The playoff results from the first round of the NCAA Division 3 football tournament are in, and the scores look very good for east region.
I have long argued that east teams play in deeper, stronger conferences than do many other teams across the country. Evidence of this was provided today, as east teams won 2 out of 3 cross-regional games with only national power Wesley surviving.
For the first time in a long time, the NCAA committee looked past the highly flawed Strength of Schedule metric and evaluated at-large teams based on true merit. For that reason, St. John Fisher made the tournament as a two loss team while Endicott stayed home. The committee was clearly right. Western New England, the team which beat Endicott in the NEFC, gave up 62 points to Empire 8 Salisbury. The Empire 8 runner up, St. John Fisher, upset Johns Hopkins 23-12.
Was the Fisher win truly an upset? Hopkins ran through the weak Centennial Conference with an undefeated record, scoring 83 points against Gettysburg, and outscoring its opponents by better than 30 points per game. Meanwhile Fisher played in the rugged Empire 8, and scheduled Pool C bid Hobart out of conference. Fisher beat Johns Hopkins 23-12 in Baltimore on Saturday, providing more evidence for our argument that a one or two loss season in a tough conference should not disqualify you from the playoffs.
While Johns Hopkins was finding out about the quality of upper echelon east teams, southern power Wesley found themselves in a dog fight with Liberty League champion Hobart. Wesley's only loss on the season came to...you guessed it, an east region team...when Kean beat them in September. It nearly happened again. The Hobart Statesmen trailed Wesley 35-28 late in the fourth quarter today. Hobart drove to the Wesley 5-yard line, where Wesley finally stopped them to barely hold on to their victory.
A few hundred miles to the north, NJAC champion Kean was destroying south region Christopher Newport (CNU). Kean built a 34-7 half time lead, then coasted to a 34-10 victory. Kean picked off five passes and recovered a fumble in dominating CNU. Kean survived the rugged NJAC, and played Wesley to compile an impressive 9-1 record. CNU went undefeated in the USAC, but lost out of conference to Empire 8 champion Salisbury, and Stevenson which was 1-7 in the MAC.
The record speaks for itself. CNU went 8-0 against southern teams, and 0-3 against eastern teams. And one of those losses came to an east team which won only one game in their conference.
Meanwhile, Salisbury took care of business with a 62-24 whipping of Western New England. Delaware Valley remained undefeated, storming past ECFC champion Norwich 62-10.
The ECFC champion has been outscored the last two seasons in the NCAA playoffs 122-10, starting with Alfred's 60-0 destruction of SUNY Martitime in 2010. The ECFC champion gets an automatic bid to the NCAA tournament, but it is clear they are not ready.
What was your biggest surprise from the first round of the NCAA tournament?
East Looking Strong in Playoffs
Posted by
Dan Padavona, DanPadavona.com
on Saturday, November 19, 2011
Labels:
division 3,
football,
hobart,
kean,
ncaa playoffs,
st john fisher
4 comments:
Dan this is dlip from the boards, great blog by the way! I really enjoyed reading your reflection on today's east region playoff games. I am absolutely hyped up about SJF's w. I felt they were the better team and that they really were not an underdog. I am very happy with the NCAA and there selection of the cardinals, even with SJF's 2 losses. This was an excellent day for the east, Kean definitely impressed, Salisbury took care of buisness over a completely overmatxhed WNEC team, and Hobart played a great game! Thanks again for the link to your excellent blog!
Thanks for paying me a visit Dlip! Always appreciate your takes on the D3 boards.
Stick around Dlip. I'll be talking football from an East perspective throughout the playoffs, and during the long off-season too.
Tough loss for the Statesmen but they should hold their heads up high. Taking the #7 team in D3 to the brink is nothing to be ashamed of. Great effort today by Hobart.
It is too bad they didn't get that game to OT. There's no telling how Wesley would have reacted to having the game reduced to the NCAA OT system. Great job by Hobart regardless.
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