2006
OHSAA Div. III State Champions
BR |
2006 Saccoccia |
OPP |
---|---|---|
22 |
Akron Buchtel |
6 |
27 |
Washington Gonzaga DC |
7 |
45 |
Edison |
19 |
36 |
@ Youngstown Ursuline |
14 |
29 |
Buffalo St. Joseph Collegiate Ny. |
13 |
41 |
@ Akron St. Vincent/St. Mary |
14 |
61 |
Wheeling Park Wva. |
7 |
36 |
@ Beaver Local |
0 |
33 |
Canton Central Catholic |
0 |
34 |
Baltimore Mount St. Joseph Md. |
20 |
26 |
New Concord John Glenn |
10 |
28 |
N Canton South |
6 |
33 |
N Dover |
30 |
48 |
N Aurora |
13 |
34 |
N Kettering Archbishop Alter |
33 |
533 |
15-0-0 |
192 |
Regional Quarter-final, Big Red (10-0), vs. John Glenn Muskies (7-3), Saturday, November 4th, 2006, at Death Valley.
It may not have looked as well-oiled as it did throughout the first 10 weeks of football, but the Big Red machine rolled on. Despite dropped passes, injuries, and an off-night from just about everybody on field, defending state champion Steubenville took the first step toward defending its state title, Saturday at Harding Stadium, by disposing of the John Glenn Little Muskies, 26-10, in the first round of OHSAA Division III playoffs.
"We have to play to play tougher if we want to go any further. We're a team and we didn't play like a team. We had misalignments, we had drop passes, we had bad throws, we had missed blocks, we had missed tackles," Big Red coach Reno Saccoccia said. "It was just a bunch of things, tonight. We didn't play championship football. We didn't have a championship attitude. We didn't have a championship effort, so we either learn from this or we don't go any further."
And what about those injuries? Big Red began the game without star running back Tamawi McGhee, tight end Anthony Gossett and receiver Dan Vogel. Nose guard Donavon Fletcher left the game in the first quarter.
"A big part of your team chemistry is being healthy and we're not healthy. When you lose a 1,400-yard tailback,a receiver with 24 catches, your nose guard and a tight end, that hurts your chemistry," Saccoccia said. "It's hard to replace four people, but you want kids to pick up and we expect the players we put in to do a good job. We can replace those players with the same amount of talent, but we also have to replace them with the same amount of effort and enthusiasm."
Still, even in a game that was uncharacteristically sloppy for Big Red, Steubenville did what it had to do to move on.
Big Red drew first blood in the first quarter, when Anthony Jackson capped off a 62-yard, nine-play drive with a 3-yard run at the 3:46 mark. Steve Davis came through on the PAT for a 7-0 Big Red lead.
By the time bands took the field, Steubenville, had increased its lead to 20-0. Zach Collaros played a role in both scores. The senior quarterback ran in from 39 yards out at 6:12 of the second and then hit Maurice Bougard on a 12-yard strike with just 18 seconds remaining in the first half. Collaros, at 7-of-14 for 132 yards, had his worst-completion game of the season, but led the team in rushing with 114 yards on just 10 carries. Collaros' scoring run came on a fourth-and-11 situation. After faking a handoff to Anthony Jackson, Collaros kept the football ran up the middle, before weaving his way to paydirt.
Big Red's final touchdown came early in the third, when James Montgomery ran in from a yard out.
As for the Little Muskies' offensive effort, it wasn't much. They had just 28 yards on the ground in the first half, and after gaining two first downs on the their initial drive of the game, didn't get another one until the third. In fact, John Glenn saved just about everything for the second half, including all its points. John Glenn picked up two points early in the fourth quarter when Collaros slipped in the end zone for a safety Later in the final frame, Garrett Bennington ran 5 yards on a counter-play for a touchdown. He tacked on two more when he ran in for the conversion. The touchdown coupled with the safety suddenly made it a 26-10 game.
"John Glenn came ready to play, They've played us before and their coach did a great job," Saccoccia said "They were well prepared, and they gave us a game."
The Muskies allowed Big Red just one first down on the possession following the John Glenn touchdown and returned the punt all to the Big Red 47. However, any hopes the Muskies had all but vanished just two plays later when John Glenn QB Aaron Bates was hit by Dreylon Pree and coughed up football. Big Red lineman Rolland Owens fell on it. Those hopes completely evaporated when running back Ezaine Moxley powered for a clock-draining first down to put the game away.
Undefeated Big Red extended its winning streak to 26 games with the victory, and will now move on to face South Canton, Saturday, at a yet-to-be-determined, neutral site. That much Saccoccia is pleased with.
"I'm happy with the result, but I know we can do better," Saccoccia said. "We have kids who compete at the drop of a hat, it just has to rub off on everybody else, that's all.
Regional semi-finals, Big Red (11-0), vs Canton South Wildcats (8-3), Saturday, November 11th, 2006 at Alliance's Mt. Union Stadium.
If there was one point Big Red coach Reno Saccoccia wanted to get across to his players in the week heading into Saturday's regional semifinal with Canton South it was that every game yields its fair share of peaks and valleys.
All Saccoccia wanted his boys to do was the fight the fight each of the 48 minutes they were on the field. The Big Red players took their coach's advice, regaining lost footing when they stumbled and making the most of it when they soared en route to a 28-6 final at Mount Union Stadium in Alliance.
"It wasn't a perfect game. I don't think anybody has ever played a perfect a game, but we're trying to get to that. Tonight, we made mistakes, but our kids kept fighting," Saccoccia said. "The key to the game was our kids not getting down when we had penalties stop our drives and when we had touchdowns called back. Our kids kept their heads in the game and we didn't let that deter us. We kept fighting."
Big Red ended up with 48 yards in penalties. It wasn't exactly the Red's highest number of flags this year, but the calls came at bad times, including a personal foul on Big Red's second scoring drive. Despite being pushed back 15 yards, the Red still crossed the goal line, thanks to a 30-yard pass from Zach Collaros to Maurice Bougard which set up the touchdown from the 1. Collaros ran it in at 1:46 of the second. He also kept the ball for the two-point conversion. That gave Steubenville a 14-0 lead.
Big Red drew first first blood with no time left in the opening quarter.
Tamawi McGhee scored that touchdown from 4 yards out. Steve Davis' PAT was blocked. That 12-play, 79-yard drive was highlighted by a 23-yard run from Collaros.
Big Red went on to score in both the third and fourth. In the third, McGhee broke for a 40-yard gain and Collaros hit Dan Vogel with a 14-yard pass, as Red marched down 66 yards down field. Collaros scored his second rushing touchdown of the night, capping off the drive with a 4-yard jaunt. The final
Steubenville touchdown was set up by six runs totaling 35 yards from Anthony Jackson. Collaros later found Vogel in the end zone for an 8-yard scoring strike. Davis split the uprights after both second-half scores to put Big Red up, 28-0.
The penalties and three lost fumbles aside, Steubenville still put up big offensive numbers. As a team, Big Red racked up 250 rushing yards, including 145 from big running back McGhee, who limped off the field in the third not to return. Collaros was 10-of-15 for 167 yards, with Bougard pulling down six of those passes for a team-leading 96 yards.
All and all, it was a pretty balanced night for Steubenville.
"We have to mixing it up. That's we have to do, and we did a good job of that, tonight," Saccoccia said. "But the thing I'm most proud about with our players is that we're banged up as hell, but we keep fighting. We fought to get the yards we got tonight, and we fought bruised and banged up."
Defensively, the Red shut down the Wildcats' ground game, giving up just 40 yards and allowing South's big rusher Devoe Torrence a mere 10. Devoe's big brother and senior wide receiver, Devon Torrence, did end up with hefty numbers, making seven catches for 155, but only one of those passes did any real damage. It was Devon that took away the Steubenville shutout when he snagged a 74-yard scoring strike from Matt Trissel, who was 12-of-30 for 210 on the night, late in the fourth. As for Trissel, his 200-plus-passing night was marred by two interceptions. Steve Davis ended up with both picks.
With the win, Big Red rolled to 12-0 on the season and extended their winning streak to 27. And while it seems as if winning comes as naturally as breathing to the Big Red, Saccoccia is keeping things in prospective.
"It's not business as usual for us. You have to cherish every win and we do. We cherish it as much everybody else, but it's on to the next step now," he said. "We are thrilled. We took the next step and that's what this is about. You keep fighting to go on and keep fighting to go on. if you let you're guard down, you don't go on. It's that simple."
Big Red will next meet Dover, who stunned Cambridge with a 42-9 win, in the Region 11 finals, Saturday at 8:30 p.m, at a yet-to-be-determined site.
Regional Final, Big Red (12-0), vs. Dover Tornadoes (11-1), Saturday, November 18th, 2006, at Canton's Fawcett Stadium.
The National Weather Service warns to seek shelter when in the direct path of a tornado. Undefeated Big Red chose to ignore that first-rule of weather safety, standing its ground and weathering a not-so-perfect storm, at Canton's Fawcett Stadium, Saturday afternoon. In a game marred by turnovers and highlighted by big plays and equally big numbers, the state-semifinal bound Big Red outlasted the Dover Tornadoes, 33-30, and won its third regional title in four years.
"(Dover) made their plays and we made our plays. I thought our defense played great, and their defense played great," Saccoccia said. "We both played our games, but our game was three points better." Those games couldn't have been more different. Both teams ended up with big numbers, combining for 908 yards of offense. For the Tornadoes, all but 79 of their yards came in the air, as senior quarterback Perci Garner lived up to the hype, hitting 27-of-46 attempts for 400 yards. Big Red, for the most part, stuck with the ground assault, rushing for 265 yards on 49 carries. Tamawi McGhee took 21 hand-offs for a game-leading 117 yards. Senior quarterback Zach Collaros came up with an additional 113 rushing yards. When the Red did throw the ball, it was effective, with Collaros finishing 12-of-18 for 164 yards. Collaros also proved to be a big playmaker on defense. He picked off Garner four times, taking one of those interceptions 100 yards for a touchdown. The interception return, a Big Red school record, quenched a Tornado drive that would have left Steubenville with just a three-point lead at the half, but instead made it a 27-10 Steubenville game with just 33 seconds left in the second quarter. The touchdown capped off a first half that saw both teams provide the other with opportunities. On the third play of the game, Collaros snagged his first interception. Big Red drove the ball inside the Dover 15, only to cough up the football. The Tornadoes capitalized on the turnover, when Garner hit Daniel Ifft with a 29-yard scoring strike at 6:47 in the first. Matt Rinehart split the uprights. Big Red responded to the five-play, 86-yard drive with a 6-play, 69-yard march of its own that ended with a 25-yard touchdown pass from Collaros to Dan Vogel. Steve Davis followed with the PAT to tie it up with 3:51 remaining in the opening quarter.
The Tornadoes retook the lead less than a minute later on a 42-yard field goal by Rinehart.
The Dover lead didn't last long. At 7:14, of the second quarter, McGhee ran in from 3 yards out. It took Steubenville 15-plays to march 75 yards to paydirt. The drive, which ate five minutes off of the clock, included an 18-yard reception by Anthony Gossett, runs of 11 and 10 by Collaros and an 11-yard jaunt by McGhee. The point after was good and Big Red led, 14-10.
Garner and Company came surging back, but fell victim to their second pick of the game. That time, Dreylon Pree delivered a thundering hit to Garner just as he was releasing his pass. The ball was deflected and fullback Rolland Owens, who had came into the game just two plays before, plucked it out of the air near midfield. Steubenville made the most of the turnover and used eight plays to increase its lead. Collaros finished what Owens started when he ran 6 yards for the score with just over a minute left in the first half.
Collaros' two-point conversion pass failed, but he came up with his record-setting interception return on Dover's ensuing possession. "We had a lot of big plays and we had a lot of little plays that ended up being big plays," Saccoccia said. "And they had big plays, too. The onside kick was a big play and a gutsy call in the game." The onside kick came at the start of the second half. Instead of kicking deep to Big Red, the Tornadoes elected to squib the football, hoping to shift the momentum back in their corner. It worked. Dover's Cory Abel fell on it, and Rinehart later hauled in an 8-yard TD reception and followed with the PAT, cutting Dover's deficit to 10. Once again, Big Red responded with a deep drive, but that was stopped when Rinehart picked off Collaros on the Dover 18. However, it was all for nothing. Minutes later, Collaros returned the favor and came up with his fourth and final interception of the game. "We turned the ball over five times, which was unfortunate," Dover coach Dan Ifft said. "But, when you're playing an opponent like (Steubenville), sometimes they create turnovers. You, obviously, have to protect the football."
And, obviously, both teams struggled to do that. Big Red committed three turnovers, bringing the game's grand total to eight, with the final two having costly consequences.
After a Dover touchdown — Garner ran in from a yard — left Steubenville with a narrow 27-24 lead with nine minutes left in the game, the Red worked its way back inside the Dover 25. Collaros passed the ball to Maurice Bougard, but 2 yards from the goal line the ball popped from his grasp and rolled into the end zone. The Tornadoes recovered the fumble and took over on the Big Red 20. There were four minutes remaining— plenty of time for Dover's explosive offense to put up the go-ahead score.
But instead of throwing deep, Garner kept it — at least he tried to. He coughed up the football and Big Red was back in business on the Tornadoes' 27. Five plays later, Collaros ran in from 3 yards out. A failed PAT gave Dover life and the Tornadoes did all it could with it, scoring one last touchdown. However, the conversion run and the onside kick following the TD failed to seal the deal for the Red. "We got the regional title, but now we have to reset our goals. I'm just thrilled for the kids, especially our seniors," Saccoccia said. "Nobody gave them a chance to get this far when the season started. Everybody said we lost a lot this and we lost a lot of that, but one thing you have to remember here is that tradition never graduates, so now we have to reset our goals and get ready for our next game." That game will take place at 7 p.m., Saturday, at Fawcett against the Aurora Greenmen, who defeated Mentor Lake Catholic, 24-23. The winner of that game will meet the winner of Kettering Alter and New Albany in the Division III state championship game. Alter won a 28-0 shutout over Sunbury Big Walnut. New Albany upset last year's state runner-up, Columbus St. Francis DeSales, 10-6.
State Semi-finals, Big Red, 13-0, vs Aurora Greenmen, 12-1, Saturday, November 25, 2006, at Canton's Fawcett Stadium.
Aurora won the toss, elected to receive and scored on its first possession of the night in the Greenmen's Division III state semifinal game against
Big Red at Canton's Fawcett Stadium, Saturday evening. However, the early touchdown would mark the last time anything would go right for Aurora, as the Red rolled over the Green, 48-13, earning the right to defend their state title next week at Massillon. Steubenville's first team defense did not allow another score and Aurora ended up with a mere 205 yards of total offense. The Big Red defenders also converted a turnover into a touchdown when defensive back Steve Davis picked off Miller and ran 40 yards to pay dirt in third. Steubenville, meanwhile, racked up over 400 total yards and seemed to spend more time in the end zone than anywhere else on the field, coming up with seven touchdowns. Senior quarterback Zach Collaros threw for six of those scores. Collaros, the 2006 Division III State Championship Game MVP, was 11-of-14 for 293 yards. "I'll tell you what, I think every kid played a great game. We blocked well. We tackled well. We caught the ball well. We threw the ball well" Big Red coach Reno Saccoccia said. "But all we earned tonight was the right to play next week, nothing more and nothing less."
The first few minutes of the game suggested that the road to the state championship game was going to a bumpy ride, but as the game progressed, it proved smooth sailing for the Red.
Aurora returned the opening kickoff all the way to the Big Red 40 and later, after the help of the three Big Red penalties, scored on the Miller-to-Snyder pass play. The Greenmen then held Steubenville to three and out, forcing the Red to punt. It was not‚t the kind of start most have come accustomed to seeing from Steubenville. "It took us a little while to get settled down, but my hat is off to Aurora. They did very well on that first drive," Saccoccia said. "They gave us some plays that we just did not‚t defend very well. The had some talented players, but like I said our kids played a great game and did what we set out to do."
After being forced to punt on its first possession, Big Red came storming back on its second. Tamawi McGhee broke out on runs of 9, 10 and 31 yards on the drive. The senior tailback also caught a pass to cap off the drive from 3 yards out.
The 3-yarder was small potatoes when compared to Collaros‚ other scoring strikes in the game. Collaros catapulted his team into the lead when he found Maurice Bougard alone down field for a 53-yard touchdown completion at 5:33 of the second.
A partially blocked punt by Branko Busick set up another Collaros-to-Bougard scoring connection in the second stanza. That one covered 39 yards and came at 3:55.
Big Red wasn't done with its first-half air show just yet. On fourth down and with less than a minute before the bands took the field, Collaros kept a Big Red drive alive with a 31-yard gain to Davis. Collaros finished it off with a 10-yarder to Anthony Gossett with 13 ticks left in the first half. Collaros found Gossett for the Red‚s first score of the second half, hitting the tight end with what became a 57-yard touchdown at 7:40 of the third. Davis came up with his interception 22 seconds later, and Collaros went out with a bang, bringing Big Red's scoring to an end with a 67-yard pass completion to Bougard with 23 seconds left in the third. The Greenmen, who finished 13-1 on the year and with the first state semifinal appearance in school history, put up one more score after the Red's starters came out, when Alex Welch ran in from three yards out at 5:20 of the final frame.
Undefeated Steubenville now moves on to the state championship game at Paul Brown Tiger Stadium where the Red will face Ketterington Archbishop Alter, a winner over New Albany, in a 3 p.m. ballgame. "This is what we wanted. We wanted the right to play next week," Saccoccia said. "But all we earned was a spot in the state championship game. Now, we have to go out and earn the state championship."
State Championship, Big Red, 14-0, vs Kettering Alter Knights, 14-0, Saturday, December 2nd, 2006, at Massillon's Paul Brown Tiger Stadium.
On a hot, humid day way back in early August, Big Red coach Reno Saccoccia was asked how his 2006 team could possibly top the 15-0 state championship run of the season before.
Saccoccia paused, thought for a moment, and then gave the only answer he could.
"We can't," he said. "We can only match it."
Four months later, Saccoccia stood in the middle of Paul Brown Tiger Stadium with the sweltering heat of August replaced by the blistering cold air that only early December can provide. Saccoccia's eyes, at that moment moist with tears, had seen a lot over the last 15 weeks of football. And although those eyes had seen the Red roll to victory week after week, they never seemed at ease. There was no time for that. Saccoccia was much too busy looking ahead to the next game. But, on Saturday, there was no game to look ahead to, and for the first time perhaps since last December, Saccoccia's eyes were relaxed.
His team had done what months early Saccoccia had said was the only thing it could do. It won its 15th game of the season and earned
Steubenville won back-to-back Division III Ohio State championships, becoming the 23rd team in OHSAA history to defend its title, with a nail-biting 34-33 victory over the previously unbeaten Kettering Archbishop Alter Knights.
"We beat what we did last year and there's one reason why we beat it. These kids played with a target on their backs since Dec. 3 of last year," Saccoccia said moments after accepting the Division III Championship trophy. "We took everybody's best shot, gave them ours, and came out on top. That's why we are the tradition, that's why we are the champions and that's way we are the Big Red."
Steubenville narrowly escaped a second-half rally by the Knights, and the game ultimately came down to a blocked extra point following Alter's final touchdown. Junior playmaker Steve Davis got a piece of the kick and instead of a tied game at 9:17 of the third quarter, the Knights trailed, 34-33.
"Coach (Rick) Camilletti works hard on those blocked kicks. He works hard with our kids on that everyday and takes a lot of pride in what he does," Saccoccia said. "I just thank God that he's on our side."
Saccoccia was no doubt as equally grateful that Davis was wearing a Steubenville uniform. With just over two minutes left in the game and Alter moving the football, Davis picked off a reverse-pass at the Big Red 26 for his second interception of the night. After, a Big Red first down, all senior quarterback Zach Collaros had to do was take a knee to seal the deal.
"Before this game, one of our coaches said the 'little things are the greatest things' and he was right," Saccoccia said. "It was simple things like the blocked extra point and interception that were the biggest plays tonight."
Perhaps, the two defensive plays by Davis, proved key, but Big Red was not without high numbers on the other side of the football.
Collaros threw for 247 of his total 254 passing yards and three scores in the first half, including the first two initial touchdowns of the game.
After connecting with Maurice Bougard on a 51-yard pass that put Big Red inside the Alter 10, Collaros hit the senior wideout again on an 8-yard scoring strike at 9:22 of the first.
Steubenville found itself in scoring position a second time, when Davis intercepted Alter quarterback Steve O'Donnell on the Knights' opening possession. Davis returned the ball to the Knights' 20 and set up a 20-yard TD pass from Collaros to tight end Anthony Gossett. Davis split the uprights, and the Knights, who had not given up a point in the postseason prior to meeting Steubenville, were suddenly behind, 14-0.
Alter took back seven of those points, when it converted a turnover of its own with three minutes to go in the first quarter. The Knights scooped up a fumble and returned to the Big Red 13. Three plays later, O'Donnell ran in from a yard out. Paul Sobecki supplied the point after.
Later, Collaros found Steve Davis wide open in the middle for a 58-yard gain to the Alter 4. Collaros later ran it in from 3 yards out at 1:05 of the first. Davis made good on the point after.
Steubenville extended its lead early in the second when Collaros and Davis paired up for another big gain. That time it was a 69-yard scoring strike. The conversion kick failed.
After two change of possessions, the Knights' crossed the goal line for TD No. 2 with a 50-yard pass from O'Donnell to Michael Shaw.
That kick after also failed, and the see-saw effect continued with a 1-yard TD run from Collaros four minutes later.
Big Red held the Knights and took over with 2:36 remaining in the half. Eventually, Steubenville faced a third-and-16 situation on the drive, and put the ball in the air. However, a Knight came down with it and Alex Place returned his pick to the Big Red 4. Chris Roark, the Knights' leading rusher with 90 yards, capitalized with a 3-yard run with 0:39 seconds on the clock. After the kick, it was a 34-20 ballgame.
Making a bad situation worse, Alter had deferred the opening kickoff and was set to receive after the break. The Knights took advantage by scoring on its opening position of the second half. Michael Shaw found a hole, ran 42 yards to pay dirt and Sobecki nailed the extra point, bringing the Knights within one score.
"The only bad call of the ballgame I made at the end of the second half. I should have sat on the football, but we threw it and they got the interception and scored," Saccoccia said. "All I could do was hope our players would get me out that with a win and they did."
That momentum shift lasted a bit longer. After the ensuing kickoff Big Red ended up pinned inside its own 10. The Red began their next possession on their own 20, punting the ball away both times.
The Knights, on the other hand, scored once more on a 3-yard run from Roark, but it proved to be all for nothing, thanks to the blocked PAT and final interception.
"People might ask me, if I would have rather have lost 50-20 or by the one point that we did, and that's a matter of pride," said long-time Alter coach Ed Domsitz, whose team was making its first-ever state final appearance. "Of course, we didn't want to get embarrassed, but to fight back like that and lose by one point is an awful feeling to have."
One person who isn't offering any apologizes for the way Alter's season ended is Saccoccia.
"I've been there. We lost in double overtime (in 1987), and we've lost in the state finals twice (1987 and '88), and I know how it feels," Saccoccia said. "All we earned and all Alter earned prior to tonight was a chance to play in this game, and our hats are off to Alter. They fought until the end, but we won this game with out scoring a single point in the second half, because we did the little things and overcame some big things from Alter.
"Nothing great comes without adversity and hard work and I think that second half just made us appreciate this whole thing just a little bit more."
2006~
Maurice Bougard, db/wr
Zach Collaros, db/qb
Steve Davis, db/wr/qb
Anthony Gossett db/te
Chris Rose db/qb
Dan Vogel db/wr
David Anderson db/qb
Mike DiCarlantonio cb/te
Mike Goodwin db/rb
Tamawi McGhee lb/tb
Jeremy Banks de/te
James Montgomery lb/tb/fb
Brandon Carroll db/rec
Jordan McIntyre db/rb
Zach Howrath lb/fb
Diontae Culbreath db/rb
Anthony Jackson db/rb
Patrick Gilbert db/wr
Rolland Owens ng/fb
William Jackson db/rec
Mike Fahey de/te
Javon Wallace lb/fb
Angelo Iachini db/rec
Nick Vogagis lb/te
Branka Busick lb/fb
Ezane Moxley lb/fb
Mark Markakis lb/fb
Anthony Iachini db/rec
Frank Littlejohn db/rec
Tom Ball db/rec
Sam Pavlik lb/g
Sean Campbell de/c
Phil Gilmore de/g
Ryan Dugan ng/g
Richard Dunn nt/g
Jeremiah Hahn db/wr
Rick Brancazio dt/g
Dylan Clayton de/g
Josh Sterling dt/t
Keith Gregory de/g
Donavon Fletcher nt/g
Pat Geary dt/g
Travis Moore de/g
Tyree Dunn dt/g
Brian Yontz dt/t
Andew Radakovich dt/t
Chad Murphy de/g
Brandon Frey dt/t
Mike Weber dt/t
Derrick Brown dt/t
William Fordham db/wr
T.J. Brown db/wr
Joe Woo db/wr
Carlo Sanders db/wr
Rick Fugate de/te
Dreylon Pree de/lb/te
Alex Morales db/wr
Stephan Byrd db/wr