Box Score
Last Non-League Game With Rams
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NEW HAVEN, Conn. - The last non-league game of
the 2010 Yale football season – and the first of three
straight Yale on YES games - is Saturday at noon when Fordham comes
to Yale Bowl and the Class of 1954 Field. The contest can be seen
on the YES Network, while audio is available on WELI Radio
(AM-960), weli.com and wybc.com.
YALE-FORDHAM
Yale has won four of the five games with Fordham. The Elis won the
inaugural contest 21-14 in 1950 at the Bowl. Forty-two years later,
the Bulldogs took a 31-12 decision at home. The last meetings were
in 2000 (24-17) at Coffey Field, 2001 (36-27) at the Bowl and then
2008 (12-10 Rams) back in the Bronx.
BULLDOGS EDGE GREEN
Philippe
Panico (Boston, Mass.) booted a 19-yard FG as time expired in
Yale's 23-20 Ivy win over Dartmouth at Memorial Field last week.
The Elis, who have won eight straight against the Big Green (2-2,
0-2 Ivy), were in position to take the road win after senior CB Chris
Stanley (Los Angeles, Calif.) pulled the ball out of the hands
of a Dartmouth runner at midfield. Stanley also registered his
first career interception to go along with three tackles. Senior QB
Patrick
Witt (Wylie, Texas), who completed 28 of 37 passes for 238
yards, and sophomore RB Mordecai
Cargill (Cleveland, Ohio), who had a career-high 18-126, took
over from there to set up the winning kick. Cargill ran for 12
yards on a pair of carries while Witt, who took a big hit and never
saw the play, connected with Jordan
Forney (Bloomington, Ind.) for a 28-yard gain. The visitors
called timeout with four seconds left following Cargill's final
run. The Bulldogs, who doubled up Dartmouth with 24 first downs and
had 464 yards, took the opening kick and went 70 yards, the last 13
on an Alex
Thomas (Ansonia, Conn.) run along the right sideline. Dartmouth
answered with a 37-yard field goal and a six-yard scamper by Nick
Schwieger (26-128) to take a three-point lead early in the
second. The Blue was two-for-three on fourth-down conversions
in the first 30 minutes. One miss gave the Green the ball at
midfield and resulted in a score, while one make came late in the
half – a pass to Chris Blohm (San Francisco, Calif.) over the
middle – and led to Yale taking a 13-10 lead at intermission
on Witt's play-action pass to Shane
Bannon (Southbury, Conn.) from three yards out. Panico's PAT,
which could have been the difference in the game, was blocked.
Foley Schmidt's second field goal of the day, a career-long,
45-yarder, evened the score for Dartmouth with 3:33 left in the
third. Sophomore RB Javi Sosa (Miami,
Fla.), who came in when both Thomas and Cargill went down with
injuries, sliced through the line from seven yards out on his first
collegiate TD run on the last play of the third quarter to put Yale
up 20-13. Big Green QB Connor Kempe (11-23, 181) had WR Michael
Reilly (124 yards) open in the end zone for a moment but Stanley
jumped with the big receiver and came down with his first career
interception at 9:26 of the fourth quarter. Yale, trying to run out
the clock and get out of trouble in its own end, suffered three
holding penalties and was forced to punt out of its own end
zone. Dartmouth DB Shawn Abuhhoff jumped all over the chance
to even the game again with a 41-yard TD return at 6:19. Panico,
one of three on field goal chances in the game, was short on a
43-yard attempt that could have given the Elis the lead, but
instead gave the home team another shot. But with the clock running
down and Dartmouth driving, Stanley stripped the ball from
Schwieger at midfield with 1:06 left.
STATS
Here are some interesting numbers from last Saturday: The Bulldogs
converted four of 13 third downs but were two of three on fourth
downs… Yale, which has converted 75 percent of its red-zone
chances this year, was perfect on four opportunities at
Hanover… There were no sacks… There were a combined
12 penalties for 159 yards.
STANLEY TOOLS GREEN
CB Chris Stanley, who became a starter this fall, enjoyed his
finest day for Yale last week. He forced and recovered a fumble
(Dartmouth's first of 2010) that led to the game-winning kick,
picked off a pass in the end zone and notched three tackles.
Collegefootballperformance.com listed him on its honor roll for
defensive players of the week. He is also a member of the Yale
track & field team and has competed in numerous events with a
rare combination of sprints (10.86 100m), long jump and pole
vault.
CARGILL INCORPORATES TOUGHNESS
His first carry went for negative yardage, and he was helped off
the field two or three times last Saturday, but sophomore RB
Mordecai Cargill kept bouncing back before finishing with a
career-best and Yale season-high 126 yards on 18 carries. It was
his first 100-yard collegiate game. "I did not want to be the
reason we lost," he said in the post-game press conference. "If I
could walk, I was going to be on the field."
NO PANIC-O
Philippe Panico will remember his first collegiate field goal
forever, his teammates might too. The sophomore kicker's boot as
time expired bounced off the right upright and went through from 19
yards away in Yale's 23-20 Ivy win at Memorial Field last week. "It
was a great snap and a great hold and it kissed the upright," said
Panico, who was clearly drained from the emotional ending. Yale's
first (now 1-for-7) field goal of the year could not have come at a
bigger time. It was Yale's first game-winning FG with under a
minute left since 2004.
COLLEGIATE FIRSTS
Philippe Panico's first varsity field goal and extra point headed
the list of collegiate firsts for the Bulldogs at Dartmouth. Here
are the others: Javi Sosa's TD run; freshman TE Keith Coty's (La
Mirada, Calif.) reception; Elijah Thomas's
(Rochester, N.Y.) first carry; and Chris Stanley's first
interception, forced fumble and fumble recovery.
RAMS
Blake Wayne completed 24 of 41 passes for 343 yards but his
Fordham team fell at Lehigh 21-17 last week. Wayne connected with
Stephen Skelton (7-89) and Jason Caldwell (6-77) often while
leading the offense to 415 total yards and 21 first downs. Xavier
Martin (14-34) was the team's top ground gainer against the
Mountain Hawks. Brendan Menlaophy (Danbury, Conn.) led the Rams
with 10 tackles. Fordham has lost three straight close games after
winning two in a row.
2-0 IVY
Yale won its first two Ivy games for the fourth time in six years
but the first since 2007. One (2006) of those four resulted in a
league title.
DEFENSIVE DOGS
Yale's rushing defense ranks ninth among FCS teams with a 94-yard
average, while the Elis are 27th in scoring defense (21.25) per
game. The Blue is third and fourth respectively in those categories
among Ivy schools. Sophomore LB Will McHale (Old
Greenwich, Conn.) led the Bulldogs with 10 total tackles at
Dartmouth, while senior DT Joe Young
(Shrewsbury, Mass.) had a team-best four solos.
BANNON FIRE
Senior Shane Bannon is Yale's h-back, the guy who can block, catch
passes and run with the ball. He had a career-high six catches last
week at Hanover and now has eight catches for 55 yards this fall.
His first career carry resulted in a TD at Princeton in 2009, his
first catch went for a score against Georgetown in 2008.
SHOW ME THE MONEY
Senior SS Adam Money
(Whiteland, Ind.) is the active career interception leader for Yale
with six, including two (77 vs. Brown '09, 60 vs. Georgetown '08)
taken back for scores. A 2009 first-team All-Ivy pick, Money, who
needs three more to crack the school's top 10 career list, has a
3.46 GPA (biology major) and has been interviewing at medical
schools this fall.
MIAMI TWICE
A pair of fleet-footed offensive players from Belen Jesuit Prep in
Miami, Fla., helped the Bulldogs win at Hanover last week. Senior
WR Gio
Christodoulou had five catches for 69 yards and leads the 2010
team with 19 grabs for 342 yards. Sophomore RB Javi Sosa was called
on when Yale's top two backs left the field with injuries in the
second half. His first carry of the game (second of the season)
resulted in his first career TD on a seven-yard run late in the
third. Sosa finished with eight carries for an important 50
yards.
MORE ON GIO
Gio Christodoulou, who had a career-best nine catches for 124
yards against Georgetown on opening day, has two career punt
returns for TDs and ranks among the top 10 at Yale in career punt
(434, 4th) and kickoff (553, 10th) return yardage.
HAMMERING HAYNES
Junior LB Jordan
Haynes (25-15-40) has led the Bulldogs in total tackles in
three of four games this fall. He had 2-6-8 at Dartmouth. The
National Football Foundation High School Scholar-Athlete from
Folsom, Calif., leads Yale in tackles and recovered fumbles (2) in
his first year as a starter. Haynes also scored Yale's first TD of
the year on a four-yard fumble return late in the first quarter on
Sept. 18.
LAST MEETING
Adam Danko's 20-yard field goal with 14 seconds left gave Fordham
a 12-10 victory over Yale at Jack Coffey Field in 2008. The kick
spoiled a four-turnover performance from the Yale defense that
included an 86-yard fumble return for a touchdown by LB Bobby Abare
'09. Fordham limited Yale to 53 yards rushing on 27 attempts, and
the Rams enjoyed a nearly 17-minute edge in time of possession.
EXPIRING TIME
Yale has scored game-winning TDs as time expired in the fourth
quarter twice this season. Patrick Witt dove into the end zone from
a yard out to erase a deficit against Georgetown on the game's last
play. Philippe Panico split the uprights at Dartmouth with no time
left. The Elis have not won a pair of games in a season on the last
play since 1937.
WITT AIRING OUT
Junior QB Patrick Witt (Wylie, Texas) proved how resilient he is
with a big day at Hanover. Recovering from an Oct. 2 injury that
limited him in practice, he shook off a number of big hits to
complete 28 passes for 238 yards while scrambling to avoid being
sacked. Witt, whose parents are both commercial pilots, leads an
air attack which rates 11th in the FCS with 277 yards per game,
while he is 14th in FCS total offense (280). Witt now has 14 career
TD passes to go along with a pair of rushing TDs this season. Witt
was named Ivy League co-Player of the Week (35-55, 407) on Sept. 20
after he threw for 400 yards (6th time it has happened at Yale) and
scored the winner against the Hoyas. A backup at Nebraska in 2008,
Witt started six Yale games in 2009 and led the team with 1,449
yards and eight TDs.
Witt in 2010
Game Com-Att, Yds
TD Int
Georgetown 35-55, 407
2 1
Cornell 18-32,
232 1 2
Albany 21-46, 231
2 1
Dartmouth 28-37, 238
1 1
Totals 102-170,
1108 6 5
LOTS OF TARGETS
Yale's QB connected with eight different receivers two weeks,
while nine caught passes at Dartmouth. Ten Bulldogs have caught
passes this fall while six different Elis have one TD catch. Gio
Christodoulou leads the team with 19 grabs. Sophomore WR Chris
Smith (Midlothian, Va.) has 18 for 158 yards. Senior WR Jordan
Forney (Bloomington, Ind.) is third with 16 while senior TE Chris
Blohm (San Francisco, Calif.) has 14 after not making a catch in
any of the 10 games he played in 2009.
UP FRONT
Patrick Witt has been sacked twice in four games, a far cry from
the 32 sacks given up in 10 games by Yale last fall. It's clear the
offensive line has improved in 2010. Freshman Wes Gavin (San
Diego, Calif., 6-5, 275) and sophomore Roy Collins (6-4,
230, Carbondale, Ill.) got the starts at tackle in game four.
Collins, a TE last year, replaced Alex
Golubiewski (Green Bay, Wis., 6-6, 280), who was taking the
LSAT exam. Junior Colin
Kruger (Sarasota, Fla., 6-3, 300) and Gabe Fernandez (Honolulu,
HI, 6-0, 273) got the nods at guard. Junior Jeff Fell
(6-5, 286, Garden City, N.Y.) was the starting center, filling in
for an injured Jake Koury
(Dublin, Ohio, 6-2, 270), while senior John
Pedersen (Great Falls, Va., 6-7, 303) also saw significant time
at tackle.
CAPTAIN
Senior DE Tom
McCarthy (Chester, N.J.), the Yale captain, was back in the
lineup after missing two games with an injury. He registered three
solos and nine overall stops. He has been one of the leaders on the
defensive line the last two years. The second-team All-Ivy pick
last fall (4 sacks, 8 TFL) was Yale's MVP of the defensive line. He
earned a medical hardship from his freshman year and is now the
fifth Yale captain since 2001 who has taken a fifth year of
eligibility.
THOMAS ON TOP
Alex Thomas has shown why he is the most prolific (8,279 yards,
114 TDs) runner in Connecticut High School history. The junior RB
from Ansonia, who scored three times in an opening day win, leads
the team with 284 yards and four TDs. His 124 yards (matched
career-high vs. Harvard '09) and 6.9 average were game-highs at
Cornell. His 47-yard run at Cornell is the longest run by a
Bulldogs this fall. Thomas, who added 15 pounds of muscle over the
summer, is fifth on the team with 13 catches.
KICKING
Senior P/PK Alex
Barnes (Chesterfield, Mo.) has handled all the punting (35.6)
duties and most of the placekicking (9-11 PAT, 0-4 FGs)
opportunities this season. Philippe Panico, a second-year PK, got
his first start at Dartmouth and was 2-3 on PAT and 1-3 on FGs.
FROSH IMPACT
San Diego natives OT Wes Gavin and RB Deon Randall, WR
Cameron Sandquist (Redmond, Wash.), DT John
Oppenheimer (Menlo Park, Calif.), TE Keith Coty,
snapper Kyle Wittenauer (Richmond, Va.) and DB Nick Okano (Los
Angeles, Calif.) are the class of 2014 Elis who have seen varsity
action this fall. Gavin is the only starter among the newcomers but
Randall has seen regular action.
BULLDOG BITES
The Blue has scored on the opening drive in two of the four games
and is averaging 62 yards per scoring drive... Yale's last three
games have taken less than three hours to play. The longest (3:06)
was game one vs. Georgetown, the shortest (2:39) was at Cornell...
Two of Yale's 2010 non-league opponents offer football
scholarships, Albany and Fordham… Gio Christodoulou needs 10
punt return yards to pass Gary Fencik '76 (443) for the No. 3 spot
on the Yale career chart. Todd Tomich '01 tops the list at 788
yards… With 102 completions and 1,108 passing yards in four
games, Patrick Witt could challenge the school single-season marks
held by Alvin Cowan (227-2994, 2003)… The largest crowd to
see a Yale game this fall was 16,026 at Cornell… The
Bulldogs have played 23-20 games the last two weeks… Yale
has outscored opponents in every quarter.
COMMON SURNAME
Smith is the most common surname in America, so it's no surprise
that Yale has three (Caleb, Chris, McConnell) from different
classes on its roster. All three are on offense, two are WRs
(Chris, McConnell) and Caleb is an end. Chris and Caleb (West
Orange, N.J.) played in both games this fall, McConnell (Chagrin
Falls, Ohio) is looking for his first varsity action.
PRO UPDATE
Dick Jauron '73, who has spent 32 years in the NFL playing and
coaching, is the secondary coach for the Philadelphia
Eagles… TE Nate Lawrie '04, who played with UFL Sacramento
last year, signed with the Eagles on Aug. 9 but was released on
Sept. 3... Jeff Mroz '05 played QB in one 2010 game for the AFL
Alabama Vipers… Pat Graham '01 is an assistant coach for the
New England Patriots… Michael McDaniel '06 is an assistant
in the UFL for San Francisco.
CATCHING THE BULLDOGS
For the 13th consecutive season, all 10 Yale Football games can be
heard live on New Haven's News/Talk 960 WELI-AM and free online at
960WELI.com. Ron Vaccaro '04 (play-by-play) and Carm Cozza (color)
have the call, which can be heard on AM radio throughout
Connecticut and across Long Island Sound, for their sixth season
together.
BARKING DOGS
Every third quarter this season, a different former Yale player
will join the WELI Radio broadcast. P.J. Collins '04 (Georgetown),
Rick Fehling '74 (Cornell), Jay Pilkerton '09 (Albany), Kevin Kelly
'78 (Dartmouth), Joe Walland '00 (Fordham), Bobby Fernandez '75
(Columbia), Matt Polhemus '08 (Penn), Chuck Mercein '65 and Scott
Rooth '77 (Princeton) and Bill Primps '71 (Harvard) are the 2010
lineup.
JOEL E. SMILOW '54 HEAD COACH OF FOOTBALL
Tom Williams, the Joel E. Smilow '54 Head Coach of Football at
Yale, is in his second season at Yale and his second as a head
coach overall. Williams is 7-7 overall with the Bulldogs and is
Fordham for the first time. He came to New Haven after two seasons
as an assistant with the Jacksonville Jaguars and is in his 13th
season of college coaching. Williams has worked at his alma mater,
Stanford, Hawaii, Washington and San Jose State. He has been part
of four Bowl Game appearances and two Bowl victories.
FIELD OF STREAMS
All six home games this season will be video streamed live (pay
per view) on yalebulldogs.com through Yale's All Access with Ron
Vaccaro and Carm Cozza providing the call.
PRACTICE
The Bulldogs, off on Mondays, are on the field at 7:30 a.m. (until
approx. 9:30) Tuesday and Thursdays, and 7:00 on Wednesdays behind
the baseball stadium. Fridays are walk-through days either at Yale
Bowl or on the road and times vary. Players and coaches are
available for interviews with working media following the practice
if there are no class conflicts. All schedules are subject to
change.
STUDENTS OF THE GAME
Broadcasts of Yale football, along with several other sports
during the year, are available on the Yale student station, WYBC,
and can be heard free on-line at wybc.com. Sports director LeRoy
Cole '12 heads each broadcast.
TUESDAYS AT MORY'S
Tom Williams, the Joel E. Smilow '54 Head Coach of Yale Football,
and some of his players are at the world famous Mory's (306 York
Street) every Tuesday (Sept. 14 through Nov. 16) at 2 p.m. for the
Dick Galiette Yale Football Press Conference. This event is limited
to media only. Please contact Yale Sports Publicity Director Steve
Conn (steven.conn@yale.edu) if you would like to attend.
YALE ON YES
Yale on YES is back for 2010 with three (Fordham, Penn, Columbia)
straight home games that can be seen live on many cable systems as
well as DirecTV, AT&T U-verse and Verizon FiOS. Chris Shearn
handles the play-by-play while former Yale defensive player Jack
Ford '72 and Ross Tucker, a former Princeton and NFL offensive
lineman, provide the color.
THE GAME OF THE WEEK
The Yale-Harvard game on Nov. 20 at Boston is the Ivy League Game
of the Week on Versus, the national sports cable TV company.
PERFORMANCE
A former Yale kicker (Brian Clarke '74) became a famous (General
Hospital, Eight is Enough) TV actor, and more recently ex-Eli
receiver (Kip Pardue '98) had a starring role as a QB in the hit
movie Remember the Titans. Sophomore QB Dez Duron
(Shreveport, La.) has been singing since he was two and might
follow in that mode. He and his siblings sang for preaching tapes
mailed by their father. Their mom wrote Christian songs with videos
and tapes for kids called "Best Buddies." Duron, at 11, and his
siblings were signed to a Christian recording label. They toured
and made a CD. Duron got more involved in sports and stopped
singing with his family. He recently began making his own music,
including the recording of two songs that can be heard on Myspace.
There are also two youtube videos.
REACHING OUT
Five Bulldogs recently visited the Boys and Girls Club of the
Lower Naugatuck Valley's Joel E. Smilow Clubhouse in Ansonia to
help kids learn the importance of eating healthy and staying
fit… Junior RB Alex Thomas (Ansonia, Conn.) and Ansonia
native John Coughlin (Yale Football Office) spoke to 125 fourth
graders this fall at John G Prendergast Elementary School in
Ansonia... Junior CB Drew
Baldwin (Alexandria, Va.), co-chair of the Yale Black Men's
Union Community Outreach Committee, is in his third year of
outreach work. Baldwin is responsible for creating the lesson plans
and the calendar of events, working to promote personal growth and
development through educational activities. "We try to do this
through exposing the mentees to new ideas and experiences and, most
importantly, through building lasting relationships between mentor
and mentee. We work toward trying to help these high school
kids become young men. In the Black Men's Union we measure
success by how many lives we impact. Because our mentoring
program puts us in a position to impact lives to a great extent, we
take that responsibility very seriously," said Baldwin (31-8-39
last year with two interceptions), who has mentored over 30 kids.
Classmate Jordan Haynes works closely with Baldwin on the
project.
JV STANDOUTS
The Yale JV team returns to action again on Oct. 31 against
Bridgton Academy. Here are the three remaining games.
Date Opponent
Time
Oct. 31 Bridgton
Academy Noon
Nov. 7 Army
Noon
Nov. 19 at
Harvard
1:00
REISING SEMIFINALIST FOR CAMPBELL TROPHY
Jesse
Reising (Decatur, Ill.), a senior LB, has been named a
semifinalist for the William V. Campbell Trophy, a scholar-athlete
award handed out December 7 at the Waldorf Astoria in Manhattan by
the National Football Foundation. Reising, second on the team with
18 tackles after three starts, owns a 3.75 GPA with a focus on
economics and political science. He may be locked in on his majors
and football right now, but this Eli has his sights set on his
country. The Bulldog defensive standout was home last summer taking
classes to get his flight license before he completes Marine Corps
Officer Candidate School next year. Reising recently spent time in
Washington, DC, working closely with veterans' service
organizations such as the Wounded Warrior Project, American Legion
and Disabled American Veterans. Reising, the class valedictorian at
Eisenhower High School, also participated in various community
outreach activities through his Yale fraternity, including events
to raise money to fight prostate cancer, Relay for Life, and making
care packages for Navy SEALs in Afghanistan. Yale players are often
selected as semifinalists for the Campbell Trophy, but only 10 have
made the final squad picked as NFF Scholar-Athletes since Rick
McCarthy became the first in 1967. Casey Gerald, who spoke at the
national event representing all the scholar-athletes in 2008, was
Yale's last selection.
GOLDEN BLUE
This season marks the 50th anniversary of Yale's last perfect
football squad. The 1960 Elis, who shared the Lambert Trophy with
Navy, were Ivy champions and ranked 14th in the final Associated
Press poll, went 9-0. They will be honored during the weekend of
the Princeton game at the Bowl.
INDIVIDUAL WEEKLY AWARDS
Here are the weekly league or conference awards garnered by
Bulldogs:
Ivy League Offensive Player of Week: QB Patrick Witt (9/20)
Ivy League Honor Roll: LB Jordan Haynes & WR Chris Smith
(9/20); RB Alex Thomas (9/27); WR Jordan Forney (10/3); QB Patrick
Witt & DB Chris Stanley (10/11)
ECAC Offensive Player of Week: QB Patrick Witt (9/20)
YALE COACHES PICK PLAYERS OF GAME
Here's who the Yale coaches honored after Saturday's game: Offense
(Patrick Witt, Shane Bannon, Mordecai Cargill, John Pedersen);
Defense (Joe Young, Jesse Reising, Chris Stanley); Special Teams
(Phillipe Panico, John Powers).
ONE BIG LOCKER ROOM
High on the facility wish list of Tom Williams was moving his team
from multiple rooms at the Smilow Field Center to one large locker
area. That wish came to fruition in the form of the Carm Cozza
Complex. A dressing area designed by ProZone Lockers and meeting
rooms for coaches and players highlight the complex that will also
include a shrine to the hall of fame former Yale head coach.
LEADERS COME TO YALE
The annual survey of Bulldogs produced the anticipated results;
Yale is a team full of leaders who produced as much off the field
as they did on it. Here is the 201 breakdown.
81 players were captains of their high school
football team
55 players were captains of another sport in
high school
57 players were a national honors society
member
8 players were class president at their
high school
8 players were student body president at
their high school
11 players were class valedictorian at their
high school
2 players were class salutatorian at
their high school
POPULAR DOGS
The following Yalies have distinguished themselves according to a
vote by their teammates.
DB Josh
Grizzard (Jr, Zebulon, N.C.): most
humorous
DB Geoff
Dunham (Jr, Dallas, Texas): most
intelligent
DB Adam Money (Sr, Whiteland, Ind.): most vocal
leader (not captain)
LB Jesse Reising (Sr, Decatur, Ill.): most
likely to be U.S. President
QB Dez Duron (So, Shreveport, La.): most
interesting activity (musician)
best singer
RB Alex Thomas (Jr, Ansonia, Conn.): strongest
player (pound-for-pound)
WR Jordan Forney (Sr, Bloomington, Ind.): most
involved in community outreach
ALOHA
"Hawaiian Fridays" are the rule in the Yale Football Office. Show
up without a Hawaiian shirt and you risk a fine. Three coaches (Tom
Williams, Ikaika Malloe, Doug Semones) have worked in high school,
college or pro football on the island while three players, Gabe
Fernandez (Honolulu), Kolu Buck (Kaneole)
and Jake Semones (Haleiwa), grew up there.
YORKSIDE IN BOWL
The Yale Bowl may be in West Haven, but the press box has a taste
of New Haven with Yorkside Pizza & Restaurant serving slices
and salad on home Saturdays. Rather than interrupting your work
with a lunch at halftime, the food is now served on its arrival
before kickoff.
filed by Steve Conn, Yale Sports Publicity Director