Football vs Wilkes - Digital Program

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vs. FDU-FLORHAM

at MISERICORDIA

OCT 1

at WIDENER

NOV 5

SEPT 24

vs. ALVERNIA

OCT 29

at LYCOMING

SEPT 17

vs. SALISBURY

OCT 22

at KING’S (PA)

SEPT 10

at ST. VINCENT

OCT 15

OCT 8

SEPT 3

TABLE OF CONTENTS

vs. DELAWARE VALLEY

vs. WILKES

THIS IS STEVENSON......................... 2-3

WILKES’ ROSTER......................... 20-21

ACADEMIC SUPPORT.......................... 4

ABOUT THE MAC............................... 22

CAREER SERVICES.............................. 4

ALL-TIME RESULTS............................ 24

ADMINISTRATION............................... 5

MAC ALL-CONFERENCE.................... 25

HEAD COACH ED HOTTLE................... 6

RECORD BOOK............................26-27

ASSISTANT COACHES......................7-9

MUSTANG STADIUM.......................... 28

GAME PREVIEW............................ 10-11

ATHLETIC FACILITIES....................... 29

FEATURE STORY........................... 12-13

MEMORABLE MOMENTS............... 30-31

STATISTICAL COMPARISON...............14

HALLOWED GROUNDS................. 32-33

AROUND THE MAC.............................15

MUSTANGS GAMEDAY..................34-35

2021 STEVENSON ROSTER............ 16-17

SOCIAL MEDIA & NETWORKS........... 36

TWO DEEPS.................................. 18-19

GoMustangSports

@GoMustangSports @SUMustangFB

GoMustangSports

StevensonMustangs

WWW.GOMUSTANGSPORTS.COM


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THIS IS

STEVENSON UNIVERSITY

As Maryland’s third-largest independent university, Stevenson serves more than 4,000 students pursuing bachelor’s, master’s, and adult undergraduate degrees in the classroom and online. Founded in 1947 as Villa Julie College, the University is committed to providing a career-focused education and to offering programs that ensure our students’ success in an increasingly dynamic job market. TWO DISTINCTIVE CAMPUSES

Mustang Stadium, where football is played.

knowledge and skills that they can apply to

The University’s original campus, the

The new sprawling Owings Mills East complex

not just their first job or graduate course but

60-acre wooded Greenspring Campus in

includes a field hockey surace with surronding

also carry with them throughout their lives.

Stevenson, Md., is surrounded by horse farms

track, grass fields for soccer and baseball/

and estate homes yet is just 12 miles from

softball fields at Stevenson’s newest athletics

This promise is made explicit through

downtown Baltimore. Home to Stevenson’s

complex. Adjacent to the Owings Mills Campus

the Career ArchitectureSM model, which

modern science laboratories, video and

is the University Owings Mills North campus.

carefully mentors students through a process

art studios, art gallery, 350-seat theatre,

The School of Design opened at the Owings

of learning who they are within a framework

meditation center, and the University Archives,

Mills North Campus in time for the fall 2013

of theory, practice, and mentoring. Stevenson

the Greenspring Campus is an academic and

semester. The Kevin J. Manning Academic

has historically high job and graduate school

cultural hub of the University community.

Center, housing the School of the Sciences,

placement rates for its students, helping

opened in the fall of 2016.

them find success by starting their careers or

The ever-evolving Owings Mills Campus offers 13 residence halls, both suite- and apartment-style; a student community center;

by entering graduate school for continuing STEVENSON IS CAREER-FOCUSED

their education. In 2013, the Maryland Career

a contemporary dining complex; the Brown

The University imbues its emphasis on

Development Association (MCDA) recognized

School of Business and Leadership; the Francis

career throughout the educational experience,

the impact of the Career Architecture process

X. Pugh Mock Trial Courtroom; and the Office

from coursework to experiential learning. In

by awarding Stevenson with its annual MCDA

of Career Services. The Owings Mills Campus

addition to providing students with a quality

Organizational Career Planning Award. This

also includes the Caves Sports and Wellness

liberal arts education, the University also stays

award recognizes an institution that has

Center, which features a 60,000-square-foot

true to its tagline, “Imagine Your Future. Design

developed an excellent program for career

gymnasium, and the University’s 3,500-seat

Your Career.” Stevenson graduates gain the

development within the organization.


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STEVENSON SUPERLATIVES Careers: Based on a recent survey by the University, 91 percent of respondents from both traditional undergraduate and graduate and professional programs reported they were employed, attending graduate school, or both within six months of graduation.

BACHELOR’S DEGREE PROGRAMS Accounting Applied Mathematics Biochemistry Biology Business Administration Business Communication Business Information Systems Chemistry Computer Information Systems Criminal Justice Digital Marketing Early Childhood Education Elementary Education: Liberal Arts and Technology English Language and Literature Fashion Design Fashion Merchandising Film and Moving Image Human Services Interdisciplinary Studies Medical Laboratory Science Middle School Education: Liberal Arts and Technology Nursing Paralegal Studies Psychology Public History Theatre and Media Performance Visual Communication Design

Outreach: Stevenson’s Baltimore Speakers Series has brought more than 50 acclaimed world cultural, political, and intellectual leaders to Maryland since 2006. Support: Stevenson received nearly $2 million in grants, gifts, and awards in 2016-2017 to support key priorities of the University. Scholarship: Since 2010, Stevenson faculty members have produced 126 creative, scholarly, and other works. Nursing: During the past three years, our

STEVENSON CORE VALUES • EXCELLENCE • COMMUNITY • LEARNING • INTEGRITY

PRE-PROFESSIONAL PROGRAMS Pre- Dentistry Pre-Law Pre- Medicine Pre-Pharmacy Pre-Physical Therapy Pre-Veterinary Medicine

STEVENSON ONLINE With courses offered in the classroom and online, the School of Graduate and Professional Studies provides flexibility and convenience for adult students seeking to advance their careers by completing an accelerated bachelor’s or master’s degree. ADULT UNDERGRADUATE DEGREE PROGRAMS Business Administration Business Communication Business Information Systems Computer Information Systems Criminal Justice (online) Interdisciplinary Studies Nursing: RN to BS (onsite or online) Nursing: RN to MS (onsite or online) Paralegal Studies MASTER’S DEGREE PROGRAMS Business and Technology Management (onsite and online) Cyber Forensics Forensic Science (onsite) Forensic Studies (offering six tracks and an online option) Healthcare Management Master of Arts in Teaching Nursing (online with concentrations in Nursing Education and Nursing Leadership/Management)

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ACADEMIC SUPPORT

The Office of Academic Support Services provides students with strategies and free services that strengthen academic performance, enhance student satisfaction, and will lead to increased persistence to graduation. The office is located in Garrison Hall South on the Owings Mills campus. ACADEMIC ADVISING is a free support

One of the great strengths of the

The DISABILITY SERVICES OFFICE, ensures

service available to all degree-seeking

University, The Academic Link connects

that students who self-identify as having

students. Advisors can assist with a wide

students to a wide array of accessible academic

documented disabilities and is registered with

range of academic matters from selecting a

support services and innovative programs.

Disability Services, receive accommodations

major to planning for graduate school. The

These connections help students in their

to ensure academic success. The office assists

Office of Student Success provides services

pursuit of success and independent learning

with students with individual needs, assisting

and resources to students, faculty, and staff

as they achieve their academic and career

faculty and staff in providing accommodations.

that will strengthen academic performance,

goals.

enhance student satisfaction, and improve student retention.

The FIRST-YEAR EXPERIENCE assists first-year students in making a smooth

The ACADEMIC LINK, was established to

transition into Stevenson University. The

support Stevenson University’s commitment to

mission of the office is to help students achieve

cultivating a rich learning environment where

academic success while also helping to ensure

students thrive. This student-oriented center

that students are satisfied with their choice

offers peer and professional tutoring. Tutoring

to attend Stevenson. Often, the transition to

is free to students, and tutors, certified by the

college can be an overwhelming one, coupled

College Reading and Learning Association, are

with so many new experiences (new faces,

trained to help students develop effective study

new freedom, new schedule, new living

strategies, increase understanding of course

environment, etc.)

content and become independent learners.


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ADMINISTRATION ELIOTT HIRSHMAN, PH.D.

BRETT ADAMS

PRESIDENT

DIRECTOR OF ATHLETICS

Stevenson welcomed its seventh president, Elliot Hirshman, Ph.D., on July 3, 2017. Hirshman joined the University after serving as president of San Diego State University (SDSU) since 2011. Under President Hirshman’s leadership, SDSU implemented an integrated budget and financial strategy; raised more than $800 million in private philanthropy for scholarships and new initiatives and programs; and established and endowed its Honors College. Service Dr. Hirshman is a member of the NCAA Board of Directors and former chairman of the Mountain West Conference Board. He is president of the SDSU Research Foundation Board and a member of the university’s Campanile Foundation Board. Dr. Hirshman co-chaired the Chancellor’s Task Force for a Sustainable Financial Model for The California State University system. He also serves on the boards of the San Diego Economic Development Corporation and the San Diego Regional Chamber of Commerce. Prior Experience Prior to Dr. Hirshman’s appointment at SDSU, he served as provost and senior vice president for Academic Affairs at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County. He also had been chief research officer at the George Washington University and chaired the Department of Psychology there and at the University of Colorado at Denver. He began his academic career, rising to the rank of full professor, at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Academic Background Dr. Hirshman earned his bachelor’s degree summa cum laude in economics and mathematics from Yale and his master’s degree and Ph.D. in cognitive psychology from UCLA. He is a fellow of the American Psychological Association. His research and teaching focus on the psychopharmacology of human cognition, using an interdisciplinary approach that involves collaboration among psychologists, medical doctors and statisticians. Dr. Hirshman has served as associate editor of the Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory & Cognition and Psychonomic Bulletin & Review. Family Dr. Hirshman is married to Jeri Hirshman. Their daughter, Wendy, graduated from Muhlenberg College and works for George Mason Mortgage, LLC. Their son, Nathan, is a student at the Duke University School of Medicine.

The first full-time Athletic Director in Stevenson’s (formerly known as Villa Julie College) history, Adams’ arrival coincided with the Mustangs’ leap to NCAA Division III at the start of the 1994-95 academic year. That year, Adams inherited an 8-team department, quickly added three sports, and subsequently oversaw the 11-sport department and committed himself to growth in order to provide students with the opportunity to compete. Since then, Stevenson has added 18 more sports and now boasts 29 intercollegiate teams with the addition of football (2011), women’s ice hockey (2012-13), men’s and women’s swimming (2014-15), women’s beach volleyball (2015-16), men’s ice hockey (2016-17), acrobatics & tumbling (2022), and most recently men’s beach volleyball (fall 2022). The first ten years, the University athletic department operated as an independent playing the toughest teams in the region to try and acquire an at-large bid to the NCAA tournament. In 2000, the women’s soccer team received the school’s first NCAA bid and advanced to the “sweet sixteen.” In order for the department to continue their progressive advancement in athletics, Adams played a major role in launching the North Eastern Athletic Conference (NEAC), serving as the first chairman of the Athletic Directors’ Committee and as the Executive Committee’s chairman from 2004-06. In its three years in the conference, Stevenson won the conference’s President’s Cup all three seasons. Adams’ men’s basketball team that he coached in 1995-96 was the first men’s team at SU to be selected to the NCAA tournament receiving an at-large bid and advancing to the second round. His 1996-97 team became the first SU team to record backto-back NCAA bids as they won the automatic bid that winter. In addition, Adams spearheaded the Mustangs’ move from the North Eastern Athletic Conference (2004-07) and the Capital Athletic Conference (2007-11) to its current membership in the Middle Atlantic Conferences where Adams served as the Chair of the Athletic Directors Board from 2018-2021. He also was instrumental in the founding of the Continental Volleyball Conference for the men’s volleyball team, the Colonial Hockey Conference (CHC) for women’s ice hockey, and the United Collegiate Hockey Conference (UCHC) for both men’s and women’s ice hockey. In five seasons in the CAC, the Mustangs won conference championships in men’s lacrosse (2010), women’s soccer (2010) and men’s golf (2011). In the CHC and in the CVC, the Mustangs earned conference championships both in 2016. Overall, under Adams’ direction, the Mustangs have earned 45 NCAA Tournament invitations including several “Elite Eight” bids, four “Final Four” appearances (three in men’s lacrosse 2009, 2010, 2012, and in one men’s indoor volleyball 2016), and one National Championship (men’s lacrosse 2013). The Mustangs also boast an individual national champion with Patrick Watson winning the 2019 NCAA Division III Cross Country Championships.

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HEAD COACH ED HOTTLE HEAD COACH

The first head coach in program history, Hottle returns for his 12th season at Stevenson in 2022. In 11 years, Hottle has built the Mustangs into a contender on a regional and national level. Stevenson extended its playoff streak to seven consecutive seasons in 2021, overcoming an 0-5 start by rattling off five consecutive victories to round out the regular season. In 2016, Stevenson won its first eight games and captured its first Middle Atlantic Conference championship with a 8-1 conference record. The Mustangs appeared in the NCAA field for the first time and finished 9-2 overall. Hottle was named the ECAC Division III South and MAC Coach of the Year. Stevenson finished the year ranked No. 20 in the final D3football.com poll and No. 22 in the final AFCA poll, while reaching as high as No. 12 during the season. In addition, senior Austin Tennessee became the program’s first All-American as a consensus First Team selection, and was invited to rookie minicamp by the Minnesota Vikings. Hottle has guided the Mustangs to five straight postseason appearances, including bowl victories in 2014 and 2015. In 2018, the Mustangs qualified for the Centennial-MAC Bowl

THE ED HOTTLE FILE BIRTHDATE HOMETOWN WIFE CHILDREN ALMA MATER

Oct. 25, 1972 Alexandria, Va. Ashley Madalynn, Wyatt, Cole, Tucker Frostburg State ’99

ED HOTTLE YEAR-BY-YEAR RECORD ASSISTANT COACH 1999 Frostburg State 2000 Frostburg State 2001 Denison 2002 Wesley 2003 Wesley 2004 Wesley HEAD COACH 2007 Gallaudet 2008 Gallaudet 2009 Gallaudet 2011 Stevenson 2012 Stevenson 2013 Stevenson 2014 Stevenson 2015 Stevenson 2016 Stevenson 2017 Stevenson 2018 Stevenson 2019 Stevenson 2020* Stevenson 2021 Stevenson Career

8-3 4-6 2-8 5-5 6-4 8-2

ACFC Champions

2-6 Resumed NCAA D-III status 1-8 6-4 ECFC Coach of the Year 2-8 Inaugural Season 2-8 4-6 8-3 ECAC Southeast Bowl Champions 9-2 Centennial-MAC Bowl Champions 9-2 NCAA 1st Round, MAC Champions 6-5 ECAC Lynah Bowl 8-3 Centennial-MAC Bowl 8-3 Centennial-MAC Bowl 1-0 played in Spring 2021 5-6 66-58 (57-40 at Stevenson; 9-18 at Gallaudet)

Series for the second time as the Mustangs finished tied for second in the Middle Atlantic Conference standings. A total of 67 players have earned MAC All-Conference recognition during Hottle’s tenure, including 19 First Team selections. The Mustangs have also had one MAC Offensive Player of the Year, one Defensive Player of the Year, and two Rookies of the Year. Fifteen players have also been recognized as MAC All-Academic selections, while Ashton Leschke was a three-time CoSIDA Academic All-District performer from 2016-18. Prior to Stevenson, Hottle served as the head football coach and assistant athletics director at Gallaudet University in Washington, D.C. While there, he amassed a 27-20 record in five seasons from 2005-09 and led the Bison back to NCAA Division III status in 2007 In 2009, Hottle was selected by his peers as the Eastern Collegiate Football Conference (ECFC) Coach of the Year after leading Gallaudet to a 6-4 record and a second-place finish. The Bison also ranked 10th in the nation in total defense and ninth in rushing offense In 2007, Hottle led Gallaudet back into NCAA Division III status as the team posted a 4-6 record with their toughest schedule in over 15 years. Gallaudet defeated two Division III teams, the first time the Bison won a game as a Division III school since 1991. Hottle is currently serving a four-year term as a member of the NCAA Division III Football Committee until 2022, playing a large role in hosting the 2022 NCAA DIII Stagg Bowl in December at Navy-Marine Corps Stadium in Annapolis. A 1999 graduate of Frostburg State, Hottle earned his bachelor’s in physical education in before receiving his master’s in education in 2001. While at FSU, he began as a football intern with the Bobcats and then spent two seasons as the defensive line coach in 1999 and 2000. Hottle served as the head coach at Calvert High School in Prince Frederick before leaving for Gallaudet. Hottle and his wife, Ashley, reside in Finksburg and have four children, a daughter, Madalynn, and three sons, Wyatt, Cole and Tucker..


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ASSISTANT COACHES

JOSH HOEG OFFENSIVE COORDINATOR Coe ‘04

Josh Hoeg was named offensive coordinator for the Mustang football program in April, 2019. Hoeg comes to Stevenson after seven years on the staff at Division II Gannon University in Erie, Pennsylvania, where he most recently served as offensive coordinator and assistant head coach. Hoeg has worked with a potent Stevenson offense, anchored by QB Ryan Segwick over the last few seasons. Sedgwick recently became the program’s all-time leader in passing touchdowns in the 2022 home opener against Salisbury. In Hoeg’s first season as offensive coordinator in 2019, the Mustangs set eight offensive program records, including total points (399), total touchdowns (56) and total offense (4,779 yards) During Hoeg’s tenure with the Knights, he coached a total of five All-Americans and 16 All-Conference players, including two PSAC West Offensive Players of the Year in 2014 and 2017. In 2017 Hoeg coached Harlon Hill Award runner up Marcus Jones, who led Division II with 2,176 yards. Gannon was PSAC West co-champions in 2014, a season in which the Knights set program records in total yards (5,146), points (414) and touchdowns (55). Prior to his time in Erie, Hoeg spent four seasons as the offensive coordinator, quarterback coach and recruiting coordinator at Wabash College, where he helped guide the Little Giants to a 39-7 record over his tenure and NCAA Division III Tournament appearances in 2008, 2009 and 2011 and a pair of North Coast Athletic Conference championships. The 2011 squad finished No. 6 in the final AFCA Division III poll after bowing out to Mount Union in the NCAA quarterfinals. At Wabash, Hoeg coached three All-Americans and 27 All-Conference performers. Hoeg spent the 2007 season as quarterbacks coach at Lake Forest College after three seasons on staff at his alma mater, Coe College, where he worked with the wide receivers and also was the program’s video coordinator. The Kohawks went 25-8 over his three seasons with one NCAA appearance. During the summer of 2011, Hoeg helped the USA National Football Team win the 2011 World Championship in Austria. He served as the running backs coach, tutoring tournament MVP Nate Kmic and helping the team finish 4-0. A 2004 graduate of Coe, Hoeg was a wide receiver and served as a team captain as a senior. In 2002, the program picked up its first NCAA tournament win, while in 2003 he led the team averaging 21.4 yards per reception. He later earned his Master of Arts in Teaching while serving as a graduate assistant.

TODD NELSON DEFENSIVE COORDINATOR West Virginia ’11

Nelson enters his eighth season at Stevenson in 2021 and his fourth as defensive coordinator after being elevated in the summer of 2019. Nelson works with the linebackers and has served as the program’s video coordinator. Prior to Stevenson, Nelson served as the assistant head coach and the defensive coordinator at West Virginia Wesleyan College for two seasons. While with the Bobcats, he assisted the head coach in all phases of the program while coaching all three linebacker positions and coordinating the defense While at West Virginia Wesleyan, Nelson also managed the recruiting for all defensive positions. During the 2012 season, Nelson served as the defensive line coach at the University of Charleston, coaching all three defensive line positions. During that year, the Golden Eagles led the conference in sacks with the defense ranking second amongst all Division II schools. Nelson was also in charge of the kickoff team, which finished first in the conference in yards allowed. From 2007-11, Nelson served as an undergraduate assistant at West Virginia University before spending a season as the defensive graduate assistant. Nelson’s coaching career began at the high school level working as the defensive coordinator at Northeast High School in Pasadena. Nelson earned his bachelor’s degree in sport and exercise psychology from West Virginia University in 2011 and is currently working on a master’s degree in Athletic Coaching Educationat WVU. He played one season of football at at Frostburg State University.

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ASSISTANT COACHES PAT MAHONEY

KEN EMMONS

MALIK HOLLINGS

OFFENSIVE LINE EQUIPMENT OPS

WIDE RECEIVERS SPECIAL TEAMS HEAD JV COACH

LINEBACKERS VIDEO COORDINATOR

Mount Union ‘15

Salisbury ‘19

Frostburg State ‘15

Pat Mahoney joined the

Malik Hollings joined

Mustang coaching staff

Ken Emmons was

the Mustangs’ coaching

in the summer of 2021. He will work with the

named to the Stevenson football staff in the

staff in the summer of 2021 after spending

program’s offensive linemen.

summer of 2019 and works with the wide

three seasons on the staff at his alma mater,

receivers. He will also serve as the program’s

Salisbury University.

Mahoney spent the past three seasons as

JV coach and special teams cooridnator

Wesley College where he served as the

Hollings most recently worked with the Sea

offensive line coach as well as the run game

Emmons spent three seasons on staff at his

Gulls’ defensive line from January 2020

coordinator. With the Wolverines, he coached

alma mater, Frostburg State, where he was

onward. He coached a pair of players to

three offensive linemen who earned All-NJAC

a starting quarterback, working with wide

All-NJAC honors in the spring of 2021 as

honors. Wesley made a pair of postseason

receivers in each of his final two seasons and

Salisbury captured the NJAC South division

appearances during his tenure, including

with the linebackers in 2016 while also assisting

title with wins over Wesley and Christopher

a conference championship and NCAA

with special teams. The Bobcats compiled a

Newport. Prior to that, he worked with the

appearance in 2019.

31-4 record during Emmons’ three years on

outside linebackers, where he coached one

the sideline, including an NCAA quarterfinal

All-Conference player and helped coach the

Prior to Wesley, Mahoney was at NCAA Division

appearance in 2017 and an NJAC conference

defense to top-12 national rankings in four

II Concord University for three seasons. He was

championship and return trip to the NCAAs

categories in 2018.

most recently the Mountain Lions’ offensive

in 2018. In 2018 the Frostburg State offense

line coach, while he also served stints working

averaged 40.7 points per game, good for first

Hollins was a five-year letterwinner for the

with the outside linebackers as well as the tight

in the conference and No. 20 nationally.

Salisbury football team. He graduated in 2019

ends, running backs and fullbacks.

with a degree in Exercise Science and minors Prior to coaching, Emmons was a three-year

A 2015 graduate of perennial Division III power

starter for the Bobcats and was a four-year

Mount Union, Mahoney began his coaching

member of the team from 2011-2014. He

career in the spring of 2015 with the Purple

finished his career with 4,045 passing yards

Raiders as an assistant with the defensive line.

and 24 touchdowns. On the ground he added nearly 1,000 rushing yards with another 13

Mahoney was a four-year letterwinner at

touchdowns.

Mount Union, spending his first two seasons as a defensive lineman before flipping to the

Emmons capped his playing career by being

offensive line, where he was a two-year starter.

named the Mike McGlinchey Most Valuable

He was a member of the Purple Raiders’ 2012

Player of the 16th Annual Regents Cup game

national championship team and Mount Union

and two weeks later, the Empire 8 announced

reached the Stagg Bowl in each of his four

that Emmons was Frostburg’s Sportsman of

seasons.

the Year.

Mahoney graduated from Mount Union with a

Emmons earned his bachelors’ degree from

degree in Sport Business with a minor in Art.

Frostburg in 2015 and went on to earn his Master’s in Interdisciplinary Education in 2019.

in Athletic Coaching and Psychology.


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ASSISTANT COACHES BILLY GUNTHER OFFENSIVE QUALITY CONTROL Stevenson ‘14

Gunther enters his

EVAN JONES SECONDARY COACH

CHRIS MONTANEZ RUNNING BACKS

seventh year on the Stevenson coaching staff. He has been with the program since its inception in 2010 as both a player and

LEON HOLLOWELL DEFENSIVE LINE

coach. A four-year member of the Mustangs, Gunter was a four-year starter on the offensive line and started in 41 consecutive games. A two-time All-Conference honoree, Gunter helped the Mustangs boast 21 100-yard rushers, including three 200-yard rushers. Gunther helped the Mustangs in 2013 rank second in the conference with fewest sacks allowed. He also help lead the team to its first postseason victory in 2014 with a win in the ECAC Bowl game versus Bethany College (W.V.).

KEVIN JOPPY RUNNING BACKS

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MUSTANGS VS. COLONELS TEAM COMPARISON STEVENSON

WILKES

Record: 7-2, 5-2 MAC Rank: NR Pts/Gm: 25.8 Rush Yds/Gm: 107.8 Pass Yds/Gm: 198.0 Total Off/Gm: 305.8 Total Def/Gm: 270.4

Record: 6-2, 5-2 MAC Rank: NR Pts/Gm: 29.88 Rush Yds/Gm: 162.1 Pass Yds/Gm: 212.1 Total Off/Gm: 374.3 Total Def/Gm: 268.4

INDIVIDUAL LEADERS RUSHING #28 Brandon Walker

RUSHING #4 Elijah Jules

82-310 yds, 5 TD, 31.6 ypg

114-762 yds, 12 TD, 891.6 ypg

PASSING #12 Ryan Sedgwick 169-268, 1769 yds, 11 TD, 11 INT, 196.6 ypg

PASSING #10 Isaiah Rodriguez 85-146, 1390 yds, 11 TD, 0 INT, 231.7 ypg

RECEIVING #7 Steven Smothers 57-512 yds, 3 TD, 56.9 ypg

RECEIVING #24 Nate Whitaker 22-404 yds,5 TD, 50.5 ypg

DEFENSE #33 Clarence Travis 61 tackles, 9TFL, 0.0 Sck

DEFENSE #15 Brandon Holcomb 70 tackles, 2.0 TFL, 0.5 sacks

THE SERIES The series is tied 5-5. Wilkes won the last matchup 14-21.

ABOUT TODAY’S GAME Stevenson enters this week’s game on a three-game win streak, outscoring opponents 88-24. Wilkes is coming off a 24-7 victory over Lycoming. The Colonels have held two opponents scoreless in their six wins. LAST TIME OUT Stevenson defeated Misericordia last week 44-7. The Mustangs held the Cougars scoreless in the second half, the third time they had done so this season. The Stevenson O-line helped the Mustangs to six rushing touchdowns and a 185 rusing yards, both season highs. HOME SWEET HOME Stevenson is 29-10 over the last seven seasons at Mustang Stadium. The Mustangs went 4-1 each year from 2014-17, 3-2 in 2018 and 4-2 in 2019 before winning the lone game of the spring of 2021 against Alvernia. SERIES HISTORY Today’s game marks the 11th meeting between the two programs, with the series tied 5-5. Wilkes won the last meeting 14-21. Stevenson’s last win came in 2019 as a 42-21 road win.


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TODAY’S GAME

GAME STORYLINES • Sophomore linebacker Demetrius Salley and junior defensive lineman JanMichael Finch leads Stevenson in sacks with four on the year.

LAST MEETING STEVENSON 14, WILKES 21 OCTOBER 2, 2021 ATTENDANCE: 1750 EDWARDSVILLE, PA | SCHMIDT STADIUM

• Stevenson is third in scoring offense (25.6), and passing offense (198.0), seventh in total offense (305.8), and ninth in rushing offense (107.8).

SCORING Stevenson Wilkes

• Stevenson is 58-26 since the start of the 2014 season and is the secondwinningest program in the Middle Atlantic Conference, trailing only Delaware Valley.

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SCORING SUMMARY 2Q 13:44 WU - J. Tabora 22 yd run (J. Pollack kick), 2Q 0:49 STE - Tylor Blake 3 yd pass from Ryan Sedgwick (Brody Campbell kick) 3Q 9:17 WU - J. Lilley 8 yd pass from J. Tabora (J. Pollack kick) 4Q 1:41 WU - J. Katz 15 yd pass from J. Tabora (J. Pollack kick) 4Q 0:05 STE - Steven Smothers 33 yd pass from Ryan Sedgwick (Brody Campbell kick)

• Senior wide receiver Steven Smothers enters this week third in the MAC with 512 receiving yards while hauling in three touchdowns on 57 catches. He has six games with 50+ receiving yards, including last week against Misericordia where he had 58 yards on seven catches.

• Stevenson carries a lengthy postseason streak into the 2022 season. The Mustangs have made a postseason appearance in seven straight seasons dating back to 2014. With a victory against Wilkes, Stevenson woul clinhc a postseason berth. • Wilkes ranks first in the MAC in scoring offense (29.9) and total offense (374.3), sec-ond in passing offense (212.1), and third in rushing offense (162.1). • Wilkes ran for 128 rushing yards on the day as they totaled 225 yards of offense in their 24-7 victory over Lycoming. The Colonels look to improve this week on their of-fense that has racked up over 300+ yards in five of the eight games they have played this season

TEAM STATISTICS First Downs Rushing Att.-Yards Passing Yards Passing (C-A-I) Total Offense Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Punts-Avg. 3rd-Down Conversions 4th-Down Conversions Sacks-Yards Time of Possession

STE 14 30-109 185 15-31-2 294 1-1 2-19 6-41.3 2-12 1-3 1-7 22:07

WU 22 42-218 225 19-32-1 443 2-2 10-99 4-41.2 8-15 1-2 3-18 37:53

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS

RUSHING: STE - Hammond 19-94 WU - Tabora 21-133 PASSING: STE - Sedgwick 15-31, 185 yds, 2 TD, 2 INT WU - Tabora 18-28, 222 yds, 2 TD, 1 INT RECEIVING: STE - C. Jones 2-56 (0 TD), Smothers 5-54 (1 TD) WU - Pelzer 5-68 (0 TD), Schweizerhof 4-45 TACKLES (UA-A): STE - Sullivan 3-6, McIntyre 3-6 WU - Gazzola 6-8, Walck 4-3


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SENIOR DAY MARKS A CULMINATION FOR AMIR MOORE

By Steve Jones As a member of Stevenson’s distinguished senior class, Amir Moore will be playing in his final regular-season game today when the Mustangs host Wilkes. Senior Day is always an emotional and reflective event. For Moore, it signifies the end of one valuable experience and the beginning of another. “It’s my last ride, my last game,” said Moore, a resident of Laurel, Md. who started playing football when he was 10 years old. “All the emotions and feelings that I have will be there, so that I have no regrets as I end my football career here.” Moore came to Stevenson after a solid career as a two-way player at Reservoir High School, handling duties at wide receiver and defensive end. He was ticketed for defensive end at Stevenson, but his talents were more suited to being a collegiate wide receiver. “I was mostly a defensive end on my high school team,” said Moore, the son of Melodie and Rayburn Moore. “They thought it was a better fit for me. But I played wide receiver all my life, because I was always the faster kid who could go out for long balls. At Stevenson, we have a really big passing offense. That was very attractive to me, because I had the opportunity to get the ball and score touchdowns.” During his four-year collegiate career, Moore has been a steady contributor to the Mustangs’ success. The 6-1, 165-pound wide receiver is having his best season, with career highs in catches (17), yards (258), and touchdowns (two) for a 7-2 Stevenson team that will clinch a berth in the Centennial-MAC Bowl Series with a victory in today’s finale. Moore’s two touchdown catches this season came at critical moments. His 28-yard touchdown reception started the scoring in the host Mustangs’ 35-21 win over nationally-ranked Salisbury. One week later, Stevenson held a slim two-point halftime lead against visiting Alvernia before Moore’s seven-yard touchdown catch from senior quarterback Ryan Sedgwick extended the margin to 27-18 on the way to a 40-18 Mustang victory. Stevenson head coach Ed Hottle credits Moore’s speed and ability to find openings on opposing defensive units for his success as a Mustang. “Amir is fast and athletic, and I wouldn’t want to have to defend him man-toman,” Hottle said. “He’s intelligent, and he sees things at a higher level than others do. He’s able to find some cracks and crevices in pass coverages.”


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Moore has also been an anchor on the Mustangs’ special teams, utilizing his blocking and tackling skills on the kickoff return, punt return, and punting units. “The wide receiver skills transfer over to my special teams,” Moore said. “At wide receiver, I block a lot on the bubble screens. On the punt returns, I read the blocks and make the blocks myself.” While Hottle appreciates Moore’s versatility and overall on-field contributions, the Mustangs’ head coach sees the difference that his senior wide receiver brings to a Stevenson squad that is closing in on an eighth consecutive postseason appearance. “Amir just shows up every day and puts in the work,” Hottle said. “He’s quiet, but when Amir speaks he’s impressive. He’s very professional, very mature, and plays with a lot of confidence.” When Moore came to Stevenson, he joined a wide receiver corps that was loaded with experienced veterans. Moore learned from the upperclassmen, and has subsequently shared their advice with the Mustangs that have followed him. “It was a lot of on-field and off-field stuff,” Moore said. “On the field, it was about different techniques, whether it was catching or blocking. Off the field, it was advice about classes and tips on school that I’ve tried to pass down to the younger guys.” Hottle believes that Moore’s analytical approach and dedication to football extends into the classroom. “With Amir, it was always the singular focus on education, and he played football because it was fun,” Hottle said. “I don’t think we’ve ever had to have an academic conversation with him. That is more the exception than the rule, because we’ve dealt with Covid and the shifting from in-person to online and then back to in-person. He was able to overcome all of the adversity of that time, and still perform at a very high level.” Moore has also shown a willingness to take on big challenges, away from the classroom and football field. During the summer of 2022, the Business Administration major and Marketing minor served an internship with J.P. Morgan, one of the nation’s largest financial institutions. The position necessitated a move to the New York City metropolitan area, with Moore living in Jersey City, N.J. and working at J.P. Morgan’s offices in Jersey City and Manhattan. “I got the internship through a program outside of the school,” said Moore, who was born in Brooklyn, N.Y. and spent his first five years there before moving to Maryland. “It was in the Global Finance and Business Management program (at J.P. Morgan), and it was my first look at the corporate world. I got to network and make some professional connections.” The experience also benefitted Moore on a personal level. “I am a very quiet guy, but this past summer allowed me to open myself up and come out of my shell a little more,” he said. “I got to visit different places and just walk around the city. It was a great experience that I will never forget.” Moore will always remember his strong ties to Stevenson University and the Mustang football program, long after his May 2023 graduation. “People come to Stevenson from all different places, and we all have different backgrounds,” Moore said. “But we’re able to come together as one and share these experiences. The bond we’ve created is everlasting.”

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STATISTICAL COMPARISON STEVENSON (5-2, 7-2 MAC)

WILKES (6-2, 5-2 MAC)

HEAD COACH: Ed Hottle (Frostburg State ‘99) YEAR AT STEVENSON: 12th Season

HEAD COACH: Duke Greco YEAR AT KING’S: 8th Season

TEAM STATISTICAL COMPARISONS

TEAM STATISTICAL COMPARISONS WILKES Scoring 29.9 First Downs 151 Rushing 162.1 Passing 212.1 Total Offense 2994 Kick Returns 17-14.2 Punt Returns 14-3.1 Interceptions 11-226 Fumbles-Lost 9-3 Penalties 60-611 Punts - Net Punt Average 29-37.1 Time of Possession 30:28 3rd-Down Conversions 33.3% 4th-Down Conversions 40.0% Sacks - By-Yards 15-101 Field Goals-Attempts 4-8 Red Zone Scores 26-32

STEVENSON Scoring 25.8 First Downs 174 Rushing/Game 107.8 Passing/Game 198.0 Total Offense 2752 Kick Returns 32-24.8 Punt Returns 10-15.0 Int Returns: #-Yards 9-3.7 Fumbles-Lost 4-3 Penalties 67-649 Punts - Net Punt Average 37-38.7 Time of Possession 29:38 3rd-Down Conversions 49.6% 4th-Down Conversions 42.9% Sacks - By-Yards 17 Field Goals-Attempts 5-7 Red Zone Scores 24-29

OPPONENTS 14.1 116 122.8 145.6 2147 36-16.2 16-10.3 4-11 9-6 69-590 41-34.2 29:28 37.5% 33.3% 8-47 1-4 13-21

SCORING

1

2

3

4

OT Total’

DVU Opponents

7 2

27 3

34 6

35 9

103 20

Att. 114 48

Yds. 733 184

Avg. 6.4 3.8

PASSING 10 -I. Rodriguez

Comp.-Att.-Int. Yds. 85-146-0 1390

RECEIVING 24 - N. Whitaker 2 - Z. Grover 8 - D. Higgins

Rec. 21 14 21

Defense 15 - B. Holcomb 2 - D. James 4 - A. Ramos 97 - S. Hess

Yds. 404 326 2 304

Tckl 68 51 46 44

TFL 2.0 2.0 8.0 2.5

Stevenson Opponent

1

2

3

4

OT

50 29

57 63

51 21

74 31

-

Total 232 144

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICAL LEADERS

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICAL LEADERS RUSHING 4 - E. Jules 0 - X. Powell

SCORING

OPPONENTS 16.0 140 106.7 163.8 2434 20-24.9 15-11.1 11-9.3 16-9 76-674 44-36.9 30:22 33.9% 47.6% 18 3-6 23-28

TD 12 2 TD 11

Avg./G 91.6 23.0

Avg/G 231.7

Avg. 18.36 3.29 14.48

TD 5 2 2

Sck 0.5 0.0 4.0 0.5

Int 1 0 0 0

Avg./G 50.5 40.8 38.0

RUSHING Att. 28 - Brandon Walker 82 0 - Maurice Hammond 81

Yds. 310 257

Avg. 3.5 3.0

PASSING 12 - Ryan Sedgwick

Comp.-Att.-Int. Yds. 169-268-11 1769

RECEIVING 7 - Steven Smothers 8 - Brandon Booze 2 - Emmanuel Ekop

Rec. 57 30 28

DEFENSE Solo 33 - Clarence Travis 31 25 - Demetrius Salley 23 32 - Tom Zatalava 35 55 - JanMichael Finch 23

Ast 30 28 12 13

Yds. 512 372 288

Avg. 9.0 12.4 10.3

Total 61 51 47 36

TFL 9-42 6.5-33 5.5-8 5-27

TD 5 5 TD 11

Avg/G 31.6 29.9

Avg./G 196.6 TD 4 2 1

Avg./G 56.9 41.3 32.0

Sacks-Yds. Int.-Yds 4-28 4-26 -


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AROUND THE MAC/POLLS 2022 MAC FOOTBALL SCHEDULE Friday, September 2 Salisbury 49, Albright 0 Ursinus 59, Alvernia 27 Franklin & Marshall 26, Lebanon Valley 7 FDU-Florham 17, Merchant Marine 7 Saturday, September 3 Delaware Valley 22, Westminster 8 Alfred State 17, Misericordia 14 Stevenson 25, Saint Vincent 21 Rowan 42, Widener 20 Susquehanna 45, Lycoming 16 Wilkes 48, Keystone 21

Saturday, September 17 Lebanon Valley 17, FDU-Florham 14 Wilkes 44, Widener 20 Misericordia 27, Albright 21 Stevenson 40, Alvernia 18 Delaware Valley 26, King’s (Pa.) 6 Saturday, September 24 King’s (Pa.) 27, FDU-Florham 23 Lycoming 45, Albright 0 Delaware Valley 41, Misericordia 0 Lebanon Valley 24, Wilkes 19 Stevenson 30, Widener 14 Saturday, October 1 Wilkes 27, Albright 0 Delaware Valley 26, Stevenson 7 FDU-Florham 28, Misericordia 14 King’s (Pa.) 28, Lycoming 23 Lebanon Valley 32, Alvernia 6

Friday, September 9 FDU-Florham 28, William Paterson 21 Saturday, September 10 Deleware Valley 14, Montclair State 6 Alvernia 38, Oberlin 35 Stevenson 35, Salisbury 21 Misericordia 38, Keystone 20 Widener 31, Hampden-Sydney 27 King’s (Pa.) 17, Hartwick 10 Lycoming 21, Lebanon Valley 20 Western Connecticut State 28, Albright 14

Saturday, October 8 Delaware Valley 21, Lycoming 0 King’s (Pa.) 20, Stevenson 7 Wilkes 35, Alvernia 14 FDU-Florham 30, Widener 17 Lebanon Valley 47, Misericordia 12 Saturday, October 15 King’s (Pa.) 27, Albright 21 Stevenson 24, Lycoming 10 Wilkes 28, Misericordia 0 Delaware Valley 34, Lebanon Valley 10 Alvernia 19, Widener 16

MAC 6-0 6-1 5-2 5-2 4-3 3-3 2-4 2-4 1-5 1-5 0-6

CPct. 1.000 .857 .714 .714 .571 .500 .333 .333 .167 .167 .000

Saturday, October 22 FDU-Florham 7 at Stevenson 20 Lebanon Valley 24 at King’s (Pa.) 34 Alvernia 10 at Lycoming 42 Albright 28 at Widener 34 Wilkes 10 at Delaware Valley 42 Saturday, October 29 Lycoming 7 at Wilkes 24 King’s (Pa.) 41 at Alvernia 14 Albright 2 at FDU-Florham 10 Stevenson 44 at Misericordia 7 Widener at Lebanon Valley 20 Saturday, November 5 Alvernia at Albright Widener at Lycoming FDU-Florham at Delaware Valley Misericordia at King’s (Pa.) Wilkes at Stevenson Saturday, November 12 Albright at Lebanon Valley King’s (Pa.) at Wilkes Lycoming at Misericordia FDU-Florham at Alvernia Delaware Valley at Widener

No. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25

School (No. 1 votes) North Central (Ill.) (23) Mount Union (2) Mary Hardin-Baylor St. John’s Linfield Trinity (Texas) UW-La Crosse Hardin-Simmons Bethel UW-Whitewater Cortland Ithaca Susquehanna Delaware Valley Wheaton (Ill.) Wartburg Johns Hopkins Randolph-Macon Carnegie Mellon Albion Huntingdon John Carroll UW-River Falls Endicott Washington U.

Rec 8-0 8-0 7-1 7-1 7-0 8-0 7-1 7-1 7-1 6-2 8-0 8-0 8-0 8-0 6-2 8-0 7-1 8-0 9-0 8-0 7-1 7-1 5-3 8-0 7-1

Pts 623 595 569 523 519 473 461 438 419 416 367 352 296 290 270 267 235 220 189 152 108 88 60 43 26

Prev. 1 2 3 4 5 6 8 9 11 10 13 12 19 14 15 16 7 17 18 20 23 25 21 ---

Dropped out: No. 22 UW-Platteville; No. 24 UWOshkosh.

2022 MAC STANDINGS Delaware Valley King’s Stevenson Wilkes Lebanon Valley FDU-Florham Lycoming Widener Alvernia Misericordia Albright

D3FOOTBALL.COM TOP 25

Overall Pct. Streak 8-0 1.000 W8 7-1 .875 W6 -2 .778 W3 6-2 .750 W1 4-5 .444 L3 5-3 .625 W1 3-5 .375 L1 3-5 .375 W2 2-6 .250 L2 .250 L5 0-8 .000 L8

Others receiving votes: UW-Oshkosh 20; Ripon 20; Birmingham Southern 18; UW-Stout 13; Mount St. Joseph 11; Claremont-Mudd-Scripps 7; UW-Platteville 7; Alma 6; Trinity (Conn.) 5; Washington & Jefferson 4; Ursinus 4; Lake Forest 3; Muhlenberg 3; DePauw 1; Howard Payne 1; Morrisville State 1; Salisbury 1; Utica 1.

Stevenson opponets in Bold.


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STEVENSON ROSTER ALPHABETICAL ROSTER 11 59 74 20 41 91 23 31 6 60 8 86 54 85 1 18 62 32 86 82 49 2 34 65 58 81 48 59 51 11 98 2 46 72 63 44 55 97 7 26 16 90 18 89 39 19 70 0 30 90 14 94 72 5 26 54 37 23 10 93 80 27 71 99 56 10 22

Jordan Adams QB Jacob Allen LB Alex Aviles OL Jacob Baytoff CB Phillip Bediako WR Devin Berman K Adrian Bernabel-Santana LB Tylor Blake TE Tyson Blakeney DB Ben Blum OL Brandon Booze WR Bradley Boyer WR Eric Brown OL Uthman Bruce TE Brody Campbell K Timothy Christ QB Parker Clendenen OL Louis Clouser RB Robert Counsellor RB Makai Credell WR Ethan Cregin LS Antonio Cruz DB Payton Cunningham RB Justin Darbouze DL Colin Davis OL Brandon Deckard WR Shaun Dishon DL Tyler Doerr LB Brady Duckhorn LS Tristan Dye DB Kedusu Egata DL Emmanuel Ekop, Jr. WR Christian Eldridge DB Luke Fasold OL Ethan Ferguson OL Justin Fermin LB JanMichael Finch DL Thomas Fisher DL Tashan Fitzgerald DL Amari Fleming-Powell DB Thomas Giannone QB Ahmir Gibson DL Matt Goetz TE Pat Gorman WR Nickyi Green DB Charles Greer DB Kyle Guerreiro OL Maurice Hammond RB Braxton Harsley DL Andrew Heer K Jaiheem Henderson DB Gordan Hoover DL Jake Houston OL Kevin Hughley WR Williams Humphrey DL Steven Irick WR Daniel Johnson DL/LB Montana Jones DB Corey Jones-Pentz DB Sheriff Kamara DL Kidduse Kebede DL Christian Kelley WR Bryan Kelly DB Alex Laboy OL Ethan Lanier DL Carter LaPorte OL Mason Ledford QB Anthony Lembo DB

NO. 0 1 2 2 3 4 4 5 5 6 6 7 7 7 8 9 9 10 10 11 11 12 13 14 14 15 16 16 17 18 18 18 19 20 21 22 23 23 24 25 26 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 32 33 34 34 35 36 36 37 38 38 39 40 41 42 42 43

NAME Maurice Hammond Brody Campbell Antonio Cruz Emmanuel Ekop, Jr. Justice Pettus-Dixon Sebastian Lucas Marvin Manassa Williams Humphrey Kevin Sheehan Tyson Blakeney Jake Taylor Tashan Fitzgerald Dante Marchitelli Steven Smothers Brandon Booze Justin Rutkowski Nyaire Wilson Sheriff Kamara Mason Ledford Jordan Adams Tristan Dye Ryan Sedgwick Amir Moore Jaiheem Henderson Zachery Manning Jakari Lewis Elijah Marquez Thomas Giannone Sean Sullivan Timothy Christ Matt Goetz Michael Merola Charles Greer Jacob Baytoff Greg Toliver Anthony Lembo Corey Jones-Pentz

POS. RB K DB WR DB WR DB DL K/P DB RB DL QB WR WR QB QB DL QB QB DB QB WR DB QB RB RB QB LB QB TE DB DB CB DB DB DB Adrian Bernabel-SantanaLB Josh Woodfork WR Demetrius Salley LB Amari Fleming-Powell DB Steven Irick WR Bryan Kelly DB Brandon Walker RB Gabriel Shanks LB Braxton Harsley DL Tylor Blake TE Louis Clouser RB Tom Zatalava LB Clarence Travis LB Payton Cunningham RB Gavin Shields LB Christopher Velardi LB Wynton Townsend RB Eddie White DB Montana Jones DB Kirk Reed RB Nevin Roman RB Nickyi Green DB Anthony Russo DB Phillip Bediako WR Andrew McGimpsey TE Bryce Zepp LB Grant McHose FB

YR. So. Jr. FY Sr. Sr. Sr. Jr. Jr. Sr. So. So. So. Jr. Sr. Sr. Jr. So. So. Sr. FY Sr. Sr. Jr. So. So. FY FY FY So. FY Jr. So. Jr. Jr. So. So. So. FY So. So. FY So. FY Jr. FY FY So. So. Jr. So. FY So. So. Jr. FY FY FY So. FY So. FY FY FY So.

HT. 5-9 5-9 5-10 5-10 6-0 6-4 5-9 6-3 5-8 5-10 5-10 5-9 5-10 5-10 5-11 5-11 5-10 5-10 5-10 5-10 5-10 6-1 6-1 6-0 6-0 5-10 5-10 6-6 6-1 6-2 6-2 6-0 5-9 5-9 5-8 5-11 5-11 5-11 5-10 6-0 5-11 5-7 6-1 6-0 5-9 6-0 6-3 6-0 6-2 5-11 5-10 6-0 5-11 5-10 6-0 5-8 5-8 5-10 6-0 6-0 5-10 6-4 5-11 6-2

WT. 195 180 190 190 185 195 185 230 155 165 165 220 180 160 185 170 240 210 170 195 165 185 165 170 185 185 207 190 210 205 200 185 180 160 150 175 195 215 180 175 175 155 170 200 200 210 205 176 210 210 165 210 218 200 180 165 180 185 173 200 160 240 200 220

HOMETOWN/HIGH SCHOOL Manassas, Va./ Paul VI South Riding, Va./ Freedom Lancaster, Pa./ Lancaster Catholic Elkridge, Md./Long Reach Parkville, Md./ St. Frances Academy Towson, Md./ Perry Hall Landover, Md./DeMatha Harrisburg, Pa./ Susquehanna Township Landenberg, Pa./ Avon Grove New Castle, Del./St. Georges Tech Lebanon, N.J./ North Hunterdon Newark, Del./ Hodgson Tech Crested Butte, Colo./ Crested Butte Reisterstown, Md./Franklin Oxford, Md./Eastern Ashburn, Va./Briar Woods Wilmington, Del./ St. Georges Tech Ellicott City, Md./ Long Reach Easton, Md./Easton Brandywine, Md./ Bishop McNamara Gaithersburg, Md./Quince Orchard Crofton, Md./Arundel Laurel, Md./Reservoir Gwynn Oak, Md./Calvert Hall Newburg, Pa./ Shippensburg Manassas, Va./ Osbourn Manalapan, N.J./ Manalpan Middletown, N.J./ Middletown North Farmingdale, N.Y./Farmingdale Hackettstown, N.J./ Mountain Lakes Wenonah, N.J./ Gateway Regional Eagleville, Pa./ Methacton Springfield, Va./South County Oldwick, N.J./ Voorhees Baltimore, Md./ Poly Lyndhurst, N.J./Lyndhurst Middle River, Md./ Archbishop Curley Reading, Pa./ Wilson Martinsburg, W.V./Martinsburg White Plains, Md./ Maurice J. McDonough Sicklerville, N.J./Winslow Township Accokee, Md./ Gwynn Park Clarksburg, Md./ Clarksburg Vienna, Va./ James Madison Centreville, Va./ Westfield Laurel, Md./ St. Vincent Pallotti Frenchtown, N.J./ Del. Val. Regional

Summit Hill, Pa./ Panther Valley North East, Md./ St. Elizabeth Bear, Del./ Hodgson Tech Willow Street, Pa./ Lampeter-Strasburg West Deptford, N.J./ West Deptford Rockaway, N.J./ Morris Knolls Upper Marlboro, Md./ Gwynn Park Salisbury, Md./ Wicomico Upper Marlboro, Md./ Gwynn Park Jacksonville, Fla./ Episcopal School of Jacksonville

Lancaster, Pa./ Lancaster Catholic Lexington Park, Md./ Great Mills Hauppage, N.J./ Hauppage Bethesda, Md./ Bethesda-Chevy Chase Holmdel, N.J./ St. John Vianney New Windsor, Md./ Francis Scott Key Franklin, N.J./ Walkill Valley


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STEVENSON ROSTER 44 45 46 46 48 48 49 50 51 52 52 54 54 55 56 56 58 59 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 68 69 70 71 72 72 74 75 77 78 79 80 80 81 82 82 83 84 84 85 86 86 88 88 89 90 90 91 93 94 94 95 96 97 98 98 99

Justin Fermin Ethan Miller Christian Eldridge Dominic Zeno Shaun Dishon Anthony Sofia Ethan Cregin Jonathan McKay Brady Duckhorn Edward Mannone Jordan Reyes Eric Brown Daniel Johnson JanMichael Finch Carter LaPorte Alan Stewart Colin Davis Jacob Allen Tyler Doerr Ben Blum Joe Pena Parker Clendenen Ethan Ferguson Jacob Miller Justin Darbouze Mark Owens Connor Zolman Cade Rambler Kyle Guerreiro Alex Laboy Luke Fasold Jake Houston Alex Aviles James Moore Nicholas Meyer Joseph Thomas Selbe Solomon Christian Kelley James Porter Brandon Deckard

LB LB DB LB DL LB LS OL LS LB OL OL DL/LB DL OL OL OL LB LB OL OL OL OL OL DL DL OL OL OL OL OL OL OL OL OL OL OL WR DL WR Johnnie-Nehemiah Castro WR Makai Credell WR Antony Scannelli TE Zachary Rutsch K Cameron Vogel WR Uthman Bruce TE Bradley Boyer WR Robert Counsellor RB Alexander Simms WR Makhi Walker WR Pat Gorman WR Ahmir Gibson DL Andrew Heer K Devin Berman K Kidduse Kebede DL Gordan Hoover DL Jayden Reyes OL Tobias Walker DL Chris Tsilikos DL Thomas Fisher DL Kedusu Egata DL Mamadou Sall DL Ethan Lanier DL Eric Strecker QB Kevin Hughley WR

So. FY FY FY FY FY So. Sr. FY Jr. FY FY So. Jr. Jr. FY So. FY So. So. Sr. So. Jr. So. FY FY FY So. So. So. FY So. So. So. Jr. So. FY Jr. FY FY FY FY So. So. So. Sr. FY RY So. FY Jr. Jr. FY So. So. So. FY FY So. FY FY FY FY FY Jr.

6-0 5-11 5-9 5-11 6-3 5-10 6-0 6-1 5-11 5-11 5-10 6-3 6-2 6-2 6-2 6-1 5-11 6-0 5-9 6-1 6-0 6-1 6-4 6-3 5-10 6-1 6-0 6-3 6-1 6-0 6-4 6-3 6-1 6-5 6-2 6-1 6-2 5-11 6-4 5-10 5-8 6-0 6-0 6-5 6-3 6-1 6-0 5-9 6-4 5-11 5-11 5-11 5-10 5-10 6-4 6-1 5-10 6-1 6-0 5-11 6-0 6-3 6-2 6-3 6-1

210 195 160 200 225 215 200 250 225 215 240 250 300 245 240 240 225 222 190 285 250 250 290 255 245 260 270 275 225 260 265 275 300 305 275 340 310 185 215 170 155 160 185 185 190 240 185 165 200 190 185 245 165 155 190 215 240 250 250 285 270 225 245 195 180

Guttenberg, N.J./ North Bergen Palmyra, Pa./ Lower Dauphin Waldorf, Md./ Westlake Mechanicsburg, Pa./ Mechanicsburg Baltimore, Md./ Sparrows Point Germantown, Md. / St. John’s Catholic HS Richmond, N.Y./ Petrides Ellicott City, Md./ Mount Hebron Mount Airy, Md./ Urbana Oceanside, N.Y./ Oceanside West Palm Beach, Fla./ Seminole Ridge Waldorf, Md./ North Point Sicklerville, N.J. / Winslow Township Pasadena, Md./ Northeast Harrisburg, Pa./ Central Dauphin Waldorf, Md./ Westlake North Wales, Pa./ North Penn Naples, Fla./ Community School of Naples Succasunna, N.J./Roxbury Mount Airy, Md./ South Carroll Columbia, Md./ Hammond Stephens City, Va./ Sherando Sterling, Va./ Dominion Palmyra, Pa./ Palmyra Bel Air, Md./ Patterson Mill Westminster, Md./ Westminster Pasadena, Md./ Chesapeake Lebanon, Pa./ Cedar Crest Springfield, N.J./Dayton Stafford, Va./ Colonial Forge Annandale, Va./ Woodson Herndon, Va./ Oakton Newark, Del./ Newark Lebanon, N.J./ North Hunterdon Farmingdale, N.Y./ Farmingdale Elkins Park, Pa./ Cheltenham Windsor Mill, Md./ Catonsville Bellingham, Mass./ Bellingham New London, N.C./ North Stanly Lawrence, N.J./ Lawrence Gaithersburg, Md./ Quince Orchard Belcamp, Md./ Aberdeen Hillsborough, N.J./ Hillsborough Point of Rocks, Md./ St. John’s Catholic Westminster, Md./ Winters Mill Mount Laurel, N.J./ Lenape Chesapeake, Va./ Grassfield Mullica Hill, N.J./ Clearview Regional Owings Mills, Md./ Mount St. Joseph Gaithersburg, Md./ Quince Orchard Richmond, Va. / Douglass Freeman Middletown, Del./ Appoquinimink South Riding, Va./ Freedom Reisterstown, Md./ Beth Tfiloh Dahan Takoma Park, Md./ Montgomery Blair Lancaster, Pa./ Hempfield West Palm Beach, Fla./ Seminole Ridge Vienna, Va./ James Madison Boonton, N.J./ Mountain Lakes Aberdeen, Md./ Aberdeen Olney, Md./ Sherwood Clarksburg, Md./ Damascus Oakton, Va./ James Madison Absecon, N.J./ Atlantic City Waldorf, Md./ Westlake

ALPHABETICAL ROSTER 15 4 4 14 52 7 16 42 43 50 18 77 45 64 13 75 82 66 61 3 80 69 38 52 94 38 40 9 84 98 25 83 12 29 5 34 88 7 48 79 56 17 6 78 21 36 33 96 35 84 28 88 95 36 9 24 32 46 42 68

Jakari Lewis RB Sebastian Lucas WR Marvin Manassa DB Zachery Manning QB Edward Mannone LB Dante Marchitelli QB Elijah Marquez RB Andrew McGimpsey TE Grant McHose FB Jonathan McKay OL Michael Merola DB Nicholas Meyer OL Ethan Miller LB Jacob Miller OL Amir Moore WR James Moore OL Johnnie-Nehemiah CastroWR Mark Owens DL Joe Pena OL Justice Pettus-Dixon DB James Porter DL Cade Rambler OL Kirk Reed RB Jordan Reyes OL Jayden Reyes OL Nevin Roman RB Anthony Russo DB Justin Rutkowski QB Zachary Rutsch K Mamadou Sall DL Demetrius Salley LB Antony Scannelli TE Ryan Sedgwick QB Gabriel Shanks LB Kevin Sheehan K/P Gavin Shields LB Alexander Simms WR Steven Smothers WR Anthony Sofia LB Selbe Solomon OL Alan Stewart OL Eric Strecker QB Sean Sullivan LB Jake Taylor RB Joseph Thomas OL Greg Toliver DB Wynton Townsend RB Clarence Travis LB Chris Tsilikos DL Christopher Velardi LB Cameron Vogel WR Brandon Walker RB Makhi Walker WR Tobias Walker DL Eddie White DB Nyaire Wilson QB Josh Woodfork WR Tom Zatalava LB Dominic Zeno LB Bryce Zepp LB Connor Zolman OL


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STEVENSON MUSTANGS DEPTH CHART MUSTANG OFFENSE Pos QB RB WR WR WR TE LT LG C RG RT

# 12 9 28 0 2 4 7 24 13 8 31 85 71 69 72 78 60 56 61 77 62 50

Name Ryan Sedgwick Nyaire Wilson Brandon Walker Maurice Hammond Emmanuel Ekop, Jr. Sebastian Lucas Steven Smothers Josh Woodfork Amir Moore Brandon Booze Tylor Blake Uthman Bruce Alex Laboy Cade Rambler Jake Houston Joseph Thomas Ben Blum Carter LaPorte Joe Pena Nicholas Meyer Parker Clendenen Jonathan McKay

Ht. 6-1 1 5-10 6-0 5-9 5-10 6-4 5-10 5-10 6-1 5-11 6-3 6-1 6-0 6-3 6-3 6-1 6-1 6-2 6-0 6-2 6-1 6-1

MUSTANG DEFENSE

Wt. 85 240 220 195 190 185 160 180 165 185 205 240 260 275 275 340 285 240 250 275 259 250

Yr. Sr. So. Jr. So. Sr. Sr. Sr. So. Jr. Sr. So. Sr. So. So. So. So. So. Jr. Sr. Jr. So. Sr.

MUSTANG SPECIAL TEAMS Pos K P LS KR PR

# 92 84 18 84 49 55 7 23 7

HOL 10 9

Name Brody Campbell Zachary Rutsch Kevin Sheehan Zachary Rutsch Ethan Cregin JanMichael Finch Steven Smothers Corey Jones-Pentz Steven Smothers

Ht. 5-9 6-5 5-8 6-5 6-0 6-2 5-10 5-11 5-10

Wt. 180 185 155 185 200 245 160 195 160

Yr. Jr. So. Sr. So. So. Jr. Sr. So. Sr.

Mason Ledford Justin Rutkowski

5-10 5-11

170 170

Sr. Jr.

Pos DL DL DL LB LB LB LB DB DB DB DB

# 5 94 7 90 55 50 17 22 32 34 52 33 25 10 14 30 6 23 3 9 4 20

Name Ht. William Humphrey 6-3 Gordan Hoover 6-1 Tashan Fitzgerald 5-9 Ahmir Gibson 5-11 JanMichael Finch 6-2 Shaun Dishon 6-3 Sean Sullivan 6-1 Anthony Lembo 5-10 Tom Zatlava 6-2 Gavin Shields 6-0 Edward Mannone 5-11 Clarence Travis 5-11 Demetrius Salley 6-0 Sheriff Kamara 5-10 Jaiheem Henderson 6-0 Bryan Kelly 6-1 Tyson Blakeney 5-10 Corey Jones-Pentz 5-11 Justice Pettus-Dixon 6-0 Justin Rutkowski 5-11 Marvin Manassa 5-9 Jacob Baytoff 5-9

Wt. 230 215 220 245 245 225 210 174 210 210 215 210 175 210 170 170 165 195 185 170 185 160

Yr. Jr. So. So. Jr. Jr. FY So. So. Jr. So. Jr. So. So. So. So. FY So. So. Sr. Jr. Jr. Jr.


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DELAWARE VALLEY DEPTH CHART COLONELS OFFENSE Pos QB RB WR WR WR TE LT LG C RG RT

# 16 7 4 26 2 24 19 3 1 8 80 38 70 65 65 72 61 68 67 74 63 79

Name Yr. Jay Mazuera FY Travis Shaver FY Elijah Jules SO Ben Contella FY Zane Grover Jr. Nate Whitaker Sr. Jason Schweizerhof Sr. Jimmy Johnson Jr. Cory Pelzer Sr. Devin Higgins So. Jason Dean Jr. Kevin Brown Sr., Brendan Boris Sr. Damian Grullon So Damian Grullon So Anthony Grieco So. Nick Meduri So. Anthony Sarkozy FY Aidan Palochik Jr. Alex Sias Jr. Anthony Messina FY Julian Hosty Jr.

Ht. 6-0 5-11 5-7 5-9 6-1 5-10 6-0 6-2 6-4 5-8 6-1 5-9 6-4 6-3 6-3 6-1 6-0 6-0 6-2 6-2 6-8 6-5

COLONELS DEFENSE Wt. 200 185 165 185 175 175 190 185 225 170 215 220 255 295 295 325 265 240 300 285 260 285

COLONELS SPECIAL TEAMS Pos

#

Name

Yr.

Ht.

Wt.

PK

13

Nick Volpone

FY

5-5

200

KO

94

Brandon Shire

So.

6-1

200

P

42

Alex Orlando

So.

6-0

195

47

Ethan Shudak

FY

5-11

195

56

Nick Davidson

FY

5-10

195

74

Alex Sias

Jr.

6-2

285

SS

56

Nick Davidson

FY

5-10

195

HO

19

Jason Schweizerhof Sr.

6-0

190

KR

24

Nate Whitaker

Sr.

5-10

175

34

Walter Lewis

Jr.

5-9

195

2

Zane Grover

Jr.

6-1

175

4

Elijah Jules

Jr.

5-7

165

LS

PR

Pos DE DT DT DE LB LB LB DB DB DB DB

# Name 91 Kellen Redmond 96 David Osman 4 Angel Ramos 51 Lance Priestas 97 Steele Hess 99 Elijah Lee 5 Adam Piston 54 Billy Schwanewede 15 Brandon Holcomb 55 Andrew Amato 36 Nick Troutman 45 Tallen Murray 2 De’Von James 14 Dylan Harrison 8 Donell Mackey-Woodson 22 Mike Cornick 12 John Washington 10 Quincy Banks 11 Jeremie Hernandez 3 Leroy Marshall 1 Jesse Addesso 27 Jake Lengle

Yr. Jr. So. Jr. So. Jr. So. Sr. FY Sr. Jr. Jr. FY So. FY So. FY Sr. Sr. Sr. So. Jr. FY

Ht. 6-3 6-0 5-10 6-1 6-1 6-2 6-0 6-2 6-1 5-11 5-10 6-0 5-11 6-2 5-11 5-11 6-2 5-10 5-7 5-11 6-2 5-8

Wt. 230 220 250 260 260 270 225 215 190 200 205 195 195 170 190 170 215 165 155 155 200 160


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2 0 2 2 S T EV E NS ON F O O T BAL L

WILKES ROSTER NO.

NAME

Yr.

Pos.

Ht.

Wt.

Hometown/High School

0

Xavier Powell

Jr.

WR

5-11

180

Poughkeepsie, NY / Arlington

1

Jesse Addesso

Jr.

DB

6-2

200

Staten Island, NY / St. Joes by the Sea

1

Cory Pelzer

Jr.

WR

6-4

225

Somerset, NJ / The Pennington School

2

Zane Grover

Jr.

WR

6-1

175

East Stroudsburg, PA / Stroudsburg

2

De’Von James

So.

LB

5-11

195

Mount Holly Springs, PA / Boiling Springs

3

Jimmy Johnson

Jr.

WR

6-2

185

Fallston, MD / Fallston

3

Leroy Marshall

So.

DB

5-11

155

Cambria Heights, NY / Christ the Kin

4

Elijah Jules

Jr.

RB

5-7

165

Red Bank, NJ / Red Bank Catholic

4

Angel Ramos

Jr.

DL

5-10

250

Allentown, PA / Parkland

5

Ron Blake

FY

RB

6-0

240

Stroudsburg, PA / East Stroudsburg

5

Adam Piston

Sr.

DL

6-0

225

Laurys Station, PA / Parkland

6

Michael Calvert

FY

DB

5-9

165

Woodbridge, NJ / Woodbridge

6

Justin Moore

So.

WR

5-9

150

Voorhees, NJ / Eastern Regional

7

Billy Costner

Sr.

DL

6-0

250

Bordentown, NJ / Bordentown Regional

7

Travis Shaver

FY

QB

5-11

185

Massapequa, NY / Plainedge

8

Devin Higgins

So.

WR

5-8

170

Pennington, NJ / Hopewell Valley

8

Donell Mackey-Woodson

So.

DB

5-11

190

Hartford, CT / Southington

9

Nasir Calhoun

So.

RB

5-10

200

Forked River, NJ / Saint Thomas More

9

River Lewis-McMillan

FY

DB

5-10

195

Brentwood, NY / St. John the Baptist

10

Quincy Banks

Sr.

DB

5-10

165

Bronx, NY / Kennedy

10

Isaiah Rodriguez

So.

QB

6-5

225

Lebanon, PA / Lebanon

11

Jeremie Hernandez

Sr.

DB

5-7

155

Bronx, NY / Kennedy

11

Cooper King

FY

QB

6-3

175

Northampton, PA / Northampton

12

Jack Howell

So.

QB

6-4

230

Bloomsburg, PA / Bloomsburg

12

John Washington

Sr.

DB

6-2

215

Brooklyn, NY / Eagle Academy

13

Nick Volpone

FY

K

5-5

200

Delco, PA / Ridley

14

Dylan Harrison

FY

LB

6-2

170

Quakertown, PA / Quakertown

14

Jaden Manzanillo

FY

WR

5-9

170

Lynbrook, NY / Malverne

15

Mike Balichik

So.

WR

6-3

195

Mount Carmel, PA / Mount Carmel

15

Brandon Holcomb

Sr.

DL

6-1

190

Boynton Beach, FL / Boca Raton

16

Anthony Dominguez

So.

DB

5-11

170

Binghamton, NY / Susquehanna Valley

16

Jay Mazuera

FY

QB

6-0

200

Hillsborough, NJ / Hillsborough

17

Braden Merrill

FY

DB

5-9

165

Seven Valleys, PA / Spring Grove

17

Janas Simms

FY

WR

6-0

170

York, PA / William Penn

18

Chris Silverio

FY

DB

6-1

175

Huntington, NY / Walt Whitman

19

Jason Schweizerhof

Sr.

WR

6-0

190

Warminster, PA / William Tennent

20

Aaron Shuker

FY

WR

5-7

165

Reading, PA / Muhlenberg

22

Mike Cornick

FY

DB

5-11

170

West Philadelphia, PA / William Penn

23

Leonard Egbe

FY

RB

5-11

195

Gilbertsville, PA / Boyertown

24

Nate Whitaker

Sr.

WR

5-10

175

Upper Darby, PA / Haverford School

25

Mike Mastroeni

FY

LB

5-9

185

Hopatcong, NJ / Hopatcong

26

Ben Contella

FY

RB

5-9

185

Wayne, NJ / Wayne Hills

27

Jake Lengle

FY

DB

5-8

160

Pennington, NJ / Hopewell Valley

30

Christian Moreno

Jr.

RB

5-8

170

Oley, PA / Fleetwood

31

Kaleb Harris

FY

LB

5-9

175

Philadelphia, PA / Parkway Northwest

33

Robert Cox

So.

DB

5-9

150

Kenilworth, NJ / Pope John XXIII

34

Walter Lewis

Sr.

RB

5-9

195

Sicklerville, NJ / Timber Creek

35

Tyler Whary

FY

DB

5-10

170

Coal Township, PA / Shamokin

36

Nick Troutman

Jr.

LB

5-10

205

Kulpmont, PA / Mount Carmel

37

Igor Rzasa

FY

K

5-10

175

Lindenhurst, NY / Lindenhurst

38

Kevin Brown

Sr.

TE

5-9

220

Baltimore, MD / Mergenthaler Vo-Tech

39

Isiah Czarnecki

FY

LB

6-3

215

Herkimer, NY / Utica Proctor

40

Sharif Johnson

FY

LB

6-0

190

Philadelphia, PA / Northeast


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WILKES ROSTER 41

Gavin Smith

FY

DB

5-8

175

York, PA / York Suburban

42

Alex Orlando

So.

K/P

6-0

195

Allentown, PA / Emmaus

45

Tallen Murray

FY

LB

6-0

195

Cedarville, NJ / Saint Joseph Academy

46

Eddy Charles

FY

DB

5-6

130

Linden, NJ / Linden

47

Ethan Shudak

FY

P

5-11

195

Mountain Top, PA / Crestwood

49

Marcus Granadeiro

FY

LB

5-10

230

South River, NJ / South River

50

Julian DiMaio

FY

DL

5-6

180

Laureldale, PA / Wyomissing

51

Lance Priestas

So.

DL

6-1

260

Bethlehem, PA / Liberty

52

Matt Williams

So.

DL

6-0

225

Wheatley Heights, NY / Half Hollow Hills East

53

Ben Dunstan

FY

DL

6-1

200

New Tripoli, PA / Northwestern Lehigh

54

Billy Schwanewede

FY

DL

6-2

215

Oradell, NJ / River Dell

55

Andrew Amato

Jr.

LB

5-11

200

Wantagh, NY / Wantagh

56

Nick Davidson

FY

LS

5-10

195

Emmaus, PA / Emmaus

57

Aiden Plant

So.

OL

6-2

235

Salt Point, NY / Franklin D. Roosevelt

58

Trevor Gitski

FY

DL

5-8

235

Alburtis, PA / Emmaus

59

Zander Unger

FY

OL

6-3

250

Berwick, PA / Berwick Area

60

Lucas Scott

Sr.

OL

6-1

290

Binghamton, NY / Chenango Valley

61

Nick Meduri

So.

OL

6-0

265

Brigantine, NJ / Saint Augustine Prep

62

Hank Lobban

FY

OL

6-4

325

Newton, NJ / Kittatinny Regional

63

Anthony Messina

FY

OL

6-8

260

Bellmore, NY / Mepham

64

Ethan Carper

FY

OL

6-0

280

Watsontown, PA / Warrior Run

65

Damian Grullon

So.

OL

6-3

295

North Miami Beach, FL / North Miami Beach

66

Joe Nester

FY

DL

6-2

315

Binghamton, NY / Chenango Valley

67

Aidan Palochik

Jr.

OL

6-2

300

Nazareth, PA / Nazareth Area

68

Anthony Sarkozy

FY

OL

6-0

240

Bethlehem, PA / Liberty

69

Everette Pfeiffer

So.

OL

6-3

315

South Plainfield, NJ / South Plainfield

70

Brendan Boris

Sr.

OL

6-4

255

Mount Carmel, PA / Mount Carmel Area

71

Ryan Martel

Sr.

OL

6-5

385

Meriden, CT / Francis T. Maloney

72

Anthony Grieco

So.

OL

6-1

325

Dorothy, NJ / Atlantic County Institute of Tech.

73

Billy Searle

So.

OL

6-1

305

Nutley, NJ / Nutley

74

Alex Sias

Jr.

OL

6-2

285

Flemington, NJ / Immaculata

75

Billy Anderson

Sr.

OL

6-2

295

Mount Carmel, PA / Mount Carmel Are

76

Anthony Bendici

Jr.

OL

6-3

285

Deer Park, NY / Deer Park

77

Mauro Guarino

So.

OL

6-2

315

Cedar Grove, NJ / Cedar Grove

78

Justin Joseph

FY

OL

6-3

280

Hagerstown, MD / South Hagerstown

79

Julian Hosty

Jr.

OL

6-5

285

Baldwin, NY / Kellenberg Memorial

80

Jason Dean

Jr.

TE

6-1

215

Auburn, PA / Blue Mountain

81

Kobina Otoo

So.

TE

6-3

205

Far Rockaway, NY / Saint Francis Prep

82

Josh Ermeus

FY

TE

6-3

230

Sparta, NJ / Sparta

83

Joe Polizzi

FY

TE

6-1

210

Lake Grove, NY / Sachem North

85

Michael Goralski

Sr.

TE

6-1

225

Southington, CT / Xavier

88

Brayden Shaffer

FY

WR

5-10

175

Coatesville, PA / Coatesville

89

Justin Suero

FY

WR

5-11

160

Iselin, NJ / John F Kennedy

90

Austin Cavallo

FY

DL

6-0

250

Northampton, PA / Northampton

91

Kellen Redmond

Jr.

DL

6-3

230

St. Petersburg, FL / Calvary Christian

92

Zach Paraway

Jr.

DL

6-4

225

York, PA / Red Lion Area

93

Chris Rodriguez

Jr.

DL

6-1

245

Allentown, PA / Whitehall

94

Brandon Shire

So.

K

6-1

200

Perkasie, PA / Pennridge

95

Alex Scretching

So.

DL

6-3

235

Philadelphia, PA / Lakewood

96

David Osman

So.

DL

6-0

220

Hellertown, PA / Saucon Valley

97

Steele Hess

Jr.

DL

6-1

260

Allentown, PA / Whitehall

98

Willie Middleton

FY

DL

6-3

275

Queens, NY / Dieruff

99

Elijah Lee

So.

DL

6-2

270

Brooklyn, NY / Erasmus Hall


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2 0 2 2 S T EV E NS ON F O O T BAL L

MIDDLE ATLANTIC CONFERENCE

MEGAN MORRISON

JONATHAN HOWER

ERIN DWYER

EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR

DIR. OF MEDIA RELATIONS

ASSISTANT DIRECTOR

Founded on December 11, 1912, the Middle Atlantic Conferences, commonly known as the MAC, is one of the oldest intercollegiate athletics associations in the United States. The first conference competition occurred on May 20, 1913 with a track & field meet at Lafayette College. Since then, 61 institutions have competed in 27 sports and won 37 NCAA team championships. The MAC has evolved into the only NCAA umbrella organization of three conferences: MAC Commonwealth, MAC Freedom and MAC. Currently, 18 Division III schools, spanning three states, have over 6,500 studentathletes competing in 27 sports for 40 conference championships. Member schools are

Stevenson defeated Muhlenberg in the inaugural Centennial-MAC Bowl Series in 2015 and also competed against Susquehanna in 2018 and Johns Hopkins in 2019.

Albright College, Alvernia University, Arcadia University, Delaware Valley University, DeSales University, Eastern University, Farleigh Dickinson University – The College at Florham, Hood College, King’s College, Lebanon Valley College, Lycoming College, Messiah University, Misericordia University, Stevens Institute of

Technology, Stevenson University, Widener University, Wilkes University and York College of Pennsylvania.

www.gomacsports.com


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HOSTED BY STEVENSON UNIVERSITY

BE A PART OF THE ACTION! TICKETS ON SALE NOV. 12 2022 DIII FOOTBALL NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIP DECEMBER 16, 2022 ANNAPOLIS, MARYLAND | NAVY MARINE CORPS STADIUM

NCAATICKETS.COM NCAA IS A TRADEMARK OF THE NATIONAL COLLEGIATE ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION.


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2 0 2 2 S T EV E NS ON F O O T BAL L

ALL-TIME RESULTS (2011-2020) 2011 (2-8, 1-7 MAC) DATE OPPONENT SCORE 9/3 at Shenandoah L 49-21 9/10 CHRISTOPHER NEWPORT W 46-43 (2OT) 9/17 KING’S (Pa.) * L 51-26 9/24 at Lebanon Valley * L 61-37 10/1 at Delaware Valley * L 58-13 10/15 WIDENER * L 54-19 10/22 LYCOMING * L 48-14 10/29 at FDU-Florham * W 36-13 11/5 ALBRIGHT * L 57-21 11/12 at Wilkes * L 43-34 Home Games in BOLD CAPS * - Middle Atlantic Conference 2012 (2-8, 2-7 MAC) DATE OPPONENT SCORE 9/1 SHENANDOAH L 26-16 9/8 at Albright * L 29-22 (OT) 9/15 DELAWARE VALLEY * L 34-10 9/22 LEBANON VALLEY * L 31-28 9/29 at Misericordia * W 35-7 10/6 at Widener * L 56-20 10/20 WILKES * L 38-35 10/27 at King’s (Pa.) * L 34-21 11/3 at Lycoming * L 32-7 11/10 FDU-FLORHAM * W 28-13 Home Games in BOLD CAPS * - Middle Atlantic Conference 2013 (4-6, 3-6 MAC) DATE OPPONENT 9/6 N.C. WESLEYAN 9/14 ALBRIGHT * 9/20 at FDU-Florham * 9/28 at Delaware Valley * 10/5 WIDENER * 10/19 KING’S (Pa.) * 10/26 at Wilkes * 11/2 MISERICORDIA * 11/9 at Lebanon Valley * 11/16 LYCOMING * Home Games in BOLD CAPS * - Middle Atlantic Conference 2014 (8-3, 6-3 MAC) DATE OPPONENT 9/6 at N.C. Wesleyan 9/13 at KIng’s (Pa.) * 9/20 LEBANON VALLEY * 9/27 at Albright * 10/4 at Lycoming * 10/18 DELAWARE VALLEY * 10/25 FDU-FLORHAM * 11/1 at Widener * 11/8 WILKES * 11/15 at Misericordia * 11/22 BETHANY (W.V.) ! Home Games in BOLD CAPS * - Middle Atlantic Conference ! - ECAC Southeast Bowl

SCORE W 19-9 W 24-18 W 55-22 L 41-23 L 21-10 L 31-24 L 21-17 W 48-3 L 30-6 L 36-20

SCORE W 40-19 W 7-0 W 20-14 W 13-6 L 31-10 L 35-13 W 57-0 L 34-23 W 33-14 W 35-14 W 29-7

2015 (9-2, 7-2 MAC) DATE OPPONENT 9/6 at N.C. Wesleyan 9/12 LYCOMING * 9/19 at Lebanon Valley * 9/26 MISERICORDIA * 10/3 KING’S (Pa.) * 10/10 at Delaware Valley * 10/24 WIDENER * 10/31 at Wilkes * 11/7 ALBRIGHT * 11/14 at FDU-Florham * 11/21 at Muhlenberg ! Home Games in BOLD CAPS * - Middle Atlantic Conference ! - Centennial-MAC Bowl Series 2016 (9-2, 8-1 MAC) DATE OPPONENT 9/2 N.C. WESLEYAN 9/10 at Albright * 9/17 LEBANON VALLEY * 9/24 FDU-FLORHAM * 10/1 at Misericordia * 10/15 at Widener * 10/22 DELAWARE VALLEY * 10/29 at King’s (Pa.) * 11/5 WILKES * 11/12 at Lycoming * 11/19 at Wesley ! Home Games in BOLD CAPS * - Middle Atlantic Conference ! - NCAA Championship 2017 (6-5, 6-3 MAC) DATE OPPONENT 8/31 at Frostburg State 9/9 KING’S (Pa.) * 9/16 at FDU-Florham * 9/23 at Delaware Valley * 9/30 MISERICORDIA * 10/14 at Lebanon Valley * 10/21 ALBRIGHT * 10/28 WIDENER * 11/4 at Wilkes * 11/11 LYCOMING * 11/19 vs. Alfred !

SCORE W 20-9 W 38-14 W 17-14 W 28-13 W 13-7 L 18-15 W 31-20 W 31-14 L 30-26 W 48-25 W 14-9

2018 (8-3, 7-1 MAC) DATE OPPONENT 8/30 FROSTBURG STATE 9/8 at Bridgewater (Va.) 9/15 at Albright * 9/22 at King’s (Pa.) * 9/29 DELAWARE VALLEY * 10/6 LEBANON VALLEY * 10/13 at Widener * 10/20 WILKES * 11/3 at Lycoming * 11/10 FDU-FLORHAM * 11/17 at Susquehanna !

SCORE L 34-7 W 35-23 W 50-21 W 38-17 L 31-20 W 36-7 W 20-6 W 33-21 W 33-32 W 34-0 L 17-7

Home Games in BOLD CAPS * - Middle Atlantic Conference ! - ECAC James Lynah Bowl (at Newark, Del.) SCORE W 42-28 W 31-26 W 24-13 W 54-15 W 48-0 W 45-21 W 19-0 W 41-20 L 38-35 W 28-10 L 38-17

2019 (8-3, 7-1 MAC) DATE OPPONENT 9/6 at Curry 9/14 BRIDGEWATER (Va.) 9/21 at Delaware Valley * 9/28 at FDU-Florham * 10/5 WIDENER * 10/19 ALBRIGHT * 10/26 KING’S (Pa.) * 11/2 at Lebanon Valley * 11/9 at Wilkes * 11/16 LYCOMING * 11/23 JOHNS HOPKINS !

SCORE W 34-0 L 37-22 L 28-21 W 49-15 W 36-10 W 55-7 W 39-15 W 42-13 W 42-21 W 31-0 L 51-28

Home Games in BOLD CAPS * - Middle Atlantic Conference ! - Centennial-MAC Bowl Series SCORE L 33-7 W 38-9 W 52-14 L 27-7 W 65-7 L 31-24 W 26-23 L 20-14 W 44-12 W 20-14 L 29-16

Home Games in BOLD CAPS * - Middle Atlantic Conference ! - ECAC James Lynah Bowl (at Newark, Del.)

2020 (1-0) DATE OPPONENT 4/10 ALVERNIA

SCORE W 28-10

Season played in Spring, 2021 due to pandemic


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MAC ALL-CONFERENCE Major Awards Offensive Player of the Year: Dan Williams (QB) - 2016 Defensive Player of the Year: Austin Tennessee (DB) - 2016 Rookie of the Year: Ian Gould (K) - 2017 Coach of the Year: Ed Hottle - 2016

First Team (25) Preston Addo (WR) - 2016, 2017 Preston Addo (Returner) - 2016, 2017 Razonte Dunn (LB) - 2015 Brendan Flaherty (OL) - 2018 Brian Latham (DB) - 2018 Trey Lee (RB) - 2014 Ashton Leschke (LB) - 2016, 2018 Billy Lewis (DB) - 2015, 2016 Chaz Lyles (WR) - 2019 Ryan Nowicki (OL) - 2019 Cory Pietrzyk (LB) - 2017 Izaiha Pitts (LB) - 2018, 2019 KK Smith (RB) - 2012 Austin Tennessee (DB) - 2014, 2015, 2016 Dan Williams (QB) - 2016, 2017 Devonte Williams (Special Teams) 2014, 2016

Titus Johnson (RB) - 2018 Scott Lange (DL) - 2014 Resheed Lashley (LB) - 2015 Jimmy Lauer (DB) - 2016 Ashton Leschke (LB) - 2017 Chaz Lyles (WR) - 2018 Deion Mason (TE) - 2019 Austin Meyers (DL) - 2016 Jeromie Miller (Special Teams) - 2013 Ryan Nowicki (OL) - 2018 Chikwado Nsoedo (DL) - 2019 Devin Salisbury (WR) - 2016 Ryan Sedgwick (QB) - 2019 Tim Sternfeld (K) - 2016 John Wadkins (OL) - 2019 David Wright (OL) - 2013 Andrew Wysocki (TE) - 2015

Honorable Mention (21)

Moses Anoh (DL) - 2014 Travis Bonds (DL) - 2016 Tim Campbell, Jr. (LB) - 2014 Shane Clough (DB) - 2014 Brody Coleman (DB) - 2018 Jainard Crawley-Lambert (RB) - 2016 Mike Datu (LB) - 2016 Seth Diorio (FB) - 2019 Brendan Flaherty (OL) - 2017 Billy Gunther (OL) - 2013, 2014 Brady Kempa (LB) - 2015 Billy Lewis (DB) - 2013 Austin Meyers (DL) - 2015 Jeromie Miller (WR) - 2013 Patrick Najmola (TE) - 2016 Cory Pietrzyk (LB) - 2014 Devin Salisbury (WR) - 2017 Travis Soubie (OL) - 2015, 2016 Cortez Taylor (WR) - 2015

Second Team (34)

Garston Banks (DL) - 2019 Donnell Brown (LB) - 2011 DJ Broxton (DB) - 2017 Ricky Congo (OL) - 2012 Ryan Crawley (FB) - 2011 Connor Davis (OL) - 2017, 2018 Jae DeShields (WR) - 2011 Razonte Dunn (LB) - 2014 Massy Essien (OL) - 2019 Dan Glazewski (OL) - 2019 Ian Gould (K) - 2017 Nick Jachera (OL) - 2015, 2016, 2017 Don Jones (DL) - 2019 Hanif Jones (LB) -2019

Dan Williams (top) and Austin Tennessee were the MAC Offensive and Defensive Players of the Year in 2016 as the Mustangs won the MAC championship and made their first NCAA appearance.


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2 0 2 2 S T EV E NS ON F O O T BAL L

RECORD BOOK (THROUGH 2019) GAME RECORDS RUSHING Most Carries: 32 - KK Smith vs. Delaware Valley 9/15/12, vs. FDU-Florham 11/10/12 Most Yards Rushing: 298 - Devonte Williams at FDU-Florham 11/14/15 Most Rushing TDs: 4 - KK Smith vs. Wilkes 10/20/12 4 - Trey Lee at FDU-Florham 9/20/13, vs. FDUFlorham 10/25/14 Longest Rush From Scrimmage: 71 - Titus Johnson at Albright 9/15/18 PASSING Most Passes Attempted: 46 - Dan Williams at Delaware Valley 9/23/17, vs. Lycoming 11/11/17 Most Passes Completed: 32 - Dan Williams vs. Lycoming 11/11/17 Most Passing Yards: 446 - Dan Williams at Wilkes 11/4/17 Most Touchdown Passes: 6 - Dan Williams vs. FDU-Florham 9/24/16 Longest Pass Completion: 90 - Dan Williams at Wilkes 11/4/17 RECEIVING Most Passes Caught: 13 - Keenan Franz vs. Johns Hopkins 11/23/19 Most Yards Receiving: 230 - Preston Addo at Wilkes 11/4/17 Most TD Receptions: 3 - Jae DeShields at Wilkes 11/12/11 3 - Preston Addo vs. FDU-Florham 9/24/16, at Wilkes 11/4/17 3 - Devin Salisbury vs. FDU Florham 9/24/16 Longest Pass Reception: 90 - Devin Salisbury at Wilkes 11/4/17 TOTAL OFFENSE Most Total Offense Yards: 472 - Dan Williams at Wilkes 114/17 Most All-Purpose Yards: 326 - Devonte Williams at FDU-Florham 11/14/15

SCORING

DEFENSE

Most Points Scored: 24 - KK Smith vs. Wilkes 10/20/12 24 - Trey Lee at FDU-Florham 9/20/13, vs. FDUFlorham 10/25/14

Most Interceptions: 3 - Jimmy Lauer vs. Widener 10/24/15 3 - Billy Lewis vs. N.C. Wesleyan 9/2/16

Most Extra Points, Kicking: 8 - Ian Gould vs. Misericordia 9/30/17 Most Points, Kicking: 17 - Ian Gould vs. Misericordia 9/30/17 Most Field Goals Made: 3 - Tim Sternfeld vs. Bethany 11/22/14 3 - Ian Gould vs. Misericordia 9/30/17, at Wilkes 11/4/17 Longest Field Goal Made: 45 - Tim Sternfeld at Misericordia 10/1/16 KICKING

Most Tackles: 19 - Antonio Lyles vs. Delaware Valley 9/15/12 Most Sacks: 2 - 9 players, 11 times (most recent Izaiha Pitts vs. Delaware Valley 9/29/18) Most Tackles For Loss: 3.5 - Razonte Dunn at Misericordia 9/29/12 Most Fumbles Forced: 2 - JaRon Cody at FDU-Florham 10/29/11 2 - Cory Pietrzyk vs. Lycoming 9/12/15 Most Pass Breakups: 4 - Austin Tennessee vs. Wilkes 11/5/2016

Highest Average Yards Per Punt (min. 3 punts): 44.4 - Wade Korvin vs. Albright 10/21/17 Longest Punt: 66 - Brandon Ribeiro at Albright 9/15/18 RETURNS Longest Punt Return: 83 - Preston Addo at FDU-Florham 9/16/17 Longest Kick Return: 92 - Devonte Williams at Widener 11/1/14 Longest Interception Return: 80 - Chris Coffie at Delaware Valley 10/10/15 Longest Fumble Return: 99 - Austin Tennessee vs. Albright 9/14/13 Most Punt Return Yards: 118 - Preston Addo at FDU-Florham 9/16/17 Highest Average Punt Return (min. 2): 24.7 - Preston Addo at Widener 10/12/16 Most Kick Return Yards: 171 - Anthony Reid vs. Delaware Valley 10/18/14 Highest Average Kick Return (min. 2): 43.0 - Devonte Williams vs. Wilkes 11/8/14

Billy Lewis had a program-record three interceptions against N.C. Wesleyan in 2016 and also holds the record for career interceptions with 20.


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RECORD BOOK (THROUGH 2019) SEASON RECORDS RUSHING Most Carries: 244 - KK Smith, 2012 Most Yards Rushing: 1424 - KK Smith, 2012 Most Rushing TDs: 12 - Trey Lee, 2014 Rushing Yards Per Game (Min. 5 games): 142.4 - KK Smith, 2012 PASSING Most Passes Attempted: 449 - Dan Williams, 2017 Most Passes Completed: 277 - Dan Williams, 2017 Most Passing Yards: 3234 - Ryan Sedgwick, 2019 Most Touchdown Passes: 30 - Ryan Sedgwick, 2019 Pass Completion Percentage (min. 20 att.): 67.6 - Dan Williams (100-148-1), 2018 Passing Yards Per Game (min. 5 games): 294.0 - Ryan Sedgwick, 2019

RETURNS

TOTAL OFFENSE

Punt Return Yards: 307 - Preston Addo (22-307), 2016 Average Yards/Punt Return (min. 5 attempts): 13.95 - Preston Addo (22-307), 2016 Most Kick Return Yards: 598 - Ken Harris (32-598), 2011 Average Yards/Kick Return (min. 5 attempts): 33.38 - Devonte Williams (16-534), 2014

Most Total Offense Yards: 7125 - Dan Williams (1137-7125) - 2014-18 Most All-Purpose Yards: 3732 - Preston Addo - 2014-17

DEFENSE Most Interceptions: 6 - Austin Tennessee (6-200), 2016 6 - Austin Tennessee (6-73), 2015 6 - Billy Lewis (6-36), 2016 6 - Billy Lewis (6-26), 2015 Total Tackles: 126 - Donnell Brown (57-69), 2011 Most Sacks: 8.0 - Cory Pietrzyk (7-2/51), 2015 Most Tackles For Loss: 15.5 - Cory Pietrzyk, 2017 Most Pass Defended: 18 - Austin Tennessee (12 brup, 6 int), 2015

RECEIVING Pass Reception Yards: 1288 - Chaz Lyles (76-1288), 2019 Pass Receptions: 87 - Devin Salisbury, 2017 Most TD Receptions: 12 - Preston Addo, 2016 Average Yards/Catch (min. 5 receptions): 25.44 - Riley Hodge (9-229), 2017 Receptions/Game (min. 5 games): 7.91 - Devin Salisbury (11 games) - 2017 TOTAL OFFENSE Most Total Offense Yards: 3244 - Dan Williams (500-3244), 2017 Most All-Purpose Yards: 1878 - Preston Addo, 2017 All-Purpose Yards, Game (min. 5 games): 170.7 - Preston Addo (11 games), 2017 SCORING Total Points Scored: 78 - Trey Lee (13 TD), 2014 Touchdowns Scored: 13 - Preston Addo (12 rcv, 1 ret), 2016 PAT Kicks Made: 47 - Brody Campbell (47-53), 2019 Field Goals Made: 13 - Ian Gould (13-15), 2017 KICKING Punt Yards: 2287 - Tim Sternfeld (70-2287), 2015 Average Yards/Punt (min. 20 attempts): 39.46 - Wade Korvin (24-947), 2017

SCORING Total Points Scored: 195 - Tim Sternfeld (102 PAT, 31 FG) - 2014-16 Touchdowns Scored: 27 - Preston Addo (25 rcv, 2 ret) - 2014-17 PAT Kicks Made: 102 - Tim Sternfeld (102-115) - 2014-16 Field Goals Made: 31 - Tim Sternfeld (31-38) - 2014-16 KICKING Punt Yards: 5750 - Tim Sternfeld (177-5750) - 2014-16 RETURNS Most Punt Return Yards: 746 - Preston Addo (66-746) - 2014-17 Most Kick Return Yards: 1075 - Devonte Williams (49-1075) - 2013-16 Average Yards/Kick Return (min. 10 attempts): 22.52 - Anthony Reid (46-1036) - 2011-14 DEFENSE

CAREER RECORDS RUSHING Most Yards Rushing: 1822 - Trey Lee (350-1822) - 2013-14 Most Rushing Attempts: 350 - Trey Lee (350-1822) - 2013-14 Most Rushing TDs: 18 - Trey Lee - 2013-14 PASSING Most Passes Attempted: 1001 - Dan Williams (608-1001-30) - 2014-18 Most Passes Completed: 608 - Dan Williams (608-1001-30) - 2014-18 Most Passing Yards: 7139 - Dan Williams (608-1001-30) - 2014-18 Most Touchdown Passes: 61 - Dan Williams - 2014-18 RECEIVING Pass Reception Yards: 1. 2358 - Preston Addo (138-2358) - 2014-17 Pass Receptions: 1. 188 - Devin Salisbury (188-1955) - 2014-17 Most TD Receptions: 1. 25 - Preston Addo - 2014-17 Receptions/Game (min. 5 games): 1. 4.95 - Devin Salisbury (38 games) - 2014-17

Most Interceptions: 20 - Billy Lewis (20-182) - 2013-16 Total Tackles: 329 - Cory Pietrzyk (191-138) - 2013-17 Most Sacks: 17.0 - Cory Pietrzyk - 2013-17 Most Tackles For Loss: 47.5 - Cory Pietrzyk - 2013-17 Most Pass Defended: 44 - Austin Tennessee (30 brup, 14 int) - 2013-16


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MUSTANG STADIUM

TREMENDOUS FACILITY THIS STADIUM IS REALLY, REALLY SPECIAL. - JOHN HARBAUGH, BALTIMORE RAVENS HEAD COACH

T

o accommodate its growth and expansion, Stevenson University opened its new Owings Mills campus in 2004. Two years later, it acquired the former headquarters and practice facility for the NFL’s Baltimore Colts and Super Bowl champion Baltimore Ravens. One of the best facilities in Division III, Mustang Stadium was opened in September 2011 and serves as the home for the University’s football and nationallyranked men’s and women’s lacrosse teams.

Baltimore Ravens in what is now the Caves Sports and Wellness Center. The concourse level has a full-service ticket office and concession stand as well as spacious restroom facilities, team store and security office. The third floor is a 6,400-square foot fitness center overlooking Owings Mills Boulevard complete with state-of-the-art workout equipment, sound system and LCD televisions with cable. There are also restroom and shower facilities as well as

The multi-million dollar, 3,500-seat stadium was designed by Curry Architects of Towson and built by Howard S. Brown Enterprises. The field level features team rooms for football, field hockey, women’s soccer, men’s lacrosse and women’s lacrosse as well offices for football and men’s lacrosse. Each team room is equipped with their own restroom and shower facilities, LCD televisions with cable, built-in stereos, scoreboard clocks and Internet access. They also feature custom built, hand-stained, wooden lockers personalized for each student-athlete. In constructing the football team room, the University repurposed the original lockers used by the Super Bowl XXXV champion

office space for a strength and conditioning coach. The two-story press box features a President’s Suite on the fourth level, complete with theatre-style seating, outdoor patios, two LCD televisions with cable, scoreboard clocks, granite countertops and bathroom tile, buffet and bar service. The fifth floor contains one of the best media facilities in Division III. It has home and visiting coaches’ boxes, home and visiting radio booths, television suits, video production room and space for general media and game day administration.

The stadium includes 204 reserved seats and general admission seating for over 3,000 fans while the field boasts a synthetic, environmentally responsible, eco-friendly FieldTurf surface and state-of-the-art scoreboard with programmable team names, statistical displays and penalty time. In its first year, the stadium hosted the Baltimore Ravens, the Ed Reed Football Camp and the Baltimore Touchdown Club Senior All-Star Game. “Tremendous facility,” said Baltimore Ravens Head Coach John Harbaugh. “This stadium is really, really special. I know the indoor, what they have is really neat. They’ve just done a great job with their athletic facilities.” The Ravens occupied the facility from 1996-2004 upon their arrival from Cleveland. The complex was originally built by the Baltimore Colts in 1979 and served as their base of operations until 1983. After the Ravens’ moved down the road to “The Castle,” the complex was purchased by Stevenson University in 2006 for use by the school’s growing athletics department.


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ATHLETIC FACILITIES

WEINBERG-FINE STADIUM

OWINGS MILLS GYMNASIUM

Weinberg-Fine Stadium, the place softball calls

Opened in August 2010, Owings Mills Gymnasium

home, is a fenced stadium featuring in-ground

is a 38,000 square foot facility designed as a “pit”

CAVES ATHLETICS COMPLEX

dugouts, inning-by-inning scoreboard, press box

style building that includes individual team rooms

Caves Athletics Complex is a modern facility serving

and stadium seating for 275 spectators.

for basketball and volleyball.

for baseball, women’s soccer and softball as well as

PINEY BRANCH GOLF CLUB

TRAINING ROOM

a racquetball court. The building also boasts The

Piney Branch Golf Club, the home of both men’s

In addition to the main training room and offices, the

John L. Stasiak Academic Link, a student lounge,

and women’s golf, features a Championship 18-Hole,

area features a rehab room, a hydro-therapy room

computer lab, classrooms and a Wellness Center

Par 71, 6,870 yard course located in the beautiful

that features a SwimEx model 700T for non-weight

for medical and counseling services.

rolling countryside of Northwest Baltimore County,

bearing rehabilitation and a Polar Plunge tub for cold

the needs of the University’s 700-plus student-athletes and the general student body. Facilities include the Caves Sports and Wellness Center, Owings Mills Gymnasium and Stevenson Stadium. The Caves Sports and Wellness Center is a 60,000-square foot facility that features a fully-equipped fitness center, athletic offices, athletic training rooms, team rooms

Maryland.

GREENSPRING TENNIS COURTS

SUGAR FIELD

BEACH VOLLEYBALL COURTS

Stevenson University’s tennis teams call the tennis

Sugar Field, home to the baseball team, is 320 feet

Located adjacent to Mustang Stadium, Stevenson

courts at the Greenspring campus home. Greenspring

down the left and right field lines, 375 feet in left

opened its beach volleyball courts in the spring of

Tennis Courts have hosted several CAC Tournament

and right center and 385 feet to centerfield. The

2016. Featuring four NCAA-regulation courts, the

matches the past few seasons along with the Mus-

University added 45-foot covered dugouts and a

facility is home to one of just two Division III beach

tang Open, a USTA-sanctioned event.

32-foot press box.

volleyball programs nationally.

REISTERSTOWN SPORTSPLEX

WEIGHT ROOM

The Reisterstown Sportsplex is Baltimore County’s

The third floor of Mustang Stadium is a 6,400-square

premier sports facilities. Home to the men’s and

foot fitness center overlooking Owings Mills Boule-

women’s ice hockey teams, the Sportsplex houses

vard complete with state-of-the-art workout equip-

a 200 x 85 foot NHL ice rink and a 180 x 80 foot

ment, sound system and LCD televisions with cable.

indoor soccer/lacrosse field with state of the art

There are also restroom and shower facilities as well

artificial turf.

as an office for a strength and conditioning coach.


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MEMORABLE MOMENTS

5

1

3

2

4

MEMORABLE MOMENTS 1. FIRST GAME

3. FIRST HOMECOMING

5. FIRST SHUTOUT

Jaelin DeShields scored the first touchdown in school history when he hauled in a 75yard touchdown pass from C.J. Hopson with 8:56 remaining in the second quarter. DeShields finished with 124 yards receiving and one touchdown as the Mustangs fell to Shenandoah, 49-21.

The Mustangs fell to Lycoming 48-14 in front of their second sellout of the season in front of 3,500 fans in the first Homecoming game in program history on Homecoming and Family Weekend. Tim Campbell had a career-high seven tackles, including five solo, one for loss and one forced fumble.

Stevenson football freshman Dylan Cumming scored on a 1-yard run with nine seconds remaining in the second quarter for the game’s only score as the Mustangs posted the first shutout in school history with a 7-0 road victory over King’s. It was also the first win in four all-time meetings against the Monarchs.

Shentel Stadium - Sept. 3, 2011

Mustang Stadium - Oct. 22, 2011

McCarthy Stadium - Sept. 13, 2014

2. OVERTIME THRILLER Mustang Stadium - Sept. 10, 2011

Garret Perau capped an eight-play, 46-yard drive that used just 56 seconds to tie the game for the fifth time as time expired in regulation of a 46-43 double overtime victory versus Christopher Newport. Trailing by three and facing a third-and-4 in the second overtime, C.J. Hopson found Jeromie Miller in the corner of the end zone to give the Mustangs their first win in program history in front of a sellout crowd of 3,500 fans in the inaugural game at Mustang Stadium.

4. SNOW GAME

Robert T. Shields Field – Oct. 29, 2011 Battling a constant snow fall and a field covered in snow, Ryan Crawley became the school’s first 100-yard rusher as the Mustangs posted their first win in the Middle Atlantic Conference with a 36-13 victory at FDU-Florham. Crawley ran for 105 yards and one touchdown on 31 carries. He also had two receptions for 23 yards and one touchdown, totaling 128 yards of total offense and two scores.


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MEMORABLE MOMENTS

6

8

9

10

7

IN MUSTANG HISTORY 8

6. MUSTANGS RECEIVE VOTES IN AFCA POLL Sept. 29, 2014

After starting the 2014 season 4-0, the Mustangs received 22 votes in the second week of the AFCA Division III Coaches’ Poll, marking the first time in school history that the team has been mentioned in either of the two national polls.

7. SCORING RECORD, FIRST HOMECOMING WIN Mustang Stadium – Oct. 25, 2014

Led by 153 yards rushing and a school-record four touchdowns from sophomore Trey Lee, the Stevenson football team posted its first victory in four tries on Homecoming and Family Weekend with a 57-0 victory over FDU-Florham in front of a sold out crowd. The Mustangs posted their second shutout of the season while setting a new school standard for points in a game.

8. ECAC BOWL WIN

Mustang Stadium – Nov. 22, 2014 Stevenson football sophomore Trey Lee rushed for 174 yards and three touchdowns on 30 carries while the defense held Bethany to just 32 yards rushing as the Mustangs scored the game’s first 26 points and cruised to a 29-7 victory in the ECAC Southeast Bowl. Stevenson finished the season on a three-game winning streak while posted a then-school record eight wins.

9. CENTENNIAL-MAC BOWL SERIES WIN Scotty Wood Stadium – Nov. 21, 2015

Using its trademark defense that led the nation in several statistical categories, Stevenson posted its second straight bowl win, recording a 14-9 win at Muhlenberg in the inaugural Centennial Conference-MAC Bowl Series. The Mustang defense came up with three interceptions, including one by Billy Lewis in the end zone to seal the victory. The Mustangs finished 9-2, establishing a school record for wins.

10. FIRST MAC TITLE

David Person Field – Nov. 12, 2016 Stevenson went on the road and defeated Lycoming 28-10 to claim its first-ever Middle Atlantic Conference title. The Mustangs clung to a 14-10 lead early in the second half before pulling away with a pair of third-quarter touchdowns and the defense held the Warriors at bay. Stevenson went on to play at Wesley in their first-ever NCAA game the following week.


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HALLOWED GROUND

THE BUBBLE

CAVES CONSTRUCTION The site of Stevenson’s Caves Athletics Complex and Mustang Stadium in Owings Mills was originally occupied in 1980 by the then-Baltimore Colts, who won the NFL title in 1958 and captured Super Bowl V over Dallas 13 years later. After the Colts left town, the facility was used by the Baltimore Stallions, who became the only U.S.-based team to win the Canadian Football League (CFL) title with a 37-20 win over the Calgary Stampede in the 1995 Grey Cup.

The Stallions headed to Montreal after Art Modell, then the owner of the Cleveland Browns, announced plans to move his team to Baltimore in time for the 1996 season. The winning tradition continued as the Ravens beat the Giants 34-7 in 2001 in Super Bowl XXXV. Bill Tessendorf, the former Ravens’ trainer who was one of 17 Browns employees who made the move to Baltimore, helped adapt what had been used by the Colts and Stallions for use by the Ravens. “When the franchise relocated to Baltimore one of the things that was offered to the franchise, besides a new stadium, was a practice facility that had belonged to the Colts,” Tessendorf said. “Even though the Colts had not been there for nine years it was appealing to us. As part of franchise relocation, one of my jobs was to convert that place from a police academy for the city of Baltimore to a workable NFL facility we could use.”

MATT STOVER In 2010, Pro Bowler and 2011 Ravens Ring of Honor inductee Matt Stover spoke to the team during their

MUSTANG STADIUM

developmental season. Stover also tossed the coin for

One of the best facilities in Division III, Mustang Stadium was opened in September 2011 and serves as the home for the University’s football, men’s and women’s soccer, field hockey and nationally-ranked men’s and women’s lacrosse teams. The multi-million dollar, 3,500-seat stadium was designed by Curry Architects of Towson and built by Howard S. Brown Enterprises. “Give credit to the administration: When these facilities opened up they got the facilities and were able to expand their campus,” Tessendorf said. “I remember meeting the president (Kevin Manning) and athletic director (Brett Adams) a few years ago as they came walking through to see the facilities. Then a few years later they had a football team and a stadium. Kudos to the administration; they were able to take the existing buildings and construct new ones.” “Tremendous facility,” said Ravens head coach John Harbaugh. “This stadium is really, really special,” Harbaugh said. “I know the indoor, what they have is really neat. They’ve just done a great job with their athletic facilities.”

the first annual Green-White scrimmage during SU Homecoming and Family Weekend.


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HALLOWED GROUND

FOOTBALL TEAM ROOM

FIRST GAME GUESTS

“When (Stevenson) took over, its athletic teams were able to use those facilities,” said Bill Tessendorf, the former Ravens’ trainer who moved with the team from Cleveland. “They adjusted to what they needed. They have more athletes than an NFL team and they had to adjust the locker rooms. But they had the basics. They were able to tailor the facilities.” “It is kind of cool,” Hottle said of the connections to the Ravens. “We talk about it in recruiting. Kids think they may have a locker that was used by Ray Lewis or Jonathan Ogden. It is a big part of recruiting.” Hottle is optimistic that the ties for Stevenson to the Colts, Stallions and Ravens will mean a fourth winner on the field in the years to come.

The Mustangs celebrated their first home game in the program’s history with the help of some of Baltimore’s greatest players. On Sept. 10, 2011, 11-time Pro Bowler and 2013 Hall of Fame Inductee Jonathan Ogden, as well as former Raven O.J. Brigance and former Colt Tom Matte delivered the game ball. Stevenson would go on to win its first game, 46-43 in double overtime. “This is just a great night for football and it’s a beautiful campus,” Ravens head coach John Harbaugh said. “The stadium is beautiful. Everyone here at Stevenson University has just been fantastic, all the way through. A lot of great people and we love them over here.” “We love working with the staff here and this is such a wonderful environment,” said Ravens Vice President of Marketing Gabrielle Dow.

RAY LEWIS The Super Bowl XLVII champion Ravens have held an open practice at Stevenson in 2012 and 2013. One of the highlights from 2012 came before the start of practice when 13-time Pro Bowler and two-time NFL Defensive Player of the Year Ray Lewis posed for a picture with Stevenson President Dr. Kevin Manning in front of what were the original lockers used by the Ravens when they were headquartered at the school’s Owings Mills campus from 1996-2004. Both of the Ravens’ Super Bowl championships in 2001 and 2013 came the same year when the team practiced on the ground that is now Mustang Stadium. In other words, the Ravens have not won a Super Bowl without starting a season on the Hallowed Ground that now is home to Stevenson athletics. “It means a great deal to Stevenson to have a relationship with one of the best organizations in the NFL,” said Director of Athletics Brett Adams.

JOHN HARBAUGH Ravens head coach John Harbaugh spoke to Stevenson’s nationally-ranked men’s lacrosse team in May 2013, giving the Mustangs a pep talk before the team headed off to Lincoln Financial Field in Philadelphia where the team would go on to win the school’s first national championship. Just nine months later, Harbaugh led the Ravens to their second Super Bowl title with a 34-31 victory over his brother Jim and the San Francisco 49ers in Super Bowl XLVII at the Superdome in New Orleans. It was also the final game in Ray Lewis’ brilliant 17-year career.

JOE FLACCO


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GAMEDAY ATMOSPHERE

CHEER The Stevenson cheer team not only performs at all home football and men’s basketball games, but competes at the NCA Collegiate Cheer Championship. Last season, the Mustangs finished were a top-10 finalist for the second straight year.

STEVENSON GAMEDAY The gameday experience at Stevenson is like no other in Division III. Not only do you get to watch a football game, you are entertained with cheer and dance teams and a marching band. The flame towers and fireworks give our fans an NFL gameday experience. And be sure to stay alert during halftime to catch a free t-shirt!

DANCE Stevenson offers two different dance teams for students to get involved with. The Game Day team is run under the Club Sports and performs at home football and men’s basketball events. If you want to help bring spirit to Mustang athletic events, this is the team for you! In addition, the school also sponsors a Competitive Dance team, which is run similarly to the other NCAA varsity programs. The team practices 12 hours a week and competes at a number of regional events. The team also travels to Orlando, Florida every January to compete in the UDA College Dance Team National Championship.


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MARCHING BAND ALMA MATER Join together, sing the praise for spirit that endures, Pledge our honor, faithfully serving – Stevenson, we are yours. From a vision, strong and steadfast, glory and pride we bring. Grateful for the light that guides us, Stevenson’s name we sing.

MARCHING BAND The Stevenson University Marching Band debuted in fall 2012. Since then, it has grown to be one of Stevenson’s largest student organizations. Led by Director of Bands Mark Lortz, the band plays at events throughout the academic year, from football games and the University’s Convocation to pep rallies and high school marching band exhibitions. The band is a contemporary style university marching band. Membership is open to all Stevenson University students, including non-music majors. The band uses standard woodwind, brass and percussion instruments and synthesizers, guitars and color guard. The main requirement to join the SU Marching Band is a strong desire to be part of an energized university marching band!

FIGHT SONG Fight for the Mustangs, Cheer for the Mustangs! Onward to vic’try, winning tonight! Raise up your voices: M–U–S–T–A–N–G Honor is ours for green and for white. March on for Stevenson pride, Roll down the field with might on our side! Raise up your voices: M–U–S–T–A–N–G Mustangs to victory.


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SOCIAL MEDIA

WATCH

TWITTER

LIVE VIDEO

Follow us at GoMustangSports to get score updates, breaking news and schedule changes as it happens. Be sure to use the hash tag #StangNation.

Stevenson athletics brings you live and ondemand content from the Mustang Sports Network of all Stevenson home games. Video can be viewed online or on your mobile device. Access all live games at GoMustangSports. com

FACEBOOK Like us at Stevenson University Mustang Athletics to get status updates and easy access to our latest releases, videos and other content that you can comment on and share with others.

INSTAGRAM Get access to memorable moments in Stevenson athletics with behind-the-scenes photos and videos from game day and much more by following us at GoMustangSports.

YOUTUBE Check out game highlights, team previews, interviews with student-athletes and coaches as well as other features by subscribing to the Stevenson Mustangs YouTube channel.

Stevenson Mustangs Athletics is also available on your favorite OTT device. Download the app now for Roku, Amazon Fire TV, Apple tvOS and Android TV and watch live and on demand games on your TV.




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