A localized power outage last night has our internet down. If it comes back up before we head out for a Fourth of July weekend at the lake, a post will go up. Stay tuned.
BW
A localized power outage last night has our internet down. If it comes back up before we head out for a Fourth of July weekend at the lake, a post will go up. Stay tuned.
BW
Quick notes from Dartmouth's first two 2026 opponents, but first . . .
Huge congrats to good friend Mike Mahoney, moving on from his longtime role as director of athletic communications at Penn to become Senior Associate Commissioner of the Atlantic 10. (LINK)
Green Alert Take: That's a huge loss for the Ivy League, and a huge win for the A-10.
Green Alert Take II: Sure would have been great to see the New Hampshire native return as the athletic communications director at Dartmouth, where he earned a degree in English and then spent six years learning the SID business under Kathy Slattery.
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Per a Lehigh release, the Big Green's Sept. 19 opener at Goodman Stadium will be a noon kickoff. The theme for the Mountain Hawks' fourth game the season will be Family Weekend.
Green Alert Take: The original plan had been an O-Dark-30 start for a game-day drive from Vermont down to the Lehigh Valley, but the early kickoff more likely means a Friday overnight with relatives about an hour east of Bethlehem.
For the record, Dartmouth's last three games against Lehigh were all in Hanover. The Big Green last visited Bethlehem on Sept. 28, 1996, coming away with a 21-14 win before 11,325 at Goodman.
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FCS Football Central on SI has a piece headlined 2026 CAA Football Preview: Contenders, Sleepers, & Key Storylines that offers a look at Week 2 opponent Monmouth HERE.
The overview lists the Hawks with transfers from Syracuse, Temple, UMass, Delaware, Richmond, Penn, Lafayette (2), Holy Cross and Charleston Southern and includes this:
Returning Significant Contributors (OFF): 6
Returning Significant Contributors (DEF): 9
Projected Returning Significant Contributors by position:
- QB (1)
- RB (1)
- WR (2)
- TE (1)
- OL (1)
- DT (3)
- EDGE (1)
- LB (3)
- S (1)
- CB (1)
In case you were wondering (which I was ;-), here's an explanation of Returning Significant Contributor from the site:
"Returning players who played over 200 snaps last season were labeled as returning significant contributors. An exception was made for players who suffered season-ending injuries, who would have been starters or major contributors if they were healthy."
Green Alert Take: The Dartmouth statistics page does not include snaps so I can't work up similar numbers for the Big Green. How significant the "Returning Significant Contributors" are is up for debate, but it would be interesting to see how the numbers break down for Dartmouth and the other Ivies if FCS Football Central on SI follows through and does a breakdown of Ancient Eight teams.
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Graduate transfer corner Patrick Campbell '26 gets a mention in a Virginia Cavaliers on SI piece headlined Ranking Virginia football's 3 deepest position groups heading into 2026. Per the story, Campbell is joining the second-deepest room on the roster. From the posting (LINK):
After suffering at the cornerback position last season . . . the team added Patrick Campbell from Dartmouth, Omillio Agard from Wisconsin, Justin Ross from Navy, and Jacobie Henderson from Rutgers in January.
This talented group of newcomers joins Donavon Platt, Jam Jackson, Ja'Maric Morris, and Josiah Persinger to form one of the absolute deepest cornerback groups in the conference heading into 2026. . . . .Platt, Jackson, Henderson, and Agard are probably the top four, but we've been hearing great things about Morris and Campbell this offseason as well.
Ranked as the third-deepest room on the UVa team is defensive end, where the Cavaliers have added two more Ivy League products. Joining the team for 2026 are Yale's Ezekiel Larry and Columbia's Justin Townsend.
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EXTRA POINT#
Speaking of former Dartmouth players in the pros, on Monday we posted a link to a video with Flo Orimolade '17 talking about his anticipated return to the Calgary Stampeders after an Achilles tear last September. Here's what he had to say after his first game back:
| Click HERE to watch the interview. |
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Dartmouth has begun the search for what used to be called a sports information director. Find the job listing HERE.
Green Alert Take: Let's hope they get someone onboard before long so we can learn a little more about the first-year players who are reporting next month, and check out an updated 2026 roster. And so things like program's official website's recruiting map – which includes four coaches no longer with the program – will be updated.
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Incredibly sad news out of Monmouth University, Dartmouth's opponent in its Sept. 26 home opener. Louis DiRienzo Jr., introduced during the offseason as the team's first-year defensive coordinator, has passed away unexpectedly at age 34. The university has a release HERE.
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Last Sunday you read in this space about Ohio State football offering a roster spot to a safety whose Baylor School (Tennessee) teammate and very close friend just so happens to be the top running back prospect OSU is recruiting. The gist was that the Buckeyes were offering the former as a way to lure the latter to Columbus.
A poster on Xwitter who purports to have inside information believes that, instead of heading for the Big Ten powerhouse, the player is actually headed this way (LINK):
Per sources: Jordan Darren Djila has committed to Dartmouth. The Ivy League school has strong ties with Baylor. Education is more important to his family than football.
Find the 247Sports page for the player in question HERE.
Green Alert Take: The player has not posted anything about choosing his college destination and college coaches are not allowed to discuss his recruitment by NCAA rule, so your guess is as good as mine until the player goes public with his decision.
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Speaking of Ohio State, there's a story under the headline Another school is copying our tactics to try and steal away a very good player that has me gritting my teeth. Not about what is in the story, but about the headline.
Although it's commonly used, the expression "try and," is one of my peccadilloes. It should be "try to steal away," not "try and steal away." One of my favorite fiction authors uses "try and" all the time, and it is fingernails on a chalkboard for me.
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EXTRA POINT
Did you know that on this day in 1963 the United States Postal Service introduced the Zone Improvement Plan? You may know it better as the ZIP Code. Something I did not know: The first three digits in your ZIP Code (in my case 050) indicate the part of the country where the mail is headed, and the final two numbers (in my case 85) the specific post office or delivery zone.
And just because . . .
The first two numbers of the +4 identify a specific group of streets or block, and the second two the side of the street, a particular building, or in my case, our post office.
Now you know. ;-)
The Premier Lacrosse League, which was founded in 2018 by brothers Mike and Paul Rabil, has raised $100 million in Series E financing.
Mike Rabil, a former Dartmouth football player and veteran entrepreneur, would not disclose the league’s valuation following the latest round, but he said its value has increased since the PLL’s Series D round in 2022. Mike Rabil serves as PLL’s CEO, while Paul Rabil is its president. Paul Rabil was an All-American lacrosse player at Johns Hopkins University and a former star in the PLL and Major League Lacrosse, which the PLL merged with in 2020.
“I believe in building something that outlasts me, and Paul does, as well,” Mike Rabil said. “How do you build a forever brand? If you look at the top four sports leagues, most of them have been around for 100 years-plus. The PLL may be very successful when Paul and I are no longer on this Earth, so we need to think long-term."
Rabil '06 was a 6-foot-2, 275-pound defensive tackle and team captain for Buddy Teevens II. Find his old Dartmouth bio HERE.
Green Alert Take: True story. Interviewing Mike Rabil when he played, I asked about his dreams for the future. He spoke about lofty entrepreneurial goals, and then quietly added he would like some day to be successful enough to settle down and run a small restaurant honoring his Lebanese heritage. I think he'll have that opportunity if he still wants it. ;-)
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Mike Rabil's former football teammate Ryan Danehy '06, has been named offensive coordinator for the Ohio State lacrosse team. From a release out of Columbus (LINK):
A native of Billerica, Mass., Danehy graduated from Dartmouth in 2006. A four-year starter for the Big Green lacrosse team, he posted 84 points (73g-11a), including four (3g-1a) in the program's first NCAA tournament appearance against Syracuse in 2003. He also was a long snapper for the football program.
Danehy was a three-year letterwinner on the gridiron.
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The preseason FCS top 20 from the Sporting News College Football Magazine courtesy of a faithful BGA reader features two Dartmouth opponents:
1. Montana State
2. South Dakota State
3. Montana
4. North Dakota
5. Illinois State
6. Villanova
7. Tarleton State
8. Rhode Island
9. South Dakota
10. UC Davis
11. Youngstown State
12. Lehigh
13. Stephen Austin
14. Yale
15. Tennessee Tech
16. Abilene Christian
17. Southeastern Louisiana
18. Lamar
19. Austin Peay
20. South Carolina State
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An entity called Stacker, which describes itself as "a team of journalists, technologists, and storytellers on a mission to empower the world's publishers and help brands build lasting authority through earned reach," has rated what it calls the 50 best colleges in the US, based on data. The fine print suggests that data includes "academics, admissions, finances, and student life." Your mileage may vary, but Dartmouth people can't complain about being ranked No. 5 in the nation. Find the story HERE.
The Top-10
1 MIT
2 Yale
3 Stanford
4 Harvard
5 Dartmouth
6 Columbia
7 Vanderbilt
8 Princeton
9 Cal Tech
10 Rice
Also . . .
11 Brown
12 Penn
21 Cornell
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| Click HERE to watch interview. |
Jones said his guidance counselor encouraged him to consider the long-term value of an Ivy League education. Cass Tech head football coach Marvin Rushing also helped him navigate recruiting and evaluate which university would support his development as both an athlete and student.Their guidance pushed Jones to look beyond the excitement of an athletic offer and consider the education, financial support and professional opportunities attached to each school.Jones said Cass Tech staff members told him he is the school’s first athlete to attend an Ivy League institution. He sees the distinction as an opportunity to establish a path for students coming behind him.“It means a lot to build that kind of status and put a light on my school so that other kids can come after me and do the same thing,” Jones said.
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Grayson Saunier – DartmouthEan Rodrigue – NichollsJustin Lamson – Montana StateJerry Kaminski – North DakotaNathan Hayes – North Dakota StateChris Parson – Austin PeayJames Murphy – BrownBraxton Thomas – North Carolina A&TAndrew Body – Alabama StateCash McCollum – Weber StateKyle Lowe – SE Louisiana
While increasing from seven to 10 football members in the last two years, the PL hasn’t just sought out adding any program to bolster the numbers, it’s added the right teams – bolstering with rivalry and quality academic institutions while not losing geographical continuity of the membership.
That seven of the 10 teams have appeared in the playoffs since 2022 reflects how the league profile is strong. Enough so that the Patriot League is poised to be one of the deeper conferences in the FCS and have multiple playoff qualifiers regularly.
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Illinois' News-Gazette has a piece headlined Illini Legends, Lists & Lore: Edward Hall that details the arrival of the Dartmouth alum as the school's first director of athletics and third head football coach on this date in 1892. (LINK)
The story notes that after a successful run at Illinois, Hall stepped down to attend ...
Harvard University’s law school, earning an undergraduate Bachelor of Law degree. He was admitted to the Pennsylvania bar in 1896 and briefly practiced law in Scranton, Pa. Two years later, he moved to Boston and became a partner at the firm of Powers, Hall & Jones. Hall served as vice president of the New England Telephone and Telegraph Company from 1913-1917. During World War I, he served as business director of the Student Army Training. . . . In 1919, Hall became vice president of the American Telephone and Telegraph Company (AT&T) in New York City. He retired in 1930 at the age of 60.
And . . .
For 27 years, Hall also stayed involved with college athletics as a member of the national football rules committee, eventually replacing Walter Camp in 1906 as director of that governing body. After a rash of fatalities in 1905, the collegiate game came under fire from administrators and President Theodore Roosevelt. That hastened guidelines for proper conduct and the formation of the National Collegiate Athletic Association. Many revered Hall as the “savior” of the game.
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Ty Pennington (Northern Arizona)Justin Lamson (Montana State)DJ Williams (Southern Illinois)Grayson Saunier (Dartmouth)Jordan Cooke (Idaho State)Chase Mason (South Dakota State)
Here's what the writeup included about Saunier:
Height: 6021
Weight: 209 lbs.
2025 Stats: 183-of-279 passes for 2,143 passing yards, 9 passing TDs, 7 INTs, 413 rushing yards, 11 rushing TDs (10 games)
Strengths
• Good overall athlete
• Quick throwing motion
• Effective on rollouts
• Displays toughness as a passer and runner
• Good anticipatory thrower
The story includes six more quarterbacks in the "Sleeper QB Prospects" category, and Brown's James Murphy is included on that list.
Find the full story HERE.
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HERO Sports continues its countdown to the season with the "best" player wearing the uniform bearing the number of the days until the first FCS game, and a seventh Ivy Leaguer (and eighth Dartmouth opponent) makes the cut. The outlet's chosen No. 64 is 6-foot-3, 290-pound Princeton offensive lineman Barrett Eddlemon.
Here's the list of Ivy Leaguers and Big Green opponents recognized to date:
96: Yale DT Jaylin Tate
86: Cornell TE Ryder Kurtz
85: Columbia WR Titus Evans
79: Lehigh OL Aidan Palmer
77: Harvard OL Spencer Doan
75: Penn OL Luke Sacchetti
71: Harvard OL Thomas O'Brien
64: Princeton OL Barrett Eddlemon
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