University of Richmond Athletics

Richmond Football Postgame Notes -- Sept. 1, 2005
09/01/2005 | Football
Sept. 1, 2005
Recap | Final Stats | Quotes
The Richmond loss...
...Gives the Spiders an 0-1 mark to open the season for the fifth consecutive year.
...Gives Richmond a split over the last two seasons in the all-time series with UMass. The Spiders topped the Minutemen 24-14 last season.
...Runs the overall series record with UMass to 13-9, in favor of the Minutemen.
...Ups Massachusetts' mark to 8-4 when playing the all-time series in Richmond.
...Gives head coach Dave Clawson a mark of 32-38 as a head coach and 93-84-1 in his coaching career.
...Evens Clawson's career mark to 1-1 against the Minutemen.
...Gives the Spiders an all-time record of 440-586-53.
Postgame Notes
-- Quarterback Levi Brown made his first collegiate start as a true freshman, completing 5-of-17 passes for 33 yards.
-- Redshirt sophomore Stephen Howell grabbed his third career interception in the second quarter.
-- Redshirt sophomore Andrew Harris' interception in the second quarter was the first of his career.
-- Redshirt freshman Joe Stewart caught his first career pass with 3:32 remaining in the first half.
-- Sophomore Matt Hale's 48-yard run with just over four minutes left in the third quarter was the longest play from scrimmage for the Spiders.
-- Redshirt freshman Will Healy made his collegiate debut late in the third quarter, completing his first three collegiate passes and leading the Spiders to their first scoring drive of the season, capped when Redshirt senior Stacy Tutt stepped in under center and scored on a QB keeper.
-- Redshirt senior Stacy Tutt scored his 15th career touchdown and 13th rushing in the third quarter.
-- Redshirt freshman Will Healy started his career completing his first eight passes before his ninth attempt was broken up.
-- Redshirt senior Brian Burnette forced the second fumble of his career late in the fourth quarter. Junior Adam Goloboski recovered.
-- Richmond's defense held the Minutemen under 20 points for the first time since Oct. 9, 2004, when UMass scored just seven points in a 28-7 loss to eventual National Champion James Madison.










