Thursday, May 28, 2026

Around The NFL


No. 62 is former Dartmouth offensive lineman Delby Lemieux, here joining other Minnesota Vikings rookies at Children's Hospital in St. Paul. Find a story HERE.

Curious what the financial arrangements are for Lemieux and other undrafted free agents? Per a story carried by MSN, the Ivy League product signed an $82,500 guaranteed contract, with a $7,500 bonus. Should he stick with the team his three-year UDFA deal would be worth $3,107,500. 

Find the Big Green graduate's Vikings bio HERE.

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Former Dartmouth defensive back Tyron Herring '23 signed this week with the Cleveland Browns. An undrafted free agent after playing two season as a grad transfer at  Delaware, Herring had previously been a practice squad member of the Green Bay Packers and later signed with the New England Patriots. (LINK)

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Still another onetime Big Green standout is opening eyes in the NFL after a grad transfer year at Duke. Here's Tampa Bay Buccaneers General Manager Jason Licht as quoted in a story headlined Buccaneers' potential Calijah Kancey replacement could be right under their nose (LINK):
"Josiah Green, I was going to bring up. Very good athlete from Duke; defensive tackle. (He was at) Dartmouth before that making a lot of plays."

The story wraps up this way:

(J)ust how much Green comes along, in (concert) with how healthy and effective Kancey is over the next two years, may be key factors in the former first-rounder's long-term future in Tampa Bay. Ideally, Kancey rights the ship and Green also makes his mark and carves out a role.

For the time being, though, Kancey is a question mark and Green is a UDFA catching plenty of attention.


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Sticking in Florida, the news was unfortunate earlier this month for former Big Green corner Isaiah Johnson '22, who tore his ACL last December while practicing with the Miami Dolphins. Johnson, who spent two seasons as a grad transfer at Syracuse, has been waived by the NFL team for a "failed physical." From the story (LINK):
Johnson has appeared in four career games with Miami (2025), recording three special teams tackles. He entered the NFL as an undrafted college free agent with the Dolphins in 2024 and spent two seasons on the practice squad (2024-25). He played his final two collegiate seasons at Syracuse (2022-23), where he appeared in 25 games with 19 starts and totaled 115 tackles (74 solo), two interceptions, nine passes defensed and one forced fumble. He transferred to Syracuse from Dartmouth (2018-21), where he totaled 55 tackles (38 solo), one interception returned for a touchdown and seven passes defensed.

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The 7220sports.com website out of Wyoming has a piece about current grad transfer defensive end Teddy Gianaris under the headline, Welcome To Wyoming Football: Thaddeus Gianaris.  Here's what Wyoming head coach Jay Sawvel had to say in the story (LINK):

Thaddeus is a unique guy. First of all, he's an astronomy major at Dartmouth and an Ivy League grad. So when you say smart guy, yes, he's uber-smart. Thaddeus has a tremendous motor and works extremely hard. We're going to be really happy that Thaddeus is in the program this year. I think there's a lot of traits that Larry Wilson had a year ago, playing for us at defensive end. Thaddeus has many of those same traits, but he's probably a better overall athlete, so that translates really well. And, look, Thaddeus was a good player in the Ivy League, you know? I mean, when you watch these transfer type things and stuff like that, like, Ivy League football is pretty good."

EXTRA POINT
I found myself thinking about the Julia Roberts movie Erin Brokovich while I was reading a New York Times story about a mom in Montana trying to stop development of a giant AI data center. If you want to know just how large those data centers can be, this line from the third paragraph of the story puts it in perspective:
The development, part of a nationwide boom in facilities that can power artificial intelligence, would be the size of about 3,800 football fields.

And that's not a typo. Take out the end zones and you could fit almost 4,500 football fields in the data center's proposed footprint.

 

Wednesday, May 27, 2026

Welcome To List Season

Listening to a podcast during my hike late yesterday afternoon I had to laugh when I heard a college football commentator refer to this as "list season."

Without any real news to report he was about to manufacture some by creating a list of top players at the school he covers.

I can relate.

Welcome to the latest BGA "list season" entry, again courtesy of the hard work done by former Dartmouth SID Rick Bender, who built a spreadsheet that includes individual rushing totals for every game since 1980, and most games between 1970-80.

From Rick's hard work, here is every 50-yard run by a Dartmouth player since 1980 in descending order.

Long

Name

Opponent

Date

97

David Clark

Princeton

Nov.  19, 1988

97

David Clark

Harvard

Oct. 15, 1988

82

Rashaad Cooper

Harvard

Oct. 27, 2018

79

Shon Page

Harvard

Oct. 27, 1990

78

Jackson Proctor

Brown

Nov. 18, 2023

75

Nick Howard

Cornell

Nov. 13, 2021

75

Jackson Proctor

Brown

Nov. 23, 2024

70

Kyle Bramble

Brown

Nov. 16, 2013

69

Jake Pallotta

Columbia

Oct. 25, 2019

68

Q Jones

Sacred Heart

Sept. 24, 2022

67

DJ Crowther

Cornell

Nov. 15, 2025

66

Nick Schwieger

Columbia

Oct. 24, 2009

66

Caylin Parker

Yale

Oct. 5, 2018

65

Nick Schwieger

Cornell

Nov. 5, 2011

65

Keegan McHugh

Brown

Nov. 20, 2021

64

Ryder Stone

New Hampshire

Sept. 17, 2016

64

Jackson Proctor

Brown

Nov.  19, 2022

63

Ryder Stone

Brown

Nov. 15, 2014

63

Shon Page

Lehigh

Sept. 22, 1990

62

Ryder Stone

Sacred Heart

Sept. 26, 2015

62

Greg Smithq

Holy Cross

Oct. 12, 1996

62

Drew Estrada

Jacksonville

Sept. 21, 2019

61

Brian Grove

Brown

Nov. 14, 2015

61

Brian Grove

Princeton

Nov. 22, 2014

60

Chad Gaudet

Harvard

Oct. 30, 2004

58

Dominick Pierre

Penn

Oct. 5, 2013

57

Dylan Karczewski

Yale

Oct. 14, 1995

56

Nick Schwieger

Bucknell

Sept. 18, 2010

56

Nate Servis

Columbia

Oct. 20, 2007

54

Kyle Bramble

Yale

Oct. Oct. 2015

53

Jared Gerbino

Princeton

Nov. 18, 2017

53

Nick Howard

Sacred Heart

Sept. 25, 2021

53

Peter Lavery

Columbia

Nov. 6, 1982

52

Greg Patton

Cornell

Nov. 7, 2009

52

Mark Akey

Harvard

Oct. 18, 1980

52

Russ Torres

Brown

Nov. 14, 1992

52

Aaron Pumerantz

Colgate

Sept. 16, 2000

51

Greg Patton

Cornell

Nov. 3, 2012

51

Rashaad Cooper

Georgetown

Sept. 15, 2018

51

Miles Smith

Georgetown

Sept. 15, 2018

51

Pete Oberle

New Hampshire

Oct. 9, 1993

50

Jeremiah White

Yale

Oct. 19, 1996


Rick's original spreadsheet included who won the games in which these runs took place. Interestingly, Dartmouth was 36-6 in these games, and 9-0 in games featuring a run of 69 or more yards.

Tied with three runs each of 50 or more yards? All-time Dartmouth rushing leader Nick Schwieger and quarterback Jackson Proctor. Others with two runs of 50-plus yards each: running backs David Clark, Rashaad Cooper, Shon Page, Ryder Stone, Brian Grove and Kyle Bramble, along with quarterback Nick Howard and wildcat QB Greg Patton.

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EXTRA POINT
I think my favorite movies are from the 1940s and early '50s featuring actors like Humphrey Bogart, Cary Grant, Jimmy Stewart, Katharine Hepburn, Ingrid Bergman, Grace Kelly, Spencer Tracy, Henry Fonda and more. There were a lot fewer car crashes, explosions and super heroes than in today's movies, and a lot more memorable dialogue.

I mention that because Mrs. BGA and I somehow had never seen the 1953 classic Roman Holiday starring Audrey Hepburn, Gregory Peck and Eddie Albert until earlier this week, and silly as it was, we both thoroughly enjoyed it.