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Brandon Lainhart vs. Wagner, 2011
Patrick Shanahan/Cornell Athletics

Football Looks To Keep Road Momentum At Dartmouth

10/31/2011 7:58:00 PM

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DARTMOUTH INFORMATION
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GAME INFORMATION
Game #8: Cornell at Dartmouth
Kickoff: Saturday, Nov. 5, at 1:30 p.m. ET
Site: Memorial Field (13,000), Hanover, N.H.
2011 Records: Cornell (3-4, 1-3 Ivy); Dartmouth (2-5, 1-3 Ivy)
Series Record: Dartmouth leads 53-40-1
Last Meeting: Dartmouth won 28-10, Nov. 6, 2010, in Ithaca, N.Y.
Radio: WHCU 870 AM, Barry Leonard (play-by-play), Phil Mahoney (color)
Live Stats: Available at www.DartmouthSports.com
Live Video: Available at www.DartmouthSports.com
Tickets: Available by calling (607) 254-BEAR

HEAD COACH KENT AUSTIN
Kent  Austin, the Roger J. Weiss '61 Head Coach of Football, is in his second season at the helm of the Big Red (5-12 overall, .294; 2-9, Ivy, .182) ... Austin has won CFL Grey Cups as a player, assistant coach and head coach ... previously was offensive coordinator at his alma mater, Ole Miss, Austin was hired as head coach on Jan. 27, 2010.

ITHACA, N.Y. — A youthful Cornell team will look to continue its forward push in the first third of the season when it visits Dartmouth on Saturday, Nov. 5 at 1:30 p.m. at Memorial Field in Hanover, N.H. If you are in the Ithaca area, you can tune in to listen to Barry Leonard and Phil Mahoney on the call on WHCU 870 AM. You can listen also to the live audio stream of the game by subscribing to RedCast at http://www.CornellBigRed.com/showcase.

Cornell's offense has proven it can hang with anyone on its schedule. Sophomore quarterback Jeff Mathews has emerged as one of the top signal callers in the Ivy League in his second year as the starter, the Big Red offense has begun to put together explosive plays in bunches. Cornell has already posted 32 offensive plays that have covered 20 yards or more. Mathews ranks in the top 20 nationally and in the top two in the Ivy League in both total offense (284.0) and pass efficiency (149.20). Mathews' primary receivers, senior Shane Savage and juniors Kurt Ondash and Luke Tasker, have combined to haul in 105 passes for 1,719 yards and 13 touchdowns. They are averaging a lofty 16.4 yards per catch. Senior tight end Ryan Houska is the team's leading rusher and also among the team's top receivers and is coming off his first career 100-yard rushing game. The offensive line, which doesn't feature a senior, has surrendered just 2.6 sacks per game after giving up a nation's worst 4.9 sacks per game a year ago.

The defense has been much improved over the 2010 season. Cornell has surrendered 172.9 rushing yards per game (down from 246.1 ypg. in 2010) and 381.4 total yards per game (down from 437.2 ypg. in 2010). Cornell has registered 14 sacks and 43 total tackles for loss and is on pace to obliterate last season's totals of 12 sacks and 38 TFL. The defensive line, led by Zack Imhoff (46 tackles, 13.0 TFL, 6.5 sacks, 3 FF, FR), has been another vastly improved unit over the first seven weeks. Linebackers Brandon Lainhart (69 tackles, 4.0 TFL) and Brett Buehler (54 tackles, 7.5 TFL, 2 FF) rank among the Ancient Eight's leading tacklers. The duo is joined at the top of the tacklers' list by Rashad Campbell (50 tackles, 4.5 TFL, 2 INTs) and Josh Barut (57 tackles, 2 FF). Opposing running attacks are averaging just 4.0 yards per carry, a far cry from last year's 5.8 yards per carry.

The special teams have been led by senior place-kicker Brad Greenway, a nominee for the Fred Mitchell Award. Greenway has been nearly perfect so far this season, making 10-of-11 field goals and each of his 19 extra points. He has also averaged 34.6 yards per punt, including a 58-yard kick. Campbell is averaging 26.4 yards per kickoff return, including an 85-yard touchdown at Colgate and a 78-yarder at Princeton. Special teams have also blocked four total kicks (two punts, an extra point and a field goal).

A preseason darkhorse in the Ivy League race, Dartmouth enters the weekend with a 2-5 record (1-3 Ivy). The Big Green has dropped five of its last six contests with a 37-0 shutout of Columbia on Oct. 22 as its lone victory during that span. Dartmouth is coming off a 41-10 loss to Harvard this past Saturday, but brings in one of the league's top rushing offenses, including Ivy League Player of the Year candidate Nick Schwieger. Head coach Buddy Teevens, a 1979 graduate of Dartmouth, is in his second go-around directing the Big Green and has a 43-72-2 in 12 seasons. He has posted a 77-149-2 record in 23 seasons as a college head coach with stops at Maine, Tulane and Stanford.

A WIN OVER DARTMOUTH WOULD:
• even Cornell's record at 4-4 on the year.
• snap a two-game skid against the Big Green overall and a two-game losing streak in Hanover, N.H.
• be the second straight on the road in Ivy play for the Big Red for the first time since winning at Dartmouth and Penn in its final two road games of the 2005 campaign.
• give Cornell its first win streak since opening 2009 with wins over Bucknell and Yale.
• be the 622nd in program history (11th most in the Football Championship Subdivision).

THE CORNELL-DARTMOUTH SERIES: (Dartmouth leads 53-40-1) This will be the 95th meeting between Cornell and Dartmouth, with the Big Green holding a 53-40-1 lead in the series. The two teams first met in 1900, a 23-6 Cornell win. The two teams have been fairly evenly matched in recent years, with 11 of the last 18 meetings being decided by a touchdown or less (Cornell holds a 10-8 lead during that stretch). Included was a 28-7 Dartmouth win last season in Ithaca.

40th ANNIVERSARY OF THE SHARED TITLE: The 2011 season marks the 40th anniversary of the 1971 shared Ivy League title between Cornell and Dartmouth. The Big Red's lone defeat during a story book 8-1 season that saw Ed Marinaro '72 earn national acclaim was to a strong Big Green squad. Cornell honored the 1971 team earlier this year prior to its contest against Brown.

THE FIFTH-DOWN GAME: The 2011 meeting between the Big Red and Big Green is also the 61st anniversary of the famed Fifth-Down Game. Played on Nov. 16, 1940 in Hanover, N.H., top-ranked Cornell improved to 6-0 with a 7-3 victory over Dartmouth, scoring on the game's final play. After reviewing game film on Monday, Coach Carl Snavely and acting athletic director Robert J. Kane wired Dartmouth officials to tell them Cornell scored on an inadvertent fifth down. Though there were no rules compelling the outcome to be changed, in an unprecedented act of sportsmanship, the Big Red relinquished claims to the win. The Big Green accepted the forfeit, winning the contest 3-0. It remains the only time a collegiate sporting contest has been decided off the field after the completion of a game.

NOTING THE WIN AT PRINCETON
• Senior Ryan Houska ran for 108 yards on 26 carries for his first 100-yard game and the first by a Cornell player since Randy Barbour ran for 120 yards against Columbia in 2009.
• Senior Rashad Campbell became the first Cornell player to return two kickoffs for touchdowns in a season with his 78-yard TD return (85 yards at Colgate).
• Senior Zack Imhoff matched his career high with 13 tackles and added 3.0 tackles for loss and a sack.
• Senior Nick Booker-Tandy recorded his second interception of the year, while freshman Andrew Nelson had the first of his career.
• The Big Red held the ball for 19:58 of the 30 minutes in the second half, including for 11:00 minutes in the fourth quarter.
• Cornell's defense limited the Tigers to 1-of-5 on fourth-down conversions.

STORIED RIVALRIES: The Big Red is involved in three of the top 20 most-played rivalries in college football. Heading into the 2011 campaign, the Cornell-Penn series ranks fifth in most games played with 118. The 98 meetings between Cornell and Columbia ranks 12th, while the Cornell-Colgate rivalry stands 17th with 95 games played. The Cornell-Dartmouth and the Cornell-Penn series are the second-longest uninterrupted active series, as the teams have met every season since 1919, a span of 91 years. They trail only the Lafayette-Lehigh series, which has been played every year since 1897.

GREAT START FOR MATHEWS: Sophomore Jeff Mathews is off to a strong start in 2011, completing 63 percent of his passes (150-of-239) for 2,076 yards and 14 touchdowns. His 149.20 quarterback rating would be the highest single-season mark in school history. He is also on pace to toss for 2,966 yards, a mark that would be a Cornell school record.

WHERE MATHEWS RANKS: Sophomore Jeff Mathews has gotten noticed for his strong start in 2011. He ranks 11th nationally in total offense at 284.0 yards per game, while sitting 20th nationally in passing efficiency (149.20). He is first in the Ancient Eight in total offense and second in pass efficiency.

CLIMBING THE CAREER PASSING LIST: For most quarterbacks in the Ivy League, midway through their sophomore years might bring their first varsity appearance, or sometimes even their first start. Big Red sophomore Jeff Mathews, has already broken through top 10 lists all-time at Cornell. (SEE CHARTS IN PDF)

AND THE SEASON PASSING LIST TOO: Sophomore Jeff Mathews will continue to climb the season passing lists as well. (SEE CHARTS IN PDF)

RECEIVERS AT THE TOP: Cornell's three top receivers so far in 2011, senior Shane Savage and juniors Kurt Ondash and Luke Tasker, have combined to haul in 105 passes for 1,719 yards and 13 touchdowns through seven contests. They are averaging a lofty 16.4 yards per catch.

TRIPLE HUNDRED: Senior Shane Savage and juniors Kurt Ondash and Luke Tasker each have two 100-yard receiving games in 2011. They are the first trio of Big Red players to have multiple 100-yard receiving games in the same season. It is the fourth year Cornell has had at least three different receivers with 100-yard games in a year, joining 1987 (Chris Hahn, Shaun Hawkins and Mike Ready), 2000 (Keith Ferguson, Tim Hermann and Joe Splendorio) and 2008 (Jesse Baker, Zac Canty and Bryan Walters).

SAVAGE WARRIOR: Senior Shane Savage, who will be fifth-year eligible in 2012, became the 16th player in school history to reach 1,000 career receiving yards with his four-catch, 99-yard effort against Bucknell in the season opener. He later became the ninth Cornellian to haul in 100 passes with four catches for 32 yards and two scores vs. Wagner, and added to that total with a career-high 152-yard effort with two scores on eight catches against Harvard. His best game came with a 12-catch, 163-yard effort against Brown. Savage has upped his career numbers to 130 receptions for 1,586 yards and 10 touchdowns. Savage has a reception in all 27 career contests and could potentially catch a pass in 40 varsity appearances barring injury or being blanked in a contest. If he catches passes in 40 consecutive games, he would break the school record of 39 set by Keith Ferguson '03, Cornell's all-time leading receiver (202 receptions, 2,569 yards). (SEE CHARTS IN PDF) 

UP TO THE TASK: Junior Luke Tasker posted his first career 100-yard game in the season-opening win over Bucknell (102 yards) and registered his second four weeks later at Colgate with three catches for 109 yards and a touchdown. He ranks third on the team with 30 catches, 517 receiving yards and three touchdown. Tasker is averaging a team-leading 17.2 yards per catch so far in 2011. He surpassed the 50 catch mark for his career with four receptions for 88 yards and a score vs. Harvard.

DASHING THROUGH THE DEFENSE: Junior wide receiver Kurt Ondash entered the season with 11 catches for 62 yards and a touchdown. He's matched or surpassed those numbers already this season, sitting second on the team's charts with 33 catches for 537 yards and four touchdowns. His 16.3 yards per catch ranks second on the Big Red. Ondash hauled in an 87-yard touchdown to seal the win over Bucknell in the season opener, the fifth-longest touchdown pass in school history.

THAT TIGHT END CAN RUN: Senior tight end Ryan Houska has been moved to running back over the last three weeks and has responded with some of the top efforts for the Big Red in quite a while. The team's 2010 Pop Warner Award winner as most valuable player, Houska leads the team in rushing (327 yards, 4.6 yards per carry, two touchdowns) and is averaging 8.5 yards on his 13 catches. He had his first career 100-yard game with a 26-carry, 108-yard effort with a score against Princeton — Cornell's first 100-yard rushing game since Randy Barbour posted 120 yards against Columbia in 2009. Running out of both the “House-Cat” and a one-back set, Houska also posted a rushing TD against Harvard, had 81 yards on 12 carries at Colgate and notched 54 yards on 13 carries vs. Brown.

RUN, PASS, CATCH: Senior tight end Ryan Houska became the fourth Cornell player since 1980 to run, pass and catch a touchdown during their varsity careers - Houska did it all in one season (2010). Luke Siwula '08 (20 rush, 1 throw, 4 receptions), John Tagliaferri '86 (8 rush, 1 throw, 2 receptions) and Derrick Harmon '84 (26 rush, 1 throw, 2 receptions) also hit on that statistical oddity.

GREENWAY TOPS KICK SCORING LIST: Senior Brad Greenway already set the school's career kicking points record, surpassing the mark with a 10-point day against Brown. With 163 career kicking points and three games remaining, Greenway has a chance to get as high as third on the list. After surpassing John McCombs '00 (148 points) for the kicking record, he can still catch Jeff Fleischmann '51 for fourth (168 points) and Derrick Harmon '84 for third (174 points). His 163 points rank 16th in Ivy League history for place-kickers, while his 13 field goals sits 13th. (SEE CHARTS IN PDF)

GREENWAY PUTS OTHER RECORDS IN JEOPARDY: Senior Brad Greenway already owns the Cornell record for most career field goals (31, surpassing John McCombs '00 with 26) and could break the career record for extra-points before the season is over. With 70 successful PAT kicks, the fifth-year senior needs just one to tie and two to break John Rodin '97 and William Kirk's '52 shared record of 71.

SCORING ACE: Senior Brad Greenway paces Cornell in scoring with 49 points through seven games. If he maintains that lead, he will become the first Cornellian to pace the team in scoring for four straight years. He led in 2008 with 45 points, then topped the charts with 43 points in 2009 and 26 points in 2010. He 2011 point total is already a career high and is the most by a Cornell kicker since Pete Zell '08 scored 62 points in 2007. Since 1946, the only Cornell players to pace the team in scoring three times are Jeff Fleischmann (1948-49-50), Ed Marinaro (1969-70-71), Derrick Harmon (1981-82-83) and Chad Levitt (1994-95-96).

GREENWAY A NOMINEE FOR FRED MITCHELL AWARD: Senior place-kicker Brad Greenway has been named to the 2011 Fred Mitchell Award Watch List. He is among 50 kickers on the Watch List for excellence on the field and in the community. Greenway has led the team in scoring in each of his first three varsity seasons and will be attempting to become the first player in school history to lead the team in scoring all four years. Last season, Greenway led the team in scoring with 26 points on 4-of-5 field goals and 14-of-15 extra-point kicks. Off the field, Greenway has been very active serving not only the Ithaca community, but also communities throughout the world. He was part of a program that gathered school supplies, cleats and jerseys to bring to children in Ghana as part of community service initiative. He also visited an Agent Orange community in Vietnam that has disabled children whose parents were impacted during the Vietnam War. There, he visited several schools to play with children. He reads to elementary school students as a volunteer as part of the Big Red Readers program. He also served as a volunteer coach in the Challenger Soccer Camps for special needs children. Greenway has also volunteered at Ithaca's Salvation Army by helping organize clothes and goods throughout the store, as well as volunteering with the Boys and Girls Club of San Diego.

SACK IMHOFF: Senior defensive end Zack Imhoff has had a monster season in 2011, ranking ninth nationally in tackles for loss (1.9) and 18th in sacks (0.9) per game. The defensive captain leads Cornell's defensive line in tackles (46), tackles for loss (13.0) and sacks (6.5) after being converted from linebacker, where he was an honorable mention All-Ivy pick in 2010. He registered a monster game in the win over Wagner with 3.5 sacks, two forced fumbles and a blocked kick. The 3.5 sacks ranks as the third-most by a Cornell player in a single game, while the two forced fumbles tied the school record. He made 13 stops with 2.5 tackles for loss, a sack and a key forced fumble against Colgate and had 13 tackles, including 3.0 for a loss at Princeton.

IMHOFF THROWN FOR A LOSS: Senior defensive end Zack Imhoff's 13.0 tackles for loss ranks 12th in a single season at Cornell. He needs one to move all the way to seventh and three to climb to fifth. His 6.5 sacks this season put him 14th, in a tie with his former coach, Jim Knowles '87. He needs one sack to move to 12th and 1.5 sacks to jump into the top 10 at eighth.

BUEHLER? BUEHLER?: Sophomore Brett Buehler is one of the top young playmakers on a young Big Red defense. In his first year as a starter, Buehler ranks third on the team in tackles (54) and ranks second on the squad with 7.5 tackles for loss and two forced fumbles. He also has recorded a sack and a pass breakup. Buehler had 11 stops against Harvard and 10 apiece against Bucknell and Wagner. The sophomore had 4.0 tackles for loss, the fourth-most in a single game in Cornell history, against Bucknell in the 2011 opener and added 3.0 TFL with two forced fumbles vs. Wagner.

KICKOFF — TO THE HOUSE: Senior Rashad Campbell did something no other Big Red player in school history had accomplished — return two kickoffs for touchdowns in the same season. In fact, he became only the second Cornell player to return two kickoffs for a touchdown in a career. Campbell was named Ivy League Special Teams Player of the Week after an 85-yard touchdown return against Colgate, then turned the trick again with a 78-yarder at Princeton. In fact, he also had a 103-yard return for a score at Yale called back on a penalty away from the play. Only Cornell Hall of Famer Pete Larson '67 has scored twice in a career on kickoffs. Campbell ranks second in school history in kickoff return yardage (1,639) and is third in return average (24.8) on his 66 career attempts. His 1,639 career kickoff return yards also rank fourth all-time in Ivy history.

CAMPBELL IN CONTROL: Senior cornerback Rashad Campbell sits fourth on the team with 50 tackles and has also posted 4.5 tackles for loss, a sack, a fumble recovery and two interceptions. Campbell has now tallied at least one interception in all four of his varsity seasons and has nearly reached his career total of 5.0 tackles for loss entering the year.

LAINHART WITH THE STOP: Senior Brandon Lainhart has had a tremendous career playing linebacker for the Big Red and has had a strong senior campaign, pacing the team and the Ivy League with his 69 tackles (30th nationally). Lainhart has added 4.0 tackles for loss and a sack and has forced and recovered a fumble in 2011. The native of Cincinnati, Ohio, has recorded 231 career tackles, good for 13th-best all-time for the Big Red. Next up on the list is David Pitman '00 with 234 in 12th place and Brad Kitlowski '05 with 252 tackles in 11th.

YOUNG SAFETIES MAKING A NAME: Sophomore Josh Barut and freshman Andrew Nelson comprise the Big Red's defensive secondary of the future — and the present. Barut, a transfer from UCLA who will have three more years of eligibility after 2011, ranks second on the team in tackles with 57 and is tied for the team lead in pass breakups (three) and is second in forced fumbles (two). He has 47 of those tackles in the last four weeks, including 15 against Brown and 12 vs. both Harvard and Princeton. Nelson has 41 tackles and three pass breakups, as well as an interception. In Ivy games only, Barut leads the circuit in tackles (11 tackles per game), while Nelson is 10th (8.0).

PICKING UP A LOSS: Cornell's defense has been spending much more time in the offensive backfield in the 2011 season, already posting 43 tackles for loss in seven contests (6.1 per game). Senior Zack Imhoff ranks ninth nationally with 1.86 per game.

THE CORNELL CAPTAINS: The Cornell football team has elected six team captains to lead the Big Red into the 2011 season, including the first-ever sophomore captain in school history. Sophomore quarterback Jeff Mathews joins senior defensive end Zack Imhoff, corner back Rashad Campbell and place-kicker Brad Greenway, junior wide receiver and punt returner Luke Tasker and center Bob Bullington as team captains. The top two vote getters on offense, defense and special teams earned the honor.

BIG PASS PLAYS HIGHLIGHT WIN OVER BUCKNELL: Cornell used three plays of 64 yards or more in the passing game en route to its 24-13 victory over Bucknell on Sept. 17. Junior Luke Tasker hauled in a 65-yard pass from Mathews, while senior Shane Savage went 64 yards for a touchdown on a deep ball from the quarterback. Mathews then sealed the win with an 87-yard toss to junior Kurt Ondash, the fifth-longest pass play in school history.

NEW VIDEO BOARD: Cornell unveiled a brand new video board during its Homecoming contest against Bucknell on Sept. 17. The 18x31 video board produced by Daktronics is being run by Cornell athletics with assistance from Varsity Media out of Rochester, N.Y.  The board will have many exciting interactive features for fans and the multi-camera production will also allow for instant replays and multiple angles of the action.

STATING THE STATES: Cornell's 105-player roster includes student-athletes from 27 different states and the District of Columbia. Leading the way is the talent-rich state of California with 15 student-athletes, one of four states that have produced at least 10 current Big Red players (New York - 13; Ohio - 10; Pennsylvania- 10).

IVY PRESEASON POLL: The Cornell football team, under second-year head coach Kent Austin, was picked to finish tied for seventh in the Ivy League media preseason poll. Overall, there were 17 voters in the poll (two media representatives per school and one national media representative). PREDICTED ORDER OF FINISH: 1. Penn (12 first-place votes) 129 points; 2. Harvard (2 first-place votes) 118 points; 3. Yale (1 first-place vote) 95 points; 4. Brown (2 first-place votes) 90 points; 5. Dartmouth 73 points; 6. Columbia 45 points; 7. Cornell 31 points; 7. Princeton 31 points.

BOOKER-TANDY NAMED TO ESPN THE MAGAZINE ACADEMIC ALL-DISTRICT TEAM: Senior corner back Nick Booker-Tandy was named to the ESPN The Magazine Academic All-District I first-team in 2010. He was one of 12 Ivy League players named to the Academic All-District team. In the classroom, Booker-Tandy has posted a 4.0 grade point average in Applied Economics and Management and was an Academic All-Ivy nominee.

CORNELL ALL-TIME: The Big Red has an overall record of 621-476-34 (.564) in its 124 years of football. The program's 621 wins ranks 11th among all FCS schools. Over the years, Cornell has taken on 87 different opponents, with its most frequent opponent being Penn (118 meetings).

BOOTHE, WALTERS ON NFL ROSTERS: Former Cornellians Kevin Boothe '06 and Bryan Walters '10 are on opening day NFL rosters this season. Boothe, an All-American offensive lineman for the Big Red, is in his sixth season in the National Football League and fifth with the New York Giants. He joined former star tailback Derrick Harmon '84 as the second Cornell alumnus to earn a Super Bowl ring after playing on special teams during the New York Giants' run to Super Bowl XLII. Boothe and the Giants upset the previously unbeaten New England Patriots, 17-14, on Feb. 3, 2008 at the University of Phoenix Stadium in Glendale, Ariz. Walters is in his first season as a wide receiver with the San Diego Chargers after setting Ivy League and Cornell records for career kick return and punt return yardage. He ranks first at Cornell and second in Ivy League history in all-purpose yardage.

INSIDECORNELLFOOTBALL.COM: Cornell football launched a new web site, www.InsideCornellFootball.com, this spring to provide all the latest information on the Big Red program. Tune in for new, exclusive videos and other information.

WHAT'S THE FREQUENCY?: All of the Big Red's football games in 2011 are carried live on WHCU (870 AM) in the Ithaca area and on the internet at www.CornellBigRed.com. Barry Leonard returns for his 14th season in the booth and 12th season in the play-by-play chair, while Buck Briggs '76 is back to provide the color commentary for a 11th season. Special guests will also make appearances throughout the year.

WE ARE THE CHAMPIONS: Cornell has won five national titles in its storied football history. The Big Red claimed at least a share of the 1915 (Helms Athletic Foundation, Houlgate System, National Championship Foundation and Parke Davis), 1921 (Helms, Houlgate, National Championship Foundation and Parke Davis), 1922 (Helms, Parke Davis), 1923 (Sagarin) and 1939 (Litkenhous, Sagarin) titles. All five teams went undefeated and dominated their opponents. The 1915 team was 9-0 and outscored its opponents 287-50 with four shutouts. The 1921, 1922 and 1923 squads each went 8-0 and outscored their opponents 392-21, 339-27 and 320-33, respectively. The teams allowed more than one touchdown in a game just once during that 24-game span while scoring 40 or more points 14 times. The 1939 team was 8-0 and defeated Syracuse, Penn State and Ohio State.

AP NO. 1: Cornell is the only Ivy League school to be ranked No. 1 in the weekly Associated Press poll, holding the top ranking for three weeks (10/15-10/29) of the 1940 season. The No. 1 ranking ended with the historic “Fifth Down Game” against Dartmouth. The Big Red ended that campaign with a 6-2 record that included wins over Army, Syracuse and Ohio State.

50TH ANNIVERSARY OF GOGOLAK'S HISTORIC KICK: This season marks the 50th anniversary of Pete Gogolak becoming the first soccer-style kicker in football history. His 41-yard field goal at Princeton on Oct. 28, 1961 went into the record books.

LATE START: For the fourth time in the last eight years, Cornell was the last Division I football team to kick off its season. The 6:07 p.m. kick-off against Bucknell on Sept. 17 was the latest of the Ivy League schools to open its season. Penn (vs. Lafayette), Brown (at Stony Brook) and Princeton (vs. Lehigh) were scheduled for 6 p.m. kickoffs. The Big Red was also the final team to open in 2004, 2006 and 2007.

UP NEXT: The Big Red will celebrate senior day with its final home contest of 2011 when Cornell meets Columbia in the Empire State Bowl on Saturday, Nov. 11 at 12:30 p.m. at Schoellkopf Field. 

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