Still on the topic of non-conference scheduling, here is Dartmouth's record since the start of formal Ivy League play in 1956 against teams from outside of the Ivy League. The date of the last matchup is in parentheses.
Army 0-1 (1983)
Boston College 0-1 (1959)
Boston University 3-1 (1989)
Bucknell 5-2 (2013)
Butler 2-0 (2013)
Central Connecticut 3-0 (2024)
Colgate 4-14 (2023)
Davidson 2-0 (1988)
Fordham 5-0 (2024)
Georgetown 2-0 (2021)
Jacksonville 1-0 (2019)
Lafayette 4-1 (1999)
Lehigh 3-4 (2023)
Maine 0-1 (1998)
Marist 1-0 (2019)
Massachusetts 5-3 (1981)
Merrimack 1-0 (2024)
Navy 0-1 (1986)
New Hampshire 12-21-2 (2023)
Sacred Heart 5-3 (2022)
Stetson 1-0 (2017)
Towson 1-0 (2016)
Valparaiso 1-0 (2022)
William & Mary 0-4 (1983)
A few bullet points:
• That's just 24 different non-Ivies Dartmouth has faced since 1956.
• The Big Green has a series edge against 16 of the 24.
• Dartmouth's record in 120 non-Ivy contests dating back to 1956: 61-57-2.
• Record sans UNH and Colgate: 45-22.
#
Congratulations to Kevin Warren on receiving the Buddy Teevens Forward Progress Award at the 2025 NFL Women’s Forum.#TheWoods #GoBigGreen https://t.co/q0FSb2RLbJ pic.twitter.com/14H3lxYZdC
— Dartmouth Football (@DartmouthFTBL) February 27, 2025
From a story posted by the Chicago Bears about Kevin Warren winning the Buddy Teevens Forward Progress Award (LINK):
The award, presented by the NFL Women's Forum founder Sam Rapoport, honors the life and legacy of Teevens — former Dartmouth College football coach and advocate for the inclusion of women in football — who tragically passed away two years ago.
And, while "infamously" isn't a good choice of words, the story goes on:
Teevens was infamously known for his willingness to provide opportunities to women who had coaching aspirations. In 2018, Teevens hired Callie Brownson as the first full-time female Division I coach in college football history then went on to bring in five more female coaches during his time at Dartmouth.
Current Dartmouth head coach Sammy McCorkle attended the forum in honor of his dear friend Teevens. McCorkle noted that Teevens "was so far ahead of the game" and believes he would be proud of the award Rapoport and the NFL created on his behalf.
"It was never about Buddy," McCorkle said. "He never wanted it to be about him. He wanted it to be about the individuals. This award would just be so special to him. This is what he was hoping for. He wanted to see this space grow, he wanted to see that develop. I was here last year, and you can just see the difference from last year to this year — just how it has expanded and the interest and the trust of the coaches in organizations that these young ladies are very capable of doing anything they need to be done."
#
EXTRA POINT
Our local news aggregator pulled this out of Powder Magazine regarding Vermont ski area Jay Peak: “Jay (~350") has received more snow this season than Utah’s Alta (~348″) and Wyoming’s Jackson Hole (347″). ... It has to do with this excellent snow year in the Northeast in general, and Jay's unique position: it's averaged over 5 inches a day in February."
As the crow flies, it is about 50 miles from our Vermont hillside home to Jay Peak. We haven't gotten anywhere near 350 inches of snow this winter, but as I sit back at the keyboard after clearing a path to our garage for the umpteenth time this winter, it's a reminder that although we haven't had a signature Nor'easter this winter, what we have had and continue to have is little snowstorm after little snowstorm after little snowstorm.