The difference between a win and a loss: Richmond football then and now
The score was the same, but the number next to Richmond on the final box score was reversed.
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The score was the same, but the number next to Richmond on the final box score was reversed.
The first part of the season is done and Richmond has gone 3-0. Although the record is pristine, three quarters, two key injuries and one major problem have put a damper on the team's future.
More than 120 students boarded three buses last Saturday to travel to Duke University for the first football game of the season.
Richmond picked up a 23-21 upset win over Duke University Saturday night at Wallace Wade Stadium in Durham, N.C. Interim coach Wayne Lineburg picked up his first career win after taking over the position just 10 days before the start of the season. Richmond has now won the past three times it has traveled to Wallace Wade Stadium.
DURHAM, N.C. — Let's be clear here: Richmond could have lost its season opener -- and maybe should have lost it. Richmond's coach was appointed to that position just 10 days before the start of the seaon, 26 freshmen and sophomores had their names listed on the two-deep pre-game depth chart and Richmond's starting quarterback was coming back from a blown-out knee.
DURHAM, N.C. — They came to Durham, N.C., Saturday night with a new head coach, several new faces on defense and a plethora of doubters. They left with a 23-21 victory.
The kick falls short and that gives the Spiders the victory, 23-21, their first over an FBS opponent since 2009, also Duke.
The small group of fans that gathered around the Lower Grass Practice Field to watch the University of Richmond's football team's final open-to-the-public scrimmage saw a familiar sight: The Spider defense exerting its dominance.
The women's lacrosse team started the season with games against four of the best teams in college lacrosse. Though the Spiders lost all four games, the players said they were optimistic about what they learned from the matchups.
Hollywood all-stars launched the annual (and often infamous) film awards season Jan. 16 with the Hollywood Foreign Press Association's Golden Globe Awards. The Golden Globes commences a season fraught with red-carpet fashion, tearful acceptance speeches, obvious winners and surprising upsets.
In basketball, they are called "Cinderellas," but in football they are the members of the Football Championship Subdivision. Either way, these teams aren't supposed to beat their bigger and more well-known competition. And yet they somehow find a way to win.
The University of Richmond football team is No. 1 in the country again.
DURHAM, N.C. — The University of Richmond championship football team picked up where it left off last season — winning. It defeated Duke University 24-16 on Saturday away in its first game of the season.
DURHAM, N.C. -- Last December, the University of Richmond football team proved it could beat any team in the Football Championship Subdivision. Last night, it proved it could do more than that.
During the past two seasons, the University of Richmond football team has won a National Championship and a Colonial Athletic Association conference championship, produced the two leading rushers and touchdown scorers in team history and set the team record for most rushing yards during a single game.
University of Richmond head football coach Mike London said he was looking forward to increased fan support when his team starts its season on Saturday at Duke.
Spider fans may still be reminiscing about Dec. 19, 2008, but the football team is looking ahead to Sept. 5, 2009 — the season opener at Duke University.
The Rev. Craig Kocher is a Chapel Hill, N.C., native, a charismatic minister and a sports fan who wants to become the next chaplain for the University of Richmond.
The first of two candidates for the university's chaplain position spoke to about 60 students, faculty and alumni Tuesday afternoon, citing his vision for the chaplaincy as a place where all students would feel welcomed and supported.
University officials announced early Tuesday morning that the Rev. Linda Morgan-Clement, chaplain and director of interfaith campus ministry at The College of Wooster in Ohio, is the second finalist for the University of Richmond's permanent chaplain position.