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Thursday, January 13, 2005
Seniors bring home hardwareGraduating class caps career with championship runby James Irwin / sports editor
On the eve of the 2004 season opener, JMUs senior class held a
13-22 record and zero playoff appearances. By the end of the season, that same group had doubled its win total and
helped capture the first national championship in program history. "You couldnt go out any better than this," senior linebacker
Trey Townsend said. "Its great to be able to finish my senior
year with a national championship after having a couple of bad seasons." The Dukes made a habit of overcoming adversity on the field in 2004,
winning five games by seven points or less. Four of JMUs 13 victories
came down to the final seconds and the Dukes trailed at some point in
every postseason game. Coach Mickey Matthews said finding a way to win is what set this JMU
senior class apart from its predecessors. "These guys have suffered a lot with us and have hung in there,"
Matthews said. "These seniors are a very special group to win all
those close games this year." Winning the close games was something Matthews teams had not done
in years past. Still, it did not deter the six-year coach from believing
his team could achieve postseason success. "I never doubted that we had a great program, that we were doing
things right and recruiting the right people," Matthews said. "We
just needed to have a little patience. Our administration had that and
they are to be commended." While Matthews applauded the universitys patience, trust was the
word redshirt senior center Leon Steinfeld used to describe JMUs
seniors. "Our teams have been through a lot," Steinfeld said. "We
trust in each other on both sides of the ball. Ive never seen a
team this close." That closeness stems from the long path the Dukes had to take from the
bottom of the Atlantic 10 in 2001, to the top of I-AA football in 2004.
Three years ago, JMU was 2-9. By 2003, the Dukes were 6-6 but still had
no postseason appearances to show for it. But, in 2004, disappointment gave way to success. "We had some tough seasons," Townsend said, moments after the
national title game. "Ive known most of these guys for four
or five years and thats a reason why its great to get this
win." Redshirt senior quarterback Matt LeZotte said the championship had a
lot to do with the previous mediocre seasons. He said the adversity of
losing strengthened the Dukes camaraderie. "Weve grown up together," LeZotte said. "We all
lived in the same dorm together. Were such a tightly knit family
that theyre all like brothers to me. The bond that we have as teammates
has helped us become winners." When asked about the meaning of the championship, LeZotte sounded as
though five years of frustration had been lifted. He said the title did
more than erase years of mediocrity. It gave the Dukes a new label to
go along with their new hardware. "This is amazing," LeZotte said. "All the adversity weve
been through and to finally end up going out on top, no one can take that
away from us. "Well forever be champions." |
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