Game 5 • vs. Army

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230 Millett Hall • Oxford, OH 45056 • Phone: 513.529.4329 • Fax: 513.529.6729 Game 5 • vs. Army Saturday, Oct. 8 • 1 p.m. ET Yager Stadium (24,286 cap.) RedHawks On The Airwaves MIAMI IMG SPORTS NETWORK Entering its fifth year of its partnership with IMG College, the Miami Sports Network continues its coverage of Miami Football with a group of affili- ates blanketing most of Southwest Ohio and South- east Indiana. “The Voice of the RedHawks” Steve Baker will deliver the play-by-play coverage, while Terry Bridge will provide color commentary. Greg Waddell will be the network’s sideline reporter. Tune-in to one of Miami’s game-day affiliates: WMOH-AM 1450 (Hamilton, OH) WFMG-FM 101.3 (Richmond, IN) WDBZ-AM 1230 (Cincinnati, OH) WONE-AM 980 (Dayton, OH) WKVB-AM 1490 (Richmond, IN) The pregame show on Saturday, Oct. 8, begins at 12 p.m. ET. TELEVISION COVERAGE: The Miami-Army game will be telecast by ONN and web-streamed by Miami All-Access. Tim Bray will handle play-by-play duties while Gino DiGiando- menico will be the color analyst. Miami Athletic Communications Assistant AD/Communications Primary Football Contact........................ Mike Pearson Office Phone........................................... 513-529-4329 Cell Phone ............................................... 513-330-2068 E-mail .................................[email protected] Assistant Director/ Secondary FB Contact .................................... Jim Stephan Office Phone................................................. 513-529-4330 Cell Phone ............................................... 513-330-1939 E-mail ................................... [email protected] Associate Director .............................. Angie Renninger Office Phone........................................... 513-529-6239 Assistant Director ..............................Michael Weisman Office Phone........................................... 513-529-1601 Assistant Director ............................................. Mike Roth Office Phone........................................... 513-529-7092 Date Day Opponent Time/Result TV 9/3 Sat. at Missouri L, 6-17 Fox Sports Net Miami’s defense holds Tigers to their fewest points in a season opener since 1978 9/17 Sat. at Minnesota L, 23-29 Big Ten Network Redhawks take game down to last play, but lose to the Gophers 9/24 Sat. Bowling Green L, 23-37 ESPN3 Crowd of 20,828 sees RedHawks lose their home season opener at Yager Stadium 10/1 Sat. Cincinnati L, 0-27 ESPN3 Miami loses its sixth straight game in the Victory Bell series 10/8 Sat. Army 1 p.m. ET ONN/Miami All-Access Pregame ceremonies (10:30 a.m.) include the unveiling of four Cradle of Coaches statues 10/15 Sat. at Kent State 3:30 p.m. ET TBA MAC foes battled down to wire in 2010, before Miami won a nail-biter 10/22 Sat. at Toledo 7 p.m. ET TBA A key battle between the preseason favorites to win the MAC East and West Divisions 10/29 Sat. Buffalo 3:30 p.m. ET SportsTime Ohio Homecoming Game; Miami leads series by 11-2 margin 11/3 Thu. Akron 7:30 p.m. ET ESPNU Miami escaped from Akron a year ago, building a 14-5-1 series edge 11/9 Wed. at Temple 8 p.m. ET ESPN2 RedHawks pitted against Temple before national TV audience 11/16 Wed. Western Michigan 8 p.m. ET ESPN2 or ESPNU Miami hosts WMU at Yager Stadium for first time in 10 years 11/22 Tue. at Ohio 7 p.m. ET ESPN2 Regular-season finale under the lights against school’s bitter rival Miami RedHawks (0-4 overall, 0-1 MAC) vs. Army Black Knights (2-3 overall) THE COACHES MIAMI HEAD COACH DON TREADWELL (Miami, ‘82) is in his first season at the helm of the Miami program ... 0-4 overall record, 0-1 MAC record ... served as Michigan State’s offensive co- ordinator the previous four seasons; Treadwell managed the Spartans for two games a year ago in Mark Dantonio’s absence due to illness, directing MSU to wins over Northern Colorado and No. 11 Wisconsin ... Treadwell joins Ara Parseghian, John Pont, Bo Schembechler, Bill Mallory, Tom Reed and Randy Walker as Miami grads who have been head coaches at MU ... Treadwell was a four-year starter for Miami (1978-81) as a receiver. ARMY HEAD COACH RICH ELLERSON (Hawai’i, ‘77) is in his third season guiding the Black Knights and owns a 14-16 record as coach of Army ... he’s 74-57 through eight collegiate sea- sons as a head coach, including a record of 56-34 at Cal Poly from 2005-08. THREE QUICK HITS 1. Miami’s football team seeks to give Head Coach Don Treadwell his first collegiate victory. 2. On Military Appreciation Day, Miami hosts Army, marking only the second time that the school has played one of the military academies in Oxford. In 1996, Miami lost a 27-7 decision to Army. 3. Miami’s Nick Harwell attempts to record his fourth-consecutive game with receiving performanc- es of 100 yards or more. A fourth-straight 100-yard receiving effort this week against Army would tie Harwell with Martin Nance’s all-time record in that category. 4. Miami unveils the statues of Ara Parseghian, Earl Blaik, John Pont and Bo Schembechler. 2011 REDHAWK SCHEDULE Home of The Cradle of Coaches Miami Football on the Web

Transcript of Game 5 • vs. Army

Page 1: Game 5 • vs. Army

230 Millett Hall • Oxford, OH 45056 • Phone: 513.529.4329 • Fax: 513.529.6729

Game 5 • vs. Army

Saturday, Oct. 8 • 1 p.m. ET

Yager Stadium (24,286 cap.)

RedHawks

On The Airwaves

MIAMI IMG SPORTS NETWORKEntering its fi fth year of its partnership with IMG College, the Miami Sports Network continues its coverage of Miami Football with a group of affi li-ates blanketing most of Southwest Ohio and South-east Indiana. “The Voice of the RedHawks” Steve

Baker will deliver the play-by-play coverage, while Terry Bridge will provide color commentary. Greg

Waddell will be the network’s sideline reporter. Tune-in to one of Miami’s game-day affi liates:

WMOH-AM 1450 (Hamilton, OH)

WFMG-FM 101.3 (Richmond, IN)

WDBZ-AM 1230 (Cincinnati, OH)

WONE-AM 980 (Dayton, OH)

WKVB-AM 1490 (Richmond, IN)

The pregame show on Saturday, Oct. 8, begins at 12 p.m. ET.

TELEVISION COVERAGE: The Miami-Army game will be telecast by ONN and web-streamed by Miami All-Access. Tim Bray will handle play-by-play duties while Gino DiGiando-menico will be the color analyst.

Miami Athletic

Communications

Assistant AD/CommunicationsPrimary Football Contact ........................Mike Pearson

Offi ce Phone ........................................... 513-529-4329 Cell Phone ............................................... 513-330-2068 E-mail [email protected]

Assistant Director/Secondary FB Contact ....................................Jim Stephan

Offi ce Phone ................................................. 513-529-4330 Cell Phone ............................................... 513-330-1939 E-mail ................................... [email protected]

Associate Director ..............................Angie Renninger

Offi ce Phone ........................................... 513-529-6239Assistant Director ..............................Michael Weisman

Offi ce Phone ........................................... 513-529-1601Assistant Director .............................................Mike Roth

Offi ce Phone ........................................... 513-529-7092

Date Day Opponent Time/Result TV

9/3 Sat. at Missouri L, 6-17 Fox Sports Net Miami’s defense holds Tigers to their fewest points in a season opener since 19789/17 Sat. at Minnesota L, 23-29 Big Ten Network Redhawks take game down to last play, but lose to the Gophers 9/24 Sat. Bowling Green L, 23-37 ESPN3

Crowd of 20,828 sees RedHawks lose their home season opener at Yager Stadium10/1 Sat. Cincinnati L, 0-27 ESPN3 Miami loses its sixth straight game in the Victory Bell series10/8 Sat. Army 1 p.m. ET ONN/Miami All-Access

Pregame ceremonies (10:30 a.m.) include the unveiling of four Cradle of Coaches statues10/15 Sat. at Kent State 3:30 p.m. ET TBA MAC foes battled down to wire in 2010, before Miami won a nail-biter10/22 Sat. at Toledo 7 p.m. ET TBA A key battle between the preseason favorites to win the MAC East and West Divisions10/29 Sat. Buff alo 3:30 p.m. ET SportsTime Ohio

Homecoming Game; Miami leads series by 11-2 margin11/3 Thu. Akron 7:30 p.m. ET ESPNU

Miami escaped from Akron a year ago, building a 14-5-1 series edge11/9 Wed. at Temple 8 p.m. ET ESPN2 RedHawks pitted against Temple before national TV audience 11/16 Wed. Western Michigan 8 p.m. ET ESPN2 or ESPNU

Miami hosts WMU at Yager Stadium for fi rst time in 10 years11/22 Tue. at Ohio 7 p.m. ET ESPN2 Regular-season fi nale under the lights against school’s bitter rival

Miami RedHawks (0-4 overall, 0-1 MAC)

vs. Army Black Knights (2-3 overall)

THE COACHESMIAMI HEAD COACH DON TREADWELL (Miami, ‘82) is in his fi rst season at the helm of the Miami program ... 0-4 overall record, 0-1 MAC record ... served as Michigan State’s off ensive co-ordinator the previous four seasons; Treadwell managed the Spartans for two games a year ago in Mark Dantonio’s absence due to illness, directing MSU to wins over Northern Colorado and No. 11 Wisconsin ... Treadwell joins Ara Parseghian, John Pont, Bo Schembechler, Bill Mallory, Tom Reed and Randy Walker as Miami grads who have been head coaches at MU ... Treadwell was a four-year starter for Miami (1978-81) as a receiver.

ARMY HEAD COACH RICH ELLERSON (Hawai’i, ‘77) is in his third season guiding the Black Knights and owns a 14-16 record as coach of Army ... he’s 74-57 through eight collegiate sea-sons as a head coach, including a record of 56-34 at Cal Poly from 2005-08.

THREE QUICK HITS1. Miami’s football team seeks to give Head Coach Don Treadwell his fi rst collegiate victory.

2. On Military Appreciation Day, Miami hosts Army, marking only the second time that the school has played one of the military academies in Oxford. In 1996, Miami lost a 27-7 decision to Army.

3. Miami’s Nick Harwell attempts to record his fourth-consecutive game with receiving performanc-es of 100 yards or more. A fourth-straight 100-yard receiving eff ort this week against Army would tie Harwell with Martin Nance’s all-time record in that category.

4. Miami unveils the statues of Ara Parseghian, Earl Blaik, John Pont and Bo Schembechler.

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Home of The Cradle of Coaches

Miami Football

on the Web

Page 2: Game 5 • vs. Army

2011 Football2

FOR STARTERS:

PLEASE NOTE: When referring to Miami, please use either Miami, Miami University or

Miami (Ohio). Please do not use Miami of Ohio or University of Miami, etc. The latter are

not the proper names for our institution. Thank you.

IF MIAMI WINS ...: It would be Miami’s fi rst victory of the season and boost its overall record to 1-4 ... it would mark Coach Don Treadwell’s fi rst collegiate victory ... it would give Miami’s a 3-2 winning margin in its series against Army.

124th SEASON OVERALL, 64th SEASON IN MAC: The 2011 season marks the Miami football team’s 124th season of football, dating back to 1888. The RedHawks have 660 all-time victories (No. 24 on college football’s all-time list) and a winning percentage of .619 (18th-best all-time among schools that have played a minimum of 30 seasons). This is Miami’s 64th season as a member of the Mid-American Conference. The school has won more MAC games than any other league program (263), and its all-time MAC winning percentage is far and away the best (.652) among long-time members. Including its championship in 2010, Miami has won or shared 15 MAC titles, fi ve more than any other school. The RedHawks have either won outright or tied for the MAC East Division title fi ve of the last eight seasons.

PREVIEWING ARMY: Coach Rich Ellerson’s Black Knights (2-3 overall), winners last Saturday over Tulane (45-6), are college football’s second-best rushing team (368.4 ypg). That statistic ac-counts for their nation’s leading time of possession of nearly 36 minutes per game. Quarterback Trent Steelman is the team’s leading rusher, accounting for 437 net yards, a per gain average of 5.1 yards, and nine rushing TDs. Running back Raymond Maples is right behind Steelman with 423 net yards (6.7 ypa). Steelman has only thrown 28 passes through fi ve games. His leading receiver is Jared McFarlin (6 catches for 60 yards). Senior linebacker Steve Erzinger has a team-leading 56 tackles and 5.5 tackles for loss.

NCAA TEAM STATISTICS Miami Army

Rushing off ense ................................ 120th (49.0 YPG) 2nd (368.4 YPG)Passing off ense ................................. 38th (262.8 YPG) 120th (45.0 YPG)Total off ense ....................................... 106th (311.8 YPG) 54th (413.4 YPG)Scoring off ense ................................. 118th (13.0 PPG) 78th (26.6 PPG)Rushing defense ............................... 80th (168.0YPG) 78th (167.4 YPG)Passing defense ................................ 19th (181.5 YPG) 40th (203.4 YPG)Total defense ..................................... 44th (349.5 YPG) 60th (370.8 YPG)Scoring defense ................................ T-76th (27.5 PPG) T-79th (28.0 PPG)Turnover Margin ............................... T-77th (-0.25) T-103rd (-0.8)Time of Possession .......................... T-72nd (29:12) 1st (35:57)

Notes From the Cradle2011 MAC Standings

EAST DIVISION

Ohio ......................... 1-0 MAC ........ 4-1 overallBowling Green ........ 1-0 MAC ........ 3-2 overallTemple ...................... 1-1 MAC ........ 3-2 overallBuff alo ........................ 0-1 MAC ........ 1-4 overallAkron ......................... 0-2 MAC ........ 1-4 overallKent State ................. 0-1 MAC ........ 1-4 overallMIAMI ...................0-1 MAC ....0-4 overall

WEST DIVISION

Western Michigan ... 1-0 MAC ........ 3-2 overallBall State ................... 1-0 MAC ........ 3-2 overall Eastern Michigan ......1-0 MAC ....... 3-2 overallToledo. ....................... 1-0 MAC ........ 2-3 overallCentral Michigan. ....1-1 MAC ........ 2-3 overallNorthern Illinois .... 0-1 MAC ........ 2-3 overall

Last Week’s MAC Scores:Cincinnati 27, at Miami 0at Oklahoma 62, Ball State 6at Tennessee 41, Buff alo 10*Toledo 36, at Temple 13*at E. Michigan 31, Akron 23*at Ohio 17, Kent State 10* at C. Michigan 48, N. Illinois 41W. Michigan 38, at Connecticut 31at West Virginia 55, Bowling Green10

This Week’s MAC Games:Oct. 8 - SaturdayArmy at Miami, 1 p.m., ONN/All-AccessC. Michigan at N.C. State, 3:30 p.m. (ESPN3)

Florida International at Akron, 2 p.m.*Temple at Ball State, 2 p.m.*Bowling Green at W. Michigan, 2 p.m. (STO/ESPN3)

*E. Michigan at Toledo, 3 p.m. (BCSN/ESPN3)

*Ohio at Buff alo, 3:30 p.m. (TWC Sportsnet)

*Kent State at N. Michigan, 3:30 p.m.

Next Week’s MAC Games:*Miami at Kent State, 3:30 p.m.*Toledo at Bowling Green, 12 p.m. (ESPN+)

*Buff alo at Temple, 1 p.m.*E. Michigan at C. Michigan, 3 p.m.*Ball State at Ohio, 3:30 p.m. (ESPN+)

*W. Michigan at N. Illinois, 3:30 p.m. (Comcast

Sportsnet Chicago)

*MAC game All starting times ET

For the latest in news, scores, statistics, live game broadcasts and more, log onto the

offi cial home of Miami University Athletics.

2011 Miami Football Coaching Staff —(Front, L to R) Matt Edwards (defensive line), Mike Bath (receivers/tight ends), John Klacik (off ensive coordinator/off ensive line), Don Treadwell (head coach), Pete Rekstis (defensive coordinator/defensive backs), Jay Peterson (linebackers) Mark Spencer (running backs). (Back, L to R) Paul Harker, strength & conditioning), Eli Wicklund (defensive GA), John Pont (defensive intern), Herb Haygood (off ensive intern), Zak Willis (special teams coordinator), Charlie Fisher (passing game coordinator/quarterbacks), Nick Siatras (defensive line), Jared Elliott (off ensive GA), Jake Richardson (special teams intern), Reed Schuitema (football operations).

Page 3: Game 5 • vs. Army

2011 Football 3

Miami vs. Army—

Miami Army13.0 ....................................................Points .................................................. 26.6311.8 ..........................................Total Off ense .........................................413.449.0 ............................................ Rushing Yards ........................................368.431.5 ..............................Rushing Attempts Per Game ............................ 67.21.6 ............................................. Yards Per Carry ............................................5.5262.8 ....................................... Passing Yardage ........................................ 45.040.5 ...............................Passing Attempts Per Game ..............................7.210.6 ................................Yards Per Pass Completion .............................. 17.327.5 ........................................... Points Allowed ......................................... 28.0349.5 ..........................................Total Defense ........................................370.8168.0 ................................ Rushing Yards Allowed ...............................167.44.1 .................................... Yards Per Carry Allowed ...................................5.0181.5 ................................. Passing Yards Allowed ................................203.411.5 ............................Yards Per Completion Allowed .......................... 13.4

Series Record: Series tied 2-2At Oxford: Army leads 1-0At West Point: Miami leads 2-1At Neutral Sites: never metMost Miami points: 38 (38-14) in 1997Most Army points: 30 (30-7) in 1960Combined points: 52 (38-14) in 1997Biggest Miami win: 24 (38-14) in 1997Biggest Army win: 23 (30-7) in 1960

The Last Meeting

AT A GLANCE...Stadium .................................................................................................................Yager StadiumCapacity ................................................................................................................................24,286Surface .............................................................................................................................Field TurfKickoff ...............................................................................................................................1 p.m. ET

Miami vs. ArmyOxford, Ohio ..........................................................Location ................................................West Point, N.Y.16,300 ....................................................................Enrollment .................................................................4,400Mid-American (East Division) ....................... Conference ................................................. IndependentYager Stadium (24,286) ..................................... Stadium .............................. Michie Stadium (38,000)Don Treadwell (Miami ‘82) .............................Head Coach ..........................Rich Ellerson (Hawai’i ‘77First Season ......................................................Years at School ..............................................Third Season0-4 .....................................................................Record at School ........................................................... 14-160-4 (one year) ..................................................Overall Record ......................................... 74-57 (12 years)10-4 ....................................................................... 2010 Record ..................................................................... 7-67-1 ............................................................. 2010 Conference Record .........................................................NAat Kent State (Oct. 15) .................................Next Opponent .............................at Vanderbilt (Oct. 22)660-398-44 ......................................................All-Time Record .................................................650-464-51

Gameday Central

Series History

1960 ...........A .........L, 30-71996 ...........H .........L, 27-71997 ...........A .....W, 38-141998 ...........A .....W, 14-13

MIAMI 14

ARMY 13

September 12, 1998 Michie Stadium • West Point, N.Y. Attendance: 31,590

For the second straight week, Miami overcame a 10-point halftime defi cit to notch a non-conference road victory, 14-13. The RedHawks tallied all of their points on a pair of third-quarter touchdowns. Off ensively, Miami was ignited by tailback Travis Prentice, who 139 of his 164 yards in the fi nal 30 minutes. Prentice’s career-long 45 -yard scamper with 3:11 to play in the third gave the RedHawks their fi rst lead of the game, 14-10. Prentice, who gained 100 yards rushing for the fi fth straight game dating back to the previous season, climbed three rungs on the Miami career rushing chart to No. 7. After being held to 44 yards of total off ense in the fi rst half, Miami took the second half kickoff and marched 68 yards on 12 plays, cluminating with a 15-yard pass from Mike Bath to Trevor Gaylor. With Miami clinging to a one-point lead and Army driving for a potential game-winning score, senior safety Jay Baker forced and recovered a fumble at the Army 42-yard line.

Miami 0 0 14 0 — 14Army 7 3 3 0 — 13

SCORING SUMMARY

First Quarter7:49 ARMY—Amey 2-yd run (Olsen kick)

Second Quarter3:32 ARMY—Olsen 24-yd fi eld goal

Third Quarter8:50 MIA—Gaylor 15-yd pass from Bath (Scott kick)3:11 MIA—Prentice 45-yd run (Scott kick)0:04 ARMY—Olsen 32-yd fi eld goal

Fourth Quarternone

TEAM STATISTICS ............................... MIA ............................ ARMYFirst Downs .......................................................... 15 .............................................. 8Rushes-Yards .............................................. 53-186 ...................................42-148Passes (C-A-I) ............................................... 8-20-0 ...................................... 4-7-1Passing Yards ....................................................... 62 ............................................66Plays-Total Yards ........................................ 72-248 ...................................49-214Punts-Average .............................................8-42.0 .................................... 7-45.0Fumbles-Lost ......................................................2-0 .......................................... 1-1Penalties-Yards ............................................... 7-63 ........................................2-22Third Down Conv .......................................7 of 19 ................................... 2 of 13Possession Time ........................................... 32:58 ......................................27:02

INDIVIDUAL LEADERSRushing — MIA: Prentice 37-164-1; Bath 13-17; Monk 3-5. ARMY: Goff 20-83; Amey 11-35-1; Williams 8-18.Passing — MIA: Bath 8-20-0-62-1. ARMY: 4-7-0-66-0.Receiving — MIA: Gaylor 4-48-1. CIN: Richardson 1-29; Jett 1-22..

Tale of the Tape

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DEFENSE (4-3)

Buck 10 C.J. Marck ............................ 6-1, 250, Sr., Newtown, PA

9 Wes Williams ...................................... 6-3, 244, Jr., Houston, TX

Nose 94 Mike Johns ..........................6-4, 270, Jr., Oak Forest, IL

79 Jordain Brown ..................................... 6-0, 303, Sr., Chicago, IL

T 90 Austin Brown .................. 6-2, 270, Jr., Woodbridge, VA

50 Anthony Shoemaker ................. 6-4, 268, So., Cincinnati, OH

End 93 Jason Semmes .................... 6-3, 247, Jr., Clarkston, MI

69 Will Diaz .......................................... 6-3, 260, Sr., Columbus, OH

SLB 38 Tyler Tucker ................. 6-2, 214, T-Fr., East Lansing, MI

48 Chris Wade ..............................................6-1, 218, So., Slidell, LA

MLB 5 Ryan Kennedy .................. 6-1, 230, Sr., Libertyville, IL

30 Evan Harris ......................................... 6-0, 221, Jr., Waldorf, MD

WLB 43 Jerrell Wedge ....... 5-11, 220, Sr., Upper Marlboro, MD

or 32 Jaytee Swanson ...................... 6-2, 221, Jr., Buford, GA

CB 14 Demetrius Quarles ....... 5-8, 147, So., Woodbridge, VA

6 D.J. Brown ................. 6-1, 179, Jr., West Chester, OH (Nickle)

SS 37 Pat Hinkel .............................6-1, 205, Jr., Westlake, OH

29 Justin Bowers.........................5-10, 203, Jr., Murfreesboro, TN

FS 18 Anthony Kokal ....................... 6-0, 208, Sr., Warren, OH

35 Brison Burris ................... 5-10, 178, T-Fr., Humble, TX (Dime)

HB 3 Dayonne Nunley ............5-8, 183, So., Monroeville, PA

2 Allen Veazie .................................... 5-11, 164, So., Houston, TX

PRONUNCIATION GUIDE

John Anevski ..................................................................ah-NESS-keeOrne Bey ........................................................................ OR-nee BAYAustin & Collin Boucher ...................................................boo-SHAYSean Breard .........................................................................BREE-yardWill Diaz ...................................................................................DEE-azChrishawn Dupuy .............................................................doo-PWEEZac Dysert ...............................................................................DYE-sertErik Finklea ............................................................................. FINK-leeAndrew Gudeman ......................................................GOO-da-munAnthony Kokal ........................................................................ KOKE-alMason Krysinski ........................................................ krah-SIN-skeeDrew Kummer .................................................................... KOO-murrDayonne Nunley ...................................................................DAY-yonNa’eem Outler ...................................................................... NYE-eemDawon Scott .....................................................................DAY-wonnJustin & Jason Semmes ......................................................... SEMMSAllen Veazie ............................................................................ VEE-zayMwanza Wamulumba ................................ wahmoo-LUMM-ba

Jerrell Wedge ........................................................................... ja-RELLJake Wurzelbacher .............................................WURR-zul-bockerDavid Zulandt ......................................................................ZOO-lant

SPECIALISTS

P 45 Zac Murphy ...................... 6-0, 188, So., Cincinnati, OH

or 18 Anthony Kokal ....................... 6-0, 208, Sr., Warren, OH

PK 91 Mason Krysinski .......... 6-3, 196, So., Shelby Twp., MI

45 Zac Murphy .............................. 6-0, 188, So., Cincinnati, OH

LS 58 Aaron Griff o...........................5-10, 203, Sr., Lima, OH

60 Dave Zulandt ............................... 6-1, 174, Jr., Chardon, OH

Hold 4 Zac Dysert ................................. 6-4, 212, Jr., Ada, OH

KR 3 Dayonne Nunley .........5-8, 183, So., Monroeville, PA

and 25 Dawon Scott .................. 6-0, 170, T-Fr., Columbia, SC

PR 8 Nick Harwell ............. 6-1, 187, So., Missouri City, TX

17 Chris Givens ..............................6-2, 203, Sr., Chillicothe, OH

KO 91 Mason Krysinski .......... 6-3, 196, So., Shelby Twp., MI

OFFENSE (MULTIPLE)

X 12 Willie Culpepper ...... 5-9, 161, R-Fr., San Antonio, TX

17 Chris Givens ..............................6-2, 203, Sr., Chillicothe, OH

LT 53 Cory Brown .................6-5, 275, Sr., Grand Prairie, TX

66 Matt Kennedy ...........................6-5, 266, Jr., Mt. Prospect, IL

LG 67 John Anevski ................ 6-3, 277, So., Cincinnati, OH

53 Cory Brown ............................ 6-5, 275, Sr., Grand Prairie, TX

C 72 Brad Bednar .........................6-4, 282, Jr., Mentor, OH

52 JoJo Williams ..................................6-2, 278, Jr., Houston, TX

RG 56 Brandon Brooks ..............6-5, 343, Sr.,Milwaukee, WI

74 John Tanner ............................6-3, 280, R-Fr., Cincinnati, OH

RT 71 Zach Lewis ................. 6-6, 264, T-Fr., Mt. Prospect, IL

68 Andy Muller.................................6-4, 289, So., Charlotte, NC

Y 82 Kendrick Bruton ..........6-4, 251, Sr., Miamisburg, OH

83 Brian Slack ................................ 6-5, 255, So., Tallmadge, OH

QB 4 Zac Dysert ................................. 6-4, 214, Jr., Ada, OH

16 Austin Boucher ......................... 6-1, 210, So., Kettering, OH

TB 49 Erik Finklea ..........................6-1, 202, So., Cincinnati, OH

31 Chrishawn Dupuy ....................5-9, 180, T-Fr., New Orleans, LA

Z 8 Nick Harwell .............. 6-1, 187, So., Missouri City, TX

25 Dawon Scott .............................6-0, 170, T-Fr., Columbia, SC

J 15 Andy Cruse ......................6-4, 210, Jr., Cincinnati, OH

80 David Frazier ............................ 6-0, 164, T-Fr., Columbia, SC

MIAMI UNIVERSITY Two-Deep Lineup (as of 10/1/11)

Projected starters denoted in BOLD

Page 5: Game 5 • vs. Army

2011 Football 5

OFFENSEWR #17 - Chris Givens—missed UC game with a concus-sion ... with 16 catches for 185 yds in 2011, he now has 113 career recs for 1,601 yds (11th on career list) ... needs only 4 catches to reach Miami’s top 10 in that category ... has 3 punt returns for 7 yds ... has 11 career TDs.

LT #53 - Cory Brown—The senior got a starting assign-ment vs. UC, his 1st of the season and 4th of his career ... Cory and his wife have a one-year-old son ... a health studies major.

LG #67 - John Anevski—Starter at left guard vs. UC, his 4th start of 2011 and 5th overall ... Miami off ense is averaging nearly 263 yards per game ... majors in sport studies at Miami.

C #72 - Brad Bednar—A starter at center last week after 3 starts at left tackle ... he was team’s starting center in 2009 and ‘10 ... he’s played virtually every snap of collegiate career ... a start vs. Army would be the 31st of his career ... he has a 3.4 GPA, majoring in engineering.

RG #56 - Brandon Brooks—At 343 pounds, he’s Miami’s heaviest starter ... an NFL prospect, he been a second-team All-MAC selection in each of last two seasons ... a psychology major.

RT #71 - Zach Lewis—True freshman made his 3rd career start vs. UC ... Matt Kennedy, the player Zach replaced, also is from Mt. Prospect, IL and Prospect H.S. ... a business major.

TE #82 - Kendrick Bruton—Fifth-year senior ... shutout vs. UC ... 1 catch for 3 yds. vs. BG, 3 catches vs. Mizzou, 1 vs. Minne-sota ... has earned three varsity letters ... brother (David) plays for NFL’s Denver Broncos ... creative writing major.

QB #4 - Zac Dysert—Co-captain for the 2nd consecutive season ... 19-for-33 (1 INT) for 252 yds vs. UC, boosting his MU career yardage to 6,053 (4th all-time at MU) ... threw for season-best 325 yds and 2 TDs at Minnesota ... ranks 29th among collegiate QBs with 259 ypg ... of school’s top 8 all-time passing eff orts, he has 2 of them (career best 426 yds vs. Temple in 2009) ... has career completion pct of .627 plus 27 career TD passes.

TB #49 - Erik Finklea—Had 12 carries for 18 net yds vs. UC ... has scored a rushing TD in 3 of his fi rst 4 games ...168 rushing yds on 55 rushing attempts ... two receptions for 15 yds ... has 86% of Miami’s net rushing yardage.

WR #8 - Nick Harwell—6 receptions for 149 yds vs. UC marked his 3rd consecutive game over 100 yds in 2011 ... has had 66-yd catches vs. UC & Minnesota ... ranks 2nd in NCAA stats with 150 ypg, 8th in catches per game (8.7) and 9th in yards per catch (17.3) ... on Biletnikoff Watch List ... career totals are 90 recs for 1,321 yds and 6 TDs ... over span of his last 12 games, he’s averaging 109 receiving yds per game ... 4 punt rets for 16 yds.

WR #15 - Andy Cruse—Four catches for 32 yds vs. UC, giving him 15 season grabs for 127 yds ... longest catch in 2011 is 15 yds ... 58 career catches for 717 yds (12.4 ypr) ... career’s best game was vs. CMU in 2010 (8 for 179), including 71-yd GW TD.

PK #39 - Mason Krysinski—Missed a 34-yd FG last week ... hit a career-long 45-yd FG as time expired at halftime vs. BG ... 2-for-4 FGs (45 & 22), 4-for-6 PATs ... also handles kickoff duties ... has compiled a perfect 4.0 GPA thus far at Miami as a chemistry major.

DEFENSEBuck #10 - C.J. Marck—Got his fi rst start of 2011, replacing injured Wes Williams ... had 4 solo stops, including a QB sack ... among his 10 season tackles are 3 TFLs ... has 11 career TFLs at Miami ... older brother of injured tight end Steve Marck.

Nose #94 - Mike Johns—Started his 2nd straight game, recording 2 tackles & 1 TFL ... he’s had 13 career starts ... a 3.0 cumulative GPA in integrated English language arts education.

T #90 - Austin Brown—had 4 tackles & 1.5 TFLs vs. UC, boosting his season totals to 18 stops & 3.5 TFLs ... has 18.5 career TFLs ... second-team All-MAC performer in 2010, he co-captained the team ... one of his biggest plays came in the MAC title contest vs. NIU when he had the game-ending tackle.

End #93 - Jason Semmes—got his 2nd start of 2011 last week, totaling 5 tackles, a QB sack, a fumble recovery and a pass break-up ... among his 12 season tackles are 2 QB sacks ... the Iowa transfer is the older brother of running back Justin Semmes ... has a 3.0+ GPA in his major of public administration.

SLB #38 - Tyler Tucker—True freshman made his 3rd straight start last week, recording 4 tackles and 0.5 TFL ... in 4 games, he has 14 stops and 1.5 TFLs ... was a high school teammate of Don Treadwell’s son, Spencer, at East Lansing High.

MLB #5 - Ryan Kennedy—Made his 3rd straight start last week, recording 6 tackles, his career’s fi rst interception, a QB sacks and another 0.5 TFL ... in 2011, he has 18 stops and 3 TFLs ... career-wise, he has 90 tackles and 13 TFLs ... a fi nance major at Miami (3.0+ GPA).

WLB #30 - Jerrell Wedge—Played vs. UC (2 tackles), his 1st appearance since game 2 at Minnesota ... a hamstring injury 2 weeks ago sidelined him for 1st time in 26 games ... had 12 tack-les and 1 TFL at Minnesota ... he’s led Miami the last 2 seasons in tackles (101 in 2010, 114 in 2009) ... has 239 career tackles and 35 career TFLs ... needs only 3 more TFLs to reach MU’s all-time top 10 in that career category ... family studies major.

CB #14 - Demetrius Quarles— At 5-8, 147, he’s the smallest player on the fi eld ... has 10 tackles in 2011 ... has played in all 18 games during his MU career ... prep teammate of Austin Brown.

SS #37 - Pat Hinkel—With 4 tackles last week vs. UC, he ranks 2nd on team with 24 tackles thru 4 games ... expected to make his 19th straight start vs. Army ... he has 112 career tackles ... a 3.0+ GPA in sport studies.

FS #18 - Anthony Kokal—Team’s defensive co-captain had 4 stops vs. UC and a game-high 13 tackles 2 weeks ago vs. Min-nesota ... punted 7 times vs. UC (32.3 ypp, 61 ydr) ... 172 career tackles and 18 career starts ... 2010 interception vs. Kent State secured Miami’s victory ... a graduate student in accountancy.

HB #3 - Dayonne Nunley—Had 3 solo tackles, an intercep-tion & 2 PBUs vs. UC ... his INT was the 8th of his career ... had a 72-yard kickoff return vs. BG, the longest play so far in 2011 ... ranks 3rd among MAC players with a KOR average of 26.4 yds.

P #45 - Zac Murphy—Punted 4 times vs. UC (34.5) ... has had 2 punts blocked for TD in last 3 games ... season-best punt is 51 ydr ... averaging 36.8 yards in 2011 ... 3rd-team 2010 All-MAC honoree ... originally a walk-on, he’s now on scholarship.

This Week’s Probable RedHawk Starters

Page 6: Game 5 • vs. Army

2011 Football6

Notes From the CradleDon TreadwellHead CoachMiami ‘82

Don Treadwell (Miami `82) has returned home to Miami University. The former Mi-ami football captain and veteran off ensive coordinator was named Head Football Coach of the RedHawks on Dec. 31, 2010, by Director of Athletics Brad Bates. Bates says that, with Treadwell at the

helm, Miami’s defending Mid-American Conference Champions will be in excellent hands heading into the future. “Don Treadwell is a man of integrity, enthusiasm, passion, intellect, competitiveness, loyalty, love and honor - all the characteristics you expect from a Miami Man,” said Bates. “His pedigree, mentors, extensive responsibilities, cumulative expe-riences in fi ve major conferences and values distinguish him as a great teacher. Don designs football curricula within athletic classrooms to develop future leaders who make a diff erence in the world.” Treadwell, who played for Coach Tom Reed, was a four-year starter at wide receiver at Miami (1978-81), earning fi rst-team All-Mid-American Conference honors as a junior and captain-ing the team as a senior. He had 73 career receptions for 1,540 yards, averaging a school-record 21.1 yards per catch. He earned his bachelor’s degree in physical education from Miami in 1982. Born June 10, 1960, Treadwell graduated from Oberlin High School in 1978 where he played quarterback. Treadwell joins a dignifi ed list of Miami graduates who ulti-mately became the head coach at their alma mater, including Ara Parseghian, John Pont, Bo Schembechler, Bill Mallory, Tom Reed and Randy Walker. “It’s a dream come true to return to my alma mater, Miami, as head football coach. Miami has always held a special place in my heart, and the opportunity to be a part of the ‘Cradle of Coaches’ is a privilege as well as a responsibility. “I have a blueprint for success for our student-athletes: in the classroom, on the playing fi eld and in the community. Everyone in the program plays an important role, and with all of us heading in the same direction, we can add a new chapter to the rich tradition of Miami football. I can’t wait to roll up my sleeves and get started.” As Michigan State’s off ensive coordinator and receivers coach the past four years, Treadwell engineered one of the most explosive off enses in the Big Ten. He was a nominee for the Broyles Award, given to the nation’s top assistant coach, in part for his role in leading the day-to-day team activities during Coach Mark Dantonio’s absence following Dantonio’s heart attack Sept. 19. Without Dantonio in attendance, Treadwell, who normally coaches in the booth, coached on the sidelines in MSU’s wins over Northern Colorado and 11th-ranked Wiscon-sin. Treadwell also coached on the sideline in victories against Michigan and Illinois while Dantonio was in the press box. The 27-year coaching veteran’s trademark of balance was on full display in 2010, as the Spartans were one of just two teams in the Big Ten to rank among the top fi ve in the conference in rushing (168.8 ypg.), passing (237.8 ypg.), scoring (30.1 ppg.) and total off ense (406.7 ypg.). The Spartan off ense stacked up as one of the best in school history, cracking the Top 10 in the team single-season records for passing yards (2,854), total yards (4,880) and points (376). The Spartans scored at least 30 points in nine games, including the fi rst six in a row, both of which are school records. A total of seven MSU off ensive players received All-Big Ten recognition on the fi rst team, second team or honor-able mention.

Treadwell’s 2010 receiving corps, complemented by quar-terback Kirk Cousins and running back Edwin Baker, was one of the deepest in the Big Ten, featuring four players with at least 20 catches, and nine players with at least 10 receptions. The top two threats, B.J. Cunningham and Mark Dell, combined fornear-ly 4,000yards, 270 receptions and 25 touchdown catches in their careers. During Treadwell’s tenure as off ensive coordinator, Spar-tans players earned All-Big Ten honors either on the fi rst team, second team, or honorable mention on 24 occasions, including 2008 consensus fi rst-team All-American Javon Ringer. In 2009, Michigan State featured the No. 2 scoring off ense in the Big Ten Conference, averaging 29.7 points per game. The Spartans were also second in the league in passing (269.4 yards per game) and third in total off ense (406.2 ypg). MSU established a school record with 28 touchdown passes in 2009, and the 3,502 passing yards ranked second in the school record books. The off ense also ranked among the best in school his-tory in total off ense (5,281 yards, sixth) and points scored (386, third). Altogether, fi ve Spartan off ensive players earned All-Big Ten honors. In 2008, Treadwell’s off ense showcased one of the top running backs in the nation in Javon Ringer, who led the nation in carries (390), scoring (132 points) and touchdowns (22), while ranking fourth in rushing (125.9 ypg.) en route to being named a consensus fi rst-team All-American. Six other Spartans earned All-Big Ten honors on the off ensive side of the ball. In his fi rst season as off ensive coordinator at Michigan State in 2007, Treadwell guided one of the most balanced off ensive attacks in the Big Ten, as the Spartans were one of two confer-ence teams and one of nine teams in the NCAA to average at least 200 yards or more in both rushing off ense and passing of-fense during the regular season. It was one of the most produc-tive off ensive seasons in school history as the Spartans ranked fi rst in points scored (430), third in total off ense (5,418 yards), fi fth in passing yards (2,842 yards), and sixth in scoring aver-age (33.1) and total yards per game (416.8) in the school record books. In addition, MSU became the fi rst Football Bowl Subdivi-sion team in 2007 to feature a 2,000-yard passer, a 1,000-yard rusher and a 1,000-yard receiver.

Page 7: Game 5 • vs. Army

2011 Football 7

Upon becoming Cincinnati’s off ensive coordinator in 2004, he put together a balanced off ense that produced a 2,500-yard passer, 1,000-yard rusher and 1,000-yard receiver, while top-ping the 2,000-yard mark in both rushing (2,201) and passing (2,666), only the second time that feat had been accomplished in UC history. Prior to Cincinnati, Treadwell served as off ensive coordina-tor at Ball State in 2003, where he helped develop the Cardinal off ense to school records for passing yards and passing TDs. During his fi rst three seasons at Michigan State, from 2000-02,he tutored several top receivers, including Charles Rogers, the 2002 Biletnikoff Award winner and the No. 2 pick of the 2003 NFL Draft. Treadwell went to Michigan State following one season at North Carolina State (1999), where he coached the running backs in 1999. He previously spent two years at Boston College (1997-98)where he served as the co-off ensive coordinator while also working with the quarterbacks and wide receivers. Treadwell coached running backs under Tyrone Willingham at Stanford from 1995-96. He directed a Cardinal rushing attack that racked up 1,819 yards in 1995 - the ninth-best single-sea-son total in school history. His full-time coaching credits also include one season as a wide receivers coach at Cincinnati (1994) and a two-year stay with Miami (1992-93), serving under Randy Walker. At Youngstown State (1986-91), Treadwell spent all of those seasons under former head coach and current Ohio State head coach Jim Tressel. Dantonio was YSU’s defensive coordinator from 1986-90. Treadwell worked with the wide receivers, run-ning backs and quarterbacks at Youngstown State, and while serving as the off ensive coordinator in 1991, he helped guide the Penguins to the NCAA I-AA National Championship. Married to the former Lola Pinskey of Fostoria, Ohio, Treadwell and his wife have three children: Whittney, Blake and Spencer. Blake will be a junior nose tackle for MSU’s 2011 foot-ball team, while Spencer is a member of Miami’s 2011 recruiting class.

THE TREADWELL FILEYear -- School (Assignment) Team’s Ranking 1986 -- Youngstown State (Quarterbacks)1987 -- Youngstown State (Receivers), NCAA I-AA Playoff s1988 -- Youngstown State (Running Backs)1989 -- Youngstown State (Running Backs), NCAA I-AA playoff s1990 -- Youngstown State (Off ensive Coordinator), NCAA I-AA playoff s1991 -- Youngstown State (Off ensive Coordinator), NCAA I-AA National Champions1992 -- Miami University (Running Backs)1993 -- Miami University (Receivers)1994 -- Cincinnati (Receivers)1995 -- Stanford (Running Backs), Liberty Bowl1996 -- Stanford (Running Backs), Sun Bowl1997 -- Boston College (Co-Off ensive Coordinator)1998 -- Boston College (Co-Off ensive Coordinator)1999 -- North Carolina State (Running Backs)2000 -- Michigan State (Receivers), Florida Citrus Bowl2001 -- Michigan State (Receivers), Silicon Valley Classic2002 -- Michigan State (Receivers)2003 -- Ball State (Off ensive Coordinator/Receivers)2004 -- Cincinnati (Off ensive Coordinator), Fort Worth Bowl2005 -- Cincinnati (Off ensive Coordinator)2006 -- Cincinnati (Off ensive Coordinator)2007 -- Michigan State (Off ensive Coordinator), Champs Sports Bowl2008 -- Michigan State (Off ensive Coordinator), Capital One Bowl2009 -- Michigan State (Off ensive Coordinator), Valero Alamo Bowl2010 -- Michigan State (Off ensive Coordinator), Capital One Bowl2011 -- Miami University (Head Coach)

Reception Average (Min. 25 rec.)

1. 22.0 Don Treadwell, 1980

2. 20.8 Andy Schillinger, 1986 3. 20.2 Dustin Woods, 2006 4. 19.4 Trevor Gaylor, 1999 5. 18.4 Milt Stegall, 1990 6. 18.2 Mike Larkin, 2001 7. 18.0 Doc Urich, 1950 8. 17.3 Paul Warth, 1977 9. 17.2 Trevor Gaylor, 1998 17.2 Gary Arthur, 1969 17.2 Chris Givens, 2007

Reception Average (Min. 50 receptions)

1. 21.1 Don Treadwell, 1978-81

2. 18.8 Sly Johnson, 1997-00 3. 18.2 Albert Maccioli, 1948-50 4. 17.2 Robert Jencks, 1960-62 5. 17.0 Doc Urich, 1947-50 6. 16.8 Andy Schillinger, 1984-87 7. 16.6 Trevor Gaylor, 1996-99 16.6 Keith Dummitt, 1979-82 9. 15.3 Tom Murphy, 1983-85 15.3 Steve Joecken, 1975-77

Treadwell Still in the Record Book

Page 8: Game 5 • vs. Army

2011 Football8

Off ensive Coordinator John Klacik

John Klacik (26th year as college coach)

A veteran of more than 25 years of col-legiate coacing, John Klacik was named Miami’s off ensive coordinator on Jan. 13. He will also have a specifi c role as off en-sive line coach.

Klacik previously spent six seasons as head coach at his alma mater, Lock Haven, trying to restore the Bald Eagle program to prominence. His other 19 years in the coaching profession have taken place at the FBS and FCS levels.

Previously, Klacik spent all but one season of his coaching career at Youngstown State and was a part of four NCAA I-AA National Championship teams. He started with the Penguins as the tight ends coach, working his way up the ladder through the off ense, moving to wide receivers, quarterbacks, off ensive line and then as off ensive coordinator for his last four seasons.

Klacik worked under current Ohio State University head coach Jim Tressel for 12 years. He also spent the 2000 season at Division I Wake Forest University, working with the quarterbacks before returning to YSU in his most recent role. While with the Demon Deacons, Klacik worked under current Indianapolis Colts Head Coach Jim Caldwell.

A standout wide receiver, Klacik graduated with a bachelor’s degree in sports/fi tness management from Lock Haven in 1988. He led the Bald Eagles in receiving yards in each of his four seasons at LHU, ranking eighth in school history with 1,976 career yards.

Klacik and his wife, Amy, have three children: Abbey, Hannah and John III.

Miami’s 2011 Off ensive Statistics

S 3—@ Missouri: 36 atts for 76 net rushing yds ... 26-39-1 for 194 passing yds ... 75 plays for 270 off ensive yds ... 6 points.S 17—@ Minnesota: 21 atts for 80 net rushing yds ... 27-48-1 for 325 passing yds ... 69 plays for 405 off ensive yds ... 23 points.S 24—Bowling Green: 31 atts for 43 net rushing yds ... 25-40-2 for 265 passing yds ... 71 plays for 308 off ensive yds ... 23 points.O 1—Cincinnati: 38 atts for -3 net rushing yds ... 21-35-1 for 264 passing yds ... 73 plays for 264 off ensive yds ... 0 points.

Defensive Coordinator Pete Rekstis

Pete Rekstis(23rd year as college coach)

No stranger to the Mid-American Conference, Pete Rekstis became Miami’s defensive coordinator and defensive backs coach on Jan. 13, 2011. He previously served seven seasons as defensive coordinator and safeties coach at MAC East rival Kent State. Rekstis brings with him a reputation as an outstanding defensive mind, a great motivator and a solid recruiter and devel-oper of NFL-caliber talent.

Since Rekstis took over in 2004, a pair of Golden Flash defensive backs were selected in the NFL draft: Usama Young (Saints, 3rd Round, 2007) and Jack Williams (Broncos, 4th Round, 2008); while Abe Elam (Browns) and Daniel Muir (Colts) have gone on to fi nd success via the free agency route. Last season, defensive lineman Roosevelt Nix became the fi rst freshman ever to win the Mid-American Conference Defensive Player of the Year award.

In 2010, Kent State ranked second in the country in tackles for loss (8.3), fi fth in rushing defense (97.2), 11th in sacks (2.9) and 13th in total defense (306.7), setting a school record with 35 sacks. The Golden Flashes held two opponents to negative yards rushing.

Prior to coming to Kent State, Rekstis coached the secondary at his alma mater, Youngstown State, from 1999-2003 and coordinated the Penguins’ defense the last three seasons. In 1999, Youngstown State posted a record of 12-3 and advanced to the Division I-AA national championship game. In Rekstis’ fi ve years at YSU, the Pen-guins intercepted 74 passes, an average of nearly 15 per season.

Before returning to Youngstown State, Rekstis served as defensive coordinator and secondary coach at Austin Peay from 1997-98 and as defensive coordinator at the U.S. Coast Guard Academy from 1994-96. He was a four-year starter at free safety at Youngstown State from 1987-90, where he played for Tressel and helped the Penguins to a record of 32-16.

A native of Cleveland, Rekstis graduated from Youngstown State in 1991 with a bachelor’s degree in history. He and his wife Gina have three daughters, twins Jessica and Sara, and Natalie, and a son, Pete III (Trey).

Miami’s 2011 Defensive Statistics

S 3—@ Missouri: 37 atts for 162 net rushing yds ... 17-26-1 for 129 passing yds ... 63 plays for 291 off ensive yds ... 17 points.S 17—@ Minnesota: 47 atts for 236 net rushing yds ... 11-21-0 for 163 passing yds ... 68 plays for 399 off ensive yds ... 29 points.S 24—Bowling Green: 38 atts for 127 net rushing yds ... 19-24-1 for 183 passing yds ... 62 plays for 310 off ensive yds ... 37 points.O 1—Cincinnati: 40 atts for 147 net rushing yds ... 16-30-2 for 251 passing yds ... 70 plays for 398 off ensive yds ... 27 points.

Page 9: Game 5 • vs. Army

2011 Football 9

Jane Hoeppner, wife of the late Miami coach Terry Hoeppner, poses with Miami’s Men of the Cradle. All eight coaches pictured are Miami University graduates. (Front L to R) Head Coach Don Treadwell, assistant coach Mike Bath, Mrs. Hoeppner, assistant coach Jay Peterson, defensive intern John Pont. (Back L to R) Assistant coach Matt Edwards, special teams intern Jake Richardson, defensive graduate assistant Eli Wicklund , off en-sive graduate assistant Jared Elliott.

M I A M I U N I V E R S I T Y

TM

TM

Page 10: Game 5 • vs. Army

2011 Football10

NOTES ABOUT MIAMI’S TEAM

Notes From the Cradle

Miami’s football team was penalized eight times for 105 yards vs. Cincinnati, surpassing the combined penalty yards it had compiled during its fi rst three games (13 penalties for 73 yards). Through its fi rst four games, the RedHawks are averaging fi ve penalties for 44.8 yards, fi fth fewest among Mid-American Conference teams.

Miami’s kickoff squads, both off ensively and defensively, rank among the nation’s best. The RedHawks are No. 20 in kickoff -return average, running back opponent’s kicks 24.6 yards. Dayonne Nunley’s 72-yard return vs. Bowling Green was the longest this season for Miami and ranks as the third-longest by a Mid-American Conference player. The RedHawks also excel in defending kickoff returns, ranking No. 5 among the 120 Divi-sion 1 teams (15.6 average). Army’s kickoff return defense ranks ninth in the NCAA stats.

9th ... tackles for loss (8.25 per game)T-26th ... fi rst downs allowed (16.75 per game)T-28th ... third-down defense (23.3%, 18-for-54 attempts)T-40th ... red-zone defense (79.0%, 15-for 19 attempts)T-45th ... quarterback sacks (2.25 per game)

RedHawks in NCAA Individual Stat Rankings

Yager Stadium’s Biggest Crowds

Nationally Ranked for Fewest Penalties

Miami Excels in Kickoff Returns, For & Against

Miami in Other NCAA Team Statistical Rankings

Miscellaneous Notes

NCAA Active Career Leaders

In the fi rst two games of its three-game homestand, Miami’s attendance has averaged 18,618 fans, its best back-to-back turnouts since 2007. A crowd of 20,828 turned out for the sea-son opener vs. Bowling Green, followed by 16,408 last Saturday vs. Cincinnati.

2nd ... Nick Harwell, 150.0 receiving yards per game8th ... Nick Harwell, 8.67 receptions per game9th ... Nick Harwell, 17.31 yards per receptionT-17th ... Zac Dysert, 24.25 pass completions per gameT-22nd ... Dayonne Nunley, 0.5 interceptions per game24th ... Dayonne Nunley, 26.4 yards per kickoff return29th ... Zac Dysert, 259.0 passing yards per gameT-24th ... Will Diaz, 1.38 tackles for loss per game36th ... Dawan Scott, 24.3 yards per kickoff return

1st ... 23 assisted tackles for loss by Jerrell Wedge4th ... 154 total tackles for loss yardage by Jerrell Wedge11th ... 77.7 receiving yards per game by Nick Harwell12th ... 566 career pass completions by Zac Dysert13th ... 5.3 receptions per game by Nick HarwellT-13th ... 903 career pass attempts by Zac DysertT-16th ... 24 total solo tackles for loss by Jerrell Wedge15th ... 232.8 yards per game by Zac Dysert18th ... 6,053 career yards by Zac Dysert

Miami’s 2010 MAC Championship ring

Miami’s defense shut out Cincinnati in the fi rst quarter last week. The RedHawks have yielded only 16 total points in the opening period this season. ... Miami’s 27-0 loss to UC marked the fi rst time it has been shut out since a 48-0 loss at Boise State in 2009. It was only the second time in the 29-year history of Yager Stadium that Miami has been shut out. ... This will be Miami’s fi fth all-time game against Army. It has never played Navy nor Air Force. Miami did beat the Quantico Marines in 1962. ... Miami’s fi rst four opponents of 2011 have a combined won-lost record of 10-9 ... Miami’s defensive eff ort against nationally ranked Missouri in the 2011 season opener is looking more and more impressive as each week passes. Mizzou’s last three opponents—Arizona State, Western Illinois and Okla-homa—have yielded averages of 44.7 points per game (Miami gave up 17 points) and 556 total yards per game (Miami yielded 291). ... Miami’s current three-game homestand against Bowl-ing Green (Sept. 24), Cincinnati (Oct. 1) and Army (Oct. 8) is the longest since 2003 when Miami hosted UC, Akron and Buf-falo in consecutive games. ... Of Miami’s last 10 regular-season opponents, six will be played against Ohio-based universities: Bowling Green (Sept. 24), Cincinnati (Oct. 1), Kent State (Oct. 15), Toledo (Oct. 22), Akron (Nov. 3) and Ohio (Nov. 22). ... De-fensive intern John Pont is the grandson of Cradle of Coaches legend John Pont, one of only three men whose jersey number (#42) is retired. ..... Earlier this year, Miami University received offi cial approval from the United States government to trade-mark the familiar phrase with which it’s associated, “The Cradle of Coaches”. ... The NCAA’s latest Graduation Success Rate (GSR) statistics indicated that Miami’s football student-athletes gradu-ate at a rate of 79 percent, 10 percent better than the national rate of 69 percent and tops among all Mid-American Confer-ence institutions.

Page 11: Game 5 • vs. Army

2011 Football 11

*Two Miami University alumni—Earl “Red” Blaik and Paul Diet-zel—have served as head coaches of the U.S. Military Academy. A statue of Blaik will be unveiled on Saturday at Miami’s Cradle of Coaches Plaza. A statue of Dietzel was dedicated in 2010.

* Earl “Red” Blaik was credited with elevating Army’s football program from the “pit to the pedestal” during the 1940s. In 18 years at the Black Knight helm, Blaik compiled a 121-33-10 record and remains the winningest grid coach in West Point history. Three of his teams captured national championships (1944, ‘45 and ‘46) and seven were crowned Lambert Trophy titlists. He was inducted in the charter class of the Army Sports Hall of Fame in 2004. Blaik also was a charter member of Mi-ami’s Athletic Hall of Fame (1969).

*Earl Blaik coached three Heisman Trophy Award winners dur-ing his career: Felix “Doc” Blanchard (1945), Glenn Davis (1946) and Pete Dawkins (1958).

*An Earl “Red” Blaik bobblehead doll was distributed at Army’s game last week to help celebrate the career of Army’s all-timewinningest head coach.

* Blaik was named college football’s “Coach of the Year” in 1946.

*In 1999, the playing surface at West Point’s majestic Michie Stadium was offi cially designated “Blaik Field,” in honor oflegendary Army football coach and athletic director Earl “Red” Blaik. The offi cial naming ceremonies took place during pre-game festivities of Army’s home game versus Ball State.

*Miami graduate Paul Dietzel was head coach of Army’s football program from 1962-65. He compiled a 21-18-1 record at West Point.

*Former Miami assistant coach Jim Young (1964-68) served as Army’s head coach from 1983-90.

*Sid Gillman and George Blackman, both Army assistant coach-es under Earl Blaik, served as head coaches at Miami. Gillman directed Miami football from 1944-47 and Blackman was head coach in Oxford in 1948.

*Former head coach Michael Haywood (2009-10) was an assis-tant coach at Army from 1989-90.

*Miami has 660 all-time football victories, while Army has 651.

The Miami-Army Connections

Notes From the Cradle

Miami’s Culture of Champions

On August 22, 2006, the Miami University Athletic De-partment came together along with those most in-vested in its future—students, University Trustees, In-

stitutional Administrators and campus leaders—to celebrate a vision of national prominence for Miami University Athletics. Since that night, Miami University and its leaders in the ath-letic department have worked hard to elevate Miami into a “Culture of Champions.” What is a “Culture of Champions?” It is a belief that part-time excellence is unacceptable, that excellence is a lifestyle. Thus, we excel intellectually, through service, with leadership, by example, with attitude, and through our words and actions. Does this mean we want to win championships? Abso-lutely! And as we grow our annual championships, each of us aspires to contribute to our collective championship culture through winning, recruiting, leading, serving, encouraging, energizing, training and preparing. With each at-bat, Reese Trophy, goal, point, Jacoby Trophy, victory and championship ring, comes a contagiousness that infects all and inspires a momentum striving to become a national model for intercol-legiate athletics. Because we strive for a position of national leader-ship, success will take the enormous, collective eff ort of ev-eryone committed to our vision. The “Culture of Champions” concept is not exclusively the responsibility of students and coaches as measured by raising a championship trophy at the end of the season (although that is certainly a signifi cant part of the goal), but, rather, the “culture” to which we aspire contains a mind-set of every single person performing like a champion in everything we do.

Page 12: Game 5 • vs. Army

2011 Football12

Notes From the Cradle

Quarterback Zac Dysert (Co-Captain)

M I A M I ‘ S O F F E N S E

• Dysert is a Miami co-captain for the second consecutive season and one of only fi ve Miami players in the modern era who have held the title of team captain for more than one year.

• Now fully recovered from the lacerated spleen he injured vs. Bowling Green in game 10 last season, he has averaged 259 yards per game in 2011 contests vs. Missouri, Minnesota, Bowling Green and Cincinnati.

• Dysert now has 6,053 career passing yards, fourth best on Miami’s all-time top ten list. Third on the list is Mike Bath, a current Miami assistant coach, who passed for 6,524 yards during his RedHawk career from 1997-2000.

• Zac’s .627 career completion percentage is second only to Ben Roethlisberger’s .655.

• In 22 starts, he’s averaged 260 passing yards per game. • In the 11 games he’s played at Yager Stadium, Dysert has

completed 274 of 422 passes (.649) for 2,969 yards (270 ypg), throwing 13 TDs and 14 interceptions.

• He had a career-best performance at Temple in 2009, pass-ing for 426 yards and three touchdowns on 31-of-51 tosses. Zac’s 438 yards of total off ense vs. Temple is eighth-best all-time at Miami. His single-game yardage was the fourth-best all-time eff ort in Miami history, behind Ben Roethlisberger’s top-three games as a RedHawk (525 yards, 452 yards and 440 yards).

• Besides his top-four performance at Temple, he had the 20th-best (348 yards vs. NIU), 21st-best (344 yards vs. Toledo) and 24th-best (337 yards vs. Kent State) eff orts in Miami history.

• In the team’s only victory in 2009 (31-24 vs. Toledo), Dysert had 404 yards of total off ense (344 passing/60 rushing). He also was the holder for Trevor Cook’s Miami-record 55-yard fi eld goal with just :37 left in the fi rst half.

• In Dysert’s very fi rst start, he had an amazing eff ort vs. Kent State, passing for 337 yards (31-of-53 passes, two int., one TD) and rushing for 107 more. His 444 yards of total off ense vs. KSU ranks seventh-best all-time in Miami history.

• Zac has 27 career TD passes, tied for sixth-best in school history.

• He has thrown 33 career interceptions.• He also serves as the holder for Miami fi eld goals and PATs.• Of the top eight all-time Miami passing performances, Zac

has two of them (426 yards vs. Temple in 2009 and 399 vs. CMU in 2010). Ben Roethlisberger is on that exclusive list fi ve times.

Miami’s Quarterbacks: (Front L to R) Kyle Seyfried, Drew Kummer, Robbie Plagens. (Back L to R) Austin Boucher, quarterbacks coach Charlie Fisher, Zac Dysert.

Page 13: Game 5 • vs. Army

2011 Football 13

Notes From the Cradle

MIAMI SINGLE-GAME PASSING YARDAGE LEADERS 1. Ben Roethlisberger vs. NIU, 2002 (41-61) .............. 525 yards2. Ben Roethlisberger at Hawaii, 2001 (40-53) ...........452 yards3. Ben Roethlisberger at BG, 2003 (26-35) .................. 440 yards4. Zac Dysert at Temple, 2009 (31-51) ................ 426 yards5. Josh Betts vs. Cincinnati, 2004 (26-43) ................... 416 yards6. Ben Roethlisberger at Kent State, 2003 (28-44) ... 409 yards7. Ben Roethlisberger vs. Akron, 2001 (23-40) ........... 399 yards Zac Dysert at CMU, 2010 (29-47) .................... 399 yards9. Josh Betts vs. Cent. Mich., 2005 (27-46) ................. 395 yards10. Josh Betts at Temple, 2005 (28-40) ........................... 379 yards11. Ben Roethlisberger vs. UC, 2003 (31-49) ................ 377 yards12. Ben Roethlisberger vs. L’ville, 2003 (21-33) ........... 376 yards13. Ben Roethlisberger vs. Akron, 2003 (31-47) .......... 369 yards14. Josh Betts vs. Cincinnati, 2005 (22-35) ................... 359 yards15. Mike Bath at Vanderbilt, 2000 (24-41) ...................... 358 yards16. Mike Kokal at Purdue, 2006 (26-43) .......................... 355 yards17. Ben Roethlisberger at NU, 2003 (28-37) .................. 353 yards18. Mike Bath vs. Cincinnati, 1999 (21-41) .................... 352 yards19. Josh Betts at West. Mich., 2004 (23-33) ................... 349 yards20. Zac Dysert vs. NIU, 2009 (27-38) .................... 348 yards21. Zac Dysert vs. Toledo, 2009 (31-51) ............... 344 yards22. Ben Roethlisberger vs. Iowa, 2002 (41-61) ............ 343 yards23. Mike Bates at Toledo, 1987 (38-65) ........................... 341 yards24. Zac Dysert at Kent State, 2009 (31-53) ........... 337 yards25. Zac Dysert vs. Ohio, 2010 (21-36) ................... 332 yards

MIAMI SINGLE-GAME TOTAL YARDAGE LEADERS 1. Ben Roethlisberger vs. NIU, 2002 (525p/-40r) ...... 485 yards2. Ben Roethlisberger vs. Hawaii, 2001 (452p/32r) . 484 yards3. Ben Roethlisberger vs. Akron, 2002 (399p/59r) ... 458 yards4. Ben Roethlisberger vs. Kent St., 2003 (409p/41r) 450 yards5. Ben Roethlisberger vs. BG, 2003 (440p/8r) ........... 448 yards Josh Betts vs. UC, 2004 (416p/32r) ........................... 448 yards7. Zac Dysert at Kent St., 2009 (337p/107r) ........ 444 yards8. Zac Dysert at Temple, 2009 (426p/12r) ........... 438 yards9. Zac Dysert at CMU, 2010 (399p/9r) ................. 408 yards10. Zac Dysert vs. Toledo, 2009 (344p/60r) ...........404 yards

CAREER Passing Yards 1. 10,829 Ben Roethlisberger, 2001-03 2. 7,029 Josh Betts, 2002-05 3. 6,524 Mike Bath, 1997-00 4. 6,053 Zac Dysert, 2009-present

CAREER Completion Pct. (Min. 300 attempts)

1. .655 Ben Roethlisberger, 2001-03 2. .627 Zac Dysert, 2009-present

3. .616 Terry Morris, 1985-86 4. .596 Mike Bates, 1986-87 5. .582 Josh Betts, 2002-05

Zac Dysert’s Career Game-by-Game Statistics

Game Comp-Att Yds. Pct. TD/Int Rush (A-Yd-TD)

vs. UK, ‘09 0-0 0 0.0 0/0 0-0-0@ BSU, ‘09 2-4 1 .500 0/2 1-4-0@ WMU, ‘09 3-7 74 .429 1/0 4-32-0@ KSU, ‘09 31-53 337 .585 1/2 17-107-0vs. UC, ‘09 33-47 286 .702 1/2 19-(-8)-0@ NU, ‘09 17-36 176 .472 1/3 23-59-0@ Ohio, ‘09 19-30 166 .633 0/2 11-15-1vs. NIU, ‘09 27-37 348 .730 3/0 13-(-32)-0vs. UT, ‘09 31-51 344 .609 1/0 13-60-2@ Temple, ‘09 31-51 426 .609 3/1 13-12-0vs. BG, ‘09 29-48 259 .604 0/3 16-(-18)-2vs. Buff alo, ‘09 24-37 194 .649 1/1 19-27

2009 247-401 2611 .616 12/16 149-258-5

@ Fla ‘10 25-44 191 .568 0/4 8-2-0vs. EMU ‘10 16-25 164 .640 1/1 9-43-0vs. CSU ‘10 18-22 231 .818 3/0 8-(-9)-0@ Mizzou ‘10 20-27 178 .741 0/1 5-(-8)-0vs. KSU ‘10 31-46 294 .674 1/0 7-(-16)-0@ UC ‘10 22-35 165 .629 0/0 8-6-0@ CMU ‘10 29-47 399 .617 3/0 10-9-0vs. Ohio ‘10 21-36 332 .583 2/4 8-(-19)-0@ Buff alo ‘10 21-36 231 .583 2/2 7-(-1)-0@BG ‘10 19-25 221 .760 1/0 9-20-1

2010 222-343 2406 .647 13/12 79-27-0

@ Mizzou ‘11 26-39 194 .667 0/1 6-(-8)-0@ Minn ‘11 27-47 325 .574 2/1 3-10-0vs. BG ‘11 25-40 265 .625 0/2 15-8-1vs. UC ‘11 19-33 252 .576 0/1 10-(-14)-0 vs. Army ‘11 @ KSU ‘11 @ UT ‘11 vs. Buff alo ‘11 vs. Akron ‘11 @ Temple ‘11 vs. WMU ‘11 @ Ohio ‘11

2011 97-159 1036 .610 2/5 34-(-4)-1

CAREER TOTAL 566-903 6,053 .627 27/33 262-281-6

SEASON Passing Yards 1. 4,486 Ben Roethlisberger, 2003 2. 3,495 Josh Betts, 2004 3. 3,238 Ben Roethilsberger, 2002 4. 3,178 Josh Betts, 2005 5. 3,105 Ben Roethlisberger, 2001 6. 2,611 Zac Dysert, 2009

7. 2,525 Mike Bath, 1999 8. 2,466 Sam Ricketts, 1997 9. 2,431 Daniel Raudabaugh, 2007 10. 2,418 Mike Kokal, 2006

SEASON Completion Pct. (Min. 100 att.)

1. .691 Ben Roethlisberger, 2003 2. .647 Zac Dysert, 2010

3. .633 Ben Roethilsberger, 2002 .633 Ben Roethlisberger, 2001 5. .627 Terry Morris, 1986 6. .616 Zac Dysert, 2009

Page 14: Game 5 • vs. Army

2011 Football14

Quarterback Austin Boucher

Stepping in for injured teammate Zac Dys-ert last season, redshirt freshman AUSTIN BOUCHER (Kettering) compiled a perfect 4-0 record in his four RedHawk 2010 starts vs. Ak-ron, Temple, Northern Illinois and Middle Ten-nessee State. Boucher completed 62.4 percent of his passes as a starter, averaging 248 yards per game. He also played briefl y at Bowling Green, Cincinnati and Missouri. In Miami’s MAC Championship victory over Northern Illinois, he passed for a career-high 333 yards, including the completion of a pass on fourth-down-and-20 and the game-winning 33-yard TD pass to Armand Robinson with just 33 seconds remaining.

Austin Boucher’s Career Game-by-Game Statistics

Game Comp-Att Yds. Pct. TD/Int Rush (A-Yd-TD)

@ Mizzou, ‘10 5-7 68 .714 1/0 2-(-7)-0@ UC ‘10 6-7 62 .857 0/0 0-0-0@ BG ‘10 0-0 0 .000 0/0 1-4-0@ Akron ‘10 22-33 213 .687 0/0 8-4-0vs. Temple ‘10 15-28 155 .536 2/1 9-37-0vs. No. Illinois ‘10 29-46 333 .630 1/0 9-(-15)-0vs. MTSU ‘10 22-35 289 .629 2/2 6-1-0

2010 99-155 1120 .639 6/3 35-24-0

vs. UC, ‘11 2-2 15 1.000 0/0 2-(-7)-0vs. Army ‘11 @ KSU ‘11 @ Toledo ‘11 vs. Buff alo ‘11 vs. Akron ‘11@ Temple ‘11 vs. WMU ‘11@ Ohio

2011 2-2 15 1.000 0/0 2-(-7)-0

SINGLE-GAME BESTS

COMPLETIONS: 29 VS. NIU, 2010ATTEMPTS: 46 VS. NIU 2010PASSING YARDS: 333 VS. NIU 2010PASSING TOUCHDOWNS: 2 VS. TEMPLE, 2010; 2 VS. MTSU, 2011LONG COMPLETION: 70 VS. MTSU, 2011

Austin Boucher

Tight Ends

Three tight ends—senior Kendrick Bruton and sophomores Brian Slack and Dustin White—should all see playing action vs. Army. Bruton started 10 of Miami’s 14 games in 2010, catching 10 passes for 129 yards.

Tight Ends No. Yards TD Long

Kendrick Bruton (#82) 5 15 0 9Dustin White (#84) 0 0 0 0Brian Slack (#83) 0 0 0 0

2011 5 15 0 0

Kendrick Bruton in action against Missouri.

Page 15: Game 5 • vs. Army

2011 Football 15

Off ensive Line

Brad BednarLeft Tackle

Marcus MatthewsLeft Guard

John AnevskiCenter

Brandon BrooksRight Guard

Zach LewisRight Tackle

OFFENSIVE LINE START CHART

Pos Name......................................... Starts (Consecutive)LT 53-Cory Brown (6-5, 275, Sr.) ................................................. 4 (1)LG 67-John Anevski (6-3, 277, So.) ............................................ 5 (4)C 72-Brad Bednar (6-4, 282, Jr.) ............................................30 (28)RG 56-Brandon Brooks (6-5, 343, Sr.) ...................................35 (11)RT 71-Zach Lewis (6-6, 264, T-Fr.) .............................................. 3 (3)

Game Rush.Off . Pass.Off TotalOff . 1stDowns RedZone/Pts@ Mizzou ‘11 76 194 270 19 1-2/ 6 pts@ Minn ‘11 80 325 405 17 3-4/17 ptsvs. BG ‘11 43 265 308 19 5-6/23 ptsvs. UC ‘11 (-3) 267 264 14 0-1/0 pts vs. Army ‘11 @ KSU ‘11 @ UT ‘11 vs. Buff alo ‘11 vs. Akron ‘11 @ Temple ‘11 vs. WMU ‘11 @ Ohio ‘11

2011 196 1051 1247 69 9-13/46 pts

Miscellaneous Off ensive Line Notes: Miami’s off ensive line has helped the RedHawk passing game average 261 yards through the fi rst three games ... Miami’s off ensive starters last week—Cory Brown, John Anevski, Brad Bednar, Brandon Brooks and Zach Lewis—average 6-4 1/2 and 288 pounds ... Brandon Brooks is the only senior among the starting fi ve of-fensive linemen ... Off ensive line coach John Klacik reports that Brooks has graded out at more than 90 percent and has not allowed any quarterback sacks. Brooks has recorded nearly 20 “pancakes” ... Bednar is also grading out at 90+ percent.

Page 16: Game 5 • vs. Army

2011 Football16

Running Backs

Notes From the Cradle

Though they’ve maintained a “running back by committee” philosophy, RedHawk coaches would love to see one individual step up to the challenge provided by Cincinnati. Six Miami RBs— freshman Chrishawn Dupuy, sophomores Erik Finklea, Orne Bey and Justin Semmes, junior Dan Green and senior Tyrone Jones— have each carried the ball thus far, though Fin-klea’s number has been called 55 of the 80 attempts. Recruited as a defensive back, Dupuy made his running debut last week vs. UC

Running Backs No. Gain Loss Net TD - Long

Erik Finklea (#49) 55 187 19 168 3 - 16Tyrone Jones (#21) 7 22 3 19 0 - 9Chrishawn Dupuy 5 18 3 15 0 - 12Orne Bey (#1) 4 7 2 5 0 - 5Justin Semmes (#46) 2 1 0 1 0 - 1Dan Green (#28) 7 11 12 -1 0 - 4

2011 80 246 39 207 3 - 16

Erik Finklea vs. Minnesota

Chrishawn Dupuy vs. Cincinnati

ERIK FINKLEA No. Gain Loss Net TD - Long

@ Mizzou ‘11 19 75 4 71 1-10@ Minn ‘11 15 54 0 54 1-16vs. BG ‘11 9 34 9 25 1-13vs. UC ‘11 12 24 6 18 0 - 7 vs. Army ‘11 @ KSU ‘11 @ UT ‘11 vs. Buff alo ‘11 vs. Akron ‘11 @ Temple ‘11 vs. WMU ‘11 @ Ohio ‘11

2011 55 187 19 168 3-16

Miscellaneous Running Back Notes: Against each of the fi rst three teams that Miami played, Erik Finklea scored a touch-down. He was held out of the endzone vs. UC. ... Finklea is averaging 3.1 yards per attempt and 42 yards per game. Last year, eventual RedHawk rushing leader Thomas Merriweather began the season with a four-game total of 136 yards on 32 attempts ... thus far, Miami’s rushing statistics rank last among the 120 Division I teams. The RedHawks’ fi rst four opponents— Missouri, Minnesota, Bowling Green and Cincinnati— currently rank 16th (87.0 ypg), 70th (156.4 ypg), 62nd (148.0 ypg) and 7th (70.6), respectively, in NCAA rushing defense statistics. Army’s rush defense ranks tied for 78th (167.4 ypg) ... Miami running backs have caught 15 passes for a total of 65 yards.

Page 17: Game 5 • vs. Army

2011 Football 17

Wide Receivers

Notes From the Cradle

Attacking Miami’s Record Book

SINGLE-GAME Receptions

1. 14 Brayden Coombs vs. Buff alo, 2009 14 Armand Robinson vs. Northern Illinois, 2010 3. 13 Andy Schillinger at Toledo, 1987 4. 12 Eddie Tillitz at Hawai’i, 2001 12 Nick Harwell vs. Minnesota, 2011

6. 11 Nick Harwell vs. Ohio, 2010

11 Armand Robinson at Florida, 2010 11 Andre Bratton vs. Cincinnati, 2009 9. 10 Nick Harwell at Bowling Green, 2010

10 5 others on 11 occasions

SINGLE-GAME Receiving Yards 1. 211 Nick Harwell vs. Ohio, 2010

2. 198 Jeremy Patterson vs. Southwestern Louisiana, 1993 3. 184 Sly Johnson vs. Eastern Michigan, 1999 4. 181 Martin Nance at Kent State, 2003 181 Tom Murphy at Bowling Green, 1983 6. 180 Ryne Robinson at Western Michigan, 2006 7. 179 Andy Cruse at Central Michigan, 2010

The trio of sophomore Nick Harwell, senior Chris Givens and junior Andy Cruse, a threesome that combined last season for 115 receptions for 1,598 yards and nine touchdowns, already has 57 grabs for 762 yards through the fi rst four games. Givens was sidelined last week with a concussion. A pair of true fresh-men, David Frazier and Dawan Scott, have 20 catches for 151 yards. Redshirt freshman Willie Culpepper has one catch this season and sophomore Jake Wurzelbacher has one catch for 10 yards. Junior Luke Swift should see playing time against Army.

Receivers No. Yards Avg TD Long

Nick Harwell (#8) 26 450 17.3 0 66Chris Givens (#17) 16 185 11.6 1 31Andy Cruse (#15) 15 127 8.5 0 15David Frazier (#80) 15 131 8.7 0 17Dawan Scott (#25) 5 65 13.0 1 26Jake Wurzelbacher (#86) 1 10 10.0 0 10

2011 78 968 12.4 2 66

With six catches for 149 yards vs. Cincinnati, Nick Harwell joined former RedHawk receiver Martin Nance as the only two Miami players who have recorded back-to-back-to-back 100-yard receiving games. Harwell sat out the season opener due to team violations, playing his fi rst game of the year at Minne-sota. Against the Gophers, Nick caught 12 balls for 162 yards, then followed that up two weeks ago with eight catches for 139 yards vs. Bowling Green. A fourth-consecutive 100-yard receiving performance by Harwell this week against Army would match Nance’s record eff ort during his senior season: Ohio State (106), Central Michigan (104), Kent State (103) and Cincinnati (119).

Altogether, Harwell has had fi ve diff erent 100-yards-plus receiv-ing eff orts over the last two seasons, topped by a Miami-record 219-yard (11 catches) contest vs. Ohio in 2010.

Harwell Aims for Back-to-Back-to-Back-to-Back

SEASON Receptions 1. 94 Armand Robinson, 2010 2. 91 Ryne Robinson, 2006 3. 90 Martin Nance, 2003 4. 81 Martin Nance, 2005 5. 75 Ryne Robinson, 2005 6. 67 Armand Robinson, 2009 67 Michael Larkin, 2003 8. 64 Nick Harwell, 2010 (871 yards)

64 Ryne Robinson, 2004

Game Rec Yds. Avg TD Recs 20+

@ Fla ‘10 1 11 11.0 0 0vs. EMU ‘10 0 0 0 0 0vs. CSU ‘10 0 0 0 0 0@ Mizzou ‘10 0 0 0 0 0vs. KSU ‘10 1 4 4.0 0 0@ UC ‘10 6 62 10.3 0 0@ CMU ‘10 8 97 12.1 1 29, 24vs. Ohio ‘10 11 219 19.9 0 81, 27, 25@ Buff alo ‘10 8 97 12.1 2 29, 27@BG ‘10 10 125 12.5 1 41, 22@ Akron ‘10 2 32 16.0 0 22vs. Temple ‘10 5 72 14.4 1 34, 21vs. No. Illinois ‘10 5 66 13.2 0 35vs. MTSU ‘10 7 86 12.3 1 40

2010 64 871 13.6 6 81, 41, 40

@ Mizzou ‘11 DNP @ Minn ‘11 12 162 13.5 0 66, 32vs. BG ‘11 8 139 17.4 0 48, 33vs. UC ‘11 6 149 24.8 0 66 vs. Army ‘11 @ KSU ‘11 @ UT ‘11 vs. Buff alo ‘11 vs. Akron ‘11 @ Temple ‘11 vs. WMU ‘11 @ Ohio ‘11

2011 26 450 17.3 0 66, 66, 48

CAREER TOTAL 90 1,321 14.7 6 81, 66, 66

Page 18: Game 5 • vs. Army

2011 Football18

M I A M I ‘ S D E F E N S E

Defensive Line

Junior Austin Brown

Defensive line coaches Matt Edwards and Nick Siatras have a potentially talented group with which to work in 2011. There are four seniors—Jordain Brown, Will Diaz, C.J. Marck and Na’eem Outler—who have loads of game experience, while underclassmen who are sure to be in the rotation include Aus-tin Brown, Kelvin Jackson, Wes Williams, Jason Semmes, Mike Johns and Anthony Shoemaker.

Diaz already has 5.5 TFLs, one more than he had recorded in his last two seasons combined.

Linemate Austin Brown is off to a good start as well, notch-ing 3.5 TFLs thru four games, including 1.5 vs. UC. He has 18.5 career TFLs.

Defensive Linemen ST AT TT TFL-Yds QBSk - FF - FR

Will Diaz (#69) 14 6 20 5.5-16 1.0 - 0 - 0Austin Brown (#90) 10 8 18 3.5-18 1.0 - 0 - 0Jason Semmes (#93) 7 5 12 2.5-15 2.0 - 0 - 1Wes Williams (#9) 6 6 12 1.5-6 1.5 - 0 - 0C.J. Marck (#10) 9 1 10 3.0-3 1.0 - 0 - 0Jordain Brown (#79) 2 2 4 0.5-1 0 - 0 - 0Roman Lawson (#20) 1 0 1 0 0 - 0 - 0Kelvin Jackson (#54) 1 2 3 0 0 - 0 - 0Mike Johns (#94) 3 2 5 2.0-2 0 - 0 - 0A. Shoemaker (#50) 0 0 0 0 0 - 0 - 0

2011 53 32 85 18.5-61 6.5 - 0 - 1

Page 19: Game 5 • vs. Army

2011 Football 19

Notes From the Cradle

Linebackers

Senior Jerrell Wedge has rebounded from his nagging ham-string injury and is tied with Ryan Kennedy at 18 tackles apiece. Wedge now has career totals of 223 stops and 33 TFLs for -151 yards. Junior Evan Harris had nine of his 10 tackles in the season opener at Missouri. Freshman Tyler Tucker got his third starting assignment last Saturday vs. and had four tackles. Kennedy re-corded his collegiate career’s fi rst interception last week. Jaytee Swanson had one of the best games of his RedHawk career last Saturday, recording a team-high seven stops. Sophomore Chris Wade also is a key contributor.

Linebackers ST AT TT TFL-Yds QBS - FF - FR

Ryan Kennedy (#5) 12 6 18 3.0-14 1.0 - 0 - 0Jerrell Wedge (#43) 8 10 18 2.0-3 0.5 - 0 - 0Jaytee Swanson (#32) 8 8 16 2.0-9 1.0 - 0 - 0Tyler Tucker (#38) 8 6 14 1.5-5 0 - 0 - 0Evan Harris (#30) 5 5 10 0.5-0 0 - 0 - 0Chris Wade (#48) 2 2 4 0 0 - 0 - 0Collin Boucher (#44) 2 1 3 0 0 - 0 - 0Luke Kelly (#36) 2 1 3 0 0 - 0 - 0Dante Taylor (#26) 0 1 1 0 0 - 0 - 0Austin Moore (#51) 0 0 0 0 0 - 0 - 0Sam Olberding (#33) 0 0 0 0 0 - 0 - 0

2011 47 40 87 9.0-31 2.5 - 0 - 0

Jaytee Swanson

Page 20: Game 5 • vs. Army

2011 Football20

Defensive Backs

Notes From the Cradle

Senior captain Anthony Kokal and Pat Hinkel are fi rst and second, respectively, on Miami’s tackles list. Kokal has 26 stops while Hinkel has 24. Dayonne Nunley, a ball-hawking halfback, ranks fourth with 19 total tackles. Including his picks vs. Mis-souri and Cincinnati, Nunley already has eight career inter-ceptions. D.J. Brown and Demetrius Quarles and are a quality twosome at corner who have 11 and 10 tackles, respectively.

Defensive Backs ST AT TT TFL-Yds Int - FF - FR

Anthony Kokal (#18) 13 13 26 1.5-3 0 - 1 - 1Pat Hinkel (#37) 13 11 24 0.5-3 0 - 0 - 0Dayonne Nunley (#3) 13 6 19 2.5-4 2.5 - 0 - 0D.J. Brown (#6) 8 3 11 0 0 - 0 - 1Demetrius Quarles (#14) 8 2 10 0 0 - 0 - 0Brison Burris (#35) 4 0 4 0 0 - 1 - 0Justin Bowers (#29) 2 2 4 1.0-3 0 - 0 - 0Jarrell Jones (#27) 1 0 1 0 0 - 0 - 0Trey Payne (#23) 0 0 0 0 0 - 0 - 0Chrishawn Dupuy (#31) 0 0 0 0 0 - 0 - 0Allen Veazie (#2) 0 0 0 0 0 - 0 - 0

2011 62 37 99 5.5-13 2.5 - 2 - 2

Dayonne Nunley

Page 21: Game 5 • vs. Army

2011 Football 21

Notes From the Cradle

M I A M I ‘ S S P E C I A L T E A M S

Punter Zac Murphy, a third-team All-MAC selection as a redshirt freshman in 2010, is averaging 36.8 yards per kick, but has had two of his punts blocked for touchdowns. Sophomore Mason Krysinski is the RedHawk placekicker and has made two of his four fi eld goal attempts. Senior Aaron Griff o is Miami’s long snapper. Nick Harwell and Chris Givens have shared the punt return job, while the kickoff return trio Dayonne Nunley, Dawan Scott and Brison Burris have made Miami the nation’s 20th best unit.

Punter No. Yds Avg Long FC - In20 - TB

Zac Murphy (#45) 16 588 36.8 51 3 - 3 - 0Anthony Kokal (#18) 7 226 32.3 61 0 - 0 - 2Zac Dysert (#4) 2 50 25.0 26 0 - 2 - 0TEAM 1 0 0.0 0 0 - 0 - 0

2011 26 864 33.2 61 3 - 5 -2

Punter Zac Murphy

Punt Returns No. Yds Avg Long TD

Nick Harwell (#8) 4 16 4.0 7 0Chris Givens (#17) 3 7 2.3 6 0David Frazier (#80) 1 5 5.0 5 0

2011 8 28 3.5 7 0

KO Returns No. Yds Avg Long TD

Dayonne Nunley (#3) 9 238 26.4 72 0Dawan Scott (#25) 7 170 24.3 33 0Brison Burris (#35) 2 34 17.0 18 0

2011 18 442 24.6 72 0

Placekicker No. 1-19 20-29 30-39 40-49 Long

Mason Krysinski (#39) 2-4 0-0 1-1 0-1 1-2 45Zac Murphy (#45) 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 --

2011 2-4 0-0 1-1 0-0 1-2 45

Kickoff s No. Yds Avg TB - OB

Mason Krysinski (#39) 12 663 55.2 0 - 1

Page 22: Game 5 • vs. Army

2011 Football22

MIAMI UNIVERSITY FOOTBALL – Alphabetical Roster (as of Oct. 1, 2011) #duplicate number

No. Name Ht. Wt. Position Elig. Hometown (High School) 67 John Anevski * 6-3 277 Off ensive Line RS SO Cincinnati, OH (Elder) 96 Delvin Becks 6-1 288 Defensive Line RS FR Houston, TX (Eisenhower) 72 Brad Bednar ** 6-4 282 Off ensive Line JR Mentor, OH (Mentor) 1 Orne Bey 5-8 177 Running Back RS FR Monroeville, PA (Gateway) 16 Austin Boucher * 6-1 210 Quarterback RS SO Kettering, OH (Archbishop Alter) 44 Collin Boucher 6-2 224 Linebacker RS SO Kettering, OH (Archbishop Alter) 29 Justin Bowers ** 5-10 203 Safety JR Murfreesboro, TN (Blackman) 91 Sean Breard 6-4 226 Linebacker FR Frisco, TX (Little Elm) 56 Brandon Brooks *** 6-5 343 Off ensive Line RS SR Milwaukee, WI (Riverside University) 90 Austin Brown ** 6-2 270 Defensive Line JR Woodbridge, VA (Woodbridge) 53 Cory Brown * 6-5 275 Off ensive Line SR Grand Prairie, TX (Grand Prairie) 6 D.J. Brown ** 6-1 179 Defensive Back RS JR West Chester, OH (Lakota West) 79 Jordain Brown ** 6-0 303 Defensive Line RS SR Chicago, IL (Hubbard) 65 Trevan Brown 6-4 288 Off ensive Line FR Florence, KY (Boone County) 82 Kendrick Bruton *** 6-4 251 Tight End RS SR Miamisburg, OH (Miamisburg) 35 Brison Burris 5-10 178 Defensive Back FR Humble, TX (Humble) 61 Sam Camiener 6-2 276 Off ensive Line FR Solon, OH (Solon) 47 Malcolm Chester 6-2 204 Safety RS SO Atlanta, GA (Westminster) 34 Tre Clifton 6-2 211 Linebacker FR South Bend, IN (Clay) 15 Andy Cruse ** 6-4 210 Wide Receiver RS JR Cincinnati, OH (Turpin) 12 Willie Culpepper 5-9 161 Wide Receiver RS FR San Antonio, TX (Brackenridge) 69 Will Diaz ** 6-3 260 Defensive Line RS SR Columbus, OH (Westland) 59 Joseph Donlan 6-1 213 FB/Linebacker FR River Forest, IL (Oak Park River Forest) 31 Chrishawn Dupuy 5-9 180 Running Back FR New Orleans, LA (Salmen) 4 Zac Dysert ** 6-4 214 Quarterback RS JR Ada, OH (Ada) 26# Jason Earle 5-9 174 Wide Receiver RS SO Bedford Heights, OH (Bedford) 49 Erik Finklea * 6-1 202 Running Back RS SO Cincinnati, OH (Woodward) 98 Alex Flexer 6-1 181 Placekicker FR Dublin, OH (Jerome) 23# Tyler Franks 5-9 168 Running Back FR Nashville, TN (Montgomery Bell) 80 David Frazier 6-0 164 Wide Receiver FR Columbia, SC (Irmo) 17 Chris Givens *** 6-2 203 Wide Receiver RS SR Chillicothe, OH (Chillicothe) 28 Dan Green ** 5-10 202 Running Back RS JR Oak Park, IL (Walther Lutheran) 78 Julian Green 6-4 297 Off ensive Line RS FR N. Bethesda, MD (Georgetown Prep) 81 J.J. Greenwood 5-10 175 Wide Receiver RS FR Middletown, OH (Middletown) 58 Aaron Griff o * 5-10 203 Long Snapper RS SR Lima, OH (Shawnee) 55 Tyler Grubbs 6-5 318 Off ensive Line RS FR Ft. Thomas, KY (Highlands) 89 Andrew Gudeman 6-3 240 Tight End FR Greenwood, IN (Center Grove) 30 Evan Harris ** 6-0 221 Linebacker JR Waldorf, MD (Westlake) 64 Josh Harvey * 6-5 352 Off ensive Line RS SO Columbia, MO (Hickman) 8 Nick Harwell * 6-1 187 Wide Receiver SO Missouri City, TX (Elkins) 37 Pat Hinkel ** 6-1 205 Safety JR Westlake, OH (St. Ignatius) 54 Kelvin Jackson 6-3 276 Defensive Line RS SO Missouri City, TX (Hightower) 85 Alvonta Jenkins 6-0 214 Wide Receiver FR Camden, SC (Camden) 94 Mike Johns ** 6-4 270 Defensive Line RS JR Oak Forest, IL (Oak Forest) 97 Tim Johnson 6-2 222 Defensive Line FR New Orleans, LA (Edna Karr) 27 Jarrell Jones 5-10 174 Cornerback FR Columbus, OH (Northland) 21 Tyrone Jones * 5-7 182 Running Back SR Dayton, OH (Chaminade-Julienne) 25 Max Keefe 6-0 215 Linebacker FR Lake Forest, IL (Lake Forest) 36# Luke Kelly ** 6-4 219 Linebacker RS JR Cincinnati, OH (Turpin) 66 Matt Kennedy ** 6-5 266 Off ensive Line RS JR Mt. Prospect, IL (Prospect) 5 Ryan Kennedy *** 6-1 230 Linebacker RS SR Libertyville, IL (Libertyville) 18 Anthony Kokal *** 6-0 208 Safety RS SR Warren, OH (John F. Kennedy) 57 Mitch Krotz 6-0 214 Linebacker RS SO Madison, OH (Madison) 39 Mason Krysinski * 6-3 196 Placekicker SO Shelby Twp., MI (Eisenhower) 9# Drew Kummer 6-3 219 Quarterback FR Cincinnati, OH (La Salle) 20 Roman Lawson ** 6-0 242 Linebacker JR Garfi eld Heights, OH (Shaker Heights) 71 Zach Lewis 6-6 264 Off ensive Line FR Mt. Prospect, IL (Prospect) 10# C.J. Marck * 6-1 250 Defensive Line RS SR Newtown, PA (Pennsbury) 87 Steve Marck ** 6-3 251 Tight End JR Newtown, PA (Pennsbury) 75 Marcus Matthews 6-3 321 Off ensive Line FR Manassas, VA (Osbourne) 51 Austin Moore ** 6-0 227 Linebacker JR Springfi eld, OH (Springfi eld) 68 Andrew Muller 6-4 289 Off ensive Line RS SO Charlotte, NC (Catholic) 45 Zac Murphy * 6-0 205 Punter RS SO Cincinnati, OH (Kings)

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No. Name Ht. Wt. Position Elig. Hometown (High School) 36# Joe Neiser 6-3 237 Tight End FR Batavia, OH (St. Xavier) 3 Dayonne Nunley * 5-8 183 Cornerback SO Monroeville, PA (Gateway) 33 Sam Olberding 6-3 230 Linebacker RS SO Cincinnati, OH (Glen Este) 11 Na’eem Outler 6-2 255 Defensive Line RS SR Occoquan, VA (Woodbridge) 13 Eric Palmore-Lett 5-11 206 Defensive Back SO Cincinnati, OH (Lakota East/Harper College) 23# Trey Payne 5-8 167 Cornerback RS FR Spring, TX (Klein Oak) 19# Robbie Plagens 6-1 190 Quarterback FR Rocky River, OH (Rocky River) 14 Demetrius Quarles * 5-8 147 Cornerback SO Woodbridge, VA (Woodbridge) 25# Dawan Scott 6-0 170 Wide Receiver FR Columbia, SC (Irmo) 93 Jason Semmes * 6-3 247 Defensive Line RS JR Clarkston, MI (St. Mary’s) 46 Justin Semmes * 6-2 230 Fullback RS SO Clarkston, MI (St. Mary’s) 10# Kyle Seyfried 6-1 202 Quarterback FR Wyoming, OH (Wyoming) 95 Zackary Shane 6-3 250 Defensive Line FR Johnstown, OH (Newark Catholic) 24# Aaron Shearer 6-4 228 Linebacker FR Nicholasville, KY (West Jessamine) 50 Anthony Shoemaker * 6-4 268 Defensive Line RS SO Cincinnati, OH (Princeton) 83 Brian Slack 6-5 255 Tight End RS SO Tallmadge, OH (Hoban) 99 John Steele 6-3 281 Defensive Line RS FR Cleveland, OH (South) 73 Justin Stumph 6-4 279 Off ensive Line RS FR Columbus, OH (St. Charles Prep) 32 Jaytee Swanson ** 6-2 221 Linebacker RS JR Buford, GA (Buford) 88 Luke Swift ** 6-2 186 Wide Receiver JR Greenwood, IN (Center Grove) 74 Jeff Tanner 6-3 280 Off ensive Line RS FR Cincinnati, OH (Moeller) 26# Dante Taylor * 6-3 190 Defensive Back SO Springfi eld, VA (Robert E. Lee) 22 Spencer Treadwell 5-10 204 Running Back FR East Lansing, MI (East Lansing) 38 Tyler Tucker 6-2 214 Linebacker FR East Lansing, MI (East Lansing) 24# Jimmy Turvy 6-2 198 Running Back/DB FR Oregonia, OH (Bishop Fenwick) 2 Allen Veazie * 5-11 164 Defensive Back SO Houston, TX (Eisenhower) 48 Chris Wade * 6-1 218 Linebacker RS SO Slidell, LA (Northshore) 92 Mwanza Wamulumba * 6-3 248 Defensive Line SO Fort Meade, MD (Meade) 43 Jerrell Wedge *** 5-11 220 Linebacker RS SR Upper Marlboro, MD (Douglas) 84 Dustin White * 6-2 250 Tight End SO Lake Charles, LA (Barbe) 76 Evan Wiley 6-6 286 Off ensive Line RS SO Monclova, OH (St. John’s Jesuit) 52 Joseph Williams ** 6-2 278 Off ensive Line JR Houston, TX (Strake Jesuit) 19# Travis Williams 5-9 172 Defensive Back RS FR Cooper City, FL (Cooper City) 9# Wes Williams ** 6-3 244 Defensive Line JR Houston, TX (Strake Jesuit) 86 Jake Wurzelbacher 6-4 185 Wide Receiver RS SO Hamilton, OH (Badin) 60 David Zulandt 6-1 174 Long Snapper RS JR Chardon, OH (Cleve. Benedictine)

PRONUNCIATION GUIDE

Coaches:John Klacik (CLAY-sick)

Pete Rekstis (REKK-stiss)Nick Siatras (see-AT-trus)

Players:John Anevski (OL) (ah-NESS-key)

Orne Bey (RB) (OR-nee BAY)Austin & Collin Boucher (boo-SHAY)

Sean Breard (BREE-yard)Trevan Brown (rhymes with heaven)

Tre Clifton (TRAY)Will Diaz (DEE-azz)

Chrishawn Dupuy (doo-PWEE)Erik Finklea (FINK-lee)

Andrew Gudeman (GOO-da-mun)Alvonta Jenkins (al-VON-tay)

Jarrell Jones (ja-RELL)Anthony Kokal (KOE-kull)

Mason Krysinski (krah-SIN-skee)Drew Kummer (KOO-mer)

Dayonne Nunley (DAY-yon)Na’eem Outler (NYE-eem)Dawan Scott (DAY-wan)Allen Veazie (VEE-zay)

Mwanza Wamulumba (wahmoo-LUMM-ba)Jake Wurzelbacher (WURR-zul-bocker)

David Zulandt (ZOO-lant)

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NCAA DIVISION I-A’S WINNINGEST PROGRAMS >>>

ALL-TIME WINNING PERCENTAGE (minimum 30 seasons)Team Yrs. W L T Games Pct.

Michigan 131 889 308 36 1,233 .736

Notre Dame 122 848 297 42 1,187 .732

Ohio State 121 834 311 53 1,198 .718

Texas 118 854 325 33 1,212 .718

Oklahoma 116 815 304 53 1,172 .718

Boise State 43 369 145 2 516 .717

Alabama 116 807 319 43 1,169 .7089

Southern Cal 118 773 313 54 1,140 .702

Nebraska 121 841 346 40 1,227 .702

Tennessee 114 792 341 53 1,186 .690

Penn State 124 822 358 41 1,221 .690

Florida State 64 466 233 17 716 .663

LSU 117 725 389 47 1,161 .645

Georgia 117 740 398 54 1,192 .643

Miami (FL) 85 570 322 19 911 .636

Auburn 118 707 401 47 1,155 .632

Florida 104 666 380 40 1,086 .632

Miami (OH) 122 660 398 44 1,102 .619

Washington 121 667 413 50 1,130 .612

Arizona State 98 559 350 24 933 .612

ALL-TIME WINS 1. Michigan ............................. 889

2. Texas ..................................... 854

3. Notre Dame ........................ 848

4. Nebraska ............................ 841

5. Ohio State ........................... 834

6. Penn State........................... 823

7. Oklahoma ........................... 815

8. Alabama .............................. 805

9. Tennessee ........................... 792

10. Southern Cal ...................... 773

11. Georgia ................................ 740

12. LSU ........................................ 725

13. Auburn ................................. 707

14. West Virginia ...................... 695

15. Syracuse .............................. 690

16. Georgia Tech ...................... 684

17. Virginia Tech ....................... 682

18. Texas A&M .......................... 676

19. Pittsburgh ........................... 674

20. Arkansas .............................. 673

21. Colorado .............................. 672

22. Washington ........................ 667

23. Florida .................................. 666

24. MIAMI (OH) ..................660

25. North Carolina ................... 659

Miami and Syracuse both rank in the top-25 for

NCAA Division-I all-time wins. The RedHawks won

the 2007 match-up 17-14 at Yager Stadium.

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Miami University, known world-wide as the “Cradle of Coaches,” contributed four alumni to Sporting News Magazine’s 50 Greatest Coaches, dominating all other universities.

PAUL BROWN (`30) was named as the 12th greatest coach of all time by The Sporting News (TSN). Miamians WALTER ALSTON (`35) and BO SCHEMBECHLER (`51) ranked 35th and 36th on the list, while ARA PARSEGHIAN (`49) was selected as sports’ 44th greatest coach. A fi fth man with Miami ties, WOODY HAYES, ranked 27th on TSN’s list. Hayes served as Miami’s football coach from 1949-50.

The August 3, 2009 publication asked a panel of 118 top coaches, media and sports ad-ministrators to choose the Top 50 list.

Altogether, only four universities contributed more than one alumnus to the list. Miami’s four alumni topped Alabama (Paul “Bear” Bryant and Bobby Bowden), Minnesota (Bud Wilkinson and Herb Brooks) and Kansas (Dean Smith and Adolph Rupp), which each had two alums ranked among the Top 50. Purdue graduate John Wooden, the famed “Wizard of Westwood”, was ranked as the No. 1 coach of all time.

1. John Wooden (Purdue)2. Vince Lombardi (Fordham)3. Paul Bryant (Alabama)4. Phil Jackson (North Dakota)5. Don Shula (John Carroll)6. Red Auerbach (George Washington)7. Scotty Bowman (did not attend college)8. Dean Smith (Kansas)9. Casey Stengel (did not attend college)10. Knute Rockne (Notre Dame)11. Pat Summitt (Tennessee-Martin)12. Paul Brown (Miami)

13. Joe Paterno (Brown)14. George Halas (Illinois)15. Chuck Noll (Dayton)16. Bob Knight (Ohio State)17. Joe Gibbs (San Diego State)18. Tom Landry (Texas)19. Mike Krzyzewski (U.S. Military Academy)20. Bill Belichick (Wesleyan University)21. Adolph Rupp (Kansas)22. Joe McCarthy (Niagara)23. Eddie Robinson (Leland College)24. Bobby Bowden (Alabama)25. John McGraw (did not attend college)26. Bill Walsh (San Jose State)27. Woody Hayes (Denison University)

28. Connie Mack (did not attend college)29. Bud Wilkinson (Minnesota)30. Pat Riley (Kentucky) 31. Pete Newell (Loyola, Calif. University)32. Joe Torre (did not attend college)33. Bill Parcells (Wichita State)34. Tom Osborne (Hastings College)35. Walter Alston (Miami)

36. Bo Schembechler (Miami)

37. Toe Blake (did not attend college)38. Sparky Anderson (did not attend college)39. Al Arbour (did not attend college)40. Amos Alonzo Stagg (Yale University)41. Tony La Russa (South Florida)42. Geno Auriemma (West Chester University)43. Dick Irvin (did not attend college)44. Ara Parseghian (Miami)

45. Chuck Daly (Bloomsburg University)46. Bobby Cox (did not attend college)47. Hank Iba (Westminster College)48. Tommy Lasorda (did not attend college)49. Gregg Popovich (U.S. Air Force Academy)50. Herb Brooks (Minnesota)

THE SPORTING NEWS

TOP 50 COACHES OF ALL TIME

An Ohio native who was a two-year football letter winner (1928-29), Paul

Brown is a member of Miami’s “Cradle of Coaches” and excelled as a coach at the collegiate and professional levels. Brown was head coach at Ohio State (1941-43) and led the Buckeyes to their fi rst national title in 1942. Brown then served as head coach at the professional level with the Cleve-land Browns (1946-62) and Cincinnati Bengals (1968-75), winning cham-pionships in the All-America Football Conference and National Football League. Brown was elected into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1967, and the current home stadium of the Bengals bears his name.

Always displaying a calm, professional demeanor, the unfl appable Walter

Alston managed the Brooklyn and Los Angeles Dodgers for 23 seasons (1954-76), winning seven National League pennants and four World Series championships. His squads would win 2,040 games during his tenure, the seventh-highest win total among major league managers. He helped to establish a “Dodger Way,” which many of his former players later used to become successful managers themselves.

A member of Miami’s “Cradle of Coaches” and the College Football Hall of Fame, Bo Schembechler was a two-year letter winner (1949-50) and head coach (1963-68) with the Red and White. During his six seasons as head coach, Schembechler led Miami to a 40-17-3 record and back-to-back conference co-championships (1965-66). Schembechler then became the head coach at the University of Michigan (1969-89) and led the Wolverines to 13 Big Ten titles.

A member of Miami’s “Cradle of Coaches” and the College Football Hall of Fame, Ara Parseghian was a football letter winner (1946-47) before moving to the sidelines as an assistant coach (1950) and head coach (1951-55). Dur-ing his fi ve seasons as Miami’s head coach, Parseghian compiled a 39-6-1 record and won back-to-back Mid-American Conference Championships (1954-55). Parseghian went on to coach at Northwestern (1956-63) and Notre Dame (1964-74) where he was named National Coach of the Year in 1964.

Paul BrownPAUL BROWN

Paul BrownWALTER ALSTON

Paul BrownBO SCHEMBECHLER

Paul BrownARA PARSEGHIAN

Paul BrownWOODY HAYES

A member of Miami’s “Cradle of Coaches” and the College Football Hall of Fame, Woody Hayes served as the head coach of Miami during the 1949-50 and 1950-51 seasons. In his last year as head coach he led the RedHawks to a 9-1 record and a MAC Championship, and also led his team to a victory in the Salad Bowl. Hayes went on to coach at the Ohio State University (1951-78) where he became a fi xture for the Scarlet and Grey and quickly became recognized as one of the greatest coaches of all time. At OSU he compiled a 205-61-10 record (.761) and led the Buckeyes to fi ve national titles, 13 Big Ten championships, and four bowl victories. He is a three-time winner of the College Football Coach of the Year Award.

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Ara Parseghian Returns to Miami

The legacy of legendary college football coaches Ara Parseghian, John Pont, Bo Schembechler and Earl Blaik will be celebrated on Saturday, October 8 when the next four of nine unique statues paying tribute to the storied history of Miami University football will be unveiled at 10:30 a.m. in a public ceremony at Yager Stadium’s Cradle of Coaches Plaza.

ARA PARSEGHIAN, who in 1951 became the fi rst MU alumnus to be named Miami’s head football coach, will return to the Oxford campus for a special Friday night function and Saturday’s unveiling, while the other deceased Hall of Famers will be represented by their respective families.

Fans are invited to attend the special Friday evening reception and dinner (Oct. 7) honoring the Cradle icons at Miami University’s Shriver Center. Tickets are available for $40 each. The reception begins at 5 p.m., with dinner following at 5:30. To make a reservation, call (513) 529-8097 by Tuesday.

Those attending the Oct. 8 Miami home football game against the Cadets from West Point (1 p.m.) as well as others are invited to arrive at 10:30 a.m. to view the four statues at the Cradle of Coaches Plaza. Miami’s special guests also will be introduced to the Yager Stadium crowd during the game.

The unique Plaza statues project will be completed in the fall of 2012 when the likeness of Paul Brown, the immortal Cleveland Browns and Cincinnati Bengals coach, will be unveiled. A generous gift from the family of Thomas P. Van Voorhis is providing the crowning touches to Miami University’s Cradle of Coaches Plaza. The $1.0 million gift, provided by Daniel T. Van Voorhis—a grandson of Thomas P. Van Voorhis and a successful business-man—is being used to create nine heroic-scale fi g-ures to represent and honor legendary former Miami coaches at the heart of the “Cradle of Coaches” tradi-tion.

The statues will honor eight Miami graduates who inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame. In addition to the statues of Carm Cozza, Paul Dietzel and Weeb Ewbank that were unveiled in 2010 and the statues of Parseghian, Pont, Schembechler and Blaik that will be introduced on Oct. 8, a sculpture honoring Paul Brown will be unveiled during the fall of 2012.

The ninth sculpture, unveiled on October 3, 2009, represents and honors Thomas P. Van Voorhis, a coach, physical education instructor and athletic administrator for Miami from 1921-56 who taught many Cradle members in the classroom. A statue of Van Voorhis stands at the entrance of the Cradle of Coaches Plaza.

The Van Voorhis family spans multiple generations at Miami. Daniel T. Van Voorhis is the Co-Founder, President and Chief Executive Offi cer of Continental Communities, one of the largest owner-operators of manufactured housing and recreational vehicle communities in the United States. His father, Thom-as C. Van Voorhis, was a long-time Oxford resident. Daniel has three sons: Daniel, Jr., Richard and Rob-ert.

Each of the life-like features will be designed in a similar vocabulary with a bronze casting and will feature the coach at the height of his coaching fame. The Cradle of Coaches Plaza was fi rst inspired by a generous gift from Miami graduates and long-time supporters Bob and Marian Kurz. Their gift helped to launch the Yager Stadium renovation project. Bob Kurz coined the phrase—“The Cradle of Coach-es”.

All nine fi gures will be sculpted by renowned art-ist Kristen Visbal of Lewes, Delaware. Residents of southwest Ohio are familiar with Visbal’s sculpture of American patriot Alexander Hamilton that is prominently displayed to passers-by on High Street in downtown Hamilton. Visbal was selected for that project through an international competition, and her works can be found throughout the United States.

Historic Weekend at The Cradle

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ABOUT THE MEN BEING HONORED ON OCT. 8

ARA PARSEGHIAN: A member of Miami’s “Cradle of Coaches” and the College Football Hall of Fame, Parseghian was a football letter winner (1946-47) before moving to the sidelines as an assistant coach (1950) and then head coach (1951-55). During his fi ve seasons as Miami’s head man, Parseghian compiled a 39-6-1 record and won back-to-back Mid-American Conference Championships (1954-55). Parseghian went on to coach at Northwestern (1956-63) and Notre Dame (1964-74), where he was named National Coach of the Year in 1964. That season, Fighting Irish quarterback John Huarte won the Heisman Trophy.

JOHN PONT: Pont was a three-year letter winner (1949-51) and is one of only three Miami football players to have his number (No. 42) retired. Pont amassed 2,457 career rushing yards and 24 rushing touchdowns. A three-time all-conference and all-Ohio selection, Pont also received All-America hon-ors twice. He worked at Miami as an assistant coach (1953-55) and head coach (1956-62) before coaching at Yale (1963-64), Indiana (1965-72) and Northwestern (1973-77). He was named collegiate Coach of the Year in 1967 when he led Indiana to a share of the Big Ten title and a berth in the Rose Bowl. Pont died in 2008 at the age of 80.

BO SCHEMBECHLER: A College Football Hall of Fame member, Schembechler was a two-year letter winner (1949-50) and head coach (1963-68) with the Red and White. During his six seasons as head coach, Schem-bechler led Miami to a 40-17-3 record and back-to-back conference co-championships (1965-66). He then became the head coach at Michigan (1969-89), being named collegiate Coach of the Year in his very fi rst season at Ann Arbor. Schembechler led the Wol-verines to 13 Big Ten titles and, as a head coach, he never had a losing season. He died in 2006 at the age of 77.

EARL BLAIK: The College Football Hall of Famer was a three-year football letter winner (1915-17) and helped Miami win back-to-back Ohio Conference Champi-onships (1916-17). Blaik began his head coaching career at Dartmouth (1934-40), but he is perhaps best known for his time as head coach of the United States Military Academy (1941-58). During his 18 seasons

at West Point, Blaik guided Army to 121 wins, includ-ing back-to-back national championships (1944-45). He was named the National Coach of the Year in 1946 and coached three Heisman Trophy Winners—Doc Blanchard (1945), Glenn Davis (1946) and Pete Dawkins (1958). Blaik was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1986. He died in 1989 at the age of 92.

PAUL BROWN: An Ohio native who was a two-year Miami football letter winner (1928-29), Brown excelled as a coach at the collegiate and profes-sional levels. Brown was head coach at Ohio State (1941-43) and led the Buckeyes to their fi rst national title in 1942. Brown then served as head coach at the professional level with the Cleveland Browns (1946-62) and Cincinnati Bengals (1968-75), winning championships in the All-America Football Confer-ence and the National Football League. Brown was elected into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1967, and the current home stadium of the Bengals bears his name. He died in 1991 at the age of 82. In the fall of 2012, a statue of Brown will be erected at Yager Stadium’s Cradle of Coaches Plaza.

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Van Voorhis Gift Provides Crowning Touches

to Cradle of Coaches Plaza

A generous gift from the family of Thomas P. Van Voorhis is helping provide the crowning touches to Miami University’s Cradle of Coaches Plaza at Yager Stadium, Director of Athletics Brad Bates announced August 27, 2009.

The $1.0 million Van Voorhis gift, provided by Daniel T. Van Voorhis—a grandson of Thomas P. Van Voorhis and a successful businessman—is being used to create nine heroic-scale fi gures to represent and honor legendary former Miami coaches at the heart of the “Cradle of Coaches” tradition.

The statues, located behind the south end zone, will complete the plaza while honoring eight Miami graduates who have earned recognition as national collegiate or professional coaches of the year and/or been inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame. The list includes Earl “Red” Blaik, Weeb Ewbank, Paul Brown, Paul Dietzel, Ara Parseghian, John Pont, Bo Schembechler and Carm Cozza. Four more bronze life-like sculp-tures will be unveiled during the fall of 2011.

The ninth sculpture, unveiled on October 3, 2009, represents and honors Thomas P. Van Voorhis, a coach, physical education instructor and athletic administrator for Miami from 1921-56 who taught many Cradle members in the classroom. A statue of Van Voorhis stands at the entrance of the Cradle of Coaches Plaza.

The family of Thomas P. Van Voorhis was joined by sculptor Kristen Visbal (far left)

and Bob Kurz (middle), who coined the phrase “The Cradle of Coaches”.

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Carm CozzaStatue dedicated in 2010 Statue dedicated in 2010 Statue dedicated in 2010

Paul Dietzel Weeb Ewbank

The Van Voorhis family spans multiple generations at Miami, beginning with Tom, and continuing through Daniel, Jr., a Miami sophomore. Daniel T. Van Voorhis is the Co-Founder, President and Chief Executive Offi cer of Con-tinental Communities, one of the largest owner-operators of manufactured housing and recreational vehicle commu-nities in the United States. His father, Thomas C. Van Voorhis, was a long-time Oxford resident. Daniel has three sons: Daniel, Jr., Richard and Robert.

Each of the life-like features will be designed in a similar vocabulary with a bronze casting and will feature the coach at the height of his coaching fame. The casting will be installed on pedestals that already exist within the Cradle of Coaches Plaza. “We are extremely grateful to Dan and his family for their generous gift to Miami University,” said Bates. “This signifi cant contribution will ensure that Miami’s exceptional and distinct legacy as the Cradle of Coaches is forever cel-ebrated at Yager Stadium in an outdoor museum. Mr. Van Voorhis’ powerful infl uence as a professor at Miami is clearly refl ected in the accomplishments and leadership of these extraordinary former students.”

In addition to the sculptures, a portion of the $1.0 million gift from the Van Voorhis family is ear-marked for Miami’s Bicentennial Student Center (BSC).

“I am very pleased and delighted to facilitate the completion of Miami’s Cradle of Coaches Plaza and forever honor a group of the most well-respected football coaches at the collegiate and professional levels, all of whom began their illustrious careers at Miami,” said Van Voorhis. “I am also extremely proud to fulfi ll my family’s dream of assuring that my grandfather’s distinguished legacy continues to be a part of Miami’s heritage. His 35-year career at this fabled institution was such an important part of his life and of our very fond memories of him.”

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The Cradle of Coaches Plaza was fi rst inspired by a generous gift from Miami graduates and long-time support-ers Bob and Marian Kurz. Their gift helped to launch the Yager Stadium renovation project. It was a fi tting renovation, as Bob Kurz coined the phrase—“The Cradle of Coaches”.

“When I fi rst typed ‘Cradle of Coaches’ in a news release in 1959, I never imagined the impact it would have. My wife and I are tremendously grateful to the Van Voorhis family and the Miami family for helping us realize that dreams do come true,” said Kurz.

Cradle of CoachesStatue Honorees in Fall of 2011

Earl Blaik Ara Parseghian John Pont Bo Schembechler

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REDHAWK FEATURE LINKS

Brad Bednar

http://www.daytondailynews.com/dayton-sports/miami-university-red-hawks/miami-center-moves-to-right-tackle-1227552.html

Austin Boucher

http://www.journal-news.com/hamilton-sports/miami-university-red-hawks/boucher-beefs-up-for-qb-position--1220702.html

Zac Dysert

http://www.journal-news.com/hamilton-sports/miami-university-red-hawks/dyserts-detour-leads-from-ice-rink-to-gridiron-1240673.html

Nick Harwell

http://www.journal-news.com/hamilton-sports/miami-university-red-hawks/redhawks-receiver-harwell-is-making-up-for-lost-time-1258019.html

Pat Hinkel

http://www.western-star.com/lebanon-oh-sports/miami-university-red-hawks/hinkels-studies-pay-off -for-miami-defense-1231161.html

Kelvin Jackson

http://www.journal-news.com/hamilton-sports/miami-university-red-hawks/jackson-surges-into-the-mix-at-nose-tackle-1237253.html

Tyrone Jones

http://www.muredhawks.com/sports/m-footbl/spec-rel/081511aac.html

Luke Kelly

http://www.journal-news.com/hamilton-sports/miami-university-red-hawks/junior-linebacker-recovers-from-knee-injury-1244427.html

Ryan Kennedy

http://www.journal-news.com/hamilton-sports/miami-university-redhawks/redhawks-make-a-change-move-outside-linebacker-to-mid-dle-1225858.html

John Klacik

http://www.journal-news.com/hamilton-sports/miami-university-redhawks/d-ii-job-prepares-miamis-off ensive-coordinator-1197766.html

Anthony Kokal

http://www.vindy.com/news/2011/sep/23/miami8217s-kokal-starts-well-eyes-anothe37/

Na’eem Outler

http://www.daytondailynews.com/dayton-sports/miami-university-red-hawks/miami-defensive-end-plays-with-urgency-1231883.html

John Pont

http://www.oxfordpress.com/oxford-sports/miami-university-redhawks/grandson-carrying-on-legacy-of-legend-pont-1235077.html

Pete Rekstis

http://www.journal-news.com/hamilton-sports/miami-university-red-hawks/new-coordinator-ready-to-lead-d-1196711.html

Jake Richardson

http://www.oxfordpress.com/oxford-sports/miami-university-redhawks/former-punter-joins-miami-coaching-staff -1230452.html

Jason Semmes

http://www.journal-news.com/hamilton-sports/miami-university-redhawks/defensive-end-semmes-comfortable-after-year-with-red-hawks-1222354.html

Don Treadwell

http://www.muredhawks.com/sports/m-footbl/spec-rel/053011aab.htmlhttp://nky.cincinnati.com/article/AB/20110801/SPT01/108020323/New-staff -instills-lessons-Miami-football-history

http://news.cincinnati.com/article/20110830/SPT01/308300085/Miami-off ense-can-learn-from-Treadwell?odyssey=tab|topnews|text|Sports

http://www.columbiatribune.com/news/2011/sep/03/redhawks-new-coach-relish-miami-tradition/?tigerextra

JoJo Williams

http://www.daytondailynews.com/dayton-sports/miami-university-red-hawks/miamis-williams-embraces-move-to-center-1253389.html

Lyman “Tootie” Wooten

http://www.muredhawks.com/sports/m-footbl/spec-rel/081311aaa.htmlhttp://www.journal-news.com/hamilton-sports/miami-university-red-hawks/redhawks-recall-tootie-fondly-1259049.html

Jake Wurzelbacher

http://www.journal-news.com/hamilton-sports/miami-university-red-hawks/badin-grad-in-the-mix-for-mu-1235653.html

Recruiting

http://www.journal-news.com/hamilton-sports/miami-university-red-hawks/redhawks-recruit-ohio-talent-1219328.html

Team

http://www.journal-news.com/hamilton-sports/miami-university-red-hawks/mu-team-to-beat-in-mac-east-1215833.htmlhttp://www.nationalfootballauthority.com/2011/08/miami-redhawks-look-to-return-to.html

***

Game one – at Missouri (9/3/11)

http://www.journal-news.com/hamilton-sports/miami-university-redhawks/mu-falls-in-treadwells-debut--1245662.html

Game two – at Minnesota (9/17/11)

http://www.daytondailynews.com/dayton-sports/miami-univer-sity-redhawks/redhawks-comeback-attempt-falls-short-1255103.html

Game three – vs. Bowling Green (9/24/11)

http://www.journal-news.com/hamilton-sports/miami-university-redhawks/miami-loses-home-opener-1259025.html

Game four – vs. Cincinnati (10/1/11)

http://www.fairfi eld-echo.com/fairfi eld-sports/miami-university-redhawks/miami-struggles-badly-against-cincinnati-1262651.html

REDHAWK FEATURE LINKS

Page 32: Game 5 • vs. Army

2011 Football32

2011 Game-by-Game Recaps

MIAMI 6

MISSOURI (21/21) 17

September 3, 2011 Memorial Stadium • Columbia, Mo. Attendance: 58,313

Sweltering temperatures and a highly-ranked Missouri team halted Miami’s six-game winning streak as the Tigers spoiled Don Treadwell’s debut as the RedHawks coach, 17-6. Erik Finklea rushed for 71 yards and a touchdown on 10 carries, while Zac Dysert completed 26 of 39 passes for 194 yards. Unlike last year when Missouri dominated 51-13, Miami was in the 2011 season opener until late in the fourth quarter. Miami had a chance to score the fi rst points of the game, but Mason Krysinski missed a 41-yard fi eld goal on the fi rst possession, spoiling a 12-play, 56-yard drive. Missouri countered to take a 7-0 lead, scoring on a fi ve-yard run with 4:23 left in the fi rst. The 21st-ranked Tigers added a 38-yard fi eld goal at the 5:59 mark of the second to open a 10-0 lead, but Miami answered back. Starting at their own 20, the RedHawks moved to the Mizzou 11, but the threat ended when Dysert’s third-down pass was intercepted in the endzone. Miami got on the board midway through the third on Finklea’s 10-yard run with 7:55 left. The burst around the right end capped a three-play, 14-yard drive that was set up by sophomore Dayonne Nunley’s seventh career interception. However, the extra point was missed, keeping the score 10-6. Missouri capitalized on a short fi eld after an exchange of punts. A 28-yard pass advanced the ball to the 13, then Mizzou scored its second touchdown on a 10-yard pass two plays later. That made the score 17-6. On the next possession, Miami tried to rally, driving to the Missouri 30. But the drive stalled on fourth and seventh to keep the diff erence at 11. Miami got to midfi eld once again late in the quarter, but Zac Dysert was sacked and fumbled, helping the Tigers run out the clock. Miami fi nished the contest with 270 yards of off ense, compared to 291 for the Tigers. However, the RedHawks out-passed Missouri 194 yards to 129. Senior Chris Givens had seven catches for 71 yards, while true freshman David Frazier added six receptions for 55 yards in his collegiate debut.

Miami 0 0 6 0 — 6Missouri 7 3 0 7 — 17

SCORING SUMMARY

First Quarter4:23 MU—Franklin 5-yd run (Ressel kick)

Second Quarter5:59 MU —Ressel 38-yd fi eld goal

Third Quarter7:55 Mia—Finklea 10-yd run (Krysinski kick failed)14:55 MU—Lucas 10-yd pass from franklin (Ressel kick)

Fourth Quarternone

TEAM STATISTICS .................................................. MIA ...........................MUFirst Downs .................................................................................. 19 ....................................15Rushes-Yards .........................................................................36-76 ........................... 37-162Passes (A-C-I) .....................................................................34-25-1 ..........................23-17-1Passing Yards .............................................................................194 ..................................129Plays-Total Yards ................................................................ 75-270 ........................... 63-291Punts-Average .....................................................................6-33.5 .............................7-44.7Fumbles-Lost ..............................................................................3-1 ...................................0-0Penalties-Yards ....................................................................... 6-33 ................................9-81Third Down Conv ...............................................................8 of 18 ........................... 3 of 13Possession Time ................................................................... 33:44 ..............................26:16

INDIVIDUAL LEADERSRushing — MIA: Finklea 19-71; Bey 4-5; Jones 2-5; Givens 2-1; Semmes 2-1; Scott 1-1; Dysert 6-minus 8. MU: Franklin 14-72; Josey 6-43; Moore 6-23; Moe, 2-14; Lawrence 9-10.Passing — MIA: Dysert 26-39-1-194. MU: Franklin 17-26-1-129.Receiving — MIA: Givens 7-71; Frazier 6-55; Cruse 4-40; Bruton 3-12; Bey 3-Minus 3; Scott 2-16; Culpepper 1-3. MU: Moe 6-56; Kemp 3-24; Moore 2-17; Egnew 2-12; Lucas 1-10; Sasser 1-4; Washington 1-4; Lawrence 1-2.

MIAMI 23

MINNESOTA 29

September 17, 2011 TCF Bank Stadium • Minneapolis, Minn. Attendance: 49,950

A dramatic fi nish came up just short as Miami was edged by Minnesota, 29-23. Deep inside Golden Gopher territory and with the fi nal seconds ticking off , Chris Givens went up for the game-winner, but the pass was broken up. Zac Dysert completed 27-of-47 passes for 325 yards and two touchdowns. He moved into fi fth place on Miami’s career passing list by topping the 300-yard mark for the seventh time in his career. Nick Harwell hauled in 12 receptions for 162 yards, tying Eddie Tilltiz (2001 at Hawaii) for fourth on Miami’s single-game reception chart. Miami took a quick 3-0 lead on its opening possession with a seven-play, 75-yard drive. Sophomore Mason Krysinski kicked a 22-yard fi eld goal, the fi rst of his career. The score was set up by a 66-yard catch-and-run by Harwell down to the Minnesota 9-yard line. The Golden Gophers answered right back, though, converting a 33-yarder to tie the game at 3-3. In the second quarter, Minnesota scored on back-to-back possessions -- a four-yard run and 19-yard fi eld goal -- to open a 10-point lead, but Miami closed to within 13-10 late in the half on a one-yard plunge by Erik Finklea. Minnesota opened the second half with its third fi eld goal for a 16-10 lead, but Dysert and Harwell connected on a 32-yard pass to the UM 8 to set up Givens for a seven-yard catch two plays later. Looking to take its fi rst lead, Miami fumbled the PAT snap, keeping the game tied. The Gophers retook the lead early in the fourth quarter with a one-yard touchdown pass, then added another score on a blocked punt return. The PAT was no good, though, and the Golden Gophers held a 29-16 edge. Dawan Scott tallied his fi rst career touchdown on a 26-yard throw from a scrambling Dysert to close the gap to 29-23, before Miami’s defense allowed for one fi nal try at the upset. The RedHawks marched 46 yards down to 20, but had two incomplete passes as time expired.

Miami 3 7 6 7 — 23Minnesota 3 10 3 13 — 29

SCORING SUMMARY

First Quarter12:02 Mia—Krysinski 22-yd fi eld goal8:37 UM—Hawthorne 33-yd fi eld goal

Second Quarter9:30 UM—Hawthorne 19-yd fi eld goal0:19 Mia—Finklea 1-yd run (Krysinski kick)

Third Quarter8:32 UM—Hawthorne 26-yd fi eld goal5:24 Mia—Givens 7-yd pass from Dysert (TEAM rush fumbled)

Fourth Quarter14:23 UM—Rabe 1-yd pass from Gray (Hawthorne kick)10:23 UM—Bennett 4-yd blocked punt return (Hawthorne kick failed)7:49 Mia—Scott 26-yd pass from Dysert (Krysinski kick)

TEAM STATISTICS .................................................. MIA ...........................UMFirst Downs .................................................................................. 17 ....................................18Rushes-Yards .........................................................................21-80 .......................... 47-236Passes (A-C-I) .....................................................................48-27-1 ..........................21-11-0Passing Yards .............................................................................325 ..................................163Plays-Total Yards ................................................................ 69-405 .......................... 68-399Punts-Average .....................................................................5-38.0 ............................ 3-46.0Fumbles-Lost ..............................................................................0-0 ...................................0-0Penalties-Yards ..........................................................................0-0 ................................4-25Third Down Conv ...............................................................7 of 16 ........................... 3 of 13Possession Time ................................................................... 25:01 ..............................34:59

INDIVIDUAL LEADERSRushing — MIA: Finklea 15-54; Scott 2-14; Dysert 3-10; Harwell 1-2. UM: Gray 25-171; Kirkwood 13-55; Bennett 7-12; McKnight 1-0; Team 1-minus 2.Passing — MIA: Dysert 27-47-1-325; Team 0-1-0-0.. UM: Gray 11-21-0-163.Receiving — MIA: Harwell 12-162; Givens 7-84; Scott 3-49; Finklea 2-15; Cruse 2-15; Bruton 1-0. UM: Moulton 4-72; McKnight 3-27; Lair 2-55; Green 1-8; Rabe 1-1.

Page 33: Game 5 • vs. Army

2011 Football 33

2011 Game-by-Game Recaps

BOWLING GREEN 37

MIAMI 23

September 24, 2011 Yager Stadium • Oxford, Ohio Attendance: 20,828

Sophomore Nick Harwell posted his second-straight 100-yard receiving with eight catches for 139 yards, but Miami dropped its home and conference opener to Bowling Green, 37-23. There were 20,828 fans on hand, the third-largest crowd since the stadium was renovated in 2005. The RedHawks trailed just 20-17 at halftime after a career-long 45-yard fi eld goal by sophomore Mason Krysinski as time expired but could not overcome the Falcons in the second half. Junior quarterback Zac Dysert completed 25 passes on 40 attempts for 265 yards and two interceptions and scored one of two rushing touchdowns for the Red and White. A pair of turnovers led to the fi rst two scores of the game. After a BG fumble recovery on the Miami 18-yard line, the Falcons opened a 6-0 lead on a short touchdown run, but missed the extra point. After Miami was forced to punt, RedHawk Wes Williams picked off a pass at the six and stolled into the endzone to give Miami a 7-6 edge. Bowling Green jumped back on top midway through the second quarter on a four-yard touchdown pass`, but Erik Finklea responded with his third rushing touchdown in as many games to put Miami back, 14-13. With less than two minutes left in the fi rst half, Bowling Green’s Ray Hutson blocked a Zac Murphy punt and took over possession at the Miami 1. On the very next play, a short pass gave the Falcons the lead for good. Krysinski’s kick made the score 20-17 going into the half. Momentum swung early in the third quarter. A 72-yard kickoff return by Dayonne Nunley put Miami deep into Falcon territory. The RedHawks reached the 1, but were stopped on fourth down. BGSU marched down the fi eld, capping a 16-play drive that took more than eight minutes off the clock with a 7-yard touchdown pass. Bowling Green 6 14 7 10 — 37Miami 0 17 0 6 — 23

SCORING SUMMARY

First Quarter3:15 BGSU - Hopgood 2 yd run (Burkhardt kick failed)

Second Quarter13:44 Mia — Williams 6 yd interception return (Krysinski kick)9:22 BGSU —Bayer 4 yd pass from Schilz (Stein kick)6:06 Mia —Finklea 1 yd run (Krysinski kick)1:47 BGSU —Montgomery 1 yd pass from Schilz (Stein kick)0:00 Mia —Krysinski 45 yd fi eld goal

Third Quarter3:23 BGSU —Jorden 7 yd pass from Schilz (Stein kick)

Fourth Quarter14:17 BGSU —Stein 35 yd fi eld goal11:03 Mia —Dysert 1 yd run (Krysinski kick failed)10:04 BGSU —Samuel 96 yd run (Stein kick)

TEAM STATISTICS ................................................BGSU ..........................MIAFirst Downs .................................................................................. 15 ....................................19Rushes-Yards ...................................................................... 38-127 ............................. 31-43Passes (A-C-I) .....................................................................24-19-1 ......................... 40-25-2Passing Yards .............................................................................183 ..................................265Plays-Total Yards ................................................................ 62-310 ...........................71-308Punts-Average .....................................................................5-40.8 ............................ 5-29.4Fumbles-Lost ..............................................................................2-1 .................................. 1-1Penalties-Yards ....................................................................... 3-32 ................................6-41Third Down Conv ...............................................................5 of 12 ........................... 4 of 13Possession Time ................................................................... 32:09 ..............................27:51

INDIVIDUAL LEADERSRushing — BG: Samuel 16-121; Martin 3-15; Hopgood 9-12; Cooper 1-12; TEAM 3-minus 10; Schilz 6-minus 23. MIA: Finklea 9-25; Dysert 15-8; Green 5-7; Harwell 1-2; Scott 1-1.Passing — BG: Schilz 19-24-1-183. MIA: Dysert 25-40-2-265.Receiving — BG: Jorden 9-91; Cooper 3-51; Joplin 1-14; Hutson 1-12; Hodges 1-6; Beck 1-5; Bayer 1-4; Montgomery 1-1; Hopgood 1-minus 1. MIA: Harwell 8-139; Cruse 5-40; Frazier 5-31; Green 4-22; Givens 2-30; Bruton 1-3.

CINCINNATI 27

MIAMI 0

October 1, 2011 Yager Stadium • Oxford, Ohio Attendance: 16,408

Sophomore Nick Harwell became just the second player in Miami history to record three straight 100-yard receiving games and junio Zac Dysert climbed another notch on the career passing list, but it was not enough to reclaim the Victory Bell from Cincinnati. The 27-0 defeat marked just the second time Miami was shutout in the 34-year history of Yager Stadium. Harwell led all receivers with 149 yards on six catches to join Martin Nance, who had streaks of four and three games during his career. Zac Dysert completed 19 of 33 attempts for 252 yards, pushing him past Sam Ricketts for fourth place. Miami caught a couple of breaks in the fi rst half in the form of timely turnovers by the Bearcats’ off ense and only trailed 6-0 at the break. The RedHawks started the second half with a bang, as Dysert connected with Harwell on a 66-yard pass on the Red and White’s fi rst play from scrimmage, setting up fi rst-and-goal at the one. But an off ensive interference call on a Harwell led to a missed 34-yard fi eld goal. Cincinnati answered with a four-play, 80-yard drive highlighted by a 72-yard catch-and-run that put the Bearcats at the 3-yard line. With 2:02 left in the quarter, another rushing touchdown capped a 12-play, 80-yard march that made the score 20-0. On Miami’s very next drive, a fumble punt snap was recovered by Cincinnati’s JK Schaff er, who ran it in for a 17-yard touchdown. It was the 116th meeting in the Battle for the Victory Bell with Cincinnati winning its sixth straight in the series against the RedHawks. It marked the fi rst time Miami had been shutout by UC in Oxford since 1898. Cincinnati 0 6 21 0 — 27Miami 0 0 0 0 — 0

SCORING SUMMARY

First Quarternone

Second Quarter6:08 CINCY —Kelce 30-yd pass from Collaros (Miliano kick failed)

Third Quarter11:40 CINCY —Pead 3-yd run (Miliano kick)2:02 CINCY —Pead 4-yd run (Miliano kick)0:33 CINCY —Schaff er 17-yd fumble recovery (Miliano kick)

Fourth Quarternone

TEAM STATISTICS .................................................... UC ..........................MIAFirst Downs .................................................................................. 19 ....................................14Rushes-Yards ...................................................................... 40-147 ...............................38--3Passes (A-C-I) .....................................................................30-16-2 ..........................35-21-1Passing Yards .............................................................................251 ..................................267Plays-Total Yards ................................................................ 70-398 ...........................73-264Punts-Average .....................................................................7-42.4 .......................... 11-33.1Fumbles-Lost ..............................................................................2-2 .................................. 2-1Penalties-Yards ....................................................................... 5-40 ............................. 8-105Third Down Conv ...............................................................7 of 16 ........................... 3 of 17Possession Time ................................................................... 29:50 ..............................30:10

INDIVIDUAL LEADERSRushing — UC: Collaros 15-89; Pead 18-49; Poteat 3-5; Woods 1-3; Abernathy 3-1. MIA: Finklea 12-18; Dupuy 5-15; Jones 5-14; Harwell 1-minus 6; Boucher 2-minus 7; Green 2-minus 8; Dysert 10-minus 14; TEAM 1-minus 15.Passing — UC: Collaros 16-30-2-251. MIA: Dysert19-33-1-252; Boucher 2-2-0-15. 5-40-2-265.Receiving — UC: JMcClung 6-64; Thompkins 5-73; Pead 2-5; Robinson 1-72; Kelce 1-30; Winn 1-7. MIA: Harwell 6-149; Dupuy 6-31; Frazier 4-45; Cruse 4-32; Wurzelbacher1-10.

Page 34: Game 5 • vs. Army

2011 Football34

The Automated ScoreBookMIAMI Overall Team Statistics (as of Oct 01, 2011)

All games

Team Statistics MIAMI OPPSCORING 52 110 Points Per Game 13.0 27.5FIRST DOWNS 69 67 R u s h i n g 19 38 P a s s i n g 45 27 P e n a l t y 5 2RUSHING YARDAGE 196 672 Yards gained rushing 378 796 Yards lost rushing 182 124 Rushing Attempts 126 162 Average Per Rush 1.6 4.1 Average Per Game 49.0 168.0 TDs Rushing 4 6PASSING YARDAGE 1051 726 C o m p - A t t - I n t 99-162-5 63-101-4 Average Per Pass 6.5 7.2 Average Per Catch 10.6 11.5 Average Per Game 262.8 181.5 TDs Passing 2 6TOTAL OFFENSE 1247 1398 Total Plays 288 263 Average Per Play 4.3 5.3 Average Per Game 311.8 349.5KICK RETURNS: #-Yards 18-442 11-172PUNT RETURNS: #-Yards 8-28 10-118INT RETURNS: #-Yards 4-11 5-50KICK RETURN AVERAGE 24.6 15.6PUNT RETURN AVERAGE 3.5 11.8INT RETURN AVERAGE 2.8 10.0FUMBLES-LOST 6-3 4-3PENALTIES-Yards 20-179 21-178 Average Per Game 44.8 44.5PUNTS-Yards 26-864 22-952 Average Per Punt 33.2 43.3 Net punt average 27.2 38.4TIME OF POSSESSION/Game 2 9 : 1 2 3 0 : 4 83RD-DOWN Conversions 22/64 18/54 3rd-Down Pct 34% 33%4TH-DOWN Conversions 3/9 3/5 4th-Down Pct 33% 60%SACKS BY-Yards 10-52 15-118MISC YARDS 0 0TOUCHDOWNS SCORED 7 14FIELD GOALS-ATTEMPTS 2-4 5-5ON-SIDE KICKS 0-0 0-0RED-ZONE SCORES (6-10) 60% (15-19) 79%RED-ZONE TOUCHDOWNS (5-10) 50% (10-19) 53%PAT-ATTEMPTS (4-7) 57% (11-14) 79%ATTENDANCE 37236 108263 Games/Avg Per Game 2/18618 2/54132 Neutral Site Games 0/0

Score by Quarters 1st 2nd 3rd 4th OT TotalMIAMI 3 24 12 13 0 52Opponents 16 33 31 30 0 110

Page 35: Game 5 • vs. Army

2011 Football 35

The Automated ScoreBookMIAMI Overall Individual Statistics (as of Oct 01, 2011)

All games

Rushing gp att gain loss net avg td lg avg/gFINKLEA, Erik 4 55 187 19 168 3.1 3 16 42.0JONES, Tyrone 4 7 22 3 19 2.7 0 9 4.8SCOTT, Dawan 4 4 16 0 16 4.0 0 9 4.0DUPUY, Chrishawn 1 5 18 3 15 3.0 0 12 15.0BEY, Orne 2 4 7 2 5 1.2 0 5 2.5SEMMES, Justin 3 2 1 0 1 0.5 0 1 0.3GIVENS, Chris 3 2 8 7 1 0.5 0 8 0.3GREEN, Dan 2 7 11 12 -1 -0.1 0 4 -0.5HARWELL, Nick 3 3 4 6 -2 -0.7 0 2 -0.7DYSERT, Zac 4 34 99 103 -4 -0.1 1 16 -1.0BOUCHER, Austin 2 2 5 12 -7 -3.5 0 5 -3.5TEAM 3 1 0 15 -15 -15.0 0 0 -5.0Total 4 126 378 182 196 1.6 4 16 49.0Opponents 4 162 796 124 672 4.1 6 96 168.0

Passing gp effic comp-att-int pct yds td lg avg/gDYSERT, Zac 4 113.60 97-159-5 61.0 1036 2 66 259.0BOUCHER, Austin 2 163.00 2-2-0 100.0 15 0 10 7.5TEAM 3 0.00 0-1-0 0.0 0 0 0 0.0Total 4 113.51 99-162-5 61.1 1051 2 66 262.8Opponents 4 134.44 63-101-4 62.4 726 6 72 181.5

Receiving gp no. yds avg td lg avg/gHARWELL, Nick 3 26 450 17.3 0 66 150.0GIVENS, Chris 3 16 185 11.6 1 31 61.7FRAZIER, David 4 15 131 8.7 0 17 32.8CRUSE, Andy 4 15 127 8.5 0 15 31.8DUPUY, Chrishawn 1 6 31 5.2 0 9 31.0SCOTT, Dawan 4 5 65 13.0 1 26 16.2BRUTON, Kendrick 4 5 15 3.0 0 9 3.8GREEN, Dan 2 4 22 5.5 0 18 11.0BEY, Orne 2 3 -3 -1.0 0 2 -1.5FINKLEA, Erik 4 2 15 7.5 0 10 3.8WURZELBACHER, Jak 2 1 10 10.0 0 10 5.0CULPEPPER, Willie 3 1 3 3.0 0 3 1.0Total 4 99 1051 10.6 2 66 262.8Opponents 4 63 726 11.5 6 72 181.5

Punt Returns no. yds avg td lgHARWELL, Nick 4 16 4.0 0 7GIVENS, Chris 3 7 2.3 0 6FRAZIER, David 1 5 5.0 0 5Total 8 28 3.5 0 7Opponents 10 118 11.8 1 21

Interceptions no. yds avg td lgNUNLEY, Dayonne 2 5 2.5 0 5WILLIAMS, Wes 1 6 6.0 1 6KENNEDY, Ryan 1 0 0.0 0 0Total 4 11 2.8 1 6Opponents 5 50 10.0 0 43

Kick Returns no. yds avg td lgNUNLEY, Dayonne 9 238 26.4 0 72SCOTT, Dawan 7 170 24.3 0 33BURRIS, Brison 2 34 17.0 0 18Total 18 442 24.6 0 72Opponents 11 172 15.6 0 29

Fumble Returns no. yds avg td lgTotal 0 0 0.0 0 0Opponents 1 17 17.0 1 17

Page 36: Game 5 • vs. Army

2011 Football36

The Automated ScoreBookMIAMI Overall Individual Statistics (as of Oct 01, 2011)

All games

PATScoring td fg kick rush rcv pass dxp saf ptsFINKLEA, Erik 3 - - - - - - - 18KRYSINSKI, Mason - 2-4 4-6 - - - - - 10GIVENS, Chris 1 - - - - - - - 6DYSERT, Zac 1 - - - - - - - 6WILLIAMS, Wes 1 - - - - - - - 6SCOTT, Dawan 1 - - - - - - - 6TEAM - - 0-1 - - - - - 0Total 7 2-4 4-7 - - - - - 52Opponents 14 5-5 11-14 - - - - - 110

Total Offense g plays rush pass total avg/gDYSERT, Zac 4 193 -4 1036 1032 258.0FINKLEA, Erik 4 55 168 0 168 42.0JONES, Tyrone 4 7 19 0 19 4.8SCOTT, Dawan 4 4 16 0 16 4.0DUPUY, Chrishawn 1 5 15 0 15 15.0BOUCHER, Austin 2 4 -7 15 8 4.0BEY, Orne 2 4 5 0 5 2.5SEMMES, Justin 3 2 1 0 1 0.3GIVENS, Chris 3 2 1 0 1 0.3GREEN, Dan 2 7 -1 0 -1 -0.5HARWELL, Nick 3 3 -2 0 -2 -0.7TEAM 3 2 -15 0 -15 -5.0Total 4 288 196 1051 1247 311.8Opponents 4 263 672 726 1398 349.5

Field Goals fg pct. 01-19 20-29 30-39 40-49 50-99 lg blkKRYSINSKI, Mason 2-4 50.0 0-0 1-1 0-1 1-2 0-0 45 0

FG Sequence MIAMI OpponentsMissouri 41 (38)Minnesota (22) (33),(19),(26)Bowling Green (45) (35)CINCINNATI 34 -

Numbers in (parentheses) indicate field goal was made.

Punting no. yds avg lg tb fc i20 50+ blkMURPHY, Zac 16 588 36.8 51 0 3 3 1 1KOKAL, Anthony 7 226 32.3 61 2 0 0 2 0DYSERT, Zac 2 50 25.0 26 0 0 2 0 0TEAM 1 0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 1Total 26 864 33.2 61 2 3 5 3 2Opponents 22 952 43.3 59 4 1 8 5 0

Kickoffs no. yds avg tb ob retn net ydlnKRYSINSKI, Mason 12 663 55.2 0 1Total 12 663 55.2 0 1 15.6 40.9 29Opponents 23 1479 64.3 5 0 24.6 40.7 29

All Purpose g rush rcv pr kr ir total avg/gHARWELL, Nick 3 -2 450 16 0 0 464 154.7SCOTT, Dawan 4 16 65 0 170 0 251 62.8NUNLEY, Dayon 4 0 0 0 238 5 243 60.8GIVENS, Chris 3 1 185 7 0 0 193 64.3FINKLEA, Erik 4 168 15 0 0 0 183 45.8FRAZIER, David 4 0 131 5 0 0 136 34.0CRUSE, Andy 4 0 127 0 0 0 127 31.8DUPUY, Chrisha 1 15 31 0 0 0 46 46.0BURRIS, Brison 4 0 0 0 34 0 34 8.5GREEN, Dan 2 -1 22 0 0 0 21 10.5JONES, Tyrone 4 19 0 0 0 0 19 4.8BRUTON, Kendr 4 0 15 0 0 0 15 3.8WURZELBACH 2 0 10 0 0 0 10 5.0WILLIAMS, Wes 3 0 0 0 0 6 6 2.0CULPEPPER, W 3 0 3 0 0 0 3 1.0BEY, Orne 2 5 -3 0 0 0 2 1.0SEMMES, Justin 3 1 0 0 0 0 1 0.3DYSERT, Zac 4 -4 0 0 0 0 -4 -1.0BOUCHER, Aust 2 -7 0 0 0 0 -7 -3.5TEAM 3 -15 0 0 0 0 -15 -5.0Total 4 196 1051 28 442 11 1728 432.0Opponents 4 672 726 118 172 50 1738 434.5

Page 37: Game 5 • vs. Army

2011 Football 37

The Automated ScoreBookMIAMI Overall Defensive Statistics (as of Oct 01, 2011)

All games

Tackles Sacks Pass defense Fumbles blkd## Defensive Leaders gp ua a tot tfl/yds no-yds int-yds brup qbh rcv-yds ff kick saf18 KOKAL, Anthony 4 13 13 26 1.5-3 . . . . 1-0 1 . .37 HINKEL, Pat 4 13 11 24 0.5-3 . . . . . . . .69 DIAZ, Will 4 14 6 20 5.5-17 1.0-4 . . 1 . . . .3 NUNLEY, Dayonne 4 13 6 19 2.5-4 . 2-5 3 . . . . .90 BROWN, Austin 4 10 8 18 3.5-18 1.0-7 . 1 1 . . . .43 WEDGE, Jerrell 3 8 10 18 2.0-3 0.5-1 . 1 . . . . .5 KENNEDY, Ryan 3 12 6 18 3.0-14 1.0-7 1-0 . . . . . .32 SWANSON, Jaytee 4 8 8 16 2.0-9 1.0-6 . . . . . . .38 TUCKER, Tyler 4 8 6 14 1.5-5 . . . . . . . .9 WILLIAMS, Wes 3 6 6 12 1.5-6 1.5-6 1-6 . . . . . .93 SEMMES, Jason 4 7 5 12 2.5-15 2.0-13 . 1 . 1-0 . . .6 BROWN, D.J. 4 8 3 11 . . . 1 . 1-0 . . .14 QUARLES, Demetrius 4 8 2 10 . . . . . . . . .30 HARRIS, Evan 4 5 5 10 0.5-0 . . . . . . . .10 MARCK, C.J. 4 9 1 10 3.0-10 1.0-7 . . . . . . .94 JOHNS, Mike 3 3 2 5 2.0-5 . . . . . . . .35 BURRIS, Brison 4 4 . 4 . . . . . . 1 . .48 WADE, Chris 3 2 2 4 . . . . . . . . .29 BOWERS, Justin 4 2 2 4 1.0-3 . . . 1 . . . .79 BROWN, Jordain 4 2 2 4 0.5-1 . . . . . . . .44 BOUCHER, Collin 4 2 1 3 . . . . . . . . .36 KELLY, Luke 4 2 1 3 . . . . . . . . .54 JACKSON, Kelvin 4 1 2 3 . . . . . . . . .17 GIVENS, Chris 3 1 1 2 . . . . . . . . .15 CRUSE, Andy 4 1 . 1 . . . . . . . . .8 HARWELL, Nick 3 . 1 1 . . . . . . . . .27 JONES, Jarrell 1 1 . 1 . . . . . . . . .20 LAWSON, Roman 3 1 . 1 . . . . . . . . .26 TAYLOR, Dante 2 . 1 1 . . . . . . . . .

Total 4 164 111 275 33-116 10-52 4-11 7 3 3-0 2 . .Opponents 4 175 87 262 25-156 15-118 5-50 13 9 3-17 3 2 .

Page 38: Game 5 • vs. Army

2011 Football38

2011 Miami Football Start ChartOff ense WR LT LG C RG RT TE WR QB TB WR

at Missouri Givens Bednar Anevski J. Williams Brooks Kennedy Bruton Cruse Dysert Finklea Frazier

at Minnesota Givens Bednar Anevski J. Williams Brooks Lewis White Cruse Dysert Scott (WR) Frazier

Bowling Green Givens Bednar Matthews Anevski Brooks Lewis Scott (WR) Cruse Dysert Finklea Harwell

Cincinnati Culpepper C. Brown Anevski Bednar Brooks Lewis Bruton Cruse Dysert Jones Harwell

Army

at Kent State

at Toledo

Buff alo

Akron

at Temple

W. Michigan

at Ohio

Defense BUCK NT DT DE SLB MLB WLB CB FS SS CB

at Missouri W. Williams J. Brown A. Brown Diaz Quarles (Nck) Wedge Harris D.J. Brown Kokal Hinkel Nunley

at Minnesota W. Williams J. Brown A. Brown Semmes Tucker Kennedy Wedge Quarles Kokal Hinkel Nunley

Bowling Green W. Williams Johns A. Brown Diaz Tucker Kennedy Swanson Quarles Kokal Hinkel Nunley

Cincinnati C.J. Marck Johns A. Brown Semmes Bowers (Nick) Kennedy Swanson D.J. Brown Kokal Hinkel Nunley

Army

at Kent State

at Toledo

Buff alo

Akron

at Temple

W. Michigan

at Ohio

Name, Pos. ....... Starts (Consecutive)

Brandon Brooks, OL ...................... 35 (11)Brad Bednar, OL .............................. 30 (28)Austin Brown, DL ........................... 27 (21)Chris Givens, WR ................................27 (0)Jerrell Wedge, LB ...............................27 (0)Evan Harris, LB ...................................25 (0)Zac Dysert, QB ...................................23 (4)David “D.J.” Brown, DB .....................22 (1)Matt Kennedy, OL .............................22 (0)Pat Hinkel, DB .................................. 19 (18)Kendrick Bruton, TE ..........................19 (1)Anthony Kokal, DB ...........................18 (4)Andy Cruse, WR .................................16 (6)

Name, Pos. ....... Starts (Consecutive)

Dayonne Nunley, DB..................... 15 (10)Josh Harvey, OL .................................14 (0)Jason Semmes, DL ............................14 (1)Mike Johns, DL ...................................13 (2)Jordain Brown, DL ............................12 (0)Wes Williams, LB ................................10 (3)Nick Harwell, WR ...............................10 (2)Joseph “JoJo” Williams, OL (was DL) .. 8 (0)C.J. Marck, LB ........................................ 8 (1)Justin Bowers, DB ............................... 7 (1)Demetrius Quarles, DB ..................... 6 (0)Ryan Kennedy, LB ............................... 6 (3)John Anevski, OL................................. 5 (4)

Name, Pos. ....... Starts (Consecutive)

Will Diaz, DL .......................................... 5 (0)Luke Kelly, LB ........................................ 5 (0)Cory Brown, OL .................................... 4 (1)Austin Boucher, QB ............................ 4 (0)Mwanza Wamulumba, DL ................ 4 (0)Zach Lewis, OL ..................................... 3 (3)Justin Semmes, RB.............................. 3 (0)Erik Finklea, RB ..................................... 2 (2)Dawan Scott, WR ................................. 2 (2)Tyler Tucker, LB .................................... 2 (2)Jaytee Swanson, LB ............................ 2 (2)David Frazier, WR ................................ 2 (0)Steve Marck, TE .................................... 2 (0)

Name, Pos. ....... Starts (Consecutive)

Luke Swift, WR...................................... 2 (0)Marcus Matthews, OL ........................ 1 (1)Willie Culpepper, WR ......................... 1 (1)Tyrone Jones, RB ................................. 1 (1)Dustin White, TE .................................. 1 (0)Roman Lawson, RB ............................. 1 (0)

THE START CHART ...

Page 39: Game 5 • vs. Army

2011 Football 39

2011 Game-by-Game StatsGame Score First Rushing Passing Tot. Off Fum- Pen.- Third Poss.

Downs No. -Yds.-TD C-A-I-Yds-TD Pl.-Yds. Lost Yards Downs Time

Miami 6 19 36-76-1 26-39-1-194-0 75-270 3-1 6-33 8 of 18 33:44

at M issouri 17 15 37-162-1 17-26-1-129-1 63-291 0-0 9-81 3 of 13 26:16

Miami 23 17 21-80-1 27-48-1-325-2 69-405 0-0 1-0 7 of 16 25:01

at Minnesota 29 18 47-236-1 11-21-0-163-1 68-399 0-0 4-25 3 of 13 34:59

at Miami 23 19 31-43-2 25-40-2-265-0 71-308 1-1 6-40 4 of 13 27:51

Bowling Green 37 15 38-127-2 19-24-1-183-3 62-310 2-1 3-32 5 of 12 32:09

at Miami 0 14 38-(-3)-0 21-35-1-267-0 73-264 2-1 8-105 3 of 17 30:10

Cincinnati 27 19 40-147-2 16-30-2-251-1 70-398 2-2 5-40 7 of 16 29:50

at Miami

Army

Miami

at Kent State

Miami

at Toledo

at Miami

Buff alo

at Miami

Akron

Miami

at Temple

at Miami

Western Michigan

at Miami

Ohio

RUSHING Finklea Green Bey Dysert Boucher Treadwell Semmes Jones

at Missouri 19-75-1 DNP 4-5 6-(-8) DNP DNP 2-1 2-5at Minnesota 15-54 DNP DNP 3-10 DNP DNP 0-0 0-0Bowling Green 9-25-1 5-7 DNP 15-8-1 DNP DNP 0-0 0-0Cincinnati 12-18 2-(-8) 0-0 10-(-14) 2- (-7) DNP 0-0 5-14Army

at Kent Stateat ToledoBuff alo

Akron

at Temple W. Michigan

at Ohio

PASSING Dysert Boucher

at Missouri 26-39-1-194 DNPat Minnesota 24-47-1-325 DNPBowling Green 25-40-2-268 DNPCincinnati 19-33-1-252 2-2-0-15Army

at Kent Stateat ToledoBuff alo

Akron

at Temple W. Michigan

at Ohio

RECEIVING Givens Frazier Harwell Cruse Green Scott Bey Bruton Swift White Culpepper Dupuy

at Missouri 7-71 6-55 DNP 4-40 DNP 2-16 3-(-3) 3-12 DNP 0-0 1-3 DNPat Minnesota 7-84-1 0-0 12-162 2-15 DNP 3-49-1 DNP 1-0 DNP 0-0 DNP DNPBowling Green 2-30 5-31 8-139 5-40 4-22 0-0 DNP 1-3 DNP 0-0 0-0 DNPCincinnati DNP 4-45 6-149 4-32 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 6-31Army

at Kent Stateat ToledoBuff alo

Akron

at Temple W. Michigan

at Ohio

Page 40: Game 5 • vs. Army

2011 Football40

TACKLES UA-A TOT MIZZ MINN BG CIN ARMY KENT TOLEDO BUFF AKRON TEMPLE WMU OHIO

KOKAL, Anthony 13-13 26 2-0 3-10 5-2 3-1HINKEL, Pat 13-11 24 7-2 3-5 1-2 2-2DIAZ, Will 14-6 20 3-1 4-1 2-4 5-0NUNLEY, Dayonne 13-6 19 4-2 3-2 3-2 3-0KENNEDY, Ryan 12-6 18 DNP 3-1 6-2 3-3WEDGE, Jerrell 8-10 18 3-1 4-8 DNP 1-1BROWN, Austin 10-8 18 2-0 3-3 4-2 1-3SWANSON, Jaytee 8-8 16 - 3-2 1-3 4-3TUCKER, Tyler 8-6 14 2-2 0-2 3-1 3-1SEMMES, Jason 7-5 12 1-1 1-1 2-1 3-2WILLIAMS, Wes 6-6 12 3-1 2-3 1-2 DNPBROWN, D.J. 8-3 11 3-2 0-1 3-0 2-0HARRIS, Evan 5-5 10 4-5 - - 1-0MARCK, C.J. 9-1 10 2-1 2-0 1-0 4-0QUARLES, D. 8-2 10 1-1 4-0 3-1 -JOHNS, Mike 3-2 5 DNP 0-1 1-1 2-0BOWERS, Justin 2-2 4 1-1 - - 1-1BURRIS, Brison 4-0 4 1-0 - 3-0 -WADE, Chris 2-2 4 1-1 1-1 DNP -BROWN, Jordain 2-2 4 1-1 - - 1-1KELLY, Luke 2-1 3 - - - 2-1BOUCHER, Collin 2-1 3 - - 2-1 -JACKSON, Kelvin 1-2 3 1-0 - - 0-2GIVENS, Chris 1-1 2 1-0 0-1 - DNPTAYLOR, Dante 0-1 1 - 0-1 DNP DNPHARWELL, Nick 0-1 1 DNP 0-1 - -JONES, Jarrell 1-0 1 DNP 1-0 DNP DNPCRUSE, Andy 1-0 1 - - - 1-0LAWSON, Roman 1-0 1 - 1-0 - DNP

SACKS UA-A TOT MIZZ MINN BG CIN ARMY KENT TOLEDO BUFF AKRON TEMPLE WMU OHIO

SEMMES, Jason 2-0 2.0 - - 1.0-9 1.0-4WILLIAMS, Wes 1-1 1.5 1.0-4 0.5-2 - DNPMARCK, C.J. 1-0 1.0 - - - 1.0-7DIAZ, Will 1-0 1.0 - - 1.0-4 -BROWN, Austin 1-0 1.0 - - 1.0-7 -SWANSON, Jaytee 1-0 1.0 - - 1.0-6 -KENNEDY, Ryan 1-0 1.0 DNP - - 1.0-7WEDGE, Jerrell 0-1 0.5 - 0.5-1 DNP -

TACKLES FOR LOSS UA-A TOT MIZZ MINN BG CIN ARMY KENT TOLEDO BUFF AKRON TEMPLE WMU OHIO

DIAZ, Will 5-1 5.5 1.0-4 2.0-6 1.5-6 1.0-1BROWN, Austin 3-1 3.5 1.0-3 - 1.0-7 1.5-8MARCK, C.J. 3-0 3.0 - 1.0-2 1.0-1 1.0-7KENNEDY, Ryan 2-2 3.0 DNP - 1.5-4 1.5-10NUNLEY, Dayonne 2-1 2.5 1.0-1 1.0-1 0.5-2 -SEMMES, Jason 2-1 2.5 - - 1.5-11 1.0-4JOHNS, Mike 2-0 2.0 DNP - 1.0-2 1.0-3SWANSON, Jaytee 1-2 2.0 - - 2.0-9 -WEDGE, Jerrell 1-2 2.0 1.0-2 1.0-1 DNP -TUCKER, Tyler 1-1 1.5 1.0-2 - - 0.5-3WILLIAMS, Wes 1-1 1.5 1.0-4 0.5-2 - DNPKOKAL, Anthony 1-1 1.5 - 0.5-1 1.0-2 -BOWERS, Justin 1-0 1.0 - - - 1.0-3HINKEL, Pat 0-1 0.5 - - - 0.5-3HARRIS, Evan 0-1 0.5 0.5-0 - - -BROWN, Jordain 0-1 0.5 0.5-1 - - -

Page 41: Game 5 • vs. Army

2011 Football 41

2011 Drive/RedZone/Possession AnalysisScoring Drive Analysis

Minus 0-9 10-19 20-29 30-39 40-49 50-59 60-69 70-79 80-89 90-99

Miami TD — — 1 — — — — 2 2 1 —

Miami FG — — — — — 1 — — 1 — —

Opponent TD — 1 1 — — 1 — 2 1 2 1

Opponent FG — — — — 2 1 1 2 — 2 —

Red Zone Analysis Miami Opponent

Game Inside Scores TD/FG Pct. Inside Scores TD/FG Pct.

at Missouri 2 1 1/0 .500 3 3 2/1 1.000

at Minnesota 4 3 2/1 .750 5 5 2/3 1.000

Bowling Green 3 2 2/0 .667 6 5 4/1 .833

Cincinnati 1 0 0/0 .000 5 2 2/0 .400

Army

at Kent State

at Toledo

Buff alo

Akron

at Temple

Western Michigan

at Ohio

Totals 10 6 5/1 .600 19 15 10/5 .789

Time of Possession

Date Opponent Score Overall 1st Qtr 2nd Qtr 3rd Qtr 4th Qtr

Sept. 3 at Missouri L, 17-6 33:44 9:09 8:09 9:47 6:39

Sept. 17 at Minnesota L, 29-23 25:01 5:36 8:31 3:08 7:46

Sept. 24 Bowling Green L, 37-23 27:51 7:36 8:13 4:27 7:35

Oct. 1 Cincinnati L, 27-0 30:10 5:24 10:46 7:23 6:37

Oct. 8 Army

Oct. 15 at Kent State

Oct. 22 at Toledo

Oct. 29 Buff alo

Nov. 3 Akron

Nov. 9 at Temple

Nov. 16 Western Michigan

Nov. 22 at Ohio

MIAMI Total 116:46 27:45 35:39 24:45 28:37

Avg. 29:11 6:56 8:54 6:11 7:09

Opponents Total 123:14 32:15 24:21 35:15 31:23

Avg. 30:48 8:03 6:05 8:48 7:50

Page 42: Game 5 • vs. Army

2011 Football42

2011 20-Yard Plus PlaysYards ......... Type........... Player(s) ...............................................................Opp.72 ................... KR................... Dayonne Nunley ................................................................Bowling Green66 ................... Pass ............... Nick Harwell from Zac Dysert ........................................Cincinnati66 ................... Pass ............... Nick Harwell from Zac Dysert ........................................Minnesota48 ................... Pass ............... Nick Harwell from Zac Dysert ........................................Bowling Green47 ................... Pass ............... Nick Harwell from Zac Dysert ........................................Cincinnati33 ................... Pass ............... Nick Harwell from Zac Dysert ........................................Bowling Green33 ................... KR................... Dawan Scott ........................................................................Bowling Green32 ................... Pass ............... Nick Harwell from Zac Dysert ........................................Minnesota32 ................... KR................... Dayonne Nunley ................................................................Missouri31 ................... Pass ............... Chris Givens from Zac Dysert ........................................Minnesota31 ................... KR................... Dayonne Nunley ................................................................Bowling Green30 ................... KR................... Dawan Scott ........................................................................Minnesota27 ................... KR................... Dawan Scott ........................................................................Minnesota26 ................... KR................... Dawan Scott ........................................................................Bowling Green*26 ................. Pass ............... Dawan Scott from Zac Dysert .......................................Minnesota25 ................... Pass ............... Chris Givens from Zac Dysert ........................................Missouri23 ................... KR................... Dawan Scott ........................................................................Minnesota23 ................... KR................... Dayonne Nunley ................................................................Minnesota22 ................... Pass ............... Dawon Scott from Zac Dysert .......................................Minnesota20 ................... KR................... Dayonne Nunley ................................................................Minnesota

* touchdown scored on play

LONG PLAYS BY THE NUMBERS .........

Plays by Yards ...................... No. ..................... TD

100+ .....................................................0 ............................... 090-99 ................................................... 0 ............................... 080-89 ................................................... 0 ............................... 070-79 ................................................... 1 ............................... 060-69 ................................................... 2 ............................... 050-59 ................................................... 0 ............................... 040-49 ................................................... 2 ............................... 030-39 ................................................... 7 ............................... 020-29 ................................................... 8 ............................... 1

Plays by Type ....................... No. ..................... TD

Rushing ...............................................0 ............................... 0Passing ............................................. 10 ............................... 1Punt returns .......................................0 ............................... 0Kick returns ..................................... 10 ............................... 0Interceptions .................................... 0 ............................... 0Fumble returns .................................0 ............................... 0Other ....................................................0 ............................... 0TOTAL ............................................... 20 .............................. 1

20-YARDS PLUS BY PLAYER

Player .......................No. .. TDs .......Type

Scott, Dawan ....................7 ........ 1 ........2p, 5krHarwell, Nick ....................6 ........ 0 ........6pNunley, Dayonne ............5 ........ 0 ........5krGivens, Chris .....................2 ........ 0 ........2p

Totals ........................ 20 ...... 1 .......10p, 10 kr

Legend

P - Pass; R - Rush; KR - Kick Return; PR - Punt Return;INT - Interception

LONGEST PLAYS OF THE YEARRushing

16 Erik Finklea at Minnesota Sept. 17 Zac Dysert vs. Bowling Green Sept. 24

Rushing Touchdown

10 Erik Finklea at Missouri Sept. 3

Passing

66 Nick Harwell from Zac Dysert twice

Passing Touchdown

26 Dawan Scott from Zac Dysert at Minnesota Sept. 17

Punt Return

7 Nick Harwell vs. Bowling Green Sept. 24

Kickoff Return

72 Dayonne Nunley vs. Bowling Green Sept. 24

Interception Return

5 Dayonne Nunley at Missouri Sept. 3

Punt

61 Anthony Kokal vs. Cincinnati Oct. 1

Field Goal

45 Mason Krysinski vs. Bowling Green Sept. 24

Page 43: Game 5 • vs. Army

2011 Football 43

Notes From the Cradle

Quoting Don TreadwellThe Head Coach

(About the Cincinnati game): “In my opinion, we were playing a team that very soon will be ranked in the top 20. Without question, our team came out with the passion to play a rival opponent. To be down 6-0 at the half displayed great focus by our young men. Cincinnati is very talented. We did a great job in containing (Isaiah) Pead, their great run-ning back, and that forced their quarterback to do a lot more than he wanted to do. The outcome can really be tracked to a couple of key plays. We didn’t help ourselves on special teams when we snapped the ball over the punter’s head.”

(About Miami’s off ensive line): “Last week, they all practiced, but we made a decision on gameday to hold some of our guys out of the Cincinnati game. (Center) JoJo (Williams) has been getting better each day. It would give us fl exibility to bump (Brad) Bednar back out to tackle and allow our young guys to share time inside, instead of having to stay in there the whole time.”

(About new running back Chrishawn Dupuy): “We’ve been looking for a guy to give us an electric charge and he’s pretty special with the ball in his hands. We’re just going to continue to give him more and more of a role.”

(About wide receiver Nick Harwell): “He has shown big-play ability, but a lot of his suc-cess was due to Zac (Dysert) threading the needle on a number of occasions. But take nothing away Nick, he does some great things with the ball in his hands.”

(About Miami’s defensive line): “We put pressure on their quarterback all day. They contained him and kept him in the pocket. Very seldom did he get outside of the pocket, which he likes to do. Our hats are off to the defensive game plan by our staff , because they put our guys in position to make the plays. That was very energizing to the whole team.”

(About his team’s focus this week): “We have told our players to keep believing. That needs to be a part of their focus.”

(About getting over the hump): “We need to believe that what we’re doing is going to put us in a position to win. When it breaks, it’s going to be just like a dam. It’s going to open up and just overfl ow. We’re excited that we’re on the fringe of success.”

(About Army’s rushing attack): “They make their bread and butter off of their running game. We have to be very disciplined as a defensive unit to be where we need to be and when we’re supposed to be there. They’re going to keep challenging you in a variety of ways. But it will be fun because it’s diff erent from what we’ve faced the last four games.”

(About the unveiling of four more Cradle of Coaches statues): “It’s so signifi cant because it speaks to our tradition of excellence in coaching. The Van Voorhis statue talks about coaching as teaching and that’s so unique to Miami. We have had a lot of educators who have taken pride in motivating their students. We have a number of Miami Men on our staff and it will be very special to be a part of that.”