|
Let
The Games Begin!
Coming
off a season-opening 20-0 victory over Hamilton, Tufts' football
team looks to continue its winning ways at Homecoming.
Medford/Somerville,
Mass. [09.27.02] -- With last
season's 4-0 start still fresh in his mind, Tufts' head football
coach Bill Samko has high expectations for this year's squad.
With a decisive 20-0 shutout over Hamilton, Samko's team may have
the right combination of skill and experience to win a spot at
the top of the conference.
"With
help from [four standout players] and 12 other returning starters,
Tufts should once again be a factor in the New England Small Colleges
Athletic Conference [NESCAC] race," reported The Boston
Globe. "Jumbos
finished 6-2 last year and placed third in the conference after
a 4-0 start. The only blemishes were consecutive 4-point losses
to undefeated league champion Williams (8-0) and runner-up Amherst
(7-1). Wins against Colby and Middlebury closed the season."
This year's
team appears to be picking up where they left off last fall.
Led by quarterback
Scott Treacy, wide receiver Matt Cerne, outside linebacker/defensive
end Brian Burbank and noseguard Matt Keller, the Jumbos are taking
their 1-0 start into Homecoming
weekend, where they will face the 0-1 Bates team.
Tufts' defense
- which was ranked 4th in the nation last year - has already proven
to be critical to the team's success.
"We
were pretty good on defense last year," Samko told The
Boston Herald. "Our secondary is definitely a strength.
Evan Zupancic has 14 career interceptions and is one shy of the
school record and Mark Tilki was All-East on special teams after
averaging 23.2 yards-per-kickoff return. So we have four or five
guys in the secondary that are standouts."
Burbank and
Keller are also big assets to the team.
"I love
Brian Burbank," Samko told the Globe of the senior - who
is one of 17 engineering majors on the team. "That kid works.
He's a great student. He is a good football player."
Keller is
also a major contributor.
"He's
a tough, hard-nosed kid," Samko told the newspaper. "He
is one of the hardest workers we have here. He and Burbank are
guys you can trust."
But defense
alone won't be enough to fend off some of the NESCAC's most potent
teams.
Samko says
the return of receiver Matt Cerne - who missed six games last
year with an injury - will provide a boost to Tufts' offense.
"It
was tough sitting out, especially [during] a great season,"
Cerne told the Globe. "I'm going to do everything
I can. We'll see how it unfolds."
Samko has
high hopes.
"Now
that Matt's back, I think we'll be a little bit more balanced,"
Samko told the Globe. "He's a great athlete. He's
capable of generating big plays."
So is quarterback
Scott Treacy.
"He
did a terrific job for us last year," Samko told the Herald.
Samko said
the key to the team's success will be remaining healthy throughout
the season.
"We
need to stay healthy, as everybody does," he told the Globe.
"If we do, we think we can be competitive."
Meanwhile
- boosted by its best start since 1999 -- the men's soccer team
enters its Homecoming match against Bates with a 4-0 record. Ranked
No. 1 in the region and No. 6 in the country by the latest National
Soccer Coaches Association poll, the team is on pace to replicate
its 5-0 start in 1999.
"We
haven't played our best, necessarily, but we've had the results
and our team chemistry has a lot to do with it," head coach
Ralph Ferrigno told the Globe.
The women's
soccer team - which has posted a 2-2 record this season - is entering
Homecoming on the momentum of its 1-0 win against No. 2-ranked
Amherst. The team was led by the play of sophomore transfer Jen
Baldwin, who earned NESCAC Player of the Week honors following
the win.
"She's
such a smart player," Tufts head coach Martha Whiting told
the Globe. "She's fast and has a great shot and all
that, but more than anything, she knows what to do and how to
get out of trouble and score."
|