Friday, March 27, 2026

Seniors Update

After four years without tackling in practice, former Dartmouth linebacker Teddy Gianaris was apparently more-than-ready to get after it as a grad transfer at Wyoming. Here's the lede to the story above:

One of the new guys immediately broke a cardinal rule.

On an inside run play Tuesday inside War Memorial Stadium, running back Samuel Harris took the hand off and patiently made his way toward the line of scrimmage. The sophomore they call "Tote" didn't have a chance to show off his trademark speed.

He was unceremoniously dumped the second he entered the masses.

That tackle came courtesy of Thaddeus Gianaris, a graduate transfer from Dartmouth.

More from the story:

t wasn't an audible rear-end chewing, but Jay Sawvel joked that he did threaten to toss the 6-foot-2, 244-pound defensive end out of practice if that ever happens again.

"He's a psychopath," Wyoming's head coach said with a smile. 

And . . . 

"The one thing that Thaddeus has is, you know, his motor is crazy good," Sawvel said. "Obviously, he was a first team all-conference player where he was before. Look, that guy's wired really well -- and I appreciate that.

"I had to tell him, this isn't part of the deal right now to take down a back in no pads right now." 

Read the full story HERE

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Dartmouth held its Pro Day yesterday and the program's social media shared these photos:

Click HERE and HERE to see full-sized versions of these picture from Dartmouth social media.

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Headline on an FCS Football Central story: Top 5 FCS Offensive Prospects In The 2026 NFL Draft; Who are the top offensive FCS prospects in the 2026 NFL Draft class? From that story (LINK):

5. Delby Lemieux | IOL | Dartmouth

Lemieux is a fringe NFL roster prospect with upside as he transitions from offensive tackle to interior offensive line. Though the transition from tackle to interior can be difficult, Lemieux is poised for a smoother one thanks to his best trait: technical soundness.

He had a solid week down in Mobile, Alabama, for the Senior Bowl and helped his stock rise significantly. Teams willing to take a swing on a versatile and technically sound offensive lineman as a preferred free agent will get a hidden gem. He has upside to be a potential adequate starter.

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From a FootballScoop story:

When NIL initially came to college back in July of 2021, the widespread belief was that it would have a major impact on major college football at the FBS level, but it would have less of an effect on the FCS level, even less at the Division II level, and really a minimal impact at the Division III and small college level.

Which leads us to this quote from Lake Forest head coach Jim Cantanzaro:

"There are at least six schools that I know of, with confirmation from people within their programs and within their [athletic] department, that have north of $250,000 to $300,0000 of NIL money for their football program. Some for basketball, and some for baseball too." 

Find the story and a video interview HERE

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The Dartmouth men's hockey season came to a close in the NCAA Regional with a closer-than-it-seems, 5-1 loss to Wisconsin. The Big Green, which earned its first ECAC championship and was making its first NCAA postseason appearance since 1980, closes out the year at 23-8-4.

The Dartmouth athletic communications release on the game began this way (LINK):

No. 8 Dartmouth men's hockey saw its historic season come to an end in the NCAA Tournament Regional Semifinal. The Big Green fell 5-1 to No. 12 Wisconsin in the Worcester Regional.

2:52 into the game the Badgers opened the scoring on the power play.

The Big Green evened the score at one at the 10:05 mark. The Big Green evened the score at one at the 10:05 mark. Hank Cleaves backchecked and deflected a pass from the Wisconsin player. The puck came to the stick of Cam MacDonald, the senior sped through the neutral zone and into the Wisconsin zone. He then dropped the puck to Colin Grable who drew two defenders in before feeding H. Cleaves on the left wing. The sophomore took a low shot and beat the goalie far side for his 18th goal of the season. Grable notched his 14th assist while MacDonald picked up his 16th assist of the season.

The game stayed tied for the remainder of the opening period.

Green Alert Take: One of the responsibilities I had when I worked as Dartmouth's assistant director of sports information in the early 1980s was helping interns in the office with their writing. If I still worked in that office I would have suggested that rather than recount how last night's goals were scored in chronological order, a better place to begin the release would be by pointing out that the game was still 1-1 midway through the final period. That's not a "homer" lede. It's the truth.

The SI.com story began where it should:

Deadlocked at one after forty minutes, Wisconsin had every reason to drop their heads as nothing was going right on the offensive end but a physical game plan and high defensive intensity that limited Dartmouth to just 14 shots continued until the Badgers finally came alive in the third. 

Green Alert Take II: I get that social media and video clips are the shiny toys of sports information today, but years from now the social media posts will have faded away, and without context the video clips will be hollow. There's still a place for solid writing and reporting, and with newspaper coverage becoming rare it's more important than ever. That's why, for example, last week's ECAC championship story should not have opened with who started the game's scoring, but by who finished it by scoring the winning goal in overtime.

Green Alert Take III: I feel a little uneasy making suggestions like these because I know the athletic communications office at Dartmouth is understaffed and there is no one looking over the writer's shoulders when reporting on deadline. When I read my own writing I sometimes grimace knowing how valuable it would be to have a good editor. The hope here is that when Dartmouth finally does fill out its athletic communications staff the importance of more than social media will be recognized.

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Still on the game, talk about cheap shots. This from an SI.com story headlined Takeaways From Surprising First Day of NCAA Hockey Regionals: Puck Drop fits the bill (LINK):

Surprising stat of the day: Dartmouth only managed 14 shots on net against Wisconsin, half of its opponent. Granted, the Badgers had two empty-net goals, but they also saw Quinn Finley, Grady Deering, Luke Osburn and Simon Tassy ring shots off the post. Don't be surprised if there's a lot of talk about why the Big Green finished No. 8 in National Collegiate Percentage (NPI) Index, which was used to pick at-large teams and seed the tournament, when it was No. 54 in strength of schedule out of 63 teams.

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EXTRA POINT
As yesterday's PAT promised, we did go to an early showing of the Project Hail Mary movie yesterday before watching Dartmouth hockey on delay. I have a very cynical thought about the origins of the movie, but it might just ruin it for you if I share what I think, so I'll keep it to myself. Sorry to be so mysterious. Suffice it to say I don't feel any need to go see the movie again.

Thursday, March 26, 2026

Coaching Staff Rounding Out

Add Adam McGuire to the growing list of new assistant football coaches at Dartmouth this spring. McGuire will head up the cornerback room after coaching defensive backs at Marist for two seasons and serving one year as the program's recruiting coordinator.

McGuire's resume includes two seasons as defensive backs coach at Central Oklahoma and a stint as a graduate assistant and defensive analyst at TCU. He also spent three years on staff at Trinity University, coaching the secondary and helping out with special teams.

McGuire completed Bill Walsh Fellowship opportunities with the Minnesota Vikings and Carolina Panthers.

A Texas native, McGuire graduated from Texas Lutheran University and holds a masters from TCU.

McGuire is the fourth new coach on the Dartmouth staff this year, joining defensive coordinator Jordan Belfiori, defensive line coach Quentin Jones and wide receives coach Todd Gilcrist.

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With spring practice underway, some Ivy League grad transfers finished classes early and are already practicing at their new schools. Others will report after graduation.

Here's the latest unofficial list of former Ivy players headed elsewhere next fall. Most – but not all – are grad transfers.

FCS to FBS
Dartmouth
DB Patrick Campbell – Virginia
TE Chris Corbo – Georgia Tech
RB DJ Crowther – South Florida
LB Teddy Gianaris – Wyoming
LB Micah Green* – Merrimack
WR Grayson O'Bara – North Texas
DL Dakota Quiñonez – Duke
TE Sean Ward – Ball State
OL Vasean Washington – Ohio State
OL Max Wentz – Ball State
* Graduated last spring, DNP last fall

Cornell
LB Keith Williams – North Dakota State

Harvard
S Ty Bartrum – Central Florida
QB Jaden Craig – TCU
DE Alex DeGrieck – Boston College
OL Aidan Kilstrom – Stanford
OL Derek Osman – UCLA

Penn
DL Carter Janki – Illlinois
LB John Lista – UConn
QB Liam O'Brien – Cincinnati
OL Netinho Oliveiri – Pitt
WR Bisi Owens – Purdue
WR Jared Richardson – Duke

Princeton
OL Scott Becker – Rice
QB Blake Hipa – Duke
DB Tahj Owens – Western Michigan

Yale
OL Michael Bennett – Oregon
OL Leo Bluhm – Rice
RB Billy Daal – Duke
WR Nico Brown – Stanford
DL Ejiro Egodogbare – Houston
DE Ezekiel Larry – Virginia
TE – Spencer Mermans – Georgia Tech

FCS to FCS
Dartmouth
DB Jamal Cooper – Northwestern State
LB Zyion Freer-Brown – The Citadel
LB Micah Green – Merrimack
DB Tyson Grimm – Rhode Island
QB Jackson Proctor – South Dakota*
* Redshirt at Northern Illinois last fall

Brown
DT John Starman – South Dakota

Penn
DL Jake Davis – Monmouth
OL Trent VanBoening – Lindenwood

Princeton
Ol Jaden Wedderburn – Illinois State
QB Kai Colon – Albany

Yale
S Joshua Tarver – Furman
WR Mason Shipp – Austin Peay
WR Adiran Stephens – Youngstown State

And in other transfer news . . .

FCS to Ivy League
QB Preston Otter, South Dakota State – Cornell

Green Alert Take: Please share corrections and updates via the contact box over in the right-side column. Updated information will be posted as received.

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From Dartmouth social media:

EXTRA POINT
Mrs. BGA and I are not what you would call big fans of science fiction. I may be one of the few people who never saw a Star Trek movie or TV show. Or Star Wars, if you can believe it. But hey, I did enjoy ET.

All that said, we are planning to see the new movie Project Hail Mary today. That Certain Dartmouth '14 isn't big on sci-fi either, and she recommended it even before learning that the directors/producers of the flick are Dartmouth '97s Phil Lord and Chris Miller. (LINK)

I'll let you know what I think tomorrow.

Wednesday, March 25, 2026

Green's Green

While the Dartmouth Pro Day is on tap, elsewhere a former Big Green standout who grad transferred to the ACC last spring was showing out . . .

Yup, that's former Dartmouth defensive lineman Josiah Green equaling the Duke record of 36 reps on the 225-pound bench press. (Thanks to a good friend of BGA for sharing.)

A look around Xwitter turned up a couple other posts of note:

And from last spring:

Listed at 6-foot-1, 285 pounds on last year's Duke roster, Green had 37 tackles last fall for the Blue Devils, with seven tackles for loss, 3.5 sacks and two quarterback hurries.

Find the Draft Diamonds interview with him HERE.

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HERO Sports' latest FCS Draft Prospects posting includes just one Ivy Leaguer among the 17 players listed. From the story (LINK):

15 Delby Lemieux
School: Dartmouth
Position: OG
Projected Round: 7th-HPFA
Draft Scout Position Rank: No. 24
Draft Scout Overall Prospect Rank: No. 334

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EXTRA POINT
Before Mrs. BGA and I headed out on our hike yesterday, I grabbed a shot of Mount Moosilauke, which featured a new covering of snow in contrast with our newly melted, brown field:


When we got back from our hike up our snow-covered local mountain, Mrs. BGA took this pic of the alpenglow lighting up another mountain beyond our field.


Tuesday, March 24, 2026

Scouting Delby


Per Steelers Depot:

From now until the 2026 NFL Draft, we will scout and create profiles for as many prospects as possible, examining their strengths, weaknesses, and what they can bring to an NFL franchise. These players could be potential top-10 picks, all the way to Day 3 selections and priority undrafted free agents. Today, a scouting report on Dartmouth OL Delby Lemieux.

The report features capsules headlined The Good, The Bad, Stats and Injury History for Lemieux, who it notes . . .

"Did not allow a single sack over final two seasons," and, "Allowed just two pressures in each of last two seasons"

Find the full report  HERE.

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Boston College had its annual Pro Day and a New England Patriots on SI story includes this (LINK):

It was a productive day for all those who participated in the Pro Day, including BC wide receiver Lewis Bond, offensive linemen Logan Taylor and Jude Bowry, tight end Jeremiah Franklin and Dartmouth offensive lineman Delby Lemieux.

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Dartmouth's Pro Day is slated for Thursday.

And a reminder that the Big Green will begin spring practice two weeks from today.

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EXTRA POINT
If you are a regular visitor to this electronic precinct you read the PAT last month when I complained about the ice buildup almost encasing the tires on my car. See a picture HERE.

The good news is that a spell of warm weather along with a little hammering finally cleared that crud out. 

That bad news? I drove just two miles through slushy snow to my regular hiking trail yesterday and that, along with overnight temperatures in the low 20s, combined to encase my tires again. I had to go out early this morning and the grinding sound as I backed out of our unheated garage told me everything I needed to know.

Fortunately, there's warmer weather ahead so the icy wheel wells should free up a little faster this time around.

Have I mentioned I'm ready for winter to be over?

Monday, March 23, 2026

Monday, Monday

Before today's obligatory football post, a little more hockey.

The 23-7-4 Dartmouth men's team will play Wisconsin (21-12-2) in Worcester, Mass., Thursday at 5 p.m. in its first NCAA Tournament game since 1990. The game will be broadcast on ESPNU.

Dartmouth has a press release HERE. A Wisconsin release with a little more background information can be found HERE and Badgers Wire has a piece HERE.

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Now on to football and one of the more curious videos you are likely to watch (or not watch). This is from the description:
Enjoy 10 hours of calm, continuous college football stadium ambience, created to help you relax, focus, sleep, or unwind.

This video features an original, AI-generated daytime stadium scene, viewed from one end zone looking across the field, with a soft crowd presence designed to feel immersive yet peaceful. 
And . . .
This ambience experience is inspired by the atmosphere commonly associated with college football environments across programs competing in the Ivy League, known for their historic campus stadium settings, traditional game-day atmosphere, and longstanding collegiate football heritage.

Some viewers may find this atmosphere similar to environments often associated with Dartmouth football.

All visuals and audio in this video are original artistic creations and are not affiliated with, sponsored by, or endorsed by any school, conference, or athletic organization.

In case your eyes glossed over and you missed it, the next-to-last sentence went like this:

Some viewers may find this atmosphere similar to environments often associated with Dartmouth football.

As legendary former Big Green SID Kathy Slattery used to say, "Ouch, babe."

Without further ado, here is the video, which clearly is not Buddy Teevens Stadium – and not just because at the real stadium the DARTMOUTH in the end zone faces in toward the field. ;-)

 

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EXTRA POINT


Sunday, March 22, 2026

Dartmouth Hockey History

Hockey earns top billing for the second day in a row after Dartmouth used a Tim Busconi goal in overtime  to earn its first-ever ECAC championship with a dramatic, 2-1, win over Princeton yesterday evening in Lake Placid. Dartmouth will now head to the NCAA's for the first time since 1980.

Here's the possession that led to the winning goal and the ensuing Big Green celebration:


Click HERE to find a story out of Dartmouth athletic communications.

The NCAA bracket will be announced at 3 p.m. on ESPNU. Per various bracketologists, Dartmouth very well may end up playing in Worcester, Mass.

From Dartmouth's social media:

Green Alert Take: I've been asked many times if there's another Dartmouth sport that BGA could cover and my standard answer is that only men's ice hockey has the following that could support it. For reference, the Big Green played before 86,913 fans this season, with 52,964 turning out for 19 games at Thompson Arena.

The issue, of course, is a season that begins in October and this year will stretch into April would require winter trips through snow and ice to games in distant New York state outposts like Canton, Potsdam, Ithaca and Hamilton. The travel difficulty and expenses combined with the length of the season make BGA on the ice an impossible challenge. That said, this would have been the year to do it. ;-)

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Men's hockey wasn't the only Dartmouth team to win its first ECAC title yesterday. The equestrian team defeated New Jersey's Centenary University in Charleston, S.C., by a 7-3 score. (LINK)

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Back to football.

Someone who covers Oregon football and no doubt would appreciate baseball's sabermetrics and basketball's KenPom numbers takes a look at former Yale offensive lineman Michael Bennett, who will play for the Ducks next fall. Trying to parse what he has written is exhausting, but here are a couple of excerpts you may find interesting.

He introduces the first video clip he uses this way:

The rushing attack was an essential part of that, and in most games was between 55% to 58% of total meaningful playcalls, but explosive rushing was relatively rare at only about 12% frequency and came about mostly because of defensive miscues - rushing was more like a hammer to dull the defense's wits and set up the real way of moving the ball, which was explosive passing on quick throws made easy by the way they'd affected the defense. The upshot is that a large part of the most productive plays, by design, didn't really involve the offensive line needing to sustain blocks, which is important context for focusing on the setup and behind-the-chains plays when they did.

Whew. 

That intro leads to an analysis of Bennett and the Yale offensive line's performance against . . . you guessed it . . . Dartmouth. (Video link) From the column:

Dartmouth's defensive front had Yale shut down both years, with broken tackles in space the only way the Bulldogs could move the ball. The defense is playing conservatively here and Yale instantly throws into the big cushion, something they'd do whenever they had the opportunity. Note the ball is out before the line is even engaged.

The column also includes this, which Yale's performance in the FCS playoffs kind of puts the lie to, but which is still kind of funny:

The final complicating factor is this: I've done season reviews on three years' worth of Notre Dame tape, four years of Auburn, five years of Florida State, and more of Washington than ought to be permitted under the 8th Amendment... and this Yale football team might be the luckiest program that I have ever seen. I was amazed at some of the stuff that the Bulldogs got away with, most of which if Oregon tried I'm certain would not only fail but would somehow result in injuries and NCAA sanctions.

If you have the time, the interest and the patience, check out the column HERE.

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EXTRA POINT
It snowed enough overnight Friday that our road had to be plowed yesterday morning, and we're in the midst of a winter weather advisory that could bring us 3-6 inches of snow and ice today before things finally settle down Monday morning. Enough is enough.

Saturday, March 21, 2026

Big Day On Ice

A little football to come, but we start today with hockey.

From a story in the Manchester Union Leader:

For the second time in its hockey history, Dartmouth will play for the ECAC tournament title.

The Big Green, known for their scoring all season, tallied two goals in the first period and junior goalie Emmett Croteau stood tall, backstopping a 4-0 victory over Clarkson in the league semifinals on Friday at Herb Brooks Arena in Lake Placid, New York.

Dartmouth's only other trip to the ECAC championship came in 1980, a 5-1 loss to Cornell. On Saturday (5 p.m.), the Big Green will face Princeton, a 3-2 winner over Cornell in the other semifinal.

Find the full story HERE.

Dartmouth, which set a school record for wins in a season, is 22-7-4. Princeton is 18-12-3.

The teams met twice this year with the Tigers winning in Princeton on Jan. 2 by a 5-4 score, and the Feb. 28 game at Thompson Arena finishing 2-2. After a scoreless overtime, Princeton registered the only goal in the shootout to earn the extra ECAC point.

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EXTRA POINT
I suppose I could understand if the temperature was 10 below zero, but it was about 30 degrees yesterday when I stopped at our little post office and noticed two fellows had left their pickup trucks running while they were inside. The trucks were still idling – and the drivers were still inside the post office chewing the fat – when I left.

Good thing they live where they do because if they left their trucks unlocked and running like that in much of the country they'd be walking home.

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.