The 6-0 Wabash football team handled its business Saturday against winless Kenyon. For the third time this season, the Little Giants held a team to negative yards. The Lords finished with minus-seven rush yards in a 52-10 lopsided North Coast Athletic Conference win.
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"Early in the year we felt a little bit up and down," Coach Erik Raeburn said. "We would play really good for a quarter, then struggle for the next. But I'm really happy that we've been able to string together some good games lately."
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A host of Little Giants strung together Saturday's dominant effort. Seven players had a rush attempt, seven more caught a pass, and 23 made a tackle. Backup linebacker and special teams ace
Connor Karns had six-and-a-half tackles, the second most by a Wabash defender.
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"You don't want to go out as a two and drop off in performance from the ones," Karns said. "You want to go out there and keep the tempo up and make the stops."
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Karns and the rest of the twos took the field with 6:59 remaining in the third quarter. He added a sack in cleanup time and still found the energy for his special teams duties.
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"If you're sitting around long enough your legs will be stiff, but you're still ready to go," Karns said. "Special teams for me is like defense. I'm not a one on defense so I have to make plays to help the team out."
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The starters' legs were loose and ready to go when arriving in Gambier. In the first quarter,
Mason Zurek '16 and
Tyler Holmes '14 punched in one-yard scores.
Houston Hodges caught a 19-yard pass from
Michael Putko as Wabash jumped to a 21-0 lead.
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Szabi Simo connected on a 24-yard field goal in the second quarter for Kenyon before Holmes responded with his second rushing touchdown to give the Little Giants a 28-3 halftime advantage.
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Wabash added 24 points in the third quarter. Putko found
Sammy Adams from 14 yards out, Zurek found the end zone from 20 yards away, and
Andrew Tutsie nailed a 20-yard field goal. Then, Holmes capped the Wabash scoring and the starters' days when he took a short pass and ran 44 yards for a touchdown, 52-3.
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Kenyon scored late in the fourth quarter for its only touchdown.
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Raeburn rotated quarterbacks Putko and
Connor Rice for the second straight week, though Putko played more. He finished 9-of-18 passing for 232 yards and three touchdowns. Rice completed 2-of-5 passes.
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"I thought we threw the ball well," Raeburn said. "They really ganged up on the run and tried to outnumber us in the box so we did a good job taking advantage of the matchups outside."
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The Little Giants attacked through the air in the first half. Wabash attempted 15 passes, completing eight.
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"As opposed to banging our head against the wall trying to run it, we felt like we could throw to the one-on-one coverage and let our guys get yards after catch," Raeburn said. "We took a lot of shots and even the ones we missed, we were close on. In our run game I thought our quarterbacks ran it really well."
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Hodges led Wabash with four catches for 87 yards and a score.
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Seven touchdowns kept kicker Tutsie busy. He converted all of his PAT attempts on top of the made field goal.
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"Ian (MacDougall '14) had a great year last year so it's obviously big shoes to fill," Tutsie said. "Ian had a much bigger leg than I do, but I've always had the mentality that if I make all of my short kicks, the rest are just bonuses. It's easier when the offense puts the ball in the end zone and I have extra-point attempts all day long."
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Tutsie is perfect on 35 extra-point attempts this year and of his three missed field goals, two were blocked.
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After two games on the road, Wabash will host Oberlin 1 p.m. Saturday.