Skip to Content, Navigation, or Footer.
Tuesday, Jan. 6, 2026
The Daily Pennsylvanian

Quakers get inspired blowout

Penn 44, Columbia 16

NEW YORK -- It was with thoughts of fallen teammate Kyle Ambrogi that Penn took the field to play with emotion, anger, and purpose -- the very specific purpose of a win in their teammate's honor. A clear goal in mind, the Quakers could not and would not let their former teammate down. Penn emerged with a decisive 44-16 victory over Columbia in New York. "Our kids were on a mission," Penn coach Al Bagnoli said. "And I just give them a tremendous amount of credit for being able to hang in there under the ultimate distress. I'm not sure we are ever going to replace Kyle and I think the best thing we could do is to come up here and try to get a 'W.'" At its homecoming, Columbia (2-3, 0-2 Ivy) suffered a deficit early in the game and never recovered. Penn (4-1, 2-0) jumped to take the lead early first quarter when running back Sam Mathews carried the ball into Columbia's end zone and put the Quakers on the board first. Mathews, who tallied 155 yards in 21 carries, recorded a second touchdown for Penn just five minutes later. The Quakers opened the second quarter with a 14-0 lead over the Lions. Electrified by an emotional week following Ambrogi's tragedy, an angry and passionate Penn offense continued to pound the struggling Lions. "That was my hope that once the game started, hopefully we were going to be an angry team," Bagnoli said. "Angry at anything that happened, the lack of rationale at how something like this could happen, and play angry and play emotional and I think we did that." Quarterback Pat McDermott led a 92-yard drive that ended when he found tight end Chris Mizell for a touchdown with five minutes remaining in the second quarter; it was the third touchdown in three games for Mizell, who had never scored for the Quakers prior to this season. Columbia kicker Jon Rocholl finally put his team on the board with a 47-yard field goal to conclude the first half. But it was too little too late. At first opportunity -- in the opening minute of second-half play -- the Quakers responded to the Columbia field goal when McDermott threw a pass to wide receiver Dan McDonald on Penn's third play of the quarter. The Columbia cornerback and safety covering McDonald collided, allowing McDonald to snatch the ball and run 80 yards into the Lions' end zone. "We can't have our free safety and our corner run into each other when we are double-covering a wide receiver and have him run 80 yards for a touchdown," Columbia head coach Bob Shoop said. Columbia errors or not, the Quakers were already set upon a victory -- and this time it was about more than just another conference win en route to an Ivy League title. "Everyone tries to play with a purpose," senior linebacker Ric San Doval said. "When something like [Ambrogi's death] occurs -- it is a purpose." Under the leadership of San Doval and others, the defense had affirmed its position as one of the strongest in the Ivy League last week when it silenced non-conference opponent Bucknell. The defense continued to dominate on Saturday, holding the Lions to an average of less than a yard per carry. Defensive back Doug Middleton scored for Penn late in the fourth quarter when he picked up a blundered Columbia onsides kick and ran for a 43-yard touchdown. But it was the Penn offense who, with the presence and returning health of go-to running backs Joe Sandberg and Mathews, really stepped into the spotlight with a refreshed rushing game. "We were disappointed in our rushing after last weekend," Bagnoli said. "We've been somewhat hindered by injuries and we don't want to use that as an excuse, but clearly for the first time in a long time we had Joe [Sandberg] and Sam [Mathews] really healthy. And I think when they are healthy they are both different level players. They make everyone aound them better, they make the offensive line better, they make the play action better, they make the passing game better." After sitting out last weekend against Bucknell, Sandberg jumped back into play and came up big for the Quakers. He ran 21 yards for a touchdown five minutes into the second half and earned a staggering 11.9 average yards per carry. Penn continues Ivy League play this Saturday, when the Quakers will host Yale on Franklin Field.

Ivy League standings

PENN 2-0 Yale 2-0 Brown 1-1 Harvard 1-1 Princeton 1-1 Cornell 1-1 Columbia 0-2 Dartmouth 0-2

Saturday's games

Georgetown 7 Cornell 57 Yale 21 (21) Lehigh 28 (2 OT) Princeton 28 Brown 31 Harvard 24 Lafayette 17 Dartmouth 16 Holy Cross 28

Next week's games

Columbia at Dartmouth, 12 p.m. Princeton at Harvard, 12:30 p.m. Brown at Cornell, 1 p.m. Yale at PENN, 3:30 p.m.