Day 2FinalsThe grand final of the 2016 Hearthstone World Championships was a European showdown between Artem DrHippi Kravets and Pavel Pavel Beltukov.
Soccer Jerseys From China . DrHippi got out to an early 1-0 lead on the back of his Dragon Warrior against the slower CThun Warrior of Pavel. He looked poised to take a 2-0 lead, but a big Flamestrike from Pavel cleared DrHippis board and swung the momentum enough to tie the series at one apiece. Game 3 was a classic Druid vs. Druid showdown, with both players jockeying for position all game long. DrHippi tried to turn the tides with a Yogg-Saron play, but it came up short and Pavel locked up the 2-1 lead.Game 4 was another classic matchup between CThun Warrior from Pavel and the Malygos Druid of DrHippi. In the late-game oriented matchup, the outcome wasnt clear for quite some time. DrHippi once again tried to make a power play with his Yogg-Saron, but it ended up killing itself before doing much damage. Pavel then used his CThun to clean, thus winning the game and the showdown between Old Gods. Not content to go quietly into the night, DrHippi grabbed a win in Game 5 with his Zoo Warlock. He controlled the board all game long and was able to easily defeat the Malygos Rogue from Pavel.With his back still against the wall, DrHippi pulled out his Druid once again to try and top Pavels Rogue. But for the third time this series, DrHippis Druid came up short. Pavel brought out a massive 10/10 Edwin Van Cleef that essentially won him the game and the right to be crowned the 2016 Hearthstone World Champion.SemifinalsCheonsu vs. DrHippiThe second semifinal of the day saw Kim Cheonsu Cheonsu take on Artem DrHippi Kravets for the last spot in the grand finals of the 2016 Hearthstone World Championship. Another series, another 1-1 tie to start things off. While Cheonsu took Game 1 with a big Malygos swing turn, DrHippi put his faith in the Old Gods and took Game 2 with some Yogg-Saron magic. Game 3 was fairly straightforward, with Cheonsu using his Midrange Shaman to defeat DrHippis Tempo Mage.DrHippi bounced back in a big way in the final three games of the series. After a strong win with his Zoo deck against Dragon Warrior in Game 4, DrHippi put his faith in The Firelord, which helped him grab a 3-2 lead. His Ragnaros was an absolute sniper, as it hit on both a 50/50 and 1-in-3 shot to fuel a big comeback. He then closed out the series with a Game 6 that saw DrHippis Tempo Mage prevail against the Dragon Warrior of Cheonsu.Jasonzhou vs. PavelThe first semifinal of the day saw Jason Jasonzhou Zhou take on Pavel Pavel Beltukov for a chance at the grand finals. The first two games were tightly contested, with both players taking a game apiece. Jasonzhou grabbed a Game 1 win with a late-game, top-decked Doomguard for lethal, while Pavel used some early ramp cards to top Jasonzhous Dragon Warrior in Game 2. Pavel took his Tempo Mage into Games 3 and 4, but he posted two very different results. He couldnt overcome Malygos Druid in Game 3, but parlayed an RNG-filled final play with a Firelance Portal to take down Jasonzhous Dragon Warrior to tie the series at 2-2.An early misplay with an unactivated Edwin Van Cleef from Jasonzhou left him at a huge disadvantage in a Game 5 Rogue mirror, essentially gifting Pavel the win. Needing just one more win to claim the series, Pavel used his CThun Warrior to take down Jasonzhou with a big late-game, 14/14 CThun that locked up the game and his spot in the grand finals.Day 1QuarterfinalsHotMEOWTH vs. DrHippiIn the final quarterfinal of the day, America saw its last hope, Edwin HotMEOWTH Cook, take on the European powerhouse, Artem DrHippi Kravetz. When the deck lists were submitted for the tournament, HotMEOWTHs Warrior deck was the biggest story, as it was an extremely unique variation of the once feared Grim Patron deck. As a result, fans were eager to see the deck in action and HotMEOWTH gladly obliged, opting to use the deck throughout the series.That became a major misstep, as DrHippi won the series in convincing fashion, sweeping HotMEOWTHs Warrior deck in four straight games. Ragnaros the Firelord closed out Game 1 for DrHippi, but he had to earn the rest of the wins in very close matchups. A terrific play with the Midrange Shaman during Game 3 was the highlight of the series, as DrHippi managed to weave through constant board clears to find a 21 damage Bloodlust combo for the win.Cydonia vs. CheonsuThe third quarterfinal matchup was a battle between Julien Cydonia Perrault of Canada and Kim Cheonsu Cheonsu, representing the last hope of the Asia-Pacific Region. Game 1 would wind up being the only competitive match, as the two Warrior archetypes -- Cydonias Control vs. Cheonsus Dragon -- came down to the wire. The decks proved evenly matched as it was never clear who would win until the very end. Despite four straight turns within two damage of lethal, Cheonsu could not find the necessary damage, falling to Cydonia in Game 1. That would be Cydonias only win, however, as Cheonsu was able to take command from there. After his Zoo Warlock took out Cydonias Tempo Mage deck in Game 2, Cydonia committed to his Secret Hunter deck, a move that backfired spectacularly as he lost the final three games. Cheonsu will face the winner of the Edwin HotMEOWTH Cook and Artem DrHippi Kravetz matchup in the semifinals tomorrow.Amnesiac vs. PavelThe second quarterfinals series saw William Amnesiac Barton take on Pavel Pavel Beltukov in a battle between North America vs. Europe. Early on, Amnesiac looked poised to take an easy sweep over the European player. He won a hotly contested Game 1 by putting his faith in The Firelord, relying on a ridiculous 33 percent lethal Ragnaros shot to win the first game before easily taking Games 2 and 3. From there, the tides shifted and Pavel made a roaring comeback, completing the reverse sweep on the back of some incredible microplays and game-changing RNG. Every time it looked like Amnesiac had stabilized, Pavel drew into the perfect answer and kept on rolling. With the win, Pavel will now move on to face Jason Jasonzhou Zhou in the semifinals.Jasonzhou vs. HamsterJason Jasonzhou Zhao was able to grab a 4-2 win over Zhuo Hamster Wang during the first quarterfinal matchup of the weekend. The start of the series appeared to be close as each player managed to split the first two games, but Jasonzhou pulled away as the series progressed. Facing a 3-1 lead, Jasonzhous Dragon Warrior wasnt able to claim the series win in Game 5 thanks to a late Ragnaros draw, which allowed Hamster to heal himself out of lethal range, and force a concede. But Jasonzhou was able to bounce back and earn the win thanks to yet another strong Dragon Warrior Play in Game 6.
Cheap Jerseys From China . -- Eastern Kentucky thrives off creating havoc for others.
Wholesale Jerseys From China . Burke is expected to miss two to three months after breaking a finger in the teams third preseason game. Tinsley, a 10-year veteran, spent the last two seasons in Utah, where the point guard averaged 3.
http://www.wholesalejerseyschinaonline.com/ . Colin Wilson had two goals and an assist, and Mike Fisher scored a goal and helped set up two others in the Predators 6-4 victory over the Red Wings on Monday night. (STATS) -- An Ivy League-record 24 players were spread across rosters when NFL camps opened this summer.There is no hiding the Ivies draw excellent high school talent that is attracted to the academics as well as the athletics.Its tremendous for the league, said Harvard coach Tim Murphy, whose program produced 10 of the players.To have 24 guys in the league, or at least competing for spots in the league, I think is reflective of the great job that so many different coaches and coaching staffs have done in the league. I know when we came into the league in, wow, 1993, there were very few players in the league who were getting the opportunity to go to the next level. And I think its a reflection of the really good job that weve done recruiting nationally. Im talking about we as a league. And I think its a reflection of kids today are really understanding that you can have a great Division I football experience in the Ivy league and have a great balance between athletics (and academics).Ivy teams have been chasing Harvard in recent years -- four of Murphys nine league titles have come in the last five seasons -- but the leagues widespread title suggests this could be one of the better title races.Dartmouth and Penn caught up to Harvard last year, sharing the league title with the Crimson in the first three-way championship tie since 1982. While all three suffered significant graduation losses, Yale, Princeton and Brown return experienced squads -- each capable of being in the title race come November.Out of those five opponents, Harvard only gets archrival Yale at home. The rest come on the road.Following is a team-by-team breakdown of the 2016 Ivy League race and STATS predicted order of finish:1. Penn2. Harvard3. Princeton4. Dartmouth5. Yale6. Brown7. Columbia8. Cornell---=TEAM CAPSULES=1. PENN QUAKERS=LOCATION: PhiladelphiaSTADIUM: Franklin FieldCOACH: Ray Priore (7-3 in one season at Penn)LAST SEASON: 7-3 overall, 6-1 Ivy League (Tie/1st)STARTERS RETURNING: 12 (7 offense/5 defense)THREE KEY LOSSES: Ryan OMalley, TE; Tanner Thexton, OL; Tyler Drake, LBONE TO WATCH ON OFFENSE: Justin Watson, WR, Jr. (74 receptions, 1,082 yards, 9 TDs)ONE TO WATCH ON DEFENSE: Donald Panciello, LB, Sr. (61 TT, 7 TFL, 1 sack, 2 PBU, 1 FR, 1 BK)OTHER KEY PLAYERS: Alek Torgersen, QB, Sr.; Tre Solomon, RB, Jr.; Brian Schoenauer, RB, Sr.; Christian Pearson, WR, So.; Nicholas Bokun, TE, Jr.; Nick Demes, OL, Sr.; Tayler Hendrickson, DL, Jr.; Louis Vecchio, DE, Jr.; Brandon Mills, LB, Jr.; Colton Moskal, LB, Jr.; Matt Henderson, LB, Sr.; Sam Philippi, DB, So.; Mason Williams, DB, So.; Hunter Kelley, P, Jr.OUTLOOK: Penn has the most returning starters (12) among last years three champions. With it comes an explosive offense. QB Torgersen (163-for-236, 1,996 yards, 19 TDs, 3 INTs) has put up big numbers for two seasons and his favorite receiver, Watson, should put fear into every defense in the league. There will be a superb running games as well with the return of RBs Schoenauer (652 yards, 6 TDs) and Solomon (453 yards, 7 TDs). The defense was good, not great a year ago and needs to overcome the loss of Drake, the 2015 Ivy defensive player in the year. Panciello wreaked havoc alongside Drake, so he is ready for a bigger role as a senior. The secondary was inconsistent, but it returns a lot of the key players, which suggests improvement. It helps the Quakers to have a full season under last years two coordinators, John Reagan (offensive) and Bob Benson (defensive). Harvard has to come to Franklin Field on Nov. 12.SCHEDULE:Sept. 17, LehighSept. 24, at FordhamOct. 1, at Dartmouth*Oct. 8, Central Connecticut StateOct. 15, Columbia*Oct. 22, at Yale*Oct. 29, Brown*Nov. 5, at Princeton*Nov. 12, Harvard*Nov. 19, at Cornell** -- Ivy League game---=2. HARVARD CRIMSON=LOCATION: Cambridge, MassachusettsSTADIUM: Harvard StadiumCOACH: Tim Murphy (156-63 in 22 seasons at Harvard; 188-108-1 overall)LAST SEASON: 9-1 overall, 6-1 Ivy League (Tie/1st)STARTERS RETURNING: 10 (5 offense/5 defense)THREE KEY LOSSES: Scott Hosch, QB; Ben Braunecker, TE; Matt Koran, LBONE TO WATCH ON OFFENSE: Justice Shelton-Mosley, WR, So. (40 receptions, 589 yards, 6 TDs; 33.1-yard KO return average; 19-yard punt return average, 1 TD)ONE TO WATCH ON DEFENSE: Sean Ahern, CB, Sr. (34 TT, 3 TFL, 1 sack, 5 PBU, 1 FF, 2 BK)OTHER KEY PLAYERS: QB Joe Viviano, Sr.; Tom Stewart, QB, So.; Semar Smith, RB, Jr.; Noah Reimers, RB, So.; Charlie Booker III, RB, So.; John Van Allen III, WR, Sr.; Anthony Firkser, H-Back, Sr.; Max Rich, OL, Sr.; Larry Allen, OL, Jr.; Langston Ward, DE, Sr.; Scott Evans, DE, Jr.; Doug Webb, DT, Sr.; Miles McCollum, DE, Sr.; Davon Robertson, DE, Sr.; James Duberg, DE, Sr.; Luke Hutton, LB, Jr.; Chase Guillory, LB, Jr.; Raishaun McGhee, DB, Sr.OUTLOOK: The Crimson program is better at reloading than any other Ivy program, but it lost 14 players who earned a form of all-league honors, some whom were two- and three-year starters. It doesnt mean a fourth straight Ivy title is out of the question -- the Crimson were in fact the leagues preseason favorite. But considering the significant losses, going on the road against Ivy rivals Brown, Princeton, Dartmouth and Penn could prove taxing. Either QB Viviano, who was injured last season, or Stewart will guide the offense, taking over for Hosch, last years Ivy offensive player of the year. One of the teams biggest strengths is the skills positions, as WR Shelton-Mosley and H-Back Firkser will be outstanding, and Reimers (253 yards, 6 TDs) and Smith will take on a bigger load at running back. The defense took more hits on graduation day than the offense. The Crimson are looking for a fiercer pass rush from its rebuilt front seven. Ahern, a first-team All-Ivy cornerback, is the top-returning defensive player.SCHEDULE:Sept. 16, Rhode IslandSept. 24, at Brown*Sept. 30, GeorgetownOct. 8, Cornell*Oct. 15, at Holy CrossOct. 22, at Princeton*Oct. 29, at Dartmouth*Nov. 5, Columbia*Nov. 12, at Penn*Nov. 19, Yale** -- Ivy League game---=3. PRINCETON TIGERS=LOCATION: Princeton, New JerseySTADIUM: Princeton StadiumCOACH: Bob Surace (25-35 in six seasons at Princeton; 43-38 overall)LAST SEASON: 5-5 overall, 2-5 Ivy League (6th)STARTERS RETURNING: 14 (7 offense/7 defense)THREE KEY LOSSES: Seth DeValve, WR; Matt Arends, LB; Anthony Gaffney, CBONE TO WATCH ON OFFENSE: John Lovett, QB/RB, Jr. (44 receptions, 286 yards, 9 TDs; 11-for-15, 94 yards, 3 TDs)ONE TO WATCH ON DEFENSE: Dorian Williams, FS, Sr. (91 TT, 1.5 sacks, 3 PBU, 1 FR, 2 FF)OTHER KEY PLAYERS: Chad Kanoff, QB, Sr.; Joe Rhattigan, RB, Sr.; Isaiah Barnes, WR, Sr.; Trevor Osborne, WR, Sr.; Scott Carpenter, TE, Sr.; Mitchell Sweigart, OL, Jr.; Erik Ramirez, OL, Jr.; Kurt Holuba, DL, Jr.; Tyler Desire, DL, Jr.; Henry Schlossberg, NG, Sr.; Brannon Jones, DL, Sr.; Rohan Hylton, LB, Sr.; Luke Catarius, LB, Sr.; Birk Olson, LB, Sr.; R.J. Paige, LB, Sr.; Markus Phox, CB, Sr.; James Gales, DB, Sr.OUTLOOK: After beating three Patriot League teams by at least 24 points last season, the Tigers kept losing close games in the Ivy League (four by seven points or less). They seek to make amends with an experienced team. Surace feels this years front seven is the best of his tenure, and the pressure it can put on quarterbacks will pay off (the defense had 28 sacks last season). Schlossberg, Desire and Holuba are standouts on the D-line. FS Williams led the team in tackles, and four of the top five in that statistic return. The no-huddle offense has one of the more unique players in the FCS in Lovett, who lines up at quarterback, running back or wide receiver. Kanoff (203-for-355, 2,304 yards, 8 TDs, 7 INTs) handles most the passing and Rhattigan (122 carries, 612 yards, 7 TDs) is the featured running back. During the preseason, the Tigers are trying to figure out depth on the offensive line and in the secondary.SCHEDULE:Sept. 17, LafayetteSept. 24, LehighOct. 1, at Columbia*Oct. 8, at GeorgetownOct. 15, Brown*Oct. 22, Harvard*Oct. 29, at Cornell*Nov. 5, Penn*Nov. 12, at Yale*Nov. 19, Dartmouth** -- Ivy League game---=4. YALE BULLDOGS=LOCATION: New Haven, ConnecticutSTADIUM: Yale BowlCOACH: Tony Reno (21-19 in four seasons at Yale)LAST SEASON: 6-4 overall, 3-4 Ivy League (Tie/4th)STARTERS RETURNING: 17 (8 offense/9 defense)THREE KEY LOSSES: Morgan Roberts, QB; Andrew Larkin, LB; Cole Champion, DBONE TO WATCH ON OFFENSE: Deshawn Salter, RB, Jr. (129 carries, 561 yards, 7 TDs)ONE TO WATCH ON DEFENSE: Copache Tyler, DT, Sr. (23 TT, 5.5 TFL, 1 sack, 4 PBU, 1 BK)OTHER KEY PLAYERS: Rafe Chapple, QB, Jr.; Tre Moore, QB, So.; Candler Rich, RB, Sr.; Dale Harris, RB, Sr.; Robert Clemons III, WR, Sr.; Christopher Williams-Lopez, WR, Jr.; Michael Siragusa Jr., WR, Jr.; Leo Haenni, TE, Sr.; Marty Moesta, DL, Sr.; Nicholas Crowle, DT, Jr.; Matthew Oplinger, LB, Jr.; Victor Egu, LB, Sr.; Spencer Rymiszewski, CB, Sr.; Foyesade Oluokun, DB, Sr.; Hayden Carlson, DDB, Jr.
Cheap Soccer Jerseys. ; Jason Alessi, DB/RS, Jr.; Bryan Holmes, PK, Sr.OUTLOOK: With the door open in the Ivy title chase, the Bulldogs must like their chances with 17 returning starters. The big question is whether QB Chapple can successfully replace Roberts, Yales all-time leader in passing yardage. Fortunately, the new signal-caller has many offensive weapons. William-Lopez is coming off a 60-catch season, and Clemons and Siragusa combined on another 70 receptions. Also, theres depth at running back with Salter, Rich and Harris, who made a late-season move to the position. The physical defense returns plenty of key players, including two first-team all-league selections in DT Tyler and CB Rymiszewski. The Bulldogs also get back standout safety Oluokun after he was limited to three games last season because of injury. A poor second half of last season (a 2/3 record) should be motivating the Bulldogs.SCHEDULE:Sept. 17, ColgateSept. 24, at Cornell*Oct. 1, LehighOct. 8, Dartmouth*Oct. 15, at FordhamOct. 22, Penn*Oct. 29, at Columbia*Nov. 5, at Brown*Nov. 12, Princeton*Nov. 19, at Harvard** -- Ivy League game---=5. DARTMOUTH BIG GREEN=LOCATION: Hanover, New HampshireSTADIUM: Memorial FieldCOACH: Buddy Teevens (75-83-2 in 16 seasons at Dartmouth; 109-160-2 overall)LAST SEASON: 9-1 overall, 6-1 Ivy League (Tie/1st)STARTERS RETURNING: 5 (4 offense/1 defense)THREE KEY LOSSES: Dalyn Williams, QB; Ryan McManus, WR/PR; Will McNamara, LBONE TO WATCH ON OFFENSE: Ryder Stone, RB, Jr. (75 carries, 375 yards, 8 TDs)ONE TO WATCH ON DEFENSE: Folarin Orimolade, LB, Sr. (36 TT, 12 TFL, 8 sacks, 4 PBU, 1 QBH, 4 FF)OTHER KEY PLAYERS: Bruce Dixon IV, QB, So.; Jack Heneghan, QB, Jr.; Houston Brown, WR, Sr.; Jon Marc Carrier, WR, Sr.; Dave Morrison, LT, Sr.; Zach Davis, OG, Sr.; Brandon Cooper, DE, Sr.; Jackson Perry, DE, So.; Zach Husain, DL, Sr.; Lucas Bavaro, NB, Sr.; Charlie Miller, SS, Sr.; Danny McManus, CB/KR, Sr.; Cameron Skaff, TE, Jr.; Alex Gakenheimer, PK, Sr.; Ben Kepley, P, Sr.OUTLOOK: Last years senior-driven team returns only five starters, which has Teevens rebuilding the teams two-deep. But there were younger players who got snaps, so Teevens believes his team can remain in the title chase following a share of their first Ivy crown since 1996. Orimolade is the only returning starter from a superb defense, so opponents will look to double-team him when he rushes the quarterback. The new anchor on the defensive line is DE Cooper. On offense, QB Dixon is expected to take over for Williams, a four-year starter, and there could be growing pains. With the loss of top receivers McManus and Victor Williams, RB Stone figures to become a focal point of the offense after splitting carries in the past. The home portion of the schedule is as strong as it will ever be as it sees fellow 2015 co-champs Harvard and Penn as well Brown and CAA Football members New Hampshire and Towson coming to Hanover.SCHEDULE:Sept. 17, New HampshireSept. 24, at Holy CrossOct. 1, Penn*Oct. 8, at Yale*Oct. 15, TowsonOct. 22, at Columbia*Oct. 29, Harvard*Nov. 5, at Cornell*Nov. 12, Brown*Nov. 19, at Princeton** -- Ivy League game---=6. BROWN BEARS=LOCATION: Providence, Rhode IslandSTADIUM: Brown StadiumCOACH: Phil Estes (108-71 in 18 seasons at Brown)LAST SEASON: 5-5 overall, 3-4 Ivy League (Tie/4th)STARTERS RETURNING: 15 (8 offense/7 defense)THREE KEY LOSSES: Brian Strachan, WR; Will Quigley, CB; Zack Gillen, FSONE TO WATCH ON OFFENSE: Alex Jette, WR/RS/P, Sr. (68 receptions, 928 yards, 4 TDs; 23.7-yard KO return average, 1 TD)ONE TO WATCH ON DEFENSE: Richard Jarvis, DE, Sr. (34 TT, 6.5 TFL, 2 sacks, 1 INT, 2 QBH)OTHER KEY PLAYERS: Kyle Moreno, QB, Sr.; Nicholas Duncan, QB, So.; Johnny Pena, RB, Sr.; Troy Doles, WR/KR, Sr.; Dakota Girard, OL, Sr.; Matt Girard, OL, Sr.; Christian Montano, C, Jr.; Robert Hughes, DE, Sr.; Daryl Banfield, DT, So.; Zach Genaway, DT, So.; Will Twyman, ILB, Sr.; Max Tylki, ILB, Sr.; Jordan Ferguson, CB, Sr.; Jacob Wilner, PK, Jr.OUTLOOK: Browns steady program appears due for a big season after two straight 5-5 campaigns. The Bears veteran team features the best wide receiver duo in the league in Jette and Doles (66 receptions, 963 yards, 7 TDs). Jette happens to be the teams punter as well. After tying for second in the FCS for the most turnovers (34) last season, Estes expects better play at quarterback, where Moreno (28-for-45, 360 yards, 2 TDs, 2 INTs) takes over the read option attack as a senior. The veteran offensive line will provide plenty of protection, something that also will benefit RB Pena (310 yards, 6 TDs). The Bears finished last in the league in scoring defense (32.9 ppg), so having a healthier defensive line is key. Jarvis is one of the leagues better pass rushers and ILB Twyman scoops up a lot behind him (he led the team with 77 tackles and six passes defensed).SCHEDULE:Sept. 17, at BryantSept. 24, Harvard*Oct. 1, at Rhode IslandOct. 8, StetsonOct. 15, at Princeton*Oct. 22, Cornell*Oct. 29, at Penn*Nov. 5, Yale*Nov. 12, at Dartmouth*Nov. 19, Columbia** -- Ivy League game---=7. COLUMBIA LIONS=LOCATION: New YorkSTADIUM: Wien StadiumCOACH: Al Bagnoli (2-8 in one season at Columbia; 236-107 overall)LAST SEASON: 2-8 overall, 1-6 Ivy League (Tie/7th)STARTERS RETURNING: 12 (8 offense, 4 defense)THREE KEY LOSSES: Cam Molina, RB; Toba Akinleye, DE; Chad Washington, DEONE TO WATCH ON OFFENSE: Skyler Mornhinweg, QB, Sr. (149-for-253, 1,323 yards, 6 TDs, 11 INTs; 84 carries, 249 yards, 3 TDs)ONE TO WATCH ON DEFENSE: Christian Conway, LB/DB, Sr. (57 TT, 7.5 TFL, 2 sacks, 3 QBH, 1 FR, 1 FF, 1 BK)OTHER KEY PLAYERS: Alan Watson, RB/KR, Sr.; Chris Schroer, RB, Jr.; Scooter Hollis, WR, Sr.; Cameron Dunn, WR, Sr.; John Hunton, TE, Sr.; Nathan Gibbs, OL, Sr.; Kendall Pace, OL, Sr.; Bewley Wales, OL, Jr.; Markham Paukune, OL, Jr.; Dominic Perkovic, DL, Jr.; Lord Hyeamang, DL, Jr.; Keith Brady, LB, Sr.; Gianmarco Rea, LB, Sr.; Jared Katz, CB, Sr.; Cameron Roane, CB, Jr.; Brock Kenyon, DB, Sr.; Cameron Nizialek, P, Sr.OUTLOOK: With six of their eight losses by eight points or less, the Lions were closer to respectability than last years 2-8 record suggested. However, the struggling program still needs to build recruiting classes under Bagnoli and actually start winning more games. Hes seeking new leaders after some of the teams top players graduated. Second-year QB Mornhinweg, the Florida transfer who played through injuries, has to improve his touchdown-to-interception ratio of 6-to-11. He gets back No. 1 WR Hollis (51 receptions, 515 yards, 1 TD). Bagnoli has to rebuild last years outstanding defensive line, although five of the teams top six tacklers, including co-leaders Brady and Conway (57 each), return to the linebackers unit and secondary.SCHEDULE:Sept. 17, Saint FrancisSept. 24, at GeorgetownOct. 1, Princeton*Oct. 8, at WagnerOct. 15, at Penn*Oct. 22, Dartmouth*Oct. 29, Yale*Nov. 5 at Harvard*Nov. 12, Cornell*Nov. 19, at Brown** -- Ivy League game---=8. CORNELL BIG RED=LOCATION: Ithaca, New YorkSTADIUM: Schoellkopf FieldCOACH: David Archer (5-25 in three seasons at Cornell)LAST SEASON: 1-9 overall, 1-6 Ivy League (Tie/7th)STARTERS RETURNING: 15 (7 offense/8 defense)THREE KEY LOSSES: Luke Hagy, RB; JJ Fives, OLB; Rush Imhotep, SONE TO WATCH ON OFFENSE: Ben Rogers, WR/RS, Sr. (26 reception, 439 yards, 3 TDs)ONE TO WATCH ON DEFENSE: Nick Gesualdi, S, Jr. (51 TT, 1 INT, 8 PBU, 1 FR, 1 FF)OTHER KEY PLAYERS: Dalton Banks, QB, So.; Robert Somborn, QB, Sr.; Chris Walker, RB, So.; Jack Gellatly, FB, Jr.; Collin Shaw, WR, Sr.; Marshall Deutz, WR, Sr.; Matt Sullivan, TE, Sr.; Dan Morin, OL, Sr.; Alex Emanuels, OL, Sr.; Seth Hope, DE, Jr.; Geno DeMarco, DL, Jr.; Sean Scullen, OLB, Jr.; Miles Norris, ILB, Sr.; Daniel Crochet, ILB, Jr.; Jackson Weber, ILB, Sr.; Chris Fraser, P, Sr.OUTLOOK: Archer feels there have been too many players on the field at too young an age, but it might pay some dividends for the win-starved program. One youngster, Banks, is trying to supplant last years starting quarterback, Somborn (144-for-272, 1,874 yards, 12 TDs, 10 INTs). Another sophomore, Walker, will try to replace the teams best player, Hagy, at running back. Rogers is the Big Reds top-returning pass catcher and return man. The defense will try to improve against the run after ranking last in the league last year. Ball-hawking safety Gesualdi and ILB Weber, the teams leading tackler, hope to jump-start the defense. In Fraser, the Big Red feature the STATS FCS Preseason All-America punter. Hes also a three-time All-Ivy first-teamer as he enters his final season.SCHEDULE:Sept. 17, at BucknellSept. 24, Yale*Oct. 1, at ColgateOct. 8 at Harvard*Oct. 15, Sacred HeartOct. 22, at Brown*Oct. 29, Princeton*Nov. 5, Dartmouth*Nov. 12, at Columbia*Nov. 19, Penn** -- Ivy League game
Cheap MLB Jerseys cheap jerseys Cheap Jerseys Free Shipping cheap nfl jerseys Cheap Jerseys USA China Jerseys Cheap NFL Authentic Jerseys Cheap Jerseys For Sale Cheap NFL Jerseys China Wholesale Jerseys Cheap NBA Jerseys ' ' '