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In this year’s chapter of the Penn-Princeton rivalry, the Quakers compiled an astounding 600 yards of total offense. The 42-point margin marked the school’s largest-ever blowout over Princeton.
The Quakers face Princeton Saturday for their fifth Ivy League game of the season. Penn is still undefeated in the conference, while the Tigers have yet to register a conference win.
After dominating the Bears, 24-7, Saturday at Franklin Field, the Quakers now control their own destiny as the lone remaining undefeated team in the conference.
The center is often the forgotten man. But don’t be fooled; senior center Joe D’Orazio is the most important player when Penn's offense takes the field.
One thing is sure: it certainly isn’t lonely at the top of the Ivy League. With the sixth week of play officially in the books, Brown (4-2, 3-0 Ivy) sits in a tie with Penn for first place.
Though Al Bagnoli’s offense has generated enough points to keep the Penn football team undefeated in Ivy League play, the team still sits in dangerous territory.
Yale's offense posed a formidable threat, entering Saturday with an Ivy-best 267 pass yards per game, but the Quakers ‘D’ showed that it was up for the task.
Al Bagnoli and four of his players — starting QB Billy Ragone and linebacker Brian Levine, as well as two freshmen — will have an early homecoming when Penn heads to Connecticut.
The voting media made a big mistake believing Penn's losses on defense in the offseason would be too great to overcome. The Quakers will win the Ivy title this year because of their improved offense.