Monday, November 24, 2025

Georgetown: The Work Ahead


 

Pardon the interruption for some candid thoughts at the conclusion of the 2025 season.

For a tenth consecutive season, the white flag flies above Cooper Field, assuming there was a flagpole there in the first place. Another season of promise ends in a program-humbling loss, a tradition of Georgetown football which goes back a quarter century and yet receives not a casual glance from its University. The same University which will send out e-mail and after e-mail pleading for money on an almost weekly basis, pays no attention to those who want to give to football and are dismissively told it's not in their ethos and culture to raise serious money for it.

Winning is a function of preparedness, execution, and commitment. Georgetown University is lacking across all three. 

***

It is no more apparent than in the final weeks of the season, every season, when the tank runs dry and the collective attention of the University has long since turned to cheering amidst 17,000 empty seats downtown. There they were on Saturday, to watch a men's basketball program which wrote a check for Wagner College to show up Saturday before an announced crowd of 4,184. Its chfronically self-aware but socially stunted student body does not even know that football played on Saturday.  Meanwhile, in Boston, 13,764 showed up for a football game.

With the 42-7 loss to Holy Cross this past Saturday, Georgetown's record falls to 6-6 on the season, Rob Sgarlata's best single season record as head coach. Nonetheless, Sgarlata's record of 41-80 becomes just one of five active FCS coaches with 80 career losses, and one of two of these coaches with a career mark under .500. (The other, Chris Villarrial, moves off the list as St. Francis drops to Division III in 2026.)  

The story is familiar: a hopeful season opener in September is weighed down by injuries and depth.  Georgetown travels to a lower tier Ivy League school and is beaten soundly--the Ivies don't have schoalrship but their generous aid packages do not go unnoticed. October features an upset here and there, usually against Lafayette or Bucknell. November wilts as the talent runs dry. In the last ten years, Georgetown has lost every single season finale, and by an average of  25 points. Only two of these have been by less than three touchdowns. 

The Hoyas are not, as a Holy Cross fan put it, a bottom feeder. In its last three seasons it has finished no lower than fourth in an seven (now eight, soon to be 10) team league.  Excepting the arrival of Richmond this season, Georgetown has defeated every PL opponent at least once over the past three years with one exception: the College of the Holy Cross.

Excepting the post-COVID year, each of the past five seasons have ended against Holy Cross, losing by an average of 30 points. The Crusaders have been a good team, so no argument here. By the third week of November, Georgetown is not, and as these games are scheduled every November to end the season;  the season comes to a fitful if predictable conclusion.

"Obviously the result was not what we were looking for," said Sgarlata in a tepid post-game statement, but it was the outcome some people expect to come out of this program. Consider the four games that this senior class has faced to end the season. There's a pattern here:

2022: Holy Cross 47, Georgetown 10

2023: Holy Cross 31, Georgetown 10

2024: Holy Cross 34, Georgetown 0

2025: Holy Cross 42, Georgetown 7

Plug in any Patriot League team except Bucknell to the last week of the season and you're likely to see much the same. Since 2001, Georgetown has lost in 21 of its 24 finales in league play.  The Hoyas trade in Brown and Morgan State for two more PL games next season. Adding Villanova or William & Mary to the late November mix next year does not portend a turnaround in this trend. 

***

This team was unprepared for Holy Cross--physically, psychologically, and perhaps spiritually-- by season's end. The Hoyas limped into Fenway Park missing its #1 quarterback, its #2 receiver, while its #2 running back never fully recovered from injuries. It lost its best defensive player to injury in the first quarter of this game. That's football, it's next man up. Unfortunately for such a thin squad, with far more all-County than all-State players, next up wasn't good enough. From the opening series of this game the Hoyas were pushed around on the lines and its showed. That said, the defense tightened after the opening score and kept things close. holding HC to an astounding 50 total yards by the end of the third quarter. Not the first quarter, but the third.

No one will accuse Danny Lauter of being Arch Manning but Dez Thomas was no Quinn Ewers either. A Division III transfer who played in four games as a backup for Trinity Collge (TX) in 2022, Thomas sat on the Georgetown bench for two seasons, then was thrust into the starting lineup mid-season and did as much as a Division III-level player could do in an FCS environment. Opposing teams shut down his run ability, linebackers clogged the passing lanes, and Thomas was left with prayers dutifully answered by Jimmy Kibble but not much else. Thomas accounted for an astounding 40 sacks allowed over nine games, befitting a quarterback who stood too long in the pocket and did not go through progressions in a timely manner. The film doesn't lie--teams locked on him more and more in every succeeding week. Saturday's finale was arguably the weakest offensive output of the season. 

Thomas had nothing against Holy Cross to open this game and ended the first half 5 for 13 for 25 yards with two interceptions. With the best receiver on the Georgetown roster in 20 years, Thomas passed just four times to Kibble, completing one for five yards. At least two passes were prospective interceptions that the Crusaders were simply late to. Give Holy Cross credit for its defensive adjustments, less to to Georgetown for not adjusting.

To be candid, Thomas should have never been allowed to start the third quarter. Down 14-0, an astoundingly narrow margin given how Georgetown was playing, Thomas' play wasn't enough. Had the coaches had any confidence in Jack Johnson (a sophomore who has played only a handful of plays in two seasons when Thomas' helmet came off after a play), this was the call. Jacob Holtschlag and Aidan Krause never got the reps to be in the conversation because, again, Georgetown puts all its chips down on one quarterback in August, usually the oldest, and they don't change horses in the race unless absolutely, positively necessary. Well, that blew up on them with Lauter's week 3 shoulder injury. Lauter wasn't leading the Hoyas to a PL title either, but he had in-game experience that Thomas did not. Georgetown doesn't develop backups, so it was all-in on Thomas.

Other signs of unpreparedness were in evidence much of the season and reignited in this game. Punter Josh Leff had shown issues with late punt snaps in a number of games, but the blocked punt in the second quarter was a turning moment in the game. Thomas Anderson struggled in the kicking game this season as well, but with just one PAT and one kickoff, he saw comparatively no action otherwise. Special teams were last in the PL in punt return yardage and dutifully allowed HC an average of 20 yards per return. The Crusaders' first three drives started at its 48, at midfield, and at the Georgetown 45.

The offensive line, battered all season, allowed six sacks but also could not open up holes for the backs, who averaged just 2.7 yards a carry and no running back had a carry of more than 10 yards. The line was stuffed on consecutive plays with one yard to go at the HC 21 with under two minutes to halftime. If the Hoyas could get it to 14-7 at the break, it's a ball game.  It was as close as Georgetown would be thereafter.

Dez Thomas' third interception ceded the game and his failed effort to avoid the pick-six summed up the 2025 Georgetown Hoyas: a hopeful band of players that were a step too slow, a size too small, and not deep enough at this level, especially at season's end. Consider this stat: when a Patriot League team has scored 24 points on Georgetown since 2001, the opponent's record is 90-5. When that team is not named Bucknell, it's 82-2. 

Holy Cross' record when scoring 24 points on Georgetown? 17-0.

The defense was young and showed it. Despite holding the Crusaders to just one red zone possession, it allowed 21 points overall, 14 with the game out of reach, with a blocked punt and two pick-six interceotions filling out the box score. 

In 2025, five teams scored 30 or more points against Georgetown and three of these scores came in the final four weeks. The Hoyas are simply not a comeback team by November, which is why that second quarter goal line stand was so deflating. 

Stats don't flower in Week 12 as much as they are sown in August and September. Overall, Georgetown gave up an average of 30 points per game in its final 10 games, with four games allowing 40 or more. That it finished with a 6-6 mark is laudable, but there's no Arthur J. Rothkopf Participation Trophy in the Patriot League.

What was galling was that, entering the fourth quarter, Georgetown was still in this game, 21-7,  having held HC to 160 yards in total offense before the roof caved in. With 12 minutes to play, Johnson had the Hoyas in Holy Cross territory. A touchdown closes this to a one possession score with plenty of time remaining and a Georgetown defense which had held a remarkably listless HC offense. Instead, Johnson was leveled and fumbled the ball, with nary a penalty flag to be seen on a night where Holy Cross racked up 194 yards in penalties (110 yards in the fourth quarter alone) and could have well been guilty of 60 yards more. Some would call it dirty play, but Sgarlata doesn't speak ill of other schools.

Perhaps he should have.

Employing an aggressive tone all evening, and particularly in the waning minutes of the game, Holy Cross coach Dan Curran, entering the game with a re3cord of 8-15 over the past two seasons, used Sgarlata and the Hoyas as a human punching bag, literally, earning some cheap pops from the Fenway Park crowd of 13,764 (the  largest crowd to see a Georgetown game since 2009)  and likely cooled down a warming seat with the Holy Cross trustees, who took the unusual step of meeting in Boston the night before and attending the game as a group. 

Imagine if the Georgetown Board of Directors ever did such a thing.

As I said elsewhere, who knows, maybe Curran was playing for his job. Finishing 2-10 with a loss to lowly Georgetown might not have gone well today around Fenwick Hall. Or maybe Curran was just trying to stick it to Georgetown in front of the home crowd and he succeeded. That Curran did not approach Sgarlata to shake his hand after the game speaks poorly of the man and the moment. Say what you will about the tactics, Curran and his staff were prepared to win. 

***

Georgetown's struggles are deeper than an interception or a blocked punt. The Hoyas can only reach what they are capable of reaching, and by the time they are seniors and haven't played, there's only so much room to grow at the end of a season. A head coach can't produce winners on his own and the role of a assistant football coach is as underrated as there is in sports. Georgetown's assistant coaching legacy isn't a strong one, at least not lately.

Every off-season, some of us hear how there is not enough money to retain coaches and among assistant coaches in general, Georgetown is seen by some as a GA (graduate assistant) job. Of Georgetown's 37 assistant coach hires since 2015, many are now out of coaching entirely. Some became high school assistants--depending on the school district, it might pay as well. Two are at staff positions at G5 programs, and two are at a coordinator level in FCS (John Bear at Bucknell and Adam Neugebauer at Towson), but neither Bear nor Neugebauer have been at Georgetown in the past five years. 

The lack of veteran coaches beyond the coordinators makes a tangible difference in player development, and unless someone has the time and interest to earn a sports management degree in their off-season, there's not much to attract a quality young candidate to Georgetown, and even less to keep him there. That no former assistant has gone to a Division I head coaching position since Joe Moorhead in 2003 speaks to a lack of institutional commitment for career growth.

An assistant's salary at Lafayette buys a young assistant coach the opportunity to live 10 minutes from campus and get a parking spot right up front at the Bourger Football House adjacent to Fisher Stadium. An assistant salary at Georgetown might not land a one bedroom apartment in Alexandria, but which does offer a GUTS bus ride into town unless he wants to pay $165 a month to get on the list for parking. 

Without career experience and longer term commitment, Georgetown coaches are not prepared to recruit what it takes to be competitive in the PL. It relies on lower value NEPSAC prep school talent to get early admits through the door and then takes its chances with what's left out there, and usually loses the impact recruits to Ivy League schools on aid. Increasingly, it doesn't even compete with Patriot schools without scholarships, and it shows. 

Turnvoer matters. Of the 37 assistants hired since 2015, 14 lasted just one season, not counting an OC that left after a month to go to Holy Cross, but that's another story. Just three assistants on the current staff were here as late as 2022. That's not because the others were derelict, but that other schools pay more. A starting assistant's job at Princeton is close to $80,000. An assistant's job at Richmond pays, on average, $102,689 per its public reports. If an assistant can move to a non-coaching staff role at a P4 school, even more. 

It's not even an issue of NIL, but don't be fooled that NIL is not an issue at this level, including the PL. What it is, first and foremost, is about contacts and relationships. Few early career coaches have the recruiting ties or the experience to evaluate someone playing in Utah or Oregon, and rely on best-case video sent by a player or coach with which to make an offer. For local kids, more often than not, relationships are not formed amidst a transient recruiting staff. "Four For 40" might sell the parents, but not the recruit or his coach. For every Jimmy Kibble from Loudoun, there are another ten other local players who either have the grades but want a more visible program, or don't have the grades and want the NIL.

In either case, Rob Sgarlata doesn't have the financial wherewithal to sweep the staff and expect a crop of talented and experienced assistants to turn Georgetown into Villanova. By the way, Villanova entered its last season of CAA football with five full time assistant coaches with seven or more years tenure on staff, and four of these will enter their 10th season or more for Villanova next year in their Patriot League debuts. Experience matters. Georgetown got 23 years of extraordinary service from names like Glacken, Droze, Calabrese, and others, but this isn't 1992 and volunteer coaches have gone the way of the rotary phone. 

Coaching is increasingly a transient business, everyone knows that. Nick Saban didn't just start ats a head coach--the coach and Miss Terry traveled through assistant stops at Kent State, Syracuse, West Virginia, Ohio State, Navy, and Michigan State all before the age of 35, only for him to be turned down for the head coaching job at Kent State. Former Georgetown coach Kevin Kelly has had 13 coaching stops in his 24 years before Georgetown and five more since. As there is a transfer portal for players, there is one, more or less, for assistant coaches. Some are probably looking right now. However, if Georgetown is not ready, willing, able and prepared to develop coaches that are committed to the  long term, why should the players be any more committed?

***

Finally, and most troubling, Georgetown University was unprepared to win Saturday. What is the University doing about it, good intentions and claims of cura personalis notwithstanding? 

Every intercollegiate sport at Georgetown is a second line program amidst the institutional all-in on men's basketball that has spent millions of dollars in the past decade, not to mention nearly $22 million in the last eight years for foolhardy and ill-advised contract extensions. Patrick Ewing's parting gift alone was enough to pay for three years of the current football budget. 

As much an admirer of Jack DeGioia's tenure as I am, his views of Georgetown basketball's "most favored nation status" came at the expense of sports like football. Jack is retired, of course, but the attitude remains. Of all the indignities around Saturday's game, look no further than the lack of awareness and foresight shown by the University around pre- and post-game festivities.

One would presume that, in the first major Georgetown athletic event in Boston in nearly 20 years and football's first visit to Fenway Park in 85 years, a game broadcast on regional cable TV across the Northeast and not just ESPN+, this would be a university opportunity, if not a priority, to engage with Boston area alumni. Far from it.  As far as I could tell, and I have asked, not a single athletic, administrative, or Advancement (read=fundraising) official attended the game nor any pre-game festivities, none. No University communications went sent out encouraging their attendance. The University Twitter account, not merely the athletic department, posted seven messages in the last 10 days about athletics, but not one around this game. In over 40 posts at the athletic department's @GeorgetownHoyas over the past five days leading up to the Nov. 22 game, a total of one noted that it was "Game Day" for football. 

Yes, the president's office is sede vacante of sorts until July, but there are development targets in Boston that are probably on Robert Groves' calendar at some point before Eduardo Penalver takes over in July. Would a luxury box at Fenway been the time for a donor conversation, athletics or not? Were there any senior staff of the University, particularly those which family in New England that could have made a cursory appearance? 

Lee Reed was not there. He can't be everywhere and the weekend life of a college athletic director is a hectic one. It would have been memorable to see an AD on the field if Georgetown had clinched that all-important seventh win. 

I didn't see any representation from the Alumni Association. Many of its senior leadership were attending an event in Tokyo that weekend, so I understood why; however, there was no visibility or branding from the Association anywhere; which stood in marked contrast to the extraordinary turnout that took place from the Holy Cross leadership--this was not only an athletic event, this was a visibility event for HC, so much so that its president sang the National Anthem from the 50 yard line and its VP of Development was featured on the Fenway video board during a time out.


Georgetown fans did show up, however. A pre-game tailgate set the stage.

This wasn't some tailgate under a tree at Regents Hall. Just short of 700 registrants filled the expansive Cask and Flagon restaurant adjacent to Fenway Park, largely on word of mouth. From parents of players, alumni, and former players decked out in their letter jackets, this was the largest pre- or post-game assemblage I have seen for a football event in over 40 years, even more than the team banquets when those were still held and not deemed an unnecessary expense by the University.


What was the importance of 700? Six years ago, during the John Carroll Weekend in Boston, a total of 586 alumni and guests paid $350/person for a black tie dinner at the Boston Museum of Fine Arts, just down the road from Fenway Park, a then-record turnout for the domestic event over the prior decade. The John Carroll Weekend is supported by a University budget and year-long support not only to recognize excellence among its most committed alumni, but specifically to reach out to benefactors and development targets who could make major gifts to support University priorities. 

If someone as myself looked out over the huge crowd that night at the MFA in 2019 and said that someday a Gridiron Club reception would top that by almost 20 percent, even I would be hard pressed to believe it. And yet, though the Fenway Park game was announced eight months in advance, no leader at the University saw fit to attend, even as the game drew closer and the premise of a winning season dangled through the clouds. The lack of preparation and delivery by the University was regretful, while the efforts of Hugh Golden and Lars Siegfried of the Gridiron Club ought to be recognized and celebrated.

Those 700 people did not arrive to the Cask and Flagon for finger food or a raffle. They arrived for  community and to build support. 

Let's also be clear: there were people in that room who, right now, could support football scholarships.  There were people in that room who, right now, could support NIL.  There were people in that room who, right now, could support assistant coaching salaries and program budget increases. Who knows, maybe someone could have fronted the money for a road jersey. (Georgetown showed up at Fenway wearing five year old white road jerseys. Why? Apparently because the program could only buy one set of new blue jerseys for home games.)


And no one at Georgetown University was there to engage them. Such conversations never took place and no one at GU, at least as of this date, seems to care, much less be aware of the opportunity lost.

These collective anecdotes, colored in the moment of an disheartening loss that needn't have ended in such ignominy, all point to a long seated institutional unpreparedness for a successful and broadly supported intercollegiate football program, emphasis on broadly supported. As I say to anyone who will listen, college sports is not a zero sum game. A rising ride lifts all boats. 

***

Sometimes people read my columns and dismiss them out of hand. "We're a basketball school," they say.  As someone who has written about Georgetown basketball more than most, I would suggest that in some University quarters, Georgetown hangs on to basketball not for its future, but as an almost vestigial piece of its past. John Thompson isn't walking through that door: it has not sold out a home game in 12 years.  It still sells Allen Iverson jerseys even as Iverson turned 50 this summer and has not been seen on campus in more than a decade. The DeGioia era clung to the Thompsonian notion that Georgetown ought to be Penn State in one sport and Penn in 29 others, and that doesn't work anymore.  Outside four nights in an empty Madison Square Garden in the midst of COVID-19, men's basketball is a combined 129-182 over the past ten seasons, having spent in excess of $150 million over that timeframe to do so. 

Georgetown football does not need $150 million to succeed, but it does need a life cycle of commitment: commitment in recruiting, commitment in player development, in staff development, in on-field performance, commitment in alumni and local support, and frankly, commitment in winning. That winning does not come by luck, it is a direct consequence to a culture of preparedness set and a culture of expectations met. A winning season should not be seen as an extraordinary accomplishment; yet that is what it has become. 

No one is asking Georgetown football to become Auburn on the Potomac, but the indifference at 2nd Healy to the struggles that football endures is evidenced by the lack of institutional awareness exhibited around this game.

***

If you've lasted this far, and thank you for doing so, so, here's the expurgated version:

  1. The players lost this game because they were worn out in November, as they often do;
  2. The coaches were unprepared in part because they are not properly compensated to the task at hand.
  3. The University was unprepared to make inroads with a large and loyal following that is otherwise ignored; and 
  4. Georgetown squandered an opportunity on a stage we will likely not see again in our lifetimes.

And I as I conclude this, a much tamer version that what was rattling around my head Saturday night sitting on a bench at Logan Airport, news today that Georgetown's leading tackler and most impactful defensive returnee for 2026, LB Giancarlo Rufo, is headed to the transfer portal.

Sisyphus returns again.




Thursday, November 20, 2025

Fenway Park, Remembered


The winner went to the Sugar Bowl, the loser, the Orange Bowl. Eight-five years ago this week, 41,700 filled Fenway Park for the game between #5-ranked Boston College and #9-ranked Georgetown on November 16, 1940. The Hoyas haven't played at Fenway since, while the Crusaders last played there in 1955.

"Georgetown jumped out to an early 10-0 lead, but BC responded," wrote Michael Coleman in a 2006 feature in The HOYA. "The Eagles' first touchdown was a short-yardage plunge into the end zone. It roused controversy among spectators because of the previous play, one in which a Hoya defender was called for pass interference near his own end zone on Boston College's fourth-down attempt.

"A reporter covering the game also thought that the call was suspect: The legendary Washington Post sportswriter Shirley Povich wrote that, "BC was helped to the touchdown by an official's abysmal ruling of interference. The official covering the play downfield saw nothing illegal. The call was made by the referee standing at midfield," he wrote.

"With the score 19-16, a defensive stand by Georgetown left Boston College at fourth down and long near its own end zone with very little time on the clock," Coleman continues. "BC's star quarterback, "Chucklin'" Charley O'Rourke, remained resourceful. He ran backwards around his own end zone ... before Hoya tacklers could bring him down for a safety.

"While the safety cut BC's advantage to only a single point at 19-18, it did the necessary damage by allowing valuable time to elapse from the game clock. Following the safety, BC used its free kick to pin the ball deep in Georgetown territory with time winding down. Georgetown's offense had no opportunity to answer.



"The loss was Georgetown's first since 1937, and may have foreshadowed the futures of the two football programs. Boston College went on to win the Sugar Bowl over Tennessee to finish undefeated with a 10-0 record; BC's coach, Frank Leahy, was rewarded with the highly coveted Notre Dame head coaching job after the perfect season."

A 1940 column by HOYA sports editor Al Cotter tried to put some perspective into what he saw. It is reprinted below:

"We sat for many a vacant moment wracking our brain to discover a means of adequately starting off this week's column. Many times during the past two years the possibility of a defeat to the greatest football team in the history of Georgetown has been in the back of our mind and we schemed of ways and means of just how we would express it in printed words. Now, the unfortunate time has come but none of our eloquent pre-thought phrases seem to ring true. Is it possible to put in writing just what that one point loss really means to the team and to Georgetown?

Unless one was intimately connected with the activities about the home of the Hoyas they could not, however hard they might try, understand the hidden meaning behind the score which read quite simply Boston College 19, Georgetown 18. They would never know of the bleak and bitter disappointment which filled the heart of every true son of the Blue and Gray as their gallant team went down to its defeat in the murky muck of Fenway Park. Or the thoughts of the loyal ones who traveled all the way to Boston as they stood outside of the stadium and watched the Eagles' merry band of hysterical rooters march up the street raising high broken pieces of goal posts, the spoils of the victors.

We spoke of a between-the-lines story, for that is just what it is. If ever a team deserved to win a game the Hilltoppers certainly had this right on that dusky day in old Beantown. They arrived practically unheard of in that section of the country but you can be certain of one thing it the good fathers ever gave thought of moving Georgetown into New England the Hoyas would have more self-appointed alumni than Notre Dame has in New York.

Not since Grant took Richmond has one thing so captured the whole-hearted support of any one group of people. Forty thousand fans fought their way into the Eagles' stronghold remaining on their feet a good part of the afternoon. Many of them wildly cheering a team they had never seen before.

Many more clustered about their radios afraid to leave them for fear something would happen the second they were away. Bartenders let their customers go thirsty, wives let their families go hungry, citizens who never saw football played sat spellbound as "the greatest game in 40 years of gridiron history" unfolded on the rock-ribbed New England soil. You will note quotation around those words for they are not original. It is from a story by one of the greatest sports authorities in the United States today. A man who has seen many a sporting thrill in his countless years of reporting, and who ought by now to be slightly calloused to all but those athletic thrills head and shoulders above the ordinary. This same man known far and wide as Grantland Rice was so overcome by the spectacle he had witnessed left his type-writer in the press box.

The Boston newspapermen, jubilant that their team had come through, turned and shook the limp hand of this crestfallen corner as he made his sorrowful path into the foggy darkness. They went out of their way to express admiration at the clean hard hitting attack of the Hoyas. They hoped that the game would become a traditional contest and with each ensuing year this rivalry will become more firmly intrenched between these two great Jesuit schools. For there is no doubt that this was real collegiate football at its best with no quarter given or asked and each team striving with all it had till the last gun was fired."


Wednesday, November 19, 2025

Week 12 Thoughts

 


Some thoughts following Georgetown's 14-0 win over Fordham:

1. A Struggle Win: It's never easy for Georgetown to eat Fordham (19 losses in the last 23 entering this game) but this game seemed a struggle: opportunities lost, fourth down plays gone sour, and despite its woeful offense, the Rams never seemed quite out of it. Yes, it was a big win as far as Georgetown's record is concerned, and a rare one at that--this was only the fifth time in 25 years where Georgetown scored 15 or fewer points against a Patriot League opponent and won it, and the first opponent not named Bucknell or Lafayette.

Once again, and it seems almost elementary at this point, turnovers were consequential. A second quarter Fordham fumble deep in its territory allowed Georgetown to go up 14-0 and set the tone for the remainder of the game. A pair of missed field goals by the Rams: a 42 yard attempt to end the first half and a 49 yard attempt in its opening drive of the third quarter could have made things interesting, but such this is the life of a one win team: mistakes become prohibitive.

As rivalries go, it's seen better days, and not just because of the disparity on the series record. There was a time when Georgetown and Fordham competed for the best students in Catholic New York, but not so much anymore. I sometimes think, perhaps humorously, that Rob Sgarlata would schedule two more New York teams just to get an extra trip to the region each year (the only area schools it hasn't played recently are LIU and Stony Brook) but this too is reflective of the past.  In 1996, 42 players on the roster came from the New York/New Jersey region; in 2025, just 13. Gone are the trips to St. John's, Iona, St. Peter's and Fairfield.

Adding two more PL games next year won't put Fordham in danger, and as long as Columbia is struggling they will see Georgetown as a game to schedule. As for New York, the Hoyas return to Fordham next year, and rest assured the Rams will be ready.

2. Warming Up?  The Patriot League is not an impatient place. Where lower tier SEC coaches seem to drop off nearly every week and cash in their eight figure buyouts, a hot seat in the PL is rare.

It's worth watching, however, to see how Fordham acts at season's end. Joe Conlin has been head coach for eight seasons, the longest run by any Fordham head coach since the late Larry Glueck, who led Fordham from Division III into the Patriot League. If Fordham defeats Merrimack, that's back to back two-win seasons at Rose Hill, and while that's not an alarm bell at Georgetown or Bucknell, it may be to a school which spends close to $9 million on football annually. Of Georgetown's four prior wins in the series since 2001, two came in the final year of former Fordham coaches Ed Foley (2005) and Tom Masella (2011) .

Conlin has coached playoff-quality teams: the 2022 team was ranked #16 nationally with a 9-2 regular season mark. The transfer portal gives, and takes away. But sports in general have been down at Fordham (men's basketball, a decades-long example) and every athletic program is trying to balance budgets with contemporary pressures. If Fordham wanted to go all-in on football NIL, for example, the Rams could be back in a big way.

Adding Villanova and William & Mary to the picture will make the PL more competitive than ever. It's a factor that has to weight upon athletic directors who see where the institution is placed relative to football spending. With future games already lined up at Syracuse (2027) and Hawaii (2028), schools like Fordham have decisions that are bigger than a coach and his staff.


3. The Seniors: A total of 30 seniors and fifth year grad students played their final game at Cooper Field Saturday. 

This was an underrated group of young men who stuck with the program after a 2-9 freshman year and enters its season finale winners of 16 of  its last 33 games, no small feat given Georgetown's budget and its self-imposed limitations. Of the 26 recruits signed in the 2021-22 academic year, 21 made it four years, with just three players lost to the transfer portal, all to FBS schools: Michael Burton to UConn, Mateen Ibrigoba to Wake Forest, and Jaden Dugger to Louisiana-Lafayette. 

Their collective commitment on and off the field is worthy of recognition. 

4. Around the PL:

Holy Cross 37, Bucknell 20: The Crusaders turned in its best game of the season, overcoming a 7-6 halftime deficit to take over the Bison in the second half.  Holy Cross rang up 414 total yards and 276 yards on the ground, sending a message they will be ready for the season finale at Fenway Park. Despite a brief appearance by senior Ralph Rucker at quarterback, it's the fourth loss in the last five weeks for Bucknell since Rucker's mid-season injury.

Lehigh 27, Colgate 7: The Engineers remained undefeated in a workmanlike win over the Red Raiders holding the Colgate ground game to 60 yards and building up a 20-7 halftime lead that was not challenged thereafter. It's the 11th PL win over the last 12 games for Lehigh, whose only setback in the last two years came on a double overtime loss last season versus Bucknell. Barring something unusual, they appear headed back to the playoffs regardless of the result of the league title game at Lafayette.

Lafayette 35, Richmond 28: For the rest of the PL fan base not in the greater Boston area this weekend, a battle of 6-0 Lehigh and 6-0 Lafayette for the league title is going to be memorable. The Leopards held Richmond to a goal line stand to preserve its win, as RB Kente Edwards led the way with 265 yards on the ground. Dean Denobile threw for three touchdown passes as the Leopards seek its first outright PL title since 2013 with a win over Lehigh. Yes, Lehigh is favored, but rivalries have a way of keeping things interesting.

The final week's games:

Fordham at Merrimack, 12:00 noon

Lehigh at Lafayette, 12:30

Richmond at William and Mary, 1:00

Bucknell at Colgate, 1:00

Georgetown vs. Holy Cross at Fenway Park, 4:00







Wednesday, November 5, 2025

Week 10 Thoughts


 Some thoughts following Lehigh's 41-0 win over Georgetown:

1. Five Phases: Yes, another 60 minute beating in this series. College football has an uncanny way where rivalries follow to form even when they shouldn't, and with two exceptions, each Georgetown game versus Lehigh has been an annual beating. 

At a distance, it's not like Lehigh particularly gets "up" for this game in the same way it might be up for, say, Lafayette. Nor does Georgetown take this game somehow for granted. But as far as games at South Mountain go, they're just not competitive. Lehigh has won 11 of 12 games at Goodman Stadium by an average of 27 points.

As for this game, it was as a complete a win as Lehigh has put together all year, and not just because it was its first shutout since, oh, well...2009, versus Georgetown.

Coaches like to talk about winning all three phases of the game. I'll go two better: they won all five phases.

Offensively, the Engineers did what they needed to do and never looked back: touchdowns on three of its first four drives. The first two of these were methodical, well executed ten play drives, the third, a defensive breakdown and a  41 yard run to the end zone.  The rush game averaged six yards a carry, and the Lehigh offensive line did not allow a sack; in fact, Georgetown got just one tackle for loss all afternoon. It's highly unusual for a run-focused team to be held to under 28 minutes time of possessions and still dominate the scoreboard as they did. 

Defensively, Lehigh was in rare form and Georgetown had no chance. The Hoyas' running game, which has been banged up all year, couldn't make progress, with just one running back carry of more than seven yards. A pair of 18 yard scrambles by quarterbacks Dez Thomas and Jack Johnson weren't going to change the outcome, and the Lehigh rush forced six sacks and a pick-six. Lehigh held Georgetown to fourth down stops on the each of the last three series of the game. 

The Hoyas got just one red zone opportunities all day and failed, and that speaks to defensive coordinator Rich Nagy and a defensive that does not settle for less than its very best.

The special teams were a one-way street for the Engineers. Its four punts averaged 49 yards with three touchbacks and a single yard of return, a huge difference in field position which gave the Hoyas nothing in the way of opportunity. Lehigh punt returner Nick Peltekian accounted for 90 yards in four returns, accounting for an average of an extra 22 yards on every kick.  A blocked PAT was the only mark against a straight flush by the Lehigh special teams in this game.

The fourth phase: coaching. This coaching staff has Lehigh believing in big things, and no one, no one was looking past Georgetown with three weeks to Lafayette. It also caught the Hoyas flat-footed on a fourth down play early in the game. 

With 10:43 in the first, Lehigh faced a 4th and two at the Georgetown 25, and lined up in a wildly unbalanced formation: seven men on the line far to the left of the QB, with nothing but a center, a guard, and a running back. Georgetown seemed confused at the start, as if this was just some effort to draw them off side or to force a penalty. If the staff had seen something, a  time out was in order. Instead, Lehigh handed it off to RB Matt Michalik, who ran for four yards despite a line of one blocker. Three plays later, Lehigh scored and never  looked back. 

This was not a trick play, this was a line placed in the sand that Lehigh basically said "come and stop us", and Georgetown was unprepared. I'm not naive to think that had Georgetown stopped them, the outcome would be any different, nor that the Georgetown staff had drilled the defensive on any such maneuver. Instead, it was a Lehigh coaching staff that was so confident in its men that it dared GU to make a defensive stop, and the Hoyas could not do it. Message sent.

The fifth phase: the program. Teams win games but programs win championships. Lehigh has won 13 PL titles with five different head coaches, Kevin Cahill among them.  Players come to Bethlehem to win, not to try to. Whatever shreds of doubt that Lehigh wasn't at the top level under Tom Gilmore were quickly flushed after Cahill's 2023 season and Lehigh hasn't looked back since. In a season when people in the PL were worried about "What Will  Richmond Do?", it lost sight, perhaps, that Lehigh wasn't going away.

Georgetown continues to be the (pre-Diego Pavia) Vanderbilt of the Patriot League: a good school that doesn't spend like the other schools do, is a nice place for players and their families to visit, a stadium that will always be friendly to road teams, and a fan base that holds no expectations of progress. Recruits to Georgetown may say they're coming to win a PL title, but no one has. Recruits to Lehigh say they're coming to win a PL title, and they do. 

Remember Nick Saban's quote? "The only place you're going to play in the SEC that's not hard to play [is] Vanderbilt. When you play at Vanderbilt, you have more fans there than they have, and that's no disrespect to them, it's the truth."  Until Vanderbilt's offense punched Alabama in the mouth and carried the goal posts to the Cumberland River, that is.  

Georgetown is nowhere close to doing the same. 

And as Saban also observed, "Dominant teams rarely are outplayed or outclassed, but they sometimes beat themselves. Just because you are dominant does not mean you are infallible. Remember that dominance does not mean perfection; a lack of focus for even a short period of time can cost you. Do not relax when you are far ahead or dominating your marketplace. That is the time to push even harder." 

So far, Lehigh is doing just that.

2. Around The PL:

Lafayette 21, Holy Cross 13: Another late game lapse by the Crusaders, falling to 1-8 before 16,583 at Fitton Field. Despite three early turnovers, this was a one point game entering the fourth quarter and the Crusaders were marching to the tying score with under a minute to play. On a fourth and  six at the Lafayette 12 with 29 seconds to play, quarterback Dominic Campanile was sacked 10 yards behind the line of scrimmage. The Crusaders fell to 4-11 over the last two years in games decided by eight points or less.

Richmond 17, Fordham 14: Despite its own 1-8 record, Fordham's defense is playing opponents tougher than anticipated and such was the case in this one, where the Spiders managed just seven points after halftime and held oft the Rams late before 4,847 at Robins Stadium. Fordham QB Gunnar Smith was held to 91 yards and two interceptions by a  Richmond defense which gave up just 161 yards all afternoon.

Colgate 23, Merrimack 20: The Red Raiders needed overtime to steer past the Warriors in a non-conference game, 23-20 before 2,713 in Hamilton. Merrimack tied the score on a 47 yard field goal with no time left, but threw an interception three plays into its first overtime possession, which Colgate dutifully converted with a field goal and the win, its fourth in the last six weeks. 

This week's games:

Holy Cross at Lehigh, 12:00 noon

Colgate at Lafayette, 12:30

Bucknell at Fordham, 1:00

Richmond at Georgetown, 1:00