WILKES-BARRE, Pa. — Lycoming traveled to Wilkes on Saturday
afternoon for an early-season matchup of Middle Atlantic Conference title
contenders. The Warriors controlled the game defensively and methodically
dismantled the Colonels for a 29-13 victory. Lycoming improves to 2-0
overall, while Wilkes falls to 1-1.
Phil Mann led the Warriors with
both his arm and his legs. Mann completed 12 of 25 passes for 193 yards
and one touchdown, while also rushing for 41 yards and a score on seven
carries. Sean Hennigar was Mann's favorite target with five catches for 26
yards. Ricky Lannetti had three receptions for 60 yards, and Brandon
Johnson caught two passes for 72 yards, including a 67-yard touchdown.
Robert Miller accounted for Lycoming's third touchdown on a one-yard run.
He totaled 29 yards on 11 carries for the afternoon. Freshman placekicker
Chris Schrader tied a Warrior record with three field goals in the game --
connecting from 32, 26, and 22 yards.
The Colonels were led by
Brett Trichilo who rushed for 98 yards on 28 carries. He also caught two
passes for 35 yards to lead the Wilkes receivers. Quarterback Matt Kaskie
completed nine of 19 passes for 65 yards. He was intercepted twice and
sacked three times.
Lycoming opened the scoring on their very first
possession marching 59 yards on 12 plays to the Colonels' 15 yardline. The
drive stalled there, however, setting up Schrader's first field goal of
the day from 32 yards out.
Wilkes answered later in the first
quarter following a Warrior turnover. On a second and five for Lycoming,
Mike Fox pressured Mann and caused a fumble as he made the sack. Steve
Rogers recovered on the Warrior seven to set up a first-and-goal for the
home team. Three plays later, Kyle Gallagher slammed through the line for
a two-yard touchdown and a 7-3 Colonel lead.
Lycoming pulled within
one early in the second quarter on a 26-yard field goal by Schrader. The
Warriors started in Wilkes territory and moved the ball 32 yards on six
plays before settling for the field goal.
Lycoming kept the
momentum forcing the Colonels to go three-and-out on their next
possession. A 24-yard punt return by Lannetti gave the Warriors great
field position at the Wilkes 27. Mann then scampered 27 yards up the
middle on the very first play of the drive for the go-ahead touchdown.
Schrader's extra-point made the score 13-7 in favor of Lycoming at the
half.
The Colonels opened the second half with the ball, but were
again forced to go three-and-out. The punt snap, however, hit the up-man
and was recovered by Kevin LeSage at the Wilkes 25 -- again giving the
Warriors prime field position.
Lycoming wasted no time capitalizing
as Mann hit Tim Brown for a 24-yard reception to the Colonels one
yardline. Miller then dove into the endzone to give the Warriors a 19-7
advantage. The two-point conversion attempt failed.
Lycoming put
the game out of reach midway through the third period when Mann found
Johnson streaking down the sideline for a 67-yard touchdown. The play came
on a third-and-6 from the Warriors 33-yard line and capped a short
three-play drive. Schrader's extra-point made the score 26-7 with 4:43 to
play in the third.
The 19-point deficit forced Wilkes to abandon
their power running attack and throw the ball in an effort to get back in
the game. The result was two stalled drives and two interceptions in four
possessions. The first interception set up an 11-play, 39-yard drive by
Lycoming that culminated in a 22-yard field goal by Schrader.
The
Colonels did find the end zone one more time on the final drive of the
game. Quarterback Duran Porrino moved Wilkes 80-yards on 12 plays,
eventually finding Sean Sholtes in the endzone for the eight-yard
touchdown as time expired. The drive was aided by two pass interference
penalties on the Warriors.
Lycoming's defense held the Colonels to
214 yards of total offense on 80 plays for an average of just 2.7 yards
per play. Sean McGinley led the unit in tackles for the second consecutive
week with nine stops, including two sacks. Tim Schmidt, Luke Sterling, and
Nick Pinto each added eight tackles. Sterling also recovered a fumble.
Matt Murdock and Nick Finn each recorded interceptions for the
Warriors.
The Colonels defense was led by Jason Mitkowski with 15
tackles and a forced fumble. Steve Rogers chipped in eight tackles as
well.