The Rise of the Carnegie Mellon Tartans (NCAA Football 07)

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  • Careless Whisper
    MVP
    • Dec 2016
    • 1984

    #1

    The Rise of the Carnegie Mellon Tartans (NCAA Football 07)



    Pessimism, Confusion Surrounds Bold Leap
    Never has there been an institution jump from NCAA Division III to Division I competition, until now


    by Bryan Smith, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette columnist
    PITTSBURGH -- This past January, when Carnegie Mellon introduced its new athletic director Daniel Corrigan, excitement filled Skibo Gymnasium.

    Corrigan’s resume spoke for itself, as he created power programs at previous stops as athletic director, Mary Hardin-Baylor in Texas and Pittsburg State in Kansas. The Tartan faithful expected a quick rise in results across the department – including national championships – while maintaining the rigorous academic standards that the university was known for.

    But no one – and I mean no one – expected Corrigan to make an unprecedented leap in just his first six months in charge.

    So when Carnegie Mellon takes the field on Thursday, August 31 at Youngstown State in its inaugural contest as a NCAA Division I – repeat, Division One – program, it is entering uncharted territory. Never once as a Division III school made the leap to Division I competition. In fact, it’s such a rarity that the NCAA had to sign off on a waiver to allow CMU to make such a jump.

    Corrigan’s Tartans, under the direction of first-year head coach John Elliott, will spend two years as a Football Championship Subdivision (formerly Division I-AA) independent before entering the Football Bowl Subdivision ranks. That’s if the program makes it that long before tucking its tail between its legs and backtracking to Division III competition.

    Come on, not even kids playing the new EA Sports NCAA Football video game would attempt something like this! We as a city have clamored for an on-campus football stadium for the University of Pittsburgh, and instead we get another Division I program? You could make a weak argument for either local FCS program Duquesne or Robert Morris to move up to FBS ball – and it would be light – but Carnegie Mellon?

    Before I’m accused of being too negative, let’s take at some positives.

    The potential elite high school recruits that value an education and want to go pro in something other than sports? Potential Tartans, I suppose.

    The publicity that CMU has received for this mind-blowing leap? All publicity is good publicity – at least that’s what they tell me.

    The Tartans’ projection of being a fringe Top 25 team in Division III prior to this? Maybe they’ll only lose by 50 to Pitt in October.

    Listen, I’m sure Corrigan has done his research and has some explanation for making this move. And I can’t argue with the man’s credentials at this point, considering the work he’s done at his previous two stops and all the Athletic Director of the Year awards.

    But he might have bitten off more than he can chew with this one. I’m sure there are students on campus that have dreamt of hosting programs such as Notre Dame and Penn State at Gesling Stadium, but visions often distort reality.
    -----------------------


    Game: NCAA Football 07 / NCAA Football 08*
    Console: PS2 (played on the OG PS3)
    Quarter Length: 8 minutes

    House Rules:
    Recruiting: I can only target recruits with A-/A/A+ awareness during in and off-season cycles; I can only recruit potential student-athletes of three-star quality or below until the program has reached three-star prestige; I can not recruit potential student-athletes of five-star quality until the program has reached five-star prestige; I can only accept transfers with acceptable awareness ratings; I can not target any junior college recruits
    Scheduling: My first two schedules will feature all FCS programs with a split of 4-8 home-away in the first season and 6-6 home-away in the second season, as well as a yearly rivalry game with Pitt; The rivalry with Pitt will feature primarily on its home field until CMU has reached a two-star prestige level; Once fully into FBS competition, I will schedule based on the program’s level, like being a “buy” opponent for elite programs
    Players Leaving: I can not stop a player from leaving early, whether it be to the NFL Draft or by transfer; I can not cut any players unless roster limits are forced upon me
    In-Season Suspensions: Length of player suspensions will be based on the game-recommended option UNLESS it is an academic violation, which in that case, the ban will be doubled the recommendation with a minimum of two games (ex. two-quarter suspension becomes two games rather than one game)
    Coaching Contracts: If/when a coach is fired from his job at CMU, I will create a new coach to take over; if a coach receives an offer from a program with a higher prestige rating, they are required to take it and then I will take over CMU with a new created coach
    Roster Template: I used the Academic template but will nerf everyone’s rating to 48 or below besides two offensive players and two defensive players that can have a peak rating of 56
    -----------------------


    * Author's Note (5/7/2020): Dynasty was moved to NCAA Football 08 after the 2007 season after I mistakenly deleted the original file.

    Disclaimer: All material written in this dynasty report is completely fictional. All media from other sites are used for entertainment purposes only and I do not profit from its use.
    Last edited by Careless Whisper; 06-05-2025, 01:55 PM.
    The Rise of the Carnegie Mellon Tartans | NCAA Football 08
    The Rise of the Carnegie Mellon Tartans | MVP 07 NCAA Baseball
  • Careless Whisper
    MVP
    • Dec 2016
    • 1984

    #2
    Re: The Rise of the Carnegie Mellon Tartans (NCAA Football 07)
    The University
    Name: Carnegie Mellon University
    Established: 1900
    Location: Pittsburgh, Pa.
    Colors: Cardinal, Black, Grey, and White
    Nickname: Tartans

    Program History
    First Season: 1906
    All-Time Record: 510-381-26 (.570)
    Undefeated Seasons: 1
    - 1954 (7-0-1)
    Conference Championships: 15 (4 co-championships)
    - Presidents' Athletic Conference (1977, 1978, 1979, 1981, 1983, 1985, 1989*)
    - University Athletic Association (1990, 1991, 1993, 1994*, 1995*, 1996*, 1997)
    - Mid-American Conference (2012)
    NCAA Postseason Record: 2-5 (.286)
    NCAA Postseason Appearances: 1978, 1979, 1983, 1985, 1990
    Bowl Record: 4-2 (.600)
    Bowl History:
    - 1938 Sugar Bowl (#1 TCU 15, #6 Carnegie Tech 7)
    - 1999 ECAC Bowl (Carnegie Mellon 28, Frostburg State 10)
    - 2009 Champs Sports Bowl (#14 Iowa 33, Carnegie Mellon 20)
    - 2010 Motor City Bowl (Carnegie Mellon 50, Penn 10)
    - 2011 International Bowl (Carnegie Mellon 49, South Florida 39)
    - 2012 Motor City Bowl (Carnegie Mellon 42, Harvard 21)

    Program Records
    Career
    Passing Yards: Justin Keyes (2007-10) - 7,308
    Passing Touchdowns: Chris Dee (1991-94) - 53
    Rushing Yards: Jim Manning (2007-09) - 4,623
    Rushing Touchdowns: Jim Manning (2007-09) - 43
    Receptions: Eddie Williams (2010-12) - 316
    Receiving Yards: Eddie Williams (2010-12) - 5,211 [NCAA Record]
    Receiving Touchdowns: Eddie Williams (2010-12) - 54 [NCAA Record]
    Tackles: Mark Toth (2008-11) - 315
    Sacks: Matt Burnsides (2009-12) - 18.0
    Interceptions: Hayden Temple (2007-10) - 21
    Made Field Goals: Jon Foster (2008-11) - 44
    Points Scored: Eddie Williams (2010-12) - 372
    Kick Return Yards: Kelvin Butler (2010-12) - 2,812
    Kick Return Touchdowns: Kelvin Butler (2010-12) - 6
    Punt Return Yards: Kelvin Butler (2010-12) - 1,242
    Punt Return Touchdowns: Kelvin Butler (2010-12) - 5

    Single-Season
    Passing Yards: Kevin Wilson (2012) - 3,032
    Passing Touchdowns: Kevin Wilson (2012) - 30
    Rushing Yards: Jim Manning (2009) - 1,936
    Rushing Touchdowns: Jim Manning (2009) - 23
    Receptions: Eddie Williams (2012) - 125
    Receiving Yards: Eddie Williams (2012) - 2,262 [NCAA Record]
    Receiving Touchdowns: Eddie Williams (2012) - 25
    Tackles: Aaron Lewis (2005) - 115
    Sacks: David Brown (2010, 2011) - 15.0
    Interceptions: Andy Helms (1991), Calvin Burton (2008), Todd Andriano (2009, 2010), Hayden Temple (2010), Jabari London (2012) - 7
    Made Field Goals: Jon Foster (2010) - 14
    Points Scored: Eddie Williams (2012) - 174
    Kick Return Yards: Kelvin Butler (2011) - 1,140
    Kick Return Touchdowns: Kelvin Butler (2010) - 3
    Punt Return Yards: Kelvin Butler (2010) - 495
    Punt Return Touchdowns: Kelvin Butler (2010) - 3

    Single-Game
    Passing Yards: Kevin Wilson (Jan. 5, 2012 vs. South Florida) - 392
    Passing Touchdowns: Kevin Wilson (Nov. 17, 2012 at Western Michigan), Gerald Culver (Nov. 5, 2011 vs. Ohio; Sept. 8, 2012 vs. Idaho; Sept. 22, 2012 vs. Buffalo) - 5
    Rushing Yards: Jim Manning (Oct. 27, 2007 vs. Villanova) - 321
    Rushing Touchdowns: Jim Manning (Sept. 27, 2008 vs. Buffalo), Lawrence McIntire (Oct. 15, 2011 at Miami (Ohio)) - 4
    Receptions: Eddie Williams (Sept. 24, 2011 at Buffalo) - 17
    Receiving Yards: Eddie Williams (Sept. 24, 2011 at Buffalo) - 228
    Receiving Touchdowns: Eddie Williams (Sept. 22, 2012 vs. Buffalo) - 5
    Tackles: Aaron Lewis (Nov. 12, 2005 vs. Thiel) - 22
    Sacks: Mario Williams (Sept. 15, 2012 at Pittsburgh) - 4
    Interceptions: Calvin Burton (Sept. 27, 2008 vs. Buffalo) - 5 [NCAA Record]










    From 1906-43, Pittsburgh and Carnegie Mellon played 30 times. The Panthers went 24-5-1 against the Tartans over that stretch.
    Last edited by Careless Whisper; 06-05-2025, 02:02 PM.
    The Rise of the Carnegie Mellon Tartans | NCAA Football 08
    The Rise of the Carnegie Mellon Tartans | MVP 07 NCAA Baseball

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    • Careless Whisper
      MVP
      • Dec 2016
      • 1984

      #3
      Re: The Rise of the Carnegie Mellon Tartans (NCAA Football 07)



      Season Preview: Tartans Enter Historic 2006 with Minimal Expectations (Pittsburgh Tribune-Review)

      Synopsis: Making the unprecedented leap from Division III to Division I FCS competition, Carnegie Mellon predictably struggled with an 1-11 record. CMU did show improvement throughout the year however, earning its lone win against Division II Shippensburg (FCS East), 27-24, followed by a pair of one-score losses at Princeton and Stephen F. Austin. One of the team's bright spots was the play of junior tailback Robert Riley, who topped the century mark in rushing yards. The Tartans also landed three foundational pieces in in-season recruiting with the signings of three-star guard Matt Fitch, outside linebacker Matt Johnson, and runningback Jim Manning.

      Recaps: at Youngstown State | at Maine | at James Madison | WESTERN ILLINOIS | at Montana | at Pittsburgh
      HARVARD | at Furman | SHIPPENSBURG | at Princeton | at Stephen F. Austin | RICHMOND


      Season Preview: Freshmen Look to Make Impact in Carnegie Mellon’s Second FCS Season (Pittsburgh Tribune-Review)

      Synopsis: Leaning on its first recruiting class, Carnegie Mellon improved to 5-7 in its second Division I FCS season and scored three consecutive wins in October. CMU nabbed its first triumph against an equal foe in a 22-21 thriller over Indiana State, but dropped its next four games to sit at 1-5 through six. With rumors of second-year head coach John Elliott's job being in jeopardy, the Tartans topped McNeese State and Dartmouth on the road before leaning on freshman Jim Manning for a school-record 321 rushing yards in a 24-21 win over Villanova. Manning starred at tailback after taking over for incumbent starter Robert Riley, earning Sports Network FCS Freshman All-America honors after totaling 1,291 rushing yards and 11 touchdowns (10 rush, 1 kick return). A change in video game (NCAA 07 to NCAA 08) in the offseason helped CMU secure a stellar recruiting class with nine three-star prospects, and also put it in the Mid-America Conference (MAC) ahead of its first FBS season in 2009.

      Recaps: at Penn | INDIANA STATE | at Pittsburgh | at Southern Illinois | RHODE ISLAND | SOUTHEAST MISSOURI STATE
      at McNeese State | at Dartmouth | VILLANOVA | HOFSTRA | TOWSON | at Idaho State


      Season Preview: Tartans Ready for FBS, MAC debut in 2008 (Pittsburgh Post-Gazette)

      Synopsis: Carnegie Mellon managed two MAC wins and three wins overall in its inaugural FBS season, but also suffered eight double-digit defeats and nine overall. Sophomore cornerback Calvin Burton tied an NCAA record against Buffalo with five interceptions, helping lift the Tartans to a 45-35 triumph in their MAC debut. Two other wins came with the calendar flipping to November, including a 41-37 nailbiter against winless Duke that saw CMU benefit from a late unsportsmanlike conduct penalty. While sophomore runningback Jim Manning posted a second consecutive 1,000-yard season on the ground, the Tartans' pro style offense struggled behind second-year quarterback Justin Keyes, who threw 19 interceptions against seven touchdowns and posted a 89.5 quarterback rating. On defense, freshman middle linebacker Mark Toth was bestowed with MAC Freshman of the Year honors after amassing six interceptions and three sacks.

      Recaps: at Wisconsin | TULANE | at Pittsburgh | BUFFALO | at Central Michigan | BOWLING GREEN
      MIAMI (OHIO) | at Akron | at Ohio | DUKE | at Western Michigan | NORTHERN ILLINOIS


      Season Preview: Tartans Look for Consistency in Second FBS Season (Pittsburgh Post-Gazette)
      Player Feature: Jim Manning, Jr., RB - Manning ‘Runs’ Towards School and National Glory (Pittsburgh Post-Gazette) [Week 12]

      Synopsis: A breakout second season in FBS play saw Carnegie Mellon finish 7-7, advancing to the MAC Championship Game and Champs Sports Bowl. The dramatic turnaround was keyed by first-year offensive coordinator Jules Nottingham's spread offense, which allowed junior runningback Jim Manning to rush for a NCAA-leading 1,936 yards and 23 touchdowns as well as bump up third-year signal-caller Justin Keyes' quarterback rating by 37 points. Keyes also benefited from the emergence of Penn State transfer Kevin Cousins at wide receiver, who tallied 1,124 yards and seven touchdowns on 79 catches after missing most of the 2009 season. The defense produced three All-MAC First Team picks (Matt Burnsides, Matt Johnson, Calvin Burton) and two Second Team selections (Mark Toth, Todd Andriano), while redshirt freshman Jon Crowell earned Freshman All-America accolades as a return specialist. CMU won its last five MAC games to punch its ticket to Detroit, where it held a 24-7 halftime lead against undefeated Toledo before ultimately falling 33-27. Following its 33-20 loss to No. 14 Iowa in the Champs Sports Bowl, Tartan juniors Calvin Burton, Matt Johnson, and Jim Manning declared for the NFL Draft, with Burton and Manning going in the sixth and seventh rounds, respectively.

      Recaps: at Rutgers | YALE | at Pittsburgh | at Ball State | BOWLING GREEN | at Toledo | at Western Michigan
      EASTERN MICHIGAN | at Miami (Ohio) | MARYLAND | KENT STATE | BUFFALO | vs. Toledo (MAC Championship Game) | vs. Iowa (Champs Sports Bowl)


      Season Preview: New Leaders Set to Emerge for Tartans in Potentially Special 2010 (Pittsburgh Post-Gazette)
      Player Feature: Justin Keyes, Sr., QB - Message Boards Fuel Keyes’ Turnaround (The Tartan) [Week 9]

      Synopsis: Carnegie Mellon continued its ascent to the MAC mountaintop in 2010, only to see a stunning 27-23 loss at Kent State in its penultimate regular-season contest keeping the Tartans from a return Detroit trip. CMU went 9-4 overall with all but one of its victories coming by 18+ points and had 10 players earn All-MAC honors. Senior captain Justin Keyes completed an impressive career turnaround, earning All-MAC Second Team accolades with 3,547 total yards and 39 touchdowns. Redshirt freshman wide receiver Eddie Williams was a revelation, emerging as one of the nation's best with 1,329 yards and 14 scores on 89 receptions. The defense saw junior defensive end David Brown lead the nation in sacks (15), with sophomore defensive tackle Matt Burnsides and junior cornerback Erik Sellers earning All-America Second Team nods. Freshman wide receiver Kelvin Butler won the Randy Moss Award convincingly, scoring six times on kick and punt returns. After a 50-10 drubbing of Penn in the Motor City Bowl, junior free safety Todd Andriano became the fourth player in two seasons to declare early in the NFL Draft, and was chosen in the fourth round by the Detroit Lions.

      Recaps: at Duke | at Pittsburgh | at Penn State | BALL STATE | at Bowling Green | TOLEDO
      WESTERN MICHIGAN | ARMY | at Eastern Michigan | MIAMI (OHIO) | at Kent State | at Buffalo | vs. Penn (Motor City Bowl)


      Season Preview: Nottingham’s Tartans Named MAC Favorites (Pittsburgh Post-Gazette)
      Player Feature: Calvin Burton, CB & Matt Johnson, OLB - Burton, Johnson to Clash in Super Bowl XLVI (The Tartan) [NFL Postseason]

      Synopsis: Carnegie Mellon kept its place amongst the upper tier of the MAC, bouncing back from an 0-3 start to go 8-2 over the final 10 games. However, a 7-1 league mark wasn't enough to return to Detroit as the Tartans' Week 7 loss to Miami (Ohio) kept them from the MAC Championship Game, with Kent State completing an undefeated season. Under first-year head coach Jules Nottingham, CMU finished with an 8-5 overall record and saw 11 players collect All-MAC accolades, with three earning Associated Press All-America recognition. Senior linebacker Mark Toth was one of two First Team picks, concluding his career with 90 tackles (16 for loss), six sacks, six interceptions, five forced fumbles, and two touchdowns. Sophomore wide receiver Kelvin Butler repeated as the Randy Moss Award winner, scoring twice on kick returns and once on a punt return. Redshirt sophomore Eddie Williams finished as the runner-up to the Fred Biletnikoff Award, earning Second Team All-America plaudits following a 102-catch, 1,620-yard, 15-touchdown campaign. Williams led the nation in receiving yards, while senior defensive end David Brown again paced all players with 15 sacks. After losing Justin Keyes to graduation, the quarterback position had its ups and downs with both junior Kevin Wilson and sophomore Gerald Culver seeing significant time. The Tartans closed the season with a wild 49-39 victory over South Florida in the International Bowl, one that saw Wilson emerge as the front-runner for the 2012 starting position after throwing for a school-record 392 yards and a pair of scores.

      Recaps: PENN | at Nebraska | at Pittsburgh | at Buffalo | CENTRAL MICHIGAN | at Bowling Green | at Miami (Ohio)
      AKRON | MICHIGAN STATE | OHIO | WESTERN MICHIGAN | at Northern Illinois | vs. South Florida (International Bowl)


      Season Preview: 2012 NCAA FBS Football Season Preview - Carnegie Mellon (Athlon Sports)
      Player Feature: Eddie Williams, R-Jr., WR - The Most Interesting Man in College Sports (Sports Illustrated) [Week 9]

      Synopsis: Carnegie Mellon catapulted itself into college football's elite in 2012, winning its first MAC title following a perfect league campaign and 34-28 triumph over Eastern Michigan in the MAC Championship Game, and by securing a No. 21 national ranking after posting a 13-1 overall record. Under second-year head coach Jules Nottingham, the Tartans won 13 straight games following a season-opening 52-31 defeat at No. 25 West Virginia, with the average margin of victory being by 23.5 points. That stretch included the program's first victory over rival Pitt since returning to NCAA Division I competition, and a 42-21 pasting of Harvard and former head coach John Elliott in the Motor City Bowl. Redshirt junior wide receiver Eddie Williams became the first mid-major player to win the Heisman Trophy since BYU's Ty Detmer in 1990, as he compiled 125 receptions, 2,262 receiving yards (a NCAA FBS single-season record), and 29 total touchdowns (25 receiving, 4 rushing), and concluded his career with NCAA FBS career standards in receiving yards (5,211) and receiving touchdowns (54). CMU in total had six Associated Press All-America honorees, with Williams making the First Team, senior defensive tackle Matt Burnsides, freshman cornerback Robert Wall, and junior wide receiver Kelvin Butler making the Second Team, and Wall, defensive tackle Mario Williams, and kicker Joseph Love appearing on the Freshman Team. Butler, despite a late-season knee injury, made it 3-for-3 on Randy Moss Award victories, and Williams followed up his 2011 runner-up finish for the Fred Biletnikoff Award with a 2012 win. Despite rumors swirling concerning Nottingham's future in the final weeks of the season, Carnegie Mellon will take the next step forward as a program as it is set to join the Big Ten Conference as a football-only member beginning in the 2013 campaign.

      Recaps: at #25 West Virginia | IDAHO | at Pittsburgh | BUFFALO | at Central Michigan | BOWLING GREEN | MIAMI (OHIO)
      at Akron | at Ohio | NAVY | at Western Michigan | NORTHERN ILLINOIS | vs. Eastern Michigan (MAC Championship Game) | vs. Harvard (Motor City Bowl)
      Last edited by Careless Whisper; 06-05-2025, 02:06 PM.
      The Rise of the Carnegie Mellon Tartans | NCAA Football 08
      The Rise of the Carnegie Mellon Tartans | MVP 07 NCAA Baseball

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      • Careless Whisper
        MVP
        • Dec 2016
        • 1984

        #4
        Re: The Rise of the Carnegie Mellon Tartans (NCAA Football 07)





        Pre-Dynasty Players (21 total, 8 drafted): Pro Football Reference
        Last edited by Careless Whisper; 06-05-2025, 02:02 PM.
        The Rise of the Carnegie Mellon Tartans | NCAA Football 08
        The Rise of the Carnegie Mellon Tartans | MVP 07 NCAA Baseball

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        • Careless Whisper
          MVP
          • Dec 2016
          • 1984

          #5
          Re: The Rise of the Carnegie Mellon Tartans (NCAA Football 07)










          Last edited by Careless Whisper; 03-10-2025, 01:33 PM.
          The Rise of the Carnegie Mellon Tartans | NCAA Football 08
          The Rise of the Carnegie Mellon Tartans | MVP 07 NCAA Baseball

          Comment

          • Careless Whisper
            MVP
            • Dec 2016
            • 1984

            #6
            Re: The Rise of the Carnegie Mellon Tartans (NCAA Football 07)







            * denotes NCAA Division I FBS single-season record.



            Last edited by Careless Whisper; 03-10-2025, 01:35 PM.
            The Rise of the Carnegie Mellon Tartans | NCAA Football 08
            The Rise of the Carnegie Mellon Tartans | MVP 07 NCAA Baseball

            Comment

            • Careless Whisper
              MVP
              • Dec 2016
              • 1984

              #7
              Re: The Rise of the Carnegie Mellon Tartans (NCAA Football 07)












              * denotes NFL single-season record.

              Last edited by Careless Whisper; 03-19-2023, 12:21 PM.
              The Rise of the Carnegie Mellon Tartans | NCAA Football 08
              The Rise of the Carnegie Mellon Tartans | MVP 07 NCAA Baseball

              Comment

              • Careless Whisper
                MVP
                • Dec 2016
                • 1984

                #8
                Re: The Rise of the Carnegie Mellon Tartans (NCAA Football 07)

                Extra for now.
                Last edited by Careless Whisper; 04-13-2021, 08:16 AM.
                The Rise of the Carnegie Mellon Tartans | NCAA Football 08
                The Rise of the Carnegie Mellon Tartans | MVP 07 NCAA Baseball

                Comment

                • moose141
                  MVP
                  • Dec 2007
                  • 3402

                  #9
                  Re: The Rise of the Carnegie Mellon Tartans (NCAA Football 07)

                  This is wild and I am here for it... that said, there will always be one game every season where I will be rooting against you!
                  Check out my Pitt Panthers Dynasty (NCAA Football 14)
                  Subscribe to my YouTube channel moose141DM!

                  Pittsburgh Penguins - Pittsburgh Panthers - Pittsburgh Steelers - Pittsburgh Pirates - West Ham United
                  University of Pittsburgh Ice Hockey

                  Comment

                  • Careless Whisper
                    MVP
                    • Dec 2016
                    • 1984

                    #10
                    Re: The Rise of the Carnegie Mellon Tartans (NCAA Football 07)

                    Originally posted by moose141
                    This is wild and I am here for it... that said, there will always be one game every season where I will be rooting against you!
                    Appreciate it! Hopefully I can pull off the upset against your Panthers... in 2015? lol

                    Always wanted to dive into the football dynasty pool and add to all the great ones we have on here, and I figured it was the right time with the lockdown. Wanted to do something off the wall and make it challenging for myself, and not where I'm competitive after just 2-3 years. After some research, I found what I wanted to do aligned best with CMU, so hopefully I can eventually bring them to glory.
                    Last edited by Careless Whisper; 03-27-2020, 09:12 AM.
                    The Rise of the Carnegie Mellon Tartans | NCAA Football 08
                    The Rise of the Carnegie Mellon Tartans | MVP 07 NCAA Baseball

                    Comment

                    • Careless Whisper
                      MVP
                      • Dec 2016
                      • 1984

                      #11
                      Re: The Rise of the Carnegie Mellon Tartans (NCAA Football 07)


                      Tartans Enter Historic 2006 with Minimal Expectations
                      Carnegie Mellon begins its first season as a FCS independent as it starts ambitious leap


                      by Alicia Brown, Pittsburgh Tribune-Review reporter


                      PITTSBURGH, Pa. -- “We’re going to work our tails off.”

                      That was first-year head coach John Elliott’s initial words when asked about his team’s expectations ahead of an unlikely journey. Carnegie Mellon is making the unprecedented leap from NCAA Division III to Division I competition this season, and even the man in charge knows the Tartans will be taking their lumps for some time.

                      “That same work ethic that these guys display in the classroom, it translates to the practice field,” said Elliott, who previously served as defensive coordinator at Gannon University. “It translates there, and it will translate to games. I’d be lying if I said we’d have more talent than any of the teams on our schedule this season, but we certainly are going to work harder than them.”

                      Elliott’s offensive attack will be based around the running game, and he has the workhorse to lead them in junior Robert Riley. Riley rushed for 1,101 yards and eight touchdowns last season as a sophomore and was named to the All-UAA Second Team.

                      “Robert’s strong and durable,” said Elliott. “We want to get him 20 or more touches each game, especially with QB1 up in the air between Andre (Miller), David (Ford), and Alex (Smith).”

                      Redshirt senior Andre Miller is the leader for the starting quarterback job ahead of classmate David Ford and true freshman Alex Smith, and whoever wins the job will have an intriguing piece in Pete Carlson to throw to. Carlson, a sophomore, scored three touchdowns of 30+ yards as a freshman and will serve as the team’s primary kick returner.

                      “Pete’s small (five-foot-seven) and wiggly, but he’s an explosive piece on the outside,” said Miller. “He’s another guy we have to get as many touches as possible.”

                      On the defensive side, the sophomore duo of Devon Elliott and Raymond Cooper stand out. Both were All-UAA selections last year as freshmen and have been turning heads in practice.

                      “Devon hasn’t been able to be blocked all camp,” said Elliott. “And our quarterbacks haven’t been throwing it to Coop’s side at all. I’m excited to see them raise their game to the level we’re playing at now.”

                      Carnegie Mellon’s schedule features 10 FCS opponents, a Division II school, and its renewed annual rivalry game with neighboring Pitt. The Tartans will play four games at Gesling Stadium, starting with their home opener on Saturday, Sept. 23 against Western Illinois.

                      “Our record might not be what we’d like it to be at the end of the day,” said Elliott. “But we’re going to make our community proud and establish the foundation for this new era of Tartan football.”


                      2006 Schedule
                      (Home games in ALL CAPS)

                      08/31 | at Youngstown State (6:00 PM)
                      09/09 | at Maine (6:00 PM)
                      09/16 | at James Madison (6:00 PM)
                      09/23 | WESTERN ILLINOIS (12:30 PM)
                      10/07 | at Montana (3:30 PM)
                      10/12 | at Pittsburgh (7:00 PM) – Rivalry Game
                      10/21 | HARVARD (6:00 PM) – Homecoming
                      10/28 | at Furman (3:30 PM)
                      11/04 | SHIPPENSBURG [1-AA East] (12:30 PM)
                      11/11 | at Princeton (3:30 PM)
                      11/18 | at Stephen F. Austin (12:30 PM)
                      11/25 | RICHMOND (8:00 PM) – Senior Night

                      Two-Deep Depth Chart
                      QB | #1 Andre Miller (R-Sr.), #14 David Ford (R-Sr.)
                      HB | #11 Robert Riley (Jr.), #40 Tramon McCollum (So.)
                      FB | #21 Andre Clifford (Sr.), #29 Korey Harper (Fr.)
                      WR | #82 Pete Carlson (So.), #15 Al Jackson (Jr.)
                      WR | #81 Ali Concepcion (Jr.), #83 Kurt Thompson (Fr.)
                      TE | #80 Antwan Copeland (Jr.), #86 Calvin Scott (So.)
                      LT | #52 Jon Young (So.), #75 Ryan Fisher (Sr.)
                      LG | #67 Andy Clarke (So.), #69 Anton Green (So.)
                      C | #73 Rob Hill (So.), #63 Andrew Stanford (Jr.)
                      RG | #59 Leroy Webb (So.), #58 Clint Chavez (Jr.)
                      RT | #70 David Jenkins (So.), #64 Greg Cunningham (So.)
                      LE | #45 Jared Davis (So.), #99 Joe Berg (Sr.)
                      RE | #62 Todd Brown (Fr.), #48 Justin Fisher (Jr.)
                      DT | #60 Devon Elliott (So.), #61 Brandon Kellner (Jr.)
                      DT | #91 Walter Hunter (Fr.), #65 Terrance Knox (So.)
                      LOLB | #98 Robert Graves (So.), #94 Andrew Motte (Jr.)
                      MLB | #43 Bobby Smith (Jr.), #93 Will Reid (Jr.)
                      ROLB | #50 Curtis Willis (Jr.), #44 Nick St. Louis (So.)
                      CB | #10 Raymond Cooper (So.), #46 Jay Edmonds (Fr.)
                      CB | #16 Spencer Mason (Sr.), #2 Brent Matthews (Jr.)
                      FS | #34 Sean Day (Jr.), 23 Xavier Bennett (So.)
                      SS | 24 Eric Holloway (Jr.), #26 Braylon Cunningham (So.)
                      K | #30 Justin Thompson (Jr.)
                      P | #49 Brad Jones (So.)
                      KR | #82 Pete Carlson (So.), #10 Raymond Cooper (So.)
                      PR | #10 Raymond Cooper (So.), #82 Pete Carlson (So.)
                      Last edited by Careless Whisper; 06-05-2025, 02:05 PM.
                      The Rise of the Carnegie Mellon Tartans | NCAA Football 08
                      The Rise of the Carnegie Mellon Tartans | MVP 07 NCAA Baseball

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                      • Careless Whisper
                        MVP
                        • Dec 2016
                        • 1984

                        #12
                        Re: The Rise of the Carnegie Mellon Tartans (NCAA Football 07)



                        Around the NCAA – Preseason Edition
                        Behind quarterback Troy Smith, Ohio State comes into 2007 as the favorite to capture the BCS title

                        USA Today Preseason Top 25 Coaches' Poll
                        1 | Ohio State [34 first-place votes]
                        2 | Texas [25]
                        3 | Notre Dame [1]
                        4 | USC [1]
                        5 | LSU
                        6 | Florida
                        7 | Auburn
                        8 | Oklahoma
                        9 | West Virginia
                        10 | Louisville
                        11 | Miami (Fla.)
                        12 | Florida State
                        13 | Penn State
                        14 | Michigan
                        15 | California
                        16 | Georgia
                        17 | Iowa
                        18 | Tennessee
                        19 | Arizona State
                        20 | Nebraska
                        21 | Virginia Tech
                        22 | Texas Tech
                        23 | Clemson
                        24 | Alabama
                        25 | Georgia Tech


                        Heisman Watch
                        Brady Quinn, Sr., QB, Notre Dame | 158.4 QB rtg., 292-450, 3,919 yards, 33 TD (1 rush), 7 INT in 2005
                        Adrian Peterson, Jr., HB, Oklahoma | 221 carries, 1,104 yards, 14 TD in 2005
                        Troy Smith, R-Sr., QB, Ohio State | 162.7 QB rtg., 149-237, 2,282 yards, 16 TD, 4 INT; 136 carries, 611 yards, 11 TD in 2005
                        Chris Leak, Sr., QB, Florida | 136.5 QB rtg., 235-374, 2,639 yards, 26 TD (6 rush), 6 INT in 2005
                        Brian Brohm, Jr., QB, Louisville | 166.7 QB rtg., 207-301, 2,883 yards, 23 TD (4 rush), 5 INT in 2005


                        Conference Favorites
                        ACC | Miami [Fla.]
                        Big Ten | Ohio State
                        Big 12 | Texas
                        Big East | West Virginia
                        C-USA | Central Florida
                        MAC | Northern Illinois
                        Mountain West | TCU
                        Pac-10 | USC
                        SEC | LSU
                        Sun Belt | Louisiana-Lafayette
                        WAC | Nevada


                        Top 10 Toughest Places to Play
                        1 | Ben Hill Griffin Stadium – Florida (90,177 avg.)
                        2 | Ohio Stadium – Ohio State (104,870 avg.)
                        3 | Tiger Stadium – LSU (90,974 avg.)
                        4 | Beaver Stadium –Penn State (105,629 avg.)
                        5 | Lane Stadium – Virginia Tech (62,031 avg.)
                        6 | Neyland Stadium – Tennessee (105,038 avg.)
                        7 | USC Stadium – USC (77,804 avg.)
                        8 | DKR-Texas Memorial Stadium – Texas (83,339 avg.)
                        9 | Kinnick Stadium – Iowa (65,798 avg.)
                        10 | Doak Campbell Stadium – Florida State (83,149 avg.)


                        Week 1 National Broadcasts
                        Southern Miss at #6 Florida
                        Northern Illinois at #1 Ohio State
                        Washington State at #7 Auburn
                        #4 USC at Arkansas
                        #15 California at #18 Tennessee
                        #3 Notre Dame at #25 Georgia Tech
                        #12 Florida State at #11 Miami (Fla.) – Game of the Week
                        Last edited by Careless Whisper; 05-12-2020, 08:36 AM.
                        The Rise of the Carnegie Mellon Tartans | NCAA Football 08
                        The Rise of the Carnegie Mellon Tartans | MVP 07 NCAA Baseball

                        Comment

                        • Careless Whisper
                          MVP
                          • Dec 2016
                          • 1984

                          #13
                          Season 1, Game 1: Carnegie Mellon at Youngstown State



                          Offense Non-Existent in FCS Debut at Youngstown State
                          Carnegie Mellon could only manage 222 yards of total offense as it fell to the Penguins, 42-3


                          by Alicia Brown, Pittsburgh Tribune-Review reporter

                          YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio -- History was made on Saturday night at Stambaugh Stadium, as Carnegie Mellon made its NCAA Division I FCS debut. However, as most expected, the Tartans went down without much of a fight, falling to Youngstown State, 42-3.

                          Carnegie Mellon (0-1) managed to not turn the ball over in its first test on the FCS level, but compiled just 222 yards of total offense on the day. Only a Justin Thompson 24-yard field goal in the second quarter kept the Tartans from being blanked, something that can be seen as a small victory according to first-year head coach John Elliott.

                          “There were a couple of solid drives there,” said Elliott. “Justin (Thompson) missed the first one, but nailed the second. I thought our defense played pretty well all things considered. We’ll have to get them off the field more often, which may mean going more conservative on offense to try and extend drives.”

                          Redshirt senior Andre Miller earned the first start under center and threw for 112 yards on 30 attempts, completing 14 of them. 11 of those completions went to sophomore Pete Carlson (6) and junior Ali Concepcion (5), who combined for 100 yards receiving.

                          Junior tailback Robert Riley finished with 57 yards on nine carries, while sophomore sidekick Tramon McCollum added 53 yards on nine attempts.

                          “Our backs were good today but we couldn’t convert those third and shorts to keep drives going,” added Elliott.

                          Defensively, junior linebacker Brett Davidson forced the first turnover in CMU’s first FCS bout, picking off a Tom Zetts pass in the second quarter that set up Thompson’s field goal. Davidson finished with 10 tackles and a sack, as he and sophomores Jared Davis and Devon Elliott sacked the Youngstown State (1-0) signal-caller three times.

                          Runningbacks Marcus Mason and Justin Reams scored twice for the Penguins, as well as wide receiver T.J. Peterson. YSU carried a 14-3 lead into halftime before churning out an 80-yard drive to open the third quarter that ended in a Zetts touchdown pass to Peterson.

                          Carnegie Mellon continues its inaugural season of FCS competition on Saturday, Sept. 9 at Maine.

                          Carnegie Mellon Tartans at Youngstown State Penguins
                          Aug 31, 20061ST2ND3RD4THSCORE
                          Carnegie Mellon Tartans (0-0)03003
                          Youngstown State Penguins (0-0)14021742
                          Scoring Summary
                          FIRST QUARTER SCORINGCMUYSU
                          10:02(YSU) Marcus Mason 3-yard run (Joe Bishop kick)07
                          4:32(YSU) Marcus Mason 3-yard run (Joe Bishop kick)014
                          SECOND QUARTER SCORINGCMUYSU
                          11:43(CMU) Justin Thompson 24-yard field goal314
                          THIRD QUARTER SCORINGCMUYSU
                          9:21(YSU) Tom Zetts 28-yard pass to T.J. Peterson (Joe Bishop kick)321
                          4:33(YSU) Tom Zetts 36-yard pass to T.J. Peterson (Joe Bishop kick)328
                          2:19(YSU) Justin Reams 4-yard run (Joe Bishop kick)335
                          FOURTH QUARTER SCORINGCMUYSU
                          3:53(YSU) Justin Reams 1-yard run (Joe Bishop kick)342
                          Carnegie Mellon Tartans
                          PASSINGC/AYDSTDINT
                          Andre Miller14/3011200
                          RUSHINGATTYDSAVGTD
                          Robert Riley9576.30
                          Tramon McCollum9535.90
                          RECEIVINGRECYDSAVGTD
                          Pete Carlson66410.70
                          Ali Concepcion5367.20
                          DEFENSETACKSACKINTTD
                          Brett Davidson10110
                          Curtis Willis9000
                          Jared Davis8100
                          Devon Elliott2100
                          KICKINGFGXPPTSLONG
                          Justin Thompson1/20/0324
                          Youngstown State Penguins
                          Last edited by Careless Whisper; 03-05-2021, 02:35 PM.
                          The Rise of the Carnegie Mellon Tartans | NCAA Football 08
                          The Rise of the Carnegie Mellon Tartans | MVP 07 NCAA Baseball

                          Comment

                          • dfsJunkie
                            Pro
                            • Apr 2015
                            • 852

                            #14
                            Re: The Rise of the Carnegie Mellon Tartans (NCAA Football 07)

                            42-3 against Youngstown St... this is going to be a long season. I like the setup so far. Cool seeing those old names in the heisman race.

                            Comment

                            • Careless Whisper
                              MVP
                              • Dec 2016
                              • 1984

                              #15
                              Re: The Rise of the Carnegie Mellon Tartans (NCAA Football 07)

                              Originally posted by dfsJunkie
                              42-3 against Youngstown St... this is going to be a long season. I like the setup so far. Cool seeing those old names in the heisman race.
                              Appreciate it! I've always had more fun playing the older titles, which is why I'm still trucking along with my old PS3 that is backwards compatible - not sure if I'll ever upgrade from it unless NCAA comes back.

                              As for the game, it was about what I expected. I can definitely move the ball on the ground against FCS teams, but my QB situation is going to be a struggle all season. If I have any shot at winning this year, I'll probably have to lean on the ground game and churn clock, and hope my defense can bend to its breaking point without snapping.

                              Thanks for checking in!
                              The Rise of the Carnegie Mellon Tartans | NCAA Football 08
                              The Rise of the Carnegie Mellon Tartans | MVP 07 NCAA Baseball

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