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2018 Personnel



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Andrew Clyde Named Third Team Preseason All-America
Matt McCollester
Football
Posted: 06/12/2018
RICHMOND, Va. – University of Richmond redshirt senior defensive lineman Andrew Clyde (Dallas, Texas) has been named FCS Third Team Preseason All-America by HERO Sports Tuesday. Clyde is one of 13 players from the Colonial Athletic Association (CAA) named to the preseason teams.

Clyde earned Third Team All-America honors last season by STATS FCS and was a First Team All-CAA selection. He led the CAA in sacks, totaling 9.0 on the season. He led a defensive line that set a school record with 3.2 sacks per game (36 on the year). He recorded 41 total tackles, 11 of which were for a loss, while leading the team with seven QB hurries.

Clyde and the Spiders open the 2018 season September 1 when they take on the Virginia Cavaliers in Charlottesville.
 


Clyde_Web_2.jpg

Andrew Clyde Named Third Team Preseason All-America
Matt McCollester
Football
Posted: 06/12/2018
RICHMOND, Va. – University of Richmond redshirt senior defensive lineman Andrew Clyde (Dallas, Texas) has been named FCS Third Team Preseason All-America by HERO Sports Tuesday. Clyde is one of 13 players from the Colonial Athletic Association (CAA) named to the preseason teams.

Clyde earned Third Team All-America honors last season by STATS FCS and was a First Team All-CAA selection. He led the CAA in sacks, totaling 9.0 on the season. He led a defensive line that set a school record with 3.2 sacks per game (36 on the year). He recorded 41 total tackles, 11 of which were for a loss, while leading the team with seven QB hurries.

Clyde and the Spiders open the 2018 season September 1 when they take on the Virginia Cavaliers in Charlottesville.
Exceptional Mr. Clyde, congratulations.
 
Clyde and Colby Ritten make such a strong pair of inside DL that it will be very hard
for teams to run up the middle on us, especially if the LBs can plug any holes. The big
question on DL is the DEs in my mind.
 




rayeldrigde1jpg-4ec3b4d60497843e.jpg

Courtesy of westernpafootball.net



Position: Defensive Tackle

School: South Fayette

Ht-Wt: 6-4, 250

College: University of Richmond

The Blitz: Eldridge earned All-Conference First Team honors on both offense and defense for the Lions and was named to the South Hills All-Star game. The lethal defender capped his senior season with 55 tackles, seven sacks, and 12 tackles-for-loss. And to bolster his stock, Eldridge did not allow a sack all season.



 
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Andrew only got credit for 7 quarterback hurries?

Seems like he had that many each game....
 
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Last-second field goals lifts Maryland over Pennsylvania in Big 33
By: David Bohr
Saturday, June 16, 2018 | 10:09 PM


web-footballkick2.jpg

HARRISBURG – Perhaps, when thinking of All-Star games, sports fans expect big offensive scores. But the players on defense are all-stars as well, and that was never more apparent than in the Big 33 Football Classic on Saturday night.

Maryland defeated Pennsylvania, 9-6, at Central Dauphin High school in a game that had no touchdowns, no 100-yard rushers and no 100-yard receivers.

Cooper McGeehan's 39-yard field goal with 5 seconds left provided the final margin for Maryland, which is 2-4 against Pennsylvania in Big 33 games.

The contest was tied 6-6 after the first half. Vlad Hilling of Hollidaysburg had field goals of 20 and 56 yards for Pennsylvania. The 56-yarder, with came with 1:26 left in the half, was a Big 33 record.

McGeehan had successful kicks of 42 and 33 yards in the first half.

A couple of WPIAL defenders made their mark. South Fayette's Ray Eldridge made back-to-back sacks in the third quarter, the second of which forced a fumble that McKeesport's Layton Jordan recovered and returned to midfield.

“Probably when I forced that fumble,” Eldridge said was his most memorable moment of the game. “I was so high. I ran to the bench, and the crowd got me so high. That and the other sack … I'll remember those forever.”

Eldridge had two additional tackles, and Jordan also had a tackle and a tipped punt.

Penn-Trafford's Will Mayr made three tackles, including a key third down tackle on the last Maryland possession. However, Maryland quarterback Kendell Bonner ran for five yards on the next play to help set up the winning field goal.

Despite the defeat, Mayr and the Pennsylvania defenders were able to walk away saying they never let Maryland's top offensive players cross the goal line.

“I think mostly we had to just keep our heads straight,” Mayr said. “We just told ourselves that we had to stop them.”

For both Eldridge and Mayr, the game was only part of the Big 33 experience.

“I had a great host family,” Mayr said. “They treated me like their own son. This was just a great experience.”

“It's kind of like a camp week, but with all these all stars,” Eldridge said. “I'm going to camp next week at Richmond. It's a good experience.”

David Green of Pittsburgh Central Catholic and Noah Plack-Tallerico of South Fayette had one tackle each.

Offensively, Eric Neill of Central Valley and Derek Devine of North Allegheny were on the offensive line for roughly half of Pennsylvania's offensive snaps.

Naszhir Taylor of Woodland Hills made one catch for 11 yards.

Carlinos Acie of McKeesport ran the ball three times for minus-seven yards and made one catch for 15 yards.

The two teams combined for 101 rushing yards, 241 passing yards and 123 penalty yards. Pennsylvania turned the ball over three times, while Maryland only did once.

The longest play of the game was a gadget play by Pennsylvania in the third quarter, when Jahan Dotson of Nazareth Area threw a halfback option pass to Jose Barbon of Conestoga Valley for a 46-yard gain to the 4-yard line. But three plays later, Luke Emge of of Manheim Township was intercepted in the end zone by Brandon Savage.

Pennsylvania did have an apparent touchdown called back on a penalty in the second quarter when one of McGeehan's field goal attempts was blocked. The penalty that took both the block and 69-yard return by Avery Young of Coatesville was for illegal procedure. Charles Katshir of Cumberland Valley did block another second-quarter attempt of McGeehan's legally.

David Bohr is a freelance writer.
 
Clyde and Colby Ritten make such a strong pair of inside DL that it will be very hard
for teams to run up the middle on us, especially if the LBs can plug any holes. The big
question on DL is the DEs in my mind.

Agreed. We need our DE's to win more of those individual matchups against the OL particularly on 3rd downs. We haven't been truly dynamic at that position in some time.
 
Last-second field goals lifts Maryland over Pennsylvania in Big 33
By: David Bohr
Saturday, June 16, 2018 | 10:09 PM


web-footballkick2.jpg

HARRISBURG – Perhaps, when thinking of All-Star games, sports fans expect big offensive scores. But the players on defense are all-stars as well, and that was never more apparent than in the Big 33 Football Classic on Saturday night.

Maryland defeated Pennsylvania, 9-6, at Central Dauphin High school in a game that had no touchdowns, no 100-yard rushers and no 100-yard receivers.

Cooper McGeehan's 39-yard field goal with 5 seconds left provided the final margin for Maryland, which is 2-4 against Pennsylvania in Big 33 games.

The contest was tied 6-6 after the first half. Vlad Hilling of Hollidaysburg had field goals of 20 and 56 yards for Pennsylvania. The 56-yarder, with came with 1:26 left in the half, was a Big 33 record.

McGeehan had successful kicks of 42 and 33 yards in the first half.

A couple of WPIAL defenders made their mark. South Fayette's Ray Eldridge made back-to-back sacks in the third quarter, the second of which forced a fumble that McKeesport's Layton Jordan recovered and returned to midfield.

“Probably when I forced that fumble,” Eldridge said was his most memorable moment of the game. “I was so high. I ran to the bench, and the crowd got me so high. That and the other sack … I'll remember those forever.”

Eldridge had two additional tackles, and Jordan also had a tackle and a tipped punt.

Penn-Trafford's Will Mayr made three tackles, including a key third down tackle on the last Maryland possession. However, Maryland quarterback Kendell Bonner ran for five yards on the next play to help set up the winning field goal.

Despite the defeat, Mayr and the Pennsylvania defenders were able to walk away saying they never let Maryland's top offensive players cross the goal line.

“I think mostly we had to just keep our heads straight,” Mayr said. “We just told ourselves that we had to stop them.”

For both Eldridge and Mayr, the game was only part of the Big 33 experience.

“I had a great host family,” Mayr said. “They treated me like their own son. This was just a great experience.”

“It's kind of like a camp week, but with all these all stars,” Eldridge said. “I'm going to camp next week at Richmond. It's a good experience.”

David Green of Pittsburgh Central Catholic and Noah Plack-Tallerico of South Fayette had one tackle each.

Offensively, Eric Neill of Central Valley and Derek Devine of North Allegheny were on the offensive line for roughly half of Pennsylvania's offensive snaps.

Naszhir Taylor of Woodland Hills made one catch for 11 yards.

Carlinos Acie of McKeesport ran the ball three times for minus-seven yards and made one catch for 15 yards.

The two teams combined for 101 rushing yards, 241 passing yards and 123 penalty yards. Pennsylvania turned the ball over three times, while Maryland only did once.

The longest play of the game was a gadget play by Pennsylvania in the third quarter, when Jahan Dotson of Nazareth Area threw a halfback option pass to Jose Barbon of Conestoga Valley for a 46-yard gain to the 4-yard line. But three plays later, Luke Emge of of Manheim Township was intercepted in the end zone by Brandon Savage.

Pennsylvania did have an apparent touchdown called back on a penalty in the second quarter when one of McGeehan's field goal attempts was blocked. The penalty that took both the block and 69-yard return by Avery Young of Coatesville was for illegal procedure. Charles Katshir of Cumberland Valley did block another second-quarter attempt of McGeehan's legally.

David Bohr is a freelance writer.

Is the kid who hit the 56 yard fg still available?
 
2018 roster updated - plenty of number changes to keep track of, freshmen all assigned numbers.

Tre Story, QB from 2017 signing class, did not return - apparently looking to walk on at Jacksonville State. Also not returning, PWO TE Jimmy Abate (although he is still listed on the roster).

 
2018 roster updated - plenty of number changes to keep track of, freshmen all assigned numbers.

Tre Story, QB from 2017 signing class, did not return - apparently looking to walk on at Jacksonville State. Also not returning, PWO TE Jimmy Abate (although he is still listed on the roster).


Thanks.Not Surprised about Tre Story after he was switched from QB to WR.Little surprised about Jimmy Abate not returning when he could definitely have had a shot beginning next season.32(RFr and Fr) of 84 rostered players have not played college football.New NCAA ruling allowing a player to play up to 4 games without foregoing a redshirt couldn’t have happened at a better time.
 

Spiders will add grad-transfer linebacker from Maryland, who spent a year at Virginia Tech


Richmond coach Russ Huesman

  • DANIEL SANGJIB MIN/TIMES-DISPATCH

Melvin Keihn

The University of Richmond will add a graduate-transfer linebacker from the University of Maryland, Melvin Keihn, who’s from Baltimore and spent one year at Virginia Tech before transferring to Maryland.

Keihn moved to the U.S. at age eight from Liberia, where he was born. He graduated in May from Maryland with a degree in public health. Keihn attended Gilman School in Baltimore.

Keihn will be Richmond’s second graduate transfer this offseason. The Spiders during the spring added long-snapper Grant Gluhaich from California. He has two seasons of eligibility remaining.

Keihn, a 6-foot-1 211-pounder, was in on 24 tackles for Maryland as a sophomore in 2016 and took part in six tackles last season. He is known for his pass-rushing ability, and often played on special teams.
 
Spiders will add grad-transfer linebacker from Maryland, who spent a year at Virginia Tech


Richmond coach Russ Huesman

  • DANIEL SANGJIB MIN/TIMES-DISPATCH

Melvin Keihn

The University of Richmond will add a graduate-transfer linebacker from the University of Maryland, Melvin Keihn, who’s from Baltimore and spent one year at Virginia Tech before transferring to Maryland.

Keihn moved to the U.S. at age eight from Liberia, where he was born. He graduated in May from Maryland with a degree in public health. Keihn attended Gilman School in Baltimore.

Keihn will be Richmond’s second graduate transfer this offseason. The Spiders during the spring added long-snapper Grant Gluhaich from California. He has two seasons of eligibility remaining.

Keihn, a 6-foot-1 211-pounder, was in on 24 tackles for Maryland as a sophomore in 2016 and took part in six tackles last season. He is known for his pass-rushing ability, and often played on special teams.

Helpful depth in a position of need. Welcome aboard.
 
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He was turned down for having too low GPA at Maryland? Yet he was accepted at UR? This will be fodder for all UR haters. Espically down on Broad St and down in Dillweed land!
 
He was turned down for having too low GPA at Maryland? Yet he was accepted at UR? This will be fodder for all UR haters. Espically down on Broad St and down in Dillweed land!

Our name notwithstanding, we are a liberal arts college. We are not known for our graduate programs except in business and law. I was counseled by my professors at UR to attend a national university for graduate school, and I did.

Before anyone reacts to the foregoing, let me say that I found the failure to accept Malcolm Benard bizarrely puzzling and to this day believe that there were other forces at work.
 
Glad to see we are getting some FBS transfers. It is becoming increasingly obvious that without a fair number of them you have virtually no chance of seriously competing for the FCS Championship.
 
I had the opportunity to see the guys working out with the strength staff this morning on the field. They were running suicides (or whatever those down and back runs are called these days). Good number out there, I'd say 40 or more and I didn't observe any of the true freshmen among the ranks this morning. Few observations:

-Justin Rubin is chiseled. He has really added some muscle to his frame.
-Jarmal Bevels was moving well with no signs of pain.
-Tim Coleman is really a monster. If they can stay healthy, the offensive line could be very good. Yarbrough is a good leader there.

Lots of good energy and it was hot out there at 7am today.
 
I had the opportunity to see the guys working out with the strength staff this morning on the field. They were running suicides (or whatever those down and back runs are called these days). Good number out there, I'd say 40 or more and I didn't observe any of the true freshmen among the ranks this morning. Few observations:

-Justin Rubin is chiseled. He has really added some muscle to his frame.
-Jarmal Bevels was moving well with no signs of pain.
-Tim Coleman is really a monster. If they can stay healthy, the offensive line could be very good. Yarbrough is a good leader there.

Lots of good energy and it was hot out there at 7am today.
Been there, Mo. Nice description. You nailed it. These guys work hard!
 
I had the opportunity to see the guys working out with the strength staff this morning on the field. They were running suicides (or whatever those down and back runs are called these days). Good number out there, I'd say 40 or more and I didn't observe any of the true freshmen among the ranks this morning. Few observations:

-Justin Rubin is chiseled. He has really added some muscle to his frame.
-Jarmal Bevels was moving well with no signs of pain.
-Tim Coleman is really a monster. If they can stay healthy, the offensive line could be very good. Yarbrough is a good leader there.

Lots of good energy and it was hot out there at 7am today.

Mo,

Is Billy Caughell among the players working with the strength coach?Curious why we brought the graduate student from Terps.

So 85 rostered minus 23 true frosh incl PWOs leaves ya 62 players
with 22 no shows....Curious again.
 
Mo,

Is Billy Caughell among the players working with the strength coach?Curious why we brought the graduate student from Terps.

So 85 rostered minus 23 true frosh incl PWOs leaves ya 62 players
with 22 no shows....Curious again.

Just rough math on my part and not all together as a single group. Highly possible there were others downstairs. Dont read much into my number.

I need to get a good read on what Caughell looks like. Good call.

I wonder if we might be able to get some situational pass rushing out of the kid from Maryland.
 
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Just rough math on my part and not all together as a single group. Highly possible there were others downstairs. Dont read much into my number.

I need to get a good read on what Caughell looks like. Good call.

I wonder if we might be able to get some situational pass rushing out of the kid from Maryland.


He was listed as a DE at Maryland who also runs a four man front. I think that is where he plays for us rather than at ILB
 
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