The Hope College football team lit up the scoreboard and the Saturday night sky on a historic evening at Ray and Sue Smith Stadium.
The nationally ranked Flying Dutchmen provided all the fireworks in the first on-campus meeting of
The Rivalry, defeating Calvin University 52-0 in front of 5,651 fans, one of the largest home crowds in program history.
Hope, ranked No. 16 in both the D3football.com and American Football Coaches Association polls, scored touchdowns on its first three possessions and added four more touchdowns and a field goal.
Defensively, the Flying Dutchmen recorded back-to-back shutouts for the first time since 1983. Hope has not allowed a point over its past 10 quarters.
Head coach
Peter Stuursma said he could not have asked for more from the setting or his team in the second Hope-Calvin matchup.
"It was awesome," Stuursma said after his team improved to 2-0 against the Knights. "Wasn't that fun? The fireworks at night … our guys truly wanted to play a night game. It was special for them because they hadn't played a night game since high school. Our athletic administration worked their tails off to put on a great show, and we are certainly appreciative of them."
The victory kept the Flying Dutchmen (7-1, 5-1 MIAA) in the league title chase with one week left in the regular season. Hope is tied for second place with Adrian College, one game behind first-place Alma College. Alma hosts Adrian next week, while Hope welcomes Olivet College to Ray and Sue Smith Stadium.
Hope limited Calvin (6-3, 3-3 MIAA) to a season-low 152 yards of total offense and forced three interceptions. Freshman cornerback
Keaton Hendricks (Zeeland, Michigan / Zeeland West), freshman linebacker
Dom Cassise (Beverly Hills, Michigan / Detroit Country Day) and junior cornerback
Lorenzo Vitti (Detroit, Michigan / Divine Child) each picked off passes.
Senior linebacker
Colton Schreur (Wayland, Michigan / South Christian) led the team with eight tackles.
"They've gone 10 quarters without being scored on. That's truly remarkable," Stuursma said of the defensive unit, led by coordinator
Jacob Pardonnet. "I thought they just had great energy. We put them in a bad spot with that first-quarter fumble. Other than that, [Calvin] did not even threaten."
Senior defensive end
Liam Danitz recorded one sack, giving him 12 this season, one of the top totals in the nation.
"I think [the last 10 quarters] just shows how bought in the guys are, how willing we are to work every day at practice and how much we believe in the coaching staff," Danitz said. "We've got an iron wall up front, and the defensive backs are intercepting everything. Everything is clicking."
Hope's offense delivered as well, totaling 557 yards and 33 first downs while averaging 6.8 yards per play. Eleven different receivers and three quarterbacks combined for 297 passing yards, while 10 ball carriers totaled 260 rushing yards.
Sophomore running back
Kal Motter (Lawton, Michigan / Lawton) and freshman running back
Trey Goike (White Lake, Michigan / Orchard Lake St. Mary's) each rushed for two touchdowns.
Motter opened the scoring with a 14-yard touchdown run with 9:10 left in the first quarter and finished with a game-high 94 yards on 14 carries. Goike added a 5-yard score with 5:06 remaining in the first quarter.
Sophomore
AJ Martel (Mason, Michigan / Mason) added a 1-yard touchdown run three seconds into the second quarter.
"We played a lot of guys, but with our first group, I think we played five different running backs and a lot of different receivers," Stuursma said. "When you have 557 yards of total offense and 33 first downs to their eight, that's fun to watch."
Hope concludes the regular season on Saturday, Nov. 16, with Senior Day against Olivet. Kickoff is 1 p.m. at Ray and Sue Smith Stadium.
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