When Xander Fuccillo was just a little tyke he would put his father's old Plymouth State football helmet on, with two towels on top of another another inside the headgear to make it fit.
Nick Fuccillo and brother
Xander Fuccillo are Plymouth State offensive linemen, nearly three
decades after their father played the position for the
Panthers. Plymouth State athletics photo |
These days the Plymouth State helmet is a great fit for the
family. Xander is playing on the Panther offensive line along with
his brother Nick. They are following their father Dave Fuccillo's
path. Dave was an offensive lineman for the 1981 Panther team that
went unbeaten in the New England Football Conference under coach
Jay Cottone.
The brothers are starters on a Plymouth team that is shooting for a
fourth consecutive postseason game, ECAC or NCAA playoffs. Nick is
a senior and Xander a sophomore.
Nick had narrowed his choices to three schools. His father posed
the question, "Which one has shown the most interest in you?"
Nick answered Plymouth as Panther head coach Paul Castonia had
made a couple of visits to the home.
"I told him, 'Don't go there just because I went there,'" Dave
said.
Then Xander was confronted with more choices. There were nine
Division I-AA schools showing interest and D-II schools had offered
partial scholarships.
"He told me that he wanted to play with his brother," Dave
said.
Xander wound up starting all 11 games as a freshman.
"My message to kids is that if you go to a Division I school you
could stand on the sidelines and maybe get a chance down the road,"
Dave said.
"Or you can go to a Division III school and maybe play every game
for four years. And D-III football is great football. People don't
realize how good it is."
Castonia was a factor in the Fuccillos' decision.
"John Clark (the athletic director) told me that Paul was the
best coach they have had there," Dave said.
That's a heck of an endorsement since the Plymouth history
includes such luminaries as Cottone and Don Brown. Brown was the
defensive coordinator for a UMass team that won a national
championship and was the architect of the Maryland defense a couple
of weeks ago that contained the Navy ground attack in the Terps'
victory.
"Paul is outstanding," Dave said.
"I never met a harder working person in my life than coach
Castonia," Xander said.
"I'm glad I'm here," Nick said.
It has worked out pretty well for the captain of that 1981 team,
too. He doesn't have to choose which game to attend to see one of
his sons play.
"It makes my life easier," Dave said.
But the Panthers have some work to do if they are to attain their
goal of another postseason berth. They are coming off a 41-16
spanking by nonconference foe Mount Ida.
But Dad can offer some encouragement here. His 1981 squad opened
with a loss to Norwich before putting together its perfect league
season.
Family all over the field
Castleton State sports information director Jeff Weld looked out
at the field during the season opener with Plymouth State and
wondered aloud, "How many other games in the country today have
brothers on the offensive line for both teams?"
A safe answer: It was a pretty short list.
Not only were the Fuccillos on the O-line for the Panthers, Andrew
and Chris Kiernan were starting on the offensive line for the
Spartans.
Andrew began college at Vermont and left a few years ago. Chris
went to Champlain College and got a two-year degree that makes him
a licensed X-ray technician.
"I made a promise to my parents to go back to college if Castleton
ever got a football team," Andrew said.
Castleton's inaugural season was 2009.
"It has been eight years since I have played on the offensive
line," Andrew said.
"Andrew kind of recruited me," Chris said.
Now, they share a house 10 miles from campus and spend Saturdays
using their 560 pounds of combined weight muscling defensive
linemen.
"It just feels right. This was the way it was supposed to happen,"
Chris said.
Bridgewater 2-0 ... bearly
The Bridgewater State Bears stayed perfect by edging
UMass-Dartmouth 10-7 as Justin Fuller rambled for 127 yards and the
touchdown. Bridgewater scored all 10 points in the fourth
quarter.
9/11 remembrances
There were 9/11 observations at stadiums throughout the country.
It had to be especially poignant at the game between Western New
England and Mass. Maritime. Former WNEC receiver Jimmy Geyer lost
his life in the attack of the World Trade Center.
Certainly the day had special meaning at the Secretaries Cup Game
between Coast Guard and the U.S. Merchant Marine Academy and in
Danbury, Conn., where SUNY-Maritime coach Clayton Kendrick-Holmes
had his Privateers in town to play Western Connecticut.
Kendrick-Holmes will be deployed to Afghanistan after the
season.
On the field, Western New England rolled past Mass. Maritime 30-6
as WNEC quarterback Bryce Brown had 100 yards and a touchdown on
the ground. He aso threw a 46-yard touchdown pass to Kyle
Filmore.
Pat Bennett was the big-play guy for Coast Guard as the Bears
helped coach Bill George open his 12th season as head coach with a
10-8 victory. Bennett took the opening kickoff 82 yards to a score
and blocked a field goal.
SUNY-Maritime went to 2-0 by beating Western Conn. 41-28. Freshman
Thomas Davis, who scored the winning TD in the opener, ran for
three more touchdowns.
All grown up
Scott Drosendahl was pressed into service as a 17-year-old
freshman last year, the youngest of Mike Landers' Baby Mustangs at
Mount Ida.
A year older and wiser, he threw three touchdown passes in Ida's
big 41-16 victory at Plymouth State.
Streaking
The loss ended a 17-game home winning streak for Plymouth. But
Norwich kept its streak going. The Cadets won their 10th
consecutive game by beating St. Lawrence 25-14.
The Cadets, who finished last season with eight consecutive wins
on the strength of a bruising ground game, are mixing in the pass
with great success this season. Chris Denton had seven catches for
169 yards and three touchdowns. Kris Sabourin threw for 223
yards.
Doing more With less
Maine Maritime's Todd Murphy had only four carries, but he still
rushed for 93 yards and two touchdowns as the Mariners crushed Anna
Maria 47-0. Maine Maritime has its home opener this week against
UMass-Dartmouth.
King Curry
Curry did nothing to dispel its preseason billing that had the
Colonels ranked first by the coaches in the NEFC poll. Playing
their first Division III opponent, the Colonels blanked Fitchburg
State 28-0 as Robert Bambini had six catches for 133 yards and two
touchdowns. But it was the defense that had to have coach Skip
Bandini smiling. They held Fitchburg to just 50 yards of total
offense.
Winning late
Framingham State's Kurt Leone tossed a 5-yard pass to Alex Avery
with just 1:20 to play to lift the Rams to a 20-19 victory over
Nichols. Leone was 23 of 36 for 186 yards and two scores.
First Win
MIT opened the season by beating Becker 21-13 as Marcel Sanchez
rushed for 154 yards.
Not so special
J.B. Wells must be lamenting the play of his special teams.
Endicott had two field goals blocked and fell to RPI 6-3.
Still, he had to love the great defensive effort against a good
team. Matt Schafer led that effort with 13 tackles and PJ Bay added
11 tackles and two pass break-ups.
Ah, the atmosphere
Think coaches are so preoccupied with the X's and O's that they
don't notice all the extras and hoopla that surrounds game day?
"(Castleton coach) Rich Alercio has really got it going here with
all the tailgating, the full stands and the marching band. The
people of Vermont should be very proud of this," Utica coach Blaise
Faggiano said after his Pioneers crushed Castleton 59-22.
The Big Games
Westfield State visits Western New England for the Presidents'
Cup, an event that has become special for the Springfield, Mass.,
area.
Coast Guard's visit to Curry is a game that could tell us a lot
about those NEFC teams.
The Merchant Marine at SUNY-Maritime contest is one of the most
special anywhere. The schools are just across the water from one
another and many of the alumni of the two institutions work
together, making bragging rights a special reward.
And Hartwick's visit to Northfield is very special for the Norwich
Cadets. The Cadets would love to beat an old foe from the Empire 8
and enter their own conference with a 3-0 record and 11-game
winning streak.