A new addition to Dartmouth's list of Transfer Portal entries is freshman quarterback Logan Klitsch:
I have entered myself into the transfer portal with 4 years of eligibility left pic.twitter.com/nxcKRDKsNX
— Logan Klitsch (@LoganKlitsch1) January 4, 2023
Dartmouth has a league-high 15 players in the portal (see below) but Klitsch is the only non-senior entry. Last year wide receiver Jamal Cooney was the lone non-senior to enter the portal and he wound up returning.
Portal entries by Ivy League school per Twitter and unofficial sources:
Dartmouth 15
Harvard 14
Penn 12
Brown 11
Columbia 6
Princeton 5
Yale 4
Cornell 3
Here's how many portal entries there are among Dartmouth's nonconference opponents for 2023:
Colgate 11
Lehigh 11
New Hampshire 2
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Here are the Ivy League players who report having found new homes via the portal and their destinations. Some would have had the opportunity to return next as COVID super seniors if they postponed graduation:
DARTMOUTH
Senior defensive lineman Shane Cokes to Colorado
Senior defensive back Tyron Herring to Delaware
Senior defensive back Robert Crockett III to Bryant
BROWN
Senior DL Cam Gagnon to Villanova
COLUMBIA
Senior kicker Alex Felkins to Penn State (PWO)
HARVARD
Senior defensive back Alex Washington to Boston College
Senior LB Jake Brown to Monmouth
PENN
Senior offensive lineman Ben Hoitink to Duke
Senior punter Benjamin Krimm to Note Dame
Senior defensive lineman Jake Heimlicher to UCLA
Senior offensive lineman Trevor Radosevich to Cincinatti
Senior linebacker Garrett Morris to Samford
Senior wide receiver Rory Starkey to Samford
YALE
Senior offensive lineman Nick Gargiulo to South Carolina
Editor's Note: Because official portal information is unavailable to the public, information posted here was compiled via Internet search of Twitter and other sources. Additions and corrections welcomed.
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EXTRA POINT
With three months to go until the start of spring football practice I figured this was as good a time as any to finally erase the dry markers on the 90/120-day calendar on the office wall here at the BGA World Headquarters. No need anymore to know that Oct. 29 was the Homecoming game against Harvard or that the deadline for a freelance story was Sept. 27.
Using toothpaste, paper towels, water and a lot of elbow grease I finally got the at-a-glance calendar cleared off and was back at the keyboard when I looked to my left and noticed my beautiful National Parks calendar was still showing December.
Probably like you, as far back as September we periodically received give-away 2023 calendars from this organization or that looking for contributions. Because I strongly believe that kind of unsolicited solicitation is wasteful and should not be encouraged, those calendars and mailing labels and greeting cards and the like almost never make it out of the post office.
Surely, I thought, there would be a beautiful new calendar under the tree. There's one every year. Turns out I thought wrong.
But not to worry. Now not only can I pick out my own calendar but it will probably be half off. Come to think of it, why would you ever buy a calendar at full price when a week into the new year you can buy one for a fraction of the cost you would pay before Christmas?