Wednesday, April 22, 2026

Wrapping Up 2025-26

Dartmouth spring football is on what coach Sammy McCorkle called a "bye week," so BGA Overtime has gone quiet for a few days. In the meantime, here are the awards presented at the Big Green's annual breakup banquet on Sunday morning:

    • Bob Blackman Trophy (most valuable player): DJ Crowther

    • Kenneth T. Young Award (underclassman who made the most
significant contribution to the team): Niquis Ratcliff

    • Jake Crouthamel Award (underclassman who contributed the most to
the success of the team on offense): Grayson Saunier

    • Doten Award (sophomore who made a significant contribution to the
success of the football team): Ky'Dric Fisher

    • Earl Hamilton Freshman Award (top rookie): Myles Craddock

    • Offensive Look Squad Award: Jason Bish

    • Defensive Look Squad Award: Matisse Brosseau

    • Special Teams Award: Luke Armistead

    • John Manley '40 Award (most improvement through efforts in the
weight room): Dakota Quiñonez

    • Gordon P. Bennett Award (outstanding lineman who exemplifies high
degree of performance, sportsmanship and character): Delby Lemieux

    • Lester R. Godwin Award (senior football squad member who, through
extraordinary perseverance, has risen above personal disadvantage to
contribute measurably to the team): Zyion Freer-Brown

    • Alan Hewitt '34 and Robert Hewitt '40 Award (athletic performance with
academic achievement): Konstantin Spörk

    • Earl Hamilton Varsity Award (sincere friendliness and sense of humor
plus appreciation of the outdoors): Nico Schwikal

    • Frank Hershey Award (zest for life, has maintained a strong, positive attitude and a sincere desire to win): Chris Corbo

    • Reggie Williams Award (member of the football program who through leadership in action and word has made Dartmouth a better place): Sean Williams

    • 12th Man Award (demonstrated hard work and dedication regardless of playing time): Jabari Johnson, Sean Ward

    • Charles "Stubby" Pearson Award: (underclassmen whose character, leadership on campus, high academic standing and performance on the playing field most resembles that of Charles (Stubby) Pearson '42, captain of the 1941 football team who died while serving in the U.S. Navy in World War II. He also was captain of basketball and graduated Phi Beta Kappa and valedictorian of his class.): Harrison Keith

And my personal favorite . . .

  • Manners Makyth Man Award (best conducted himself to the advantage
of Dartmouth and displayed good manners in the sense of William
Wykeham's phrase, "Manners Makyth Man."): Daniel Haughton

The Wooden Football Award is presented to players honored as the player of the week in seven positions areas the most times during the season:

WOODEN FOOTBALLS
Offensive Bigs: Max Wentz
Offensive Skill (QB-WR): Grayson O'Bara
Offensive Mid (RB-TE): DJ Crowther
Defensive Bigs: Joe Onuwabhagbe
Defensive Skill: Tyson Grimm, Patrick Campbell
Defensive Mid: Teddy Gianaris
Special Teams: Colin O'Garro
 

Game Balls are presented for each win over the course of the season:

GAME BALLS
UNH
Offense: Konstantin Spörk
Defense: Patrick Campbell
Special Teams: Samuel Washington

Central Connecticut
Offense: Grayson O'Bara
Defense: Jabari Johnson
Special Teams: Sean Ward

Yale
Offense: Vasean Washington
Defense: Bruce Williams
Special Teams: Woods Ray

Fordham
Offense: Luke Rives
Defense: Tyson Grimm
Special Teams: Jorden Barnes

Columbia
Offense: DJ Crowther
Defense: Niko Schwikal
Special Teams: No'Koi Maddox

Princeton
Offense: Chris Corbo
Defense: Dakota Quiñonez
Special Teams: Matisse Weaver

Cornell
Offense: Cisco Caballero
Defense: Niquis Ratcliff
Special Teams: Colin O'Garro

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And this from Dartmouth's social media:

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More from the football program's social media: 

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The transfer portal hit Dartmouth men's basketball in a tough way with 6-foot-5 sophomore shooting guard Kareem Thomas transferring to Seton Hall. Thomas is coming off a breakout season in which he averaged 15.9 points while shooting a healthy 44.7 percent from outside the arc. Find a story on his move from a Seton Hall perspective HERE.

Per the 247Sports portal site, Thomas is the only Big Green player leaving via the portal after former head coach David McLaughlin was replaced by Brett MacConnell.

Green Alert Take: I went back to the 2025-26 roster page to confirm the roster and discovered McLaughlin has been deleted and replaced by MacConnell as head coach, with Amir Bell and Eamonn Kearney added as assistant coaches. That makes the page historically inaccurate. None of the three were part of the 2025-26 team. In a perfect world that page would be restored to reflect who was actually part of that team, and MacConnell and his assistants be added to a 2026-27 roster page.

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EXTRA POINT
We had a second contractor do a walk-around the outside of our house yesterday for work we need to have done. He's going to send a formal estimate in a few days, but what he told us before hopping in his huge pickup truck and heading up the driveway confirmed two things. First, that the jaw-dropping number the first contractor gave us was par for the course. And second, that maybe these hands should have learned how to use a hammer instead of how to maneuver around a keyboard. We're having a third and final contractor come to give us an estimate on Friday, but I've resigned myself to the idea that it is going to be more of the same. Sigh.

Tuesday, April 21, 2026

Cannon Earned His Shot

From the Mike Farrell Sports website (LINK):

Mike Farrell is the Godfather of college football recruiting. In the game for more than 25 years, Farrell was the national recruiting director at rivals.com for over 20 years.

And one of Farrell's ventures these days is helping players get notice from college coaches – for a price. Again from his site:

Mike and his team have the contacts, connections and following that will give you the best shot of continuing your football career at the collegiate level. 

Which brings us to this post on his FarrellPortal Xwitter account:

Green Alert Take: I'm sure a lot of would-be college players benefit from Farrell's service. I could be wrong, but I'm going to hazard a guess that Cannon would have been on Dartmouth's radar on his own. Accounting for a New Jersey state record 63 touchdowns (rushing and passing), recording a state-best 33 rushing touchdowns, completing 71.4 percent of his attempts for 2,747 yards, throwing 30 touchdown passes, and running for 1,673 yards last fall was going to win Cannon a lot of attention. And it's not like he popped up out of nowhere. As a junior he completed 69.7 percent of his passes for 1,944 yards and 19 touchdowns. He also ran for 1,095 yards and 18 touchdowns. As for the high academic piece, a story about his commitment reported him as having a 4.2 grade-point average and as being a member of the National Honor Society, which is something Ivy coaches have a way of learning pretty quickly.

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The Boston Herald has a story behind a paywall headlined Duxbury’s Delby Lemieux makes major change in hopes of NFL draft call. From the story (LINK):

Lemieux is very well on the NFL’s radar just days before the league’s annual draft, but it comes as a center, a position he never played in college, youth football or in his days starring at Duxbury.

“I knew if I was going to pursue this, playing-wise, it takes a special person to be able to play and fit the mold of a tackle in the NFL,” Lemieux said. “Just wanted to be versatile and put my best foot forward. I just started snapping informally after practice or with some of the younger guys when they were throwing the balls at the receivers and just trying to get comfortable with it, so when the time came, if that opportunity arrived I would be ready.”

And . . .

“He’s able to move inside where that’s where you got to have the football smarts and he has that already,” (Dartmouth coach Sammy) McCorkle said. “That was the advantage of him being at tackle, he’s essentially calling plays for us out there.”

And . . .

“I just think he’s just so competitive,” McCorkle said. “He wants to win. He’s not going to be intimidated. I think he’s got that quiet confidence to him. And he’s going to find a way and make a way to win. He’s going to figure it out and he’s going to figure it out fast. He knows it’s a big challenge. He knows you got to be ready all the time. And I think that’s the biggest thing with him. He’s confident, he knows what he can do and I think he’s going to be ready for that challenge and he’s definitely going to open some eyes.”

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A to Z sports has a piece headlined 7-round Colts mock draft has Indianapolis take a different approach than many expect, and it leads to a unique haul that recommends Indy grab Lemieux. From the story (LINK):

Round 7 pick 254: Dartmouth C/OT Delby Lemieux

Last up is a major sleeper in this year’s class that I think the Colts should target in round seven or as an undrafted free agent. Delby Lemieux, out of Dartmouth, was a three-year starter at left tackle for Dartmouth. Many believe he will make the move to center in the NFL. The Colts need a backup for Tanor Bortolini, but also could use tackle depth. Let Lemieux compete for both spots, and I think he has a real shot at making the roster.

Also, Boston's 98.5 The Sports Hub points to Lemieux has one of five potential Undrafted Free Agents the Patriots should pursue (LINK), and a Cincinnati Bengals A to Z story lists him as one of the potential Undrafted free agents to remember (LINK).

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EXTRA POINT
Sunday's snow has melted, the grass is about as green as it is going to get, and if I'm going to be completely honest, it's pretty shaggy out there. But I'm staring at a lot of mowing over the next few months, so I'm going to try to hold off for a few more days before I hop on the tractor.

Monday, April 20, 2026

Here We Go

With the NFL Draft kicking off Thursday evening, there figure to be lots of Delby Lemieux notes this week, but we start today with a very brief look at Dartmouth spring practice at the midway point in a posting from the athletic communications office HERE.

(Here's hoping you already checked the detailed BGA Overtime story after Saturday's practice HERE.)

Now on to the Lemieux news.

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What's left of the venerable Sporting News has a piece headlined NFL Draft sleepers: The best FCS, HBCU & small-school players you should know in 2026. The posting names 10 players, and Lemieux is one of the 10. From the post (LINK):

7. Delby Lemieux, OL, Dartmouth
Offensive lineman Delby Lemieux was a three-time All-Ivy League selection at Dartmouth and a two-time All-American, leading to his invitation to the 2026 Senior Bowl. He would be the first Dartmouth player drafted to the NFL since 2004, when Casey Cramer was selected.

Over his time in college, Lemieux played in 35 games, with 30 pressures allowed, three sacks allowed and a 3.1% pressure rate. He's best fit for an interior role despite playing tackle at Darmouth, technically sound but with the strength and technique to create running lanes well.

Lemieux's pass protection is a concern, despite his 305-pound frame and athleticism. He is the No. 36 consensus interior offensive lineman on the board, per NFL Mock Draft Database.

"Lemieux is very athletic and will have no issues as a pulling center or in getting to his landmarks on outside zone," NFL.com's Lance Zierlein wrote of Lemieux. "He’s low-cut and can fit up blocks with leverage but needs to add more bulk."

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The Analyst has a piece headlined FCS Football in the 2026 NFL Draft: Who, What and Everything You Need to Know that lists Key FCS Prospects in 2026 NFL Draft. The posting takes a look at 26 prospects, with Lemieux ranked 16th. From the story (LINK):

Delby Lemieux, Dartmouth, OG/C (6-5, 305)
• Consensus Big Board Ranking: 397
• 2025 Stats Perform FCS Preseason All-America First Team
• Allowed only three sacks in 950 career pass-blocking snaps, per FCS Football Central.

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An ESPN piece headlined 2026 NFL draft rankings: Jordan Reid's top 499 prospects has Lemieux as one of 60-plus players given a "sixth-round" grade. It has him listed at No. 311 overall. He is not among the site's top 15 centers. (LINK)

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It's never too early to start thinking about next season. Chuck Burton, the guru of Lehigh Football Nation, offers a few thoughts on Dartmouth's Week One opponent after the Mountain Hawks' spring game HERE. He has high praise for the team's defense and one receiver in particular, and doesn't sense any hangover from last year's 12-1 season and No. 9/10 national ranking.

HERO Sports has a piece headlined FCS Spotlight: Lehigh RB Luke Yoder that takes a look at the returning All-America tailback who has run for 3,067 yards and 30 touchdowns in 35 career games HERE

What the story does not mention is Yoder will be joined this fall by sophomore Trey Tremble, who ran for 3,361 yards, had 1,232 receiving yards and scored 65 touchdowns as a first-team, all-state selection in nearby Allentown. He has transferred to Lehigh after beginning his career at Army West Point.

The HERO piece ends this way:

Richard Nagy was promoted to head coach after three years as Lehigh’s defensive coordinator.

With a new head coach, plus the additions of William & Mary and 2025 semifinalist Villanova to bolster the league’s depth, can the Mountain Hawks remain atop the Patriot?

There is still a strong core of standouts returning to challenge at the top, including Yoder, quarterback Hayden Johnson, offensive linemen Aidan Palmer and Langston Jones, tight end Joseph Marranca, and safety Nick Peltekian.

EXTRA POINT
With the temperature topping 70 degrees last week, I broke out the flip-flops I live in all summer and set this up . . . a little prematurely, I suppose. This was early in the day and the stuff kept coming . . .


These poor things hung in there the best they could:


Sunday, April 19, 2026

Spring Ahead

Courtesy of Dartmouth's social media:

For an overview of spring practice at the midway point, check out last night's BGA Overtime posting HERE.

Editor's Note: While at practice I had a chance to chat on the sidelines with Don Dobes, Dartmouth's recently retired defensive coordinator and linebackers coach. Keep an eye out for a BGA Overtime story where the Ivy League coaching veteran explains the role he had in helping identify his successor, why now was the right time for him to stop away, and how he'll be spending his time this fall.

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One of Don Dobes' former players is back in the game. Linebacker Macklin Ayers '24, is playing for the United Football League's DC Defenders. Ayers, who grad transferred to UMass, has appeared in three games for the 3-1 DC team, posting nine tackles and recovering a fumble. He recorded five solo tackles one week ago in a 45-7 win over the Houston Gamblers.

Ayers, listed at 6-foot-3 while at Dartmouth and UMass, is listed as 6-1 on the Defenders' roster. (LINK)

Also, former Princeton defensive back Blake Williams is the DC defensive coordinator.

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While we are at it, a little Googling turned up an interesting video with Ayers running a non-football player through one of his offseason workouts. It was a bit of an eye-opener for his workout partner and may be for you as well. So you aren't confused, Macklin is the bigger guy with the white sleeves. ;-)

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EXTRA POINT
The saying is that mountains make their own weather and many times we've seen that happen with the only clouds in the sky visible from our Vermont hillside home hovering over Mount Moosilauke. Yesterday clouds on the mountain made it almost look like a volcano.

Saturday, April 18, 2026

We Know Those Guys


From a pre-NFL Draft story about Josiah Green, the former Dartmouth defensive line standout who played last fall at Duke (LINK):

The Dartmouth transfer had the second most pressures in 2025 among all defensive tackles and was Duke’s “Hard Hitter” award winner. Green really caught the attention of scouts at his pro day. He was not invited to the combine, but he did had a spectacular performance at his workout. His 36 bench reps would have been second among all players at the combine and his 10-yard split, his three cone and his shuttle would have been first among all defensive tackles at the combine and his broad jump would have been second.

And the bottom line from the piece:

Green is probably a a late-round prospect. He’d be worth a shot in the sixth round.

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Another DJ Crowther story out of the Tampa Free Press quotes the former Dartmouth tailback now at South Florida talking about Buddy Teevens (LINK):

"Coach T had a real impact on me and has a special place in my heart,” said Crowther, whose full name is Darius Crowther Jr. “He was really personable. He was genuine and always cared about you as a person on and off the field. I remember he always preached about life after football. You were more than just a football player.” 

And the piece includes this about the onetime Big Green back's future:

Crowther is far, far more than just a football player. He enrolled in a master’s program (entrepreneurship) at USF and may opt for real estate when it is time to hang up his helmet.

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Look who is featured in this photo from the True North:


 No. 7 is former Dartmouth standout Flo Orimolade '17, listed on the top line of the depth chart at defensive end for the Calgary entry in the Canadian Football League.

Unfortunately, that depth chart is probably a little premature. Orimolade, who missed the entire 2019 season with a quadriceps injury and seven games in 2021 with a high ankle sprain, is trying to make his way back from a torn Achilles suffered last September.

The Stamps open training camp on May 10 and have their first preseason game one month from today. They open the season June 5. From the story (LINK):

Here’s hoping Folarin Orimolade can return from a season-ending Achilles injury and be his normal, explosive self.

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A reminder that I’ll be at practice this morning and will have a story up on BGA Overtime tonight wrapping up the first half of the spring football season. 

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EXTRA POINT
It's only about three minutes from our driveway to the trailhead where I park before heading up the mountain every day, and I should not have turned the radio for the short drive yesterday. You are not going to be happy with me when I tell you what I heard. It was this:
1-877-Kars for Kids
K-A-R-S Kars for Kids
1-877-Kars for Kids
DoNATE your car today

I apologize if you can't unhear it now.

For what it's worth, the Kars4Kids website has a history of the jingle. From that posting (LINK):

Some love it, some profess to hate it and it’s become an art to rail creatively against it, but one thing is certain: all who hear the Kars for Kids jingle remember it.

One more thing. Mrs. BGA crushes me all the time for getting song lyrics wrong. Unfortunately, this is one jingle I can't forget. 

Friday, April 17, 2026

Grad Transfers In The News

Dartmouth football wraps up its first two weeks of spring practice tomorrow before the coaches head out for a week of recruiting. Then it's back on the practice field for two more weeks. Be sure to check out BGA Overtime tomorrow evening for a look at spring practice at the halfway point.

If you missed last night's post centered around rebuilding an offensive line that graduated four starters, you can find it HERE.

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Ivy League grad transfers are a horse of a different color to the media covering a lot of FBS schools. Here are two examples featuring Dartmouth alums:

From this Tampa Bay 28 story (LINK):

Thursday, the USF football team held one more practice before Sunday’s spring game at Corbett Stadium. One Bulls running back took a unique path to Tampa, where he looks to find continued success.

Northern California-native D.J. Crowther played his first four years of college football at Dartmouth. He graduated early from the Ivy League school while playing a sport, a feat he attributes to prioritizing his schedule.

"I would say the biggest thing is just time management. You gotta learn how to manage your time," Crowther explained after practice. "Be the best football player you can be, and also being the best student you can be."

More from the story: 

"Really good downhill back. Smart. Never really gets flustered. Not a very emotional guy. Centered. When he makes a mistake, moves on," (USF coach Brian) Hartline said. "He’s very mature. He’s doing a really good job of building his basis of trust and competitive excellence. Making the play when the ball’s in his hands. The more and more he can keep building that, the more and more the team will continue to trust him as well."

The story includes a video with comments from the former Big Green back.

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And then there's this one:

A Wyoming Tribune Eagle story begins this way:

Thaddeus Gianaris is a big fan of physical science.

The 6-foot-2, 244-pound defensive end transferred to the University of Wyoming in January after earning a bachelor’s degree in astronomy at Dartmouth. While he was a star in the classroom, Gianaris also earned All-Ivy League honors last fall with 44 tackles, nine tackles for loss and five sacks.

Gianaris comes to Laramie with 76 tackles, 14 tackles for loss, nine sacks and four pass breakups during his four-year career with the Big Green.

From the story (LINK):

Gianaris credits longtime Dartmouth defensive coordinator Don Dobes for his development in the Ivy League. Dobes is going into his 45th year as a college coach.

"He did a really good job with me," Gianaris said. "He recruited me back in high school, brought me in, and I was in need of a little bit of discipline as a player. Coach Dobes definitely helped with that. I have a lot to thank him for."

And . . .

As far as goals, Gianaris wants to continue his winning ways in Laramie after earning Ivy League titles twice at Dartmouth.

"I'd love to be an all-conference player," Gianaris said. "That's kind of what I'm shooting for now. As an individual, that's my goal. As a team, I want that (conference) championship. I want another ring. I'm hungry for it.

""I got two already during my time at Dartmouth, so I want to keep it going. I'm not here to lose. I'm here to compete. I'm here to win. That's what I'm about."

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Regarding Tuesday's post (LINK) about Villanova seeking a waiver to allow a QB who began his career at Kent State before playing at Mississippi Gulf Coast, Nicholls State and Villanova to have a second grad transfer year at Villanova, an emailer shared that the Patriot League grandfathered in eligible grad transfers from its new CAA members. Otherwise, the league has not changed its stance on grad transfer participation.

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The Analyst has a story attempting to answer the question, Who Are the Best FCS NFL Draft Picks in Every Round Over the Last 10 Years? Turns out, two of them are from the Ivy League and, interestingly, both are from Yale. From the column (LINK):

Round 5 (26 FCS Selections)
Best Pick
Jackson Hawes, Yale/Georgia Tech, TE – Buffalo Bills (2025, pick 173)

In his 2025 rookie season, Hawes rewarded the Bills in blocking and pass-catching situations. While not all of his contributions showed up in box scores, he had 16 receptions, including 13 that went for first downs, for 189 yards and three touchdowns. The Bills led the NFL in rushing and were just one of five teams to have three tight ends with at least 16 catches.

Round 6 (25 FCS Selections)
Best Pick
Foyesade Oluokun, Yale, LB – Atlanta Falcons (2018, pick 200)

Talk about late-round value, Oluokun was the NFL leader in total tackles in 2021 (an NFL-record 192 over a 17-game regular season with the Falcons) and 2022 (184 with the Jaguars) and led in solo tackles in both 2022 (128) and 2023 (111, Jaguars) while compiling the third-most overall stops (1,062) since he entered the league in 2018.

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EXTRA POINT
Were you tempted to take part in the Joe's Pond "ice-out" contest after learning about it in the BGA Extra Point a couple of years ago HERE? In case you are wondering when the cinder block that unplugs the alarm clock fell in the Vermont pond, here's your answer:


For the record,it was ice out at Joe's Pond one. year ago on this day at 8:41 p.m.  The latest it has gone out since contest record keeping began in 1988 is May 6, back in 1992. The earliest it has gone out is April 5 in 2010. For more about the Joe's Pond Ice Out, click HERE.  

Thursday, April 16, 2026

That's A Surprise

Had a great chat with veteran offensive line coach Keith Clark at practice this a.m. Look for a story on the O-line on BGA Overtime tonight.

And now for some good stuff about one of Clark's protégés . . . 

Click this still from YouTube and advance to the 12:30 mark.

This Pro Football and Sports Network headline should get your attention:
NFL Analyst Predicts a 97th-Percentile Ivy League Sleeper Will Crash Day 2 of Draft | PFSN’s Football Debate Club; NFL analyst Ian Cummings predicts Dartmouth prospect Delby Lemieux could become a Day Two draft pick after elite athletic testing.
From the story (LINK):
At Boston College’s pro day, Lemieux posted a 5.02 40-yard dash, a 7.52 three-cone, and a 1.71 10-yard split, landing in the 97th percentile among offensive linemen. He covers ground easily, recalibrates his base with quickness, and plays with the kind of range that fits modern zone-heavy systems.

And more importantly:

In the immediate timeline, Lemieux profiles as athletic, position-versatile depth. In the right scheme, particularly one that leans on movement, angles, and leverage, there is a path for him to become an impact starter on the interior. A player who looked like a late-round flyer now has a measurable, trait-driven case to crash Day 2. 

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Princeton and Columbia can recruit in the fertile New Jersey area. Penn brings in talent from Philly and Pittsburgh, and points in between. Yale has had success recruiting Connecticut, and Brown always has a few good ones from Rhode Island. Ditto Harvard from Massachusetts.

Ever wonder why Dartmouth doesn't pull in more recruits from Northern New England? Go ahead and scroll down to the entries about Maine, New Hampshire and Vermont in this story headlined The highest-ranked high school recruit in the history of all 50 states. (LINK)

Green Alert Take: That's not to say there haven't been very solid players from these states. Dartmouth surely would love to have had defensive lineman Thor Griffith stay in-state instead of playing at Harvard and then Louisville. And Vermonter David Ball set the FCS record for career touchdown receptions at New Hampshire before Cooper Kupp broke it. Go back further and Maine native John Huard played six years in the NFL in the late '60s and early '70s before being elected to the College Football Hall of Fame.

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EXTRA POINT
From the go-figure department: I have several pairs of sneakers from Allbirds, which is regularly promoted as producing the most comfortable sneakers on the market. So imagine my surprise learning the company that makes the footwear isn't just walking away from its sneaker business. It's running away from it.

That's right. Allbirds is transitioning from footwear to being an AI company. Find a story about that about-face HERE while I head off to see if they are having a clearance sale. ;-)

Wednesday, April 15, 2026

Missed This Last Fall

Received this email after yesterday's posting on Dartmouth's scoring leaders since 2000:

Your posting the scoring leaders today made me wonder about Owen Zalc’s career total. With a “paltry” 56 points in his junior season, he surpassed Dennis Durkin as Dartmouth’s leading kicking scorer (206-202 points). Not sure if you had mentioned this previously. With another seven points, he will surpass Al Marsters’ total and become the program’s second leading scorer behind Myles Lane, at an unreachable 307 points.

That sent me scrambling to update the Big Green's overall scoring leaders in the Ivy League era:

 Most Career Points In Ivy League Era


Name

Years

TD

FG

PAT

2Pt

Pts

1

Owen Zalc ‘27

2023-

0

39

89

0

206

2

Dennis Durkin ’93

1990-92

0

36

94

1

204


Nick Howard ’23

2019-22

34

0

0

0

204

4

Dave Regula ’98

1994-97

1

38

80

1

202

5

Foley Schmidt ’12

2008-11

0

33

87

0

186

6

Dominick Pierre ’14

2010-13

30

0

0

0

180

7

Connor Davis ’22

2018-21

0

19

113

0

170

8

Nick Schwieger ’12

2008-11

26

0

0

0

156

9

Alex Gakenheimer ’17

2013-16

0

19

84

0

141

10

Ted Perry ’74

1971-73

0

20

75

0

135

11

Tyler Lavin ’05

2001-04

0

28

49

0

133

12

John Short ’71

1968-70

22

0

0

0

132


Ryder Stone ’18

2014-17

22

0

0

0

132

14

Craig Saltzgaber ’86

1983-85

0

25

56

0

131

15

Jon Aljancic ’97

1994-96

21

0

0

0

126


Richard Weissman ’85

1982-84

21

0

0

0

126


Jared Gerbino ’20

1960-62

21

0

0

0

126


Editor's Note: Thanks as always for the help!

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Spotted this on FootballScoop:
Dartmouth is hiring a Football Recruiting and Operations Coordinator. This full-time position is a great opportunity to be heavily involved in all aspects of recruiting and running a Division I football program. 

Find the official job posting out of Dartmouth HERE

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After seeing the above Xweet, I posted this on BGA Overtime last night:

Given pleasant weather at 6 a.m., the practice was held on Memorial Field where Zach Pierson, the Dartmouth program's manager of content services for football, put his camera to work and produced some epic photos.

These pictures were posted on the Dartmouth football Xwitter page as well as its Instagram page. 

Because a lot of Dartmouth fans do not visit those sites, the photos are reproduced here to help them get the viewership they deserve. Huge kudos to Zach for his work producing these images from the first full-pad practice of the spring. Click on the photos for a better look.

Click on the Xweet above to view the pictures. Or if you prefer, visit BGA Overtime to check out Zach's work, reposted with appreciation HERE.

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If you've been on campus over the past year-plus you've noticed Crosby Street, which runs in front of Buddy Teevens Stadium, has been closed. If you are curious about what is going on, the college has an update under the headline, Progress Continues on Dartmouth’s Energy Transition; The project has already laid 3.5 miles of hot and chilled water piping across campus. Find that update HERE.

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EXTRA POINT
Mrs. BGA and I were watching Jeopardy last evening when she noticed quite a show being put on in the sky over Mount Moosilauke.  This photo can't compare to Zach Pierson's images, but it should give you a pretty good indication of what we saw. With the sun at our backs, it is filtering through storm clouds and lighting up just one cloud in the east.

Click photo to enlarge.