UNH football travels to Western Michigan Saturday for season's FBS test

Junior running back Dylan Laube earned Colonial Athletic Association weekly honors for the second time this season, in large part for his 92-yard return of a punt for UNH’s first touchdown in last weekend's game at Towson.
Junior running back Dylan Laube earned Colonial Athletic Association weekly honors for the second time this season, in large part for his 92-yard return of a punt for UNH’s first touchdown in last weekend's game at Towson.

DURHAM – If they can just bottle that last one.

From inspiring start to efficient finish, the University of New Hampshire football team put it all together – special teams, offense and defense – in Saturday’s impressive 37-14 Colonial Athletic Association road win at Towson.

The challenges keep coming this week as the Wildcats take their 3-1 overall record (they are 3-0 in the CAA) to Kalamazoo to face Western Michigan in Waldo Stadium on Saturday night at 6 p.m. in their FBS test for the season.

The Broncos are 1-3 with a 37-30 win over Ball State to go with losses at Michigan State, 35-13, at home against Pittsburgh, 34-13, and at San Jose State, 34-6, last Saturday.

After Western Michigan, the Wildcats play three straight games without leaving the state: They have Stony Brook in Wildcat Stadium for Homecoming on Saturday, Oct. 8 at 3:30 p.m.; play at Dartmouth College on Saturday, Oct. 15 at 1:30 p.m.; and then face Elon in their Family Weekend game Saturday, Oct. 22 at 1 p.m.

First, the Broncos.

Replicating the triumph at Towson – which featured some risk/reward opportunities that paid off handsomely – would be nice.

Special teams

Junior running back Dylan Laube earned Colonial Athletic Association weekly honors for the second time this season, in large part for his 92-yard return of a punt for UNH’s first touchdown of the game in the last minute of the first quarter.

“We needed that spark,” said coach Rick Santos said. “It allowed us to get a little more momentum. Dylan has an infectious personality and when he makes a play like that, the guys on defense get excited as well.”

The Laube play – on a punt that some would have chosen not to try to return from that close to the UNH end zone - gave the Wildcats a 10-0 lead they extended to 24-0 early in the third period.

It tied the program record for longest return for a TD that was set in 1981 by Dave Wissman and was UNH’s longest since Casey DeAndrade, now an assistant coach with the team, had one of 90 yards against William & Mary on Oct. 17, 2015.

Laube also had 23 carries for 114 yards rushing, had 250 all-purpose yards and was named CAA Special Teams Player of the Week. He was the league’s Co-Offensive Player of the Week after rushing for 202 yards at UAlbany on Sept. 10.

And here’s the, well, kicker: redshirt freshman Nick Mazzie was another fine candidate for Special Teams honors.

Mazzie started the game with an onsides kick drawn up by special teams coach Garrett McLaughlin. Adam Deese recovered the ball and Mazzie kicked a 25-yard field goal to give UNH an early 3-0 lead.

The Wildcats had been working on the onsides kick all season and debated long and hard over whether to open the Towson game with it.

“We rolled the dice a little bit,” Santos said.

Mazzie was impressive all night. His high kicks had enough hang time to help the kickoff team keep Towson’s dangerous returner, D’Ago Hunter, in check.

He made all four of his conversion kicks and added field goals of 25 and 42 yards in the fourth quarter to help seal the win.

He’s four-for-four on field goals this year. The Wildcats made only two field goals last season.

The offense

UNH’s 37 points were the team’s most since a 40-17 win over Towson on Oct. 21, 2017.

Sophomore quarterback Max Brosmer completed 17 of his 23 passes for 194 yards and three more touchdowns, did not throw an interception and was not sacked. He has seven touchdown passes with one interception in the past two games.

The goal Santos, offensive coordinator Brian Scott and the rest of offense set coming into the season was to establish the run game first to help set up a passing attack with the idea of making the Wildcats dangerous in both aspects.

They scored five of their first six touchdowns of the year on the ground. They’ve scored their last seven through the air.

The offense had 171 yards rushing against Towson and 194 passing and for the season is at 209 passing and 144 rushing.

UNH is averaging almost 31 points a game.

“I like the way the offense is going right now, being able to run and pass the ball,” said captain and offensive tackle Patrick Flynn. “It’s key to not be one-sided. If you’re only running the ball, it’s not good. The defense will load the box. If you’re only passing the ball, they can take people away. You want to be able to run and pass the ball.”

Brosmer has thrown touchdown passes to five different players with redshirt freshman Joey Corcoran, grad student Heron Maurisseau and freshman DJ Linkins each catching a pair.

Maurisseau, a transfer from Connecticut, has pulled in a long TD pass (the first 49 yards, the second 51) in each of the last two games.

The defense

The defense bounced back at Towson from a rough night in a loss to North Carolina Central the week before.

The Wildcats shut the Tigers out in the first half and kept quarterback Tyrell Pigrome bottled up. Towson had 97 yards rushing and 239 total yards of offense.

The defensive front applied pressure all night and came up with six sacks, half of them by sophomore defensive end Dylan Ruiz. Josiah Silver had a sack and a half from the other end position.

UNH leads the CAA and is ranked No. 10 in the country in sacks with 3.75 per game. Ruiz leads the team with 4.5 sacks and Silver is close behind with 3.5.

Captain and defensive tackle Niko Kvietkus, who is in the MBA program at the Peter T. Paul College of Business & Economics, loved the onsides kick and the way UNH jumped in front at Towson.

“The amount of energy, especially on the road in the CAA, you can get out of that is great,” said Kvietkus, who is one of four CAA players nominated for the William V. Campbell Trophy. “You can just suck the energy out of the stadium doing that and use it to your advantage. It was awesome.”

The Campbell Trophy is awarded to the best football scholar athlete in the country and considers academic success, football performance and exemplary leadership.

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This article originally appeared on Portsmouth Herald: UNH football will face Western Michigan in FBS test Saturday