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Sports

Athlete of the Week: Cameron Ayers ’14

By Chris McCree

Sports Editor

 

Profile:

Cameron Ayers

Class: Sophomore

Position: Guard

Height/Weight: 6′ 5” / 203 lbs

Hometown: Blue Bell, Pa.

Major: Undeclared

 

Statistics:

Games: 3

Minutes/game: 30.4

Points/game: 13.3

Assists: 7

Rebounds: 9

3-pt. percentage: 61.5

 

After opening the season with two tough losses to Minnesota and Vanderbilt, the men’s basketball team has reeled off five straight victories behind the play of starting point guard Cameron Ayers ’14. During the TicketCity Legends Classic at Sojka Pavilion this past weekend, Ayers led the team to three wins and a tournament title. Over the three-game stretch, Ayers averaged a solid 13.3 points per game, including a career-high 20-point performance during the team’s 87-50 victory over West Alabama. His most significant contribution came during the team’s championship matchup against Morehead State, where he hit a tiebreaking three-pointer with just 1:47 left on the clock.

This season, Ayers has been given the difficult task of taking over the starting point guard role from Darryl Shazier ’11 and has performed well thus far. He leads the team in floor time and is just one of four Bison averaging 10 or more points per game. After a successful 2010-2011 season, ending in a Patriot League title and NCAA tournament berth, the Orange and Blue have high expectations this year and currently stand at 5-2 following this weekend’s three wins. The team faces a tough road in the coming weeks, including a big matchup at No. 4 Syracuse on Dec. 20, before it starts Patriot League play in January. As an emerging leader of the team, Ayers will play a crucial role in the team’s future successes and has complete faith in his team’s ability to win on the highest level.

“We can play with anyone in the country if we play within ourselves and do what we need to do to be successful,” Ayers said. “We have a really close group of guys that want to win and know how to win. We are a family that really wants to be successful.”

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Sports

Wrestling falters at Northeast Duals

By Andrew Arnao

Writer

The men’s wrestling team went 0-3 at Northeast Duels in New York last Saturday, losing to Maryland, Eastern Michigan and Northern Iowa. The Bison faced seven ranked individuals and won just five bouts overall.

“We obviously did not have a good day at the Northeast Duals,” Austin Miller ’15 said. “It wasn’t the fact that we lost three matches, just that we did not go out and wrestle to the best of our ability.”

The Orange and Blue faced No. 11 Maryland and failed to win a decision, falling 40-0 to a Terps squad that featured ranked competitors, including No. 2 Josh Asper. Against Eastern Michgan, Alex Pellicciotti ’14, in the 141-pound weight class, defeated Corey Phillips 10-4, while Jamie Westwood ’14 defeated Mike Curby 5-3 in the 184-pound class. 

During the 27-12 loss to Northern Iowa, Stephen McPeek ’14 recorded the team’s only pin of the day in 5:51, marking his first pin of the season. Miller and Derrik Russell ’13 also each won a decision.

“We had the expectations to beat Northern Iowa in our last match but fell short due to some injuries and some of our team not being able to wrestle,” Westwood said. “The teams that we are wrestling are a very good measuring stick for us because we have such a young team with more than half our lineup including freshman; [and] they are getting the experience they need for the upcoming season and years to come.”

After the meet, the Bison stand at 0-4 on the season. The Bison will host Michigan State tomorrow in Davis Gym  at 7 p.m., and then head off to the Penn State Open on Sunday.

“This was not our best performance but is a great tool to test how we respond next weekend against Michigan State,” Russell said. “We are looking to have a very solid week of preparation and we are all eager to get back on the mat this Saturday in Davis.”

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Sports

Women’s basketball loses three straight

By Ajan Caneda

Writer

The women’s basketball team dropped three straight contests this week, on the road to Niagara and St. Francis and at home to Canisius, dropping its record to 1-7 on the season.

At Niagara, the Orange and Blue shot 47.9 percent for the game but fell 61-55. Guard Shelby Romine ’14 scored nine first-half points to keep the Orange and Blue within striking distance and finished with 20 points for the game. Trailing 32-28 at halftime, the Orange and Blue claimed their first lead of the game when Lindsay Horbatuck ’13 scored a lay-up off an assist from Christina Chukwuedo ’12. The Bison won the rebounding (36-24) and shooting battles, but the Purple Eagles came away with the victory.

“We have to cut down on our turnovers and get balanced scoring from all the players on the floor,” head coach Kathy Fedorjaka said. “I believe in the potential of this group and that we are staying cohesive during our early season challenges.”

After the loss at Niagara, the Bison traveled to Loretto, Pa. to face St. Francis. The Bison fell 70-53. Turnovers hampered the Orange and Blue as they had 23 to St. Francis’s 12, allowing the Red Flash to get off to a 16-9 run in the first 14 minutes of the game. Both teams struggled shooting in the first half as the Bison shot four for 21 from the field while St. Francis went nine for 34. In the second half, the Orange and Blue as shot 48.1 percent but St. Francis responded by shooting 50 percent from the field. In the loss, Horbatuck had her first double-double of the season with 15 points and 11 rebounds.

On Wednesday, the Orange and Blue concluded their three-game stretch with a 55-47 loss to Canisius at home. A ten-point deficit in the first half kept the Bison from gaining an edge. The Orange and Blue forced 24 turnovers, but only scored ten points off those turnovers. Alyssa Dunn ’13 finished with 13 points and three steals while Micki Impellizeri ’15 had a defensive showcase with five steals.

“Despite our record, I remain very optimistic about where are team can go this season, especially by the time we hit Patriot League play,” Fedorjaka said. “We have a lot of the pieces, but now just need to gel those pieces together. We’ve emphasized perseverance and staying the course, the results will come if we keep working hard and doing the right things.”

The Bison travel to Newark, N.J. to take on NJIT on Dec. 3.

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Sports

Football season recap

By Eric Brod

Staff Writer

In just his second season as head coach, Joe Susan and the football team improved from a 1-10 team in 2010 to a rising 6-5 team at the end of the 2011 campaign. Despite a 21-6 loss at Colgate in the team’s season finale, the outlook for 2012 is very promising.

The Orange and Blue were plagued by turnovers and could not move the ball consistently against a stout Colgate defense. Trey Lauletta ’15, who played the majority of the game, finished 22 out of 35 passes for 166 yards with two interceptions. On defense, the biggest moment came when Bryce Robertson ’12 continued his record-setting season by intercepting his 13th pass of the season, finishing one behind Rashean Mathis’ single season FCS record of 14.

The Orange and Blue found themselves trailing only 7-6 at halftime thanks to a pair of Drew Orth ’12 field goals of 19 and 33 yards, respectively. Colgate scored on a 50 yard run by Gavin McCarney to give the Raiders a 14-6 lead. The score held until the fourth, but Lauletta threw his second interception of the game to give Colgate a 21-6 lead.

Jeremiah Young ’13 finished with 91 yards on the day, shouldering the bulk of the running game after Tyler Smith ’13 left with an injury. Receiver Frank DeNick ’12 finished with six catches for 51 yards, giving him an impressive 977 for his career. Orth finished with a season total of 12 field goals made, third best in program history.

With many of the core players coming back, such as Lauletta and Smith, the team looks to be a serious contender in the Patriot League and could capture its first league title since 1996.

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Sports

Robertson ’12 beaks interceptions record as football dominates Fordham

By Eric Brod

Senior Writer

Behind five turnovers and 204 rushing yards from Tyler Smith ’13, the football team clinched a winning season with a 21-0 win at Fordham this past Saturday. With this victory, the team improved to an overall season record of 6-4, its highest win total since 2006.

Two of the team’s five turnovers were interceptions by Bryce Robertson ’12, giving him 12 for the season. Roberston leads the nation in interceptions this season and now has passed Gene Luccarelli for the most interceptions in program history. 

The Orange and Blue broke a scoreless tie midway through the first quarter when Smith punched the ball in from two yards out. The score capped a five-play, 71-yard drive in which Smith accounted for all 71 yards, 64 on the ground with one seven-yard catch. After their next drive stalled off a Fordham fumble on the kickoff, Derrick Palmer ’14 forced a fumble that set up the Bison’s second score of the game. On the ensuing drive, quarterback Brandon Wesley ’14 hit Victor Walker ’14 for a 35-yard gain, and Jeremiah Young ’13 finished off the drive with a one-yard touchdown run for his second score of the season late in the first quarter.

The Bison held their 14-0 lead into the fourth quarter with Fordham facing a fourth and goal on the Bison five-yard line. The defense was able to force an incomplete pass by Fordham quarterback Ryan Higgins. On the very next play, Smith broke off a career-long run of 52 yards. The run set up Smith’s second score of the game, giving the Orange and Blue a 21-0 lead with less than six minutes left.

“Tyler is a very strong runner and has become a lot more confident in our offensive system,” head coach Joe Susan said. “He is much more patient in the run game and knows how to set up his runs as a game goes on. Tyler’s success is tied into the continued development of our offensive line, fullback and tight ends. We have had the same starting offensive line for nine straight games.”

Robertson’s second interception of the game at the Bison 15 yard line helped preserve the shutout as the Bison clinched their sixth victory of the season.

The Bison ground game dominated the contest, accounting for 250 of the team’s 346 yards. Wesley completed six of 11 passes for 80 yards.  The Bison now have a plus-28 turnover margin.

“We work to stop the run. If we are successful at doing this our opponent will have to rely on the passing game,” Susan said. “We pressure the passer and force him into making decisions in a shorter time period.”

Looking for their first seven-win season since 2004, the Bison will travel to Colgate Saturday to wrap up its 2011 campaign.

“Our challenge defensively is to stop one of the better run teams in the patriot league, if not in FCS football,” Susan said. “Offensively, we have to continue to improve our run game and apply it to their defensive schemes.”

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Sports

Athlete of the Week: Bryce Robertson

By Chris McCree

Sports Editor

 

Player Profile:

Class: Senior

Position: Defensive Back

Hometown: Reserve, La.

Major: Management

 

Statistics:

Tackles: 3

Interceptions: 2

Interception return yards: 16

Breakups: 1

 

This past weekend, defensive back Bryce Robertson ’12 intercepted two passes during the football team’s 21-0 victory over Patriot League rival Fordham. Robertson broke Gene Luccarelli’s 41-year old record for most interceptions in a single season and has recorded at least one per game in eight of the team’s 10 games this season. Robertson has now intercepted multiple passes in three consecutive games and his 12 interceptions are tops in the nation.

All season long, Robertson has anchored a defensive unit that seems to improve with every game. Against the Rams, the Orange and Blue produced their best performance of the year, limiting the Fordham attack to just 267 total yards and forcing five turnovers. Tallying four of its five turnovers in the first half, the Bison defense took much of the pressure off the offense which quickly capitalized by scoring 14 points in the first quarter and seven more in the fourth. With the victory, the team improved to 6-4 on the season and can post its first seven-win season since 2004 with a win against Colgate on Saturday. The Bison will look for Robertson and the defense to give them the edge they need to take down the Raiders.

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Beyond the Bison Sports

Beyond the Bison: A Legacy-Defining Decision

By Julian Dorey

Columnist

As the cold winter readies to set in, the lights in ball parks are out. But the drama is in full force.

Every year, almost immediately after the World Series’ conclusion, baseball’s hot stove ignites. Baseball free agency is a much longer process than the signing periods in other sports. Every November, several of the game’s greats hit the MLB’s salary-capless market, with price tags that only get heftier as the years pass by.

This particular offseason is a historic one. Our generation’s greatest player—-a man who may have every right to consider himself equal among names like Ruth, DiMaggio, Williams, Mays and Aaron when his career comes to a close—-is there for the taking.

That man is Albert Pujols.

Pujols has a smooth right-handed swing that rivals any the game has ever seen, and has power that can place the ball into unprecedented territories of every stadium he visits. Pujols is a rare combination of top-tier power and gold-glove fielding. He might be a big manbut he can move and throw with the best of them at first base. Fans have watched him tear through the Major Leagues since 2001. His St. Louis Cardinals have won two World Series Championships during that span.

But the place he chooses to play this off-season may very well end up being what he is most remembered for. Will he be the loyal player and sign with the team that gave him his chance, the team he has already tasted victory with? Or will he be a typical 21st-century player and leave for another team with a bigger market?

He performed admirably for St. Louis for 10 years and delivered titles to the team. Cardinals fans can’t ask any more of Pujols.

Let’s be clear; this is not a LeBron James situation. Pujols is a not an attention-grabbing player with nothing on his mind but where his legacy will stack up among his sport’s greatest. In addition, St. Louis isn’t his hometown, nor has he failed to deliver them a championship trophy.

Pujols might not be concerned about his legacy like James, but his final decision in his free-agency process will be integral in how he will be rememberd 30 or 40 years from now.

It is easy to admire Pujols. In a baseball era that saw steroids destroy the very sanctity that made the game America’s pastime, never once was Pujols’ name implicated in the drug-abuse mess. It’s easy to forget that, sometimes. Pujols has many great qualities that are set to make him the highest-paid player in Major League history.

We live in an age where business rules sports. Where words like loyalty, legacy and love don’t seem to apply. In the end, the high and mighty dollar circulates through everyone’s minds. Unfortunately, as a result of professional sports’ current business models, it seems players don’t ever start and finish their careers in one place. At some point, an organization or a player seems to draw a line in the sand and move on.

It’s somewhat sad that great players now seem to divvy up their careers between two or three teams. What happened to men like John Elway, Bobby Clarke and Bill Russell in sports?

Those guys don’t really exist anymore—-and it’s a damn shame. For once, a player has a chance to buck the recent business-model trend and sign on to finish his career in one venue. That’s Albert Pujols.

Whatever decision he ultimately makes, he’ll most likely do it quietly. The money is out there everywhere he turns, including in St. Louis. I just hope that, for once, a professional athlete puts his personal business interests aside and makes the decision to ride into the sunlight wearing one uniform.

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Sports

After major miscue, women’s XC finishes 12th

Women’s Cross Country

Katherine Harris ’15

The women’s cross country team wrapped up its season this past weekend by finishing 12th in the NCAA Mid-Atlantic Regional Championships. The team traveled to the regional championships at the University of Maryland-Eastern Shore on Saturday.

With five seniors and not much to lose in their last cross country meet of their career, the squad decided on a gutsy strategy going into the race.

“Our women went into this meet with very high expectations, especially coming off a great Patriot League Championship race two weeks earlier,” head coach Kevin Donner said. “We decided to take the pace out hard for the first mile.”

The Orange and Blue followed this plan–so well, perhaps, that their strong start actually ended up hurting them a bit in the long run. With many of their top runners at the head of the pack, the Bison followed the lead cart as it made a wrong turn and led many of the fastest runners on the wrong path, which added an extra 600 meters to the race and exhausted many Bison runners after their aggressive start.

Even with this course miscue, the team ended up 12th in a field of 29. The Bison placed six runners in the top 100, with Stephanie Fulmer ’12 and Emily Liggett ’12 leading the way as they came in 50th and 60th, respectively. Other top performers for the Orange and Blue included Alysha Hooper ’12 and Betsy Edinger ’15.

All in all, many of the runners ended up frustrated with the lead cart error and a little disappointed with the team’s overall performance in their last meet. Nonetheless, team members were positive about the hand they were dealt.

“Although we came up a little short, it just shows that each individual put every ounce of energy into the Patriot League Championships,” Fulmer said. “I am extremely proud of the team and could not have asked for a better group of girls to run with. I am also very proud of the fact that with an in-race mess up of the course and running an extra half-mile our girls were able to still focus in and stick to the race plan.”

Donner agreed with this assessment of his team’s performance. Though perhaps not the most ideal outcome for the Orange and Blue, the squad’s strong effort when faced with adversity did not go unnoticed.

“Twelfth place was not where we wanted to be; however, I am proud that our team really went for something big. We had five seniors run their last cross country race and they were a part of some very good teams over the past four years. I am very proud of this group,” Donner said.

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Sports

Wrestling falls to Cornhuskers

By Chris McCree

Sports Editor

Facing a Cornhuskers squad that placed 12th at NCAA Championships last year, the Bison men’s wrestling team opened its season with a 28-9 loss last Thursday night at Sojka Pavilion.

The Orange and Blue started off the meet by winning three out of the first five bouts, leaving the two teams at a 9-9 tie. Austin Miller ’15 claimed the team’s first win of the year with a 4-3 victory over Nebraska’s Shawn Nagel in his first-ever collegiate match. Nagel posted a late escape, but neither wrestler scored in the final minute as Miller put the Bison up 3-0 early.

“My coaches have really helped me out a lot this fall, especially with technique in some areas that I was struggling in,” Miller said. “They pushed our entire team to work hard, and my conditioning paid off a lot in that match … I am going in to work with the coaches about three or four times extra per week on things I need to improve upon. Just being consistent with that I think helped me to improve and prepare for Nebraska.”

Derrik Russell ’13 and John Regan ’12 also posted early wins for the Bison, yet the team’s inability to win bouts in the heavier weight classes hindered its overall performance. Although five of the 10 matches were decided by three points or less, the Cornhuskers swept final five bouts of the meet, allowing them to cruise to a 19-point victory.

“This match was a great measuring stick for the team as a whole as well as individually. We see areas that need improvement, and emphasis will be placed on these areas accordingly,” Russell said. “One important thing the team needs to work on is to be more aggressive at the start of every single whistle, trying to be the first one to make contact.”

The Bison will hit the mats again at the Navy Classic on Nov. 19 in Annapolis, Md.

Looking ahead, the team remains confident about its ability to compete with the top schools in the nation.

“We are a very young team and I think it showed on Thursday that we are lacking experience … However, the talent is there, and the work ethic is there. I believe we will do big things in the near future,” Miller said.

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Sports

Men’s XC finishes in top 10

By Andrew Arnao

Writer

Five runners from the men’s cross country team finished in the top 100 racers for the 10k at the NCAA Mid-Atlantic Regional Championships last Saturday. The Orange and the Blue finished 10th out of 25 teams, the team’s first top-10 finish in the Regional Championships since 2003.

D.J. Krystek ’13 was the top-placing Bison, finishing 54th overall in 31:59.0. Placing 68th and 69th were Dave Brown ’12 and John Dugan ’15, respectively. Michael McGowan ’15 finished 81st, while Eric Balaban ’14 placed 99th.

“The team was ecstatic when we found out that we finished 10th because our goal was to finish at our ranking of 12th in the region, considering we had two of our top seven [runners] out,” McGowan said. “Our top four were ahead of our number one runner last year at this meet.”

Overall, the Bison finished with 347 points. Georgetown placed first with a total of 47 points.

“Looking into the future, I am very excited about what this team can do,” McGowan said. “We have a lot of young guys who got big race experience and were scorers for us this year.”

“A few key runners couldn’t race, but we came together as a team and went out there with something to prove,” Balaban said. “This is just the beginning and I can’t wait to see what we’re capable of.”

The Orange and the Blue race next at the IC4A and ECAC Championships at Van Cortlandt Park, N.Y. this weekend.