Playoffs! NCAA Division III | Syracusefan.com

Playoffs! NCAA Division III

SWC75

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Here is the field for the NCAA Division III playoffs, with the team name, the state they are in, (if it’s not already part of the name), the won-loss record, the points for and against, who they lost to, their ranking, their all time post season record, (including NAIA and other NCAA divisions and small college bowl games, and championships won.

WASHINGTON & LEE of Virginia (8-2, 368-278). Lost to Franklin & Marshall 28-35 on 9/1 and Bridgewater St. 14-31 on 10/20. Unranked. All-Time: 0-3. No titles.
At
HOBART of New York (10-0, 389-148). No Losses. Rank: #7 All-Time 4-8. No titles.
 
WITTENBERG of Ohio (9-1, 390-152) Lost to Wabash 24-27 on 10/6. Rank: #24. All-Time: 20-12. Titles: Poll 1964, NCAA Division III 1973, 1975.
At
HEIDELBERG of Ohio (9-1, 374-134). Lost to Mount Union 14-33 on 10/27. Rank: #12 All-Time 1-0, (bowl game). No Titles
 
FRANKLIN of Indiana (8-2, 417-186). Lost to Mount Union 7-45 on 9/1 and Butler 13-42 on 9/8, (and then won 8 in a row). Rank: #16 All-time: 3-5. No Titles.
At
ADRIAN of Michigan (9-1, 235-112), Lost to Carthage 17-20 on 9/1, (and then won 9 in a row). Unranked. All-Time 0-2. No titles.
 
FRAMINGHAM STATE of Massachusetts (10-1, 379-133), Lost to Endicott 7-34 on 9/1, (and then won 10 in a row). Unranked. All-Time: 0-0. No titles.
At
CORTLAND STATE of New York (8-1, 337-180), Lost to Buffalo State 31-49 on 9/1, (and then won 8 in a row). Rank: #18. All-time 4-7. No titles.
 
MOUNT IDA of Massachusetts, (8-2, 355-237). Lost to Springfield 42-49, 9/15 and Gallaudet 22-29 on 11/3. Unranked. No titles.
At
WESLEY of Delaware, (8-1, 259-133). Lost to Mary Hardin-Baylor 32-35 on 9/15. Rank: #6. All-Time: 18-8. No titles.
 
BRIDGEWATER ST. of Massachusetts, (9-1, 284-151). Lost to Framingham State 0-16 on 9/21. Unranked. All-time: 0-2. No titles.
At
WIDENER of Pennsylvania, (9-0, 461-155). No losses. Rank: #9. All-Time 15-10. Titles: NCAA DIII 1977, 1981.
 
ROWAN of New Jersey, (7-2, 259-101). Lost to Merrimack College 7-20 on 9/8 and Cortland State 21-24 on 10/20. Rank: #25. All-Time: 30-13. No titles.
At
SALISBURY of Maryland (8-2, 350-137) Lost to Wesley 7-17 on 9/8 and Ithaca 14-21 on 10/27. Rank: #11 All-Time: 7-8. No titles.
 
WASHINGTON & JEFFERSON of Pennsylvania (8-2, 256-197). Lost to St. John Fisher 24-28 on 9/8 and Thomas More 18-54 on 10/6. Unranked. All-Time 21-21-1. No titles.
At
JOHNS HOPKINS of Maryland (9-1, 337-142). Lost to Franklin & Marshall 12-14 on 11/3. Rank: #19 All-time: 2-3. No titles.
 
CHRISTOPHER NEWPORT of Virginia (6-4, 241-240). Lost to Salisbury 16-40 on 9/1, Hampden-Sydney 20-42 on 9/8, Lagrange 6-20 on 10/13 and Methodist 29-30 on 11/10. Unranked, (they won their conference’s automatic bid). All-Time: 2-8. No titles.
At
MOUNT UNION of Ohio (10-0, 517-45- that’s right, 45!) No losses. They had a streak of 6 consecutive shut-outs from 9/15-10/20. Rank: #1 All-Time 73-13. Titles: NCAA Division III: 1993, 1996, 1997, 1998, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2005, 2006, 2008 (10)
 
LOUISIANA COLLEGE (8-2, 350-233), Lost to Wesley 22-25 on 9/22 and Mary Hardin-Baylor 3-30 on 10/13. Rank: #23 All-Time 3-2. No titles.
At
MARY HARDIN-BAYLOR of Texas (10-0, 496-180). No losses. Rank: #2 All-Time: 18-10. No titles.
 
ST. NORBERT of Wisconsin (8-2, 269-195). Lost to John Carroll, (in Dublin, Ireland) 3-40 on 8/31 and Monmouth 9-31 on 9/29. Unranked. All-Time 1-8. No titles.
At
ST. THOMAS of Minnesota (10-0, 362-143). No losses. Rank: #4 All-Time: 8-5-1. No titles.
 
ELMHURST of Illinois (9-1, 328-211). Lost to North Central 10-44 on 9/29. Rank: #17. All-Time: 0-0. No titles.
At
COE of Iowa (10-0, 399-110). No losses. Rank: #10 All-Time 2-7. No titles.
 
BETHEL of Minnesota (8-2, 306-180). Lost to St. Thomas 0-37 on 10/13 and St. Olaf 17-24 on 11/3. Rank: #21 All-time: 6-6. No titles.
At
CONCORDIA-CHICAGO (10-0, 404-239). No losses. Unranked, (despite the undefeated record). No titles.
 
ST. SCHOLASTICA of Minnesota (8-2, 283-125). Lost to Whitworth 13-28 on 9/1 and Northwestern of Chicago 13-14. Unranked. All-Time: 0-1. No titles.
At
WISCONSIN-OSHKOSH (10-0, 388-128). No losses. Rank: #5. All-Time: 0-0. No titles.
 
PACIFIC LUTHERAN of Washington (7-2, 302-195). Lost to California Lutheran 23-37 on 9/8 and Linfield 24-31 on 9/29. Rank: #20. All-Time: 1-0. All-Time 32-15. Titles: NAIA DII 1980, 1987, 1993, NCAA DIII 1999 (4)
At
LINFIELD of Oregon (9-0, 403-146). No losses. Rank: #3 All-Time: 30-19 Titles: NAIA DII 1982, 1984, 1986, NCAA DIII 2004 (4)
 
NORTH CENTRAL of Illinois (8-2, 392-147). Lost to Wisconsin-Lacrosse 17-21 on 9/1 and Wheaton 21-35 on 11/3. Rank: #13 All-Time 6-7. No titles.
At
CALIFORNIA LUTHERAN (8-1, 410-218). Lost to Linfield 30-33 on 9/15. Rank: #8 All-Time 4-7 Titles: NAIA DII 1971

Comment: One half of the Mount Union-Whitewater stranglehold on this title has ended. They’ve met for the last seven national championships and at leasttone spot in the final will be earned by someone else, for which I’m grateful. One of the reason I’ve always enjoyed watching the small college championships is to see schools that just had been names in the Sunday paper come alive for me. We used to get different schools each year, much of the time, anyway. Mount Union had dominated the division from 1993-2004, winning seven titles in that time and having winning streaks of 54 and 55 fames, the two longest in NCAA history. Wisconsin-Whitewater patterned their program after that of Larry Kehres, the Mount Union coach, who has an absurd career record of 327-24-3, (he’s a ringer for Tom Osborne and Tom can only wish he won this much), even to the pint of having similar school colors and uniforms. It looked like Mount Union was playing itself. Whitewater finally got to the finals in 2005 and have made it every year through last year. They lost three of the first four confrontations with Mount Union but came back to even dominate the Purple Raiders by winning the last thee titles and 45 straight games. All of that was awesome but it reached the point of being boring. It ended for Whitewater this year with three losses, (Buffalo State did the honors, breaking their winning streak with a 7-6 win at Whitewater), and no invitation to the tournament.

But Mount Union is very much in the tournament with one of their greatest and most dominant teams, which is saying something. They gave up a score in their first game to Franklin, (who is in this tournament), winning 45-7. They then shut out their next six opponents by a total of 342-0. The closest of those games was the last one, which they won 51-0. Heidelberg, (also in the tournament) managed two scores on them in a 33-14 game, the closest anyone got all year. They then won their final two games by 38-7 and 59-17. It would be a huge upset if they didn’t win this but they’ve been upset in the playoffs before after a dominant regular season.

The Pac Lutheran-Linfield match-up is a battle of old rivals, (who already had a close game this year), with almost identical resumes. Wittenberg was the closest thing to Mount Union before Mount Union. They were the winningest school in college football in both the 1960’s and 1970’s and won two of the first three DIII titles. But that was a long time ago. Widener also won a couple of titles many years ago and Cal Lutheran won an NAIA DII titles 40 year as ago. Wisconsin-Oshkosh has no history in their tournament but they won the conference Whitewater is in, so they deserve some respect.

Hopefully we get somebody who can, at least, compete with Mount Union. I also hope we don’t just go back to Mount Union-Whitewater next year.

FIRST ROUND

Washington & Lee came in as the most prolific rushing team in Division III with 364 yards per game but Hobart had what it took up front to limit them to 188 yards while running for 288 of their own and go on to win 38-20. Steven Webb ran for 99 yards and three scores. Bobby Dougherty ran for 81 more and a score and quarterback Nick Strang passed for 986 yards and scored a TD of his own.

In the battle of the Bergs, Heidelberg scored on four of it’s first five possessions to take a 28-6 first half lead over Wittenberg. But the Tigers, who won two of the first three DIII titles back in the 70’s, (the closest thing to Mount Union in their time), stormed back to win 52-38. Reed Florence was 31 for 49 for 346 yard and 5 scores. The “Student Princes”, (I kid you not), helped out by fumbling two kick-offs. This is what happens when royalty takes on the working class.

Franklin used a 28 point second period to eliminate Adrian 42-10. The Grizzlies mauled the Bulldogs, 511 yards to 225. Quarterback Jonny West threw for 303 yards and 4 touchdowns.
Cortland State dodged a bullet when a Framingham extra point bounced off the left upright with 3:38 left. The Red Dragons got their arms around a squib kick and got a couple of first downs, one on 4th and 1 to run out the clock. Melike Van Alstyne ran for 227 yard for Framingham but Justin Autera got 1221 for Cortland and Kordel McInnis caught a couple of TD passes.

Wesley sent Mount Ida back to the rocking chair, 73-14. Justin Sottilare three 6 touchdown passes and the Wolverines had a season high 247 rushing yards.

Widener, another school with a couple of titles back in the old days, broke a 7-7 halftime tie with a 37 point second half to bury Bridgewater State, 44-14. The “Pride” had a 463-195 edge in total offense, including 317 passing yards from quarterback Chris Haupt.

Joe Benedetti of Salisbury rushed for 125 and two scores to lead the Seagulls to a 17-9 win over Rowan. The Professors had to go with their back-up quarterback due to a neck injury to Louie Bianchini. His replacement Paul Hamersma was 24 for 46 but for only 155 yards, 1TD and two interceptions.

Johns Hopkins is more noted for lacrosse but they are making noise in football these days. Washington & Jefferson certainly has a ringing in their ears after a 10-42 loss. Like Rowan, the presidents lost their quarterback early in the game but the Blue Jays put this away early anyway. On their first possession they were stopped on downs in W&J territory. They then scored the next three times they got the ball and led 28-3 at the half. Jonathan Rigaud rushed for 155 yards and score and Robbie Matey passed for 282 yards and 5 scores.

Christopher Newport had no chance at all against Mount Union. It was 49-7 at halftime and 72-14 at the end. The Purple Raiders had 326 yards rushing and 315 passing. The Captains had 101 total yards. Kevin Burke passed for 264 yards and 3 touchdowns. Chris Denton returned a punt 80 yards for a score and five different players had rushing touchdowns for the winners.

Quarterback LiDarral Bailey ran for 124 yards and two scores and passed for 267 and three more scores as Mary Hardin-Baylor swamped Louisiana College for the second time this year, 59-20. In their first meeting, “The Cru” didn’t score until the 30th minute of their first b=meeting but then exploded for 30 points after that in a 30-3 win. Here they blew out to a 42-6 halftime lead and coasted. They gave up 432 yards, mostly after the contest was decided but had an awesome 674 yards of their own.

In a Holy War, Saint Thomas proved more worthy than Saint Norbert, 48-17. Brenton Braddock, (how’d you like to try to tackle a guy with a name like that?) ran for 166 yards on 24 carries and 4 touchdowns, one on an 82 yard burst. The “Tommies” broke a scoreless tie with a 27-0 second quarter that ended any suspense.

Elmhurst was lining up for a tying field goal against Coe in a 21-24 game when “Kohawks” (you gotta love these nicknames) coach Steve Staker called a time-out. During the time-out Elmhurst Coach Tim Lester decided to go for it. Quarterback threw a 7 yard pass to Corey Thonn for what turned out to be the winning score in a 27-24 thriller. The yards were virtually even, 429-415. Scottie Williams rushed for 196 yards and a score for the winning Blue Jays while Brendan Leiran had 181 yards and a score for the Kohawks.

In another thriller, Bethel of Minnesota defeated Concordia of Chicago 24-23 by batting down a two point conversion with 18 seconds left. Bethel had almost put it away with 7 minutes to go but quarterback Erik Peterson’s attempt to break the plane of the end zone with the ball was knocked out of his hands. Peterson completed 16 of 23 passes for 161 yards and Marshall Klitzke rushed for 134 yards for the winners.

Wisconsin-Oshkosh ran over Saint Scholastica 55-10, rushing for 413 yards. Cole Myhra ran for 198 yards and Nate Wara added 128 more. Scholastica had been giving up only 88 yards a game on the ground but were outclassed by the Titans. The Saints will now return to the peace and quiet of their devotional studies.

Pacific Lutheran and Linfield are virtual twins, both tiny, (about 5000 students between them), schools from the Pacific Northwest who won three NAIA titles each and then switched over to the NCAA and won a title each there. They played each other on 9/29 and Linfield won 31-24. They did it again last week, only it was even closer at 27-24. The “lutes” out-gained the Wildcats but suffered 5 turnovers and 6 sacks, which allowed Linfield to hold them off enough to win. Chad Coburn rushed for two scores for the winners and Mickey Inns threw for 210 yards. Kyle Warner caught 12 passes for 205 yards but couldn’t catch up to a 4th down pass with 33 seconds left.

It was not a good week for the Lutherans as California Lutheran went down hard to North Central, 21-41, giving up 528 yards total offense. The visiting Cardinals took control immediately with a 24-0 first quarter. Lutheran never got within 17 after that. Running back Nick Kuric gained a career high 250 yards on 20 carries, including a 79 yarder on the second play from scrimmage. Their defense forced four turnovers, got 4 sacks and held the Kingsmen to 324 total yards.

SECOND ROUND

Once upon a time Wittenberg was the most successful small college football team in the country. They had the highest winning percentage at any level through the 1960’s and the 1970’s. They were the closest thing to Mount Union before Mount Union. They won 2 of the first three DIII titles and played for the title two more times in the 70’s. They have continued to play good football over the last three decades but not been as dominant- or prominent. And they were no match for Hobart’s greatest team last Saturday at Geneva. The Statement declawed the Tigers, 35-10, holding them to a season low 135 yards. It took Hobart a while to get going themselves. They gained only 74 yards in a 7-3 first half. But they marched for a score to open the second half to make it 14-3. Wittenberg answered but then got fumbleitis, dropping a punt, blocking a field goal but then fumbling again and the Statesmen took it in for a 21-10 lead and they never looked back. Hobart rushed for 286 yards and scored all five touchdowns by that route- by 5 different players. Steven Webb led the Statesmen with 130 yards and twisting, sideline-to-sideline 57 yard score and Bobby Dougherty added 85 more and his 19th touchdown of the year, tying Don Aleksiewicz‘s 1971 record. Hobart had the ball for more than 39 minutes of the 60 minute contest.

Mary Hardin-Baylor was formerly Baylor College for Women. Mary Hardin and her husband John saved the college financially during the Great Depression after a fire devastated the campus and the school renamed itself after Mrs. Hardin. It became co-educational in 1971 They started up a football program in 1998 in the NAIA, switched over to the NCAA in 2000. They made the playoffs for the first time in 2001 and made it all the way to championship in 2004, losing to Linfield, (this was the last title game before the Mount Union-Whitewater co-dynasty). They’ve had only one head coach, Pete Fredenberg. Franklin was no match for them in a 63-17 victory for the Crusaders, also known as “The Cru”. The game was 28-0 after one period and 49-3 at halftime. The Cru had a balanced offense with 282 yards on the ground and 281 in the air. Franklin had 310 total yards. LiDarral Bailey threw three first quarter TD passes and didn’t even play in the second half.

Cortland State, Upstate New York’s other representative in this field, never got off the launching pad at Wesley. On the third play of the game, Chris Rose threw an interception that was returned 22 yards for a touchdown. On the next possession Rose was sacked and fumbled with the ball being returned for a touchdown. It started a 56-6 avalanche for the home team. The Wolverines have now devoured two teams by a combined 129-20 in the playoffs, a slightly better record than even mighty Mount Union. Cortland wound up with 6 turnovers - 5 of them interceptions. Wesley has a school record 26 interceptions this year. They only gained 366 yards but only gave up 194. Quarterback Justin Sottilaire had 3 TD passes. But this one was all about defense.

Widener easily handled Salisbury, 28-7, out-gaining them 445-230. Again, turnovers were key. The Pride scored twice in the first half after the Sea Gulls fumbled. Chris Haupt threw an 82 yard bomb to Anthony Davis, (which one?) to make it 21-0 early in the fourth. He followed it up with a 64 yarder to Connor Schlegel to make it 28-0. Haupt was 23 of 35 for 47 yards

From the Chicago Tribune: “Johns Hopkins University coach Jim Margraff understood completely the immense challenge his team faced. "I joked with our guys early in the week," Margraff said. "There's a Division III bucket list and you could come to Alliance and play Mount Union." The Blue Jays kicked the bucket, losing 13-55 and being out-gained 278-653 by the #1 team in the division. After celebrating stopping the Purple Raiders on their 5 yard line in the opening possession, quarterback Robbie Matey threw interceptions on the next two possession and Mount Union quarterback Kevin Burke threw touchdown passes to Jasper Collins, the first two of five. It was 34-7 at halftime. Burke was 25 of 36 for 388 yards while Collins caught 12 passes for 228 yards. "It was exciting for us to come play the No. 1 team in the country," Margraff said.

In an actual close game, St. Thomas beat Elmhurst 24-17, overcoming a 0-14 first quarter deficit. The Tommies opened up with a blocked field goal a 75 yard, 6 play drive by Elmhurst, a fumble and a second Blue Jay score. But quarterback Matt McConnell’s 51 yard run gave them some hope and set up a one yard plunge by Brenton Braddock to make it 7-14. Then, after a punt, McConnell threw the ball from his own 12 to the Elmhurst 40 where Matt Misiewicz caught the ball in stride and ran to the end zone, completing an 88 yard play to tie it. Elmhurst then drove to the St. Thomas 8 but a fumbled pitch was scooped up by Ayo Idowu who rambled 86 yards down the side to give the Tommies the lead for good. The teams traded third quarter field goals and that was that. The total yards were virtually even- 393-391. It was a great game, or at least a great half.

Wisconsin-Oshkosh, who won Whitewater’s conference this season and is playing in the post-season for the first time, also fell behind 0-14 but came roaring back to win easily, 37-14 against Bethel of Minnesota. “We’re very unemotional” said Coach Pat Cerroni, “and that’s probably because of me”. After having three punts and two interceptions in their five possessions, the unemotional Titans scored 37 unanswered points. An interception just before halftime set up with first score and a 21-0 third period gave them control of the contest. They gained 462 total yards, including a 344-75 second half. Cole Myhra and Caleb Voss scored 5 touchdowns between them.


Linfield had another opportunistic defense, forcing 7 North Central turnovers, including 5 interceptions, in a 30-14 win. They now have 12 takeaways in two playoff games and 34 on the season. A 73 yard pick 6 by Dom Forrest gave the Wildcats a 14-0 lead. They led 17-0 at the half. Two more interceptions set up third quarter touchdowns and a 30-0 lead. Two quick scores by the Cardinal’s Nick Kukuc within 3 minutes made it interesting at 30-14 but the Wildcats shut the Cardinals out in the game’s last 14 minutes. Linfield QB Mickey Linns completed 24 of 39 passes for 305 yards and 2 scores.


QUARTERFINALS

Hobart’s dreams of being the first New York State team to make the DIII finals since Ithaca won it for the third time in 1991 went down hard in a sea of errors vs. St. Thomas. A blocked punt on Hobart’s first possession set the Tommies up and on their first defensive play, star linebacker Devin Worthington hurt his leg and never returned rto the game. The wonderfully named Brenton Braddock scored from the 4, the first of four short-range touchdowns and a run by the placement holder on the conversion made it 0-8. After a short punt and a personal foul penalty, Braddock scored again from the 2 to make it 0-15. On the next series, Steven Webb ran 66 yards for Hobart’s only score on a 4th and 1. But whatever optimism that created didn’t last long. An interception set up another score to make it 7-22 on the first play of the second quarter. By halftime it was 7-32 and the final was 7-47. The Tommies out-gained Hobart 462-294 and intercepted 3 passes.

Wesley had been doing a Mount Union imitation with their blow-out wins until they ran into perennial rival Mary Hardin-Baylor and got beat for the 5th time in 7 playoff confrontations and the second time this season, 20-32. The Crusaders jumped out to a 2-0 lead when Wesley recovered a backwards pass in their own end zone. They then drove 50 yards with the subsequent kick-off to score on an 18 yard pass from LaDarrel Bailey to Jon Ross and make it 9-0. In the second quarter, leading 12-7 MHB blocked a Wesley punt and appeared ready to score when they fumbled at the 9. The Wolverines drove the length of the field to take a 14-12 lead. A fumble set up a Wesley field goal to give the Wolves a 17-12 halftime lead. But the second half belonged to “The Cru”. Bailey threw to Darius Wilson for a score and an interception set up another to Caleb Moore. Wesley kicked a field goal to make it 25-20 but another was blocked and Bailey hit Moore again from 23 yards out to produce the final score. Wesley was unable to score in four chances from the Crusader 4 and the winners were able to run out the clock. Bailey was 16 for 20 for 195 for 4 scores and no interceptions. He also ran for 95 yards.

Wisconsin-Oshkosh beat perennial power Linfield 31-24 in overtime. Nathan Smith blocked a potential game winning field goal at the end of regulation and, after Caleb Voss caught a 21 yard TD pass from Nate Wara, Andrew Thompson recovered a fumble to end the contest and send Oshkosh into the semi-finals against St, Thomas. Linfield had jumped to a 14-0 lead and led 21-6 at halftime. Going into the fourth quarter it was 24-9 but the Titans rallied, aided by an encroachment call that wiped out an interception. They scored on that drive to make it 24-16. A blocked field goal saved them after a fumble had set up the Wildcats deep in Oshkosh territory and an 80 yard 10 play drive tied it. Quarterback Wara snuck over form the 1 and threw to Cory Wipperfurth for the two point conversion. Then came the second field goal block and the overtime heroics. Wara completed 23 of 30 passes for 237 yards and a score and ran for two more.

Widener college has a distinguished history, winning national championships in 1977 and 1981. But there was no Mount Union around in those days. They are the latest school to go through the Purple Raider meat-grinder, losing 17-72. The “Pride” got off to a good start, converting a Mount Union fumble into a 3-0 lead. The rest of the game was 14-72. It was 3-37 by halftime. After a competitive third quarter, (14-21), the home team tacked on a couple more scores to make it a 55 point margin in the end. The Purple Raiders ground out 753 total yards, 380 on Chris Burke’s passing and another 115 on his running. Burke accounted for 5 touchdowns.

Let’s compare this Mount Union team to Larry Kehres’ other teams:

1986 11-1-0 349-131 (29-11) Lost in quarterfinals
1987 6-4-0 275-210 (28-21)
1988 6-3-1 218-183 (22-18)
1989 7-2-1 257-142 (26-14)
1990 10-1-0 377-114 (34-10)Lost in first round
1991 8-1-1 290-138 (29-14)
1992 12-1-0 465-165 (36-13) Lost in semi-finals
1993 14-0-0 582-120 (42-9) Won National Championship
1994 10-2-0 376-148 (31-12) Lost in quarterfinals
1995 12-1-0 547-153 (42-12) Lost in semi-finals
1996 14-0-0 669-184 (48-13) Won National Championship
1997 14-0-0 752-112 (54-8) Won National Championship
1998 14-0-0 523-227 (37-16) Won National Championship
1999 12-1-0 649-251 (50-19) Lost in semi-finals
2000 14-0-0 662-222 (47-16) Won National Championship
2001 14-0-0 582-155 (42-11) Won National Championship
2002 14-0-0 654-180 (47-13) Won National Championship
2003 13-1-0 660-108 (47-8) Lost in title game
2004 12-1-0 547-142 (42-11) Lost in semi-finals
2005 14-1-0 620-154 (41-10) Won National Championship
2006 15-0-0 659-127 (44-8) Won National Championship
2007 14-1-0 778-104 (52-7) Lost in title game
2008 15-0-0 683-131 (46-9) Won National Championship
2009 14-1-0 679-145 (45-10) Lost in title game
2010 14-1-0 578-134 (39-9) Lost in title game
2011 14-1-0 554-130 (37-9) Lost in title game

They have had such amazingly consistent success for the last couple of decades that there almost doesn’t seem to be separate Mount Union teams: they are just “Mount Union”. But they have had to rebuild to some extent. Not all their teams have been of equal strength. Off the numbers, the 1997 team seems to have been their best: 14-0-0 752-112 (54-8). So far this year they are 13-0-0, 716-89, (55-7), so this team seems at least comparable. But they have to seal the deal by winning their 11th National Championship. Only then can a comparison really be valid. The 2007 team had a record close to this year’s and lost to Wisconsin-Whitewater in the title game, (they were 14-0 and 757-73, 54-5, going into that game but lost 21-31). Larry Kehres, in 27 seasons is 330-24-3, (.932) and has out-scored his opponents 14,661-4,010 (41-11).

The match-ups for the semi-finals:

ST. THOMAS of Minnesota (13-0, 481-124). No losses. Rank: #4 All-Time: 11-5-1. No titles.
Vs.
WISCONSIN-OSHKOSH (13-0, 511-176). No losses. Rank: #5. All-Time: 3-0. No titles.

These teams shouldn’t be under-estimated. All four semi-finalists are 13-0 and Oshkosh won the same conference that produces Whitewater, Mount Union’s nemesis, (whom they beat 28-13 this year).

MARY HARDIN-BAYLOR of Texas (13-0, 650-237). No losses. Rank: #2 All-Time: 21-10. No titles.
Vs.
MOUNT UNION of Ohio (13-0, 716-89) No losses. They had a streak of 6 consecutive shut-outs from 9/15-10/20. Rank: #1 All-Time 76-13. Titles: NCAA Division III: 1993, 1996, 1997, 1998, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2005, 2006, 2008 (10).

Mary Hardin-Baylore took care of the Mount Union imitators last week. Now they get the real thing. But if anybody can knock off Mount Union this year, it might just be “The Cru”, who did it back in 2004, 38-35 in the national semi-finals, (they went on to lost to Linfield, 21-28 in the last final before the Mount Union-Whitewater run). The Purple Raiders look awesome but at this stage, they aren’t in there with chumps.

The Championship game will be played Friday 12/14/12 at 7PM EST in Salem, Virginia and will be on ESPNU. That’s Channel 108 on Time Warner Cable in the Syracuse area.
 
This must all be a bunch of fiction. There is no way someone has figured out a way to do a playoff in college football. There are, afterall, finals to consider and traveling and no way to figure out who should play in them. Just ask the BCS AD's. But I have heard they've come up with something for the future. It's only going to include 4 teams, but I'm sure that's just a start. Once the BCS schools get it all figured out I'm sure the lower level divisions can adopt it too. They'll probably be very thankful someone came up with something.
 
This must all be a bunch of fiction. There is no way someone has figured out a way to do a playoff in college football. There are, afterall, finals to consider and traveling and no way to figure out who should play in them. Just ask the BCS AD's. But I have heard they've come up with something for the future. It's only going to include 4 teams, but I'm sure that's just a start. Once the BCS schools get it all figured out I'm sure the lower level divisions can adopt it too. They'll probably be very thankful someone came up with something.

DII has a 32 team playoff. NAIA does 16. DII does 24 teams. FCS has 20 teams. These are all student-atheltes, unlikely to have a carewer in the pros. They are jsut guys who enjoyed playing football in high school and wanted the opportunity to continue doing so. Meanwhile in FBS, (D1A), everyone is trying to get into the NFL and most of them would not even bother with college if it hadn't been set up as the NFL's minor leagues. But we can't have a comprehensive playoff because it's too many games and it might effect their academics.

It's quite an eductation for the kids. In hypocracy.
 
DII has a 32 team playoff. NAIA does 16. DII does 24 teams. FCS has 20 teams. These are all student-atheltes, unlikely to have a carewer in the pros. They are jsut guys who enjoyed playing football in high school and wanted the opportunity to continue doing so. Meanwhile in FBS, (D1A), everyone is trying to get into the NFL and most of them would not even bother with college if it hadn't been set up as the NFL's minor leagues. But we can't have a comprehensive playoff because it's too many games and it might effect their academics.

It's quite an eductation for the kids. In hypocracy.
I went to Ithaca from '89-'93 and saw first hand how the playoffs work. Two of my roommates were on the team that won the NC in 1991...and they both handled their academics quite well as did most of the guys on the team. Hell, one of them took a final on the plane ride down to Phenix City, AL for the Stagg Bowl. I have been saying for years that the NCAA is missing the boat on a 16 team playoff (which is what it was back then). But realisticaly the big boys wont go back to an 11 game scehdule or do away with conference championships. Oh well...
 
DII has a 32 team playoff. NAIA does 16. DII does 24 teams. FCS has 20 teams. These are all student-atheltes, unlikely to have a carewer in the pros. They are jsut guys who enjoyed playing football in high school and wanted the opportunity to continue doing so. Meanwhile in FBS, (D1A), everyone is trying to get into the NFL and most of them would not even bother with college if it hadn't been set up as the NFL's minor leagues. But we can't have a comprehensive playoff because it's too many games and it might effect their academics.

It's quite an eductation for the kids. In hypocracy.
Yeah. Anytime people have said, "There's no way we could do a college football playoff.'' I've screamed "LIES". We've had the model for years in the lower levels, and as long as you didn't go farther than 8 or 16 teams the regular season wouldn't be devalued because you'd have to do so well just to get in.
 

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