League Champion Crusaders in the final game of the regular season and hope that this year’s game is just as favorable.

“The final against Holy Cross will be a springboard into our off-season,” Susan said. “Every new beginning comes from some other beginning’s end.”

Categories
Sports

Women’s XC places seventh

By Joyce Novacek

Writer

The women’s cross country team placed seventh at the NCAA Mid-Atlantic Regional Championships Saturday in University Park, Pa. Sarah Moniz ’11 and Stephanie Fulmer ’12 led the Orange and the Blue, both recording times of 21:41 in the six-kilometer event and finishing 35th and 36th overall, respectively.

Alysha Hooper ’12 finished in 22:29, claiming the 67th spot overall and Alaina Chodoff ’11 and Kelly Grosskurth ’12 finished 77th and 89th, respectively.

“We decided to have a more aggressive strategy and go after it right from the start,” Moniz said. “We would have loved to beat one or two of the teams ranked ahead of us but we had a consistent, solid performance and were happy to place higher than we’ve been in recent years.”

Although they did not reach their ambitious goal, a seventh-place finish is still the team’s best since 2006.

“We ended up placing exactly where we were seeded against some of the best teams in the country including Villanova, the NCAA 2009 champions,” Fulmer said. “We were satisfied with our performance and it was a great finish for the varsity girls.”

The Villanova Wildcats won the meet for the second consecutive season, as they placed four runners in the top six spots.

“Because this was the last race of the season for the seven of us, I think we all had high goals and expectations to finish a little stronger than we did,” Hooper said. “Overall I think that our strong cross-country season will lead into a strong season for indoor and outdoor track.”

This meet marks the last of the season for the top seven runners on the Bison cross country team, but the rest of the team will compete at the ECAC Championships on Nov. 20 in the Bronx, N.Y.

“The ECAC Championship is a great opportunity to really show off the depth of talent on our team,” Moniz said.

“The ECAC championships allow everyone who may have been injured or had a slow start to the season the opportunity to be able to compete against many great colleges from the Northeast,” Fulmer said. “The meet is held on a historical course where decades of great runners have competed.”

Categories
Sports

Men’s XC finishes 17th of 28 teams

By Andrew Lichtenauer

Contributing Writer

Dave Brown ’12 led the Bison on Saturday as the men’s cross country team finished 17th in a field of 28 teams at the NCAA Mid-Atlantic Regional Championships in University Park, Pa. Brown came in 83rd overall with a time of 32:26 on the 10-kilometer course.

Charles Murphy ’11 and Robert Yamnicky ’13 followed, coming in 87th (32:33) and 89th (32:34), respectively. Joshua Clark ’10 finished 101st (32:50), and Evan Novakowski ’10 finished 106th (32:59) overall, rounding out the scoring for the Bison.

“I thought the race was pretty average both for me and for the team,” Murphy said. “We ran well tactically and I don’t think we can really be too disappointed in our performance, but nobody had the kind of breakthrough race we needed to really excel as a team.”

Princeton won the men’s team title with a total of 53 points. Georgetown’s Ayalew Taye claimed the individual title with a time of 30:05. The Bison finished 17th of 28 teams with 461 points. The Bison were third among Patriot League teams, behind fifth-place Navy and 15th-place Lehigh.

“Our men once again ran as a great pack,” head coach Kevin Donner said. “We had a 30-second differential between our top five. The lack of a front runner hurt us from finishing higher, but I was very proud of how these guys competed all year.”

The team will continue the season next weekend at the IC4A Championships on Nov. 20 in the Bronx, N.Y.

Categories
Sports

Bison take on No. 6 Villanova

By Greg Stevenson

Senior Writer

In one of the most hyped weekends for the University’s men’s basketball team in five years, the Orange and Blue reminded fans of past basketball heroics and proved to the Patriot League and to the nation that they are not all hype.

Facing two traditional Big East conference powerhouses, No. 6 Villanova and Marquette, the Bison hung tough, pushing both Big East foes to the limit before bowing out in the final minutes of the second half.

On Friday night, the Bison traveled to Philadelphia in one of their most anticipated matchups of the season against the Villanova Wildcats. Defensively, the Orange and Blue stymied the Wildcats, holding them to just 68 points, but the Bison could not mount anything on offense and fell to the Wildcats 68-52.

The Villanova advantage was eight after G.W. Boon ’11 drilled a three-pointer at the six-minute mark in the second half. That was the closest the Bison got the rest of the way, as Villanova ended the game on a 14-6 run.

Corey Fisher was one of three Wildcats to score in double-figures, leading the way for Villanova with 24 points. Darryl Shazier ’11 and Mike Muscala ’13 scored 12 and 10 respectively to keep the Orange and Blue in the contest until the final minutes.

If Friday’s game against Villanova was a step in the right direction for the upcoming season, Sunday’s contest at the Marquette Golden Eagles could be the start of a Patriot League championship run for the Bison.

Even though the Bison faced a trip from Philadelphia to Milwaukee and an under-48-hour turn-around time, the Orange and Blue did not show it early against the Golden Eagles. The Bison offense that was held to 52 points in their opener exploded for 41 in the first half, giving the team an eight-point advantage at halftime.

A free throw by Joe Willman ’13 at the 10:22 mark in the second half gave the Bison an 11-point lead.

The Golden Eagles had other ideas about a Bison upset, though. Marquette scored 24 unanswered points over an eight minute stretch, turning a 12-point deficit into a 12-point lead with two minutes left, one the Golden Eagles would not relinquish, escaping with a 72-61 victory.

Bryson Johnson ’13 tallied 18 points, all on three-pointers. Boon and Willman each scored 11 in an overall balanced scoring effort for an Orange and Blue squad that gave two top-tier teams all they could handle in one weekend of play.

After hanging tough with two Big East powers over the weekend, the opening week of play for the Bison culminated with a 66-38 blowout victory against the Binghamton Bearcats in the 2011 home opener. The Orange and Blue put on a defensive show for their fans in Sojka, limiting the Bearcats to under 25 percent shooting from the floor and outscoring Binghamton 41-20 in the second half.

The Bison look to build on a stellar opening week with four games in five days, all on the road, starting with a trip to Saint Francis tomorrow evening. The Orange and Blue then head to Harrisonburg, Va., home of the James Madison Dukes, for their final three contests of the CBE Classic. The Bison face Presbyterian on Monday, Princeton on Tuesday and the Dukes on Wednesday.