I think it's too early to post my Ivy Power Rankings before all the Ivy teams have played at least one league game, but here are some probably not-fully-cooked thoughts after week 1:
-I watched the Harvard-Merrimack game in its entirety and Harvard showed good killer instinct to get back into that game, but Merrimack's abysmal clock management sure helped. I was also not impressed by the Crimson's offensive line, and starting QB Charlie Dean was off the mark way too often with his passes. RB Aiden Borguet was contained almost all night until the Merrimack defense finally faltered in the 4th quarter. His stats were impressive, but I was still surprised to see him win the Ivy Offensive Player of the Week award. I was very impressed by Harvard's defensive line's ability to totally shut down the run.
-Cornell's win over VMI was a nice victory and a possible sign that the Big Red has a workable two-QB attack going. But a much bigger test comes in five days against Yale at Schoelkopf.
-Speaking of Yale, the Elis looked listless much of the time against a very, very good Holy Cross team. One thing to note: RB Josh Pitsenberger, a freshman who was not even listed on the Yale two-deep, was the biggest contributor on offense. He may be surprise weapon.
-Brown came to life very late to pull off a big comeback win over Bryant. But like Cornell, the much bigger test comes vs. Harvard at Brown Stadium this Saturday. Based on the way both teams played in week one, this could be quite the battle. In other words, I would no longer be shocked if Harvard loses. But I'd still be surprised.
-Dartmouth looked very efficient in its win over Valparaiso, especially after some serious injuries and other surprise emergency needs from the O-line to the kicking game. But like Columbia after it's easy takedown of Marist, it's a bit hard to judge just where the Big Green are after beating an opponent like Valpo.
-Penn started out looking terrible but finished strong making three Ivy teams that followed that pattern Saturday, (Harvard and Brown being the others). One great piece of good news I was not aware of for the Quakers is that WR Rory Starkey is still a serious weapon.
-Princeton's offense was fine and there's no way really to judge its defense right now after a slow start but stronger finish against Stetson.
More Columbia Thoughts
-PK Alex Felkins' 35-yard FG attempt miss late in the game clearly cost him the Ivy Specia Teams Player of the Week award. It was still tough to see him not mentioned for anything more than the "honor roll" when he broke a school record with an earlier 53-yard FG... which also made him the first Ivy League kicker to boot three 50-plus yard field goals in a career.
-I certainly do not mean to take any credit away from RB Joey Giorgi and his amazing 103-yard performance in his first-ever varsity game. But my priority was to note how dominant the offensive line was, and no one can hold much of a candle to how much this O-line has been snubbed and ignored over the last seven months or so.
-Head Coach Al Bagnoli's Columbia record is now 30-31. My expert math research team tells me that if the Lions beat Georgetown this Saturday, he will be 31-31. That would make him the first CU head coach to have a career record (through at least 10 games) at or above .500 since Lou Little, who still retired with a losing record overall at CU. This is almost a century in the making.
2 comments:
Once again, a great write up. Thank you Jake. One can only hope that Cornell and Brown both somehow take down Harvard and Yale during the first game of the season. That would create some great excitement. We know how well Yale plays as the season progresses so got to take them out early.
To me the big story is how Harvard easily could have, and probably should have, lost to an unknown Merrimack team.
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