/seasons/2012/contrib/20121006iasw6q

No. 20 Wheaton (Ill.) Downs Carthage, 44-10, on Oct. 6

More news about: Carthage

The Carthage College football team (3-2, 1-1 College Conference of Illinois and Wisconsin) began a brutal stretch of CCIW games on Saturday, Oct. 6 with a 44-10 loss to No. 20 Wheaton College (Ill., 4-1, 2-0 CCIW) ) at McCully Stadium in Wheaton, Ill.  The Red Men's next two games are against No. 13 Illinois Wesleyan University and No. 11 North Central College.

Carthage took an early, 3-0 lead on a 31-yard field goal by Brett Bukari at 10:27 first period to cap the Red Men's opening drive.  A 55-yard keeper by Thunder quarterback Garrett Meador on Wheaton's opening drive set up Sam Cote's 24-yard field goal that tied the game, 3-3, at 10:10.

Carthage missed a golden opportunity at the start of the second period.  After recovering a Wheaton fumble at the Thunder 18-yard line, the Red Men had to settle for a 37-yard field goal attempt that Bukari missed at 12:56.  Wheaton came right back with a seven-play, 80-yard scoring drive that ended with a four-yard touchdown pass from quarterback Jordan Roberts to tight end Hunter Thorson at 9:58 that gave the Thunder a 10-3 lead.

Carthage recovered a fumbled punt return at the Wheaton 24-yard line at 8:33.  Four plays later, the Red Men scored on a six-yard touchdown pass from quarterback A.J. Simoncelli to wide receiver T.J. Trepanier that tied the contest, 10-10, at 7:13.  The Thunder took the lead for good, 17-10, with 3:34 remaining in the half on an eight-play, 51-yard scoring drive the ended with a four-yard TD pass from Roberts to wide receiver Mark Hiben.  Wheaton's go-ahead score was set up by 42-yard kick return by Justin Swider. 

The Thunder worked the clock perfectly on their final drive of the half, going all the way from their own 27-yard line with 46 seconds to go and getting a 39-yard field goal from Sam Cote with one second on the clock.  Wheaton led, 20-10, at halftime.  Carthage recovered four fumbles and intercepted a pass in the first half.

The game got out of hand for Carthage in the second half, as the Thunder scored 34 unanswered points.  Carthage was forced to punt on its first drive of the second half, and Pete Djurickovic's kick covered only 28 yards.  Wheaton marched 53 yards on six plays and scored on a an eight-yard pass from Roberts to Garrett Cook, giving the Thunder a 27-10 lead at 11:09.  Wheaton made it a 34-10 game at 4:20 third period with a nine-play, 60-yard scoring drive that ended with a 10-yard TD pass from Roberts to David Washko.  Carthage's A.J. Simoncelli was intercepted at his own 29-yard line, and the Thunder struck immediately with a 29-yard touchdown pass from Roberts to Garrett Cook, putting Wheaton up, 41-10, at 3:02 third period.  Cote booted a 28-yard field goal at 4:48 fourth period, capping a 98-yard scoring drive, and the Thunder closed out the scoring at 44-10.

Wheaton rolled up 554 total offensive yards, 258 yards rushing and 296 yards passing, while Carthage was limited to 133 total yards, 56 on the ground and 77 in the air.  The Red Men were zero-for-16 on third-down conversions.  Thunder quarterback Jordan Roberts was nearly perfect, completing 24-of-27 passes for 258 yards and five touchdowns.  Mark Hiben caught seven passes for 86 yards, with Charlie Velling rushing for 76 yards on 13 carries.  Carthage's A.J. Simoncelli (Fr., Downers Grove, Ill./South) completed seven-of-27 passes for 60 yards. 

Red Men outside linebacker Brandon Mecozzi (Sr., Kenosha, Wis../Bradford) collected a game-high 18 tackles (12 solo, 6 assisted), while defensive end Mike Merucci (Sr., Kenosha, Wis../Bradford) had two of Carthage's three sacks.

"We hung with them as long as we could," said Carthage coach Tim Rucks, "but things got out of hand in the third quarter.  It was only a two-score game at halftime, and we needed to get something done on that first series of the second half.  We needed to get at least a field goal.  We didn't, and things just went downhill from there.  Wheaton is really good, but I'm still convinced that we are going to be good.  I surely expected a better showing today.  We just couldn't get a first down and keep our defense off the field.  Turnovers are good, but you have to be able to convert those into points.  Wheaton just comes at you in so many different ways.  Their receivers are huge, and they can run a power game, as well.  They mix it up well.  How we react to adversity will determine how we do the next few weeks.  On the positive side, Brandon Mecozzi was just relentless today, he proved why he's an all-conference player.  Same thing with Tyler O'Brien.  This week, it's not so much that we're playing Illinois Wesleyan, but we're playing ourselves, and that's how we have to look at it.  We have to get our house in order and get better as a football team."

Carthage travels to Bloomington, Ill., on Saturday, Oct. 13 to play CCIW-opponent and No. 13 Illinois Wesleyan University (5-0, 2-0 CCIW) in a 1:30 p.m. game at Wilder Field at Tucci Stadium.

Sep. 4: All times Eastern
TBA
Pacific at Howard Payne
6:00 PM
Averett at N.C. Wesleyan
7:00 PM
Brockport at Buffalo State
7:00 PM
Franklin and Marshall at Lebanon Valley
7:00 PM
King's at Wilkes
7:00 PM
Carroll at UW-Eau Claire
8:00 PM
Coe at Cornell
Sep. 5: All times Eastern
TBA
Hobart at Alfred
6:00 PM
Concordia (Wis.) at Thiel
7:00 PM
Moravian at Muhlenberg
7:00 PM
Juniata at Gettysburg
Sep. 6: All times Eastern
TBA
John Carroll at Waynesburg
TBA
Case Western Reserve at Rowan
TBA
Kenyon at Bluffton
TBA
TCNJ at Lycoming
TBA
Plymouth State at New England College
TBA
McDaniel at Catholic
TBA
Coast Guard at University of New England
TBA
Crown at Hamline
TBA
Macalester at Grinnell
12:00 PM
Grove City at Cortland
12:00 PM
Union at Susquehanna
12:00 PM
Johns Hopkins at Ithaca
12:00 PM
Utica at Washington and Jefferson
12:00 PM
Calvin at Oberlin
12:00 PM
Hampden-Sydney at Delaware Valley
12:00 PM
Morrisville State at Kean
1:00 PM
Wooster at Wilmington
1:00 PM
Alfred State at Anderson
1:00 PM
Salisbury at Washington and Lee
1:00 PM
Ky. Christian at Brevard
1:00 PM
Trine at Christopher Newport
1:00 PM
Carnegie Mellon at Chicago
1:00 PM
Alma at UW-River Falls
1:00 PM
Maryville (Tenn.) at Hendrix
1:30 PM
Ohio Northern at Franklin
1:30 PM
Wheaton (Ill.) at Mount Union
2:00 PM
Baldwin Wallace at Wittenberg
2:00 PM
Denison at Allegheny
2:00 PM
Central at Illinois Wesleyan
2:00 PM
Wabash at St. Norbert
2:00 PM
Albion at UW-Stevens Point
2:00 PM
Augsburg at Valley City State
2:00 PM
Carleton at UW-Whitewater
2:00 PM
Millikin at Luther
2:00 PM
UW-Platteville at Aurora
2:00 PM
Beloit at Rockford
2:00 PM
Dubuque at UW-Stout
4:00 PM
UW-Oshkosh at Linfield
4:00 PM
Gustavus Adolphus at Whitworth
6:00 PM
Huntingdon at Berry
7:00 PM
DePauw at Rose-Hulman
7:00 PM
Hanover at Centre
7:00 PM
Augustana at Simpson
7:00 PM
Carthage at Lakeland
7:00 PM
North Park at Ripon
7:00 PM
Trinity (Texas) at Texas Lutheran
7:00 PM
Adrian at Valparaiso
7:00 PM
Kalamazoo at Austin
8:00 PM
Mayville St. at Concordia-Moorhead
8:00 PM
Monmouth at Wartburg
8:00 PM
Rhodes at Washington U.
9:00 PM
Claremont-Mudd-Scripps at Lake Forest
@ Chandler, Ariz.
10:00 PM
Hardin-Simmons at Chapman
10:00 PM
George Fox at Redlands
Maintenance in progress.