Monday, February 23, 2026

Ram Tough


A mock draft on the Los Angeles Rams SI web page has the team taking Dartmouth offensive tackle Delby Lemieux in the sixth round of the NFL Draft. From the story (LINK):

Round 6, No. 209 overall: Delby Lemieux, interior OL, Dartmouth
A goal for every NFL team, including the Rams, should be to add offensive line depth, no matter the need at the position. Continuity is important, but having the depth to spot startis needed. Lemieux is an intriguing Ivy League prospect with guard and center versatility, and was a standout at the Senior Bowl.

Green Alert Take: It doesn't hurt Lemieux's chances of getting noticed that Dartmouth has a significant presence in the Rams' organization. Kevin Demoff '99 and Tuck '06, is the team president who broadcast and wrote about Big Green football as a student. Tony Pastoors '10, is the team's chief operating officer after playing in the Dartmouth secondary. Former running back Matthew Shearin '10 is the organization's senior manager of football administration. And for good measure Dan August '07, is the executive vice president of consumer revenue and strategy while his wife, Joanna Hunter '06, is the team's vice president, corporate affairs. And yeah, it probably doesn't hurt that Rams' defensive coordinator Chris Shula's father, David Shula '81, got a good look at Lemieux for two years before he stepped down as the Big Green's wide receivers coach.

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A story on The Analyst headlined FCS Football Head Coaching Changes: Who’s New for the 2026 Season? is a reminder that Dartmouth will face three new coaches in the fall. From the story (LINK):

MONMOUTH
Former coach Kevin Callahan (Dec. 11) – 9-3 record in 2025 and 197-151 in 33 overall seasons as Monmouth’s original head football coach, winning seven conference championships.

New coach Jeff Gallo (Dec. 11) – Spent 21 seasons as an assistant coach under Callahan, most recently as offensive coordinator and associate head coach.

PENN 
Former coach Ray Priore (Nov. 24) – 6-4 record in 2025 and 58–42 in 11 overall seasons, highlighted by a share of Ivy League titles in 2015 and 2016.

New coach Rick Santos (Dec. 13) – Posted a 37-24 record in five seasons at New Hampshire (2019, 2022-25).

YALE
Former coach Tony Reno (Feb. 17) – Went 9-3 in 2025 and 83-49 in 13 seasons with five Ivy League titles before stepping down due to health concerns.

New coach TBA.

Not on the schedule until next year, but also playing under a new coach, will be Dartmouth's cross-state rival:

NEW HAMPSHIRE
Former coach Rick Santos (Dec. 13) – 8-5 record in 2025 and 37-24 in five overall seasons, including a 2022 CAA co-title, before stepping down to become Penn’s head coach.

New coach Sean Goldrich (Dec. 29) – The Wildcats’ starting quarterback in the 2012-15 seasons arrives with eight years of collegiate coaching experience, most recently as the QB coach, pass game coordinator and head recruiting coordinator at Delaware.

EXTRA POINT
Fresh off finishing a masters in journalism, I was dispatched as a newly minted sportswriter to Thompson Arena in early February of 1980 to interview Herb Brooks, the coach of the U.S. Olympic hockey team. The Swedish Olympic team was playing Dartmouth in an exhibition, and we had been tipped off that Brooks would be there to get a look at an opponent who figured to be a factor in the gold medal race in Lake Placid.

I found Brooks behind the railing on the press box side of Thompson Arena and pulled out my notebook to start the interview. I had my back to the ice while Brooks kept his eyes on the Swedes. Before the interview began, he put his hands on my shoulders and slid me directly between himself and the Swedish bench, as he explained to me, to lessen the chance the Swedes knew he was there.

In honor of yesterday's gold medal game, here's the story I wrote in 1980, presented warts and all. It's a very basic story from a young sportswriter who had no idea a Miracle on Ice was just 2½  weeks away.

Olympic Hockey Coach
Hopes For Medal Upset

HANOVER - By now Herb Brooks has heard the questions so many times the answers come almost automatically.

"I've been asked everything already," the coach of the U.S. Olympic hockey team admitted. "There's nothing new."

But for Brooks, the time for questions is finally growing short. With the start of the Olympics just around the corner, the answers will be coming soon, and the hockey coach hopes they point to a medal for his young and talented team.

"We've got a good chance," Brooks explained "We're a quick team, and we've got a lot going for us. The Russians, Czechs and Swedes are the favorites, but a lot of people are picking us as contenders for the bronze medal."

Brooks spoke about the medal hopes of his team Wednesday as he watched the powerful Swedish Olympic team warm up for an exhibition game with Dartmouth at Thompson Arena.

"I feel that a bronze medal would mean as much as the gold medal the U.S. won in 1960," Brooks explained, "because everyone else has improved so much since then."

After his team finally settled into Lake Placid earlier in the day, Brooks had come to Hanover to do some last minute scouting against one of the teams his squad would have to face in the opening round of the Games. The U.S. will also have to play the perennially powerful Czechs.

"We'll just have to upset 'em," the coach said with a smile as he watched the swift skating Swedes go through their pre-game drills.

"The Swedes are as good a skating team as you are going to see," Brooks observed. They are definitely one of the favorites." The U.S. coach characterized his team as "at about the same level as the Canadians and the Finns."

One reason Brooks has optimism for his team's chances is the rigorous schedule it has played in preparation for the Games.

"This is the toughest schedule any U.S. team has ever played in terms of the number of games and quality of competition," he explained. "We've had 25 games against the pros, including games against the NHL for the first time, and games against the Central Hockey League." Brooks also pointed out that his team has international experience, having played another 25 games against teams from around the world.

Brooks noted that the team has an overall record of 42 wins, 15 losses and two ties, including wins in all eight games it played against collegiate competition. The squad's best showing against an NHL team came in a 4-2 loss to the Minnesota North Stars.

While Brooks cited the value of the rigorous schedule, he admitted to being a little worried that it might have worn his team down.

"We've played 47 games on the road," he said, "and that's more than anyone in the NHL has played, and in a shorter amount of time. They won't have played that many until mid-April.

"It's been tough," he went on. "And we're not skating that well right now. It could be that we left some of our emotional and physical strength on the ice. But we'll see."

While noting that this is the youngest U.S. hockey team ever assembled, with an average age of 20.5, Brooks said that it will play a different kind of game than in the past. "We've got a new system," he explained. "We're not going to rely on the dump and chase - we'll do some different things. But we won't play the European game completely. We'll still use our bodies."

During the Sweden- Dartmouth game, Brooks sat alone in the Dartmouth end, watching impassively as the Swedes pounded Big Green goalie Rich Diver with a vicious assortment of shots.

Occasionally he would scribble a note in the margin of his program - something he noticed that might give his team a little bit of an edge in its uphill battle with the Scandinavians.

If Brooks had picked up any pointers about how to play the Swedes, Dartmouth coach George Crowe could have used them, because the Swedes topped his team by a convincing 17-3 score.

Sunday, February 22, 2026

Of Ice And Snow

On the final day of the Olympics, a story headlined Winter Games 2026: How tiny Dartmouth College has sent athletes to every Winter Olympics ever includes this:
Hanover, New Hampshire, might not be the first — or the 50th — locale to come to mind in connection with the Winter Olympics, but it should. Hanover is the home of Dartmouth College, which has the unique distinction of sending Olympians to every single Winter Games, from Chamonix in 1924 right on through to Milan Cortina in 2026.

Read the full story HERE

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South Carolina made the hiring of Matthew Smiley as special teams coordinator official. From the story (LINK):

A native of East Lynn, Ill., and a 2001 graduate of the University of Illinois, Smiley began his coaching career in the collegiate ranks, first at Dartmouth College, where he served as an assistant quarterbacks and specialists coach for the Big Green in 2005 before assuming the duties of special teams coordinator in 2006.

EXTRA POINT
Back to the Olympics. That Certain Nittany Lion '16 is here for the weekend and in advance of the big ice hockey game shot this picture early this morning off our front steps. He captioned it, "looked like a gold medal." Yup.

Saturday, February 21, 2026

Linebacker U?

Former Dartmouth linebacker Teddy Gianaris was a welcome addition as a grad transfer in Wyoming, where they see him as a defensive end. Check out this short interview:

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And speaking of former Dartmouth linebackers/grad transfers, Macklin Ayers isn't done yet. After one season at UMass in 2024, and an NFL look, he's headed to the DC Defenders of the spring United Football League. From a Pro Football Newsroom story (LINK):

(Ayers) played college football at UMass and Dartmouth over his four-year career, finishing with 203 tackles and an interception in 40 games played. Following the 2025 NFL Draft, Ayers was invited to Cleveland Browns rookie mini-camp, but was not signed.

During his time at UMass and Dartmouth, Ayers was extremely solid against the run and displayed the ability to play sideline-to-sideline, even at 6’3 230 lbs.

Also . . .

Ayers joins an impressive DC linebackers corps with Curtis Jacobs, Brandon Smith, Ferrod Gardner, Micah Baskerville, Brian Abraham, and Ayers will be the sixth inside linebacker to be on the camp roster.

The first two of those linebackers Ayers will be joining on the defending champion DC Defenders were Penn State standouts, and the last is a former Yale player who finished up at Albany. The UFL kicks off its first weekend of games March 27-29.  

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ItemLive, a multimedia outlet in the north shore of Massachusetts has a column headlined, Reggie Williams and David M. Shribman: A shared history of struggle. The piece is introduced this way:

With the approach of the end of Black History Month, the two of us — David, a white Jewish journalist, and Reggie, a Black retired NFL standout who played in two Super Bowls, presences in each other’s lives for more than half a century — have been talking about the ties between African Americans and Jews.

Read the column featuring two prominent Dartmouth graduates from the Class of 1976 HERE

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EXTRA POINT
If you live in areas of the country that gets snow that lasts all winter – we haven't come close to seeing bare ground here since before Christmas – this might look familiar. If not, let me introduce you to one of the annoying things about driving on snowing, slushy roads:


That is absolutely rock-solid frozen slush behind one of the front tires of my car. I've been known to take a hatchet to the stuff trying to knock it off, but it's stubborn. Maybe I should try a hammer and a long screwdriver. All four wheels suffer the same fate, and at some point you just say the heck with it, hop in and drive.

When I am making a sharp turn and the tire rubs up against the frozen mess it sounds as if I am dragging a shopping cart under the car until I straighten the wheel out. The good news is that spring is coming.  On the other hand, we got about eight more inches last night.

Friday, February 20, 2026

A Box Of That

It's become the thing for college football programs to send a "box of that" to Jon Gruden. Dartmouth jumped in with an overflowing box.

Here's a lightly edited version of much of what Gruden had to say about Dartmouth while going through the box. (Editor's note: This does not include his comments on the contents of the box.)

The Woods. 1769. This thing's been around since 1769. What the hell were they studying back then? But look at this Dartmouth box, man. They're proud of that. 1769. This is Hanover freaking New Hampshire. You ever been there? I have actually. I've been there. I went to a place called Molly's Tavern. Had a few.

But this Dartmouth is a very prestigious college. When I was coaching the Philadelphia Eagles, our quarterbacks, one of them was Jay Fiedler. Fiedler went on to start for the Dolphins. He played at Dartmouth. Jeff Kemp played quarterback at Dartmouth. Big Green. The Dartmouth Big Green. ...

 They got a hell of a coach. (Sammy) McCorkle. The Big Green has won 22 Ivy League championships, more than any other Ivy League team. How about the Ivy League? Can you imagine going to the Ivy League? It's impressive. Dartmouth right here.

This is where David Shula, the old (assistant) coach of the Miami Dolphins went. He was a hell of a punt returner, by the way,. A wide receiver.

Dartmouth football used to have a coach named Bob Blackman. Bob Blackman's in the College Football Hall Of Fame. He shredded people. ...

 The Kansas City Chiefs, they used to have a kicker named Nick Lowery. Helluva  kicker. 

We drafted a tight end from Dartmouth named Casey Cramer when I was coaching back in the day. They've had a lot of players. Reggie Williams played for the Cincinnati Bengals . Mike Brown, the owner of the Cincinnati Bengals, went to Dartmouth. 

One of my best friends I have, I don't have a lot of friends, but one of my very best friends, Len Fontes, was an All-Ivy linebacker in the mid-'80s. He had 147 tackles. Now he's doing a rock and roll band. 

Buddy Tevens was a great player at Dartmouth. He was the head coach there for like 18 years. We tragically lost him a few years ago, but he was a great friend, a great coach, inspiring. A great person, man. 

Can you imagine going there and taking classes like, I don't know, say you're in the Thayer School of Engineering and you're taking differential equations. Or let's go to multivariable calculus today. Let's study memorization and mechanism mastery. How the hell do you go to Dartmouth to get a degree? These kids have got to be freaking geniuses.

You know who really inspires me that graduated from Dartmouth? Dr. Seuss! I don't eat green eggs and ham here or there. I don't eat them anywhere. I used to say Dr. Seuss.

Wo else with the Dartmouth? Who? Mr. Rogers. Wow. His name was Fred Rogers back in the day. You ever see Mr. Rogers Neighborhood? Freaking awesome. Mr. Rogers and Dr. Seuss. 

They play at Memorial Field, they've only got about 6,500 students. 4,500 of these students are undergraduates. And about 25 percent of them play varsity sports.

You ever see that show Friday Night Lights? Yeah. They got a lady on that thing. Connie Britton. She went to Dartmouth.

There's a little note. Look right here. Wonder if it's from Coach McCorkle. "Coach Gruden, enjoy the gear, the Big Green." Say hello, Coach (Sammy) freaking McCorkle. 

Who else went there? You like poetry? Robert Frost! Remember that poem he wrote? What was it called? I Took The One Less Traveled By (sic). He was a freaking great poet. I mean Dartmouth. Dartmouth, it's cold up there

 You ever watch Fox News at all? A little bit. Laura Ingraham went right here to Dartmouth. I mean, how do you think she gets that job?

They've had a lot of great people. David Harbour went there from Strangers. I mean think of all the people that have gone through this classy place.

Dartmouth football. Dartmouth academics. I mean Mindy Kaling from The Office went right here. It's prestigious. It's one of a kind. It's the Ivy League. Dartmouth since 1769. Thank you, Coach McCorkle. Keep it going, Big Green. I'm going to go call my friend Len Fontes and tell him I got some gear from Dartmouth. Woo!

BGA Take: Someone did some pretty thorough research on Dartmouth with one absolutely glaring exception that you'll recognize if you actually listen to the video. Pretty much the only thing Gruden shouldn't have gotten wrong . . . he did. ;-) 

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HERO Sports takes a look at the 16 FCS prospects Draft Scout currently has ranked in its Top 350. Just making the cut is Dartmouth's Delby Lemieux. Per Draft Scout he is the No. 24 offensive guard, and No. 349 prospect overall, and is projected to be chosen in the seventh round or be a "high priority free agent." (LINK)

Matthew Smiley, a charter member of the first coaching staff of Buddy Teevens' second tenure (along with Sammy McCorkle) is expected to join the staff at South Carolina after a stint as special teams coordinator for the Buffalo Bills. (LINK)

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EXTRA POINT
At the local newspaper there were file cabinets filled with clippings of every story we wrote. When I left the paper to start Big Green Alert, I no longer had access to those files.

A couple of weeks ago I received a promotional email from Newspapers.com offering a significant discount on a limited-time membership to the site, which features the archives of 30,000 newspapers and publications. When I learned my old paper was included, I bit for less than the price of a dinner out with Mrs. BGA.

With Olympics on the brain, over the past week or so I've pulled up an interview I did with Herb Brooks shortly before the 1980 Miracle on Ice. Also a story about a local man who designed the old USA hockey logo where the S becomes the flag. I found a story I did on biathlon competitors tuning their rifles in the frigid temperature inside Hanover's Cold Regions Research and Engineering Laboratory, a piece I did with Mikaela Shiffrin's father about "blood doping," and another about the sad end of Dartmouth's famed ski jump.

Two things. First, for that last one I was able to get to the bottom of the story about someone going off the jump in a baby carriage. It did actually happen, although no one would go on the record about it, even many years later.

And second, it's fun to read old stuff that I wrote as if I were reading it for the first time – and liking it.

Thursday, February 19, 2026

Looking Ahead To Spring (Aren't We all? ;-)

I remember Whitey Burnham, the legendary Dartmouth soccer coach, lacrosse coach, and raconteur, several times improvising at banquets when the microphone malfunctioned by saying, "I've been in front of more dead mics than an Irish undertaker." Sound it out. ;-)

In his later years YT (as he'd sign notes) would joke, "I don't buy green bananas anymore."

When it comes to BGA in 2026 I'm not quite sure what color bananas I would buy, but with a brief escape from the northern Upper Valley potentially on the table, I touched base with the Dartmouth football office to get a copy of the spring practice schedule. 

They were kind enough to share this yesterday:

2026 Dartmouth Spring Football
Tuesday, Apr. 7 - 5 p.m.
Thursday, Apr. 9 - 5 p.m.
Saturday, Apr. 11 - 10 a.m.

Tuesday, Apr. 14 - 5 p.m.
Thursday, Apr. 16 - 5 p.m.
Saturday, Apr. 18 - 10 a.m.

Tuesday, Apr. 28 - 5 p.m.
Thursday, Apr. 30 - 5 p.m.
Saturday, May 2 - 10 a.m.

Tuesday, May 5 - 5 p.m.
Thursday, May 7 - 5 p.m.
Saturday, May 9 - 10 a.m.

Of note:

• The Green-White Game isn't what is used to be so I'd call May 9 the Green-White Day.

• Dartmouth players will once again have a mid-spring week of recovery and training but no practice while the coaches hit the road recruiting.

• As always, the schedule is subject to change.

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From a story headlined NFL Women’s Forum Presented by AWS Returns at the 2026 NFL Combine to Connect Women with Professional Opportunities in Football (LINK):

For the third year in a row, the NFL will honor the life and legacy of Buddy Teevens, former Dartmouth College head football coach and advocate for the inclusion of women in football, with the presentation of the Buddy Teevens Forward Progress Award Presentation. Alongside Women Leaders in Sports, the NFL has developed a specialized curriculum for this year’s Women’s Forum participants.

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Dartmouth has received a $5 million gift from the Spaht Family Foundation to endow the Dartmouth Peak Performance director's position. Holden Spaht '96 captained the Dartmouth tennis team as a senior and with wife Claire is parent to a current Dartmouth student. From the release (LINK):

"Claire and I are grateful for the opportunity to invest in a role that supports critical student-athlete needs including their mental health and well-being," says Holden Spaht. "As a former Dartmouth student-athlete, I understand the value of an all-encompassing approach like DP2 and how much the Dartmouth community at large stands to benefit from it."

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EXTRA POINT
As someone who enjoys train travel, I watched a YouTube video a couple of days ago in which a fellow enthusiast rode the "NextGen Acela" train in first class from Boston to Washington, D.C. Although subsequent reviews have largely been critical, I would be tempted to ride the train except for two things.

First, while it can hit 160 mph, it is able to do so only in two sections of the trip and so cuts only about 10 minutes off the time the "OldGen Acela" (my term) needed to make the trip.

And second, you can fly round trip from Boston to Sydney, Australia for about what you would pay for a  first-class NextGen down-and-back between Boston and D.C. at premium times.

Wednesday, February 18, 2026

In The News

From an Essentially Sports story carried by Yahoo under the headline, Russell Wilson Reveals Why His Lawyer Dad Worked at a Gas Station & Shares His Impact on NFL Career (LINK):

Long before he helped the Seattle Seahawks win their first-ever Super Bowl, it was his father who ensured his son got the very best. Recounting a childhood incident, the signal caller revealed why his old man worked at a gas station despite being a full-time lawyer. Wilson says the story rooted in sacrifice still drives him today.

“I go home to my dad. I’m like devastated…I’m like, ‘Dad, you work at the gas station?’ He goes, ‘Yes, son…I’m working extra hours.’” he said on the Good Inside podcast. I said, ‘Why?’ He goes, ‘You want to go to a great school, right? Like, you want to go do all the things you want to do. I got to do extra for you guys. I’m doing anything for you.’ And I remember him saying, ‘I got to buy those books.’”

Green Alert Take: Russell Wilson never fails to credit his father, a former Dartmouth wide receiver from the class of 1977, for the role in played in his life.

Green Alert Take II: This is a peccadillo, I know, but the journalist in me is really annoyed when conversations are transcribed and the result is someone who knows better being quoted as said, "I got to do extra," and "I got to buy those books." I would be really annoyed if I said, "I've got to . . . " and when the story came out someone quoted me as saying, "I got to . . ."

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Tough news out of New Haven where tremendously successful head football coach Tony Reno is stepping down for health reasons just days after turning 54. Reno, who led the Bulldogs to five Ivy League titles in 13 seasons while compiling an 83-49 overall record and a 55-36 Ivy League mark, had announced after the season that he was taking time away to concentrate on his health. Last fall Reno led Yale to the Ivy League's first-ever win in the FCS playoffs and to a one-score playoff lost at eventual national champion Montana State.

From a Yale release noting that the school will be running a national search for a new coach (LINK):

"Given my current health situation, I have made the decision to step down as head coach of Yale Football," said Reno. "When I arrived at Yale 14 years ago, I could never have imagined what this journey would become. The relationships formed, the moments shared, and the people I have been privileged to be surrounded by have changed my life and my family's lives forever. I am deeply grateful to the players, the coaches, and the staff who gave everything they had to Yale Football."

The Yale Daily News largely reprises the release with a few new thoughts at the end of the story HERE.

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EXTRA POINT
The turkeys were back this morning and although I got a pretty good shot of them in a nearby tree, this view out to the White Mountains was too pretty not to share:

Click photo for a better view.
When we were moving from the shoulder of Moose Mountain in rural Hanover, our hope was to find either a house either on a lake or with great views. We succeeded and I never take it for granted.

Tuesday, February 17, 2026

The Times They Are A Changin'

Justin Lafleur, who inherited the role of Dartmouth's Associate Athletics Director for Varsity Athletics Communications several years ago from longtime SID Rick Bender, has moved on to the University of Massachusetts as its athletics Director of Communications. A UMass graduate, Lafleur posted this before leaving:

Green Alert Take: Thanks, Justin, for all your help these past couple of years.

Green Alert Take II: Watching Don Dobes and the energy he still has it's hard to believe he's retiring, but the longtime Dartmouth and Ivy League defensive coordinator made it official at the end of January that he's hanging up his battered hat. (LINK) The suspicion here is that even if retirement "takes," Dobes is going to find a way to use that energy somewhere around a football field.

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EXTRA POINT
Yesterday's PAT recalled a "rafter" of turkeys that I came across a couple of days ago. A group of 24 of the birds stopped by our place yesterday for a nibble. Here's about a minute of the group slowly parading behind our house. Watching how orderly they marched I couldn't help but think we could learn something from the way they neatly merge from two "two lanes" into one.


After finishing up behind our house the birds were spooked by something and took flight. Here's a shot of a few of them high up in the trees at the edge of our field:


And as I write this, they've returned to our side yard and are pecking away in the snow under a couple of ornamental trees that produce little berries.

Monday, February 16, 2026

We Know That Guy!

On a whim I queued up a Jason Kelce Youtube video showing him learning what he needed to know about the four-man bobsled before making a run down the track, and look who I stumbled across:


That's former Dartmouth football captain Quinten Arello '23 explaining to Kelce how he hopped in a runaway bobsled while the former Philadelphia Eagles center looked on. Watch the full video, including Arello's climb into the sled, below. (Former Princeton running back Charlie Volker, an Olympic bobsled veteran, also appears in the video.)


Arello did not make the US team for the Olympics, but he did compete on the Cortina bobsled track earlier in the season. Find his season results HERE.
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The Dartmouth has a Q&A headlined Delby Lemieux ’26 impresses at the 2026 Senior Bowl, a key step to NFL draft. Check it out HERE.

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EXTRA POINT
One day last week I was on my way to our little post office when I was reminded one of the disadvantages of driving an EV: They are so quiet they can surprise animals along the road.

Half a "rafter" of wild turkeys was on the left side of the road when my quiet arrival spooked the others, who were about to cross from the right side. Just like that, they took flight over the road.

Here's the thing. While turkeys are surprisingly agile flyers over a short distance, they can weigh upwards of 20 pounds, so their battle against gravity can require a bit of a runway.  If I hadn't slowed as quickly as I did I might have ended up with a couple of drumsticks on my car windshield.