User:Murphanian777/Interhall football: Era of Aaron

Era of Aaron

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The era of Aaron is an arbitrary division between the Co-Ed era and the modern age of interhall football, meaning I will almost certainly change it before I release the final website during the summer of 2021. This time period begins with my father's arrival at the University of Notre Dame in 1991 and ends with his departure in the 1994-1995 school year.

Other Eras

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Other pages

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Other teams
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1991

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The 1991 men's interhall tackle football season began on September 22 with fifteen teams.

Date Team Score Team Score Location Notes Source
Parseghian League
September 22 Flanner Grace Stepan fields [1][2]
September 22 Dillon technical Off-Campus technical Stepan fields [note 1] [3]
September 29 Dillon 6 Morrissey 10 Stepan fields [1][2][4][5]
September 29 Flanner 20 Off-Campus 3 Stepan fields [note 2] [2][4]
October 6 Flanner 6 Morrissey 6 Stepan fields [6]
October 6 Grace 0 Off-Campus 21 Stepan fields [6]
October 13 Dillon Flanner [note 3] [5][7]
October 13 Grace Morrissey [note 4] [5][7]
October 20 Dillon 0 Grace 20 Cartier Field [5]
October 20 Morrissey Off-Campus Cartier Field [note 5] [5]
Leahy League
September 22 Alumni Cavanaugh Stepan fields [8][2]
September 22 Stanford 13 Zahm 14+ Stepan fields [8][2]
September 29 Cavanaugh 0 Zahm 10 Stepan fields [2][4]
September 29 Alumni 6 Keenan 0 Stepan fields [2][4]
October 6 Keenan 3 Zahm 0 [6]
October 6 Stanford 7 Cavanaugh 6 [6]
October 13 Alumni Zahm [note 6] [5][7]
October 13 Keenan Stanford 0 [note 7] [5][7]
October 20 Cavanaugh 0 Keenan Cartier Field [note 8] [7]
October 20 Alumni 0 Stanford 0 Cartier Field [5]
Rockne League
September 22 Carroll St. Edward's Stepan fields [9][2]
September 22 Fisher Sorin Stepan fields [2]
September 29 Sorin 14 St. Edward's 6 Stepan fields [2][4]
September 29 Carroll 21 Pangborn 0 Stepan fields [2][4]
October 6 Fisher 12 St. Edward's 0 Stepan fields [6]
October 6 Pangborn 6 Sorin 0 Stepan fields [6]
October 13 Fisher Pangborn [note 9] [5][7]
October 13 Carroll Sorin [note 10] [5][7]
October 20 Carroll 7 Fisher 7 Cartier Field [5]
October 20 Pangborn unknown St. Edward's unknown Cartier Field [note 11] [7][10]
First round
November 3 #4 Fisher 6 #5 Zahm 14 Stepan North field [7][11][12]
November 3 #3 Flanner 8 #6 Off-Campus 0 Stepan North field [7][11][12]
Semi-finals
November 10 #1 Carroll technical #5 Zahm technical Stepan North field [note 12]</ref> [7][12][13][14]
November 10 #3 Flanner 0 #2 Keenan 3 Stepan North field [7][12][13][14]
Interhall championship
November 17 #2 Keenan 7 #5 Zahm 3 Notre Dame Stadium [14][15][16]

Interhall championship

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The 1991 men's interhall tackle football championship was played November 17 at Notre Dame Stadium between the Keenan Knights and Zahm Hall.

1991 Men's IFL championship summary
Trick play leads Keenan past Zahm in defensive affair

"Keenan Hall lost the battle but won the war, coming away with the men's interhall football championship Sunday at Notre Dame Stadium with a 7-3 victory over Zahm. Zahm dominated almost every offensive category, and was able to hold Keenan to only one first down on offense. Yet the Knights were unable to beat Keenan where it really counted, on the scoreboard. After having no offensive success the entire game, Keenan coach Phil Wehby reached into his bag of tricks and pulled out the game-winning play—a 35-yard halfback pass with three minutes remaining in the game which caught the Zahm defense by surprise. Running back Brian Baker took a pitch from Keenan quarterback Matt Davis, stopped and threw across field to receiver Pete Knight for the game's only touchdown. "We had used that play earlier in the year against Cavanaugh and it was successful," said Davis. "We couldn't get anything going on offense so we had to try something. "Zahm got the ball after Knight's score, but Zahm quarterback Chris Hammond threw into double coverage and the ball was intercepted, ending any chances for a Zahm victory. That interception was the only down point of the day for Hammond, who victimized the Keenan defense for 119 yards passing, completing 8-of-16 attempts. Hammond's arm lead to Zahm's only score, a 20-yard field goal on the game's opening drive. The drive was highlighted by completions of 15 and 35 yards which put Zahm at the Keenan six. A delay of game penalty and a stingy Keenan defense forced Zahm to settle for a field goal. The early score hinted that the game may be a high-scoring one, but it was a defensive battle from that point on, with no team able to threaten until Keenan's game-winning score. "We usually like to run (Matt) Seng a lot but they shut our running game down completely," said Hammond. " Both defenses played extremely tough.""

George Dohrmann, Notre Dame Observer, 18 November 1991

Women

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The 1991 women's interhall flag football season began on September 20 with twelve teams.

Date Team Score Team Score Location Notes Source
Blue League (Farley, Knott, Lewis, Pasquerilla East, Pasquerilla West, Siegfried)
September 22 Pasquerilla East 6 Pasquerilla West 9 Cartier Field [17][18]
September 22 Farley 0 Lewis 6 Cartier Field [note 13] [17][18]
September 22 Knott 0 Siegfried 6 Cartier Field [note 14] [17][18]
September 25 Farley Pasquerilla East Cartier Field [note 15] [18][2]
September 25 Knott Pasquerilla West Cartier Field [note 16] [18][2]
September 25 Lewis Siegfried Cartier Field [note 17] [18]
September 29 Farley 8 Pasquerilla West 25 Cartier Field [2][4]
September 29 Pasquerilla East 13 Siegfried 21 Cartier Field [2][4]
September 29 Knott Lewis Cartier Field [note 18] [2][4][19]
October 6 Knott Pasquerilla East Cartier Field [note 19] [19]
October 6 Farley Siegfried Cartier Field [note 20] [19]
October 6 Lewis Pasquerilla West Cartier Field [note 21] [19]
October 13 Lewis 14 Pasquerilla East 22 Cartier Field [19]
October 13 Farley 20 Knott 14 Cartier Field [19]
October 13 Pasquerilla West 6 Siegfried 0 Cartier Field [note 22] [19]
Gold League (Badin, Breen-Phillips, Howard, Lyons, Off-Campus, Walsh)
September 22 Badin 8 Walsh 14 Cartier Field [note 23] [8][17][18]
September 22 Breen-Phillips 8 Off-Campus 0 Cartier Field [8][17][18]
September 25? Howard Lyons Cartier Field [note 24] [8][17]
September 29 Badin 0 Off-Campus 16 Cartier Field [18][4]
September 29 Breen-Phillips 6 Lyons 0 Cartier Field [2][4]
September 29 Howard 6 Walsh 0 Cartier Field [2][4]
October 2 Breen-Phillips Howard Cartier Field [note 25] [4][19]
October 2 or 6 Lyons Badin Cartier Field [note 26] [19]
October 26 Breen-Phillips 8 Walsh 14 Cartier Field [20]
October 2 or 6 Badin Howard Cartier Field [note 27] [19]
October 2 or 6 Lyons Off-Campus Cartier Field [note 28] [19]
October 6 Off-Campus 6 Walsh 16 Cartier Field [4][19][20]
October 13 Badin 0 Breen-Phillips 12 Cartier Field [19]
October 13 Howard 6 Off-Campus 12 Cartier Field [19]
October 13 Lyons 0 Walsh 6 Cartier Field [19]
First round (Quarter-finals)
November 3 #1 Howard 0 #8 Lewis 6 Cartier Field [note 29] [19][7][21]
November 3 #7 Off-Campus 12 #2 Pasquerilla West 14 Loftus Sports Center [19][7][21]
November 3 #6 Breen-Phillips 12 #3 Walsh 6 Cartier Field [19][7][21]
November 3 #5 Pasquerilla East 8 #4 Siegfried 0 Cartier Field [19][7][21]
Semi-finals
November 10 #8 Lewis 19 #5 Pasquerilla East 0 South Stepan field [7][21][14]
November 10 #6 Breen-Phillips 9 #2 Pasquerilla West 8 South Stepan field [7][21][14]
Interhall championship
November 17 #6 Breen-Phillips 6 #8 Lewis 0 Notre Dame Stadium [14][16]

Interhall championship

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The 1991 women's interhall flag football championship was played November 17 at Notre Dame Stadium between the Breen-Phillips Blitz and Lewis Chickens.

1991 Women's IFL championship summary
Breen-Phillips makes it back-to-back crowns with 6-0 win over Lewis

"Breen-Phillips was too much for Lewis Sunday afternoon when it defended its women's interhall football championship, 6-0. It was a battle in which defenses came in even and the offenses held the key to the game. It would be Lewis' special teams that sealed the Chickens' fate. After an exchange of possessions, a Lewis returner muffed a Blitz punt inside the two-yard line. After this miscue, the Chickens never seemed to get good field position. "We had bad field position. They (B.P.) held us back on our end of the field the whole game," said Lewis' Julie Fleck. In the first half, Lewis' defense could not contain the Blitz running game. Sophomore Michelle Hurst burst for a 25-yard run early in the game, but the B.P. drive stalled and they were forced to punt. However, Lewis' offense was unable to generate any yardage and B.P. got the ball back. Hurst broke for another 20-yard run, putting the Blitz at the Chicken 11-yard line close to scoring again. Two plays later, Hurst took a pitch left and scrambled in for a seven-yard touchdown run just as time ran out in the first half. B.P. missed the extra point try. The Blitz controlled play for most of the second half with time-consuming marches. Quarterback Lynn Ervin connected on several long pass plays to Lisa Petursson and Karen Dubay, but B.P. was unable to convert. Lewis had one final chance after forcing B.P. to punt with less than a minute remaining. A 15-yard pass play from Kristin Kirwin to Fleck, a run by Kristin Sadie and a Blitz penalty brought the ball to midfield, and Lewis finally had hopes of scoring. But Kirwin's desperation pass with 20 seconds remaining was picked off by Kelly Guerin — her third interception in the postseason—sealing the victory and the title for the Blitz."

Elaine Debassige, Notre Dame Observer, 18 November 1991

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All-Stars

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For the second year, an all-star team was selected by the interhall coaches. It included offensive and defensive first and second teams in each of the five divisions in the interhall leagues. As was last year, the list of players will not be displayed here but should eventually be written out for the website.[22][23][24][25]

1992

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The 1992 men's interhall tackle football season began on September 20 with fourteen teams. Pangborn became a women's residence hall before the start of the school year, so league membership dropped to 14 and necessitated re-alignment of the interhall division. The three-league, six-spot playoffs was shelved in favor of a a more traditional two-league and eight-spot playoffs which allowed for the first true quarterfinals in men's interhall history (the W-IFL had already implemented the system in 1989). The only problem was that the number of games each team would have to play in the round-robin system of scheduling would be six games, which (I think) did not fit within RecSports' new intramural sports schedule. Thus, the long tradition of round-robin was abandoned, with each hall playing just four of their six divisional opponents.

Date Team Score Team Score Location Notes Source
Gold Division (Dillon, Flanner, Grace, Off-Campus, Keenan, Morrissey, Stanford)
September 20 Dillon 3 Off-Campus 0 [26]
September 20 Flanner 13 Keenan 0 [26]
September 20 Morrissey 6 Stanford 0 [26]
September 27 Dillon 0 Keenan 3 [26][27]
September 27 Grace 3 Stanford 8 [27]
September 27 Morrissey 3 Off-Campus 6 [26][27]
October 4 Dillon 6 Flanner 7 [28]
October 4 Grace 0 Off-Campus 6 [28]
October 4 Keenan 7 Morrissey 0 [28]
October 11 Off-Campus 12 Stanford 0 [note 30] [29]
October 11 Grace 0 Keenan 14 [29]
October 11 Flanner 6 Morrissey 0 [29]
October 14 Dillon 8 Stanford 6 [note 31] [29][30]
Unknown Flanner Grace [note 32] [30]
Blue Division (Alumni, Carroll, Cavanaugh, Fisher, Sorin, St. Edward's, Zahm)
September 20 Alumni 2 Zahm 7 [26]
September 20 Cavanaugh 6? Sorin 0 [note 33] [26]
September 20 Carroll 6 Fisher 0 [26]
September 27 Fisher 7 Zahm 17 [26][27]
September 27 Cavanaugh 10 St. Edward's 3 [26][27]
September 27 Carroll 0 Sorin 7 [26][27]
October 4 Alumni 20 Fisher 7 [28]
October 4 Sorin 0 Zahm 24 [28]
October 4 Carroll 28 St. Edward's 0 [28]
October 11 Alumni 14 Sorin 11 [29]
October 11 St. Edward's 0 Zahm 14 [29]
October 11 Carroll 0 Cavanaugh 7 [29]
Unknown Alumni St. Edward's [note 34] [30]
Unknown Cavanaugh Fisher [note 35] [30]
First round (Quarter-finals)[note 36]
November 1 Alumni 3 Off-Campus 0 [note 37] [30][31]
November 1 Carroll 0 Flanner 12 [30][31]
November 1 Cavanaugh 0 Keenan 6 [30][31]
November 1 Dillon 0 Zahm 3 [30][31]
Semi-finals
November 8 Alumni 0 Zahm 7 [31][32]
November 8 Flanner 0 Keenan 3 [31][32]
Interhall championship
November 15 Keenan 0 Zahm 14 Notre Dame Stadium [33]

Interhall championship

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The 1992 men's interhall tackle football championship was played November 15 at Notre Dame Stadium between Keenan and Zahm Halls.

1992 Men's IFL championship summary
Zahm claims the inter-hall football crown

"Relying on a tenacious defense and wide-open offense, Zahm ended Keenan's bid at repeating as interhall champion, winning 14-0 at Notre Dame Stadium on Sunday and earning the title that eluded them last year. In a game that keyed on turnovers, Zahm captain Matt Seng set the tone early, intercepting a Matt Casey pass at the Keenan 30-yard line and returning it to the seven. On third down from the one-yard line, Seng carried up the middle for the touchdown, following a terrific lead block by guard Tim Ysura. Upon getting the ball back, Keenan moved effectively on the ground, as tailbacks Brian Murphy and Dave Dettore each broke off long gains. However, the drive stalled as Dettore committed his first fumble of the year, which was recovered by Zahm on its own 35. Following a 20-yard pass from Chris Hammond to Rick Rios and a ten-yard carry by Seng on third and one, Zahm was again in scoring position, but a pass tipped by cornerback Jim Walsh was in tercepted by Rich Toohey at the Keenan five, ending the threat. Behind the blocking of Scott Sauer on the offensive line, Keenan again moved the ball behind Murphy and Dettore. However, the Zahm defense stiffened, as Dave Bozanich drilled Dettore on a first down carry, inciting the Zahm defense to register the game's first sack on the next crucial third down. Again with the ball, Zahm went to its quick strike attack, as Hammond lofted a perfect pass to a wide open Rios for Zahm's second touchdown, a 40-yard completion. The Zahm defense held the lead going into halftime, as Curtis Plaza batted down a pass and registered a sack as the first half ended.

The second half was a hard-hitting defensive struggle, as Zahm refused to give up its lead. Led by Bozanich, the Zahm secondary was superb, as both Pat McDonough and Steve Misch came up with big tackles when isolated one-on-one with Keenan receivers in the flat. Bozanich also recovered Dettore's second fumble of the game to end a Keenan drive. The Keenan defense also played extremely well in the second half, as Toohey registered his second interception of the game at his team's 28, and Dettore combined with Lee Walker on a sack to force a Zahm punt that was almost blocked, as coach Matt Makowski used the same special teams play that had turned the game against Flanner in the semifinals. Zahm did manage one other scoring opportunity, as another catch by Rios put Zahm at the Keenan 26. However, Scott Ecker missed a 42-yard field goal to keep Keenan's hopes alive. Faced with little time and a stingy run defense, Keenan was forced to go to the passing game, but the Zahm secondary was up to the task. After Micky McNamee barely missed completing a halfback option pass, Casey connected with Murphy for twenty yards to pose a Keenan threat. After another twenty-yard gain was negated by a penalty, Zahm linebacker Tim Ysura made an interception on an important fourth and two play. Zahm's Paul Shuga iced the game with his second big interception in as many weeks as time was running out."

Timothy Seymour, Notre Dame Observer, 17 November 1992

Women

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The 1992 women's interhall flag football season began on September 20 with thirteen teams.

Date Team Score Team Score Location Notes Source
Blue League (Farley, Knott, Lewis, Pasquerilla East, Pasquerilla West, Siegfried)
September 27 Farley 0 Pasquerilla West 6 Cartier Field [27][34]
September 27 Pasquerilla East 13 Siegfried 19 Cartier Field [27][34]
September 27 Knott 12 Lewis 0 Cartier Field [27][34]
October 4 Farley 13 Siegfried 7 Cartier Field [34][35]
October 4 Knott 6 Pasquerilla East 0 Cartier Field [34][35]
October 4 Lewis 12 Pasquerilla West 14 Cartier Field [34][35]
October 11 Farley Knott Cartier Field [note 38] [35]
October 11 Lewis Pasquerilla East Cartier Field [note 39] [35]
October 11 Pasquerilla West 6 Siegfried 26 Cartier Field [note 40] [35][36]
Unknown[note 41] Farley Lewis Cartier Field [note 42]
Unknown Farley Pasquerilla East Cartier Field [note 43]
Unknown Knott Pasquerilla West Cartier Field [note 44] [35]
Unknown Knott Siegfried Cartier Field [note 45] [36]
Unknown Lewis Siegfried Cartier Field [note 46] [36]
Unknown Pasquerilla East Pasquerilla West Cartier Field [note 47] [36]
Gold League (Badin, Breen-Phillips, Howard, Lyons, Off-Campus, Pangborn, Walsh)
September 20 Breen-Phillips 30 Pangborn 6 Cartier Field [note 48] [26]
September 27 Breen-Phillips 12 Walsh 0 Cartier Field [note 49] [26][27][34]
September 27 Howard 0 Off-Campus 12 Cartier Field [27][34]
September 27 Badin 12 Pangborn 7 Cartier Field [27][34]
September 30 Howard 6 Lyons 13 Cartier Field [27][34]
September 30 Badin 6 Walsh 12 Cartier Field [27][34]
September 30 Breen-Phillips 14 Off-Campus 8 Cartier Field [27][34]
October 4 Pangborn 18 Walsh 21 Cartier Field [34][35]
October 4 Breen-Phillips 12 Lyons 6 Cartier Field [34][35]
October 4 Badin 6 Off-Campus 0 Cartier Field [34][35]
October 7? Badin 13 Breen-Phillips 12 Cartier Field [note 50] [35]
October 11 Lyons Pangborn Cartier Field [note 51] [35][37]
October 11 Badin Howard Cartier Field [note 52] [35][10]
October 11 Off-Campus Walsh Cartier Field [note 53] [35][38]
Unknown[39] Breen-Phillips Howard Cartier Field [10]
Unknown Howard Pangborn Cartier Field [note 54] [37]
Unknown Howard Walsh Cartier Field [note 55] [10]
Unknown Off-Campus Pangborn Cartier Field [note 56] [37]
Unknown Badin unknown Lyons unknown Cartier Field
Unknown Lyons unknown Off-Campus unknown Cartier Field
Unknown Lyons unknown Walsh unknown Cartier Field
First round (Quarter-finals)
November 1 Pasquerilla West 7 #8 Siegfried 25 Cartier Field [36][31]
November 1 Lewis 19 Lyons 12 Cartier Field [36][31]
November 1 Breen-Phillips 14 Knott 13 Cartier Field [36][31]
November 1 Badin 0 Walsh 6 Cartier Field [36][31]
Semi-finals
November 8 Breen-Phillips 6 Walsh 7 [note 57] [31][32]
November 8 Lewis 0 #8 Siegfried 7 [31][32]
Interhall championship
November 15 #8 Siegfried 13 Walsh 0 Notre Dame Stadium [32][33]

Interhall championship

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The 1992 women's interhall flag football championship was played November 15 at Notre Dame Stadium between the Siegfried Slammers and Walsh Hall.

1992 Women's IFL championship summary
Siegfried wins interhall title

"The Siegfried Slammers went on to win the women's interhall football championship over a determined Walsh squad 13-0 last Sunday, claiming the title and setting a precedent for future teams, being the first team to go in as an eighth seed in the playoffs and go on to win the whole thing, according to Siegfried coach Mark Falcione and RecSports. Siegfried's first play was a twenty-five yard pass completion from Slammer quarterback Marcie McNeill to captain Suzanne Juster, which set up an eventual eight-yard touchdown pass from McNeill to Pris Peralta. Siegfried then missed the extra point, keeping their lead to six points going into the second half.

Both defenses played tough, Siegfried keeping Walsh from moving the ball, and Walsh holding Siegfried to one touchdown until the final minute of the game, when the Slammers scored again with a fifty-yard run by Angie Luzio, killing Walsh's hopes for a comeback. The extra point was converted on a run by McNeill. Having good defensive games were Megan Frost turning in an interception, her fifth of the year and Juliet Dickmann with a key sack. Ann Lillie had an important pass deflection as well. "Once again, defensive coach Al Pisa had an excellent gameplan to stop the opposing team's offense," said Falcione. Also having strong games, and strong seasons were Siegfried's offensive line, center Sharon Tasca, and guards Sheila Zachman and Kathleen Clark, allowing no sacks in the game. Walsh, which two years ago lost every game, made it all the way to the house that Rockne built, proud of their accomplishments for the year. "It was disappointing to make it to the finals and to lose, but it was a lot of fun to play in the stadium. We played tough," said captain Laura Lavigne. Turning in great seasons were seniors Jeannine Trezeant, on offense, and on defense, Jeanne Blasi, Erin Kelly, Chris Darcy, and Lara Nelson."

Heather Wiley, Notre Dame Observer, 17 November 1992

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All-stars

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The third year of modern all-star selections saw the first all-league rosters that were not split up by division. Thus, this year's selections were far fewer than in the previous two seasons.[40]

1993

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The 1993 men's interhall tackle football season began on September 26 with fourteen teams.

Date Team Score Team Score Location Notes Source
Pre-season
September Cavanaugh scrimmage Zahm scrimmage [41]
Blue Division (Alumni, Carroll, Cavanaugh, Fisher, Sorin, St. Edward's, Zahm)
September 26 Cavanaugh 0 Zahm 0 Stepan fields [41]
September 26 Carroll 0 St. Edward's 0 Stepan fields [41]
September 26 Fisher 14 Sorin 6 Stepan fields [41]
October 3 #11 Carroll 6 #3 Zahm 8 Stepan fields [10][42]
October 3 #7 Sorin 8 #10 St. Edward's 14 Stepan fields [10][42]
October 3 Alumni 0 #4 Fisher 19 Stepan fields [note 58] [10][42]
October 10 #11 Alumni 14 #3 St. Edward's 7 Stepan fields [43][44]
October 10 #12 Carroll 3 #7 Cavanaugh 6 Stepan fields [43][44]
October 10 #13 Sorin 0 #5 Zahm 3 Stepan fields [43][44]
October 17 #2 Fisher 14 #7 St. Edward's 0 Stepan fields [42][45][46]
October 17 #8 Alumni 0 #4 Zahm 7 Stepan fields [45][46]
October 17 #5 Cavanaugh 13 #13 Sorin 0 Stepan fields [note 59] [45][46]
October 20 #7 Alumni 6 #4 Cavanaugh 0 Cartier Field [47][48]
October 20 #12 Carroll 0 #2 Fisher 6 Cartier Field [47][48]
Gold Division (Dillon, Flanner, Grace, Keenan, Morrissey, Off-Campus, Stanford)
September 26 Dillon 14 Flanner 7 Stepan fields [41]
September 26 Grace 0 Stanford 24 Stepan fields [41]
September 26 Morrissey 6 Off-Campus 0 Stepan fields [41]
October 3 #8 Flanner 6 #1 Stanford 6 Stepan fields [10][42]
October 3 #12 Grace 0 #6 Morrissey 20 Stepan fields [10][42]
October 3 #2 Dillon 0 Keenan 3 Stepan fields [note 60] [10][42]
October 10 #2 Morrissey 6 #10 Flanner 0 Stepan fields [43][44]
October 10 #6 Keenan 14 #4 Stanford 12 Stepan fields [43][44]
October 10 #14 Grace 6 #9 Off-Campus 8 Stepan fields [43][44]
October 17 #3 Keenan 3 #1 Morrissey 20 Stepan fields [45][46]
October 17 #9 Dillon 6 #6 Stanford 17 Stepan fields [45][46]
October 17 #11 Flanner 14 #10 Off-Campus 6 Stepan fields [45][46]
October 20? Dillon 20 Grace 0 [note 61] [49]
October 20? #5 Keenan #10 Off-Campus [note 62] [50]
First round
November 7 #8 Alumni 0 #1 Fisher 22 Stepan fields [49][51]
November 7 #4 Keenan 7 #5 Stanford 10 Stepan fields [49][51]
November 7 #6 Cavanaugh 6 #3 Zahm 12 Stepan fields [49][51]
November 7 #7 Dillon 7 #2 Morrissey 24 Stepan fields [note 63] [49][51][52]
Semi-finals
November 14 #2 Morrissey 14 #3 Zahm 3 Stepan fields [52][53]
November 14 #1 Fisher 7 #5 Stanford 10 Stepan fields [note 64] [52][53]
Interhall championship
November 21 #2 Morrissey 9 #5 Stanford 7 Notre Dame Stadium [53][54][50]

Rankings

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A "power poll" graphic was released by the RecSports department starting on September 28, as well as division standings (which confirmed the poll was not just a rank of win percentages) and a "player of the week" in the IFL and W-IFL. The poll was decided by the interhall staff writers, which may have included Joseph Villiniski, Dominic Amorosa, George R. Nelson, Warren Junium, Kelly Cornelis, Scott Clemente, and Christina Coronado. The Week 3 power poll released on October 12 was subsequently revised on October 14 to account for incorrect win-loss records for some of the teams. Morrissey, originally 2–1 (and subsequently revised incorrectly again on October 13 as having a 2–0 record), was actually 3–0, and St. Edward's, originally 1–0–2, was actually 1–1–1. As a result, Morrissey ascended to the top ranking and St. Edward's rose to the #7 spot. While the poll held significance as a predictor of games and a sense of pride for interhall players, it did not guarantee a playoff berth. The postseason standings were almost certainly a separate ranking which took the top four teams from each division and ordered them by win percentage. Standings charts had been released at the bottom of the power poll every week and were the true determinants of a playoff berth. I have come across numerous mistakes with the weekly records and its likely that I missed some of them, so the poll is not perfect.

Week 1
September 28
Week 2
October 5
Week 3
October 12/14[note 65]
Week 4
October 19[note 66]
Week 5
November 22 (final)[note 67]
1.Stanford (1–0)Fisher (2–0)Morrissey (3–0)Morrissey (4–0)Morrissey (7–0)1.
2.Cavanaugh (0–0–1)Morrissey (2–0)Fisher (2–0)Fisher (3–0)Stanford (4–2–1)2.
3.Zahm (0–0–1)St. Edward's (1–0–1)Keenan (2–0)Zahm (3–0–1)Fisher (5–1)3.
4.Fisher (1–0)Stanford (1–0–1)Zahm (2–0–1)Cavanaugh (2–0–1)Zahm (4–1)4.
5.Dillon (1–0)Zahm (1–0–1)Cavanaugh (1–0–1)Keenan (2–1)Keenan (3–2)5.
6.Morrissey (1–0)Keenan (1–0)Stanford (1–1–1)Stanford (2–1–1)Cavanaugh (2–2–1)6.
7.Sorin (0–1)Cavanaugh (0–0–1)St. Edward's (1–1–1)Alumni (1–2)Alumni (2–3)7.
8.Flanner (0–1)Dillon (1–1)Alumni (1–1)Dillon (1–2)Dillon (2–3)8.
9.Off-Campus (0–1)Off-Campus (0–1)Dillon (1–1)St. Edward's (1–2–1)St. Edward's (1–2–1)9.
10.St. Edward's (0–0–1)Flanner (0–1–1)Off-Campus (1–1)Flanner (1–2–1)Flanner (1–2–1)10.
11.Carroll (0–0–1)Alumni (0–1)Flanner (0–2–1)Off-Campus (1–3)Off-Campus (1–3)11.
12.Grace (0–1)Carroll (0–1–1)Carroll (0–2–1)Carroll (0–2–1)Carroll (0–3–1)12.
13.naSorin (0–2)Sorin (0–3)Grace (0–3)Grace (0–3)13.
14.naGrace (0–2)Grace (0–3)Sorin (0–4)Sorin (0–4)14.
Week 1
September 28
Week 2
October 5
Week 3
October 12/14[note 65]
Week 4
October 19[note 66]
Week 5
November 22 (final)[note 67]
NoneNoneNoneNone

Playoff seeding

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A separate ranking, based on the win percentages of the top four teams from each division, was utilized to determine which teams would receive playoff berths. As for how the teams with the same record were distinguished is unknown to me. Its probable that after win percentage, win margin was the next most important factor (something I can check before I upload my website).

Rank Team Division rank
1 Fisher (4–0) No. 1 Gold
2 Morrissey (4–0) No. 2 Gold
3 Zahm (3–0–1) No. 1 Blue
4 Keenan (3–1) No. 2 Blue
5 Stanford (2–1–1) No. 3 Gold
6 Cavanaugh (2–1–1) No. 3 Blue
7 Dillon (2–2) No. 4 Gold
8 Alumni (2–2–) No. 4 Blue

Player of the Week

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Another addition to the interhall season was the selection of an outstanding player each week in the IFL and W-IFL.

  • Week 1 (September 28) - Mike Miller, WR Stanford - "Had 4 catches for 81 yds and a touchdown in the Stud's 24-0 win over Grace"[41]
  • Week 2 (October 5) - Scott Taylor, QB Morrissey - "Taylor threw two touchdown passes, one for 40 yards and another for 25 in No. 2 Morrissey's 20-0 win over Grace"[42]
  • Week 3 (October 12) - Jim Walsh, RB Keenan - "Playing with a twisted ankle, pulled groin, and hip pointer, Walsh scored on 4th & goal from the one for the game-winning TD in Keenan's 14-12 win over Stanford."[44]
  • Week 4 (October 19) - Mike Norbut, RB Cavanaugh - "Norbut scored two touchdowns, had two other runs of 20 and 30 yards, and picked off a pass in No. 4 Cavanaugh's 13-0 win over Sorin."[46]
  • Final Week (November 22) - Scott Taylor, QB Morrissey - "The Morrissey senior quarterback was the key to their championship run. All year he did what he had to do to lead his team to victory. Sunday he passed for 80 yards and played mistake-free football"[50]

Interhall championship

edit

The 1993 men's interhall tackle football championship was played at 12:00 p.m., November 21 at Notre Dame Stadium between the No. 2 Morrissey Manor and the No. 5 Stanford Studs.

1993 Men's IFL championship summary
Morrissey concludes 7-0 season with championship

"Two outstanding teams squared off at Notre Dame Stadium Sunday for the men's interhall championship, with Morrissey edging Stanford to claim a 9-7 victory and the crown. Morrissey used a balanced attack, a big play defense, and a little luck in completing its undefeated season. Morrissey, behind its strong offensive line, rushed for over 100 yards and passed for 82 yards. Scott Taylor played his usual near-perfect game, taking only what the Stanford defense would give him and not making any mistakes. "Stanford had a great scheme and some good cover guys," said Morrissey quarterback and League MVP Scott Taylor. "I couldn't throw deep." Justin Kruer and Paul Lopach each rushed well for Morrissey.

Morrissey opened the game with an impressive 64-yard drive, but Stanford's defense stuffed them at the goal line, forcing a field goal. "That stand set the tone for the whole game," said Taylor. "It was a classic battle." Early in the second half, Stanford marched 65 yards behind its great backs, Lamar Guillory and Chris Pollina. Guillory capped the drive with a strong 12-yard run. Morrissey then mounted an impressive drive, but was stifled late in Stanford territory. However, on their next play, Stanford fumbled, and Morrissey captain George Reider made the huge recovery. "That was the key play in the game," said Reider. Four plays later, Justin Kruer sprinted around the end for a one-yard touchdown. Stanford refused to quit and promptly marched the length of the field. Morrissey defense stiffened, forcing a Stanford field goal attempt. The steady Chad Smock trotted onto the field for a game-winning attempt. Smock was the hero in Stanford's first two playoff games, but this game would be different. Smock's 28-yard attempt sailed wide right.

"Morrissey is a class team and played a great game," said Stanford captain Chris Pollina. Stanford will be back, losing only two players to graduation. "It seems that championship dynasties always begin with a loss," said Stanford's Matt Dowd, "And our team will be a dynasty." Morrissey earned the championship. They were the best team all year long, and they backed it up Sunday. "It was a great ride," said Morrissey senior tailback Justin Kruer "We enjoyed every moment of it." And now it is time for Morrissey to enjoy the title. "God was with us today," said Morrissey's Reider. "It was a fitting end for a great season." The Manor may be establishing a dynasty of their own, adding a football championship to last spring's interhall basketball title."

G. R. Nelson, Notre Dame Observer, 22 November 1993

Women

edit

The 1993 women's interhall flag football season began on September 22 with thirteen teams.

Date Team Score Team Score Location Notes Source
Blue League (Farley, Knott, Lewis, Pasquerilla East, Pasquerilla West, Siegfried)
September 22 Knott 0 Pasquerilla West 21 Cartier Field [55]
September 22 Farley 0 Pasquerilla East 2 Cartier Field [55]
September 22 Lewis 12 Siegfried 0 Cartier Field [55]
September 26 Pasquerilla East 0 Pasquerilla West 14 Cartier Field [note 68] [41]
September 26 Knott 0 Siegfried 26 Cartier Field [41]
September 26 Farley 0 Lewis 14 Cartier Field [41]
September 30 #10 Farley 12 #6 Siegfried 0 Cartier Field [10][56]
September 30 #11 Knott 0 #7 Pasquerilla East 19 Cartier Field [10][56]
September 31 #3 Lewis 0 #2 Pasquerilla West 6 Cartier Field [10][56]
October 6 #9 Farley 6 #1 Pasquerilla West 0 Cartier Field [note 69] [42][43]
October 6 #10 Siegfried 6 #6 Pasquerilla East 0 Cartier Field [note 70] [42][43]
October 6 #11 Knott 0 #4 Lewis 18 Cartier Field [42][43]
October 10[note 71] #10 Siegfried 8 #1 Pasquerilla West 13 Cartier Field [37][44]
October 10 #4 Lewis 12 #6 Pasquerilla East 13 Cartier Field [37][44]
October 10 #9 Farley 6 #11 Knott 0 Cartier Field [37][44]
Gold League (Badin, Breen-Phillips, Howard, Lyons, Pangborn, Walsh)
September 22 Howard 13 Walsh 6 Cartier Field [55]
September 22 Badin 28 Pangborn 0 Cartier Field [55]
September 23 Breen-Phillips 37 Lyons 35 Cartier Field [note 72] [55]
September 29 #4 Howard 20 #5 Breen-Phillips 18 Cartier Field [41][10]
September 29 #1 Badin 18 #9 Walsh 0 Cartier Field [41]
September 29 #8 Lyons 26 #12 Pangborn 6 Cartier Field [41]
October 3[note 73] #1 Badin 19 #8 Lyons 20 Cartier Field [note 74] [56][42]
October 3 #5 Breen-Phillips 6 #9 Walsh 14 Cartier Field [56][42]
October 3 #4 Howard 24 #12 Pangborn 0 Cartier Field [56][42]
October 7 #5 Badin 13 #2 Howard 7 Cartier Field [43][37]
October 7 #8 Breen-Phillips 0 #12 Pangborn 6 Cartier Field [note 75] [43][37]
October 7 #3 Lyons 6? #7 Walsh 12+ Cartier Field [note 76] [43][37]
October 13 #10 Pangborn 0 #6 Walsh 18 Cartier Field [44][45]
October 13 #3 Howard 7 #7 Lyons 19 Cartier Field [44][45]
October 13 #2 Badin 15 #11 Breen-Phillips 7 Cartier Field [44][45]
First round (quarterfinals)
November 7 #1 Badin 26 #8 Farley 6 Cartier Field [49][57]
November 7 #5 Howard 27 #4 Pasquerilla East 20 Cartier Field [note 77] [49][57]
November 7 #6 Lewis 7 #3 Lyons 6 Cartier Field [49][57]
November 7 #2 Pasquerilla West 18 #7 Walsh 0 Cartier Field [49][57]
Semi-finals
November 14 #6 Lewis 6 #2 Pasquerilla West 20 Cartier Field [57][53]
November 14 #1 Badin 26 #5 Howard 18 Cartier Field [57][53]
Interhall championship
November 21 #1 Badin 6 #2 Pasquerilla West 13 Notre Dame Stadium [53][54][50]

Rankings

edit

A "power poll" was released by the RecSports department starting on September 28, as well as division standings (which confirmed the poll was not just a rank of win percentages) and a "player of the week" in the IFL and W-IFL.

Week 1
September 28
Week 2
October 5
Week 3
October 12
Week 4
November 22 (final)[note 78]
1.Badin (1–0)Pasquerilla West (3–0)Pasquerilla West (4–1)Pasquerilla West (7–1)1.
2.Pasquerilla West (2–0)Howard (3–0)Badin (3–1)Badin (6–2)2.
3.Lewis (2–0)Lyons (2–1)Howard (3–1)Howard (4–3)3.
4.Howard (1–0)Lewis (2–1)Pasquerilla East (3–2)Lewis (4–3)4.
5.Breen-Phillips (1–0)Badin (2–1)Lewis (3–2)Pasquerilla East (3–3)5.
6.Siegfried (1–1)Pasquerilla East (2–1)Walsh (2–2)Lyons (3–3)6.
7.Pasquerilla East (1–1)Walsh (1–2)Lyons (2–2)Walsh (3–3)7.
8.Lyons (0–1)Breen-Phillips (1–2)Farley (3–2)Farley (3–3)8.
9.Walsh (0–1)Farley (1–2)Siegfried (2–3)Siegfried (2–3)9.
10.Farley (0–2)Siegfried (1–2)Pangborn (1–3)Breen-Phillips (1–4)10.
11.Knott (0–2)Knott (0–3)Breen-Phillips (1–3)Pangborn (1–4)11.
12.Pangborn (0–1)Pangborn (0–3)Knott (0–5)Knott (0–5)12.
Week 1
September 28
Week 2
October 5
Week 3
October 12
Week 4
November 22 (final)[note 78]
NoneNoneNone

Playoff seeding

edit

A separate ranking, based on the win percentages of the top four teams from each division, was utilized to determine which teams would receive playoff berths. As for how the teams with the same record were distinguished is unknown to me. Its probable that after win percentage, win margin was the next most important factor (something I can check before I upload my website).

Rank Team Division rank
1 Badin (4–1) No. 1 Gold
2 Pasquerilla West (4–1) No. 1 Blue
3 Lyons (3–2) No. 2 Gold
4 Pasquerilla East (3–2) No. 2 Blue
5 Howard (3–2) No. 3 Gold
6 Lewis (3–2) No. 3 Blue
7 Farley (3–2) No. 4 Blue
8 Walsh (3–2) No. 4 Gold

Player of the Week

edit

Another addition to the interhall season was the selection of an outstanding player each week in the IFL and W-IFL.

  • Week 1 (September 28) - Bethany Riddel, QB Pasquerilla West - "Threw for two TD's, ran for one TD plus an extra point in the Green Waves 21-0 win over Knott on Wednesday night. Riddel then scored another TD and a two point conversion in Sunday's 14-0 win over P.E."[41]
  • Week 2 (October 5) - Wendy Holthaus, WR Lyons - "In Lyons' 20-19 win over No. 1-ranked Badin, Holthaus ran for one TD and caught another, and then caught the winning two-point conversion in triple overtime."
  • Week 3 (October 12) - Kim Gold, WR Lewis - "Gold caught four TD passes in Lewis' 18-0 weekend victory, and she received two more TD passes against P.E. in a 13-12 loss."[44]
  • Final Week (November 22) - Bethany Riddle, QB Pasquerilla West - "Riddle has led the Weasel offense all year, as she continually coupled her touchdown passes with equally impressive rushing statistics. In the championship game, Riddle threw for one touchdown and caught a 70-yard flea-flicker to clinch the 13-7 win and the women's interhall championship."

Interhall championship

edit

The 1993 women's interhall flag football championship was played at 11:00 a.m., November 21 at Notre Dame Stadium between the top-ranked Badin Attitude and the No. 2 Pasquerilla West Weasels.

1993 Women's IFL championship summary
Pasquerilla West slips past Badin for women's crown

"Pasquerilla West overcame a slow start to take the women's interhall title with a 13-6 victory over Badin

The Weasel defense set the tone early when senior Kathleen Glines made a diving tackle on a Badin sweep to force the Badin Attitude to punt. After stopping PW, Badin got the ball back and drove deep into Weasel territory. The Attitude then drove to the PW five but were unable to score. The PW defense came up with four straight stops with an aggressive pass rush and a tight secondary coverage. Glines, who forced Badin to throw the ball away on fourth down, was the leader of the Weasel defense. "It was a very aggressive game," said Glines. "I was determined to get to the quarterback." After turning the ball over, the Badin defense was able to hold PW and force a punt. On the first play after the punt, Badin quarterback Shari Shepard threw a bomb to teammate Erin Osborne for the score. The extra point was successful and Badin led 7-0. PW finally got the offense going on their next possession. Quarterback Bethany Riddle threw deep to senior Jenny Tate to set up first and goal. The Badin defense then held tough on three consecutive plays to force a fourth and goal. On the fourth down play Riddle took the snap, rolled to her right and threw a strike to senior Bridget Graham for the score. The extra point was missed and Badin took a 7-6 lead into halftime.

Glines explained her team's slow start. "We had to see what would work," noted Glines. "We remained confident in ourselves throughout the game." The Weasals quickly found out what would work in the second half when they came up with the biggest play of the game. After losing yards on their first two plays, PW faced third and long from their own ten-yard line. Riddle took the snap, and tossed the ball to Tate. After faking the run Tate stepped back and looked to pass. She found Riddle streaking uncovered down the left sideline. Tate hit Riddle with a perfect pass and Riddle was able to run in 70 yards for the score. The flea-flicker, which turned out to be the game winner, put PW ahead 13-6. On Badin's next possession, Glines came up with another big play to stop a Badin drive. Sophomore Katherine Begert tipped a Badin pass and Glines was able to get under it for the interception. Badin, however, did not give up and forced the Weasels to punt after three straight downs. Again PW was able to hold the Badin offense. The Attitude faced a fourth and short with time running out on the clock. Badin attempted to throw for the first down but the pass was deflected. PW then took over with 40 seconds left in the game. The Weasels were able to seal the victory when Riddle connected on a 45-yard bomb to Graham.

Despite the loss, Badin sophomore Jill Satanek was happy with their season. "We wished it could have ended better," said Satanek, "But we played the best we could." Glines was obviously happy with the Weasels' aggressive play. "Our mission was to beat the Attitude with attitude," said Glines. The mission was accomplished and with it came a championship for Pasquerilla West."

Scott Clemente, Notre Dame Observer, 22 November 1993

-

1994

edit

The 1994 men's interhall tackle football season began in September with thirteen teams.

Date Team Score Team Score Location Notes Source
Pre-season
September Carroll Flanner [note 79] [58]
September Carroll Fisher [note 80] [58]
September Sorin Stanford [note 81] [58]
September 18 Dillon Unknown [note 82] [58]
Blue Division (Dillon, Flanner, Grace, Keenan, Morrissey, Off-Campus, Stanford)
September 25 Flanner 0 Stanford 21 Stepan Field [59]
September 25 Dillon 6 Keenan 7 Stepan Field [59]
September 25 Morrissey 0 Off-Campus 7 Stepan Field [59]
October 2 No. 12 Flanner 14 No. 13 Grace 0 Stepan Field [59][60][61]
October 2 No. 5 Keenan 6 No. 3 Off-Campus 2 Stepan Field [59][60][61]
October 2 No. 7 Morrissey 15 No. 1 Stanford 7 Stepan Field [note 83] [59][60][61]
October 9 No. 1 Keenan 7 No. 5 Stanford 22 Stepan Field [62][63]
October 9 No. 14 Grace 9 No. 4 Morrissey 7 Stepan Field [62][63]
October 9 No. 11 Dillon 0 No. 3 Off-Campus 7 Stepan Field [62][63]
October 16 No. 8 Flanner 6 No. 10 Morrissey 0 Stepan Field [64][65]
October 16 No. 9 Grace 7 No. 4 Keenan 14 Stepan Field [note 84] [63][64][65][66]
October 16 No. 12 Dillon 0 No. 3 Stanford 16 Stepan Field [64]
October 19 No. 12 Dillon 0 No. 9 Grace 20 [65][66][67]
October 19 No. 6 Flanner 0 No. 2 Off-Campus 14 Cartier Field [66][67]
Gold Division
September 25 Alumni 16 Sorin 0 Stepan Field [58][59]
September 25 Carroll 0 Zahm 0 Stepan Field [59]
September 25 Fisher 6 St. Edward's 2 Stepan Field [59]
October 2 No. 4 Alumni 0 No. 6 Zahm 0 Stepan Field [60][61]
October 2 No. 11 Sorin 0 No. 8 St. Edward's 14 Stepan Field [60][61]
October 2 No. 9 Carroll 12 No. 2 Fisher 0 Stepan Field [note 85] [60][61]
October 9 No. 8 Fisher 0 No. 9 Zahm 12 Stepan Field [62][63]
October 9 No. 6 Alumni 0 No. 7 St. Edward's 0 Stepan Field [62][63]
October 9 No. 2 Carroll 14 No. 12 Sorin 7 Stepan Field [62][63]
October 16 No. 4 Alumni 7 No. 1 Carroll 10 [note 86] [64]
October 16 No. 11 Fisher 22 No. 13 Sorin 0 [64]
October 16 No. 6 St. Edward's 0 No. 7 Zahm 6 [64]
Quarter-finals
November 6 No. 1 Carroll 6 No. 8 Flanner 7 Stepan Field [68][69][70]
November 6 No. 5 Keenan 6 No. 4 Zahm 7 Stepan Field [68][68][70]
November 6 No. 6 Alumni 0 No. 3 Off-Campus 20 Stepan Field [68][68][70]
November 6 No. 7 Fisher 0 No. 2 Stanford 10 Stepan Field [68][68][70]
Semi-finals
November 13 No. 8 Flanner 7 No. 4 Zahm 16 Stepan Field [70][71][72]
November 13 No. 3 Off-Campus 9 No. 2 Stanford 6 Stepan Field [note 87] [70][71][72]
Interhall championship
November 20 No. 3 Off-Campus 14 No. 4 Zahm 0 Notre Dame Stadium [72][73][74][75][76]

Predicted Finishes

edit

Predictions on divisional standings were released on September 22 as part of a comprehensive pre-season preview of the men's interhall football league.[58]

Blue Division

edit
Rank Team
1 Stanford
2 Keenan
3 Off-Campus
4 Morrissey
5 Flanner
6 Dillon
7 Grace

Gold Division

edit
Rank Team
1 Fisher
2 Zahm
3 St. Edward's
4 Alumni
5 Carroll
6 Sorin

Rankings

edit

The second year of the "power poll" was released in the Observer on September 27.

Week 1
September 27
Week 2
October 4
Week 3
October 11
Week 4
October 18
Week 5
November 2
Week 6
November 8
Week 7
November 15
Week 8
November 22 (final)
1.Stanford (1–0)Keenan (2–0)Carroll (2–0–1)Carroll (3–0–1)Carroll (3–0–1)Off-Campus (4–1)Off-Campus (5–1)Off-Campus (6–1)1.
2.Fisher (1–0)Carroll (1–0–1)Off-Campus (2–1)Off-Campus (2–1)Off-Campus (3–1)Stanford (4–1)Zahm (4–0–2)Zahm (4–1–2)2.
3.Off-Campus (1–0)Off-Campus (1–1)Stanford (2–1)Stanford (3–1)Stanford (3–1)Zahm (3–0–2)Stanford (4–2)Stanford (4–2)3.
4.Alumni (1–0)Morrissey (1–1)Alumni (1–0–2)Keenan (3–1)Keenan (3–1)Flanner (3–2)Flanner (3–3)Flanner (3–3)4.
5.Keenan (1–0)Stanford (1–1)Keenan (2–1)Zahm (2–0–2)Zahm (2–0–2)Keenan (3–2)Keenan (3–2)Keenan (3–2)5.
6.Zahm (0–0–1)Alumni (1–0–1)St. Edward's (1–1–1)Flanner (2–1)Fisher (2–2)Carroll (3–1–1)Carroll (3–1–1)Carroll (3–1–1)6.
7.Morrissey (0–1)St. Edward's (1–1)Zahm (1–0–2)Fisher (2–2)Alumni (1–1–2)Fisher (2–3)Fisher (2–3)Fisher (2–3)7.
8.St. Edward's (0–1)Fisher (1–1)Flanner (1–1)Alumni (1–1–2)Flanner (2–2)Alumni (1–2–2)Alumni (1–2–2)Alumni (1–2–2)8.
9.Carroll (0–0–1)Zahm (0–0–2)Grace (1–1)Grace (1–2)Grace (2–2)Grace (2–2)Grace (2–2)Grace (2–2)9.
10.Dillon (0–1)Flanner (1–1)Morrissey (1–2)St. Edward's (1–2–1)St. Edward's (1–2–1)St. Edward's (1–2–1)St. Edward's (1–2–1)St. Edward's (1–2–1)10.
11.Sorin (0–1)Dillon (0–1)Fisher (1–2)Morrissey (1–3)Morrissey (1–3)Morrissey (1–3)Morrissey (1–3)Morrissey (1–3)11.
12.Flanner (0–1)Sorin (0–2)Dillon (0–2)Dillon (0–3)Sorin (0–4)Sorin (0–4)Sorin (0–4)Sorin (0–4)12.
13.Grace (0–0)Grace (0–1)Sorin (0–3)Sorin (0–4)Dillon (0–4)Dillon (0–4)Dillon (0–4)Dillon (0–4)13.
Week 1
September 27
Week 2
October 4
Week 3
October 11
Week 4
October 18
Week 5
November 2
Week 6
November 8
Week 7
November 15
Week 8
November 22 (final)
NoneNoneNoneNoneNoneNoneNone

Playoff seeding

edit

The methodology for choosing the eight teams who would advance to the interhall playoffs was separate from the power poll standings that had been released throughout the season. Teams were first seeded on a point calculation, with two points for a win and one for a tie. The seven points garnered by Carroll (3–0–1) earned them the No. 1 rank. However, there were many ties in the current system. To remedy this, additional factors were considered to organize the teams. Records against common opponents was considered the penultimate factor, and the point differentials in those games was considered third if necessary. There was a three-way tie between Stanford, Off-Campus, and Keenan, for the No. 2 spot and Blue division title, which Stanford won on account of their 16-point win over common opponent Dillon.[68]

Rank Team
1 Carroll
2 Stanford
3 Off-Campus
4 Zahm
5 Keenan
6 Alumni
7 Fisher
8 Flanner

Player of the Week

edit

At the bottom of every "power poll" a "Player of the Week" was chosen by the interhall sportswriters.

  • Week 1 (September 27) - Chris Pollina, RB/D Stanford: "Along with a stellar defensive effort, the Stanford sophomore rushed for two touchdowns in the Studs' thrashing of Flanner."[59]
  • Week 2 (October 4) - Rick Rios, WR Zahm: "Despite Zahm's scoring drought, the senior wide receiver shined as he caught seven passes including a 22-yard grab that helped the Rabid Bats almost score their first TD of the year."[61]
  • Week 3 (October 11) - Brian Perez and Mike Dwire, QB and WR Grace: "The QB-receiver combination helped Grace win their first game in three years. Perez passed for 145 yards, while Dwire caught an 80-yard TD pass for Grace's first score of the year."[63]
  • Week 4 (October 18) - Anthoney Laboe, CB/RB/WR Carroll: "The Carroll senior was Mr. Everywhere on Sunday as he had a 100 yards in total offense and also made a key interception to help the Vermin finish No. 1."[64]
  • Week 5 (November 2) - none selected[68]
  • Week 6 (November 8) - Chris Hammond, Off-Campus QB: "The Off-Campus senior passed for two touchdowns and ran for another as Crime jumped to No. 1 in the polls, setting up a showdown with Stanford next Sunday."[70]
  • Week 7 (November 15) - Off-Campus defense: "After having allowed only one touchdown all year, the Crime defense kept it up, holding the high-powered Stanford offense to a field goal in overtime."[72]
  • Week 8 (November 22) - George Reider, Off-Campus LB: "The senior linebacker provided leadership all year as the corner-stone of the dominating Off-Campus defense. In keeping the Zahm offense in check with an interception and some bone-crushing hits on Sunday, he gave the Crime offense time to get on track in the championship game."[76]

Interhall championship

edit

The 1994 men's interhall tackle football championship was played on November 20 at Notre Dame Stadium between the No. 1 ranked Off-Campus Crime (5–1) and the No. 2 ranked Zahm Rabid Bats (4–0–2).

1994 Men's IFL championship summary
Crime capture men's title with 14-0 rout of Zahm

"Whoever said 'Crime Doesn't Pay' never played Off-Campus on the football field. The Crime rolled over a feisty Zahm club on their way to a 14-0 victory for the Interhall Championship. Off-Campus won all season because of an unyielding defense. Sunday was no exception. The Crime held the Rabid Bats to 23 total yards. Zahm ran the ball 15 times for a grand total of 7 yards. Quarterback Benji Hammond was 4 of 12 for 38 yards, and was sacked three times for a loss of 22 yards. The Off-Campus defense forced three Zahm turnovers, and the Bats were penalized five times for 60 yards. "They capitalized on our mistakes. We weren't able to do the same," Zahm captain Dave Bozanich said. The game was a 0-0 defensive stalemate in the fourth quarter, before the gutsy leadership of quarterback Chris Hammond led the Crime to the win.

Wide receiver Tom Fitzpatrick got past the Rabid Bat defense, and Hammond hit him with a 29-yard touchdown strike. Michael Marty's extra point made it a 7-0 lead. Zahm attempted to mount a drive on their next possession. Benji Hammond fired to Randy Swatland for a first down at the Bat 43, but then he fumbled under pressure, and Off-Campus' Joe Bergan fell on the football. Six plays later, Hammond dove in from the one, and the Crime had sealed a 14-0 victory.

The duel of the quarterbacking Hammond brothers was clearly won by Off-Campus' Chris. He outshone Benji by completing 5 of 10 passes for 81 yards. Chris has played in the Stadium all three years of his Interhall career, and won two titles. However, the victory left him feeling sorry for his freshman brother. "They were hitting him pretty hard at the end. A freshman getting to the Stadium is pretty impressive. I thought he played well considering Zahm couldn't run the ball well." Bozanich felt Benji showed guts. "Any freshman can hang his head, give up, and quit. He stuck in there. He never gave up. If Zahm has him for three more years, look out." Feeling more torn were the brothers' parents. They spent the first half in the Off-Campus stands, and the second half in the Zahm stands. The boys' mother, Susie, never really had a chance for a breather, since she had a son playing on both offenses. "Usually, I get pretty involved at games, but this time. I'll get no breaks."

For the Crime, the game culminated a great season, and great careers at Notre Dame. "We're the last team to win a game this season in Notre Dame Stadium," captain Dave Dettore said." This was the last chance for a lot of us to play football." Off-Campus' seniors couldn't have hoped for a better way to go out. Rocky Hammond is still shaking his head. "Those Off-Campus kids were big and mean." The rest of the interhall league is thinking the same thing."

Neil Zender, Notre Dame Observer, November 22, 1994

-

All-Star game

edit

The 1994 IFL all-star game was scheduled for 9:00 p.m. on November 22 at the Loftus Sports Center.[72] It was commissioned by Marty Ogren. The game was organized as the best of the blue division versus the best of the gold. Tony Yelovich, former head of Notre Dame recruiting, coached the blues, while the golds were led by Fisher head coach Chuck Hurley. The selections for all-stars were made by "peers of the hall" who chose four players to represent them in the game. Due to the venue of the game in Loftus Sports Center, special rules of no field goals and mandatory two-point conversion attempts were instituted. additionally, no blitzing was allowed.[74]There were 4 players selected per hall (2 offense, 2 defense), 28 players per team, and a total of 56 selections.[76]

Date Team Score Team Score Location Notes Source
November 22 Blue all-stars 12 Gold all-stars 16 Loftus Sports Center [77]

Women

edit

The 1994 women's interhall flag football season began on September 22 with fourteen teams.

Date Team Score Team Score Location Notes Source
Pre-season
September Badin 14 Pasquerilla East 0 [note 88] [78]
September Pasquerilla East 6 Pasquerilla West 6 [note 89] [78]
September Lyons 0 Pangborn 0 [note 90] [78]
September Cavanaugh Walsh [note 91] [78]
September 19 Farley Howard [note 92] [78]
September 20 Breen-Phillips 7 Off-Campus 6 [note 93] [78]
Blue Division (Farley, Lewis, Knott, Off-Campus, Pasquerilla East, Pasquerilla West, Siegfried)
September 22 Lewis 0 Siegfried 12 [78][59][79]
September 22? Farley Pasquerilla East [note 94] [59]
September 22? Knott Pasquerilla West [note 95] [59]
September 25 Knott 10 Off-Campus 21 [59]
September 25 Farley 6 Siegfried 6 [59]
September 25 Pasquerilla East 6 Pasquerilla West 6 [59]
September 29 No. 2 Off-Campus 6 No. 6 Pasquerilla East 6 [59][79][60]
September 29 No. 4 Pasquerilla West 0 No. 7 Siegfried 0 [79][60]
September 29 No. 9 Farley 6 No. 12 Lewis 13 [79][60]
October 6 No. 13 Knott 0 No. 5 Pasquerilla East 12 [59][80][62]
October 6 No. 4 Off-Campus 6 No. 8 Siegfried 19 Cartier Field [80][62]
October 6 No. 11 Lewis 6 No. 7 Pasquerilla West 0 [80][62]
October 9 No. 10 Farley 0 No. 7 Pasquerilla West 6 [note 96] [63]
October 9 No. 13 Knott 6 No. 8 Siegfried 32 [note 97] [63]
October 9 No. 11 Lewis 13 No. 4 Off-Campus 18 [note 98] [63]
October 13 No. 4 Pasquerilla East 6 No. 5 Siegfried 12 [81][64]
October 13 No. 11 Farley 0 No. 3 Off-Campus 18 [81][64]
October 13 No. 14 Knott 6 No. 9 Lewis 21 [81][64]
October 16 No. 4 Off-Campus No. 9 Pasquerilla West [65]
October 16 No. 5 Lewis 0 No. 6 Pasquerilla East 0 [65]
Gold Division (Badin, Breen-Phillips, Cavanaugh, Howard, Lyons, Pangborn, Walsh)
September 22 Breen-Phillips 12 Lyons 19 [78][59][82]
September 22 Badin 7 Pangborn 12 [59][82]
September 22 Cavanaugh 0 Walsh 22 [59][82]
September 28 No. 8 Badin 20 No. 14 Howard 0 [82][79]
September 28 No. 10 Breen-Phillips 6 No. 1 Walsh 13 Cartier Field [82][79]
September 28 No. 3 Lyons 12 No. 5 Pangborn 13 [82][79]
October 2 No. 10 Breen-Phillips 20 No. 13 Cavanaugh 0 [note 99] [61]
October 2 No. 5 Pangborn 0 No. 1 Walsh 6 [note 100] [61]
October 2 No. 14 Howard 8 No. 3 Lyons 20 [note 101] [61]
October 5 No. 6 Badin 6 No. 3 Lyons 19 Cartier Field [note 102] [83][80]
October 5 No. 12 Howard 7 No. 1 Walsh 14 [note 103] [83][80]
October 5 No. 14 Cavanaugh 6 No. 2 Pangborn 19 [83][80]
October 12 No. 8 Breen-Phillips 7 No. 2 Pangborn 14 [84][81]
October 12 No. 10 Badin 12 No. 1 Walsh 0 [84][81]
October 12 No. 13 Cavanaugh 6 No. 12 Howard 19 [84][81]
October 15? No. 3 Lyons No. 1 Walsh [note 104]
October 15? No. 8 Breen-Phillips No. 12 Howard [note 105]
October 15? No. 10 Badin No. 13 Cavanaugh [note 106]
October 19? No. 11 Howard 7 No. 1 Pangborn 20+ [note 107] [66]
October 19? No. 13 Cavanaugh 7 No. 2 Lyons 20 [66]
October 19? No. 8 Badin 12 No. 10 Breen-Phillips 13 [66]
Quarter-finals
November 6 No. 8 Breen-Phillips 0 No. 1 Siegfried 6 Cartier Field [note 108] [68][70]
November 6 No. 4 Off-Campus 18 No. 5 Walsh 6 Cartier Field [68][70]
November 6 No. 3 Lyons 13 No. 4 Pasquerilla East 0 Cartier Field [68][70]
November 6 No. 7 Lewis 0 No. 2 Pangborn 6 Cartier Field [note 109] [68][70]
Semi-finals
November 13 No. 1 Siegfried 0 No. 4 Off-Campus 6 Cartier Field [note 110] [70][71][72]
November 13 No. 3 Lyons 14 No. 2 Pangborn 0 Cartier Field [70][71][72]
Interhall championship
November 20 No. 3 Lyons 13 No. 4 Off-Campus 7 Notre Dame Stadium [72][75][76]

Predicted Finishes

edit

Predictions on divisional standings were released on September 21 as part of a comprehensive pre-season preview of the women's interhall football league.[78]

Blue Division

edit
Rank Team
1 Pasquerilla West
2 Pasquerilla East
3 Lewis
4 Farley
5 Off-Campus
6 Siegfried
7 Knott

Gold Division

edit
Rank Team
1 Badin
2 Breen-Phillips
3 Walsh
4 Cavanaugh
5 Pangborn
6 Lyons
7 Howard

Rankings

edit
Week 1
September 27
Week 2
October 4
Week 3
October 11
Week 4
October 18
Week 5
November 2
Week 6
November 8
Week 7
November 15
Week 8
November 22 (final)
1.Walsh (1–0)Walsh (3–0)Walsh (4–0)Pangborn (4–1)Pangborn (5–1)Pangborn (6–1)Lyons (7–1)Lyons (8–1)1.
2.Off-Campus (1–0)Pangborn (2–1)Pangborn (3–1)Lyons (4–1)Lyons (5–1)Lyons (6–1)Off-Campus (6–1–1)Off-Campus (6–2–1)[note 111]2.
3.Lyons (1–0)Lyons (2–1)Lyons (3–1)Siegfried (4–0–2)Siegfried (4–0–2)Siegfried (5–0–2)Siegfried (5–1–2)Siegfried (5–1–2)3.
4.Pasquerilla West (1–0–1)Off-Campus (1–0–1)Pasquerilla East (2–0–2)Off-Campus (4–1–1)Off-Campus (4–1–1)Off-Campus (5–1–1)Pangborn (6–2)Pangborn (6–2)4.
5.Pangborn (1–0)Pasquerilla East (1–0–2)Siegfried (3–0–2)Lewis (3–2–1)Lewis (3–2–1)Lewis (3–3–1)Lewis (3–3–1)Lewis (3–3–1)5.
6.Pasquerilla East (1–0–1)Badin (1–1)Off-Campus (2–1–1)Pasquerilla East (2–1–3)Pasquerilla East (2–1–3)Walsh (4–3)Walsh (4–3)Walsh (4–3)6.
7.Siegfried (1–0–1)Pasquerilla West (1–0–2)Pasquerilla West (2–1–2)Walsh (4–2)Walsh (4–2)Breen-Phillips (3–4)Breen-Phillips (3–4)Breen-Phillips (3–4)7.
8.Badin (0–1)Siegfried (1–0–2)Breen-Phillips (1–2)Badin (3–2)Breen-Phillips (3–3)Pasquerilla East (2–2–3)Pasquerilla East (2–2–3)Pasquerilla East (2–2–3)8.
9.Farley (0–1–1)Breen-Phillips (1–0–2)Lewis (2–2)Pasquerilla West (2–2–2)Pasquerilla West (2–2–2)Pasquerilla West (2–2–2)Pasquerilla West (2–2–2)Pasquerilla West (2–2–2)9.
10.Breen-Phillips (0–1)Farley (0–2–1)Badin (1–2)Breen-Phillips (2–3)Badin (3–3)Badin (3–3)Badin (3–3)Badin (3–3)10.
11.Knott (0–2)Lewis (1–1)Farley (0–3–1)Howard (1–4)Howard (1–5)Howard (1–5)Howard (1–5)Howard (1–5)11.
12.Lewis (0–1)Howard (0–2)Howard (0–3)Farley (0–4–1)Farley (0–4–1)Farley (0–4–1)Farley (0–4–1)Farley (0–4–1)12.
13.Cavanaugh (0–1)Knott (0–3)Cavanaugh (0–3)Cavanaugh (0–5)Knott (0–5)Knott (0–5)Knott (0–5)Knott (0–5)13.
14.Howard (0–0)Cavanaugh (0–2)Knott (0–5)Knott (0–5)Cavanaugh (0–6)Cavanaugh (0–6)Cavanaugh (0–6)Cavanaugh (0–6)14.
Week 1
September 27
Week 2
October 4
Week 3
October 11
Week 4
October 18
Week 5
November 2
Week 6
November 8
Week 7
November 15
Week 8
November 22 (final)
NoneNoneNoneNoneNoneNoneNone

Playoff seeding

edit

The methodology for choosing the eight teams who would advance to the interhall playoffs was separate from the power poll standings that had been released throughout the season.[68]

Rank Team
1 Siegfried
2 Pangborn
3 Lyons
4 Off-Campus
5 Walsh
6 Pasquerilla East
7 Lewis
8 Breen Phillips

Player of the Week

edit

At the bottom of every "power poll" a "Player of the Week" was chosen by the interhall sportswriters.

  • Week 1 (September 27) - Jenny Layden, WR Lyons: "The Lyons' junior scored two touchdowns and caught everything thrown her way last week against B.P."[59]
  • Week 2 (October 4) - Ann Jackobice, HB Walsh: "The Walsh halfback was Mrs. Clutch this week as she scored with thirty seconds left on Wednesday to down B.P. 13-6."[61]
  • Week 3 (October 11) - Marce McNeil, QB Siegfried: "The senior star quarterback helped the Slammers dominate the past week as she threw for three TD's against Knott and completed 11 of 13 passes against Off-Campus."[63]
  • Week 4 (October 18) - Kelly Guerin, DB Off-Campus: "In helping Off-Campus make the playoffs in their first year back as a team, the senior captain intercepted passes against both Farley and P.W. and returned them for touchdowns."[65]
  • Week 5 (November 2) - none selected[68]
  • Week 6 (November 8) - Kelly Guerin, QB Off-Campus: "The O-C senior makes her second appearance as player of the week as she passed for two TD's and ran for one more."[70]
  • Week 7 (November 15) - Michelle Drury, WR/D Off-Campus: "In dominating the overtime session, the O-C senior intercepted a Siegfried pass to stall the drive and caught the winning touchdown pass from QB Nikole Neidlinger, catapulting O-C into the finals."[72]
  • Week 8 (November 22) - Julie Byrd, QB Lyons: "The catalyst of the Lyons offense lifted her stellar regular season play to another level on Sunday, running the option to perfection as she threw for a TD and ran for another one in securing the interhall title for Lyons."[76]

Interhall championship

edit

The 1994 women's interhall flag football championship was played on November 20 at Notre Dame Stadium between No. 3 ranked Lyons (7–1) and No. 4 ranked Off-Campus (6–1–1).

1994 Women's IFL championship summary
Lyons cruises past O-C for women's title

"The cream always seems to rise to the top when the mom ent of truth arrives. It certainly did on Sunday, as Lyons captured the Interhall championship with an impressive 13-7 victory over a relentless Off-Campus squad at The Stadium. Lyons, coached by Kevin Kuwik, Andy Brant, Jim Mullen, and Kevin Klau, executed their game plan brilliantly on both sides of the ball. Offense. Defense. Coaching. You name it—Lyons was superior in each and every aspect of the game. "It was a great team effort," said Klau. "The game typified the kind of effort we've had throughout the year."

With the game scoreless after nearly 16 minutes into the contest, Lyons linebacker Cindy Eagan came up with the play of the game. Make that the play of the season. Off-Campus appeared to be driving to take the lead when Eagan stepped in front of O-C wideout Michelle Drury and intercepted a Nicole Neidlinger pass to turn the tide of the battle. The O-C turnover gave the Lyons offense second life and a first down at the 30-yard line. It took just four plays for the team to score, as Lyons quarterback Julie Byrd found receiver Kathy Shantz wide open for an easy score as time expired in the first half. Byrd added the conversion on a keeper to give Lyons a 7-0 lead heading into intermission.

Just like the first, the second half started out as a defensive struggle. Neither squad was able to build a drive until the final minutes of the game. Unfortunately for Off-Campus, it was Lyons who answered the call when the game was on the line. Starting from deep in their own territory, Byrd and the Lyons offense engineered a nine-play, 60-yard drive. In what someday may come to be known as The Drive, Byrd connected with receiver Jenny Layden three times and Shantz once as a result of making adjustments against the O-C blitz. "We focused all week on picking up the blitz, and we were able to do a pretty good job of that," said Byrd. "The offense executed pretty well, especially in the second half. "As the Off-Campus defense stiffened up near the goal line, Lyons faced a fourth and goal situation with less than four minutes to play. Just as she had all afternoon, Byrd came up big for Lyons with a four yard touchdown scamper to extend the lead to 13-0. Off-Campus narrowed the gap to 13-7 following a nine yard touchdown pass from Neidlinger to tailback Megan Allen. However, it proved to be too little too late, as Lyons was able to run the clock out and hang on to the 13-7 victory. Indeed the cream did rise to the top. And for Lyons, victory couldn't taste any sweeter. "

Michael Day, Notre Dame Observer, November 22, 1994

-

All-Stars

edit

An all-stars game was tentatively planned for the women's interhall league November 22 at the Loftus Sports Center. The game was described as a "pro-bowl". Carroll coach Marty Ogren first proposed the idea, and the game was organized by Director of RecSports Tom Kelly and assistant director Rich O'Leary.[81][72] The game pitted the best of the gold division versus the best of the blue. The golds were coached by Tom MacDonald with seven assistants, while the blues were coached by John Gordon. A total of 57 players were selected for the all-star game, 29 for gold and 28 for blue. The golds were composed of 4 seniors, 14 juniors, 7 sophomores, and 4 freshmen. The blues consisted of 9 seniors, 5 juniors, 7 sophomores, and 7 freshmen.[76]

Date Team Score Team Score Location Notes Source
November 22 Blue all-stars 18 Gold all-stars 20 Loftus Sports Center

-

1995

edit

The 1995 men's interhall football season began on September 17 with thirteen teams.

Date Team Score Team Score Location Notes Source
Blue Division (Dillon, Flanner, Grace, Keenan, Morrissey, Off-Campus, Stanford)
September 17 Grace 7 Off-Campus 6 Stepan Fields [85]
September 17 Flanner 6 Morrissey 0 Stepan Fields [85]
September 17 Dillon 6 Keenan 6 Stepan Fields [85]
September 24 No. 4 Grace 0 No. 2 Stanford 6 Stepan Fields [note 113] [86][87]
September 24 No. 10 Dillon 13 No. 5 Off-Campus 0 Stepan Fields [86][87]
September 24 No. 9 Keenan 7 No. 8 Morrissey 15 Stepan Fields [86][87]
October 1 No. 3 Flanner 14 No. 2 Stanford 6 Stepan Fields [88][89]
October 1 No. 8 Dillon 8 No. 6 Grace 7 Stepan Fields [88][89]
October 1 No. 5 Morrissey 13 No. 9 Off-Campus 0 Stepan Fields [88][89]
October 8 No. 2 Flanner 0 No. 9 Keenan 8 North Stepan Field [90][91]
October 8 No. 7 Dillon 7 No. 4 Stanford 6 North Stepan Field [90][91]
October 8 No. 8 Grace 6 No. 3 Morrissey 13 Stepan Fields [90][91]
October 11 No. 2 Morrissey 7 No. 7 Stanford 9 Stepan Fields [note 114] [92]
October 11 No. 6 Keenan 12 No. 12 Off-Campus 6 Stepan Fields [92]
October 11 No. 5 Flanner 0 No. 10 Grace 7 Stepan Fields [note 115] [92]
Gold Division (Alumni, Carroll, Fisher, Sorin, St. Edward's, Zahm)
September 17 Fisher 0 Zahm 22 Stepan Fields [85]
September 17 Carroll 19 St. Edward's 0 Stepan Fields [85]
September 17 Alumni 12 Sorin 0 Stepan Fields [85]
September 24 No. 3 Carroll 0 No. 1 Zahm 34 Stepan Fields [86][87]
September 24 No. 7 Alumni 19 No. 11 Fisher 0 Stepan Fields [86][87]
September 24 No. 12 Sorin 0 No. 13 St. Edward's 0 Stepan Fields [86][87]
October 1 No. 12 Fisher 17 No. 13 St. Edward's 2 Stepan Fields [88][89]
October 1 No. 7 Carroll 14 No. 11 Sorin 6 Stepan Fields [note 116] [88][89]
October 1 No. 4 Alumni 3 No. 1 Zahm 7 Stepan Fields [88][89]
October 8 No. 12 Sorin 0 No. 1 Zahm 21 Stepan Fields [90][91]
October 8 No. 5 Alumni 19 No. 13 St. Edward's 0 Stepan Fields [90][91]
October 8 No. 6 Carroll 10 No. 10 Fisher 21 Stepan Fields [90][91]
October 12 St. Edward's 0 Zahm 25 Stepan Fields [93]
October 12 Fisher 7 Sorin 0 Stepan Fields [93]
October 12 Alumni 14 Carroll 0 Stepan Fields [93]
Quarterfinals
Semifinals
Championship

Power Poll

edit
Week 1
September 19
Week 2
September 26
Week 3
October 3
Week 4
October 10
Week 5
Week 6
Week 7
Week 8
1.Zahm (1–0)Zahm (2–0)Zahm (3–0)Zahm (4–0)1.
2.Stanford (2–0)Stanford (1–0)Flanner (2–0)Morrissey (3–1)2.
3.Carroll (1–0)Flanner (1–0)Morrissey (2–1)Alumni (3–1)3.
4.Grace (1–0)Alumni (2–0)Stanford (1–1)Dillon (3–0–1)4.
5.Off-Campus (0–1)Morrissey (1–1)Alumni (2–1)Flanner (2–1)5.
6.Flanner (1–0)Grace (1–1)Carroll (2–1)Keenan (1–1–1)6.
7.Alumni (1–0)Carroll (1–1)Dillon (2–0–1)Stanford (1–2)7.
8.Morrissey (0–1)Dillon (1–0–1)Grace (1–2)Fisher (2–2)8.
9.Keenan (0–0–1)Off-Campus (0–2)Keenan (0–1–1)Carroll (2–2)9.
10.Dillon (0–0–1)Keenan (0–1–1)Fisher (1–2)Grace (1–3)10.
11.Fisher (0–1)Sorin (0–1–1)Off-Campus (0–3)Sorin (0–3–1)11.
12.Sorin (0–1)Fisher (0–2)Sorin (0–2–1)Off-Campus (0–3)12.
13.St. Edward's (0–1)St. Edward's (0–1–1)St. Edward's (0–2–1)St. Edward's (0–3–1)13.
Week 1
September 19
Week 2
September 26
Week 3
October 3
Week 4
October 10
Week 5
Week 6
Week 7
Week 8
NoneNoneNoneNoneNoneNoneNone

Player of the Week

edit
  • Week 1 (September 19): Jake Schuller, Zahm DB: "The Junior defensive back intercepted one pass and added a touchdown off a fumble recovery as top-ranked Zahm rolled to an easy 22-0 victory over Fisher on Sunday."[85]
  • Week 2 (September 26): Mark Tate, Morrissey TB: "The junior tailback compiled 105 total yards (48 rushing, 57 receiving) and added a touchdown in Morrissey's 15-7 victory over Keenan on Sunday."[87]
  • Week 3 (October 3): Mark Tate, Morrissey TB: "For the second straight Sunday, the junior tailback stood head and shoulders above the rest, compiling 160 yards on nine carries to go along with a pair of touchdowns."[89]
  • Week 4 (October 10): Matt Mammolenti, Alumni TB: "Matt Mammolenti of Alumni shredded the St. Edward's defense for 168 yards and three touchdowns in Alumni's 19-0 victory over the Steds."

Women

edit

The 1995 women's interhall football season began on September 17 with fourteen teams.

Date Team Score Team Score Location Notes Source
Blue Division (Off-Campus, Farley, Lewis, Knott, Pasquerilla East, Pasquerilla West, Siegfried)
September 17 Knott 0 Pasquerilla West 20 Cartier Fields [85]
September 17 Lewis 13 Siegfried 0 Cartier Fields [85]
September 17 Farley 0 Off-Campus 20 Cartier Fields [85]
September 19? Knott 6 Siegfried 0 Cartier Fields [note 117] [94]
September 19? Farley 0 Pasquerilla West 18 Cartier Fields [94]
September 19? Off-Campus 0 Pasquerilla East 6 Cartier Fields [94]
October 1 No. 2 Lewis 0 No. 4 Pasquerilla West 8 Cartier Fields [88]
October 1 No. 9 Knott 0 No. 5 Pasquerilla East 0 Cartier Fields [88]
October 1 No. 14 Farley 12 No. 11 Siegfried 0 Cartier Fields [88]
October 3 No. 7 Off-Campus 8 No. 11 Siegfried 13 Cartier Fields [note 118] [95]
October 3 No. 2 Lewis 6 No. 9 Knott 0 Cartier Fields [95]
October 3 No. 14 Farley 6 No. 5 Pasquerilla East 13 Cartier Fields [95]
October 8 No. 8 Pasquerilla East 13 No. 14 Siegfried 0 Cartier Fields [90][91]
October 8 No. 4 Off-Campus 6 No. 2 Pasquerilla West 12 Cartier Fields [90][91]
October 8 No. 11 Farley 0 No. 7 Lewis 18 Cartier Fields [90][91]
October 10 No. 2 Pasquerilla West 13 No. 12 Siegfried 8 Cartier Fields [note 119] [96]
October 10 No. 7 Lewis 0 No. 4 Pasquerilla East 12 Cartier Fields [96]
October 10 No. 9 Knott 0 No. 10 Off-Campus 12 Cartier Fields [96]
Cartier Fields
Cartier Fields
Cartier Fields
Cartier Fields
Cartier Fields
Cartier Fields
Gold Division (Badin, Breen-Phillips, Cavanaugh, Lyons, Howard, Pangborn, Walsh)
September 17 Cavanaugh 0 Pangborn 18 Cartier Fields [85]
September 17 Breen-Phillips 6 Lyons 12 Cartier Fields [85]
September 17 Howard 0 Walsh 7 Cartier Fields [85]
September 24 No. 1 Lyons 6 No. 2 Pangborn 7 Cartier Fields [note 120] [86][87]
September 24 No. 11 Badin 12 No. 12 Cavanaugh 6 Cartier Fields [86][87]
September 24 No. 10 Breen-Phillips 0 No. 7 Walsh 6 Cartier Fields [86][87]
September 28 No. 8 Badin 8 No. 6 Walsh 12 Cartier Fields [note 121] [97]
September 28 No. 13 Cavanaugh 0 No. 3 Lyons 19 Cartier Fields [97]
September 28 No. 10 Howard 0 No. 1 Pangborn 19 Cartier Fields [97]
October 1 No. 12 Breen-Phillips 0 No. 1 Pangborn 7 Cartier Fields [89]
October 1 No. 8 Badin 6 No. 3 Lyons 6 Cartier Fields [note 122] [89]
October 1 No. 13 Cavanaugh 6 No. 10 Howard 12 Cartier Fields [89]
October 4 No. 13 Cavanaugh 0 No. 3 Walsh 7 Cartier Fields [note 123] [90]
October 4 No. 12 Breen-Phillips 0 No. 10 Howard 8 Cartier Fields [90]
October 4 No. 6 Badin 12 No. 1 Pangborn 13 Cartier Fields [90]
October 8 No. 5 Lyons No. 3 Walsh Cartier Fields [90]
October 8 No. 12 Breen-Phillips No. 13 Cavanaugh Cartier Fields [90]
October 8 No. 6 Badin No. 10 Howard Cartier Fields [90]
October 8 No. 1 Pangborn 20 No. 3 Walsh 6 Cartier Fields [91]
October 8 No. 10 Howard 0 No. 5 Lyons 26 Cartier Fields [91]
October 8 No. 6 Badin 7 No. 12 Breen-Phillips 0 Cartier Fields [91]
Cartier Fields
Cartier Fields
Cartier Fields
Cartier Fields
Cartier Fields
Cartier Fields
Quarterfinals
Semifinals
Championship

Power Poll

edit
Week 1
September 19
Week 2
September 26
Week 3
October 3
Week 4
October 10
Week 5
Week 6
Week 7
Week 8
1.Lyons (1–0)Pangborn (2–0)Pangborn (3–0)Pangborn (6–0)1.
2.Pangborn (1–0)Lewis (1–0)Pasquerilla West (3–0)Pasquerilla West (5–0)2.
3.Off-Campus (1–0)Lyons (1–1)Walsh (2–0)Walsh (5–1)3.
4.Lewis (1–0)Pasquerilla West (2–0)Off-Campus (1–1)Pasquerilla East (4–1)4.
5.Pasquerilla West (1–0)Pasquerilla East (2–0)Lyons (1–1–1)Lyons (3–2–1)5.
6.Pasquerilla East (0–0)Walsh (2–0)Badin (1–0–1)Badin (3–2–1)6.
7.Walsh (1–0)Off-Campus (1–1)Lewis (1–1–1)Lewis (2–2–1)7.
8.Siegfried (0–1)Badin (1–0)Pasquerilla East (2–1)Howard (2–4)8.
9.Howard (0–1)Knott (1–1)Knott (1–1–1)Knott (1–3–1)9.
10.Breen-Phillips (0–1)Howard (0–1)Howard (1–1)Off-Campus (2–3)10.
11.Badin (0–0)Siegfried (0–2)Farley (1–2)Farley (1–5)11.
12.Cavanaugh (0–1)Breen-Phillips (0–2)Breen-Phillips (0–3)Siegfried (1–4)12.
13.Farley (0–1)Cavanaugh (0–2)Cavanaugh (0–3)Cavanaugh (1–5)13.
14.Knott (0–1)Farley (0–2)Siegfried (0–3)Breen-Phillips (0–6)14.
Week 1
September 19
Week 2
September 26
Week 3
October 3
Week 4
October 10
Week 5
Week 6
Week 7
Week 8
NoneNoneNoneNoneNoneNoneNone

Player of the Week

edit
  • Week 1 (September 19): Kelly McMahon, Pasquerilla West TB: "The Sophomore tailback scored a pair of touchdowns and added some key blocks in P.W.'s 22-0 win over Knott."[85]
  • Week 2 (September 26): Mary Hepburn, Pasquerilla West DL: 'The sophomore defensive lineman recorded a league high six sacks Tuesday night as the Purple Weasels defeated Farley 18-0 to improve their record to 2-0."[87]
  • Week 3 (October 3): Denie Generally, Pasquerilla West: "The freshman defensive lineman recorded several tackles and added the game winning safety in the Purple Weasels' 8-0 upset victory over No. 2 Lewis."[89]
  • Week 4 (October 10): Michelle Dillenburger, TB/LB: "Playing as both tailback and linebacker put on a marvelous show as she scored two touchdowns and recorded three interceptions in Badin's 14-0 win over Howard."[91]

1996

edit

The 1996 men's interhall football season began on ____ with ___ teams.[59]

Date Team Score Team Score Location Notes Source
Blue Division
Gold Division
Quarterfinals
Semifinals
Championship

Women

edit

The 1996 women's interhall football season began on ____ with ___ teams.

Date Team Score Team Score Location Notes Source
Blue Division
Gold Division
Quarterfinals
Semifinals
Championship


1995

edit

The 1997 men's interhall football season began on ____ with ___ teams.[59]

Date Team Score Team Score Location Notes Source
Blue Division
Gold Division
Quarterfinals
Semifinals
Championship

Women

edit

The 1997 women's interhall football season began on ____ with ___ teams.

Date Team Score Team Score Location Notes Source
Blue Division
Gold Division
Quarterfinals
Semifinals
Championship


1998

edit

The 1998 men's interhall football season began on ____ with ___ teams.[59]

Date Team Score Team Score Location Notes Source
Blue Division
Gold Division
Quarterfinals
Semifinals
Championship

Women

edit

The 1998 women's interhall football season began on ____ with ___ teams.

Date Team Score Team Score Location Notes Source
Blue Division
Gold Division
Quarterfinals
Semifinals
Championship


1999

edit

The 1999 men's interhall football season began on ____ with ___ teams.[59]

Date Team Score Team Score Location Notes Source
Blue Division
Gold Division
Quarterfinals
Semifinals
Championship

Women

edit

The 1999 women's interhall football season began on ____ with ___ teams.

Date Team Score Team Score Location Notes Source
Blue Division
Gold Division
Quarterfinals
Semifinals
Championship

Notes

edit
  1. ^ Off-Campus originally defeated Dillon 14 to 0, but an announcement later in the season stipulated that Off-Campus forfeited the game to Dillon. It is very likely that Off-Campus was forced to forfeit the game and probably had to do with the controversy over having had seven players from Holy Cross Junior College on their roster.
  2. ^ Considered to be the first upset of the year, because Off-Campus was the defending IFL champion. Considering Off-Campus was likely forced to retroactively forfeit their game versus Dillon, its unclear whether the official result is a 20-3 Flanner win or a Flanner victory by forfeit.
  3. ^ Circumstantial outcome.
  4. ^ Circumstantial outcome.
  5. ^ Result confirmed, but score unknown.
  6. ^ Circumstantial outcome.
  7. ^ Circumstantial outcome.
  8. ^ Circumstantial outcome.
  9. ^ Circumstantial outcome.
  10. ^ Circumstantial outcome.
  11. ^ This game was almost certainly a win for Pangborn. An article in the Observer in 1993 claimed that St. Edward's had lost all of their games in the last four seasons. Aside from a tie in 1990, this claim holds up. However, the game must officially remain unknown because I believe that I have no concrete proof, indirect or otherwise.
  12. ^ Carroll initially won 13 to 10 in double overtime. Days later, Carroll was forced to forfeit the game after it was discovered tthat three inelligible players were used. Two players were students of Holy Cross Junior college (Stephan Tompkins and Hastings Siegfried) but dormed at Carroll hall, while another (George Keegan) was a former resident of Carroll who now lives off campus.
  13. ^ Lewis won in overtime.
  14. ^ Siegfried won in double overtime.
  15. ^ Circumstantial outcome.
  16. ^ Circumstantial outcome.
  17. ^ Circumstantial outcome.
  18. ^ Circumstantial outcome.
  19. ^ Circumstantial outcome.
  20. ^ Circumstantial outcome.
  21. ^ Circumstantial outcome.
  22. ^ De-facto blue division title game.
  23. ^ Walsh won in overtime.
  24. ^ Postponed from its original date on September 22. Circumstantial outcome.
  25. ^ Circumstantial outcome.
  26. ^ Circumstantial outcome.
  27. ^ Circumstantial outcome.
  28. ^ Circumstantial outcome.
  29. ^ Lewis won in overtime.
  30. ^ The game was called over with time left in the 4th quarter after a brawl broke out between the players.
  31. ^ There is a small possibility that this game was a division tiebreaker and not a regular-season game.
  32. ^ This game is never explicitly mentioned but fits within the schedule as both teams needed one more opponent. Flanner's end-of-season record indicates that they won this game but it may have taken place earlier in the season. It is a circumstantial outcome.
  33. ^ The only score of the game was a Cavanaugh touchdown, but the fate of the extra point or two-point conversion is unknown.
  34. ^ This game is never explicitly mentioned but fits within the schedule as both teams needed one more opponent. Alumni's end-of-season record indicates that they won this game but it may have taken place earlier in the season. It is a circumstantial outcome.
  35. ^ This game is never explicitly mentioned but fits within the schedule as both teams needed one more opponent. Cavanaugh's end-of-season record indicates that they won this game but it may have taken place earlier in the season. I know for a fact that this game was not played on October 14 as Cavanaugh's last opponent was stated to be Carroll. It is a circumstantial outcome.
  36. ^ The Blue Division seedings went Zahm, Cavanaugh, Alumni, Carroll, and the Gold division seedings went Flanner, Off-Campus, Keenan, Dillon. The teams were not ranked No. 1 through 8 in 1992.
  37. ^ Alumni won in overtime.
  38. ^ The winner of the game won a playoff berth. Circumstantial result.
  39. ^ Circumstantial result. Lewis already had two confirmed losses and Siegfried was the eighth seed with a 3-2 record so Lewis must have won each of their three unknown games to correlate with their playoff berth.
  40. ^ Last game of the regular-season.
  41. ^ Of the six unknown dates, three were definitely played on September 20, though the other three or less certain. They could have been played on October 1 but that is unlikely because of a stipulation in the Observation that the next round of games after September 27 would be on October 4. They also could have been played on September 23.
  42. ^ Circumstantial result. Lewis already had two confirmed losses and Siegfried was the eighth seed with a 3-2 record so Lewis must have won each of their three unknown games to correlate with their playoff berth.
  43. ^ Circumstantial result. Farley must have won this game or else they would not have been in a position to win a playoff berth on October 11.
  44. ^ Circumstantial result.
  45. ^ Circumstantial result.
  46. ^ Circumstantial result. Lewis already had two confirmed losses and Siegfried was the eighth seed with a 3-2 record so Lewis must have won each of their three unknown games to correlate with their playoff berth.
  47. ^ Circumstantial result. Pasquerilla West was undefeated before October 11.
  48. ^ Pangborn's first interhall football game as a women's dorm.
  49. ^ The game was originally scheduled for September 23, but was apparently postponed to Sunday for an unknown reason.
  50. ^ This game was played sometime earlier in the season, most likely on October 7. However, this contradicts the statement in the October 8 edition of the Observer that Breen-Phillips was still undefeated.
  51. ^ Circumstantial outcome. In 1993 the Observer reported that Pangborn had won their first W-IFL game in hall history, which meant their 1992 season must have been winless. I usually do not trust sources from different seasons, but the relatively short time between 1992 and 1993 and the recent emphasis on interhall football coverage sway me to count these losses as official.
  52. ^ In 1993, Howard sophomore player Sarah Cashore said that Howard only won one game in 1992. That win was later confirmed to be against Pangborn.
  53. ^ Outcome confirmed, score unknown.
  54. ^ Circumstantial outcome. In 1993 the Observer reported that Pangborn had won their first W-IFL game in hall history, which meant their 1992 season must have been winless. I usually do not trust sources from different seasons, but the relatively short time between 1992 and 1993 and the recent emphasis on interhall football coverage sway me to count these losses as official.
  55. ^ In 1993, Howard sophomore player Sarah Cashore said that Howard only won one game in 1992. That win was later confirmed to be against Pangborn.
  56. ^ Circumstantial outcome. In 1993 the Observer reported that Pangborn had won their first W-IFL game in hall history, which meant their 1992 season must have been winless. I usually do not trust sources from different seasons, but the relatively short time between 1992 and 1993 and the recent emphasis on interhall football coverage sway me to count these losses as official.
  57. ^ Walsh won in overtime.
  58. ^ Alumni had a bye in week 1 and so was not ranked in the power poll.
  59. ^ Star running back for Cavanaugh and Player-of-the-Week Mike Norbut exclaimed after the victory, "today our whole offense was like a V-8, Dodge Ram Charger firing on all cylinders."
  60. ^ Keenan had a bye in week 1 and so was not ranked in the power poll.
  61. ^ Circle back to this one later.
  62. ^ Circumstantial outcome. Conflicting final season rankings contradict whether Keenan won or tied Off-Campus, but after analyzing the week 4 power poll it is clear that the Off-Campus final record was a mistake and Keenan won. There is a slight possibility that the team Keenan played was not Off-Campus.
  63. ^ An alternate score of Morrissey winning 24 to 6 was published in a subsequent edition of the Observer.
  64. ^ Stanford won in overtime.
  65. ^ The poll was revised on October 14 to account for incorrect win-loss records for some of the teams. Morrissey, originally 2–1 (and subsequently revised incorrectly again on October 13 as having a 2–0 record), was actually 3–0, and St. Edward's, originally 1–0–2, was actually 1–1–1. As a result, Morrissey ascended to the top ranking and St. Edward's rose to the #7 spot. Dillon and Alumni, both with 1–1 records, were also switched during the October 14 re-rank. Other mistakes were found by me but missed by the re-rank. Off-Campus, originally 1–2, should have been 1–1. The mistake dropped Off-Campus to tenth in the poll, even though they had actually won the game they had played that week.
  66. ^ Two more mistakes were found in the week 4 poll, though no know re-rank was released. Off-Campus, originally 1–2–1, should have been 1–3 following a loss to Flanner.
  67. ^ The same mistakes from the week 4 poll were found in the final poll. Off-Campus, originally 1–2–1, should have been 1–3 following a loss to Flanner. Carroll, originally 0–2–1, should have been 0–3–1.
  68. ^ Rivalry game.
  69. ^ Farley won in overtime. Many Pasquerilla West players missed the game to attend the campus premiere of the recently-filmed blockbuster, Rudy.
  70. ^ Siegfried won in overtime.
  71. ^ The W-IFL teams that played on October 6 were not re-ranked for the games on October 10.
  72. ^ One of, if not the highest scoring game in interhall history.
  73. ^ The W-IFL teams that played on September 29 were not re-ranked for the games on October 3.
  74. ^ Lyons won in triple overtime.
  75. ^ Reported to be Pangborn's first W-IFL win in hall history.
  76. ^ Lyons scored one touchdown and Walsh scored two, but the status of the extra points is unclear.
  77. ^ Howard won in overtime.
  78. ^ Pangborn, originally 1–3, should be 1–4.
  79. ^ Considered a scrimmage.
  80. ^ Considered a scrimmage.
  81. ^ Considered a scrimmage.
  82. ^ Considered a scrimmage. Score tracked but unknown.
  83. ^ Rematch of 1993 interhall football championship.
  84. ^ Unconfirmed result but reflects change in record. The game was also mentioned in a later edition.
  85. ^ Rivalry game. Dubbed the "battle for the traveling crooked stick". A rivalry trophy was to be presented to the winner (most likely this stick).
  86. ^ Considered the marquee matchup of the Week.
  87. ^ Off-Campus won in overtime. The score was 3–3 at the end of regulation.
  88. ^ Considered a scrimmage.
  89. ^ Considered a scrimmage. Interestingly, it is the only known tie in women's interhall history up to this point. Wthere it occurred before the 0-0 tie between Lyons and Pangborn is unknown.
  90. ^ Considered a scrimmage.
  91. ^ Considered a scrimmage. Score unknown.
  92. ^ 20-play scrimmage. No score was kept.
  93. ^ Considered a scrimmage.
  94. ^ Circumstantial outcome via rankings and scheduling.
  95. ^ Circumstantial outcome via rankings and scheduling.
  96. ^ Rankings are not updated to reflect the games on October 6.
  97. ^ Rankings are not updated to reflect the games on October 6.
  98. ^ Rankings are not updated to reflect the games on October 6.
  99. ^ Rankings are not updated to reflect the games on September 28.
  100. ^ Rankings are not updated to reflect the games on September 28.
  101. ^ Rankings are not updated to reflect the games on September 28.
  102. ^ Reportedly division rivals.
  103. ^ Many players were missing from both rosters. The Indigo Girls were touring near Notre Dame, and many chose the concert over the game.
  104. ^ Indirect result, confirmed by power poll records. Rankings not updated for October 12 games.
  105. ^ Indirect result, confirmed by power poll records. Rankings not updated for October 12 games.
  106. ^ Indirect result, confirmed by power poll records. Rankings not updated for October 12 games.
  107. ^ Pangborn RB Kelly Brady reportedly scored three touchdowns, although there is some indication that the final score was 14 to 7. It's possible that Brady scored two touchdowns and the second extra point.
  108. ^ Siegfried won in overtime. 0–0 at the end of regulation. Slippery field conditions sent five players to the hospital.
  109. ^ Pangborn won in overtime. 0–0 at the end of regulation.
  110. ^ Off-Campus won in overtime. The score was tied 0–0 at the end of regulation.
  111. ^ The Observer incorrectly posted a record of 6–2–2 in the power poll, when in fact Off-Campus' true record was 6–2–1.
  112. ^ It is unclear exactly why a 29th player was needed.
  113. ^ This week's marquee game of the blue division.
  114. ^ Rankings not updated to reflect games on this date.
  115. ^ Rivalry game. Dubbed the "Battle of Towers".
  116. ^ Claimed to be Sorin's first touchdown in three years. Check for validity.
  117. ^ No rankings were provided to these teams because they were not included on the week 1 power poll records.
  118. ^ Rankings not updated to reflect games on this date.
  119. ^ Rankings not updated to reflect games on this date.
  120. ^ Billed as a marquee game because it was a 1 v. 2. matchup.
  121. ^ Rankings not updated to reflect games on this date.
  122. ^ Rivalry game.
  123. ^ The October 4 games were originally scheduled for September 22 but were delayed because of rain.

References

edit
  1. ^ a b "OC looks to repeat; Grace and Manor in way" (PDF). The Observer. September 20, 1991. p. 18.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r "SUNDAY'S INTERHALL FOOTBALL SCHEDULE" (PDF). The Observer. September 27, 1991. p. 20.
  3. ^ "Call Crimestoppers!" (PDF). The Observer. September 23, 1991. p. 3.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n "Breen-Phillips leads assault as women's IH football continues play/Cinderella Planner takes a bite outta Crime, 20-3; Carroll romps" (PDF). The Observer. September 30, 1991. p. 15, 18.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k "Grace's running attack too much for Dillon in 20-0 win" (PDF). The Observer. October 18, 1991. p. 16.
  6. ^ a b c d e f "OC football caught in another controversy" (PDF). The Observer. October 7, 1991. p. 18.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r "INTERHALL FOOTBALL PLAYOFF SCHEDULE" (PDF). The Observer. October 30, 1991. p. 14.
  8. ^ a b c d e "Women's interhall begins Sunday/Leahy division men ready to rumble; Alumni favored" (PDF). The Observer. September 19, 1991. p. 14, 18, 20.
  9. ^ "Men's interhall football gears up for '91" (PDF). The Observer. September 18, 1991. p. 17, 20.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n "Lewis to face PW for top spot in Blue Division/Zahm and Carroll go head to head/Stanford and Flanner to clash in the Gold League/Howard tops BP as two-point conversion fails" (PDF). The Observer. September 30, 1993. p. 12-14.
  11. ^ a b "Men's interhall playoffs begin with two games Sunday/Howard leads pack into interhall playoffs" (PDF). The Observer. November 1, 1991. p. 22, 26.
  12. ^ a b c d "Flanner, Zahm survive first round" (PDF). The Observer. November 2, 1991. p. 18.
  13. ^ a b "Men's IH football reaches semis/Women's IH football playoffs resume Sunday" (PDF). The Observer. November 8, 1991. p. 24, 26.
  14. ^ a b c d e f "Men's I-H football set for finals/Breen-Phillips to face Lewis for I-H championship" (PDF). The Observer. November 11, 1991. p. 13, 16.
  15. ^ "Interhall football titles up for grabs on Sunday/Carroll ousted for using ineligible players" (PDF). The Observer. November 15, 1991. p. 18, 22.
  16. ^ a b "Knights, Blitz fans celebrate interhall football titles" (PDF). The Observer. November 18, 1991. p. 14.
  17. ^ a b c d e f "Scoreboard" (PDF). The Observer. September 24, 1991. p. 14.
  18. ^ a b c d e f g h i "West bests East in Women's Interhall" (PDF). The Observer. September 25, 1991. p. 16.
  19. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s "WOMEN'S INTERHALL FOOTBALL PLAYOFF SCHEDULE/P.W. clinches Blue division" (PDF). The Observer. October 16, 1991. p. 14, 17.
  20. ^ a b "Walsh downs OC" (PDF). The Observer. October 9, 1991. p. 19.
  21. ^ a b c d e f "Underdogs rule as women's IH football playoffs start" (PDF). The Observer. November 5, 1991. p. 16, 20.
  22. ^ "Carroll Hall addresses complaints/Alkidas named Player of Year/Eligibility rules should be tightened in IH" (PDF). The Observer. November 19, 1991. p. 11, 14, 16.
  23. ^ "If you got the money, we got the room/Carroll dominates awards/Knott's Kmak named MVP" (PDF). The Observer. November 20, 1991. p. 9, 13, 16.
  24. ^ "Dettore named MVP as Keenan fills Leahy all-star team" (PDF). The Observer. November 21, 1991. p. 12, 16.
  25. ^ "Flanner stakes its claim for Parseghian division honors" (PDF). The Observer. November 22, 1991. p. 18.
  26. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m "Cavanaugh defeats Sorin in men's interhall opener" (PDF). The Observer. September 23, 1992. p. 16.
  27. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o "Scoreboard" (PDF). The Observer. October 2, 1992. p. 18.
  28. ^ a b c d e f "IH football getting intense as playoffs near" (PDF). The Observer. October 7, 1992. p. 13-14.
  29. ^ a b c d e f g "Flanner, Zahm stay on top in IH football" (PDF). The Observer. October 14, 1992. p. 13.
  30. ^ a b c d e f g h "Flanner, Zahm favored in IH football" (PDF). The Observer. October 29, 1992. p. 18.
  31. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l "Men's Interhall football playoffs down to final four/BP-Knott showdown highlights interhall playoffs" (PDF). The Observer. November 4, 1992. p. 14, 16.
  32. ^ a b c d e Cite error: The named reference Observer1992I51 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  33. ^ a b "Siegfried wins interhall title/Zahm claims the inter-hall football crown" (PDF). The Observer. November 17, 1992. p. 14, 16.
  34. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o "Women's interhall heats up" (PDF). The Observer. October 1, 1992. p. 18, 20.
  35. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n "BP romp heads interhall action" (PDF). The Observer. October 8, 1992. p. 17.
  36. ^ a b c d e f g h "PW-Siegfried showdown highlights playoff action" (PDF). The Observer. October 30, 1992. p. 23. Cite error: The named reference "Observer1992I44" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  37. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Upsets abound in womens interhall gold division/Siegfried to challenge Pasquerilla West" (PDF). The Observer. October 8, 1993. p. 13-14.
  38. ^ "Class" (PDF). The Observer. October 15, 1992. p. 4.
  39. ^ Of these unknown games, its likely that two were played on September 20, three were played on September 23, and two more were played on October 7. Its possible that the Gold League teams only played five of their six potential opponents so they played the same number of games as the Blue League.
  40. ^ "Interhall football honors" (PDF). The Observer. December 8, 1992. p. 14.
  41. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o "Women's Interhall/Men's Interhall" (PDF). The Observer. September 28, 1993. p. 12-13.
  42. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n "Second place Morrissey trounces Grace/P.W. defends tide against Farley tomorrow/Third ranked Lyons upsets No. 1 Badin, 20-19/Zahm beats Carroll in grudge match" (PDF). The Observer. October 5, 1993. p. 12-14.
  43. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l "Siegfried drops P. E. in overtime to even record at 2-2/Lyons hopes to avoid letdown tonight/St. Ed s hopes to continue early success against Alumni/Morrissey awaits struggling Grace" (PDF). The Observer. October 7, 1993. p. 13-14.
  44. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n "Final Gold games to be played this Wednesday/Farley shoots for playoffs after 6-0 shutout of Knott/Keenan tops Stanford despite injuries/Final minutes become crucial in Alumni's upset and Cavanaugh's win" (PDF). The Observer. October 12, 1993. p. 14-16, 18.
  45. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Alumni, Zahm await marquee battle/Keenan, Morrissey to decide Gold League's best/Lyons uses second half spurt to defeat Howard; Walsh hammers Pangborn" (PDF). The Observer. October 14, 1993. p. 21-22, 24.
  46. ^ a b c d e f g "Zahm, Cavanaugh, Fisher remain unbeaten in Blue League/Top-ranked Morrissey finishes as lone 4-0 team in Gold League" (PDF). The Observer. October 19, 1993. p. 12-13.
  47. ^ a b "No. 4 Cavanaugh faces No. 7 Alumni in season finale" (PDF). The Observer. October 20, 1993. p. 13.
  48. ^ a b "Alumni drops Cavanaugh to even record" (PDF). The Observer. October 21, 1993. p. 13.
  49. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Morrissey, Dillon have momentum/Keenan, Stanford rivalry heats up as playoffs approach/Badin the team to beat in womens interhall playoffs" (PDF). The Observer. November 5, 1993. p. 16-18.
  50. ^ a b c d "Morrissey concludes 7-0 season with championship" (PDF). The Observer. November 22, 1993. p. 12-13.
  51. ^ a b c d "Keenan's comeback attempt falls short against Stanford/Morrissey stomps Dillon; Zahm defeats Cavanaugh" (PDF). The Observer. November 9, 1993. p. 12.
  52. ^ a b c "Morrissey looks to dethrone Zahm/Lewis and P.W. face off again in semis/Top seed Badin faces Howard in awaited rematch" (PDF). The Observer. November 11, 1993. p. 19, 21, 24.
  53. ^ a b c d e f "PW tops Lewis to advance to championship against Badin/Zahm loses first game since '91/Stanford stops Fisher 10-7 in overtime/Badin squeaks by Howard in Sunday's semi-finals" (PDF). The Observer. November 16, 1993. p. 12, 14, 16.
  54. ^ a b "Badin and PW meet in stadium/Stanford bids for upset" (PDF). The Observer. November 18, 1993. p. 16-17.
  55. ^ a b c d e f "Offensive fireworks open womens interhall season" (PDF). The Observer. September 22, 1993. p. 20.
  56. ^ a b c d e f "Badin puts undefeated record on the line against Lyons/P.W. drops Lewis to remain undefeated" (PDF). The Observer. October 1, 1993. p. 16.
  57. ^ a b c d e f "Lewis upsets Lyons, other favorites roll" (PDF). The Observer. November 10, 1993. p. 12, 16.
  58. ^ a b c d e f "Blue Division/Gold Division" (PDF). The Observer. September 22, 1994. p. 11-13.
  59. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z "Are you ready for some interhall?" (PDF). The Observer. September 27, 1994. p. 12-13, 16.
  60. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Papa John's Salutes All the Interhall Football Teams!/Upstart Lewis knocks of Farley, 13-6/Off-campus, Pasquerilla East tie 6-6/No. 4 Alumni faces winless Zahm/Off-Campus faces Keenan in battle of unbeatens" (PDF). The Observer. September 30, 1994. p. 8, 20, 22, 26-27.
  61. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k "Morrissey stuffs Stanford, Keenan, Flanner victorious/B-P, Walsh waltz to wins/Carroll cruises past Fisher, Zahm comes up empty, ties Alumni" (PDF). The Observer. October 4, 1994. p. 10, 12-13, 16.
  62. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Keenan-Stanford fight neighborhood battle/Middle-of-pack squads fight for position/Siegfried powers past Off Campus, 19-6" (PDF). The Observer. October 7, 1994. p. 13, 17-18, 20.
  63. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l "Parity reigns supreme in interhall" (PDF). The Observer. October 11, 1994. p. 16-18, 20.
  64. ^ a b c d e f g h i j "Siegfried up-ends Pasquerilla East, 12-6/Morrissey, Flanner vie for play-off bids/Top-ranked Carroll faces No. 4 Alumni" (PDF). The Observer. October 14, 1994. p. 19, 24-25.
  65. ^ a b c d e f "Vermin top Dawgs, Zahm bests St. Ed's for second straight win" (PDF). The Observer. October 18, 1994. p. 13-14, 16.
  66. ^ a b c d e f "Regular season ends tonight/Pangborn controls Howard 21-7" (PDF). The Observer. October 19, 1994. p. 9-10, 12.
  67. ^ a b "Off-Campus, Grace wins close season" (PDF). The Observer. October 20, 1994. p. 14, 16.
  68. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o "Parity adds complexity to playoff seeding" (PDF). The Observer. November 2, 1994. p. 13, 16.
  69. ^ "Flanner faces Carroll/Fisher hoping for sweet revenge" (PDF). The Observer. November 4, 1994. p. 14, 16.
  70. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n "Upstart Flanner knocks off top-seed 7-6/Zahm kicker steps up to challenge/Defense propels Lyons and Pangborn forward" (PDF). The Observer. November 8, 1994. p. 10-11, 13, 16.
  71. ^ a b c d "Flanner ready to meet fourth-ranked Zahm/Women's IH action on Sunday" (PDF). The Observer. November 11, 1994. p. 13-14.
  72. ^ a b c d e f g h i j "Intramural News/Zahm, Off-Campus survive in mens' bracket/Off-Campus, Lyons to battle for womens' title" (PDF). The Observer. November 15, 1994. p. 12-13, 15-16.
  73. ^ "Lyons looks for right combination" (PDF). The Observer. November 16, 1994. p. 13.
  74. ^ a b "Thank you, Zahm" (PDF). The Observer. November 17, 1994. p. 12-13.
  75. ^ a b "Interhall Football Championships" (PDF). The Observer. November 18, 1994. p. 26.
  76. ^ a b c d e f "O-C, Lyons, deliver one-two punch/Women's stars compete/Seniors suit up one last time in all-star game" (PDF). The Observer. November 22, 1994. p. 8-10, 12.
  77. ^ "Offenses control in women's interhall all-star battle/Blue squad unable to handle Gold's second half comeback in men's game" (PDF). The Observer. November 29, 1994. p. 14.
  78. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Blue Division/Gold Division" (PDF). The Observer. September 21, 1994. p. 12-13.
  79. ^ a b c d e f g "Siegfried and P.W. battle in big week of football/Attitudes reign over Ducks" (PDF). The Observer. September 29, 1994. p. 13-14, 16.
  80. ^ a b c d e f "Blue race heats up as Off-Campus, Siegfried clash/Walsh tops Badin, 14-7" (PDF). The Observer. October 6, 1994. p. 12-13, 16.
  81. ^ a b c d e f g "Ducks stampede past Cavilers, 19-6/All-star game planned/No. 1 ranking up for grabs" (PDF). The Observer. October 13, 1994. p. 16, 18, 20.
  82. ^ a b c d e f "Ducks seek win, respect" (PDF). The Observer. September 28, 1994. p. 14.
  83. ^ a b c "Badin, Lyons in division showdown" (PDF). The Observer. October 5, 1994. p. 14.
  84. ^ a b c "BP, Pangborn in key IH match-up" (PDF). The Observer. October 12, 1994. p. 14, 16.
  85. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n "Interhall football opens with a bang" (PDF). The Observer. September 19, 1995. p. 12-13, 16.
  86. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Carroll poses an early threat to No. 1 Zahm/Grace hopes to continue momentum against Stanford/Defense will decide Lyons, Pangborn battle" (PDF). The Observer. September 21, 1995. p. 16-17, 20.
  87. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k "Top teams collide early" (PDF). The Observer. September 26, 1995. p. 12-13, 16.
  88. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Top teams collide early" (PDF). The Observer. September 28, 1995. p. 18-19.
  89. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k "Some surprises in weekend interhall action" (PDF). The Observer. October 3, 1995. p. 16, 18, 20.
  90. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o "Lewis, P.W. hope to build on momentum/Lyons, Badin try to rebound/Planner, Morrissey set sights on top ranking/Mismatches highlight weekend/Walsh remains perfect/Off-Campus athletes attempt to change rule" (PDF). The Observer. October 5, 1995. p. 16-18, 20.
  91. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m "Crunch time approaching as Interhall rolls on" (PDF). The Observer. October 10, 1995. p. 13, 15, 20.
  92. ^ a b c "Grace wins battle of towers" (PDF). The Observer. October 12, 1995. p. 18, 20.
  93. ^ a b c "Zahm stays undefeated with triumph over St. Ed's" (PDF). The Observer. October 13, 1995. p. 10.
  94. ^ a b c "Interhall women blank opponents" (PDF). The Observer. September 20, 1995. p. 14, 16.
  95. ^ a b c "Laurie's two touchdown passes slam Off-Campus" (PDF). The Observer. October 4, 1995. p. 18, 20.
  96. ^ a b c "Purple Weasels finish perfect regular season" (PDF). The Observer. October 11, 1995. p. 18.
  97. ^ a b c "Late score wins for Walsh" (PDF). The Observer. September 29, 1995. p. 20.