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The Top Ivy League Football Players of 2010: Defense by Position

Apr 13, 2010

Brown loses the most, with two All-Ivy starters on the defensive line as well a starting linebacker and two defensive backs.  They will be led by All-Ivy Defensive Rookie of the Year AJ Cruz but that is a lot of personnel to make up.

DEFENSIVE LINE

Harvard returns nearly the entire starting defensive line while Penn adds another All-Ivy defender on the line.

All rising seniors:

Victor Ojukwu, Josue Ortiz and Chucks Obi, HARVARD,

Owen Thomas, PENN,

Matt Boyer, PRINCETON

Joe Young, YALE.

LINEBACKERS

PENN's defense looks loaded for 2010 and its strength is at the linebacker position.  Zach Heller (Sr.), Brian Levine (Sr.) and Erik Rask (Jr.) PENN all made All-Ivy last year.

Heller was the No. 2 Ivy league sack leader and Rask was No. 4 in tackles for lost (TFL)

Steve Cody (Sr.) PRINCETON, Ivy League leading tackler and No. 5 in TFL

Sean Williams (Sr.) YALE

DEFENSIVE BACKS

There are several talented DB's in the league, with Brown's AJ Cruz being the youngest.

Colin Zych (Sr.) HARVARD TOP 10 tackler and tied for lead in passes defended

Adam Money (Sr.) YALE

AJ Cruz (Soph.) BROWN No. 3 in passes defended

Shawn Abuhoff (Jr.) DARTMOUTH tied for lead in passes defended

Adam Mehrer (Sr.) COLUMBIA No. 4 total tackles, Ivy League leader in INT's

Rashad Campbell (Sr.) CORNELL

TEAM DEFENSE

#1 PENN, #2 HARVARD, #3 YALE

The Top Ivy League Football Players of 2010: Offense by Position

Apr 13, 2010

Spring football in New England brings to mind the need to review who is returning to the Ancient Eight gridirons come fall.

QUARTERBACK

QB Kyle Newhall-Caballero, BROWN (Sr.)

All-Ivy first team selection as a junior led the Ivy League in passing yards and touchdowns in 2009. How those numbers look replacing three of the top 10 receivers in the Ivys, including Player of the Year and All-American Buddy Farnham is yet to be seen.

RUNNING BACK

RB Nick Schwieger, DARTMOUTH (Jr.) / Lyle Marsh, PENN (Soph.)

With intact lines and returning starters, these young runners put up great numbers last year and should have no problem repeating their performances.

Harvard, Princeton, and Brown are losing significant portions of their offensive lines. That will call into question the running games of rising senior Gino Gordon and rising sophomore Trevor Scales, as well as the punishing Brown duo of Zach Tronti and Sprio Theodhosi.

WIDE RECEIVER/TIGHT END

WR Chris Lorditch, HARVARD and TE Nicolai Schwarzkopf, HARVARD

Both had impressive performances last season and now returning as seniors should put the exclamation on their collegiate careers. They will be joined by senior wide receiver Trey Peacock of Princeton an All-Ivy honorable mention last year.

OFFENSIVE LINE

Ben Osborne, HARVARD (Sr.); Jeff Adams, COLUMBIA (Jr.); Joe D'Orazio, PENN (Sr.); Luis Ruffalo, PENN (Sr.); Greg Van Roten, PENN (Jr.)

Again, Harvard, Princeton, and Brown are losing significant portions of their offensive lines. Comprised of first and second team All-Ivy players, it will be hard to replace that many holes. Penn, on the other hand, is returning nearly all its All-Ivy starters and will be a force to be reckoned with.

SPECIAL TEAMS

In the kicking game, Penn's rising senior kicker Andrew Sampson returns from his first team All-Ivy selection. Joined by second team All-Ivy punter Kyle Lovett of Brown, this kicking duo will provide additional weapons in the arsenal for their teams.

In the return game, the Ivy League loses three seniors who topped the league in return yardage with Buddy Farnham of Brown, Austin Knowlin of Columbia, and Bryan Walters of Cornell. Replacements have large shoes to fill.

It's an Equity Issue?: Ending the Ivy League Football Postseason Ban

Mar 23, 2010

I have long advocated for an Ivy football Championship game (which 33 of 35 Ivy League sports get to have), a revival of the ECAC Bowl Game and an All-Ivy All Star game to showcase the talent of the league (previously done and discontinued).

I would also add an Ivy sponsored Pro-Day prior to the NFL Draft, rotating from campus to campus or focused on the three big Ivy League cities (Philly, Boston, New York) to maximize exposure.

There has been an idea forwarded that the specific exclusion of Ivy football from postseason play is a violation of Title IX (see voy forums Ivy League Sports Board) and does not allow male football players the same opportunities as say, women lacrosse players, for "Full and effective accommodation of the interest and ability" and does not "Demonstrate a continual expansion of athletic opportunities."

While use of Title IX is a unique angle, common sense and fairness should be enough, as demonstrated from the examples below:

(from ivyleaguesports.com)
Sponsoring conference championships in 33 men's and women's sports, and averaging more than 35 varsity teams at each school, the Ivy League provides intercollegiate athletic opportunities for more men and women than any other conference in the country. All eight Ivy schools are among the "top 20" of NCAA Division I schools in number of sports offered for both men and women.


Please note that these events for the 2009-10 season are subject to change.
Ivy League Championships:
Cross Country (Men & Women)
Fencing (Men & Women)
Women's Swimming and Diving
Indoor Track & Field (Men & Women)
Men's Swimming and Diving
Men's Golf
Women's Golf
Men's Lacrosse
Women's Lacrosse
Baseball (men)
Softball (women)
Outdoor Track & Field (Men & Women)

ECAC
Championships:
Wrestling
Men's Hockey
Women's Hockey
Men's Rowing
Women's Rowing

NCAA Championships:

Men's Basketball (Cornell)
Fencing (Harvard)
Lacrosse (Cornell Men)



(from gocrimson.com)
The Harvard fencing team will send nine members, including five women and four men, to the NCAA Championships hosted by Penn State at the Ashenfelter Multi-Sport Facility in State College, Pa. The championships will begin Thursday, March 19 and conclude Sunday, March 22 (2009).



(from espn.com)
FOXBOROUGH, Mass. -- Kenny Nims never realized how desperate things had become for Syracuse because he refused to consider the possibility that the defending NCAA lacrosse champions might actually lose.

"Never count us out," said Nims, who scored with 4.5 seconds left in regulation to send the game into overtime and help the Orange beat Cornell 10-9 for their second straight title and record 11th overall.



(from ncaa.com)
The Ivy League's bids to the NCAA men's and women's lacrosse tournament will no longer be an "automatic" for the regular-season champion beginning in 2010. The league has announced that an Ivy League tournament for men's and women's lacrosse will be held annually beginning with the 2010 season. The winners of the tournament will receive the league's automatic bids to the NCAA tournaments, rather than the regular-season champion, as has always been the case in the past.


So it is not that NCAA championships are forbidden league-wide. It is not that there is an unwillingness to add additional conference championships and it is not that there is no room for playoffs or championships outside of the Ivy League or NCAAs (An ECAC Championship would be equivalent to the ECAC Bowl proposal).

I have shown that these add-ons can be scheduled without impacting exams. What then, is left to demonstrate? Let's find the sponsors and get this done!

A Night to Remember

Aug 18, 2009


Last night's special reception and BBQ dinner for returning season ticket holders on the concourse at Wien Stadium was great event.

I big highlight was seeing a number of former players, including Michael Quarshie '05, Justin Nunez '07, (who has sold dozens of season ticket packages for the team this year), Tom O'Connor '63, Olivier Manigat '05, and many more.

Here are some of the key points from the speakers who took the mic for a few words during the dinner:

Columbia sports marketing chief Barry Neuberger:

Barry reminded everyone there's still time to get your football season tickets, sign up for the True Blue package for football, men's and women's basketball, and also to sign up to donate a season ticket package for local kids who otherwise couldn't afford to go to the games.


Columbia Athletic Director Dr. Dianne Murphy:

Spoke of the soon-to-be-finished rennovations for the Chrystie Field House and how everyone is sure to be pleased with the final results.


Columbia Women's Basketball Head Coach Paul Nixon:

Gave us a preview of the 2009-10 season, and talked about how exciting it is to have three returning All Ivy players on the roster.


Columbia Football Head Coach Norries Wilson:

Players report back to Columbia this Saturday, start practicing for real on Monday.

Talked about the good number of returning players 18 of the 22 starters and how that bodes well.

Mentioned that just being "in the game" in the fourth quarter isn't good enough anymore; we need wins.

Said that at any given time during the summer, there were between 30-40 guys on the team working out on campus together.

Reiterated that right now, Millie Olawale has the starting QB job. He will have to prove he deserves to keep it during camp.

Said that Marc Holloway is the starting middle linebacker as of now, but he could still get a push from rising sophomore Nick Mistretta.

In response to questions about the kicking situation, Coach Wilson said there will be an open competition among the handful of freshmen kickers we're bringing in this year.

In response to questions about changing the offensive game plan, he insisted not much has changed in the playbook. If you want to see the Wildcat, "you'll have to watch Northwestern," was the quip.

The wide receiving corps is pretty deep. Nico Gutierrez is almost 100% healed from his 2007 ACL tear and he joins Austin Knowlin, Mike Stephens and Taylor Joseph as the leading wide outs coming into camp. But speedy A.J. Maddox is out and will not play this year due to injury.

Every team on the schedule is tough, including Central Connecticut State, a complere unknown for us.


Now here are a few things I gleaned during the "mingling" period with some of the alumni and assistant coaches:


-Coach Aaron Kelton assured me he knows some of the coaches in the new Old Dominion football program and "they will be very good." I may have to reconsider my hope to have Columbia play them in the coming years.


-Former Columbia Spectator writer Stan Waldbaum '62 talked about how close the Spec sports writers were with the football players back in his day. That does not seem to be the case at all these days. Stan also opined that the league overall will be very strong, (I see it as weaker), but he still thinks the Lions have a shot for the title.

-Columbia great Tom O'Connor '63 chatted with me about his days on the team, but mostly wanted to talk about the current squad. He comes to every home game and I am trying to recruit him for a halftime interview this season.

-Michael Quarshie was a surprise attendee and he seemed interested in reading this site. I hope he logs on soon and often. Stan Waldbaum told him of my prediction that he will be in the NFL front office one day. During the Q & A period with Coach Wilson, Quarshie asked who would lead our team in sacks. The coach reminded everyone that Lou Miller led the whole league in sacks and tackles for a loss last year and he is coming back for his senior season.

Again, I hope the athletic department is able to keep this preseason dinner tradition going. It is a very warm and fun event.


Day 32: Todd Abrams '07

Necessity has forced a lot of Columbia football players to switch positions over the years, and Todd Abrams enjoyed the results more than most.

After two years of getting solid playing time at linebacker, Abrams bulked up during the offseason and moved to nose tackle for the 2006 campaign.

Abrams came to Columbia in 2003 from Clayton High School in St. Louis, where he played QB, running back and linebacker.

In 2004, he got into nine games, making 13 tackles and two for a loss.

As a starting linebacker in '05, Todd racked up 52 tackles, including one and a half sacks. He also recovered a fumble.

Then came senior year and Abrams bookended that exciting 5-5 year with fumble returns for TD's in the opening win over Fordham and season ending win at Brown where his score was the turning point in the game.

Abrams finished the season with 37 tackles, six tackles for a loss, one sack, and three fumble recoveries.

And it was Todd's mom who rang that very memorable cow bell game after game during his career.

We miss Todd and that cow bell.

We gotta have more cow bell!

Day 33: Matt Stary '02

Aug 17, 2009


I like mine medium rare


In just a few minutes, I'll be headig up to Wien Stadium for the returning season ticket holders dinner and reception beginning at 6pm. I am really looking forward to it, as last year's inaugural event was great. Kudos to the athletic department and especially Columbia sports marketing chief Barry Neuberger for dreaming the event up.

With just a few days to go before training camp begins, Head Coach Norries Wilson is making what I expect are his last few trips away from Baker Field. Saturday he visited his old school to watch practice at UConn as the Huskies prepare for 2009.



Matt Stary '02

Doing the 5th year senior thing can be harder than it looks in the Ivy League. Matt Stary found that out the hard way in 2001, but before that he was a super force at defensive tackle for the better part of three seasons at Columbia.

The son of a Canadian-Pacific Rail conductor, Stary came to Columbia in 1997 from Fenton High School in Bensenville, Illinois. He break out season came in his junior year of 1999, when he 21 total tackles, three tackles for a loss and 1.5 sacks.

In his "first" senior season of 2000, he had 32 tackles, five tackles for a loss and two sacks. He made Second Team All Ivy that year.

In 2001, as a fifth year, he had 21 tackles and three tackles for a loss through six games, before someone noticed he wasn't taking enough credits to be eligible. It was an honest mistake, but an embarrassing moment, even though Columbia was not forced to forfeit any games. It was an unfortunate end to a very good Lions career for the run-stopping monster that was Matt Stary.

Day 39: The Trendsetter

Aug 11, 2009


Lessons from Media Day


We've a few hours to decompress after the super-quick Ivy Football Media Day I think I can boil things down to a few headlines for Columbia and the rest of the league.

For Columbia:


1) Millie's the man. Coach Wilson didn't say Olawale was absolutely, positively going to be the starter on 9/19, but he's the number one guy going into camp.


2) With Joe Stormont's departure the kicking game becomes a top, if not the top concern for the team going into 2009. We'll watch for news on that front out of training camp as much as possible, especially if Coach Wilson gives us the kind of daily updates we received last year and during spring practice.


3) We have the makings of a great defense with a lot of returning starters. As evidence of that, 5th year returnee Corey Cameron was not given the automatic nod over returning rising junior Matt Moretto who missed 2008 with an injury.


4) There's a lot of confidence in presumptive left tackle starter Jeff Adams to step up and do great things despite his sophomore standing.


5) This is a very experienced team. 26 returning seniors. There's reason to be optimistic about that.


For the Rest of the League:

1) Consensus is Harvard and Penn will duke it out for the title. The week 9 matchup at Harvard Stadium looms large already.

2) Just about the entire league is going to start new QB's this season. That makes things more wide open than usual and the standings may be surprising at season's end.

3) Cornell is getting a transfer tight end in Jack Campbell from Texas Tech, and that slid under the radar for most of us. Campbell is not particularly big at 6-foot-0 and 220 pounds, and it doesn't look like he played a down with the Tech varsity, but we will keep a close eye on his progress this season. He has transferred into the Agricultural Sciences School at Cornell, which is sure to raise the hackles of Big Red haters everywhere.

4) Yale Head Coach Tom Williams was surprisingly brief in his comments, something he would not have had the luxury of doing had this been the face-to-face event at the Yale Golf Club with all the local media around him.

I liked the teleconference for the most part, and I hope the weekly conferences they're setting up for the regular season provide some good content.


Sean Nichols '94

Sean Nichols deserves to be on the list as a defensive tackle and a defensive end, because he was a first team All Ivy honoree at both slots. And even though he was already graduated by the time the Lions reached their peak in 1994-96, Nichols was a trendsetter on a defensive line that eventually became one of the most feared in the league.

Nichols came to Columbia in 1992 after serving two years in the military. He graduated from the famed Chicago Vocational High, (alma mater of Dick Butkus, Keena Turner, and Chris Zorich), where he played linebacker.

At Columbia, Coach Ray Tellier immediately put him in the starting lineup at defensive end, and he exploded with 61 tackles, seven sacks, and 16 tackles for a loss. The Lions went 3-7 in that 1992 season, thanks to standout defensive performances by Nichols and Des Werthman '93. Both were 1st Team All Ivy.

Despite his success at pass rushing Tellier wanted to utilize Nichols' overall strength, so he moved him over to defensive tackle for 1993. '93 ended up being a disappointing 2-8 season for the Lions, but not because of Nichols. He ended the season with 43 tackles, 4.5 sacks and 13 tackles for a loss. Once again, he was voted 1st Team All Ivy.

Nichols was also voted the team's most valuable player for 1993.

He didn't get to the promised land, but Sean Nichols definitely helped take us to the border.


ONE MORE THING...


Check out the new splash page for the GoColumbiaLions.com Website. It now features a new photo of Austin Knowlin and some of his accolades.

Day 40: Bob Kent

Aug 10, 2009


Yale's Tom Williams will likely be the top focus of tommorow's media day


The lull between the announcement of the incoming freshmen classes, (late May), and the start of actual news from Ivy football camps, (less than two weeks away), is finally ending. Beginning tomorrow, the new cycle starts again especially for Columbia fans.

Tomorrow is the Ivy League Football Media Day teleconference and the Ivyleaguesports.com says it will be posting some of the audio as soon as possible. I will be doing my best to cover the event myself and will provide an update or two tomorrow.

This is the first year that they're changing this from an in-person live event at the Yale Golf Club and that presents some plusses and minuses. One of the plusses, in my opinion, is that the event has tended to be very Yale-centric over the years with about 70% of the media's attention directed at the Yale coach's table. With the Elis sporting a new coach this year, I expect the attention to be strongly on Yale's side again, but this time there will be more of a chance to get an equal amount of info from each coach.

Poll Positions

Media day also means the release of the annual preseason final standings poll. Last year, there was a rare tie with both Harvard and Yale predicted to finish first. Harvard held up its end by tying for the title... but it was with the team predicted to come in 3rd, Brown. Yale ended up in fourth behind the Crimson, Bears and the 5-2 Penn Quakers who made a great run to finish out 2008. Columbia was picked last.

It seems silly to make predictions about predictions, but my guess is that Harvard will come out alone on the top of this year's poll with Penn a close second. This despite the fact that no one in the media could know for sure who the Crimson's starting QB will be.

Where will "the media" place Columbia? I'm getting a sronger sense that there is some begrudging respect for the Lions for this coming season. No one is going to vote for us to win the title, but I would not be surprised to see us picked as high as 5th for 2009. Remember that a 5th place pick for us from the Ivy media is like being picked first for almost anyone else. Most reporters still probably would like to pick us last and spend their thiking time on everyone else. But after going 0-109 last season, I expect Dartmouth to be this year's media whipping boy. Cornell will probably get very little love as well.


The Dance Card Going Forward...

Six days after tomorrow's media day is the special dinner for returning season ticket holders at Columbia with the coaches. (If you received your email invite, make sure to RSVP as soon as possible). Last year's event was excellent as the assistant coaches mingled with the crowd and Coach Wilson gave a nice preview of the season. If you've been invited and are on the fence about attending, this is really a no-brainer, you should come!

And not too long after that August 17th dinner, training camp will begin. That's when we'll get the updated rosters and a host of other info we've all been craving during this long offseason.

Bob Kent '92

Today begins 10 days of recognizing some of the most memorable defensive tackles in Columbia history.

Of all the interviews I've done for this blog, my conversation with Bob Kent '92 from two summers ago remains the most important to me. You'll understand why once you've read it below.

But before you do that, there are some updates from Bob. First, he is now living in Newport News, Virginia, next door to my old hometown of Norfolk. And yes, he WILL be going to the inaugural football games for Old Dominion University, (beginning on Sept. 5th)! Now that's a coincidence!

Also if all goes well, Bob and wife Clare will be my guests for a halftime interview sometime in the early part of this season. That will be an interview you won't want to miss.




Bob Kent anchored the Columbia defensive line in the very early 1990's (CREDIT: Columbia Athletics Dept.)

Bob Kent was a force at defensive tackle and a bright spot during the lean early years of Coach Ray Tellier's tenure at Columbia. Kent burst on the scene as a sophomore in the 1989 season, recording two sacks in the Lions lone win that year, a big 25-19 upset of the Cornell Big Red in Ithaca. It was Columbia's first road win in more than six years.

During his three varsity years, Kent was always one of the team leaders in tackles and sacks, and in his senior season he was named second team All-Ivy, a remarkable achievement on a team that gave up about 25 points a game, (note that NONE of Columbia's defensive linemen made first or second team All-Ivy last season despite never giving up more than 24 points in ANY GAME).

Bob Kent was a classmate of mine, and while I only had rare occasion to even say "hi" to him on campus, I followed his progress closely as a football fan. While taking classes at CU during the summer of 1991, I frequently would notice Kent practicing his stance and other footwork all by his lonesome on South Field. I was particularly glad to see how his hard work paid off during the season the following fall.

Bob Kent was not your typical Columbia student. He came to CU after completing two postgraduate years at Milford Academy in New Berlin, NY. Prior to that he graduated Pope John XXIII Regional High School in Sparta Township, New Jersey. Bob's background was more working class he often worked as an ironworker during breaks and was a fourth-generation member of the iron workers union.

Kent's three-year varsity won-loss record was a stark 3-27, but he was a lot more successful in love than he may have been on the field. He married his classmate, the lovely CU cheerleader Clare Deegan just two months after graduation. Clare got her MBA from the University of California only four weeks after giving birth to her first child in 1998. They currently have three daughters ages nine, seven and five.

Kent eventually went to law school in San Francisco and earned his J.D. in 1998.

And then one day, Bob Kent decided he wanted to join the Air Force. He felt the time was right in April 2000 and finished training in August 2001... just one month BEFORE... well, I think we all know what happened one month later that made being in the military much different than it had been before.

Bob's first assignment was in Germany, but when the war in Iraq began, his entire 4th expeditionary air support operations squadron moved to Kuwait. There he successfully led a ten soldier unit charged with finding, tracking and targeting mobile targets.

Since 2004, Captain Kent has been at Hurlburt Field, FL, first working as the chief of intelligence before switching to special operations in 2005. He plans to leave the military in the coming weeks.

Needless to say, I was delighted when Bob contacted me via email earlier this week to say he is a fan of this site and I was even more happy when he agreed to do this interview:

JAKE: Your career path has taken some unique twists and turns. Why did you first turn to the law and then join the military?

Bob Kent: The short version is that I wanted to work for the Justice Department and did all the things that you were supposed to do: law school, internship with the U.S. Attorney’s Office, etc. After graduation I went through the hiring process but when I made it up to the final round, the government announced a hiring freeze. The prospect of working in a law firm for a few years did not really appeal to me and I was able to convince Clare that I should join the military for one four-year tour. However, after I graduated from intelligence training the September 11th attacks happened and we decided I would stay in for a while.

J: How would you describe your experience in the Air Force? Was it what you expected?

BK: Overall, I would describe my Air Force experience as great. But, like playing college football, it was over before I was ready. With regards to my expectations, all of my preconceived notions and stereotypes about the military were shattered. Where I grew up, kids who got in trouble were often given a choice between the military and jail, and I thought that many of the people in the military would be troublemakers or kids who couldn’t get another job, get into college, etc. Needless to say I was wrong. Ninety percent of the people I encountered were amazing. They were hardworking and patriotic and joined the military to make a difference.


Bob Kent and Family (Credit: Kent family)


J: You qualified for some highly specialized duty, did your experience as a sports competitor help you get an edge in the tough selection process?

BK: I went through Air Force Special Tactics/Combat Control training and my sports background helped me in two ways. First, I was used to functioning as part of a team and was very comfortable with the teamwork aspect and second, I knew that I was not going to die from physical stress and exertion. This gave me a slight edge, (Combat Control has about a 95% washout rate in the first six months), because I was used to being in a team environment and working in close physical proximity with other men. Also I was used to stressing my body. A lot of the trainees that I worked with were young men right out of high school or college without a sports background who had to learn how to function as part of a team in addition to everything else.

J: Have you come in contact with any other Ivy athletes in the military?

BK: I’ve met two, both from Princeton and both in special operations. The first is a female intelligence officer who rowed crew and the other is an enlisted combat controller who was on the swim team.

J: Has your military career been tough on your family, or is watching that new show "Army Wives" on Lifetime actually harder to endure, (I know it is for me, but my wife controls the remote)?

BK: While there are positives and negatives, a military career is tough on your family and mine was no different. There is a huge cultural adjustment. Prolonged absences and uncertainties put a ton of stress on your spouse. Clare has been amazing through my entire career but I know it was hard for her. For instance, last year I was away for seven months and she had to deal the kids, the finances and everyday life by herself. We haven’t watched “Army wives”, but Clare will not watch other shows that portray military family life such as “The Unit” because it hits too close to home. The career field that I cross-trained into has about 300 men in it and while I was away at training they held funeral services for five of them at our base.

The kids were also affected by my career. Clare tried to keep things as normal for them as possible while I was away but they still missed me. Also, no matter how much you try to insulate them, (we never let them watch the news), they pick up on everything. We were living in Germany when I deployed to Kuwait prior to the invasion of Iraq. My oldest daughter Audrey was five and a few weeks after I left, Clare found a box full of bottle caps, tin foil and small pieces of metal under her bed. It seems she had recently read one of the "American Girl" books and got the idea to collect scrap metal for the war effort. This was before the invasion started.

We also had a ton of positive experiences. We were able to live in Germany for three years and traveled all over Europe. Although my children were very young, (my youngest, Finna was born in Germany), they loved living overseas and still talk about going back. When we told the girls that I would be leaving the Air Force they were upset. Apparently they are proud of what I did.

J: What's a day in the life of the Kent family like now?

BK: I am currently on an extended vacation, (90 days), and we live in the Florida Panhandle so I would describe it as a tropical honeymoon with three small children.

J: I wonder if some of the challenges the military has been facing, and the criticism it takes in the media, remind you of what it was like to be a Columbia football player in the early 90's. Any similarities?

BK: The media criticism of the military does remind me a little of the criticism the team received during the early 1990’s in that it is derisive criticism and does not offer any solutions. This is especially true of the criticism that has come from the Columbia campus in recent years. However, while few critics can offer any advice that can help a losing team win, involvement and participation in the current conflict by Columbia students, alumni and professors could improve the situation. If you don’t like current policy, get involved and do something to change it.

J: What do you want to do next and why?

BK: My dream job would be a career in risk management for a corporation like Templeton Thorpe or in risk assessment/mitigation for a company such as Control Risk Group or The Ackerman Group. I am interested in risk management because it seems like a natural progression from what I have done so far. I have a diverse background and I enjoyed aspects of each job. A career in risk management will allow me to utilize some of my legal skills, some of the analytical and area assessment skills that I developed as an Intelligence Officer and some of the think outside the box, “shoot, move and communicate” stuff that I learned in Special Operations.

J: What drove your decision to do post-grad study at Milford Academy after leaving Pope John XXIII in New Jersey, and how different were those two schools?

BK: I went to Milford Academy because I wanted to play college football. During my junior and senior years at Pope John I was recruited to play football by a number of colleges. However, after my senior season, I had surgery to repair part of my pelvis that I broke during my junior year and I was on crutches for a few months. Not surprisingly, most of the offers disappeared. When the coach at Milford gave me a call I decided to go and it worked out for the best.

Pope John XXIII is a regional high school with an excellent academic reputation and a solid football program. Around 99% of their graduates go to college. Milford Academy is a football factory for athletes who are not ready to enter college, most because of academic deficiencies. They have a ton of alumni who have played Division 1A football and in the NFL. Not so many in the Ivy League.

J: Tell us how you decided to come to Columbia and the recruiting process.

BK: Coach (Joe) White recruited me out of Milford Academy and after visiting the campus on a weekend visit, I jumped at the opportunity to go. Columbia was a dream school for me, and it really sold itself. I was a native New Yorker, (my parents did not move to NJ until I was in middle school), and the opportunity to go to an Ivy League School and play competitive football in NYC was too good to pass up.

J: You used to work as an iron worker, how did that happen and what was it like?

BK: I worked as an ironworker on and off for about 14 years, starting when I turned 18. I became an ironworker because I had access and it was a great way to make money for school. Mostly I worked summers between school and weekends when I wanted to supplement my income and get out in the fresh air. At the time, the union I worked for was a father and son local, which meant that if your father was an ironworker, and if jobs were available, they would hire the son. I was a fourth generation ironworker and because my father and grandfather had excellent reputations, I had a job whenever I wanted one.

Ironwork was a lot of fun and a great character builder. Climbing columns and walking across steel beams helped put the pain of studying for exams in perspective. The work was hard and very dangerous but it attracted the best guys, real characters that you usually only read about in pulp fiction. Additionally, I often worked directly for my father, which I came to appreciate more and more over time.

J: In a game program from the 1991 season, you were quoted as saying you came to Columbia to play football, "especially against Yale." Was there any real bad blood between you and the Elis?

BK: It was more like a personal rivalry. I was recruited to play football at Yale and the coach who recruited me told me that my acceptance was a sure thing. This was fairly early in the year and I foolishly decided not to apply to any other colleges. When I received a rejection that April I had a typical Irish reaction and decided to make the Elis as miserable as I could if I ever had another opportunity to play against them. So I always looked forward to playing against Yale. However, I was friendly with several of the Yale players and have tremendous respect for Coach Coza. I would not have disliked the team so much if I hadn’t wanted to be part of them in the first place. But I still like to see Yale lose.


Kent lines up against Brown, 1990 (CREDIT: Columbia Athletics Dept.)

J: Your senior year was filled with near-miss losses to Harvard, Fordham, Cornell and Brown, plus a very good showing against eventual league champion Dartmouth. Were the 1991 Lions the best 1-9 team ever?

BK: I really don’t know how to compare the quality of 1-9 teams. I remember my senior year it really felt like we were on the cusp of turning the program around. Obviously we never did, but part of coach Tellier’s genius was that he was able to sustain that feeling throughout a losing season.

J: You and your wife Clare were college sweethearts... in fact, some of your relationship seems right out of the 1950's, as you were "the football player" and she was "the cheerleader." Obviously, there's a whole lot more to two Ivy League college grads, so would you like to blow that stereotype up, or was the truth just as "storybook" as it sounds?

BK: Well, obviously there is a lot more to anyone than what you see on the surface, and Clare and I are no exception. For instance, Clare graduated at the top of her class from Haas/Berkeley Business School but also loves to bake. But as far as our romance goes, it is pretty much as “storybook” as it sounds. It was the first week of school when I saw Clare for the first time. She was on the opposite side of the quad, coming out of Hartley and I can still describe what she was wearing. We started dating in October of that year and I have been crazy about her ever since. On July 10th we celebrated our 15th wedding anniversary and I can honestly say that it feels like we were just married. For me, the best thing about Columbia will always be that that is where I met Clare. Clare makes me believe in the myth of romantic love. I know it sounds incredibly sappy. Even Clare and I realize how it looks and maintain a sense of humor about our relationship. The attached photos should make everything clear.



This is why you shouldn't have thrown out your Underoos


J: Athletes are taking some criticism in the student papers and online publications at Columbia these days, was there any hint of that when you were at CU?

BK: There was always a little, but not to the extent I see now.

J: I've seen you at some Columbia games over the years, how closely do you follow the team and do you keep in touch with your old teammates?

BK: I follow as closely as I am able. I go to games whenever I can. Once I took a military transport to Dover AFB in Delaware and rented a car to make the second half of a game at Baker field. I read whatever is published about the team and particularly enjoy reading your blog and receiving the e-mail updates that Coach Wilson has started sending out.

Although I do not do nearly as good a job as I should, I do keep in touch with several old teammates, particularly Jim Daine, Bob Walcott and Kiernan O’Connor. Most recently, I had an opportunity to visit with Coach White and his family while they were vacationing in Pensacola Beach. He looks exactly the same and is doing great.

J: I remember seeing you practice alone on South Field every day during the summer of 1991. It seemed to pay off as you made 2nd team All-Ivy that fall, but was there a more organized practice and training schedule for the players in the off season?

BK: There were no organized practices allowed in the Ivy League during the off-season at that time. We did have a weightlifting and running schedule during the school year, but only a handful of players trained at Columbia in the summertime. One of the positive changes that Coach Tellier and his staff made was encouraging players to stay at Columbia during the summer to work and train. I have read that Coach Wilson has a similar program. I think this will really help Columbia develop future players (and help the players develop their resumes.)

J: How would you describe your overall experience at Columbia from 1988-92?

BK: While I am sure that there were some negatives, I tend to remember all of the positives. I had a great experience at Columbia. It is a wonderful university in the greatest city in the world and it attracts a brilliant and diverse student body. I met my wife at Columbia and the best friends I have today I met while attending Columbia. The ideas that I was exposed to at Columbia help me in my endeavors to this day. If anything, I wish I had done more and learned more while I was there. But there are so many opportunities at Columbia, it is impossible to experience them all in four years.

J: What game from your Columbia days do you remember most and what game would you most like to forget?

BK: I remember the Harvard game my senior year the best. We played at Harvard and the weather was perfect. It was a very close game but the team played extremely well and we were very hopeful when we left Harvard stadium. Personally, I remember being very excited after that game and believed that we would win the rest of our games that season.

(*Jake's Note: Columbia lost that game 21-16, despite having a 1st and goal at the four with about two minutes left in the game. Four tries yielded nothing and the Crimson held on).

As far as forgetting, the Penn game my junior year was a personal low for me. I remember being very excited about that game because I was going to play against (future NFL All-Pro center with the Kansas City Chiefs), Joe Valerio, one of the league’s best offensive linemen. During the first half of the game, I did a great job against Valerio, (at least that‘s how I remember it). However, in the second half I committed an extremely flagrant personal foul and was ejected from the game. This game served as a turning point in my career. Prior to this game, I had a history of committing personal fouls. However, this incident, along with some much needed mentoring from Coach White, made me realize how useless, selfish and counterproductive penalties were. I do know that I never intentionally committed another foul.

J: What was your daily schedule like during the football season?

BK: I usually woke up early and went to breakfast and then to morning classes. I used to schedule all of my classes in the morning or early afternoon because we had to catch the bus to Baker field at around 2:30. Then I would go to practice until 5-5:30 and then catch the bus back to Columbia. I usually went to the cafeteria for dinner and then studied and went to bed. A couple of times a week we also had to lift weights and watch game films. I also found time to hang out and do typical college student stuff.

J: What were your impressions of Coach Ray Tellier and his staff?

BK: Coach Tellier took over as head coach during my freshman year and he immediately started to make changes for the better. He brought in a great staff, many of whom are successful head coaches for other college football teams today. Eventually Coach Tellier was able to build the team he envisioned and had the best team in recent CU history. But what I remember best about Coach Tellier was that he managed to make us believe that we were working towards the future of CU football and were the foundation of what would one day be a great team.

J: Who did you consider to be the best players you played with while at CU?

BK: The players that I remember as having the biggest impact were the linebackers. I was very fortunate to have three great linebackers play behind me: Bart Barnett, Galen Snyder and Des Werthman. I remember Bart as being a great leader and Des went on to be an Ivy League legend, (and made the best hit I ever saw when Keith Elias called his name and pointed to the hole he was going to run through), but I think Galen was the best player I was ever on the field with. Galen was consistent, smart, fast, tough and hard hitting and would probably have been a stellar player in any league. During his junior and senior years he was definitely the heart of our defense.

Although we had many talented players at the offensive skill positions, the offensive player who I felt made the biggest contribution was the OG Brad Hutton. Brad was an anchor on the offensive line and a great captain our senior year. On the field, he could play with anybody and practicing against him definitely made me a better player. Additionally, he is a very classy guy and always exhibited great sportsmanship. His accomplishments are even more impressive when you consider that he was the youngest player on our 1988 freshman team, (I think he was 16).

The most intense player was Mike Holt. He was a fierce competitor and an all around great guy.


J: Have you had a chance to see this current team play, and do you have any thoughts on their success last year?

BK: I was only able to see the current team play on video last year. On paper, they seemed like any other Columbia team but obviously they were something special. I believe that there was lot of parity, talent wise, in the league last year, (with some exceptions). So I would have to attribute their success to Coach Wilson and his staff. Under Coach Tellier, I saw first-hand how a coach can turn a program around. I would love to see Coach Wilson build on his success. The hardest thing at Columbia seems to be building and sustaining winning teams. Maybe Coach Wilson can do it, I certainly wish him the best. If the football fairies are reading this, 20 years down the road I would love for Columbia to be a perennial Ivy Football powerhouse. It would also be great to attend their games at a new stadium in downtown Manhattan.

Day 44: A Rudd We can be Proud of!

Aug 6, 2009


Nick Rudd's famous game-winning kick over Fordham, 2002



The Patriot League has released its preseason media poll, putting Columbia's opening week opponent Fordham at 5th and our week four opponent Lafayette in a tie with archrival Lehigh at 3rd.

Here's the full poll:

1. Holy Cross
2. Colgate
3T. Lafayette
3T.Lehigh
5. Fordham
6. Bucknell
7. Georgetown


Fordham is a super-hard team to figure this preseason as the Rams returned a lot of their 2007 championship team only to fall to 1-5 in the Patriot League in 2008. And with athletic scholarships kicking in for next season, one has to wonder how that will affect the current players and staff who may be looking ahead to 2010.

The good news is that Columbia will have one scouting opportunity as Fordham begins its season on September 5th at URI. Then the Rams have a bye week before taking on the Lions in The Bronx on the 19th.

Even under relatively normal circumstances, I have found it very hard to measure just how good a team Fordham is over the years. I don't envy the job the folks voting in that media poll had to do this week.

Lafayette is boasting a lot of returning players, including some very impressive linemen, but seems a little thin at the skill positions. I am predicting a much better showing for the Lions than the last time they went to Easton, when they fell to the home team by a 29-0 score.

Speaking of media polls, we're just five days away from the release of the Ivy media poll, which for the 3rd year in a row, I was honored to participate in. Usually this poll buries Columbia at the bottom, but I would not be surprised if we saw the Lions emerge from their usual 7th or 8th place slot this time around.


Nick Rudd '05

Nick Rudd came to Columbia in 2001 and luckily for him, bore no relation to infamous '68 campus riot radical Mark Rudd.

The younger Rudd was a standout in soccer and football at Miramonte High School in Orinda, California.

As a freshman, Rudd was solely a punter and he made a great immediate impact at the position. He finished the 2001 season with a solid 39.0-yard punting average, especially making a difference in Columbia's close win over Cornell in Ithaca by averaging 47-yards per boot in that game.

For the next three years, Rudd had the tough job of handling the punts and placekicks, but he mostly excelled at punting upping his average to 39.1 yards per kick and making the All Ivy Second Team. Of course, the highlight of his 2002 season had to be his clutch last second field goal to beat Fordham 13-11 on national TV just moments after having an earlier attempt blocked.

Rudd was the 1st Team All Ivy punter in 2003 along with gaining Honorable Mention All Ivy honors as a kicker in 2003. That exciting season Rudd nailed 11 of 16 FG attempts, with a long of 43-yards.

Like most of his teammates, Rudd logged a mostly disappointing 2004 season, but the sum total of his four years at Columbia shows a record of very hard work under some very difficult circumstances.

Day 60: Upperco's Upper Hand

Jul 21, 2009

There are a few pieces of news of keen interest to Lion's fans that I've neglected to mention over the past few days.

Army and Notre Dame have agreed to resume their rivalry, with games at the new Yankee Stadium.

I think this is a great development for college football in New York City. The question is: will this be a good development for Fordham, and perhaps by extension, Columbia?

There was talk when Fordham announced the shift to athletic scholarships for football that the ultimate goal was to get some home games at Yankee Stadium, and reap the potential big-time revenues from games with Army, Navy, and perhaps Notre Dame, (although that game would almost definitely have to be in South Bend, I can't imagine the Irish agreeing to travel for Fordham).

The Army-Notre Dame deal may or may not hurt Fordham's chances.

On one hand, it may crowd out the Rams if Army grabs whatever dates are available on the Yankee Stadium schedule. If they force up the price, Fordham would have to pay to use the field.

On the other hand, the folks in charge of the stadium may find that football works well at the venue and try to keep the field in use as much as possible in hopes of paying back the considerable number of bondholders who financed the very expensive facility. Fordham might be the beneficiary of some free beta testing here.

If Fordham does end up clinching some home dates at Yankee Stadium in the future, and if the Columbia-Fordham rivalry continues for the coming years, I know I would be thrilled to see the Lions and Rams hook up at the big stadium in the Bronx.

Even if a scholarship-strengthened Fordham becomes a University of New Hampshire-type powerhouse, I think it may be worth it to play them if we get a Yankee Stadium date.

That's just my opinion...and a lot of wishful thinking.

I know I have written a lot about Old Dominion's launching of a football program already, but check out this page (click on the link that shows an animated video of what they expect gameday to be like on a typical Saturday in Norfolk).

These guys have the right idea. Sorry to be so interested in ODU, but this is my childhood we're talking about here. AND, you have to love a school starting football in these economic times. Gutsy, and smart. Season tickets are already sold out.

And yes, I would love to see Columbia start playing ODU sometime in the future. That would be a lot of fun.



100 Players in 100 Days, the Tight Ends

Dan Upperco, '85–came to Columbia in 1981 from Orlando's Boone High school, where he was an all-state player. His brothers were football stars too; one of them played at U. of Miami, another at Tulane, and a third one at the University of the South.

Upperco had the very good fortune of being at Columbia when John Witkowski ('84) was the QB.

In his sophomore year of 1982, Upperco platooned at tight end with James Powell ('83), but he still made Honorable Mention All-Ivy, with 26 catches, 377 yards, and an incredible six touchdowns catches. At 6'4'' and 200 lbs, he was huge for a tight end at that time.

In '83, Upperco made First Team All-Ivy, and put up more monster numbers, but it was his senior year–after Witkowski had graduated–that may have been Dan's most impressive achievement.

Working with new QB Henry Santos ('86), Upperco still managed to lead the team in receiving, with 38 catches for 489 yards. He once again made First Team All-Ivy.

Upperco got a chance to crack the L.A. Raiders roster, (yes, they were in Los Angeles then), but never really made it as a regular player.

Today, Upperco is vice president of the NFL Players Association of Retired Players.

If all goes well, I hope to interview him during halftime of one of this coming season's games.