Tag Archives: Football

Michaeles named new Colby head football coach

After turmoil, Colby has found resolve.

As reported earlier this year, allegations of sexual assault enveloped the Colby campus, especially after rumors surfaced that the accused were members of the football team. Ed Mestieri, a 23-year employee of the university and head coach for the past eight seasons, resigned for unspecified reasons as well.

Months later, Colby landed its newest coach. Press release is via Colby College Athletics.

WATERVILLE, Maine — After a national search that garnered more than 100 applicants from across the country, Jonathan Michaeles, an assistant coach for the Colby College football team the last eight years, was named as the new head football coach of the Mules on Wednesday. Continue reading

Linking Around the NESCAC | February 6

Welcome to Linking Around the NESCAC, your hub for daily links throughout the conference on the day that New England exploded from Super Bowl hangover.

And now, the links: Continue reading

Linking Around the NESCAC | February 2

Welcome to Linking Around the NESCAC, your hub for the top news around the conference. Here we go:

Men’s Basketball | Middlebury emerges as unlikely D-III powerhouse (via Sports Illustrated)

In 2008 Middlebury made its first NCAA tournament appearance in almost a century of fielding a basketball team. A year later the Panthers won their first New England Small College Athletic Conference (NESCAC) tournament title, the ultimate laurel in a league that has produced national champions in Amherst and Williams. In 2010 the Panthers reached the NCAA Regional finals; last season they made it to the Division III Final Four; and this season, again for the first time, they hit No. 1. An eight-week run atop the polls will end as a result of the team’s first loss of the season, by a point at Keene (N.H.) State on Tuesday. But Middlebury, 18-1, is still tracking an upward trajectory. “Every year there’s been improvement,” says Ryan Sharry, the Panthers’ 6-foot-8 forward and co-captain. “It’s pretty clear to me what’s next.”

Amherst and Williams had long dominated the NESCAC, playing the roles of what Middlebury coach Jeff Brown refers to as “North Carolina and Duke” in Division III’s ACC. “We were Clemson,” Brown says. “Now we’re striving to be North Carolina or Duke.”

Football | Recap the full list of NESCAC signees on NESCAC Insider

Ice Hockey | ECAC East/NESCAC picks: Feb. 3 (via USCHO.com)

Football | Hamilton alum and Giants receivers coach Sean Ryan traces his success to the Ivy Leagues (via New York Times)

In his most honest moments, the receivers coach Sean Ryan said Tuesday, even he never imagined he would see his charges break out the way they have. But then again, Ryan added, he never imagined he would already be seeking a second Super Bowl title, particularly because it was only six years ago that he was spending much of his time scouring high school scouting reports in search of the rarest of football prospects — the ones with grades good enough to get into Harvard.

“When there is a kid who is good enough that you want and has the grades to get in and you’re fighting for him with Yale? Now that’s challenging,” said Ryan, who came to the Giants in 2007 after serving as an assistant and the recruiting coordinator at Harvard. “The Ivy League doesn’t have all the hoopla of the N.F.L., but that doesn’t mean it isn’t serious.”

He added, “I think a lot of the skills I built there have helped me succeed in my job here.”

NESCAC Football Signing Day

Ascribing the national spectacle that is “Letter of Intent Day” to Division III athletics is a fruitless exercise. After all, no prospective Div. III athlete can technically “sign” with a school. Scholarships at this level do not exist.

Still, that doesn’t mean that recruits can’t announce their commitments, an event that occurred in waves yesterday.

Local and national websites alike have released the names of various high school athletes who intend — “intend” being the operative word, as nothing is set in stone until they actually enroll — to compete in the NESCAC.

NESCAC Insider has aggregated the lists for your convenience below, in addition to any relevant information about the recruit: Continue reading

Linking Around the NESCAC | February 2

Welcome to Linking Around the NESCAC on a cloudy New England Thursday after an uneventful Wednesday. But that won’t stop us. And now, the links:

Football | A phone call before all the offensive calls (via Press Herald)

BRUNSWICK – Sometime Sunday, before his real work begins, New York Giants offensive coordinator Kevin Gilbride will place a phone call to Maine.

Gilbride won’t be talking about how Eli Manning can avoid the pass rush of New England Patriots nose tackle Vince Wilfork, or how his receivers can get open for another Super Bowl-winning catch. Gilbride will want to know how the Bowdoin men’s basketball team did.

“The last two weekends, in the afternoon the phone is ringing and it’s Kevin,” said Tim Gilbride. “He’s asking ‘How’d it go this weekend?’ Both times it’s a couple of hours before his game.”

Men’s Basketball | Jumbos ride the Ferris wheel to wild victory (via Tufts Daily)

Freshman guard Ben Ferris was almost the goat on Tuesday. With 0.2 seconds left in regulation and Tufts leading 74−73, he was called for a loose−ball foul. But UMass Dartmouth made just one of two at the line, giving Ferris another chance and sending the game to overtime.

By the end of the extra period, Ferris was the hero. He stole two passes and sank four free throws in the final 10 seconds, leading the Jumbos to their most thrilling win of the season, 84−82. In the extra session, the Corsairs took an 82−78 lead with just two minutes left. But after sophomore guard Kwame Firempong sank a jumper to decrease the margin to two, Ferris pushed his game to a completely different level.

Ice Hockey | Surging Bowdoin coming of age (via Maine Hockey Journal)

In its second game of its season, back in November, Bowdoin traveled to Middlebury and got embarrassed, 7-1.

There was nothing nebulous about it. The Polar Bears gave up three goals in each of the first two periods, got outshot by a 2-to-1 margin and were forced to make peace with a very unfulfilling opening weekend.

Flash forward two months, practically to the day. In the rematch, it was Bowdoin scoring twice in each of the first two periods against Middlebury and holding a big edge in shots in a 5-0 home win.

What can we glean from that? Plenty.

Women’s Lacrosse | Preseason IWLCA poll released, 8 NESCAC teams in top 20 (via IWLCA)

Tweet of the Day (Not the NESCAC Edition):