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Randolph-Macon stays in race
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Pat Coleman
Pat Coleman is the editor and publisher of D3football.com and D3hoops.com. He's written about Division III football in USA Today and been interviewed about it on ESPNews and CSTV. He is a member of the Football Writers Association of America. By day he is Sports Editor for the Verizon Central Newsroom.
Previous columns
Dec. 24 Five rounds, five journeys
Nov. 12 Centennial's swim in Pool C
Nov. 5 Stagg Field farewell
Oct. 29 Bridgewater revival continues
Oct. 22 Randolph-Macon stays in race
Oct. 13 Catholic lands first blow
Oct. 6 Who's in, who's out?
Sep. 21 Macon's up-and-down day
Sep. 14 W&J a sleeper no longer
Sep. 4 Catholic, JCU have ways to go
Aug. 29 ACFC alignment might be short-lived
Jul. 20 E&H looks to end dry spell

Posted Oct. 22, 1999
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Despite a 64-29 deficit in fourth quarters this season, Randolph-Macon managed to hold on to beat Emory and Henry 36-23. This time the Yellow Jackets took a 23-0 lead into the final quarter but needed a late 69-yard interception return for a touchdown by senior linebacker D'Andre Murray to clinch it.

Emory & Henry's near comeback unfolded as follows: Quarterback Matt Olexy would hit David Miller for a gain of 59 yards taking the Wasps to the R-MC 9-yard line. After an Oliver Jordan 4-yard plunge and a Matt Olexy bootleg, E&H would find itself at the Yellow Jacket 1-yard line at the end of the third quarter.

Following a defensive stop for no gain on Jordan, Olexy would find Bryant Jones on a play action pass for the touchdown, then Miller for the two-point conversion.

Randolph-Macon went three-and-out, losing 12 yards after Ryan Harris and Nolan Jefferies combined on a sack. The Wasps got the ball back at midfield on a punt, then marched 50 yards on 10 plays capped by another Olexy-to-Miller touchdown and Olexy-to-Miller two-point conversion, trimming R-MC's lead to 23-16.

Michael Becker, however, would take the ensuing kickoff back for a 42-yard return into Emory & Henry territory. Four plays later, Partlow would find Sean Eaton for the third time on the afternoon on a 29-yard strike to give the Yellow Jackets a 30-16 lead.

The Wasps answered immediately with a four-play, 72-yard drive that used just 1:10 of clock. E&H's Oliver Jordan would break free of the Randolph-Macon defense for the first time and only time as the senior would scamper 43 yards to the end zone to reduce the R-MC margin to seven at 30-23. That set up Murray's interception, plus a last-minute pick by Scottie Brubeck, after the game was decided.

The loss means Emory & Henry is no longer in control of its own destiny, for even if they beat Catholic Oct. 30 to force a potential three-way tie, Randolph-Macon would win that tiebreaker on the "Rose Bowl Rule," which gives the automatic bid to the team that has been absent from the playoffs the longest. Randolph-Macon has not been to the playoffs since 1984, while Emory & Henry went in 1995 and Catholic last went in 1998.

Let's not go to the videotape
Much has been made of the alleged officiating mistakes in the Wilkes-Lycoming game last weekend. Now while I haven't seen too many games in which a score in each direction was missed (a field goal for Lycoming, a last-second touchdown for Wilkes), but games are played on the field, not on tape. Sometimes teams get the breaks, sometimes they don't. And sometimes, apparently, neither team gets the breaks.

I do hope this doesn't end up costing Wilkes a playoff spot, but I'm afraid it might. Hopefully the MAC will investigate the matter more closely.

The week ahead
Bridgewater (Va.) at Johns Hopkins (Friday, 7 p.m.)

Don't count the Eagles out of the ODAC race, as they also hold their destiny in their own hands. Coming off a winless 1998, Bridgewater stands at 3-3, 2-1 ODAC, with games remaining against Randolph-Macon and Catholic the last two weeks of the season. They could hand Macon their second loss and Catholic their first and would win the head-to-head against Catholic.

Wilkes at Ursinus (1 p.m.)
Wilkes and the MAC as a whole have a chance to make a statement regarding which conference and team is more worthy of an at-large bid. Neither team might get one, but the winner of this game has a reason to expect it.