Yale's Tyler Varga may be even busier in 2013
100 Top Moments on
the way…
As we approach the 100 day countdown to kickoff, I will be
using each of the 100 days to describe the 100 top moments of the 2012 season.
I took a break from the 100 top moments feature last year to
give new Head Coach Pete Mangurian a clean break from the previous coaching
regime.
But I consider looking back at the 100 moments from the
previous season to be the most informative tool for understanding what the team
did last season and where it is coming into the fall.
Just as a reminder, the 100 top moments will not be listed
in ascending or descending order, (doing that would unfairly straddle the
readers with a bunch of less exciting moments all at the end or the beginning of
the count). Instead, they will be listed in chronological order.
So, we’ll start he countdown this Thursday, when we are exactly
100 days before kickoff, but I just wanted to get everyone prepared for what to
expect right now.
Top Running Backs
Returning
Last week, I wrote
about the familiar rarity of top-level impact defensive tackles in the Ivy
League.
The second big rarity are 1,000-yard running backs. And
right on cue, the only 1,000-yard rusher from 2012 -- Harvard’s Treavor Scales – is gone to
graduation.
But there is what I would call an unusual amount of
potential 1,000-yard rushers returning this season.
Columbia’s Marcorus Garrett is one of the leaders of that
group. A 1st Team All Ivy selection last year, Garrett had a
breakout season in 2012. Only Scales rushed for more yards overall and Garrett
also had the longest run from scrimmage in all of the Ivies. Garrett’s
impressive work in the weight room this offseason makes him even more
dangerous.
Yale’s Tyler Varga, who played in only eight games last
season in his first year with the Bulldogs, is the man most Ivy pundits are
watching the closest. The Canadian college transfer averaged 117 yards per game
and scored eight TD’s. Varga was pretty much all of Yale’s offense last year,
and he can’t logically be expected to continue to shoulder that entire load…
but maybe “logic” isn’t what we think it is in Varga’s case. He still averaged
fewer than 25 carries per game last year and he shared a lot of the running
duties with the now-graduated Mordecai Cargill. So, one could argue that Varga
will be asked to do even MORE in 2013. And in that case, he looks like a good
bet to get to the 1,000 yard mark.
Another big contender who failed to play in all 10 games
last season is Dartmouth senior Dominic Pierre. Pierre netted 830 rushing yards
in nine games played, but he really only was healthy for eight full contests. He averaged five yards
per carry and scored nine TD’s. He was basically a 20-carry-a-game back in
2012, and would give the Big Green a big push if he could be durable enough to
up that to the 25 carry area.
If the three players mentioned above all get to the 1,000
yard mark, it would be a very rare achievement league-wide to have more than
two thousand yarders. I consider them to be the top three contenders for the
mark. But don’t sleep on some of the other players who I think could do it this
season.
-Penn’s 5th year senior Lyle Marsh certainly has
the ability to be a top runner, but injuries have really slowed him down since
he burst onto the scene in early 2009. Another factor running against him is
his QB and fellow 5th year player Bill Ragone is likely to take his
usual big share of the carries away from him. Another issue is the return of another 5th
year senior in Brandon Colavita. All three of these Quakers are talented, but
too injury prone for me to think that Penn won’t run the ball by committee in
2013… much as it did in 2012, 2011, 2010, etc.
-Princeton’s Will Powers had a very strong sophomore
campaign in 2012 and may get a significant upgrade over his 11 carries per game
average last year. But don’t forget DiAndre
Atwater, the explosive freshman Tiger who made a big impression in just four
games played last season before his injury. Powers or Atwater could get to
1,000 yards, but I don’t think both will and it’s possible they’ll each take
enough of the running load that they’ll both end up in the 800-yard
neighborhood.
-Another player I’m not sleeping on is Cornell’s Luke Hagy,
a very talented runner who isn’t likely to get a full chance to show his stuff
while Jeff Mathews remains at QB for the Big Red. But new Head Coach David
Archer is promising to use the run more this season and that’s good news for
Hagy.
6 comments:
If you're talking about full games, Dom Pierre was only healthy for about half of them. He sat out the Sacred Heart game entirely, and left the Columbia, Yale, and Princeton games early because of injury.
And I'm guessing you're writing off Chuck Dibilio (the only returnee with a 1,000+ season under his belt) entirely. Pity.
Garrett ran for almost 1,000 yards despite the youngest and lightest OL in the Ivies. He sat out most of the second half on the Brown game, thus costing him his 1,000 yards. He should be in the mix for offensive POY if he can stay healthy.
... we all keep perpetuating the same old song .... weak offensive line .... yes, weak at protecting the passer ... but .... Garrett didn't get all that yardage without a decent job by the offensive line at the point of attack ....
Despite that, I agree the O-line needs to improve if we are going to win more than 2-3 games this season ...
A lot of Garrett's yards depended upon having a two back set with a lead blocker.
Lions LBs will have to stop these "Water Buffalos" at the LOS. The young DBs will not be able to bring down these monsters alone.
Pass D should be very good.
Please advise info on recruits if possible. They will be on campus in July.
As much as I love my Pride, my prediction is Varga rushes for 1500 this year. We couldn't stop him and I don't see anyone else doing so either. Have not seen a big back with his speed and skills in the Ivy fora long time.
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