Blue Hens continue dominance of Delaware State, but will it be good enough for CAA?
The Blue Hens met the challenge, secured the desired result and avoided the historic consequences that failure against Delaware State would invite.
A 35-9 victory over the Hornets in the home opener at Delaware Stadium was, a little belatedly, worry free and typically one-sided.
But Delaware’s ongoing dominance of its First State rivals didn’t hide the fact that, with the treacherous Colonial Athletic Association schedule now looming, the Blue Hens must be better.
Eventual success Saturday night swung on a couple third-quarter plays – Kedrick Whitehead’s 42-yard fumble return that set up one touchdown and Marcus Yarns’ subsequent 82-yard touchdown gallop. They put the Blue Hens in command 28-3.
Delaware also needed a blocked punt to take the lead for good early.
FINAL STATS: Delaware 35, Delaware State 9
"I think we're going to have continue to make big plays," coach Ryan Carty said of what personified this win.
"That's who we're gonna have to be. That's who we want to be. That's how you win games in college football . . . We had to make some big plays and we didn't in the first half, minus the blocked punt."
Quarterback Nolan Henderson completed 21 of 36 passes for 240 yards and three touchdowns, the second a 7-yarder on fourth-and-6 to Braden Brose four plays after Whitehead’s runback on a bobble forced by Noah Plack.
.@NolanHendersonn throws 7 yards on fourth and 6 to @broseb21 for TD. Freshman @GarrettBennion kicks PAT #BlueHens up 21-3 on @DSUHornets 4:01 left 3Q #caafb pic.twitter.com/eXSVlTGq9N
— kevin tresolini (@kevintresolini) September 11, 2022
Henderson later passed 27 yards to the tight end Brose for another touchdown to close the scoring with 4:51 left.
Thyrick Pitts caught seven passes for 94 yards, including the first UD touchdown, on a night he was targeted a dozen times. He earned the Nate Beasley Award as game MVP for the second time, having also gotten it 2019.
"It's nowhere near where we want to be," Pitts said of the Blue Hens' development. "We left a lot out there today I think . . . We settled down a little bit. We made some strides from game one to game two . . . There's definitely still a lot we need to work on."
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The Blue Hens had 400 total yards against a DSU defense that was No. 1 in the MEAC last year and returned much of its personnel. The Hornets had 311 total yards but couldn't extract more then a touchdown and field goal from them.
It was the 11th meeting between the state’s lone college football teams, both members of the NCAA Division I Football Championship Subdivision. The Blue Hens were presented the traditional First State Cup as the victor in ex-Hen QB Carty's first home game as UD coach.
Delaware has won every game by a double-digit margin. Their next two scheduled meetings are in 2024 and 2025 at Delaware State.
Delaware (2-0), ranked No. 10 nationally in FCS, was coming off a 14-7 win at FBS-level Navy. Delaware will open CAA play next Saturday at 1 p.m. with a tough test at 22nd-ranked Rhode Island. The Rams won 35-21 at Bryant Saturday night.
"We keep getting better," Carty said. "We're cleaning things up as we go. We're still trying to figure each other out, still trying to be a football team. But I know that we played really hard."
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Delaware State (1-1) had romped 34-0 over Division II Lincoln University in its opener.
The crowd of 17,176 featured a massive student turnout, typical for opening night but a throng Delaware has had difficulty retaining on subsequent Saturdays as the season progresses.
The Hornets cut the gap to 28-9 early in the fourth quarter on Jared Lewis’ 57-yard TD heave to Rahkeem Smith. The game ended with DSU being thwarted on a goal-line stand by the Blue Hens' defense.
The Hornets struck first on the game’s opening drive as Jonathan Cardoza-Chicas tied a school record by booming a 54-yard field goal on his first career attempt for DSU. It was just the second time DSU has ever led Delaware, the other being by a 6-3 score in the 2019 game here.
It didn’t last long.
Delaware was stopped on its first series, but Ben Dinkel’s punt was downed at the DSU 1. That paid dividends for the Hens, who forced a DSU punt from the end zone.
Middletown High grad Trey Austin blocked Matt Noll’s kick and Quincy Watson recovered for a touchdown with 5:39 left in the first quarter.
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The Blue Hens then marched 70 yards on 12 plays and a roughing-the-passer penalty on their next series, culminating with Henderson’s 18-yard TD pass to Pitts. The sixth-year wideout turned around just in time to get his hands on the football on the left edge of the end zone on the first play of the second quarter. Brandon Ratcliffe’s second extra-point kick put the Hens up 14-3.
.@t_pitts1 turns just in time to reel in 18yd TD pass from @NolanHendersonn. Ratcliffe adds PAT #BlueHens up 14-3 on @DSUHornets first play of 2Q #caafb pic.twitter.com/qWrqXA40li
— kevin tresolini (@kevintresolini) September 10, 2022
But Delaware’s next two series ended with Henderson’s pass being picked off by Jayden Estes, ending the third longest streak without an interception in UD history at 156 passes, and Ratcliffe missing a 39-yard field-goal try.
DSU drove to the UD 37 on its final series of the first half but Cardoza-Chicas’s chance to tie his record on another 54-yard try was short.
Have an idea for a compelling local sports story or is there an issue that needs public scrutiny? Contact Kevin Tresolini at ktresolini@delawareonline.com and follow on Twitter @kevintresolini. Support local journalism by subscribing to delawareonline.com.
This article originally appeared on Delaware News Journal: Hens continue dominance of DSU but will it be good enough for CAA?