Per Sagarin:Dartmouth is favored by 11 points over BrownHarvard is favored by six points over YaleColumbia is favored by 5½ points over CornellThe amateur oddsmakers have:Dartmouth favored by 14 over BrownHarvard favored by 4½ over YaleColumbia favored by 8½ over CornellMassey sees:Dartmouth defeating Brown, 34-21 with 80 percent confidenceHarvard defeating Yale , 31-27, with 61 percent confidenceColumbia defeating Cornell , 27-20, with 69 percent confidence
College Football Hall of Famer DeOrmond (Tuss) McLaughry served as head coach at both Dartmouth and Brown.McLaughry headed up the Bears’ program from 1926-40, posting a record of 76-58-5. His first team, the legendary “Brown Iron Men,” featured 11 players who were on the field for all 60 minutes of wins over Dartmouth and Yale, as well as for much of the rest of that season. His 1926 team finished 9-0-1 and is still the only undefeated team in Brown football history, while his ’28 and ’32 teams both lost just one time.McLaughry moved on to Dartmouth in 1941, replacing Earl Blaik. After two seasons he took a leave to serve his country as a lieutenant colonel in the Marines. He would return to the Big Green in 1945 and coach the team until 1954. His 1948 and ’49 squads were credited at the time with being the first in school history to post six wins over so-called “major” teams.While McLaughry is part of football lore at both Dartmouth and Brown, his biggest impact may have been on his profession.In addition to serving on the NCAA football rules committee from 1945-54, he played an integral role in the American Football Coaches Association, serving first as the organization’s secretary, then as president, and finally as its executive director from 1960 to 1965.During his tenure the American Football Coaches Association bestowed the Amos Alonzo Stagg Award for "service to football" on McLaughry, and in 1964 the AFCA honored the former Brown and Dartmouth mentor by establishing the Tuss McLaughry Award, the highest honor given out by the organization. It is presented annually for nothing less than “service to mankind.”Read those words again. The award bearing Tuss McLaughry's name is presented for "service to mankind."Among the winners of the McLaughry Award since its inception have been General Douglas MacArthur, Presidents Lyndon B. Johnson, Gerald Ford, Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush, the Apollo 11 astronauts, Jimmy Stewart, General Chuck Yeager, Roger Staubach and former Dartmouth football player Jeffrey Immelt ’78, who went on to run General Electric. This year’s honoree will be Archie Manning.
Green Alert Take: Enjoy this year's edition of The Tussle, once again with a piece of the Ivy League title at stake.
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With the Ivy League race coming down the stretch, college football teams jockeying for the playoffs and the NFL grabbing headlines, this news from the weekend got overlooked. Mea culpa!
This Xweet from Sam Laptad '16 offers kudos to former teammate Flo Orimolade '17 for helping the Toronto Argonauts with the CFL's Grey Cup:
Congrats to the GOAT Flo SackArtรญst ๐จ๐จ๐ฟ๐จ https://t.co/hayjHDPSMK
— Sam laptad (@Lapteeezy_82) November 19, 2024
Find Oriomolade's bio on the Argos' website HERE. He finished the season with six sacks, one interception, one forced fumble and 17 tackles.
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This headline will grab your attention: Transfer Portal: Ivy League players to watch. Listed with short capsules on the site (LINK):
Wide receiver WR Bryson Canty, Columbia
Offensive guard John Iannuzzi, Columbia
Safety Trey Harris, Cornell
Green Alert Take: Players in the portal can return to their current school if they still have eligibility remaining. If I'm reading the bios correctly, Canty should have the opportunity of another year at Columbia after being limited to three games a year ago (as long as he doesn't graduate). Iannuzzi and Harris can have another year elsewhere after not seeing action as freshmen, but would be able to return to the Ivy League only if for some reason they had a medical redshirt.
Green Alert Take II: These won't be the last names to pop up. Far from it. Cornell's game notes last week reminded us that 15 of the 27 seniors on the 2023 Big Red roster went on to play elsewhere this fall. The end of the COVID-19 super senior exception will cut that number down around the league but there will still be players moving on.
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EXTRA POINT
The forecast calls for a chance of rain tomorrow through Saturday in these parts and while that may not be a good thing if you are in the stands for The Tussle Saturday, it would be a good thing for our area. CLICK HERE for a map showing the drought conditions in northern New England. Hanover is in the "moderate drought" category while here in our part of Vermont – on the border of the Upper Valley and the Northeast Kingdom – we're in the "abnormally dry" category.