Thursday, May 21, 2009

Future Wally Always Fights

Tom Kilbane sent me this item from the Michigan City News-Dispatch. (Hey, I used to write for this paper in grad school.) Looks like we got the right kid!

Knee Doesn’t Slow Him Down

Michigan City’s Ryan Sosinski

Nick Dettmann
Staff Writer

MICHIGAN CITY - Ryan Sosinski wondered: Is it worth it?

Is the pain, the rehabilitation, worth enduring in order to play a sport
he has loved since he was 7 years old?

Yes.

Absolutely.

No doubt about it.

The 6-foot-1, 200-pound tight end barely has a left knee to walk on. In
the third game of his sophomore year - his first on the varsity roster -
he tore his medial collateral ligament. Hoping to contribute as a junior
after missing two-thirds of his sophomore season with a knee injury, he
tore the anterior cruciate ligament. The following spring, he tore his
patellar tendon. And, this year after the football season, he discovered
he tore his meniscus.

“It was a struggle,” he said. “… There were a lot of times I thought
about giving up. Sometimes you thought, ‘Will it be back to normal?’ It
probably never will be, but it’s as close as I’ll ever get it.”

The closest he came to quitting? It came Aug. 31, 2007, against
Chesterton, when his ACL was torn.

“I thought about (quitting) a few times,” he said. “But I never really
thought about going through with it. I love football so much.”

The injuries, he says, have molded him into the person - the player - he
is today. They either make or break you, tough to come back from.

When the thought of quitting came up, it was brief. Only during the
surgeries. Once through that stage, Sosinski worked to get back to
football.

His passion wouldn’t let him quit.

“There’s something inside me that won’t let me give it up,” Sosinski
said. “… A lot of times, your greatest success comes from what, at the
time, looks like your greatest failure.”

He’s a walking success story.

On Wednesday, Sosinski announced he would attend Wabash College in
Crawfordsville, Ind., to play football. He wants to study biology and
pre-med, ultimately becoming a team doctor.

He joins classmate Garrett Payne, a wrestler at City, with the same
aspirations.

As a senior this year - his first full varsity season - Sosinski caught
19 passes for 383 yards and four touchdowns. He will play in the
East-West All-Star game during the Sports Fest 2009 this summer in South
Bend.

He was also a News-Dispatch All-Area selection this past season.

“Ryan had an outstanding senior year coming off ACL surgery as a
junior,” City coach Craig Buzea said. “Wabash is getting a very good
pass-catching tight end and, most importantly, a quality
student-athlete.”

Sosinski will join a Wabash football team that went 10-2 last season and
won its fourth consecutive North Coast Athletic Conference championship
with a 7-0 conference record. The Little Giants advanced to the NCAA
Division III playoffs, defeating Case Western Reserve, 20-17, in the
first round before losing to Wheaton College in the second round.

Wabash finished the season ranked 18th by D3football.com and 14th the
American Football Coaches Association.

“When I visited them,” Sosinski said, “I saw their work ethic, and how
hard they work to win to win and in academics, and that’s a place where
I wanted to be.”

Sosinski said he visited the campus four times, including attending two
games - Oct. 25 against Wooster and Nov. 15 against DePauw.

The DePauw-Wabash game, or the “Monon Bell Classic,” is college
football’s oldest rivalry west of the Alleghenies. It has been played
since 1890 and the series is tied at 53-53-9.

“They have a lot of fan support, which I really want to play for,”
Sosinski said. “The DePauw game was nice because there was like 11,000
people there. It was pretty loud.

“It was crazy. I would not have expected to see that for a Division III
team.”

Sosinski considered many schools, including Valparaiso, Indianapolis,
DePauw, St. Xavier, Ohio-Northern and St. Joseph College.

“They’re all good schools, academic wise,” Sosinski said. “I felt I fit
in better (at Wabash) with the football program.

“… Every time I went down there, I got that strong tradition feeling
like you would see at Notre Dame. … I’m looking forward to possibly
playing for a national championship. That’s one of their goals. They
want to take the next step to win a national championship.”

Sosinski says it has been worthwhile.

Definitely.

Contact sports writer Nick Dettmann at ndettmann@thenewsdispatch.com or
874-7211, Ext. 447.

Posted by Hugh Vandivier at 21:24:03 | Permalink | No Comments »

Monday, November 10, 2008

Paper Tigers

It’s Bell week, and though we all know that records don’t mean a thing, Tom Kilbane has been busy eagerly crunching some numbers on this week’s matchup:

Here’s a quick stats table comparing the two teams through 9 games…I’ve bolded the numbers where one team has a distinct advantage. 

Stat

Wabash

Wabash Opp

DePauw

DePauw Opp

Points

411

107

278

246

Pointspergame

45.7

11.9

30.9

27.3

FirstDowns

215

125

183

182

RushYPG

208.1

79.9

102.8

144.9

RushYPC

5.0

2.7

2.9

3.9

TDsRushing

28

4

13

12

PassYards

2409

1474

2743

1976

Att-Comp-Int

243-165-6

291-144-15

327-216-12

307-175-10

TotalOffense

4282

2193

3668

3280

KickReturnAvg

27.8

19.0

17.7

21.5

PuntRetrunAvg

6.6

6.3

7.7

4.7

Fumbles-Lost

13-8

21-6

17-12

18-12

Penalties-Yards

71-578

56-498

69-627

60-563

Punts-Yards

23-805

56-2034

38-1327

39-1391

TOP

31:25

28:25

29:10

24:10

3rdDownPct.

51%

28%

42%

41%

4thDownPct.

54%

39%

57%

52%

Sacks-Yards

18-114

5-24

14-103

12-61

TDsScored

57

15

37

35

RedZone

45-52

16-23

28-36

21-38

1stQPoints

92

10

51

45

2ndQPoints

138

39

99

83

3rdQPoints

95

10

66

43

4thQPoints

86

48

59

75

Wow.  If you’re a DePauw fan, it’s a damn good thing that these games aren’t played on paper. 

Thanks, Tom. For me, I want to see how strength of schedule comes into play in Saturday’s game. Wabash has played one of the weakest schedules in recent memory. U. of Chicago, Kenyon, Oberlin, and Hiram are not exactly strong programs…and I’m being polite. It’s nothing against the mettle of our Little Giants, but 7-2 DePauw will be a much stronger opponent than we’ve seen in weeks.

Wabash headed to the playoffs and undefeated. DePauw playing their last game of the season with nothing to lose but the Monon Bell.

We’ve heard this one before. And one thing’s for sure.

WABASH ALWAYS FIGHTS!

Posted by Hugh Vandivier at 21:37:28 | Permalink | No Comments »

Monday, October 27, 2008

Wabash Whips Wooster, Ranks 3rd

The battle of conference unbeatens on Family Day this past Saturday gave Wabash it’s seventh win of the season 45-24 over Wooster and vaulted the Littlle Giants to a third ranking on the D3football.com Top 25.

The real challenge to our gridders this season has been an easy schedule against sub-500 teams like U of Chicago and Kenyon. They face Oberlin (2-5,2-2) this weekend and Hiram (2-5,1-3) before the BIG GAME on Nov. 15. Will they be ready for the currently 5-2 Dannies? Will Coach Raeburn have these guys ready for playoffs?

I’m feeling pretty confident. These guys look good so far!

Posted by Hugh Vandivier at 19:50:00 | Permalink | No Comments »

Friday, August 1, 2008

‘Bash RB Cover Story in NCAA Mag

This is pretty cool.

Rising senior running back Brock Graham is featured on the cover of the NCAA’s quarterly Champions magazine. Here’s the online story and a photo gallery. (Read about Brock’s trip to Botswana, the photo shoot, and how this happened.)

I’m constantly amazed when our little college gets national recognition and exposure.

Pretty cool indeed.

Posted by Hugh Vandivier at 18:13:42 | Permalink | No Comments »

Sunday, December 23, 2007

Creighton to Coach at Drake U.

So much for no news happening between semesters…

Check out the official story, Coach Creighton’s words, Drake’s announcement, Wabash reaction, the discussion on D3football.com, and Tom Runge’s thoughts. Wabash AD Vernon Mummert has offered the job to assistant coach Neal Neathery. Press conference video available here. (Subscription required.)

Drake is a school of about 3,000 Des Moines, Iowa. Their football team competes in the in the Pioneer League of Division 1-AA.

In coaching circles, you always want to take a program to “the next level.” That’s a daunting challenge when you’re talking about Wabash football, but Chris Creighton did just that from the moment he stepped on campus. Just check out some of his contributions:

  • 2001 Wabash 8-2
  • 2002 Wabash 12-1, NCAA Division III playoffs
  • 2003 Wabash 7-3
  • 2004 Wabash 6-4
  • 2005 Wabash 11-1, NCAA Division III playoffs
  • 2006 Wabash 8-2
  • 2007 Wabash 11-2, NCAA Division III playoffs

Career Record: 95-24 (.798 winning percentage)


Wabash Record: 63-15 (.807 winning percentage)

Best of luck on your new post, Coach. You leave a program better than you found that found it–and that’s saying a lot.

Posted by Hugh Vandivier at 18:27:39 | Permalink | No Comments »