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Game Week

Holy Cross Notes

The Bulldogs enter Week 2 with an unblemished 1-0 record for the first time in years after an exciting 38-31 win at Holy Cross.

Grant Jordan’s debut at quarterback was short lived suffering what appeared to be a concussion after being rocked by a Holy Cross safety on a running play. Jordan played well with a couple nice passes including a great throw along the sideline to Shipp. Not many quarterbacks have the physical durability of the departed Grooms and unfortunately Jordan learned the hard way why most signal callers must slide when confronted in the open field. McCaughey entered the contest looking like a seasoned veteran as he marched the Bulldogs down with impressive passes and a hard-nosed charge into the endzone for Yale’s first points. McCaughey showed incredible poise not only on the first drive but throughout the contest culminating in a game winning drive aided by defensive penalties. McCaughey finished the afternoon 18 of 32 for 217 yards and 1 TD. It wasn’t all pretty for McCaughey with a number of risky deep balls that could have been intercepted and short passing plays that were doomed by poor timing or low balls. Pantelis and Shipp were dominant with a combined 11 catches for 169 yards and a touchdown. Freshman Jaxton Santiago is a matchup nightmare for defensive backs with his size and strength. With Pitsenberger out of the contest, Denney, Dahl and Peterson picked up the slack rushing for 129 yards (3.5 yards per carry) and 3 TDs. McCaughey added another 14 rushing yards with a touchdown. Denney was a workhorse that fought tirelessly for every yard and his receiving skills looked much improved. Pass blocking along the offensive line was decent for a first contest with only one sack allowed, although McCaughey’s elusiveness aided this statistic as he was often running for his life and took a number of hard shots after releasing the ball. Run blocking was up and down as the big men opened enough holes to keep the clock ticking away, but far too many rushing plays were blown up at the line of scrimmage. Overall, it was a great offensive effort considering we were down a starting QB and RB with two new starters along the offensive line.

The defensive performance was another story as Holy Cross posted 426 yards of total offense. Saffold was caught off guard on the very first defensive play with a play action pass going for a 74-yard touchdown. Freshman Breylan Thompson entered in relief of Saffold and instantly made his presence known with a punishing hit on a Holy Cross running back. The future looks very bright for Thompson as we haven’t seen a freshman cornerback with his skillset in Reno’s entire career at Yale. The defensive line appeared to be a bright spot for Yale heading into the season, but with Egodogbare and Yang out of the rotation, our linemen were not getting off blocks and were not pressuring the quarterback. Containment on the outside from our defensive ends was often non-existent. Sophomore DE Zairion Jackson-Bass seemed to have the best performance along the defensive front with 4 tackles, half a tackle for loss and a fumble recovery. The linebacker position continues to be a huge concern with the linebackers failing to plug gaps or shed blockers. Shaffer, Biggs and Campbell all missed crucial tackles which forced the safeties and cornerbacks to make touchdown saving stops. Shaffer’s performance did improve in the 2nd half and he wound up leading the defense in tackles with 9. The secondary was often just a step out of position to contain receivers and even in tight coverages, Holy Cross’ talented wideouts were able to make difficult catches. The safeties and cornerbacks stepped up on 3rd downs though with Kamara, Daniyan, Guyton and Tarver all making clutch plays to stall drives. Holy Cross was limited to just 5 of 11 on third down conversions but was able to generate big plays in the passing game with 10.3 yards per attempt and 23.3 yards per reception. This contest likely would have had a different outcome with either Bob Chesney coaching or Jordan Fuller playing at running back.

Conforti was 1 of 2 on field goals with his miss coming on a difficult 47-yarder in the rain. Florio averaged 35.8 yards per punt with 2 punts placed inside the endzone. The kickoff team will need to improve considerably as Florio’s short kickoffs gave great field advantage to Holy Cross. Felton was inactive, but Denney was fantastic in the return game with 27.0 yards per kickoff return.   

7 replies on “Holy Cross Notes”

One thing that bothers me having Denney running the football on kickoffs let Daal have a shot returning the football on sat. remember we have 2 great freshman running backs on the bench let them play to

In regards to their injuries. Leo Blum was a heck of a center. I didn’t see him in the spring game either. Felton is a heck of a kickoff returner. I saw Josh , on the sideline with his right hand wrapped up.

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