Saturday, February 28, 2026

Looking Back While We Look Ahead

Dartmouth offensive lineman Delby Lemieux is bidding to be the Big Green's first NFL draft pick since tight end Casey Cramer was selected by the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in 2004.

Lemieux, who like Cramer did not earn an invitation to the NFL Combine, will have a Pro Day at Dartmouth in March. Looking ahead to that day, BGA takes a look back at a workout Cramer did for a New England Patriots scout in advance of the draft.

To get a feel for what Lemieux will experience on his Pro Day, here's the story I wrote about Cramer's workout for the Pats in 2004. (Editor's note: The story includes corrections of typos and several 
small edits.)

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Exam Time: NFL Taking A Measure of TE Cramer

HANOVER – Shirt off, face contorted with effort, 6-foot-2, 245-pound Casey Cramer is a cement mixer barreling between the white lines of the Leverone Field House track.


With no runaway truck ramp to stop him, Cramer grinds to a halt, seemingly inches from crashing through Leverone’s glass back wall and onto Memorial Field, where he was the most prolific tight end ever to wear a Dartmouth uniform, and where he became a potential NFL draft pick.


Cramer hesitates for a second at the end of his run. Then, almost reluctantly, he turns around.


Suddenly he is the nervous little boy walking to the front of the class to collect his report card. 


Standing back at the finish line, scribbling Cramer's 40-yard dash time into a white notebook while college workers tear down the remnants of last weekend's Upper Valley Home/Life Show, is Kyle O'Brien, a scout for the New England Patriots.


“The 40 is my biggest nemesis,” Cramer says after his second NFL workout in a week. “Walking back after finishing is the longest walk imaginable. The whole way you are worrying about how you did.”


The walk, like the run, is worth it. Cramer has clocked 4.73, not far off from the 4.69 he ran in a group workout before 50 scouts last month back home at the University of Wisconsin.


Courtesy Dartmouth

As will be the case throughout this two-hour workout, O'Brien wears a poker face when Cramer gets back to him. Ask the scout later how the Ivy Leaguer stacks up and he will apologize politely as he says he is contractually forbidden from talking about his scouting assignments.


Rob Talley, Dartmouth defensive coordinator and NFL liaison, tries to fill in the blanks late in the two hour workout.


"Because they are looking at Casey as a fullback/H-back, I think his 40 is average to slightly above average for the league," whispers Talley. "That time definitely puts him in the mix. It's not a situation where he is running 4.9's, and they don't think he's fast enough.”


After resting up from his second 40, changing shoes and taking a drink or two from the gallon container of blue fruit punch Gatorade he will lug with him throughout the workout, Cramer is set for the pro shuttle drill. As O'Brien starts his watch, Cramer bolts for an adhesive-taped line to his right, where he touches the synthetic turf with his hand and a grunt that echoes through the building. Then he bolts to his left and another temporary line, where he touches and grunts again. Then it's back through the start line and a click of the stopwatch.


O'Brien: "That feel good?"

Cramer: "Yeah. What was it?"

O’Brien: "4.25."

Cramer: "I can do better."

O'Brien: "Want to do another one?"

Cramer: "Yeah."


This time Cramer is clocked in 4.22.


"His time there was in the ballpark," says Talley. "It was average, but it's a good test for him because it tests change of direction."


Another rest, another swig of blue juice, sweatpants on and sweatpants off, and Cramer is ready for another test: the three-cone drill. He will run from one cone to another a short distance away, and then back. Then it's back around the second cone and the third in a figure eight before sprinting back to the start.


The cement mixer tries a test run, but the tires won't hold. Cramer switches to sneakers before going full out. "Push, push, push," O'Brien says as Cramer strains for the finish. "I'll let you do one more."


Cramer will get two more after he misses a cone the second time.


"His time there was actually pretty good," says Talley. "Slightly above average, which could mean a lot or nothing."


Another rest and it's onto the standing long jump. Back in his lighter shoes, Cramer rocks heel to toe, obeying the warning not to shuffle his feet, and then leaps alongside a measuring tape O’Brien has unwound on the turf. The Patriots’ scout grabs Cramer by the heels as he lands, freezing him in place for an accurate measurement. Another jump and Cramer, who grins easily and often, is smiling for the first time.


"He was right around nine feet, his best to date," says Talley "so he's happy about that.”


Cramer is finally able to relax.


"The worst part is over. The rest is just fun," he says, taking a long swig of the Gatorade. “Got to gain some weight."


The next stop is Davis Varsity House, home of the Dartmouth football offices. Cramer's vertical leap is measured at 31.5 inches. "That 32 is just taunting me," he tells O'Brien and Talley, smiling again.


In the weight room in the eaves of Davis, O'Brien weighs one of the steel plates to make sure it is accurate while Cramer yanks open the pull top on a Sobe Adrenaline Rush and downs the energy drink. He leaves a half eaten Rice Crispy Treat next to the empty can and strides into an adjacent room to change the music filling the air. On a stationary bicycle nearby, Dartmouth head coach John Lyons pedals away.


With Talley spotting him and shouting, "Come on, come on," Cramer lifts to exhaustion. Soon, O'Brien is measuring the size of his hand and the length of his arms, writing the numbers in his white notebook. Three times the scout will measure Cramer's height against a chart he’d previously taped to the wall. He had measured how high he taped the chart just one time, but no one tells him.


Before returning to Leverone, Cramer switches the music to something a little more in tune with Lyons’ taste. Then it's back to Leveone where O'Brien breaks out a football for the first time.


After a few patterns, he has Cramer run down the field and try to grab high-arcing passes over his head, a la Willie Mayes robbing Vic Wertz in the 1954 World Series.


"He said he knows I can catch," Cramer relates a few minutes later. "He said he just wanted to see me do some stuff, take some handoffs, and try some things I'm unfamiliar with."


Cramer – honestly, if a little mischievously – told his professor he was missing his first class because he had a job interview, and is satisfied with how it went.


"The nice thing was that, this time, my times were pretty much comparable to Wisconsin, which was nice," he says. "I did a lot better than I did with the Jets. I needed this."


From what Talley was able to glean when the Jets were in town, Cramer is probably being a little hard on himself.


"The biggest thing a scout from the Jets related to us is that he doesn't have any minuses, where you say he can't do something," Talley says. "He's going to be average in some and good in others. But there's no drill where you look at him and say he just can't do it."


By Talley’s count, virtually all NFL teams have sent a scout to Hanover to watch film and talk with the coaches about Cramer. Although there are no other visits planned, it wouldn't surprise Talley if teams call on the spur of the moment, or fly Cramer in as they gear up for the April 24-25 draft.


What it all means, whether Cramer will hear his named called, Talley is uncertain.


"It's a crazy deal," he says. "You just never know until all is set and done. I just tried to give Casey as much information as I can about what to expect."


Cramer appreciates the feedback from Talley because, other than what he hears from his agent, it is about his only barometer.


"It's like pulling teeth,” he says of ferreting information from the scouts. "They'll say I did well, which is good. They say I have a good chance of getting drafted, but everybody says that.”


"I was talking with my agent yesterday and he said, 'Well, Casey, to be quite honest with you, I'm kind of worried.’ I asked why, and he said pretty much everyone was saying I was going to get drafted, but none of them were saying they wanted me for sure. They are all saying what we want to hear, but they aren't the ones biting."


Editor's Note: Cramer was taken by the Tampa Bay Bucs in the seventh round with the 228th pick of the 2004 draft. He stuck around the NFL until 2008 with the bulk of his playing time coming with the Tennessee Titans. He also spent time with the Bucs, Jets, Panthers and Dolphins.


After a stint as team chaplain for the Tennessee Titans, today he is lead pastor of King's Cross Community Church in Springboro, Ohio (LINK).


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EXTRA POINT
The temperature here could hit 40 degrees today, a number we've reached just two times since before Christmas. Works for me!

Friday, February 27, 2026

This And That

Dartmouth athletic communications has a story about safety Harrison Keith, the Big Green's honorable mention All-America choice as a junior who has stepped away from lacrosse to chase his football dreams. From the story:

Keith played in all 13 of men's lacrosse's games last spring, tallying 14 groundballs and six caused turnovers. His first-career goal was the game-winner against Bucknell in the season opener.

It's a season Keith will never forget, but very recently, Keith decided to step away from lacrosse.

"Playing football takes a toll on your body and although I love football and lacrosse, I did make the original commitment to play football here, and I'm hoping to continue to play football after Dartmouth," said Keith.

"But it was a tough decision."

And on the season ahead:

"We're returning a lot of core guys," said Keith. "It's always good to return a quarterback (Grayson Saunier) who has proven himself and has great experience. Next year, especially with the playoffs and the way FCS football is changing, we have really high expectations both in the league and to compete for a national championship.

"The stakes are that much higher," Keith continued. "And stepping into senior year, I want to go all-in on football to have the most success we can."

Read the full story HERE

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The Dartmouth has a Q&A with Justin Lafleur, who worked under Rick Bender in the athletic communications office before taking over that operation a couple of years ago. Earlier this month he moved on to the University of Massachusetts, his alma mater. Find the story HERE.

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Joe Gilfedder, who Spencer Brown brought to Dartmouth as an assistant strength coach in 2015, now works for his old boss with the Rutgers football program. In a video podcast Gilfedder addresses his journey from three years working in Hanover, to seven years at Fordham and now reuniting with Brown at Rutgers. Watch the video HERE.

Find Gilfedder's Rutgers bio HERE and Brown's bio on the Rutgers site HERE.

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The Any Given Saturday message board has a thread about the Patriot League next fall noting that, "League members have 8 games scheduled vs FBS opponents set for 2026. The schedule features every league member except Lehigh and Georgetown."

Patriot League FBS games
Lafayette-Uconn
Villanova-Louisville
Colgate-Central Michigan
Fordham-Coastal Carolina
Holy Cross-Miami (Ohio)
Richmond-NC State
Bucknell-Pitt
W&M-Duke

That sent me scurrying to check out another regional conference: 

NEC FBS Games
LIU-Kansas
LIU-Florida International
Central Connecticut-Toledo
Duquesne-Air Force
Duquesne-Washington State
Mercyhurst-New Mexico State
Mercyhurst-New Mexico
Mercyhurst-Western Kentucky
Robert Morris-Akron
Robert Morris-Buffalo
Wagner-James Madison
Wagner-Cal
Stonehill-UMass
Stonehill-Ohio

And that sent me scrambling to check out the Ancient Eight:

Ivy League FBS Games
None

New Hampshire, in case you are wondering, will play at Syracuse this fall.

Green Alert Take: I get it. If even one of those Patriot League or NEC teams wins one of those games it will be a big upset. But there's tremendous excitement for the players and their fans to at least have a chance. And for the record, the bet here if Dartmouth played UMass three times in the last half dozen years the Big Green would have won at least one of those games and quite possibly two. How cool would that have been?

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Several NCAA football rules could be changing. From a story posted on ESPN (LINK):

Division I football rules makers have proposed a one-year trial rule allowing a player disqualified for targeting for the first time to play in his team's next game regardless of which half the penalty was assessed, the NCAA announced Thursday.

And . . .

Under the Division I Football Rules Subcommittee's proposal, a player disqualified for targeting a second time during the season would sit out the first half of the next game. A third targeting ejection in the same season would cause the offending player to sit out the entire next game. 

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And finally, another proposal that would have brought a smile to the late, great Steve Ward, Dartmouth's longtime equipment manager who passed away several years ago:

The rules subcommittee proposed that players wear leg coverings from the top of their shoes to the bottom of their pants. Players would have to wear the same covering style and colors for that particular game.

And . . .

"The current look of the uniform is clearly not meeting the expectations of the college football community," (A.J. Edds, rules subcommittee chair and vice president of football administration for the Big Ten) said. "This will take a collective effort by administrators, coaches and officials to communicate expectations to players and equipment managers. This proposal, we believe, is definitive and gives us a chance for consistent enforcement across Division I football." 

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EXTRA POINT
Heading into Hanover shortly for the best of all reasons. We're picking up That Certain Dartmouth '14, who flew in on a red eye from Bryce Canyon (actually Cedar City) for a campus speaking engagement. The college is off the hook for a hotel room because she's be staying with us. Hooray!

Thursday, February 26, 2026

Check It Out


Veteran assistant coach Keith Clark, whose legerdemain annually turns the Dartmouth offensive line into a formidable unit, speaks with former Big Green protégés Jacob, John Paul and Michael Flores who run the Trench U offensive line camp near their Dallas-area home. From the description of the video featuring all three brothers:
Coach Clark pulls back the curtain on exactly what college coaches are looking for when they evaluate offensive linemen. The things that get you recruited. The things that get you passed over. And what high school athletes are missing that could cost them a scholarship.

And . . .

The #1 thing coaches look for in OL recruits (it's not what you think).

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Grayson Kline, a former Penn State tight end who spent the past two seasons as offensive quality control assistant at Dartmouth, has parlayed his time in Hanover into a full-time position as tight ends coach at Furman. Find a quick story HERE.

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Still another ex-Penn Stater who worked with tight ends in Hanover is in the news. Wendy Laurent, the former Dartmouth tight ends coach who added the title of assistant head coach in his final year under Sammy McCorkle, has been named the Bill Bidwell Coaching Fellow with the Arizona Cardinals for the second time. From a story out of Arizona (LINK):

After his time with the Cardinals in 2025, Laurent went on to coach at Ohio State as an assistant tight ends coach. Before that, he spent three seasons (2022-24) working with tight ends at Dartmouth College. He also served as a graduate assistant for his alma mater Penn State for two years (2020-21). Laurent got his coaching start with Buffalo as a grad assistant in 2019.

Laurent was introduced as tight ends coach at Old Dominion in January.

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EXTRA POINT
I received an email from a GM service a couple of days ago informing me that one tire on my EV was low on air. Given that I don't have WiFi on my car, that was kind of creepy.

It turned out the message was correct. The tire is supposed to be at 36 PSI, and it was at 24. Uh oh.

So I bundled up and headed outside to pump up the tire in our freezing garage. Unfortunately, when I pulled the pump off the valve I could barely hear a gentle psss that told me air was escaping. Not good.

Yesterday morning when I headed out to the garage the tire was at a woeful 4 PSI. Uh oh oh.

The local garage said they could take a look at the tire today if it would hold air long enough for the four-mile drive into town, so I dutifully pumped it up to 36 PSI yesterday afternoon and hoped for the best.

Here's the surprise. When I went out to check on the tire this morning it hadn't lost air. None. It's still at 36 PSI as I write this.

I'll be keeping an eye on the tire, but I have a suspicion I know what the problem was. For some reason, the tire in question did not have a cap on the valve and I suspect the valve core, the spring-loaded thingie in the middle of the valve, had a little ice or sand or some kind of grit that forced it just out of alignment. I think (hope) that the second time I filled the tire I dislodged whatever was causing the problem and now all is good.

Two things.

As I said, I'm going to keep a really close eye on that tire before I take the car very far from home. And . . .

I'm going to keep a cap on the valves of all four tires from now on.

Wednesday, February 25, 2026

Buddy Teevens Award Winner

Headline on the Cleveland Browns' website (LINK):
Andrew Berry wins NFL's 2026 Buddy Teevens Forward Progress Award
From the story:
The award, established in 2023, honors the life and legacy of Buddy Teevens, the former Dartmouth College head football coach who was a pioneering advocate for women in football. In 2018, Teevens made history by hiring Callie Brownson as the first full-time female Division I coach in college football history. Brownson later became the first woman to coach a position group during an NFL game with the Browns in 2020 and served as the Browns Chief of Staff and then Assistant Wide Receivers coach.

And . . .

Berry has channeled Teevens' philosophy into his own leadership. Since being named general manager in 2020, he has prioritized building a football operations department that reflects a wide range of perspectives. His approach has always focused on hiring the best, and this broad and intentional approach has led the organization to use the NFL Women's Forum as a pipeline for talent. Today, the Browns have the most women in team operations across the league.

Green Alert Take: The author of the piece missed an interesting anecdote. Berry actually played against Buddy Teevens three times as a four-year starting cornerback at Harvard before graduating in 2009.

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This excerpt from story out of Wyoming headlined, 5 defensive transfers to watch for Cowboys football, shows why former Dartmouth linebacker Teddy Gianaris made a smart decision choosing to grad transfer to Woming, where they intend to use him as an edge rusher (LINK):

Defensive end depth will be crucial for the Cowboys after they graduated Tyce Westland (43 tackles, 7½ tackles for loss, two sacks), Brayden Wilson (26 tackles, five tackles for loss, two sacks) and Chisom Ifeanyi (20 tackles, 2½ tackles for loss and 1½ sacks). Peter Eyabi (10 tackles, half a tackle for loss) transferred to Indiana State.

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Former Dartmouth tackle Delby Lemieux is one of the players written up in a piece from Ravens Wire headlined Ravens NFL draft rumors: Could Baltimore have interest in multiple offensive guards. Find the story HERE.

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A story on the 406 Sports site about Bobby Hauck's second stint at Montana headlined Like many coaches before him, Bobby Hauck's sequel didn't live up to original has a list of 12 FCS football coaches who had two separate tenures at a school. From the story (LINK):

Buddy Teevens at Dartmouth went from .540 (26-22-2) in stint No. 1 and was slightly down to .535 (91-79) in his return.

Green Alert Take: That's incredibly misleading. Left unsaid is that Teevens' winning percentage over his final 10 seasons was a glittering .710.

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EXTRA POINT
It's snowing again here this morning, but I'm not going to complain. We got off easy.

I've noted this here before, but if you are in Providence or Princeton or somewhere that got hit hard by snow and are still trying to free up your car or clear off the steps, don't go to Home Depot and grab the latest wild-looking, ergonomic shovel at the end of the aisle. Instead, go to the gardening section and grab a grain shovel. Preferably one with an aluminum scoop. Old-timers in these parts swear by them and I do as well. Curious? Click HERE.

Tuesday, February 24, 2026

More Lemieux

Excerpted from FCS Football Central on SI.com (LINK):
Projection:
Lemieux is a technically sound offensive lineman who will have to transition from offensive tackle to the interior of the offensive line. He excels in an inside zone scheme, where he uses his strength, lower-body power, and technique to create running lanes in congested areas.

He has a strong upside as an interior offensive lineman who could eventually become an adequate NFL starter, who will be brought in as a fringe roster or rotational prospect.

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When Tony Reno stepped down as Yale football coach just a week ago because of health issues, the school announced it would conduct a national search for his replacement. (LINK)

As one wag on the Yale Football Blog wrote after news broke that Lehigh's Kevin Cahill was returning to New Haven to succeed Reno, "My guess is the 'national search' never went any further than Pennsylvania."

Cahill, named the Eddie Robinson National FCS Coach of the Year after guiding the Mountain Hawks to an undefeated regular season last fall, spent 10 years under Reno at Yale, the final five as offensive coordinator and assistant head coach.

Find a Yale announcement of his hiring HERE.

The pull of Yale was strong per the Lehigh Valley's Morning Call, which noted (LINK):

It looked like Cahill was going to stay after he signed a contract extension after the end of the 2025 season, but things changed for him and Lehigh when Cahill’s friend, Tony Reno, stepped down as Yale’s coach last week, citing health reasons after 14 seasons that included 83 wins and five Ivy League titles.

More from the Call:

Cahill inherited a 2-9 program and after the growing pains of a 2-9 campaign in 2023, he led the Mountain Hawks to 9-4 and 12-1 seasons that included trips to the FCS playoffs. In 2024, Lehigh upset Richmond in the first round.

Last season, Lehigh was one of only two teams in the FCS who entered the playoffs undefeated, and the Mountain Hawks got as high as No. 3 in the national rankings during the 2025 season, but lost a 14-7 heartbreaker to Villanova in the second round after getting a first-round bye.

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An Opta Analyst piece that includes the following under the headline Programs to Never Qualify for FCS Playoffs is completely accurate, but a little unfair (LINK):
Ivy – Brown, Columbia, Cornell, Dartmouth, Penn, Princeton

Green Alert Take: That headline could just as easily have read:

Teams to make the FCS playoffs every year they were eligible: Yale, Harvard

Or . . .

Teams to miss FCS playoffs just once: Brown, Columbia, Cornell, Dartmouth, Penn, Princeton

EXTRA POINT
For those of you keeping score, we didn't get even a dusting here at our Vermont hillside home from yesterday's East Coast snowmageddon. We still have upwards of 18 inches down in our field so we didn't need it, thank you very much.

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.