Box Score WASHINGTON, D.C. – The 2010 Gallaudet
University football season came to a close on a cold Saturday night
under the lights at Hotchkiss Field before a crowd of 800 as the
Bison watched SUNY Maritime College celebrate an undefeated regular
season. Maritime, the Eastern Collegiate Football Conference (ECFC)
champions, scored the game-winning touchdown with under two minutes
left in regulation as the Privateers (10-0, 7-0 ECFC) won
21-14.
The Bison (5-5, 3-4 ECFC) were in position early in the fourth
quarter to take the lead over the Privateers but unfortunately
Gallaudet's final 15 minutes in its season turned into missed
opportunities. GU had four possessions that ended with a missed
field goal, punt, fumble and an interception. The Bison executed 17
plays in the fourth quarter for 39 yards.
Senior kicker Justin
Wilson (Carmichael, Calif.) lined up for a 27-yard
field goal with 13:17 left in regulation but his kick, which had
enough distance, was ruled no good. The Bison started their next
two drives near midfield but those drives ended up with no points
and gave the ball back to Maritime. The Bison fumble at midfield
with 5:42 left in the game proved to be the difference. The
Privateers marched 47 yards on seven plays on the game-winning
drive. Junior fullback Jamie Spanopoulos plunged into the end zone
from four yards out with 1:58 left.
Maritime becomes the first undefeated champion in the two-year
history of the ECFC. The Privateers will await the official
announcement of the NCAA Division III tournament field to see if
their season will continue with a postseason run.
"I am really proud of our team to finish undefeated. To be able
to make it through our conference [undefeated], and we have had
some battles, is tough," said Maritime coach Clayton
Kendrick-Holmes. "It has been a special season."
Before the start of the game this evening the Gallaudet
University athletics department and the football program presented
a plaque to Coach Kendrick-Holmes to honor him for his impending
deployment to Afghanistan as a U.S. Navy officer upon the
completion of the season. Kendrick-Holmes' story has grabbed
national attention as ESPN and CBS Sports filmed the
Gallaudet-Maritime game this evening for future stories on the
Privateer coach.
GU started the game off on the right foot as the Bison received
the opening kick-off and scored a touchdown 1:31 into the first
quarter. Senior quarterback Jimmy
Gardner (St. Augustine, Fla.) tossed a 61-yard
touchdown pass to sophomore wide receiver Ryne
Worsham (Chicago, Ill.). Wilson's extra-point attempt
failed.
Gallaudet coach Chuck Goldstein rolled the dice on
the ensuing kick-off and elected for an onsides kick that the Bison
recovered. The next play would doom the Bison for the remainder of
the game and scrap their game plan. Gardner was brought down for a
five-yard loss by sophomore linebacker Keith Barnes (nine tackles)
and hobbled off with a knee injury and would not return. Sophomore
back-up Anthony
Palmer (Unadilla, N.Y.) was thrust into the game where
he finished under center for the Bison. Palmer completed 5-of-13
passes for 74 yards and one interception.
The Bison held the 6-0 lead until early in the second quarter
when sophomore quarterback Joe Dickey busted loose for 21 yards and
the touchdown. Dickey finished the game with a game-high 98 yards
on the ground on 14 carries and 0-for-9 passing.
GU punted twice in the second quarter while Maritime scored
touchdowns on 2-of-3 possessions. The last possession for the
Privateers came later in the first half and ended with a Fritz Jean
30-yard touchdown run down the sideline to give Maritime a 14-6
lead at the break.
The Bison tied the game midway through the third quarter when
sophomore Phillip
Hayes (Baton Rouge, La.) scored from nine yards out.
The touchdown ended an 8-play, 80-yard drive that took 4:20 off the
clock. Gallaudet went for the two-point conversion to tie the game.
Palmer received the ball under center and handed it off to senior
running back Cole
Johnson (Eden Prairie, Minn.) who threw the ball to a
wide-open Worsham in the right corner to knot the game at 14.
Worsham finished the game with a career-high 149 yards, his third
100-yard receiving game this year.
Maritime held the Bison rushing attack to their lowest total of
the year (75 yards on 37 carries). Hayes led the team with 28 yards
on seven carries. The 75 yards on the ground is the lowest
Gallaudet has rushed for since November 1, 2008, when it lost 38-7
to Mount Ida College.
The Privateers, the second leading rushing team in the ECFC ahead
of Gallaudet and behind Norwich, ran for 275 yards on 52 attempts.
Gallaudet surrendered 200 plus rushing yards for the third time
this year and the 275 total is the second highest against the Bison
defense. Maritime threw for 24 yards on a Tyler Trodden pass in the
second quarter. The passing total is the lowest the Bison defense
has surrendered this season and the lowest since October 10, 2009,
against Norwich University.
Sophomore linebacker Tom Pangia
(Hammonton, N.J.) tallied a game-high 12 tackles in the loss for
the Bison. Sophomore defensive back Shelby Bean
(Arvada, Colo.) made seven tackles, 1.5 tackles for a loss of three
yards. Sophomore linebacker Pat Lasher made 11 tackles to lead the
Privateers.
"It was an exciting season," said Goldstein, who completed his
first year at the helm and second with the program. "It was tough
to watch Maritime celebrate a perfect regular-season because that
easily could had been us. We lost five games by 25 combined points.
All of our losses were by eight points or less. That's one score.
We need to learn from those games and start working on the 2011
season."
This was the last game for the Bison seniors who are out of
eligibility including linebacker Joshua
Doudt (Medina, Ohio), Wilson, Gardner, Johnson,
linebacker Dmitry
Rossoshansky (Chicago, Ill.), defensive lineman
Ricky
Bailey (Willingboro, N.J.) and lineman Michel
Daze' (Frederick, Md.).
"Our senior class helped to build a strong foundation for our
future," said Goldstein. "Teams are not going to take us lightly
moving forward."