The Spreadsheet: Excel2003, 292kb
The FBS Spreadsheet: included here because because. Excel2003, 266kb
Saturday’s D-II Game of the Week:
Winston-Salem State reached the D-II semifinals last season. North Carolina-Pembroke missed out, but they were 8-3 on the year, with one of those losses being to the Rams. Saturday, they met up at Bowman Gray Stadium in Winston-Salem and immediately commenced a titanic struggle. The Rams got on the board first, capping a long drive with an eight-yard TD run by Maurice Lewis at the end of the first quarter. It took nine minutes, but after Winston-Salem lost a fumble at their own 10, the Braves scored three plays later on a TD pass from Luke Charles to Te’vell William. The Rams marched back downfield to retake the lead in a 21-yard toss from Kameron Smith to Tehvyn Brantley with 1:29 to go in the half; Pembroke cut the lead to 14-10 with a 43-yard Connor Haskins field goal as time expired.
Smith ducked into the end zone from the one on the Rams’ first drive of the second half, which was set up by a 77-yard Sherman Bryce kickoff return from the goal line. Ultimately, that special teams gaffe may have been the difference. Rams DB Larry Hearne picked off Charles on the Braves’ ensuing drive, but the Rams were forced to punt; nine plays later, Damonte Terry scored from seven yards out to being Pembroke back within 21-16 after they missed the PAT. The teams then slugged it out until midway through the fourth when Charles hit William for 31 yards to put the Braves on the Rams’ 30; a pass interference penalty on the next play moved Pembroke to the 15. After Terry picked up four yards, Charles tried to find the end zone but was again intercepted by Hearne to end the threat. Winston-Salem responded with a seven play, 80-yard drive culminating in a Lewis TD run and the Rams looked in control, up 28-16.
It took Luke Charles 101 seconds to cause a re-evaluation. On a drive aided by a roughing the passer penalty and three William catches for 50 yards, Charles capped things off by hitting William for 28 and a touchdown to make it 28-23; the Braves then forced the Rams to go three-and-out and took over on their own 24 with 1:06 to go. They managed to get down to the Winston-Salem 39, and had time for one more play. Charles dropped back and had plenty of time, and William seemed to get open in the end zone… but Larry Hearne again intervened, getting a hand on the ball and batting away what would have been the game-winning touchdown pass as time expired.
As always, you never know what to really make of what a season opener really means. Going off last year’s results, we can only presume that either Pembroke is a serious threat to crack the playoff field this year or that Winston-Salem has lost a step; we’ll know much more in the coming weeks, naturally.