Schedules fall into place

St. Peter’s dropped football a few weeks ago, leaving three Division III football teams scrambling for games.

While it hasn’t worked out well for St. Peter’s, obviously, the D-III schools have made it work, finally. And in the end, it helped out another school that needed games.

St. Peter’s was scheduled to play Western Connecticut, Salisbury and Geneva. Just this week, we learned Western Connecticut filled its open date with a Week 1 game against Wagner. Salisbury and Geneva ended up scheduling each other.

But the St. Peter’s fallout helped another school. At the beginning of June, Frostburg State released a schedule that had it playing Waynesburg on Nov. 3. Only problem, Waynesburg was playing a conference game that day. (Perhaps Frostburg didn’t read all of its correspondence.) Losing the Waynesburg game leaves Frostburg with just eight games.

We tried matching Frostburg State up with Western Connecticut on their mutual Week 1 open date, though admittedly, that’s not a short trip. We recommended the matchup to the respective coaches. But we were also able to find some of St. Peter’s other games, and found they were scheduled to play at Duquesne on Sept. 29 — for Duquesne’s homecoming.

Duquesne is in Pittsburgh. Desperate for a game. I-AA nonscholarship. Great match for Frostburg. We make the recommendation. And according to the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, they took each other up on it.

Before we had an Open Dates board, we tried to play matchmaker a lot more often. Although the coaches do it themselves on our site now, it’s still satisfying to help out.

Happy Birthday, Ricky Lannetti

Ricky Lannetti would have turned 25 this weekend.

If you don’t recall the name, a reminder — Lannetti was a wide receiver for Lycoming before he passed away on Dec. 6, 2003. He lost his battle with a staph infection that night, the day Lycoming was scheduled to play Bridgewater in the national quarterfinals.

19, snow angel

I came across a tribute site built to him this evening. If you’ve been around this site for four years, you may remember our coverage of his death. We were in Williamsport that weekend and had unprecedented access behind the scenes on a day in which the game was snowed out.

People still sign Lannetti’s guestbook. They get together every year on his birthday. There’s an annual 3-on-3 basketball tournament in his memory each summer. They raise awareness of MRSA — methicillin resistant staphyloccus aureus, the superbug that killed Lannetti.

His parents, Theresa and Rick, spread the word about MRSA to this day.

“His name is now living through MRSA awareness campaigns throughout the country,” Rick Lannetti told the Times News, a newspaper in Carbon County, Pa. “His picture and other helpful information is posted at colleges and high schools everywhere, and I still get emails thanking him all the time for making them aware of this superbug. His name and his story are being heard around the world. His passing tells about the superbug and that it could kill even the healthiest people. He’s pretty much actively saving lives, or at least bringing about an awareness that this deadly germ exists. To have a family street named after him, that would be really something special. His friends and college teammates, they visit me now and then, and I know how proud they would be for a long-term tribute to him.”

Hope this helps.

The Texas Stagg Bowl bid

COPPELL, Texas — By an unusual coincidence in my work for Verizon, I am in the Dallas area this week and took the opportunity to do a walk-through of the stadium in the bidding against Salem Stadium for future Stagg Bowls. (Not for 2007, which is in Salem.)

Shockingly, like a typical Texas high school football stadium, Buddy Echols Stadium Google map is big. It is listed at 12,000 capacity, though I actually thought it seated more.

They are in the midst of installing artificial turf — the grass was all out and the playing surface was stripped down to dirt. There’s certainly plenty of parking. It’s less than 10 miles from Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport.

Those are the positives. The negatives are that the D-III crowd will get swallowed up in a stadium that size, unless an ASC team makes the Stagg Bowl every year. How many Mount Union fans are making the 19-hour drive to Coppell? (Or, how many are paying through the nose for plane tickets on short notice?) Even if they draw 8,000 fans, how many empty seats does that leave? Who in the local market cares one bit about the Division III championship game while the Texas high school football playoffs are going on? Would the game generate even a blip on the local news radar, as opposed to the minutes upon minutes of coverage it receives in Salem? And who will pick up the mantle from Stone Station, which has been the Division III welcome wagon (photos) in Salem the past couple of seasons? Will those fans make the 1,200-mile drive? Will the Division III community come out in force the way it has the past couple of seasons?

The scoreboard is sufficient, though not as new as Salem’s, and the press box accommodations don’t appear to fulfill the need I have seen at recent Stagg Bowls. There’s a box on one side that seats 15-18 people across, six partitioned booths on the other side of the stadium, but not a space similar to Salem for television to build out of.

But these concerns are secondary to the location and the size. I just don’t think the Stagg Bowl works here. But I’m glad I got to see it to make sure.