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2008 HOFSTRA FOOTBALL GAME 5: HOFSTRA UNIVERSITY (2-2, 1-0) at #1 JAMES MADISON UNIVERSITY (4-1, 2-0) Saturday, October 4, 2008-1:30 p.m. Bridgeforth Stadium (15,500) - Harrisonburg, VA Television: None Radio: WRHU-FM (88.7), Pre-game show at 1:00 p.m. Internet: Audio - www.wrhu.org 2008 HOFSTRA SCHEDULE Date Opponent (TV) Time/Res. Aug. 28 at Connecticut (SNY) 3-35 L Sept. 13 ALBANY 16-22 L OT Sept. 20 RHODE ISLAND*+ 23-20 W Sept. 26 at Stony Brook (MSG) 43-3 W Oct. 4 at #1 James Madison* 1:30 p.m. Oct. 11 at Bucknell 1:00 p.m. Oct. 18 at Maine* 3:00 p.m. Oct. 25 #16 DELAWARE* 3:00 p.m. Nov. 1 at #5 New Hampshire* 12:00 p.m. Nov. 8 #6 RICHMOND* 1:00 p.m. Nov.15 NORTHEASTERN* 1:00 p.m. Nov. 22 at #18 Massachusetts *(CN8) 2:30 p.m. * - CAA Game + - Homecoming All times ET INFORMATION CONTACTS: Hofstra - Jim Sheehan, Senior Sports Information Director; (516) 463-6764 - O; (516) 523-6692 - Cell; (516) 463-5033 - Fax James Madison - Gary Michael, Sports Information Director; (540) 568-6154- O; (540) 568-3703- Fax Bridgeforth Stadium Press Box - (540) 568-6521 2008 HOFSTRA FACTS, FIGURES, STREAKS AND TRENDS: - Hofstra is riding a two-game winning streak and is coming off a 43-3 victory over Long Island rival Stony Brook last Friday night at LaValle Stadium. - The Pride is 66-50 (.565) in regular season play since the start of the 1998 season. Hofstra has posted a 98-60-1 (.619) record since becoming a member of the Football Championship Subdivision (FCS), formerly I-AA, in 1994. HOFSTRA-JAMES MADISON SERIES: Saturday's game is the eighth meeting between Hofstra and James Madison in a series that started in 1992. The Dukes hold a 5-2 series lead and have won the last four meetings including a 42-10 victory in 2005 at Shuart Stadium on Long Island. Two of the contests in the series had a three-point margin of victory including a 24-21 JMU overtime victory in 2002. The series history is as follows: Year Winner (Loc.) Score 1992 James Madison (A) 6-38 1998 Hofstra (A) 37-24 1999 Hofstra (H) 34-16 2002 James Madison (H) 21-24 (OT) 2003 James Madison (A) 20-23 2004 James Madison (A) 21-31 2005 James Madison (H) 42-10 THE LAST TIME - HOFSTRA vs. JAMES MADISON - OCTOBER 1, 2005 IN HEMPSTEAD: Defending I-AA national champion James Madison Dukes used a big second half to break open a close game and capture a 42-10 Atlantic 10 Conference win over Hofstra at James M. Shuart Stadium. Hofstra and James Madison were tied 7-7 at the half, but the Dukes scored two quick touchdowns at the start of the third quarter and took advantage of three Hofstra turnovers and turned them into 21 second half points to pull away for the win. The Dukes got on the board late in the first quarter as junior quarterback Justin Rascati hooked up with L.C. Baker for a 37-yard scoring pass. David Rabil's extra-point gave JMU a 7-0 lead. After Rabil missed a 30-yard field goal attempt in the second quarter, the Pride tied the contest as junior running back Terry Crenshaw caught a 4-yard pass to cap an 8-play, 80-yard drive. Quarterback Anton Clarkson was 5-for-5 for 78 yards, including two completions to Marques Colston for 59 yards, in the drive. The game turned for Hofstra in the third quarter as junior tailback Maurice Fenner rushed 66 yards down the Hofstra sideline to take a 14-7 lead just 1:10 into the period. Fenner rushed 14 times for 125 yards on the day. On Hofstra's next possession Clarkson was pressured and hit while throwing and was picked off by tackle Chuck Suppon. The 6'4, 290-pound junior rumbled 33 yards for the touchdown and a 21-7 advantage. The Pride got three back on its next possession as sophomore kicker Rob Zarrilli booted a 39-yard field goal to close the deficit to 21-10. The Dukes capped a 6-play, 98-yard drive on the first play of the fourth quarter as Rascati hit Ardon Bransford for a 64-yard score eight seconds into the period. On Hofstra's next possession, Clarkson was picked off by junior linebacker Akeem Jordan at the Pride 30 and returned 18 yards to the Hofstra 12 yard line. After gaining 10 yards on his first rushing attempt, junior Alvin Banks carried the ball into the end zone from 2 yards out for a 35-10 lead. Clarkson, who suffered a shoulder injury, was replaced by sophomore Dennis Davis on the Pride's next possession. JMU safety Phil Minafield picked off Davis at the Hofstra 41. Three plays later Rascati hit Tahir Hinds for a 29-yard touchdown and a 42-10 lead. Rascati compled 8-of-10 passes for 174 yards and three touchdowns to lead the Dukes attack, which racked up 502 yards. JMU rushed for 320 yards. The Pride were led by Clarkson, who completed 24-of 40

passes for 274 yards and a touchdown, but was picked off three times. Senior receiver Devale Ellis caught six passes for 117 yards while Colston added six grabs for 89 yards. 1 2 3 4 F JMU 7 0 14 21 42 HOFSTRA 0 7 3 0 10 Scoring Summary JMU Baker 37-yard pass from Rascati (Rabil kick) HU- Crenshaw 4-yard pass from Clarkson (Zarrilli kick) JMU- Fenner 66-yard run (Rabil kick) JMU- Suppon 33-yard interception return (Rabil kick) HU- Zarrilli 39-yard field goal JMU- Bransford 64-yard pass from Rascati (Rabil kick) JMU- Banks 2-yard run (Rabil kick) JMU- Hinds 29-yard pass from Rascati (Rabil kick) JMU HOFSTRA First Downs (R-P-Pe) 13-5-1 4-9-1 Rushes-Yards (Net) 50-320 21-28 Passing Yards (Net) 182 272 Passes Comp-Att-Int 9-11-0 25-44-4 Total Offense/Plays-Yards 61-502 65-300 Punt Returns-Yards 1-0 0-0 Kickoff Returns-Yards 0-0 4-62 Interception Returns-Yards 4-52 0-0 Punts (Number-Avg) 3-37.3 6-39.3 Fumbles-Lost 1-1 1-0 Penalties-Yards 3-21 6-48 Possession Time 33:43 26:17 Third Down Conversions 7-13 9-18 Fourth Down Conversions 1-1 0-0 Red-Zone Scores-Chances 1-3 2-3 Sacks By: Number-Yards 3-18 1-12 RUSHING: HOFSTRA- Crenshaw (10-45-0), Huggins (3-6-0), Clarkson (8-(-23)-0); JMU-Fenner (14-125-1), Hines (9-82-0), Banks (16-77-1) PASSING: HOFSTRA- Clarkson (40-24-3, 274, 1), Davis (4-1-1, (- )2, 0); JMU-Rascati (10-8-0, 174, 3), Landers(1-1-0, 8, 0); JMU RECEIVING: HOFSTRA- Crenshaw (7-33-1), Ellis (6-117-0), Colston (6-89-0); JMU-Bransford (2-72-1), Banks (2-12-0), Baker (1-37-1) TACKLES (UA-A): HOFSTRA-Darby (3-8-11), Talvacchio (3-7- 10), LeGrande (4-5-9), Haley (3-6-9), Greene (3-6-9); JMU- Barnes (6-3-9), LeZotte (5-4-9), Winston (2-4-6) Cohen By The Numbers 11-15 Overall record 6-11 Conference record 5-7 Home record 6-8 Road record 5-3 Night games 6-12 Day games HOFSTRA COACHING STAFF: Pride Head Football Coach Dave Cohen added two new members and made several promotions to its 2008 football coaching staff during the off-season. After the departure of assistant head coach/offensive coordinator/offensive line coach Ed Foley to a BCS position and wide receiver/special teams coach Jaime Elizondo to the Canadian Football League, Cohen promoted: defensive coordinator Mike Elko to assistant head coach/defensive coordinator; passing game coordinator/quarterbacks coach Dave Patenaude to offensive coordinator/passing game coordinator; defensive backs coach Lyle Hemphill to special teams coordinator/defensive backs coach; defensive backs assistant Kahmal Roy to Receivers Coach; and defensive line assistant Kevin Mapp to defensive ends coach. In addition Cohen added Bill Durkin from the University of Richmond as run game coordinator/offensive line, and newcomer Kyle Smith as defensive backs assistant. Durkin, who brings 11 years of college coaching experience to Hofstra, was an All-American, a two-time All-Yankee Conference first team selection and a two-time captain at Massachusetts from 1989 through 1993. He was also named to the Yankee Conference 50th anniversary all-time team. Smith, a newcomer to college coaching, was a three-year letterman and a two-year starter at free safety at Purdue University from 2001 through 2005. The 2007 Pride football coaching staff, with returning coaches bolded, is as follows: Coach Pos. HU Yr. Overall Mike Elko Asst. HC/DC./LB 3rd 10th David Patenaude OC/QB Coach 2nd 17th Lyle Hemphill S.T. Coord/DB. 3rd 7th Bill Durkin Off. Line 1st 12th Kevin Baumann Tight Ends 3rd 5th Antonio Smikle RB Coach 2nd 4th Malik Hall DL Coach 2nd 5th Kahmal Roy WR Coach 2nd 2nd Kevin Mapp DE Coach 2nd 6th Kyle Smith Asst. DB Coach 1st 1st Stadium: James M. Shuart Stadium Attendance: 6,065 Weather: 69 degrees and sunny HOFSTRA HEAD COACH: Dave Cohen is in his third season as Hofstra University head football coach. Just the seventh head coach in the history of Pride football, Cohen came to Hofstra in December 2005 after serving as defensive coordinator and linebackers coach at the University of Delaware from 2002 through 2005. He also served as defensive line and linebackers coach at Delaware from 1994 through 1998 before becoming the associate head coach/defensive coordinator at Fordham University from 1999 through 2001. The Long Island native, who was a two-year starter at LIU-C.W. Post, began his coaching career at the University at Albany in 1988 as linebackers and strength coach. In 1990 Cohen became linebackers and defensive line coach at Lafayette College and held that position for four seasons. HOFSTRA'S 2008 STATISTICAL LEADERS 4 GAMES RUSHING Att. Net Avg. TD YPG Brock Jackolski 32 195 6.1 2 65.0 Cory Christopher 74 166 2.2 3 41.5 Everette Benjamin 40 165 4.1 2 41.2 PASSING (Eff.) Comp-Att-Int Yds. TD YPG Cory Christopher (126.9) 84-123-2 (68.3) 828 2 207.0 RECEIVING No. Yds. Avg. TD YPG Anthony Nelson 25 264 10.6 1 66.0 Aaron Weaver 22 194 8.8 1 48.5 Ottis Lewis 12 157 13.1 0 39.2 Everette Benjamin 10 72 7.2 0 18.0

TACKLES UT-AT-TT Sacks Int Chris Edmond 13-10-23 0-0 1-6 Greg Melendez 13-10-23 0-0 0-0 Luke Bonus 7-15-22 1.5-6 0-0 Nick Altomare 13-12-25 0-0 2-5 Anthony Vernaglia 9-10-19 1-7 1-16 HOFSTRA IN THE NCAA STATS: Here is where the Hofstra team and Pride players rank in this week s NCAA statistics report, as of September 29: Category FCS Avg. CAA Rushing Offense 59 134.50 6 Passing Offense 57 207.00 8 Total Offense 64 341.50 9 Scoring Offense 77 21.25 9 Rushing Defense 60 147.50 6 Pass Efficiency Defense 9 97.30 2 Total Defense 43 328.00 5 Scoring Defense 28 20.00 3 Net Punting 50 33.06 5 Punt Returns 118-1.80 12 Kickoff Returns 36 21.36 5 Turnover Margin 2 2.00 1 Pass Defense T-39 180.50 4 Passing Efficiency 59 122.91 8 Sacks 97 1.00 11 Tackles For Loss 31 7.00 2 Sacks Allowed 114 3.75 12 Category HU Player FCS Avg. CAA Rushing Brock Jackolski T-76 65.00 12 Cory Christopher 41.50 15 Everette Benjamin 41.25 16 Passing Efficiency Cory Christopher 48 126.95 7 Total Offense Cory Christopher 26 248.50 2 Brock Jackolski 65.00 24 Recpt./Game Anthony Nelson T-19 6.25 T-1 Aaron Weaver T-40 5.50 4 Ottis Lewis 3.00 T-25 Rec. Yds./Game Anthony Nelson 64 66.00 6 Aaron Weaver 48.50 T-16 Interceptions Nick Altomare T-41.50 T-7 Ray McDonough T-41.50 T-7 Anthony Vernaglia.25 T-15 Chris Edmond.25 T-15 Leslie Jackman.25 T-15 Punting Shane Casciano 71 36.94 6 Kickoff Returns Brock Jackolski T-79 20.88 9 Field Goals Brian Hanly T-27 1.00 T-3 Roger Williams T-52.75 T-6 Scoring Cory Christopher 5.00 18 All-Purpose Runners Brock Jackolski 42 127.67 3 Anthony Nelson 74.50 22 Sacks Luke Bonus.38 T-16 Tackles For Loss Luke Bonus.88 T-11 Andrew Nelson.75 T-15 Joe Akabalu.67 T-22 CAA FOOTBALL THIS WEEK: Here is the CAA Football standings and schedule as of September 29: Conference Overall W L Pct. W L Pct. North New Hampshire 1 0 1.000 4 0 1.000 Hofstra 1 0 1.000 2 2.500 Northeastern 0 0.000 1 3.250 Massachusetts 0 1.000 2 2.500 Maine 0 2.000 2 3.400 Rhode Island 0 2.000 1 4.200 South James Madison 2 0 1.000 4 1.800 Villanova 1 0.000 3 1.750 Richmond 2 1 1.000 3 2.600 William& Mary 0 0.000 2 1.667 Delaware 0 0.000 2 2.500 Towson 0 1.000 2 3.400 This Week - Saturday, October 4 *Northeastern at Towson *Delaware at Massachusetts *Villanova at William and Mary *Hofstra at James Madison Richmond at VMI Brown at Rhode Island Last Week - Friday & Saturday, September 26-27 Hofstra 43 at Stony Brook 3 *Richmond 20 at Villanova 26 (OT) *James Madison 24 at Maine 10 Columbia 24 at Towson 31 Albany 7 at Delaware 38 UC Davis 10 at Northeastern 27 Rhode Island 0 at Boston College 42 New Hampshire 42 at Dartmouth 6 For more CAA Football information visit the CAA website at www.caasports.com THE PRIDE AGAINST THE TOP 10: Saturday s game at topranked James Madison will be Hofstra s first contest against a number one-ranked team since 2002. That season, the Pride opened up against #1 Montana at James M. Shuart Stadium and lost to the Grizzlies, 21-0. Since then, the Pride has faced 12 opponents who have been ranked in the top 10. Here are the Hofstra results against top 10 opponents since joining the CAA/Atlantic 10 in 2001: Rank Opponent Result Date 1 Montana 0-21 L 8/29/02 2 at Montana 23-41 L 9/11/04 2 New Hampshire 26-29 L 11/5/05 3 Delaware 19-20 L 10/16/04 3 at Massachusetts 16-22 L 11/18/06 6 James Madison 10-42 L 10/1/05 6 at Massachusetts 22-27 L 10/18/03 7 Delaware 14-24 L 9/27/03 7 Villanova 34-32 W 11/8/03 7 Massachusetts 21-10 W 11/19/05 8 Massachusetts 5-27 L 11/17/07 9 at Furman 41-44 L (2OT) 9/24/05 9 Furman 32-17 W 9/8/07

HOFSTRA IN THE POLLS: Here is where the Pride ranked in the FCS Polls in 2008: Date TSN Coaches Preseason RV RV Sept. 1 RV RV Sept. 8 RV RV Sept. 15 NR NR Sept. 22 NR NR Sept. 29 RV RV RV-Receiving Votes; NR- Not Ranked THE SPORTS NETWORK FCS MEDIA POLL: Here is The Sports Network s 2008 Football Championship Subdivision Media Poll, as of September 29. No. Team (1st pl votes) W-L Pts. LW 1. James Madison Dukes (87) 4-1 2,684 2 2. Appalachian State Mountaineers 2-2 2,528 3 3. Montana Grizzlies (16) 4-0 2,455 4 4. McNeese State Cowboys (1) 2-1 2,360 6 5. New Hampshire Wildcats (3) 4-0 1,976 7 6. Richmond Spiders 3-2 1,733 1 7. Elon Phoenix 4-1 1,653 8 8. Cal Poly Mustangs 2-1 1,337 9 9. Wofford Terriers 3-1 1,242 14 10. Northern Iowa Panthers 2-2 1,228 5 11. Eastern Washington Eagles 2-2 1,206 11 12. The Citadel Bulldogs 3-1 1,193 13 13. Southern Illinois Salukis 2-1 1,155 15 14. Villanova Wildcats 3-1 1,117 19 15. Furman Paladins (1) 4-1 1,043 16 16. Delaware Blue Hens 2-2 935 17 17. North Dakota State Bison 2-2 855 10 18. Massachusetts Minutemen 2-2 784 18 19. Central Arkansas Bears 4-1 703 12 20. Liberty Flames 4-0 687 25 21. Western Illinois Leathernecks 2-2 681 22 22. Jacksonville State Gamecocks 3-1 650 NR 23. South Dakota State Jackrabbits 3-2 559 20 24. Northern Arizona Lumberjacks 3-1 548 NR 25. Brown Bears 2-0 481 NR Others receiving votes: Eastern Illinois 382, Lafayette 368, Tennessee State 267, Harvard 260, Holy Cross 251, Youngstown State 148, William & Mary 145, Hampton 143, Sam Houston State 130, Georgia Southern 66, Prairie View 56, San Diego 50, Weber State 42, Florida A&M 36, Cornell 24, Tennessee-Martin 21, North Dakota 10, Sacred Heart 7, Delaware State 6, Southeastern Louisiana 6, Montana State 4, Colgate 2, South Carolina State 2, Southern 2, Central Connecticut State 1, Coastal Carolina 1, Grambling 1, Hofstra 1. The 2008 CCA/AFCA FCS TOP 25 COACHES POLL: Here is Collegiate Commissioner s Associations/American Football Coaches Association 2008 Football Championship Subdivision Coaches Poll, as of September 29. No. Team (1st Votes) W-L Pts. LW 1. James Madison (23) 4-1 671 1 2. Montana (4) 4-0 638 3 3. Appalachian State 2-2 621 4 4. McNeese State 2-1 572 6 5. New Hampshire 4-0 517 8 6. North Dakota State 2-2 493 7 7. Richmond 3-2 477 2 8. Cal Poly 2-1 470 9 9. Wofford 3-1 421 11 10. Northern Iowa 2-2 397 5 11. Southern Illinois 2-1 390 13 12. Massachusetts 2-2 376 10 13. Eastern Washington 2-2 347 16 14. Delaware 2-2 344 12 15. Elon 4-1 305 14 16. Villanova 3-1 303 19 17. Furman 4-1 268 17 18. South Dakota State 3-2 218 18 19. Central Arkansas 4-1 197 15 20. The Citadel 3-1 152 24 21. Liberty 4-0 131 NR 22. Western Illinois 2-2 129 21 23. Jacksonville State 3-1 78 NR 24. Northern Arizona 3-1 44 NR 25. Eastern Illinois 2-3 40 20 Other receiving votes (pts. in parentheses): Georgia Southern (33), Montana State (25), Youngstown State (20), Tennessee State (19), Hampton (16), Sam Houston State (14), William & Mary (12), South Carolina State (6), Florida A&M (6), Holy Cross (5), Lafayette (5), Jackson State (3), Prairie View A&M (3), Colgate (2), Hofstra (2), San Diego (2), UT Martin (1), SE Louisiana (1), Harvard (1). PRIDE SECOND IN TURNOVER MARGIN: After their +4 turnover margin at Stony Brook on September 26, Hofstra is number one in the CAA and second in the FCS in turnover margin with a + 2.0 tpg average. The Pride trail only McNeese State in the FCS in the category. The Cowboys have a 2.33 average. Hofstra has picked up 12 turnovers (7 interceptions and five fumbles) while turning the ball over four times (2 fumbles and 2 interceptions). KILLING THE CLOCK: Hofstra is dominating the time of possession category this season, winning that battle in the last three games. The Pride is averaging 33:42 in the four games this season including holding the ball for a season-best 37:22 against Rhode Island on September 20. Hofstra continues to lead the CAA in time of possession. RED-ZONE: The Pride is 13-for-19 for a 68% average in the redzone through four games this season. Included in those 13 scores in the red-zone were eight touchdowns. QB CORY CHRISTOPHER: Quarterback Cory Christopher led the Pride s 316-yard offensive effort by accumulating 209 yards in total offense in Hofstra s 43-3 victory at Stony Brook last Friday night. He completed 15 of 24 passes for 161 yards and threw a 30-yard touchdown pass to Anthony Nelson in the second quarter and rushed 12 times for 48 yards with scoring runs of 1-yard in the first and 2-yards in the fourth. Christopher is now 84-

for-123 (68.3%) for 828 yards and two touchdowns this season. He ranks second in the CAA in total offense with a 248.5 ypg average through four games. -He posted his second straight 250-yard passing game and 70% completion contest while accumulating 314 yards in total offense in the Pride s 23-20 victory over URI on September 20. Christopher completed 25 of 33 passes for a career-best 75.8 completion percentage and 265 yards. He also rushed 22 times for 49 yards and scored on a 1-yard run after an 11-play drive early in the fourth quarter. The junior Floridian completed four of seven passes in Hofstra s final drive, moving the Pride from their own 21 to the URI 21. That set up Roger William s game-winning field goal. - Christopher led the Pride in their 22-16 overtime loss to the Great Danes of Albany on September 13. Christopher completed 27 of 38 passes (66.7) for a career-best 272 yards and one touchdown. His 13- yard scoring pass to Aaron Weaver put the Pride on the scoreboard just 4:32 into the contest. Christopher was also credited with 19 rushes for 44 yards against the Great Danes. - In his Hofstra debut on August 28 Christopher completed 17 of 28 passes for 130 yards at Connecticut. He also rushed 21 times for 25 yards and was sacked seven times. Like injured 2007 starter Bryan Savage, Christopher came to Hofstra last year through the junior college system, An All-American honorable mention at Nassau Community College, Christopher was named to the all-conference first team and was selected conference Offensive Player of the Year after passing for 1,181 yards and eight touchdowns in 2006. He was an all-conference second team pick in 2005. The American High School (Miami Lakes, Florida) graduate was named to the All-Dade County team as a senior. DB NICK ALTOMARE: Senior safety Nick Altomare, a two-time academic all-conference selection and a CoSIDA Academic All- District pick in 2007, led a Pride defensive charge that held Stony Brook to 211 yards on the night, including 139 yards passing. Altomare recorded a game-high and career-best eight tackles against the Seawolves including a career-best six solo tackles in the contest. The Academic All-American candidate leads the Pride in tackles with 25 and interceptions with two in 2008.Altomare ranks seventh in the CAA in interception average this season. - Altomare led a Pride defensive charge that held URI to 341 yards on the day, including 248 yards passing which was 64 yards under their 2008 average. Altomare picked off his second pass of the season in the first quarter at the URI 33 and returned it five yards. He was third on the team in tackles against the Rams with five and added one tackle for a loss of two yards, forced a fumble and had a pass breakup. -He notched a career-high seven tackles including six assisted stops, against Albany on September 13, topping his previous best of five tackles. - Altomare posted five tackles and his first Hofstra interception at Connecticut on August 28. He tallied his interception in the UConn end zone stopping a second quarter Huskie drive. - Last year, Altomare recorded a career-high 32 tackles (18-14) as a junior and equaled his career-high with five tackles in games against Rhode Island (4 solos), Albany and William and Mary. He also tallied four tackles against New Hampshire on October 20 and three tackles at Northeastern. WR ANTHONY NELSON: Sophomore receiver Anthony Nelson tallied four receptions for 69 yards and caught a 30-yard TD pass from Cory Christopher at Stony Brook last week. He is tied for first in the CAA and is 19th in the FCS in receptions per game with a 6.25 rpg average. Nelson now has 25 receptions for 264 yards and one touchdown through four games this season. - Nelson equaled his season-high with nine catches for 92 yards against Rhode Island on September 20. He also tallied nine receptions for 85 yards against Albany on September 13. - Nelson had three catches for 18 yards, and two kickoff returns for 43 yards in the season opener at Connecticut. Last year, Nelson: - Was second on the team, 12th in the CAA and 97th in the FCS in receptions with 44 for 543 yards and one touchdown in 2007. He posted the second-most receptions by a Hofstra freshman in school history, trailing only Charles Sullivan s 68 in 2004. He tallied two 100-yard receiving games as a freshman - Was named to the All-CAA first team as a punt returner after leading the CAA and placing sixth in the NCAA with a 15.6 average (312 yards) on 20 returns. - Recorded six catches for 105 yards at Northeastern. He also returned a punt 67 yards to the Northeastern 7-yard line that resulted in a 7-yard scoring pass from Savage to Sullivan. - Posted career-highs of 10 receptions for 128 yards in the Pride s loss to New Hampshire on October 27. His previous highs were 7 catches for 92 yards against Furman. - Tallied 4 receptions for 52 yards and hauled in a 24-yard touchdown pass at Villanova. He also had 4 punt returns for 39 yards. - Notched 3 catches for 13 yards and returned four punts for 33 yards against Stony Brook on September 29. - Helped spark the Pride s second half comeback at Rhode Island with a 77-yard punt return in the third quarter of Hofstra s 37-24 victory. Nelson, who posted three punt returns for 83 yards in the contest, returned the punt to the Rams 4-yard line, setting up a 4- yard TD pass from Savage to Sullivan on the next play. He also caught five passes for 59 yards to post 142 all-purpose yards in the contest. - Made his college debut by recording 7 receptions for 92 yards, and adding 22 yards on 1 punt return for 114 all-purpose yards. Three of the rookie s catches went for first downs. K ROGER WILLIAMS: Red-shirt freshman walk-on Roger Williams, who handles kickoff duties for the Pride, made his third consecutive field goal of the year in as many attempts, and connected on four of six point-after attempts to record seven points in the Pride s 43-3 victory over Stony Brook. Williams 21-yard field goal in the first quarter gave the Pride a 10-0 lead. - He came off the bench in the second half against Rhode Island to kick two field goals, including the game-winner with 3-seconds to play, that gave the Pride a 23-20 victory over the URI Rams. - Williams, a native of Mandeville, Louisiana who was a transplanted victim of Hurricane Katrina, kicked a 33-yard field goal with 3:27 to play in regulation that boosted the Hofstra lead to 20-14 before his game-winner. He also assisted in the game-ending tackle on the kickoff following his 38-yard kick. LB ANTHONY VERNAGLIA: Notre Dame-transfer graduatestudent, linebacker Anthony Vernaglia led the Pride with six tackles, a sack (-7) and a fumble recovery to lead the Pride defense against

Rhode Island on September 20. He was in on three tackles at Stony Brook last week. - The Anaheim Hills, California native had 19 tackles, one sack, one interception, one fumble recovery and two pass deflections through four games this season. - Vernaglia tallied four tackles, one tackle-for a loss (-2), one interception and two pass break-ups in his Hofstra debut at Connecticut on August 28. He followed that debut with 6 tackles in the loss to Albany. RB BROCK JACKOLSKI: True-freshman running back Brock Jackolski came off the bench to post 32 yards on 11 carries and caught one pass for eight yards in the Pride s 43-3 victory over Stony Brook. The William Floyd High School graduate from Shirley, New York also returned one kickoff for 18 yards. Jackolski, who is averaging 6.1 yards per carry this season, leads the Pride in rushing with 195 yards on 32 carries, and all-purpose yards with 383 (127.7 ypg). He ranks 12th in the CAA in rushing with a 65.0 ypg average. - Jackolski was named the CAA Rookie of the Week for his performance against Rhode Island on September 20. In only his second collegiate game, Jackolski posted his first 100-yard rushing game, carrying the ball 13 times for 144 yards against the Rams of URI. His 64-yard run to the URI 1-yard line in the fourth quarter setup Roger Williams first field goal. The former NY State Player of the Year and PrepNation All-American also returned four kickoffs for 73 yards including a 23-yarder in the fourth quarter that started the Pride on a touchdown drive that gave them the lead 17-14. - He made his collegiate debut against Albany on September 13 and posted a team-high 108 all-purpose yards for the Pride. Jackolski stepped into a back-up role at tailback after the departure of red-shirt freshman Larry Gaskins and a hamstring injury to graduate-student transfer Justine Buries (New Mexico State). Jackolski s 38-yard return on the opening kickoff against Albany helped set-up Hofstra s first score. He later tied the game at 16-16 early in the fourth quarter with a 3-yard touchdown run. Jackolski rushed eight times for 19 yards, had one reception for 13 yards, and returned three kickoffs for 76 yards against the Great Danes of Albany. DB LESLIE JACKMAN: Junior cornerback Leslie Jackman may have had the best defensive game for the Pride against Stony Brook last week. He recorded four tackles (3 solos), one forced fumble, one fumble recovery and was in on a tackle for a loss. He turned around his second quarter strip of running back Edwin Gowins and returned the fumble for a 60-yard touchdown. Jackman now has 14 tackles through four games on the season. - He recorded his first Hofstra interception on September 20 against Rhode Island. The Rutgers University-transfer picked off the pass in the third quarter stopping a Rams drive at the Hofstra 32-yard line. Jackman also posted three solo tackles in the contest. RB EVERETTE BENJAMIN: Sophomore Everette Benjamin started in the backfield at Stony Brook last week and posted 45 yards on 11 carries (4.1), caught two passes for 11 yards and tallied 56 allpurpose yards. - Benjamin rushed for 69 yards on 19 carries against the Great Danes of Albany on September 13. He carried the ball nine times for 43 yards and scored on a 6-yard run against Rhode Island on September 20. - He rushed just once for eight yards and had one reception for six yards in the season opener at Connecticut. Last year Benjamin: - Played in 11 games and started eight at both fullback and tailback and was third on the team in rushing with 68 carries for 260 yards and two touchdowns. - Tallied 93 yards on 20 carries and scored on a 2-yard run at Northeastern and posted 57 yards on 15 carries against William and Mary. - Filled in for Kareem Huggins in the second half of the Villanova game and rushed 11 times for 24 yards and scored on a 2-yard run late in the third quarter. - Benjamin rushed for 42 yards on nine carries against New Hampshire, and posted 10 carries for 32 yards against Maine. WR AARON WEAVER: Red-shirt freshman receiver Aaron Weaver continues to have a fine first season, picking up three receptions for 23 yards, one rush for 18 yards, and returning one kickoff for 27 yards against Stony Brook last week. Weaver is second on the Pride team with 22 receptions for 194 yards and one touchdown through four games this season - He posted a career-best eight catches for 76 yards against Rhode Island on September 20. That topped his previous best of seven against Albany on September 13. - He posted a career-best seven catches for 70 yards and hauled in a 13-yard TD pass to open the scoring in the Albany contest. - Weaver led the Pride with four receptions for 25 yards and added two kickoff returns for 44 yards in the Pride s loss at UConn on August 28. Weaver had two receptions on the Pride s only scoring drive against the Huskies, including a possession opening 11-yard grab to the UC 33-yardline. He also had a 19-yard KOR in the first quarter and a 25-yard KOR in the fourth quarter. DB CHRIS EDMOND: Freshman linebacker Chris Edmond continues to play consistent, solid football in this his first season with the Pride. He posted four tackles and one interception, the first of his career, at Stony Brook last week. Edmond is second on the team in tackles with 23 including a team-high 13 solo stops. - Edmond posted a game-high nine tackles, including five solos, in his Pride debut against Connecticut. - He followed that up with seven stops, including five solo tackles, against Albany. Against Rhode Island Edmond tallied three tackles. LB LUKE BONUS: Junior linebacker Luke Bonus, the 2006 Atlantic 10 Defensive Rookie of the Year award-winner and a twotime academic all-conference selection, tallied five tackles including four solos to finish second on the Pride team against Stony Brook last week. Bonus now has 22 tackles on the season including a team-high 15 assisted stops, and has a team-high three tackles for losses through four games this season. - He tallied five tackles against Rhode Island on September 20. - He doubled his tackle output from week one with eight tackles to lead the Pride defense against Albany on September 13. The Garden State native also tallied two tackles for losses of eight yards and recorded 1.5 sacks for six yards in losses. - He posted four tackles, broke up a pass and was in on one tackle for a loss in the opener at Connecticut. All four of his stops were assisted tackles.

The Bonus Career - Bonus was third on the Pride and 24th in the CAA in tackles with 84 (42-42) last year. He posted four double-digit tackle games in 2007. Bonus also led the Pride in pass deflections with six. - Led the Hofstra defense with a game-high 13 tackles, including 4 solos, against New Hampshire last season. It was his season-high. - Posted game-high honors with 12 tackles-all solo stops- in Hofstra s 35-31 loss at Northeastern in 2007. The 12 were a career solo tackle high for the 2006 Atlantic 10 Defensive Rookie of the Year. - Recorded 11 tackles and three pass deflections against Stony Brook on September 29, 2007. It was his first double-digit tackle game of the season. - Notched five solo stops and five assisted tackles in the Pride s 38-13 victory over Maine. - Posted seven tackles against William and Mary. - Led the team with 98 tackles stops in 2006. - The Medford Lakes, New Jersey, native recorded a career-high 15 tackles, 4.5 tackles for losses of 23 yards, one sack for eight yards, one forced fumble and one fumble recovery in the Pride s 20-13 loss to Rhode Island on November 4, 2006. - Posted 12 tackles including six solos, three pass deflections and had a half-tackle-for-a-loss against Towson on September 23. 2006. - On October 28, 2006 at New Hampshire, he tallied 11 tackles and an assisted tackle behind the line of scrimmage, in Hofstra s 10-6 loss to the Wildcats. - At Marshall on September 9, 2006 he was second on the team with 10 tackles, including five solo stops. - Posted three tackles and one interception against Northeastern in 2006. His interception was in the end zone. DB GREG MELENDEZ: Red-shirt freshman safety Greg Melendez tallied four tackles and broke up two passes at Stony Brook last week. The Brooklyn, New York native is tied for second on the team with 23 tackles (13-10) through four games. -He recorded three solo tackles in the victory over Rhode Island on September 20. Melendez posted a season-best eight tackles, including six assisted stops, against Albany on September 13. - He also posted five solos and three assisted tackles in the Pride s opener at Connecticut. S RAY MCDONOUGH: Junior safety Ray McDonough tallied his second interception of the season last week at Stony Brook. The Glendale Community College (CA) transfer was in on one tackle against the Seawolves. McDonough now has 14 tackles on the season, a team-high four pass deflections and is tied for the team lead with two interceptions. -McDonough, who tallied three solo tackles against URI on September 20, was second on the Pride team with eight tackles against the Huskies of UConn on August 28. His third quarter interception on the Pride 2-yard line-on a second-and-goal play from the Hofstra 5 yard line stopped a potential UConn scoring drive. He returned the interception 54 yards to the Connecticut 44 which set-up the Pride s only score of the contest, a 28-yard field goal by freshman Brian Hanly. McDonough posted 4 solo stops and one assisted tackle in the first half. - He tallied two tackles against Albany on September 13. DE JOE AKABALU: Junior defensive end Joe Akabalu recorded two solo and two assisted stops at Stony Brook last week. He now has six solo and seven assisted tackles in four games this season. -Akabalu posted a career-best seven tackles, including four solo stops, in the Pride s loss to Albany on September 13. - He was in on two tackles against Rhode Island on September 20. - He posted five unassisted tackles and five assisted stops in seven games last season. LB DERON MAYO: Sophomore linebacker Deron Mayo tallied three tackles against Rhode Island and one solo stop at Stony Brook. He now has 10 solo tackles and 6 assisted stops in 2008. - He notched a career-high seven total tackles (2-5) in the Pride s loss to Albany on September 13 - Mayo also recorded a career-high five solo stops in the season opener at Connecticut. Last year Mayo: - Posted 11 solos and seven assisted tackles in nine games. - Recorded his first college interception and returned it 4 yards against William and Mary last November. He also posted four tackles against the Tribe. - Posted a career-high six tackles against the Black Bears of Maine on October 6. WR OTTIS LEWIS: Senior receiver Ottis (OTT-is) Lewis posted a season-high four receptions for 37 yards in the Pride s 43-3 win over Stony Brook. He now has 12 receptions for 157 yards on the season. - He posted three catches for 51 yards against Albany and three receptions for 32 yards in the season opener at Connecticut on August 28. The 2008 tri-captain had two grabs for 37 yards against the Rams of Rhode Island last week. Last year Lewis: - Tallied a career-high 27 receptions for 465 yards and four touchdowns. He ranked third on the team in receptions and was 20th in the CAA in receiving yards per game. - Posted a career-high four receptions against New Hampshire (62 yards), Furman (51) and Albany (34). - Recorded a career-high with 88 receiving yards on three catches against Stony Brook on September 29, 2007. - Posted 63 yards receiving on three receptions and recorded his first touchdown catch in the Pride s victory at URI. He hauled in a 33- yard scoring toss from Bryan Savage that closed the Pride deficit to 24-20 against the Rams. - Had one catch for 17 yards at Villanova and two for 57 yards and a touchdown against William and Mary. His scoring catch was 12 yards. - Posted a 33-yard TD catch-his only catch of the game-against Maine in 2007. - Lewis tallied three catches for 40 yards at Towson on October 13.

LB SAID GAIDA: Sophomore linebacker Said Gaida posted two tackles at Stony Brook last week. He now has seven solo stops and five assisted tackles through four games in 2008. - He recorded a career-best six tackles, including four solo stops, in the Pride s victory over Rhode Island on September 20. The six stops tops his previous best of three at Albany in 2007. PUNTER SHANE CASCIANO: Junior punter Shane Casciano punted three times for a 38.5 average, including one punt inside the 5-yard line, at Stony Brook last week. He has now punted 17 times for a 37. 0 average this season. - He averaged 41 yards per punt in five kicks against Rhode Island. Included was a career-best 66-yard punt in the third quarter against the Rams. - Casciano, who punted three times for a 27.3 average against Albany, posted a 37.8 punting average in 6 kicks in the 2008 opener at Connecticut. - Last year, he averaged 32.8 ypp in relief of the injured Chris Hanly. DB JEFF AIME: Sophomore Jeff Aime (Ah-may) has made the move from running back to the secondary since last season and recorded two tackles in each of the first two games this season. He had one tackle at Stony Brook last week. - Aime, a running back last season, came in for Everette Benjamin in the third quarter against William and Mary on November 3, 2007 and rushed 23 times for 81 yards, and caught one pass for 1 yard in the Pride s 38-14 win. TE PHIL RILEY: Senior Phil Riley posted three receptions for 27 yards in the loss to Albany. Riley has four receptions for 27 yards in four games in 2008. - Riley had one reception at UConn in the 2008 opener. - He started all 11 games at tight end in 2007 and posted eight receptions for 72 yards on the season. - Riley tallied a season-high four receptions for 25 yards at Rhode Island on September 22, 2007. - Riley posted 22 catches for 168 yards in 2006. He had five receptions for 49 yards at Marshall in 2006, and equaled his careerhigh with 5 catches for 38 yards against Rhode Island in November, 2006. OG DAVID SPANICH: Starting junior guard David Spanich went down in the first half of the Rhode Island game with a lower leg injury and did not return. He missed the Stony Brook game and is questionable for Saturday s game at James Madison. HANLY GETS HOFSTRA ON THE BOARD: Freshman kicker Brian Hanly, the brother of former Pride punter Chris Hanly, hit one of four field goal attempts- missing one and having two others blocked-against Albany, and went one-for-two in the field goal department against Rhode Island. He also missed a point-after attempt in each of those contests. - Hanly gave Hofstra its only points of the game against UConn in the season opener on August 28 with a 28-yard field goal after a Ray McDonough interception. He was a two-time all-county and All-New Jersey selection at Don Bosco Prep. TE BRYANT CARPENTER: Junior tight end Bryant Carpenter, who also played at fullback last season, tallied 9 receptions for 92 yards in 2007 - Recorded a season-high 5 catches for 57 yards against William and Mary on November 3, 2007 and had 3 catches for 19 yards at Northeastern. NOTES FROM THE STONY BROOK GAME: Hofstra improved to 12-0 all-time against the Seawolves of Stony Brook with its 43-3 victory The Pride defense and Stony Brook turnovers were the story of the game as SBU recorded four turnovers (2 fumbles, 2 interceptions) that resulted in 26 Hofstra points The Pride defense held Stony Brook to just 211 yards on offense-which was 93 below their season average- recorded interceptions by Pride newcomers, freshman Chris Edmond (4 tackles) and junior Ray McDonough (1 tackle) and a forced fumble/fumble recovery return for a 60-yard touchdown by Rutgers-transfer, junior cornerback Leslie Jackman..For the third consecutive meeting the Pride held Stony Brook to under 75 yards rushing in their meeting. Hofstra held the Seawolves to 211 total yards last week including just 72 rushing. In 2007 the Pride allowed just 273 yards to Stony Brook, including just 29 yards rushing on 32 attempts. In 2006 the Pride held Stony Brook to just 27 yards rushing in a 17-8 victory. NOTES FROM THE RHODE ISLAND GAME: Hofstra improved to 17-6 against the Rams all-time and 10-2 against URI on Long Island The Pride went over the 400-yard mark in total offense for the second straight game. The Pride also picked off two passes against Rhode Island Hofstra posted a season-high 476 yards, including 265 passing, against the Rams The Pride dodged the bullet with five fumbles but only lost one of those drops Hofstra held the ball for a season-best 37:22 against the Rams. NOTES FROM THE ALBANY GAME: Hofstra outgained Albany 404-309 in total offense but went just 3-of-6 in the red-zone and was 1-for-4 in the field goal department. The Pride did not have any turnovers despite four fumbles. Hofstra also had the ball for 36:41 of the contest The Pride, who fell to the Albany Great Danes for only the third time in 14 games, had their nine-game winning streak over the state university snapped on September 13. NOTES FROM THE CONNECTICUT GAME: The Pride defense picked off three passes in the season opener at Connecticut-the most by a HU team since 2005 against Maine-as senior DB Nick Altomare, graduate-student LB Anthony Vernaglia and junior Ray McDonough all recorded the first aerial thefts of their Hofstra careers. Altomare tallied his in the UConn end zone stopping a Huskie drive. Vernaglia returned his 16 yards deep into UConn territory, and McDonough s 54-yard return set-up Hofstra s only score The Huskies blew away the previous top road crowd to see a Hofstra game by drawing 37,583. The previous mark was 26,861 at Marshall in 2006 The UConn game was the earliest start to a season in Hofstra history, beating the 2002 season opener against Montana at Shuart Stadium by one day. TEAM CAPTAINS: The Pride coaching staff has named senior quarterback Bryan Savage, senior wide receiver Ottis Lewis and junior linebacker Luke Bonus to serve as Hofstra team captains in 2008. QB BRYAN SAVAGE LOST FOR THE SEASON: 2007 starting quarterback Bryan Savage will miss the 2008 season due to a herniated disc in his back. Junior Cory Christopher (Miami, Florida), who replaced Savage in the 2008 season opener at Connecticut, will continue as the starting quarterback for the Pride. Savage, a senior signal-caller from Springfield, Pennsylvania was scratched from the Pride's season opener at BCS-member

Connecticut approximately 15 minutes before game time after notifying the Hofstra medical staff of numbness in his feet. An MRI taken revealed the severity of the injury. "My heart really goes out to Bryan," Cohen said. "He worked very hard to prepare for this season. He is a leader and has given so much of himself for the program including spending most of the summer on campus preparing for his senior year." A January 2007 transfer from Coffeyville Community College, Savage started all 11 games for the 7-4 Pride last season. He ranked fourth in the Colonial Athletic Association (CAA) and was 13 th in the NCAA Football Championship Subdivision (FCS) in passing yards, and was fourth in the CAA and 15 th in the nation in total offense. Savage completed 232-of-367 passes for 2,668 yards and 13 touchdowns last season, posting the sixth-best, single-season passing yards total in Hofstra history. He recorded six games with 250 or more passing yards including three 300-yard contests, and tallied 10 games with a completion percentage of above 60 percent, including a school-record 15-for-17 (88.2) against William and Mary. Savage completed 31-of-50 passes for a season-best 325 yards against New Hampshire at Shuart Stadium last October. Savage played the 2006 season at Coffeyville CC in Kansas where he served as team captain and earned all-conference honors. He attended the University of Wisconsin for two years, red-shirting in 2004 and practicing with the team in 2005. ONE FOR THE ROAD FOR OL JIMMY MANGIERO: Injured junior offensive lineman Jimmy Mangiero, who had his seventh knee surgery recently, made his season debut ans season farewell against Rhode Island on September 20. Mangiero, who was expected to return to a starting role in 2008, was sidelined until the URI game with the bad knee. He came off the bench against URI after junior guard David Spanich was injured to help provide some leadership on the line. Mangiero is not expected to return this season. GASKINS LEAVES: Red-shirt freshman running back Larry Gaskins has voluntarily left the team due to personal reasons. He had two carries for one yard at Connecticut on August 28. FORMER HOFSTRA AND NFL GREATS JOHN SCHMITT AND COLSTON HAVE THEIR PRIDE NUMBERS RETIRED: In an effort to acknowledge the outstanding accomplishments of numerous former student-athletes during the University's nearly 75 years of existence, Hofstra University has announced that a group of 20 former Pride athletes, including three former football standouts, will have their jersey numbers retired. During the first two Hofstra home games, current New Orleans Saints receiver Marques Colston (#89) and former New York Jets center John Schmitt (#77) had their Hofstra jersey numbers retired in halftime ceremonies. Colston, a four-year letterman and a three-year starter at Hofstra from 2001 through 2005, was selected in the seventh round of the 2006 NFL Draft by the Saints after an outstanding Pride career. An All- Atlantic 10 Football Conference first team selection as a senior, he ended his college career in grand style by breaking the Hofstra career receiving yards record formerly held by former Houston Texans/Denver Broncos receiver Charlie Adams. Colston posted 70 receptions for 975 yards and five touchdowns in 2005 to finish his career with 182 receptions for 2,834 yards and 18 touchdowns. In addition to his 2,834 receiving yards-which was broken last season by Charles Sullivan-his 182 catches currently ranks third on the Hofstra career reception list. Colston was also named to the 81st annual East-West Shrine Game in San Antonio in 2006 and caught five passes for 82 yards and a touchdown. Two seasons into his NFL career, Marques Colston has emerged as one of the elite receivers in the NFL and owns the league record for receptions in his first two campaigns with a total of 168. Incidentally, Hofstra alum and retired New York Jet Wayne Chrebet was a previous holder of that record with 150 catches in his first two NFL seasons. After catching 70 balls for 1,038 yards and eight scores in 2006, Colston finished third in the voting for NFL Offensive Rookie of the Year. He was even better in 2007, posting a Saints-record 98 receptions, 1,202 yards and a team record-tying 11 touchdowns. Schmitt, who graduated from Hofstra in 1964 with degrees in management and marketing, was a three-year letterman on the Pride football team and also lettered in wrestling and track. An offensive lineman, he received Little College All- America honors in 1963. In 1964 he was signed by the New York Jets, starting an 11-year National Football League career that was highlighted by a Super Bowl championship in 1969. He was a starter in nine of his 10 seasons with the Jets and played in 114 games. Schmitt earned All-Pro honors in 1968 and 1969, Most Valuable Lineman accolades in 1972, and was a team captain in 1971. He saw action in 14 games for the Packers in 1974 before ending his NFL career. In 1969 he was the first inductee into the Long Island Sports Hall of Fame. He has been honored by Hofstra University with the 1969 George M. Estabrook Distinguished Service Award, the 1988 Hofstra School of Business Alumni Association Alumnus of the Year Award and the 1990 Hofstra University Alumnus of the Year Award. John was an honoree at the 2002 Hofstra Pride Club Dinner and was inducted into the Hofstra Athletics Hall of Fame in 2006. John founded the 16th-largest insurance business in the nation, and an insurance marketing firm that develops programs for credit unions. Schmitt is actively involved with many charitable causes and in the Hofstra community, including serving on the board of directors of the Hofstra Pride Club. "The honoring of Marques Colston and John Schmitt and the other 18 former student-athletes is a celebration of the outstanding history of Hofstra Athletics," commented Hofstra University Director of Athletics Jack Hayes. Earlier this year the athletics department began an online process that resulted in more than 150 nominations being submitted. From that list the group of 20 former student-athletes was selected by a committee of alumni, athletics department administrators and Hofstra Pride Club members. The group of 20 former student-athletes encompasses a wide range of sports and accomplishments as 10 different teams are recognized and among the honorees are National Champions, National Players of the Year, All-Americans and World Champions. Colston s #89 and Schmitt s #77 join the current list of retired jerseys that includes football alumni Wayne Chrebet (#3) and Walter Kohanowich (#33), Crystal Boyd (#13) from the softball team and Sue Weber (#20) from the women s soccer team.

In 2008, Hofstra is 2-2 overall 1-0 in CAA games 1-1 at home 1-1 on the road 1-0 in day games 1-2 in night games 1-1 televised games 0-1 overtime games 0-1 on grass fields 2-1 on turf fields 1-1 when scoring first 1-0 when leading after one quarter 1-2 when trailing after one quarter 0-0 when tied after one quarter 2-1 when leading after two quarters 0-1 when trailing after two quarters 0-0 when tied after two quarters 2-0 when leading after three quarters 0-2 when trailing after three quarters 0-0 when tied after three quarters 0-1 scoring 10 points or less 0-1 scoring 11-20 points 1-0 scoring 21-30 points 0-0 scoring 31-40 points 1-0 when scoring 40 points or more 1-0 allowing 10 points or less 1-0 allowing 11-20 points 0-1 allowing 21-30 points 0-1 allowing 31-40 points 0-0 allowing more than 40 points 0-1 when rushing for less than 100 yards 1-1 when rushing for 101-200 yards 1-0 when rushing for 201-300 yards 2-0 when allowing less than 100 rushing yards 0-0 when allowing 101-200 rushing yards 0-2 when allowing 201-300 rushing yards 0-0 when allowing more than 300 rushing yards 0-0 when passing for less than 100 yards 1-1 when passing for 101-200 yards 1-1 when passing for 201-300 yards 0-0 when passing for more than 300 yards 0-0 when allowing less than 100 yards passing 1-1 when allowing 101-200 passing yards 1-1 when allowing 201-300 passing yards 0-0 when allowing more than 300 passing yards 0-0 with less than 100 yards in total offense 0-1 with 101-200 yards in total offense 0-0 with 201-300 yards in total offense 1-0 with 301-400 yards in total offense 1-1 with more than 400 yards in total offense 0-0 when allowing less than 100 yards in total offense 0-0 when allowing 101-200 yards in total offense 1-0 when allowing 201-300 yards in total offense 1-1 when allowing 301-400 yards in total offense 0-1 when allowing more than 400 yards in total offense 2-1 with more than 30:00 in time of possession 0-1 with less than 30:00 in time of possession 0-0 when time of possession is even HOFSTRA S RETURNING STARTERS: The Pride has 10 returning starters from the 2007 squad. There are seven offensive starters and three defensive. The returning starters from 2007 are: Offensive Starters Returning: 7 Bryan Savage QB Sr. Bryant Carpenter FB Jr. Ottis Lewis WR Sr, Phil Riley TE Sr. Jimmy Mangiero LG Jr. David Spanich RG Jr. Brian Frederick RT So. Defensive Starters Returning: 3 Kevin Smith DE Jr. Luke Bonus LB Jr. Nick Altomare SS Sr. Starting Kickers Returning: 0 HOFSTRA S NEW STARTERS: Hofstra s starters for the season opener against Connecticut included seven defensive players, three offensive players and a kicker who made their starting debut in a Hofstra uniform. The Pride, who graduated 24 seniors including 14 starters following the 7-4 2007 season, started three new faces in the secondary, two at linebacker, two on the defensive line, two offensive linemen and a tailback. Three of the newcomers, graduate student linebacker Anthony Vernaglia (Anaheim Hills, CA), junior cornerback Leslie Jackman (Freeport, NY), and junior safety Ray McDonough (Los Angeles, CA) are transfers while three others, safety Greg Melendez (Brooklyn, NY), offensive tackle Derek Moore (Granville, OH) and tailback Larry Gaskins (Conshohocken, PA) are red-shirt freshmen. Junior defensive tackle Zach Carney (Wynatskill, NY), sophomore defensive tackle Andrew Nelson (Uniondale, NY), linebacker Deron Mayo (Hampton, VA) and center Jaren Harrell (Quartz Hill, CA), and true freshman kicker Brian Hanly (Wyckoff, NJ) also made their Pride starting debut. Vernaglia, who is pursuing a MBA at Hofstra, graduated from the University of Notre Dame this past spring after playing three seasons. He is one of two graduate-student transfers, along with back-up running back Justine Buries from New Mexico State, on the Pride roster. Jackman, a Long Island native, came to Hofstra last winter after three years at Rutgers University, while McDonough is a junior college transfer from Glendale Community College in California. PRIDE PICKED THIRD IN THE 2008 CAA FOOTBALL PRESEASON COACHES POLL The Pride is picked to finish third in the CAA North Division in the 2008 CAA Preseason Poll of conference coaches and select media. FCS Playoff participants Massachusetts was selected to win the North Division and Richmond was picked to win the South Division. In the North, Massachusetts again gets the top preseason nod after winning the division last season. New Hampshire, a FCS Playoff participant, was second in this year s poll followed by the Pride, who surprised many by finishing tied for second last year after being picked fifth in the preseason poll. Maine, Northeastern, and Rhode Island round out the North Division in the poll. In the South Division, the Spiders of Richmond, who captured the South Division and the conference title before advancing to the FCS Playoff semifinals, are picked to win in 2008. Richmond was selected to finish fourth last season in the preseason poll. James Madison, who dropped a one-point decision to eventual national champion Appalachian State in the first round of the FCS Playoffs last year, is picked second while FCS Playoff finalist Delaware is third. Villanova, William and Mary, and Towson round out the South Division in the preseason poll.

2008 COLONIAL ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION PRESEASON COACHES POLL North Division (First Place votes) 1. Massachusetts (17) 2. New Hampshire (1) 3. Hofstra (1) 4. Maine 5. Northeastern 6. Rhode Island South Division (First Place votes) 1. Richmond (11) 2. James Madison (7) 3. Delaware (1) 4. Villanova 5. William and Mary 6. Towson OVERALL CHAMPION -- Massachusetts 2008 PRESEASON CAA ALL-CONFERENCE TEAM OFFENSE QB - Liam Coen Senior Massachusetts RB - Jhamal Fluellen Senior Maine RB - Eugene Holloman Senior James Madison FB - Joe Casey Senior Rhode Island WR - Kevin Grayson Soph. Richmond WR - Marcus Lee Senior Towson WR - Aaron Love Senior Delaware TE - Scott Sicko Junior New Hampshire OL - Sean Calicchio Senior Massachusetts OL - Ryan Canary Senior Maine OL - Kheon Hendricks Senior Delaware OL - Scott Lemn Senior James Madison OL - Matt McCracken Junior Richmond DEFENSE DL - Jovan Belcher Senior Maine DL - Tim Kukucka Junior Villanova DL - Matt Marcorelle Junior Delaware DL - Lawrence Sidbury Junior Richmond LB - Andrew Downey Senior Maine LB - Erik Johnson Senior Delaware LB - Eric McBride Soph. Richmond LB - Collin McConaghy Junior Richmond S - Drew Mack Senior Towson S - Jeromy Miles Junior Massachusetts CB - Courtney Robinson Senior Massachusetts CB - Sean Smalls Senior Massachusetts SPECIAL TEAMS RET - Justin Rogers Sophomore Richmond PK - Jon Striefsky Junior Delaware P - Tom Bishop Senior New Hampshire 2008 CAA FOOTBALL PRESEASON OFFENSIVE PLAYER OF THE YEAR QB - Liam Coen Senior Massachusetts 2008 CAA FOOTBALL PRESEASON DEFENSIVE PLAYER OF THE YEAR DL - Jovan Belcher Senior Maine UCONN DRAWS: After their season opening victory over the Pride, the Connecticut Huskies are now in the Pride s attendance record book twice. The Huskies were in the record book previously as the opponent for the best attended Pride home game at Shuart/Hofstra Stadium, drawing 9,381 in 1999 to see Hofstra down the Huskies, 56-17. In the season opener at Rentschler Field in East Hartford, CT, the Huskies blew away the previous top road crowd to see a Hofstra game by drawing 37,583. The previous mark was 26,861 at Marshall in 2006. 68th SEASON: 2008 marks the 68th season of Hofstra Football. The Pride has posted a.500 or better record in 46 of those seasons. Hofstra (2-2) has recorded a 396-256-11 record (.607) in its 663 games. 2008 also marks the second season of Colonial Athletic Association Football, which sent a record five conference members to the Football Championship Subdivision (FCS) Playoffs last season. The CAA absorbed the Atlantic 10 Football Conference, which Hofstra was a member from 2001 through 2006, capturing the 2001 league title and advancing to the FCS (then-called I-AA) Playoffs. Prior to that the Pride played as FCS Independents from 1994 through the 2000 season, making four trips to the national playoffs. Hofstra was also a successful Division III program, making six NCAA Division III Championship Playoff appearances from 1983 through 1990, including a national semifinal appearance in the Pride s final season in Division III (1990). NEW HELMET DESIGN: The Pride will have a new helmet design for the second time in as many years. The blue graphic of the two lions on the white helmet that was used last year has been replaced with the white block H in motion on the blue helmet. SEASON OPENERS: Including the 2008 season opener at UConn on August 28 Hofstra has now won 23 of its last 26 season openers dating back to 1983. The Pride has posted a 42-24-2 all-time record in season openers. In 2002 the University of Montana ended Hofstra's streak of 19 consecutive season opener victories, as well as the Pride's 255-game, non-shutout streak in a 21-0 decision. In 2003 the Pride dropped its season opener at FBS Marshall, 45-21. HOME OPENERS: With their loss to Albany on September 13 Hofstra dropped its home opener for only the fifth time in the last 27 seasons. In addition to Albany the Pride s other home opening losses during that period came in: 2006 to Towson (33-30); 2003 to Maine (44-21); 2002 to Montana (21-0); and 2000 to Delaware (44-14). SECOND MOST-IMPROVED TEAM IN THE FCS: After going 2-9 in Coach Dave Cohen s first season at Hofstra in 2006, the Pride improved five games to 7-4 in 2007 to become the second mostimproved team in the Football Championship Subdivision. AGAINST THE FBS: Following the 2008 season opening 35-3 loss at Connecticut, the Pride is 0-3 against members of the Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS), formerly I-A. Hofstra dropped games at Marshall in 2003 and 2006. In addition the Pride defeated two other current FBS teams while in their transition from I-AA. In 1999 the Pride, who recorded a 10-1 mark that season, defeated Buffalo, 20-13, and South Florida, 42-23, on the road. ON THE ROAD: The Pride is 30-27 in their last 57 road games and 32-29 in their last 61 contests away from Shuart Stadium. The Pride is 37-30 on the road since the start of the 1997 season. EARLIEST START EVER: The season opener at Connecticut was the earliest start to a season in Hofstra history. While the Pride has played three games in August since 2002, the UConn contest beat the 2002 season opener against Montana at Shuart Stadium by one day.

HOFSTRA'S RETURNING STATISTICAL LEADERS FROM 2007 RUSHING Att. Net Avg. TD Bryan Savage 118 302 2.6 10 Everette Benjamin 68 260 3.8 2 PASSING (Eff.) GP Comp-Att-Int Yds. TD Bryan Savage (127.2) 11 232-367-16 2,668 13 RECEIVING No. Yds. Avg. TD Anthony Nelson 44 543 12.3 1 Ottis Lewis 27 465 17.2 4 Everette Benjamin 15 153 10.2 1 TACKLES UT-AT-TT Sacks Int Luke Bonus (LB) 42-42-84 0-0 0-0 Nick Altomare (DB) 18-14-32 0-0 0-0 Al Carmody (DE) 3-16-19 0-0 0-0 Deron Mayo (LB) 11-7-18 1-3 1-4 HOLDING THE BALL: The Pride won the battle for time of possession in 10 of the 11 games last season. Hofstra s 36:04 possession time in its victory over William and Mary was the Pride s second-best of the season. Ironically the best, 36:48, was against New Hampshire in a 40-3 loss. 400 YARDS: The Pride recorded 400 yards of offense in six of the 11 contests in 2007 including in five consecutive games. On October 13 at Towson the Pride recorded a season-high 482 yards on offense. It topped the previous 2007 high of 461 at Rhode Island. It is the most yardage on offense since racking up 533 yards against #2 New Hampshire in a 29-26 loss at Shuart Stadium in 2005. The Pride posted 474 yards on offense in the loss to New Hampshire on October 20. DEFENSIVE NOTES FROM 2007: The Pride defense recorded six sub-300 yard games in 2007 Hofstra posted its first sub-200 yard contest of the season against Towson on October 13. Hofstra held the Tigers to 193 yards including just 70 yards rushing on 34 attempts. The Tigers junior quarterback Sean Schaefer was also held to his career-low passing yardage with just 123 yards. Towson s 193 total yards including just 70 rushing was Hofstra s lowest opponents total since New Hampshire had 140 yards in a storm-washed contest in 2006. Linebacker Stanley Gutierrez and safety David Darby intercepted passes for Hofstra against Towson. Both interceptions led to Hofstra scores The Pride defense picked off two passes in a game four times in 2007 Villanova s 56 yards passing was a season-best for the Pride defense. Hofstra held opponents under 140 yards passing three times in 2007. A RECORD RALLY: Hofstra s 2007 rally from a 17-point halftime deficit at URI to win the game is the biggest in Hofstra recorded history. In 2003 the Pride rallied from a 26-14 halftime deficit to down Villanova, 34-32. HOFSTRA ALUMNI IN THE NFL: While the Pride had as many as eight alums on National Football League rosters in August, there are currently four former Hofstra players currently gracing NFL team rosters in 2008. They are: - OT Willie Colon (Class of 06), Pittsburgh Steelers - WR Marques Colston (Class of 06), New Orleans Saints - DE Stephen Bowen (Class of 06), Dallas Cowboys -DT Shemiah LeGrande (Class of 08), Detroit Lions ALUMNI NORTH OF THE BORDER: After the retirements of linebacker Brian Clark 96 and defensive back Patrick Dorvelus 02, only one Hofstra football alum, linebacker Renauld Williams 04, is playing in the Canadian Football League this season. Last year the Pride has as many as four alumni playing in the CFL. SHUART STADIUM - HOME, SWEET HOME: With its win over Rhode Island on September 20, Hofstra is now 111-31-0 in regular season play at Shuart Stadium since 1980. Hofstra was 6-0 in 1986 and 1980; 6-1 in 1998; 5-0 in 1995, 1990, 1989, 1988 and 1983, 4-0 in 1991; 5-1 in 2001, 1999, 1984 and 1982; 4-1 in 2000, 1997, 1994, 1993, 1987, 1985 and 1981; 4-2 in 2007; 3-1 in 1992; 3-2 in 2004 and 2005; and 3-3 in 2002. The Pride was 2-4 in 2003 and 1996, and 0-4 at home in 2006. They are 1-1 at home this season. RADIO AND INTERNET: Every Hofstra football game in 2008 can be heard on radio on WRHU-FM (88.7) and on the Internet at www.wrhu.org beginning with the pre-game show at least 30 minutes before every contest. This week s pregame show for James Madison will begin at 1 p.m. THE HOFSTRA COACHES SHOW: Fans, friends and the media are invited to listen to Hofstra Athletics coaches and players and be part of the live audience as WRHU-FM (88.7) presents the Hofstra Coaches Show. The one-hour show, which will air locally on WRHU-FM and worldwide on the internet at www.wrhu.org on Tuesday s at noon will review and preview Hofstra Athletics during the 2008-09 season. In addition to Pride coaches and players, opposing coaches and media members will make guest appearances on the show. IN THE TRENCHES CAA FOOTBALL SHOW: Hofstra University s In the Trenches CAA football show can be heard every Thursday night at 8 p.m. during the football season on WRHU- FM (88.7) in the metropolitan area, and online at www.wrhu.org and www.caasports.com. The hour-long show produced by WRHU- FM, home for Hofstra Athletics, will touch on a wide variety of CAA Football topics. The WRHU Sports team, headed by Sports Director Mike Leslie, will be joined by a number of guests, including CAA Football administrators, coaches and student-athletes, and radio personalities from around the league. The show, entering its third season, will review some of the big games from the previous weekend, preview the upcoming contests, and chat with several CAA Football weekly honorees. PRACTICE: Here is the Hofstra football practice schedule at Shuart Stadium for September 28 through October 8: Sunday, Sept. 28 4:30 p.m. Shakeout Monday, Sept. 29 Players off Tuesday, Sept. 30 4:15 p.m. Practice Wednesday, Oct. 1 4:00 p.m. Practice Thursday, Oct. 2 4:15 p.m. Practice Friday, Oct. 3 Travel to JMU Saturday, Oct. 4 Players off Sunday, Oct. 5 4:30 p.m. Shakeout Monday, Oct. 6 Players off Tuesday, Oct. 7 4:15 p.m. Practice Wednesday, Oct. 8 4:00 p.m. Practice WEEKLY RELEASE E-MAIL: The Hofstra University weekly football release will be available by Wednesday on the Hofstra Athletics Web site (www.hofstra.edu/athletics). We will e-mail the release, in PDF format, to those media members who wish to get every football release during the season. HOF STRA PRO NUN SEE AY SHUNS: 1 - Vernaglia (Ver-nag-lee-ah) 2 - Justine Buries (Justin Burr-eaze) 4 - Aime (Ah-may)

11 - Said Gaida (Sy-eed, Guy-da) 12 - Casciano (Cash see ann o) 13 - Heron (Her-ron) 14 - Sidaras (Sa-dare-us) 19 - Luqman Abdallah (Luke-mahn) 20 - Altomare (Al ta mair) 24 - Basim Hudeen (Bah-seem who-deen) 31 - Kwabena Asante (Kwa-bee-nah, A-sahn-tay) 48 - Schamgar Cenat (Sham-gar Sen-not) 50 - Szelong (Zee long) 53 - Akabalu (Ocka bah loo) 60 - Ottaiano (Oh-tee-ah-no) 74 - Paulemon (Paul-la-mun) 80 - Ottis Lewis (OTT is) 84 - Denimarck (Den ah mark) 89 - Jaramillo (Jare-a-mee-oh) 94 - Akabalu (Ock-a-bah-lu) 95 - Carmody (Car-ma-dee) 98 - Abiola (Ab-ee-oh-la) 2008 HOFSTRA GAME SUMMARIES GAME 1 AUGUST 28 AT CONNECTICUT: University of Connecticut running back Donald Brown set a career-high with four touchdowns and 146 rushing yards, helping the Huskies defeat the Pride, 35-3, in the season opener for both teams at Rentschler Field Thursday night. Junior quarterback Cory Christopher (Miami, Fla) made his first career appearance for the Pride, kicking off the 68th season of Hofstra football by going 17-28 for 130 yards and two interceptions. Christopher was named the starter by Head Coach Dave Cohen about 15 minutes before kickoff, replacing Bryan Savage (Springfield, PA) after the starting QB was held out because of back spasms. It was the Pride's first season-opening loss in five years. Christopher, who was the 2006 Conference Offensive Player of the Year for Nassau Community College before transferring, completed at least one pass to nine different receivers (including offensive lineman David Spanich on a tipped pass). Connecticut sacked Christopher seven times. The contest marked just the third time the Pride played a member of the Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS), formerly I-A. Hofstra lost two games at Marshall-in 2003 and 2006-while also posting victories against current FBS schools Buffalo and South Florida in 1999 when both schools were in transition from I-AA. Hofstra came out strong and temporarily quieted the near-sellout crowd of 37,583, forcing the Huskies to go three-and-out on its opening possession. Following a 47-yard punt, Connecticut's Robbie Frey recovered Anthony Nelson's fumble recovery at the Hofstra 1- yard line. Brown capitalized on the turnover one play later, bullying his way into the end zone for a touchdown run to open a 7-0 lead two minutes into the first quarter. Christopher recorded his first career completion for the Pride, delivering a third-down strike to Aaron Weaver (Freeport, NY) picked up the first down. But Scott Lutrus' interception stalled the drive, giving possession back to the Huskies midway through the first. Brown added his second touchdown of the quarter, capping a seven-play drive with another 1-yard touchdown run to forge a 14- point edge with 4:47 remaining. Brown nearly added his third touchdown of the quarter before a holding penalty negated another scoring rush. The junior tailback still tallied 86 yards on 14 carries in the opening 15 minutes. The Pride almost got on the board in the second quarter, engineering a 15-play drive that teetered out after two sacks. UConn still held Hofstra off the scoreboard and surged to a 28-0 halftime lead thanks to Brown's third and fourth rushing touchdowns of the half, including a 19-yard scamper 12 minutes into the second and a two-yard rush into the end zone with 41 seconds remaining in the half. Ray McDonough (Los Angeles, CA) helped put some life back into Hofstra in the second half, picking off Tyler Lorenzen's pass at the Huskies' 2-yard line before returning it 54 yards. Christopher completed first-down passes to Weaver and Nelson (Wellington, Fla.) on back-to-back plays while also scrambling for another 12 yards; setting up place-kicker Brian Hanly's (Wyckoff, NJ) 29-yard field goal to put Hofstra on the scoreboard nearly 10 minutes into the third quarter. Graduate student Anthony Vernaglia (Anaheim Hills, CA) made a master's-worthy play in the third quarter, picking off Lorenzen's downfield attempt and returned it 16 yards. Vernaglia recorded his first pick of his career. The linebacker never had an interception in his three seasons at Notre Dame. Nick Altomare (Fairfax, VA) also generated the first pick of his career. The fourth-year veteran moved from safety to cornerback during training camp and saved at least six points when he corralled a pass in the Connecticut end zone on the second quarter's first play. Altomare registered five tackles. Frey's two-yard touchdown run 3:33 into the final quarter capped the scoring as Connecticut improved to 3-2 in the all-time series against the Pride. Freshman Chris Edmond (Freeport, NY) collected a team-high nine tackles. McDonough added eight tackles; the same total as freshman Gregory Melendez (Brooklyn, NY). Senior receiver Ottis Lewis (Norwalk, CT) led all Pride receivers with 32 yards on three receptions. 1 2 3 4 F Hofstra 0 0 3 0 3 Connecticut 14 14 0 7 35 Scoring Summary UC - Brown 1-yard run (Ciaravino kick) UC - Brown 1-yard run (Ciaravino kick) UC - Brown 19-yard run (Ciaravino kick) UC - Brown 2-yard run (Ciaravino kick) HU - Hanly 28-yard field goal UC - Frey 2-yard run (Ciaravino kick) HOFSTRA UCONN First Downs (R-P-Pe) 4-8-1 12-13-2 Rushes-Yards (Net) 28-40 43-218 Passing Yards (Net) 130 233 Passes Comp-Att-Int 17-28-2 18-30-3 Total Offense/Plays-Yards 56-170 73-451 Punt Returns-Yards 1- (-15) 2-42 Kickoff Returns-Yards 5-105 2-33 Interception Returns-Yards 3-70 2-0 Punts (Number-Avg) 6-37.8 2-43.5 Fumbles-Lost 2-1 2-2 Penalties-Yards 8-70 7-70 Possession Time 28:43 31:17 Third Down Conversions 6-14 5-10 Fourth Down Conversions 0-1 0-0

Red-Zone Scores-Chances 1-3 5-7 Sacks By: Number-Yards 0-0 7-47 RUSHING: HOFSTRA- Christopher (21-25-0), Benjamin (1-8-0), Buries (4-6-0); UConn- Brown (23-146-4), Frey (9-34-1), Wylie (6-23-0) PASSING: HOFSTRA- Christopher (17-28-2, 130, 0TD); UConn- Lorenzen (14-25-3, 184, 0TD), Endres (4-5-0, 49, 0TD) RECEIVING: HOFSTRA- Weaver (4-25-0), Lewis (3-32-0), Ant. Nelson (3-18-0), Benson (2-26-0); UConn- Gaulden (4-62-0), Moore (4-37-0), Smith (3-32) TACKLES (UA-A): HOFSTRA-Edmond (5-4-9), Melendez (5-3-8), McDonough (5-3-8); UConn- Wilson (4-4-8), Lloyd (2-4-6), Lutrus (3-1-4). Stadium: Rentschler Field Attendance: 37,583 Weather: 76 degrees and cloudy GAME 2 - SEPTEMBER 13 VS. ALBANY: Hofstra junior quarterback Cory Christopher passed for 272 yards and a touchdown, but it wasn't enough as Albany got a 7-yard touchdown run from junior tailback David McCarthy in the first overtime to earn a 22-16 victory over the Pride Saturday evening at James M. Shuart Stadium. Hofstra slips to 0-2 with the loss, while Albany evens its record at 1-1 this season. Christopher, a native of Miami, Florida, completed 27-of-38 passes, while also rushing for 44 yards. Linebacker Luke Bonus led Hofstra's defense with eight tackles and 1 ½ sacks. Christopher tried to win it for the Pride in regulation, initiating an 18- play drive with the scored tied at 16. The junior passer produced a mini-highlight reel on the drive, faking a handoff before scrambling up-field for a key first down on an option play to push Hofstra past midfield. Anthony Nelson, who logged a game-high nine catches for 85 yards, sustained the drive by sprawling out for a third-down catch, giving the Pride a new set of downs on the Albany 17. Christopher ran a quarterback keeper to center the ball between the hash marks, setting up freshman kicker Brian Hanly's potential game-winning attempt. But Hanly had his 34-yard field goal attempt blocked by Dave Casale with three seconds remaining, sending the contest into overtime. Hanly had another chance in overtime, lining up for a 30-yard kick that would have forced the Great Danes to score a field goal to tie or a touchdown to win. Instead, Albany senior Raphael Nguti came up with the third block of the game for Albany. McCarty raced in for the winning score five plays later, marking just the third time the Great Danes have defeated Hofstra in 14 career meetings. Down 16-9 early in the fourth quarter, the Pride stormed back. Christopher electrified the crowd of 5,111, eluding a sack about 10 yards in the backfield on third-and-long by juking away from linebacker Emerson Kinsey before firing a strike to Everette Benjamin for a first-down. The drive nearly stalled near Albany's goal line as Christopher's third-down pass to Aaron Weaver sailed wide. Albany's Ross Bertrand was called for pass interference, setting up freshman tailback Brock Jackolski's first collegiate touchdown. Jackolski took the pitch and ran untouched into the left corner of the end zone, tying the game at 16 with 10:34 remaining in the fourth quarter. Albany quarterback Vinny Espositio (10-22, 102 yards) put the Great Danes ahead when the junior bullied his way into the end zone for a 1-yard quarterback keeper. The touchdown forged a 16-9 lead for the Great Danes with 2:12 left in the third quarter. Nearly four minutes earlier, Albany generated points on defense to erase a 9-7 deficit. With the ball at the Hofstra 4-yard line, Christopher fumbled but recovered. Albany made the tackle in the Pride end zone for the game-tying safety. Hofstra surged to a 6-0 lead thanks to nine-play, 59-yard drive that culminated with Christopher's 13-yard touchdown strike to Weaver. The Pride missed the extra point, though Weaver's first career touchdown reception gave the home team the edge on its first possession. Christopher's bullet pass was his first touchdown pass as a Hofstra player. But Albany rebounded late in the first quarter by marching 84 yards in 10 plays, pulling ahead thanks to the first of Esposito's two rushing touchdowns. The QB pushed past the goal line with a 1-yard keeper. Herb Glass added the extra point, putting Albany up 7-6 entering the second quarter. Hofstra defensive end Al Carmody combined with Bonus on Hofstra's only other sack. Gregory Melendez chipped in seven tackles. Strong safety Ray McDonough contributed three pass breakups. 1 2 3 4 OT F Albany 7 0 9 0 6 22 Hofstra 6 3 0 7 0 160 Scoring Summary HU - Waever 13-yard pass from Christopher (Hanly kick blocked) UA - Esposito 1-yard run (Glass kick) HU - Hanly 25-yard field goal UA - Team safety UA - Esposito 1 yard ruin (Glass kick) HU - Jackolski 3-yard run (Hanly kick) UA - McCarthy 7-yard run HOFSTRA ALBANY First Downs (R-P-Pe) 7-18-1 10-6-1 Rushes-Yards (Net) 46-132 45-207 Passing Yards (Net) 272 102 Passes Comp-Att-Int 27-39-0 10-22-0 Total Offense/Plays-Yards 85-404 67-309 Punt Returns-Yards 0-0 1-0 Kickoff Returns-Yards 3-76 4-61 Interception Returns-Yards 0-0 0-0 Punts (Number-Avg) 3-27.3 6-37.3 Fumbles-Lost 4-0 0-0 Penalties-Yards 6-44 4-32 Possession Time 36:41 23:19 Third Down Conversions 8-16 6-15 Fourth Down Conversions 1-2 1-2 Red-Zone Scores-Chances 3-6 3-3 Sacks By: Number-Yards 2-7 3-17 RUSHING: HOFSTRA- Benjamin (19-69-0), Christopher (19-44-0), Jackolski (8-19-1); UA- McCarty (27-178-1), Simmons (8-25-0), Gannon (3-3-0) PASSING: HOFSTRA- Christopher (27-38-0, 272, 1); UA- Esposito (10-22-0, 102, 0)

RECEIVING: HOFSTRA- Ant. Nelson (9-85-0), Weaver (7-70-1), Lewis (3-51-0); UA- Bush (6-58-0), Bocanegra (1-17-0), Lullen (1-10-0) TACKLES (UA-A): HOFSTRA-Bonus (3-5-8), Melendez (2-6-8), Edmond (5-2-7); UA- Brancaccio (9-6-15), Casale (7-6-13), Kelly (7-3-10. Stadium: James M. Shuart Stadium Attendance: 5,111 Weather: 71 degrees and overcast GAME 3 - SEPTEMBER 20 VS. RHODE ISLAND: Hofstra freshman placekicker Roger Williams drilled a 38-yard-field goal with three seconds remaining in the contest to give the Pride a 23-20 CAA Football victory over Rhode Island at James M. Shuart Stadium Saturday afternoon. The Pride improved to 1-2 and 1-0 in the CAA while Rhode Island dropped to 1-3 and 0-2 in conference play. Williams, a walk-on from Mandeville, Louisiana, came off the bench in the second half in place of freshman starter Brian Hanly and kicked two field goals, including the game-winner in the waning seconds of regulation, to lead the Pride to victory. Pride quarterback Cory Christopher sliced through the Rams defense with his arm and his legs, completing 25 of his 33 attempts for 265 yards while rushing for an additional 97 yards. Freshman tailback Brock Jackolski (Shirley, NY) added a career-high 144 yards on 13 carries in just his second collegiate contest. With the scored tied at 20 in the final minute and no timeouts, Christopher engineered an eight-play, 58-yard drive in just 44 seconds to facilitate Williams attempt. The Miami, FL. native completed two passes to Everette Benjamin before connecting on a 12-yard pass to red-shirt freshman receiver Aaron Weaver as the Pride advanced into Rams territory. Christopher punctuated the drive by finding Ottis Lewis for 24 yards to the URI 21. After a spike to stop the clock, Williams came on and converted his second field goal of the game to give the Pride the lead. Williams would kick-off to the Rams and, after a total return of 57 yards by two URI players, would assist on the final tackle to end the game. Rhode Island mounted a comeback of its own, marching 54 yards down the field on its second-to-last possession. Rams tailback Anthony Ferrer pushed through for a 21-yard gain and then pushed his way in from the 1-yard line one play later to tie the game at 20 with 44 seconds left. But Louis Feinstein hooked his extra point attempt, keeping the score tied at 20. Hofstra scored 14 points in the final quarter, starting with Christopher s one-yard quarterback sneak for a touchdown with 8:21 left. Head Coach Dave Cohen elected to go for the two-point conversion and Christopher delivered by finding Weaver for a successful conversion and a 17-14 lead for the Pride. Jackolski, who was playing in just his second NCAA game, nearly made it a two-score game five minutes later. The underclassman busted through a hole, completed a spin move and raced 64 yards downfield before getting hauled down just inches from the goal line. But the Pride couldn t punch it in and had to settle for a 33-yard field goal from Williams to boost the Pride lead to 20-14 with 3:27 to play. The Rams came out strong, breaking open the scoring just 1:50 into the contest when Jimmy Hughes blasted through a hole for a 37-yard rushing touchdown. Hughes would lead the Rams ground game with 49 yards on 11 carries. The Pride got on the scoreboard with 5:31 remaining in the first half following Brian Hanly s (Wyckoff, NJ) 21- yard field goal. Benjamin, who added 44 yards on nine carries, gave the Pride its first lead just over a minute later, recording a six-yard touchdown run to give Hofstra a 9-7 halftime lead. It was Benjamin s first touchdown of the season. Senior defensive back Nick Altomare (Fairfax, VA) set up that short scoring drive, forcing Hughes to fumble after a ferocious hit. Anthony Vernaglia (Anaheim Hills, CA) recovered the loose ball, giving possession to the Pride at the Rams 21-yard line. Vernaglia finished with a team-high six tackles, including five sol stops, and a sack. Altomare also added an interception-his second of the seasonoff quarterback Derek Cassidy, one of three turnovers the Pride generated. Cassidy, who completed 18 of his 32 passes for 248 yards, also had a pass picked off by Leslie Jackman. Christopher ran the ball 22 times but also forged a connection with his two top receivers. Sophomore Anthony Nelson (Wellington, FL) logged a game-high nine receptions for 92 yards while Weaver contributed eight catches for 76 yards. 1 2 3 4 F Rhode Island 7 0 0 13 20 Hofstra 0 9 0 14 23 Scoring Summary URI - Hughes 37-yard run (Feinstein kick) HU- Hanly 21-yard field goal HU- Benjamin 6-yard run (Hanly kick failed) URI- Ferrer 2-yard pass from Cassidy (Feinstein kick) HU- Christopher 1-yard run (Weaver pass from Christopher) HU- Williams 33-yard field goal URI- Ferrer 1-yard run (Feinstein kick failed) HU- Williams 38-yard field goal HOFSTRA URI First Downs (R-P-Pe) 12-12-1 5-10-0 Rushes-Yards (Net) 45-211 26-93 Passing Yards (Net) 265 248 Passes Comp-Att-Int 25-36-0 18-32-2 Total Offense/Plays-Yards 81-476 58-341 Punt Returns-Yards 4-6 1-6 Kickoff Returns-Yards 4-73 6-144 Interception Returns-Yards 2-5 0-0 Punts (Number-Avg) 5-41.0 7-32.7 Fumbles-Lost 5-1 2-1 Penalties-Yards 6-60 4-30 Possession Time 37:22 22:38 Third Down Conversions 5-15 3-12 Fourth Down Conversions 0-2 1-1 Red-Zone Scores-Chances 4-5 2-2 Sacks By: Number-Yards 2-14 5-30 RUSHING: HOFSTRA- Jackolski (13-144-0), Christopher (22-49- 1), Benjamin (9-43-1); URI- Hughes (11-49-1), Ferrer (3-25-1), Cassidy (10-22-0) PASSING: HOFSTRA- Christopher (25-33-0, 265, 0TD); URI- Cassidy (18-32-2, 248, 1TD) RECEIVING: HOFSTRA- Ant. Nelson (9-92-0), Weaver (8-76-0), Benjamin (4-33-0); URI- Johnson-Farrell (7-67-0), Leonard (4-118- 0), Bellini (4-50-0) TACKLES (UA-A): HOFSTRA- Vernaglia (5-1-6), Gaida (4-2-6), Altomare (3-2-5); URI- Hansen (9-3-12), Ball (7-4-11), Young (8-1- 9). Stadium: James M. Shuart Stadium Attendance: 6,107 Weather: 64 degrees and cloudy

GAME 4 - SEPTEMBER 26 AT STONY BROOK: Hofstra's defense generated four turnovers, leading directly to 26 points as the Pride defeated Stony Brook, 43-3, in a non-conference game at LaValle Stadium. The Pride forced stops on the Seawolves first five drives, surging ahead 31-3 at halftime. Hofstra improved to 2-2 on the season and 12-0 in the all-time series, starting strong in the first of four straight road contests. Stony Brook dropped to 1-4. Hofstra junior quarterback Cory Christopher wasn't deterred by the soggy weather, finishing 15-for-24 for 161 yards and a touchdown, while adding 48 yards on the ground and two rushing touchdowns. The Pride's point total exceeded its first three games combined, extending the team's winning streak to two. Nick Altomare registered a team-high eight tackles, keying a defense that picked off quarterback Dayne Hoffman twice and recovered two fumbles in addition to stopping four fourth-down attempts. A fumbled punt and a turnover on downs gave Hofstra favorable field position in the first quarter, as the Pride put up 10 points. The Pride defense sustained the momentum in the second quarter, building a three-score lead when cornerback Leslie Jackman's stripped Stony Brook running back Edwin Gowins of the ball and raced untouched 60 yards up the Stony Brook sideline for a touchdown, building a 17-0 lead with 14:08 to play in the half. Stony Brook nearly set the early tone, marching all the way to the Hofstra 24 on its opening drive. Hoffman nearly put his team on the scoreboard, finding an open receiver in the end zone. But Dwayne Eley couldn't handle the throw and the Pride defense forced a turnover on downs. Christopher's engineered a 12-play, 66-yard drive and called his own number on the quarterback keeper to put Hofstra ahead, 7-0, with 4:05 remaining in the first quarter. On the Seawolves next possession a bad snap on Stony Brook's punt attempt set up Hofstra's second score on the next drive. The snap from center went over punter Luke Gaddis' head with the punter falling on the ball at the Seawolves 4-yard line for a 38-yard loss. Hofstra capitalized on the miscue, pulling ahead by 10 thanks to Roger Williams' 21-yard-field goal in the first quarter's final minute. Hofstra kept pressuring the Seawolves following Jackson's big play. Anthony Nelson, who finished with a game-high 69 receiving yards on four catches, took a swing pass 2 yards in the backfield and sprinted up-field to sustain the drive on third-and-long. Christopher's fourth down sneak later in the drive led to another seven points and marked the Miami, FL, native's third rushing TD of the year. After a Stony Brook three-and-out, Christopher went right back to work. Aaron Weaver corralled a jump ball at the Stony Brook 4, beating the man-on-man coverage. Reigning CAA Rookie of the Week Brook Jackolski recorded a touchdown for a second straight game, taking an end-around all the way on the next play as Hofstra opened a 24-0 lead midway through the second quarter. Two turnovers allowed Hofstra to pad the lead in the second half. Phil Riley recovered Eley's fumbled punt return near midfield late in the third quarter. The Pride opened up the playbook, getting Weaver got into the action as a rusher. The sophomore wideout took a reverse 18 yards to the Stony Brook 2-yard line. Christopher added the second of his rushing touchdowns on the next play. Red-shirt freshman Chris Edmond garnered his first collegiate interception, picking off Hoffman's pass in the flat at the Stony Brook 28. Benjamin capped the following seven-play drive by bullying ahead for a 2-yard touchdown run to close the scoring. 1 2 3 4 F Hofstra 10 21 0 12 43 Stony Brook 0 3 0 0 3 Scoring Summary HU- Christopher 1-yard run (Williams kick) HU- Williams 21-yard field goal HU- Jackman 60-yard fumble recovery (Williams kick) HU- Jackolski 3-yard run (Williams kick) HU- Ant. Nelson 30-yard pass from Christopher (Williams kick) SBU- Gaddis 28-yard field goal HU- Christopher 2-yard run (Williams kick failed) HU- Benjamin 2-yard run (Williams kick failed) HOFSTRA SBU First Downs (R-P-Pe) 10-8-0 7-7-2 Rushes-Yards (Net) 39-155 29-72 Passing Yards (Net) 161 139 Passes Comp-Att-Int 15-24-0 12-27-2 Total Offense/Plays-Yards 63-316 56-211 Punt Returns-Yards 0-0 1- (-1) Kickoff Returns-Yards 2-45 7-124 Interception Returns-Yards 2-6 0-0 Punts (Number-Avg) 3-38.3 2-39.5 Fumbles-Lost 0-0 3-2 Penalties-Yards 6-53 3-15 Possession Time 32:03 27:57 Third Down Conversions 8-13 3-11 Fourth Down Conversions 1-1 1-5 Red-Zone Scores-Chances 5-5 1-2 Sacks By: Number-Yards 0-0 0-0 RUSHING: HOFSTRA- Christopher (12-48-2), Benjamin (11-45-1), Jackolski (11-32-1); SBU- Cuttino (15-75-0), Gowins (9-63-0), Contardi (3-(-4)-0). PASSING: HOFSTRA- Christopher (15-24-0, 161-1TD); SBU- Hoffman (9-22-2, 119, 0), Sweeney (3-5-0, 20, 0) RECEIVING: HOFSTRA- Ant. Nelson (4-69-1), Lewis (4-37-0), Weaver (3-23-0); SBU- Eley (6-69-0), Saffold (2-23-0), Porter (1-37- 0) TACKLES (UA-A): HOFSTRA- Altomare (6-2-8), Bonus (1-4-5), Jackman (3-1-4, Melendez (3-1-4); SBU- Schwicke (4-4-8), Soivilien (4-2-6), Brevi (4-2-6). Stadium: LaValle Stadium Attendance: 2,105 Weather: 70 degrees and misty Just 12 seconds later, Ray McDonough registered the second big play from a defensive back. The junior read Hoffman's passing route, stepping in front of the intended receiver for his second interception of the season. Hofstra turned the mistake into points when corner Mike McCoy slipped, allowing Nelson all the time he needed to catch Christopher's lob and increase the lead to 31-0.