Friday, March 20, 2026

Score A Big One For Williams

Over a 41-year period, Dartmouth had just two people directing its athletic communications efforts, but with the assistant who had been overseeing the office moving on last month, the department will now have its second new director in just over two years.

The perfect candidate for the role is was out there, but per this release out of Williams College he'll instead soon be running the show for the "Little Ivy" powerhouse in Massachusetts:

That, of course, is Rick Bender, who succeeded longtime Dartmouth SID Kathy Slattery Phillips in 2008 and was highly regarded around the Ivy League for his professionalism and steady leadership guiding the office into the digital era. After 17 years at Dartmouth he served as the first full-time athletic communications director at Knox College in his home state of Illinois before the position was eliminated.

Said Williams Athletic Director Lisa Melendy in announcing the school's new SID director of athletic communications: 

"I am pleased to welcome Rick Bender to our department, and excited for him to begin his work with our student-athletes, coaches, and staff. With a proven track record of excellence and a specialized focus on the student-athlete experience within a liberal arts context, Rick is uniquely positioned to lead our communications department as we enter the next chapter. We are incredibly fortunate to have Rick's expertise at the helm."

Green Alert Take: As a former assistant SID who knows and respects Rick, I couldn't have said it any better.

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Ranking the Top 15 FCS Transfer Portal Safeties for the 2026 Season might be a fool's mission before a single game has been played, but when one of your former players is among those who are ranked and his photograph leads the story, why not?


The photo is of Tyson Grimm, who will be a grad transfer this fall at Rhode Island. From the story (LINK):

Grimm is a super-experienced defensive back who played in nearly every game for Dartmouth over the past two years. He has posted over 100 career tackles with 2 INTs and 6 pass breakups. He's expected to play an important role for the Rams in 2026, who need to replace some major pieces in the secondary.

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EXTRA POINT
When I was in sixth grade my grandfather sent me a "glow engine"  model airplane. This was back in the days before remote control, and so the plane was tethered to the operator by a control line. I never once got the engine to start and out of frustration took to swinging it around like it was the hammer throw until it broke into pieces on re-entry. ;-(

That, my friends, was the beginning of my lifelong issue with internal combustion engines and the like. I had a grass trimmer that worked for a while, but after a bit I could never get it to start. Whenever my lawn mower wouldn't start, I'd stare at it for a while and then load it into the car to take it to someone who could fix it.

Now maybe you understand why I have a Ryobi string trimmer, a small electric chainsaw, and an electric tractor. The two EVs are a different deal, but I promise you when something goes wrong with our '84 VW camper it's immediately on its way to the shop.

All of that is by way of saying it won't be me cleaning up the mess after the wind storm a few days ago that twice took our power down. Unfortunately, it also took down half a tree that is now splayed across the bottom of our field. I'm not happy about what it's going to cost, but someone with facility for a chainsaw that I clearly don't have will be getting a call in the next few days to take care of that tree and a couple others that have seen better days.

Thursday, March 19, 2026

Before The Games Begin

The third video introduction of new Dartmouth coaches from the football program's social media channel:

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This is kind of harsh. The Pats Pulpit grades the New England Patriots signing former Dartmouth defensive end Niko Lalos to compete as long snapper and they don't grade on a curve. (LINK

Green Alert Take: Two points. First, you have to raise a cheer for Lalos getting a $1.01 million deal. Let's hope he gets to cash in on it. And second, might I suggest waiting until training camp and you get a look at what Lalos can do before grading him? As a good friend would say, "Sheesh."

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With Penn making its long-awaited return to the NCAA's today, what remains of the legendary Sporting News has a piece headlined, What is a Quaker? Explaining the origin of Penn's nickname, mascot history. The story notes that (LINK):

According to The Penn Gazette, the first sighting of the Penn Quaker mascot appeared in 1949. A student named Jack Melnick, in costume known as William Quaker, came to a Penn-Dartmouth football game dressed in Quaker attire.

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An outlet with the hugely unfortunate name brobible has a piece headlined The 13 Teams With The Longest Active March Madness Droughts and it is the rare time that Dartmouth men's basketball has the opportunity to chant, "We're Number One." From the story (LINK):

There are only eight teams in the Ivy League, but that hasn’t prevented a few of its members from becoming responsible for three of the longest active March Madness droughts.

The first is Dartmouth, which has the dubious distinction of being left on the outside looking in for longer than any other program in the country.

The Big Green did earn a spot in the national championship game in 1942 and 1944 (it’s worth noting the NIT was viewed as the most prestigious postseason tournament until the 1950s), but they have not gotten an invite since losing in the first round in 1959.

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EXTRA POINT
I sent a Happy New Year email this morning to a friend who lives and breathes the NCAA Tournament. In honor of the NCAA's, I'm reposting a column I wrote back in 1998 that I hope you'll enjoy.

A Tough Ticket To The NCAA's

So, you're thinking about zipping on down to the Hartford Civic Center today to catch the NCAA East regional doubleheader featuring the nation's number one team and the nation's number one darling.

Have fun, but don't look for me there.

As much as I'd love to see North Carolina's skywalkers in the first game and Princeton's precision attack in the nightcap, I'm not sure if I can handle any more excitement – basketball or otherwise.

And I know I can't afford a ticket.

That I know because I happened to be in Hartford Thursday night to see Princeton whip UNLV, 79-67.

The seeds of the trip down I-91 were sewn when a friend – he shall remain nameless to protect the not-so-innocent – and I made a pact that we were going to see the Tigers in the NCAA's wherever they ended up playing. He's a Princeton grad and diehard fan. I grew up in New Jersey and have followed Princeton basketball for as long as I can remember.

Our pledge to go anywhere in the country to watch the Tigers this year was a game of chicken, of course. I'll admit now that if they were penciled into the West Region, I would have found a legitimate reason to beg out.

Uh, sorry, but the dog is scheduled for his rabies shot Friday and I just can't miss it.

But the NCAA did us a favor and kept the Tigers in the East. At least we thought it was a favor until The Great Ticket Search began.

First, a little history lesson. When I saw Princeton lose a one-point game to Final Four-bound Rutgers in 1976, I was given the ticket. The phone rang, a friend said he had a couple of freebies and asked if I was up for a road trip. He gave the other one away to a stranger on the sidewalk outside the arena.

Things had started to change by the mid-'80s when several of us drove down to catch an opening-round NCAA doubleheader in Hartford. We weren't happy with how much we had to spend for seats, but we were definitely feeling good about ourselves just for getting into the building. At least we were until the Sherpas led us to the rafters. And there, seated next to us, we found a very large, very uninterested group of kids from the local Boys Club throwing candy at each other.

Now don't get me wrong; I think it's great the kids had a chance to see the games. But it was a pretty fair indication that the demand for tickets wasn't what we thought. That sure has changed.

Take it from me, there were no large blocks of tickets set aside for the Hartford Boys Club this year. The Billionaire Boys Club, maybe.

Once the bracket was drawn and we knew Princeton was headed for Hartford, we set about finding a way through the door. With no tickets available at the Civic Center, the first call was to a broker in Manchester. For a strip that included two sessions Thursday and one Saturday, the asking price was $300. The face value for the Thursday doubleheader featuring Princeton: $30. No thanks, we'll keep looking.

Time to start working the phones and firing out e-mail. I've been in and around sports for a couple of decades now and know a lot of people at a lot of colleges and conferences, but it soon became apparent that this was going to be harder than I thought. My friend's Princeton alumni pipeline was no more promising.

Undaunted, we decided we would drive down anyway and take our chances with scalpers. I've done it before at big-time events with some success. It's a gamble, but it can pay off smartly if you are willing to work at it.

Then the phone rang. Kismet. An old friend had two extra ducats waiting for him at a ticket bureau in Hartford. Was I interested?

My Princeton buddy and I somewhat reluctantly agreed to fork over $110 apiece for two $30 tickets. (Please don't tell my wife.) The plan was to meet the old friend when he signed for the cardboard at Tickets 'R' Us in Hartford at 7 p.m. (That is not the obnoxious business's real name; if they want free advertising, they can damn well pay for it.)

My friend and I arrived at the address we were given at 6:45 and stood there freezing. At 7:10 we started to get nervous. At 7:15 my friend was ready to kill me. At 7:20 I was ready to kill myself. 

We were both thinking murderous thoughts as the 7:40 tip-off approached and we watched sleazy guys who were buying tickets on the street carry them into the bureau to be re-sold at upwards of several hundred dollars a shot.

At 7:25, my friend stuck his head through the door asked a guy behind the counter if our contact had picked up his tickets yet. Sure, the man said, and he left a couple others for two guys who haven't shown up yet. We look at each other in disbelief – and relief. I signed my name. We grabbed the tickets and ran.

Although they weren't our old boys club seats, we were sitting pretty high and on the corner. Still, the view was surprisingly good and the Princeton- UNLV game was fun to watch, so we weren't complaining.

With a couple minutes to go and the outcome decided, my friend headed over to the UNLV section to scarf up a couple of cheap resales for today's game.

I had done the same thing in 1986, buying tickets to see Duke and Navy play for less-than-face value from fans whose team had lost a round before. But times have changed. Fans traveling with the teams now only get vouchers for Saturday's games. Vouchers redeemable if their team won.

And so, while the UNLV fans were disappointed about their loss, they were only a little more disappointed than those of us hoping to capitalize on their misfortune.

At halftime of the nightcap, we trolled the concessions area in search of tickets. We were hardly alone in our quest. A hand•written sign drew notice, but just one potential seller. My friend offered $100 a ticket.

I coughed.

The seller scoffed.

Disappointed, we headed into the bitter cold night only to find our parking garage locked tight. A sign said it closed at 7 p.m.

With no way to get the car, no hotel rooms available for miles and – most painful of all, no tickets – we could only laugh.

As we started to wander aimlessly through the windy streets of Hartford, an attendant at another parking facility told us there was a security guard at our garage and he might – the emphasis being on the word might – be able to help us.

We never did get the tickets. But at least we got the car back.

Anyone got two?

Wednesday, March 18, 2026

Buddy Teevens Award


BYU coach Kalani Sitake was named the winner of the Buddy Teevens Award in December and formally accepted it Saturday at the 89th annual Maxwell Football Club National Awards Gala. The Teevens Award recognizes "outstanding achievement on the field and exceptional leadership that leaves a lasting impact on players, coaches and the game of football at large."

In accepting the award, Sitake said:
"Coach Buddy Teevens stood for everything great in our profession. Buddy's commitment to innovation, combined with his love for his players and care for their safety and the mentoring he gave them, he gave young people the lessons and principles that will expand and extend beyond the football field. It's an honor for me to be connected to his legacy. This is truly special for me."

Peyton Manning, whose family established the Teevens Award, congratulated Sitake in a short video, saying:

"Coach Sitake is the perfect steward of Buddy's legacy. I know Buddy would be very proud of all the work Coach does on and, especially, off the field." 

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OptaAnalyst has a posting under the headline, Six Key FCS QB Battles Before 2026 Season and Dartmouth will face one of the six schools breaking in a new quarterback this fall. From the story (LINK):

Harvard Crimson

QBs to Watch: Dante Torres (6-3, 205, Jr.), Ty Fein (6-1, 205, So.), Sam Kaiser (6-5, 210, So.)

The Skinny: Here’s another quarterback battle with little proven college experience, but keep an eye on Torres, the projected favorite. He’s a former New York Gatorade Player of the Year who possesses the skills to be extremely successful in Harvard’s offense. He completed 4-of-5 passes for 68 yards and one TD versus Holy Cross last season. Kaiser and Fein are two younger players who are expected to push Torres and will get a real shot at the starting job.

Jaden Craig, who caused Dartmouth all kinds of problems as Harvard's all-time passing leader before using up his Ivy League eligibility, will be a grad transfer next fall at TCU. 

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One team (other than Dartmouth) not looking for a new quarterback is the Big Green's Week One opponent, Lehigh, which kicked off spring football yesterday morning. The Mountain Hawks, under first-year head coach Rich Nagy, are coming off an undefeated regular season and are ranked No. 8 in a "way-too-early" preseason poll pulled together for the NCAA. From that poll (LINK):

Lehigh | Last year's finish: 12-1 (FCS second round)

Lehigh returns Patriot League Offensive Player of the Year (running back) Luke Yoder, plus first team all-conference quarterback Hayden Johnson in 2026. All-Patriot League tight end Joseph Marranca and defensive back Aidan Singleton are also back.

For all the talk of Patriot League newcomers, we can’t forget about the Mountain Hawks. Lehigh went undefeated with a 12-0 finish in the regular season last year and have two straight years of playoff experience. 

Lehigh has the makings of a top-10 team next year, even after an early playoff exit.

Find Lehigh's spring roster featuring four fifth-year seniors HERE

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And finally, back to Harvard. This from OptaAnalyst has to stick in the craw of a lot of Big Green fans:


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EXTRA POINT
It was 8.5 degrees when Griff the Wonder Dog and I headed downstairs this morning, and it's not expected to get above freezing all day.

Last week we had back-to-back days when it topped 60 degrees. That had me doubting Punxsutawney Phil, but maybe he got it right after all. Unfortunately.

Tuesday, March 17, 2026

Return To The NFL A Snap For Lalos


Niko Lalos '20 is back in the NFL. The former Dartmouth defensive end who made a brief splash with the New York Giants, has been signed by the New England Patriots as a long snapper. He will be bidding for his first appearance in an NFL game since playing in five games in 2020. Find an Avanda Times story HERE, and a What signing Niko Lalos means for the Patriots story HERE.

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Jordan Belfiori, Dartmouth's new defensive coordinator/linebackers coach, introduces himself in the Big Green's latest social media video:

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EXTRA POINT
Surprise, surprise, our power is out as I write this. I don't know what time it went out but we have a clock radio that shines the time on the ceiling and when I rolled over at some point in the wee hours to check what the red numbers said, there were none. ;-)

Per the the VT Outages site, there are 271 residences in Newbury that are down, and we are one of the lucky ones. We've been waiting to try the setup that allows us to power the house with our car, but Mrs. BGA just happens to be away so I'm managing with a laser printer-sized lithium-ion batter than can run a handful of small appliances at once.

Eureka. The power just came on as I finished this!

Monday, March 16, 2026

More On The New Coaches


Dartmouth athletic communications has a story about the first three additions to the Big Green football coaching staff with comments from head coach Sammy McCorkle HERE. Expect several more additions to be announced in advance of the start of spring football early next month.

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Callie Brownson, who first made headlines after joining Buddy Teevens' staff at Dartmouth and later coached with the Cleveland Browns, is helping the ECAC start of a women's collegiate flag football league. Here she talks about her journey and her hopes for women in football:


In case you are wondering here is a list of schools expecting to compete in the inaugural 7-on-7 ECAC college football league per a SportsJam story (LINK):
Allegheny College
Caldwell University
Eastern University
Fairleigh Dickinson (Teaneck)
Franciscan University
Kean University
Long Island University
Mercy University 
Mercyhurst University
Montclair State University
Mount St. Mary’s University
Union College
Penn State Schuylkill
Sweet Briar College

EXTRA POINT
The wind is howling here on our Vermont hillside this morning, and rain is falling sideways. Should the power go out, the newer of our two EVs is more than capable of running most of our house for a few days. 

Unfortunately, Mrs. BGA is out-of-state helping out her sister – and she drove off with that car.

Fortunately, I have a lithium-ion battery power station that can keep things going if the lights go out. I even have a solar panel that can recharge it, although by the looks of it, that won't be much help today. ;-)

Sunday, March 15, 2026

On A Quiet Sunday

From Dartmouth social media:


No more info from Dartmouth yet. Here's what BGA wrote last week:
Jones arrives from Wesleyan University. His coaching resume includes stops at Brown, several other schools, and as head coach of the Prague Lions in Europe. He began his playing career at UTEP before playing at Youngstown State and the University of Charleston in West Virginia, where he earned his degree.

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2026 Dartmouth Opponent Records


OA

Conf

At Lehigh

12-1

6-0

Monmouth

9-3

6-2

Penn

6-4

4-3

At Yale

9-3

6-1

Merrimack

4-8

0-0

At Columbia

2-8

1-6

Harvard

9-2

6-1

At Princeton

3-7

2-5

At Cornell

4-6

3-4

Brown

5-5

2-5



2025 Sagarin Ratings

114

Yale


116

Lehigh 


142

Harvard


152

Monmouth


183

Penn


199

Princeton


200

Brown


217

Cornell


219

Columbia


232

Monmouth



Dartmouth finished the year at No. 172 in the Sagarin Ratings.

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EXTRA POINT
After taking a day off from my regular hike because having my boots sink 18 inches into melting snow made the trip up the mountain exhausting, I took advantage of an overnight freeze to strap on cleats and hit the hardened trail yesterday. 

I learned cleats are a great help on steep uphill stretches that resemble frozen waterfalls. I also learned the hard way they are not much help heading down those frozen stretches. Ouch.

Saturday, March 14, 2026

How About That!

The almighty "algorithm" delivered a link to this shot earlier today. Recognize the fellow in the middle?


Flanking Sammy McCorkle are kicker Judd Davis (6)  and punter Shayne Edge after the special teams helped Florida defeat Alabama, 24-23, in the 1994 SEC Championship Game at the Georgia Dome. McCorkle's Dartmouth team will begin spring practice on April 7 at 5 p.m.

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It has been over there on the right side of this page for weeks, but Dartmouth formally announced its 2026 schedule yesterday. Head coach Sammy McCorkle was quoted in the release saying this:
"We're looking forward to our 2026 season and are eager to get back on the field. Our strong non-conference schedule provides us with some good opportunities and the parity that exists in the Ivy League always makes it competitive week in and week out."
Green Alert Take: Expect one, and quite possibly two of those games to be shifted to Friday night for TV purposes.

Green Alert Take II: This line from the release is 100 percent true: "It will be the first time in Dartmouth's 145 year program history that two teams have squared off." But also true is this: Monmouth didn't exist until 1933, and didn't field its first football team until 1993. ;-)

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One day after a mention of a familiar name on TigerBlog and on this page, this showed up in social media:

Green Alert Take: Best of luck to Justin in his new role.

Green Alert Take II: Keep an eye out here next week for terrific news about yet another Dartmouth expatriate.

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Meant to include this with yesterday's note about swimming being reinstated at UMass Dartmouth. This was also in the release about athletics at the state school in Massachusetts (LINK):

Women’s flag football will begin as a club sport in 2026-2027 and build toward varsity competition the following year. The NCAA D3 membership to recognize women’s flag football as an Emerging Sport at the 2026 NCAA Convention.

Curious just how "emerging" women's flag football is at the college level? For a listing of active varsity, active club and "announced" teams, click HERE. You may be surprised. ;-)

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EXTRA POINT
Interestingly, after a couple of days when they were AWOL, the robins were back this morning. That despite a couple of inches of unwelcome white stuff coming down overnight.

Friday, March 13, 2026

The New DC DC

Dartmouth social media introduces another of the Big Green's new coaches:

There's no bio up yet for the Big Green's new defensive coordinator/linebackers coach, but this went up on BGA a few days ago:

Belfiori comes to Hanover from Butler University, where he had been defensive coordinator and linebackers coach, the role long held at Dartmouth by the recently retired Don Dobes. Belfiori previously coached for seven years at Colgate, where he served as the Raiders' defensive coordinator. He's 2012 graduate of Central Michigan.

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Sam Herder of HERO Sports offers a few thoughts coming out of the FCS Oversight Committee meeting:

The second part of that Xweet offers a little more information (bold is mine):

The FCS Oversight Committee reviewed a recommendation from the FCS Championship Committee to update the at-large selection criteria policy to include prioritization of teams who competed against at least 11 Division I opponents.

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TigerBlog starts today's post off with a nod to Justin Lafleur, former football contact in the Dartmouth office of athletic communications. Now working at his alma mater, Lafleur was in Cleveland yesterday watching the UMass men's basketball  team hand Miami its first loss in the MAC tournament semifinals. (LINK)

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Mention of a college basketball tournament reminds me of something that has been bothering me ever since the Ivy League finally relented and started its own postseason tournament. And this is it: They call the thing Ivy Madness.

How derivative is that for a league that always railed against having a tournament?

If they had asked me, I would have recommended "Ivy Intensity."

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Reading a headline yesterday, the refrain from the Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young song Deja Vu was echoing in my head, "We have all been here before."

What headline?

    Swimming restored at UMass Dartmouth.

The public university in Dartmouth, Mass., has reinstated the men's swimming program it cut for financial reasons in 2020. (LINK)

Dartmouth College went down that same road with swimming not once, but twice trying to cut the sport and then reinstating it. The first time was in 2003 (story) and the second time in 2021 (story). 

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EXTRA POINT
If you live in other parts of the country you may have never seen anything like what happened a short drive north of our Vermont hillside home yesterday. Check out what it looked like when the ice broke up on the Moose River near St. Johnsbury. This was shown on our semi-local TV station: