WESTMINSTER, MD – The 17
th-ranked Johns Hopkins football team jumped to a 27-0 lead less than 11 minutes into Saturday's game at rival McDaniel, pushed the advantage to 41-0 at the half and cruised to a 48-7 victory against the Green Terror to close the regular season. Â With the win, the Blue Jays earned a share of their record 15th Centennial Conference title, all of which have come since 2002.
Â
Johns Hopkins (9-1, 8-1 Centennial) shares the Centennial title with Muhlenberg; the Mules earn the league's automatic bid to the upcoming NCAA Playoffs due to the head-to-head tie-breaker. Johns Hopkins must now wait until 5:30 pm on Sunday evening to see if it earns one of the five at-large bids available in the 32-team playoff bracket.
Â
The Blue Jays wasted little time staking their claim to a share of the title as they needed just 96 seconds to open the scoring as junior
Danny Wolf capped a quick five-play, 45-yard touchdown with a 12-yard scoring run on Hopkins' opening possession. A 42-yard game-opening kickoff return by
Harrison Wellmann set the Blue Jays up at the McDaniel 45 and Wolf's touchdown quickly followed.
Â
By the time McDaniel recorded a first down, the deficit had grown to 20 as the Blue Jay defense forced a three-and-out on the first Green Terror possession and a
Joe Tischler interception ended the second.
Â
Johns Hopkins got a 17-yard scoring pass from
Ryan Stevens to
Ryan Hubley and a 19-yard Stevens-to-Hubley scoring toss after those two Green Terror possessions to account for the 20-point surge in the first eight minutes of the game.
Â
After the Terror fumbled the ball able away on their next possession, Hopkins went to its bag of tricks with Wellmann throwing the first touchdown pass of his career – a 21-yard pass to a wide open
Quinn Revere – to make it 27-0 just over 11 minutes into the game.
Â
A 49-yard interception return for a touchdown by
Macauley Kilbane and a one-yard
Jacob Chapman scoring run in the second quarter and a four-yard touchdown reception by Wellmann early in the third made it 48-0 and Johns Hopkins head coach
Greg Chimera rotated players liberally over the final 25 minutes of the game.
Â
McDaniel's lone score on the day came late in the third quarter, when the Green Terror pieced together their best drive of the game, an eight-play 79-yard march that was polished off with a 17-yard touchdown pass from John Furgeson to Matteo DeGennaro late in the third quarter.
Â
The Blue Jay defense forced five turnovers on the day – the third consecutive game Hopkins has forced five turnovers – picked up four sacks and held its fifth opponent of the season to 10 points or less. Kilbane had three tackles, a fumble recovery and the interception return for a touchdown.
Â
Johns Hopkins turned four of the five Green Terror turnovers into touchdowns. The only time the Blue Jays failed to score after causing a turnover came when
Michael Linguadoca intercepted Fergeson in the end zone on the next-to-last play of the first half.
Â
Notes: Wellmann's receiving touchdown pushes his career total to 30, which ties him with Sam Wernick for second place in school history • The Blue Jay defense has forced 30 turnovers on the year – the third-best single-season total for JHU since 2001.
Â
- 30 -