The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Rutgers rolls over Northweste­rn

Chicago school suffers loss in first game since hazing scandal broke.

- By Tom Canavan

Northweste­rn PISCATAWAY, N.J. — lost to Rutgers 24-7 on Sunday in the football team’s first game since a hazing scandal led to a coaching change, investigat­ions and multiple lawsuits.

Rutgers quarterbac­k Gavin Wimsatt threw a touchdown and ran for another as the Scarlet Knights dominated the time of possession, controllin­g the ball for almost 38 minutes.

The loss in interim coach David Braun’s first game is Northweste­rn’s 12th straight dating back to last season.

Braun replaced longtime coach Pat Fitzgerald, who was first suspended and then fired after allegation­s of hazing surfaced in the summer and spread to other programs at the university.

Northweste­rn, which finished last season 1-11, had one positive moment — scoring with about 20 seconds to play on a 1-yard pass by backup quarterbac­k Brendan Sullivan to Caleb Komolafe.

Cincinnati transfer Ben Bryant started and finished 20-of35 passing for 169 yards and two intercepti­ons. He was sacked five times. The Rutgers defense only allowed 201 yards.

The Scarlet Knights scored on their first two drives, with Wimsatt (17 of 29 for 163 yards) hitting Ian Strong on an 11-yard pass to cap the first and running six yards for the second. The first TD was initially called incomplete but a review showed Strong had a foot down in the end zone. Jai Patel added a 32-yard field goal on the third drive after Braun gambled on a fake punt. Kyle Monangai scored on a 15-yard run in the third quarter.

With their team down 17-0, many of the Northweste­rn fans at the game said they expected more from the Wildcats.

“Not a very impressive first half,” said 18-year-old Ellis Zuckerman of New York, who will be starting his first semester at Northweste­rn next week.

Zuckerman, whose father Andrew attended the Chicago school, said hearing about the hazing scandal the past two months was concerning but did not impact his decision to attend the university, saying he was not going there for football.

Jared Breslaw, who grew up in Chicago and attended Northweste­rn games with his father and two brothers, flew up from Miami to see the game.

“I thought it was going be a little more competitiv­e,” the 35-yearold said. “I thought we would rally around this. Then again we’re a second-half team, Cardiac Cats.”

Takeaways

Northweste­rn: Bryant showed flashes at quarterbac­k and the receivers are surehanded. The offensive line struggled, especially in the running game. The defense was on the field way too much but has promise.

Rutgers: Coach Greg Schiano felt his defense was very good coming into the season and it more than lived up to his expectatio­ns on all three levels.

The biggest surprise was the maturity and confidence Wimsatt showed. There were only a couple of throws that were slightly questionab­le and most of his passes were on target. The only knock is his handoffs are not fluid at times.

 ?? ADAM HUNGER / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Rutgers defensive back Max Melton (16) exults after making an intercepti­on against Northweste­rn during the first half in a 24-7 win Sunday in Piscataway, N.J.
ADAM HUNGER / ASSOCIATED PRESS Rutgers defensive back Max Melton (16) exults after making an intercepti­on against Northweste­rn during the first half in a 24-7 win Sunday in Piscataway, N.J.

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