Monmouth football has championship dreams in 2025 with top-ranked FCS offense
WEST LONG BRANCH – What if I told you the country's top FCS offense last year, led by the nation's most prolific passer throwing to a talented young receiving corps that combined for video game-like numbers, had no one enter the transfer portal.
You'd laugh, right, because it couldn't possibly be true. Except it is.
Advertisement
Oh, and that team closed last season with back-to-back wins over nationally ranked teams, and had a chance to beat two other top-20 foes in the final minute.
Intrigued?
Monmouth quarterback Derek Robertson celebrates during their game at FIU in Miami on Sept. 21, 2024.
The heart-stopping thrill ride Monmouth took everyone on last season only amounted to a 6-6 record. But if a flood of defensive reinforcements from the portal can stabilize the defensive side of the ball, the Hawks have the look of a championship contender in the CAA.
'Especially in today's day-and-age of college football, it doesn't happen very often. It speaks volumes about this place and the guys in that locker room,' said grad student Derek Robertson, who led all FCS quarterbacks with 3,937 passing yards, along with 31 TDs and just six interceptions.
Advertisement
'Ultimately, the decisions came down to everyone wanting a chance to win a championship, and that is what our goal is.'
That familiarity within the group – the Hawks rolled up 690 yards in a 55-47 win over No. 16 Stony Brook in the season finale - could be a huge advantage, with receivers TJ Speight, Josh Derry, Tra Neal, Gavin Nelson and Maxwell Janes combining for 3,259 receiving yards and 25 TDs, while running back Rodney Nelson flashed his big-play potential as a freshman.
'I think there's a high level of anticipation for what this group can accomplish,' head coach Kevin Callahan said.
'How much can the defense develop. We had a lot of shootouts last year and some we won, some we didn't. If we can maintain what we did on offense, and then ratchet up the defense, you've got to feel pretty good about it.'
Big question mark
That was the backdrop as the Hawks opened spring practice this week at Kessler Stadium, seeking to take full advantage of an offense that's been among the nation's most productive since 2019.
Advertisement
In the second season under defensive coordinator Lewis Walker, any resurgence will have to start with a core of young returnees. after losing six of their top 10 tackles off a unit that finished 14th in yards allowed in the 16-team CAA. Walker also remade the defensive staff during the offseason, adding Codey Cole as the defensive line coach and Louis DiRienzo Jr. as linebackers coach, while former Hawk Kamau Dumas will be in charge of the defensive backs.
The defensive backfield should be a strength, led by senior captain Justin Bennin, who made 55 tackles and picked off two passes. Deuce Lee, a junior safety, is the top returner with 70 tackles, leading a defensive backfield that includes cornerback Israel Clark-White, who had 37 tackles last season as a redshirt freshman.
The offseason focus has revolved around rebuilding the linebacking corps, with the departure of leading tackler Ryan Moran, who played five seasons, and Sam Korpoi and Damir McCrary, both in the transfer portal. The four newcomers join returnee Charlie Sasso, who won't practice this spring to rest a problematic knee.
Defensive tackle Isaiah Rogers (6-2, 300), a third team All-CAA selection, and senior end Miles Mitchell (6-4, 250), who had 30 tackles and 2.5 sacks, return up front, but this looks like an area the Hawks still need to address.
Advertisement
Here's a look at the transfer portal pickups, with Callahan indicating more could be coming:
Inumidun Ayo-Durojaiye (6-0, 205), a linebacker from Yale, ranked second on the team with 58 tackles and 3.5 sacks in 10 games, and had nine tackles, an interception and a forced fumble against Princeton.
Brady Hock (6-1, 220), a linebacker from Colgate, made 60 tackles, including five for loss.
Zack Ricci, a defensive back from Wagner, led the NEC in interceptions with four, and has two years of eligibility remaining.
Ryan Russo (6-2, 230) is a linebacker with two years of eligibility remaining after a season at Rutgers and two at an Iowa JUCO.
Geovanny Fabian (6-1, 175), a defensive back from Delaware State, made 29 tackles last season.
Spencer Kishbaugh (6-3, 200) played 15 games over two seasons as a linebacker for Coastal Carolina.
Monmouth has two players moving up from Division 2, including defensive back Elliot Porter, who had 82 tackles in 20 games at Pace, and defensive lineman Josiah Graham from Emory & Henry.
This article originally appeared on Asbury Park Press: Monmouth football: High-flying offense has expectations soaring

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


NBC Sports
an hour ago
- NBC Sports
NHL is expanding use of Hawk-Eye measuring and tracking. It may eventually solve some on-ice issues
Commissioner Gary Bettman at the NHL general managers meeting this spring had a clear answer for when the league might be able to use tracking technology to determine a variety of things with certainty, from high-sticking to whether a puck fully crossed the goal line. 'When we're certain that it works,' Bettman said at the time. 'We will test it and re-test it, but we haven't hesitated to spend the money or the time on technology to improve the game.' The NHL is taking another step in that innovation with the expansion of the use of Hawk-Eye measuring and tracking technology as part of a new technology partnership with Sony. The same technology that has become omnipresent in tennis to determine whether the ball is in or out has evolved to the point that it could in help hockey officials and the league's situation room make more precise calls for close plays on the ice. 'We're closer — we keep getting closer,' NHL executive VP of business development and innovation David Lehanski said. 'It's going to be a solution that includes multiple inputs and different types of technology. ... Likely it will be a combination of active tracking in the puck, in the players, the jerseys — wherever it might be — optical cameras and maybe some other type of technology that all need to get stitched together.' The league has used Sony's Hawk-Eye technology for the past decade as part of Synchronized Multi-Angle Replay Technology (SMART) services in every team's arena to make replay reviews and coach's challenges faster and more accurate. It also helps organizations keep track of player health and safety. The technology has improved to the point where cameras capture 29 skeletal points on each player and three more on sticks. 'What that enables us to do is to have an incredibly high-fidelity, low-latency view of the athletes' movements in real time,' Hawk-Eye Innovations CEO Rufus Hack said. 'The NHL have a real clear vision around what they're going to do with this, but obviously it's still very much in the early stages of what that could look like for them.' Lehanski said a mix of various tech elements could help on the ice with everything from penalties to positioning on the ice. Off the ice, beyond animated telecasts and visualizations that will continue, the league is hoping Sony cameras can get the home viewing experience closer to in-arena excitement. '(It's about trying to) bring that game experience into everyone's homes,' Sony president of imaging products and solutions in the Americas Theresa Alesso said. 'As the cameras get better and smaller and lighter, get those angles to the game into someone's living room is really important.'


San Francisco Chronicle
6 hours ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
NHL is expanding use of Hawk-Eye measuring and tracking. It may eventually solve some on-ice issues
Commissioner Gary Bettman at the NHL general managers meeting this spring had a clear answer for when the league might be able to use tracking technology to determine a variety of things with certainty, from high-sticking to whether a puck fully crossed the goal line. "When we're certain that it works," Bettman said at the time. 'We will test it and re-test it, but we haven't hesitated to spend the money or the time on technology to improve the game.' The NHL is taking another step in that innovation with the expansion of the use of Hawk-Eye measuring and tracking techology as part of a new techology partnership with Sony announced Wednesday, hours before the start of the Stanley Cup Final. The same technology that has become omnipresent in tennis to determine whether the ball is in or out has evolved to the point that it could in help hockey officials and the league's situation room make more precise calls for close plays on the ice. 'We're closer — we keep getting closer," NHL executive VP of business development and innovation David Lehanski said. 'It's going to be a solution that includes multiple inputs and different types of technology. ... Likely it will be a combination of active tracking in the puck, in the players, the jerseys — wherever it might be — optical cameras and maybe some other type of technology that all need to get stitched together.' The league has used Sony's Hawk-Eye technology for the past decade as part of Synchronized Multi-Angle Replay Technology (SMART) services in every team's arena to make replay reviews and coach's challenges faster and more accurate. It also helps organizations keep track of player health and safety. The technology has improved to the point where cameras capture 29 skeletal points on each player and three more on sticks. 'What that enables us to do is to have an incredibly high-fidelity, low-latency view of the athletes' movements in real time,' Hawk-Eye Innovations CEO Rufus Hack said. 'The NHL have a real clear vision around what they're going to do with this, but obviously it's still very much in the early stages of what that could look like for them.' Lehanski said a mix of various tech elements could help on the ice with everything from penalties to positioning on the ice. Off the ice, beyond animated telecasts and visualizations that will continue, the league is hoping Sony cameras can get the home viewing experience closer to in-arena excitement. '(It's about trying to) bring that game experience into everyone's homes,' Sony president of imaging products and solutions in the Americas Theresa Alesso said. 'As the cameras get better and smaller and lighter, get those angles to the game into someone's living room is really important.' ___
Yahoo
6 hours ago
- Yahoo
NHL Mulls Call Automation Options Via Hawk-Eye Tech Expansion
The NHL will expand the use of Sony's skeletal tracking Hawk-Eye technology under a multiyear tie-up that could impact how hockey games are officiated and the way they are viewed at home. The deal makes Sony an official NHL technology partner, with connections ranging from the use of Sony cameras to the company's Beyond Sports team helping the league recreate hockey games as animated visualizations in real time. Advertisement More from 'When you look at the total partnership, the way we set it up, obviously it runs across Sony,' said David Lehanski, NHL executive vice president of business development and innovation. 'So it canvases across their whole company in a way that's going to affect everyone in our community.' The NHL has used Sony technology for replay reviews specifically since 2015. 'The NHL were the first within the U.S. to do video review, and now that is used almost universally across global sports,' Hawk-Eye, Pulselive and Beyond Sports CEO Rufus Hack said. 'We now have 1,500 people who work for our business globally, and actually having them delivering at a world-class level—and understanding what the pressure is of delivering some of these solutions in the heat of battle—is actually almost one of the most important things that we've learned from the NHL and early adopters in cricket and tennis that we've been able to port into other sports.' Advertisement The NFL will use Hawk-Eye for evaluating line-to-gain decisions starting this season, while European soccer leagues have leveraged similar tools for automated offsides and goal reviews. All 32 NHL arenas now have 60-frames-per-second optical tracking setups that follow 29 points on each player and three points on each stick. Lehanski said the league is evaluating the potential use of tracking data to quickly weigh in on offsides infractions and goals, though the speed and physicality of hockey present unique challenges. The same tracking data that would be used to assist those calls is already being deployed by teams as a player evaluation tool. Increasingly, it's changing the way fans watch sports, too. Early player tracking data has been used for kid-friendly animated broadcasts. With the added precision of limb and stick data, analysts such as P.K. Subban now don VR headsets to put themselves on virtual ice, with 360-degree views of the action. Advertisement Going forward, the NHL would like to give fans a similar opportunity. Digital recreations could live within web-based or video game environments that allow consumers to manipulate the perspective and even attempt to recreate on-ice feats. To do so, the league could tap additional Sony arms, such as its PlayStation platform, which includes VR functionality. Beyond Sports has already helped the NHL deliver feeds in Roblox, drawing more than one million unique visitors in the first month of that activation back in 2023. 'We think at Sony, we've got a really unique mix of capabilities,' Hack said. 'We want to bring in the best of PlayStation, the best of Sony Music, Sony Pictures … so we can really help take the sports industry to a new level.' Best of Sign up for Sportico's Newsletter. For the latest news, follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.