Billy Ragone
The name of Billy
Ragone has been familiar to Columbia fans almost as long as it has been to Penn
fans.
Even before he
started his career at Franklin Field, I paired him up with his fellow Connecticut
high school star Sean Brackett ’13,
as two new Ivy QB’s who were worth watching.
That thought
turned out to be correct as they both would become All Ivy players and iconic team
leaders.
The tough
difference for Columbia fans is that Ragone currently has three Ivy League
championship rings on his fingers and Brackett graduated in May with just 10
total wins as a starter.
Brackett may
still be the more talented player overall, but Ragone has great physical grit
especially in the clutch.
In the week five
game against Penn, Columbia was forced to learn that lesson about Ragone time
and again… starting with a key play early in the 2nd quarter with
the game still scoreless.
Facing a 4th
and one from the Lion 23, Penn Head Coach Al Bagnoli took Ragone off the
sidelines where he had been sitting out that offensive series in favor of
fellow QB Andrew Holland. Ragone started erratically as a passer in 2012, and
Bagnoli and his staff wanted to make sure they weren’t relying too much on one
QB.
But when push
came to shove, Bagnoli knew who he needed to rely on in a tight squeeze and
that was Ragone, who calmly trotted on the field and made a two yard gain for a
1st down.
Then he trotted
right off the field and handed the ball back over to Holland, who got the
Quakers close enough for a 37 yard Connor Loftus field goal and a 3-0 lead.
4 comments:
Why all the hype for Ragone? He can't pass. He makes yards on the ground because he is a load, with a good OL and a good FB as lead blocker.
He wins ugly... like Joe Kapp used to do it. I hate that he gutted out wins against us the last two years, but there it is. He did the same against Princeton too. Guy's a winner.
The Kapp comparison is very accurate. I have to confess I never liked him. He was knocked cold in the Super Bowl against Kansas City and later failed as coach at Cal. (How did he get that job???) But I admit he was a tough, ugly player.
He's done same against Dartmouth. Morphed into John Elway in fourth quarter...
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