Sunday, March 30, 2025

Solid Numbers For Looes

Charlie Looes '23, who had a strong season as a grad transfer defensive lineman last fall at Rice, put up solid numbers in his Pro Day:


Good thing this is visual . . .


And then there's this, which includes not one, but two former Dartmouth defensive linemen, with Shane Cokes '23 also listed. (Click a time or two or open the graphic in a new tab to make it readable – although hardly understandable. ;-)

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EXTRA POINT

OK, this is a weird one.


It was 81 degrees yesterday in New York City. While people down there were in shorts and T-shirts, at our Vermont hillside we were getting almost eight inches of snow. In Hanover, 25 miles south of us, they barely got any of the white stuff. Go figure.

Saturday, March 29, 2025

Saturday Stuff

From Sam Herder, Senior FCS Analyst for HERO Sports:

Green Alert Take: It's not going to happen for the Ivy League, but should the FCS eventually approve a permanent 12-game slate, would the Ancient Eight then have a larger field of teams to canvas while looking to schedule non-conference games? A reminder that the Ivy League is currently limited to 10 games. While the rest of the FCS can play 11 games, in years when there are 13 Saturdays between Labor Day weekend and the weekend before Thanksgiving they can play 12. That happens on average every five or six years and was the case last fall.

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Click on the Xweet to take a look at this posting from Dartmouth football's social media:


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EXTRA POINT

• Dartmouth baseball opened its home season yesterday with a doubleheader sweep of Penn.

• We put our gas grill out on the deck yesterday.

• As I write this, we are in the midst of our biggest snowfall of the season.


Ah, spring in Northern New England!

Friday, March 28, 2025

Hey, We Know That Guy!

 From a story posted by Pat Feinberg on the CFL website HERE:



This is what the author wrote about the 2017 Dartmouth product, who was the Ivy League's defensive player of the year as a senior:

One of the biggest acquisitions of the off-season gets top honours as the Stamps brought in Orimolade from Toronto in exchange for linebacker Cameron Judge in January. Now back where his CFL career began in 2018, Orimolade will be a focal point in a Calgary defence looking for a big bounce back after missing the playoffs last season.

In two seasons and 29 appearances with the Argos, Orimolade recorded 16 sacks, 53 defensive tackles three forced fumbles, and one interception. Last year also saw the 29-year-old Orimolade finish second in Pro Football Focus’s player grades for edge defenders. With his combination of speed and power, Orimolade looks poised for another outstanding season in his return to the red and white.

The story includes this video of Flo chasing down a quarterback and forcing a fumble:

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While most of Dartmouth's grad transfers have found their new homes for next fall, wide receiver Painter Richards-Baker is still fielding offers. Here's the latest:


Richards-Baker, a deep threat whose career in a Dartmouth uniform was slowed by injury, also reported over the past several months offers from Maine, UT Martin, The Citadel, Murray State, West Georgia and Wagner.

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EXTRA POINT

Mrs. BGA and I took the advice of the "Top Critics" on Rotten Tomatoes who unanimously praised a "low-budget" movie and checked it out at the Nugget Theater in Hanover yesterday. What we should have done is taken the advice of an amateur critic on the site who wrote this after giving the flick half a star:

Good lord. How did this movie garner 100% critic rating (as of this writing) from 57 critics? Terrible. Slow. Boring. Sometimes very hard to understand soft-spoken, mumbled dialogue. So little character development. ... The trailer (which I had seen a couple times) looked promising, then I saw 100% on RT. So I was expecting to enjoy it. But this was the WORST movie I've seen in years. I can't imagine anyone thinking that this should have been made. Horrid.

I'm not going to mention the name of the move (email me if you are curious) but it was particularly timely, and maybe you can figure out what it's about in the first sentence of another amateur reviewer who called it a "snooze fest."

I felt like the luckiest . . . luckiest...luckiest . . . man . . . man . . . man . . . on the face . . . face . . . face . . . .of the Earth . . . Earth . . . Earth . . . when it was over . . . over . . . over. 

Thursday, March 27, 2025

What Say You?

There’s an oxymoron in the headline of an NCAA story titled, Making sense of FCS conference realignment. (LINK)

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Ah, but on the subject of FCS conference realignment, the William & Mary Sports Blog has a piece headlined, The Scholars League: A New Model For True Student-Athletes that gives it a pretty good shot. From the column (LINK):

The Scholars League would be a 10-member conference designed for academically-minded, mid-sized schools that are committed to true student-athletes, not the pseudo-professionalization happening in the Power Four.

FCS FOOTBALL MEMBERS

• William & Mary 

• Davidson

• Elon

• Richmond

• VMI 

• The Citadel

• Howard

Non-Football schools

• College of Charleston

• Washington & Lee

• Johns Hopkins

Here’s the kicker that Ancient Eight fans tired of games against NEC and Pioneer Football League teams may appreciate:

Out-of-conference scheduling would prioritize:

• Ivy League 

• Patriot League

• Traditional local rivals from current conferences (to maintain history, rivalry, and tradition)

Green Alert Take: Works for me. ;-) 

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The final gap in the Ivy League’s non-conference schedule has been filled with Harvard announcing a game against . . . wait for it . . . Merrimack.

The Crimson also play at Stetson and at Holy Cross. Find the Harvard schedule release HERE.

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EXTRA POINT

Feeling sluggish after a few days without hiking my usual mountain trail but still unsure about road conditions, I walked the two miles to the trailhead yesterday, then hiked to the top of the mountain and walked the two miles home. I guess it will be a few more days until I hop in the car and begin my daily hiking ritual because this is how the road still looked:




For what its worth, during the entire four-mile hike to and from the trailhead, one vehicle passed me. It was a huge pickup truck with extra clearance, and even it squizzled side-to-side as it drove past

Wednesday, March 26, 2025

Lifting Up Others

Wish this had come across a little sooner for the chance to drum more interest. Former Dartmouth linebacker Macklin Ayers ’24, who played at UMass last fall as a grad transfer, is using his Pro Day to raise money for a worthy cause:

From Ayers' pledge campaign statement:

I am dedicating every rep of 225 I bench press at my Pro Day on March 26 to raise money for The Andrew McDonough B+ Foundation to help children across the country beat cancer.

Your pledge will convert to a donation on April 15 based on the number of reps completed by Macklin at his Pro Day. For example, if you pledge $5 - and Macklin bench presses 225 15 times, then your pledge turns into a $75 donation on April 15th. 

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Speaking of grad transfers, there’s this from a story headlined FCS Football: Top 10 Pre-Spring Transfer Portal Classes (LINK):

Transfers helped lead Rhode Island back to the FCS Playoffs last season. It was another successful transfer haul for the Rams this offseason. Running backs Q Jones (Dartmouth) and Antwain Littleton (Temple) are important additions after the Rams lost All-American Malik Grant to graduation. 

The story also has a mention of former Dartmouth defensive lineman Derrell Porter ’24 heading to UC Davis.

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And more from the grad transfer front on the USA Today College Sports Wire under the heading All 16 players attending Colorado's pro day including Travis Hunter and Shedeur Sanders (LINK):

DL Shane Cokes

Cokes came to Boulder as a transfer from Dartmouth and was an integral piece on CU's defensive line. He recorded 48 tackles, one sack and a forced fumble. He could be a valuable depth piece on an NFL defensive line.

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Those who aren’t thrilled with Dartmouth and Ivy League football teams scheduling opponents from the NEC can cross off a future game against Saint Francis. The school in Loretto, Pa., won’t be fielding an FCS team much longer. From a New York Times story (LINK):

Saint Francis (Pa.) plans to reclassify from Division I to Division III, the school announced Tuesday, just one week after its men’s basketball team was bounced from the NCAA Tournament in a thrillingly narrow First Four loss.

Saint Francis lost to Alabama State 70-68 in a No. 16-seeded game on March 18 after winning the Northeast Conference to qualify for the NCAA Tournament for the first time since 1991. The school will continue competing in the NEC through the summer of 2026. Then, it will transition into the Division III Presidents’ Athletic Conference for the 2026-27 school year.

And, to the point:

The Red Flash football program has fielded a team since 1892 and competes in the Football Championship Subdivision. It has twice qualified for the FCS playoffs, most recently in 2022. It’s scheduled to face Buffalo and Louisiana-Monroe next season.

It also has future games scheduled against FBS members Bowling Green, Ohio and West Virginia.

Saint Francis follows in the footsteps of the University of Hartford, which voted in 2021 to drop from DI to DIII. (LINK)

The home of former NBA all-star and Olympic gold medalist Vin Baker, Hartford went 5-20 overall and 3-15 in conference this winter playing the likes of Wentworth Institute of Technology, Gordon College and Nazareth University as a member of the Conference of New England.

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EXTRA POINT

Did you know the average lifespan of a robin is two years, although they have been known to live up to 14 years in the wild? Or that while more and more are forgoing migration given climate change, some from these parts winter as far away as Mexico and Central America? And that they can average 100-200 miles per day while migrating, flying mostly at night? Or that they can fly upward of 35 mph?


Ah, the things you learn when you look out the window, get a little inspiration and then do some Googling. ;-)


Tuesday, March 25, 2025

Movin’ On Up

Per HERO Sports, here’s the latest list of FBS schools that will have former Ivy League players on their rosters next fall. (Schools in italics will have former Big Green players on their rosters.)

Boston College (2)

Central Florida

Charlotte

Connecticut

Duke (2)

Georgia Tech

Hawaii

Iowa State

Kansas

Massachusetts (4)

Memphis

Nevada

Northern Illlinois (2)

Rice (2)

Stanford (2)

West Virginia

Green Alert Take: Expect that there will be at least a few additions to this list before August.

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Speaking of moving on from the Ivies to the FBS, here’s former Dartmouth defensive line coach Cedric Calhoun, in his first year of spring football at Temple. Calhoun was at Dartmouth from 2006-2009. He was most recently at Rice.

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EXTRA POINT

With mud making the two-mile drive to my regular hiking trail unpassable, I went up another nearby trail late last week and discovered I had a clear view of the peak of the mountain I try to hike most days. It is in the left foreground of this shot –  and looks a lot more like a volcano than you would notice from the top. ;-)



Monday, March 24, 2025

Vegas Bound

Ryan Paganetti '14, who spent a little time as a Dartmouth running back as a freshman before injuries cut short his career, has found a new home in the NFL. From FootballScoop:

Las Vegas Raiders: Ryan Paganetti has joined the coaching staff as head coach research specialist, where his role will include game management responsibilities, per Seth Walder. He most recently was director of football analytics with the Jaguars and previously worked with Raiders offensive coordinator in Philly.

Paganetti spent six years in the Philadelphia Eagles' front office and the last three years was on staff with the Jacksonville Jaguars.

Find his Dartmouth football bio HERE.

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In a posting headlined FCS Football: These 12 Are Facing Added Pressure in 2025 Season, Craig Haley of Stats Perform makes the point that with opportunity comes a little pressure for Ivy League football teams. From the post (LINK):

The Ancient Eight are eligible for the postseason for the first time in 80 years, so anything but an impressive FCS playoff showing would be a letdown. The strength of Ivy teams hasn’t been the same since the pandemic – their number of combined weeks in the national rankings over the last four seasons (27) is lower than the two seasons before sitting out the 2020-21 academic year (32 in 2018 and ’19).

Green Alert Take: To be sure, the Ivy League could use a strong showing to reinforce what many believe has been a significant improvement in the quality of play over the past dozen or so years. I'm just not sure weeks in the national poll is the metric I'd use to compare the Ivies before and after the pandemic.

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EXTRA POINT

The first day of spring was last week but apparently no one told Mother Nature. Its 22 degrees and snowing as I write this.

Sunday, March 23, 2025

Sunday Stuff

Former Dartmouth defensive lineman Shane Cokes got seriously huge after his move to Colorado. Here he goes through a Pro Day drill:

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Trying to pick up where first football and then men's ice hockey left off, the long-suffering Dartmouth men's lacrosse team improved to 7-1 overall, and 1-0 in the Ivy League with a 9-8 overtime win at Penn last night. The Big Green came into the game ranked No. 20 in the nation while Penn, now 4-5 overall and 1-1 in the conference, was No. 17. Find a story out of Dartmouth HERE and one taking a different approach – literally – HERE.

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A peaceful look at winter in Hanover courtesy of Dartmouth:

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EXTRA POINT
Last week Mrs. BGA and I had occasion to be in the charming town of Montpelier, the capital of Vermont (and the smallest state capital in the United States with a population 8,074 as of the 2020 census). We came across this sign, which hits home for us, with a sugarbush adjacent to our field producing it share of Vermont’s liquid gold at this time of year.