Quincy Patriot Ledger: "South Shore Players Bring Massachusetts Maritime Football Team To Full Steam"
South Shore players bring Mass. Maritime football team to full steam
September 21, 2013
By Mike Loftus, The Patriot Ledger
It’s one of the great challenges of moving away to college – the moment you enter a room and don’t know a soul.
Incoming members of the Mass. Maritime Academy football may have faced that uncertainty in dorm and classrooms when they reached the Buzzards Bay campus in the fall of 2010, but not so much in the locker room. There, many new Buccaneers saw plenty of players they already knew – guys they’d played with or against in high school, or guys they’d heard about while playing on the South Shore.
“I thought it was great,” said Mike Stanton, the prolific senior quarterback who once played at North Quincy High School. “It made it easier to get in the swing of things. I saw some familiar faces and that made it easier to make friends.”
That familiarity has paid off. Mass. Maritime has posted winning records in each of the past three seasons – the first time that’s happened since 1998 through 2000 – and developed one of NCAA Div. 3’s most powerful offenses. With South Shore-bred stars like Stanton, receiver Keith Caruso (Hingham) and former Plymouth South teammates Stefan Gustafson (running back) and John Bochman (offensive line) leading the attack, the Bucs ranked sixth nationally in total yardage last season (520.7 yards per game), were No. 1 in first downs per game (27.67), and scored 40 points or more on four occasions.
“We haven’t changed the offense much since we’ve been here,” said Bochman, a senior captain. “It’s been because of the development of the players together and the way the senior class has come together like a tight-knit family. We all came out and did our best each week last year, and that was how the season ended up.”
Head coach Jeremy Cameron has asked some players to make adjustments along the way. Bochman, for instance, sometimes plays center and sometimes plays guard, while Gustafson – also a senior captain – was a defensive back for the first two years of his college career, while awaiting an opening in the offensive backfield.
Then there’s Stanton, the 6-foot-5, 220-pounder the school is pushing as a candidate for the Gagliardi Trophy, awarded annually since 1993 to the top player in NCAA Div. 3. He didn’t throw the ball much in North Quincy’s halfback-oriented offense, but was asked to do it once he became Mass. Maritime’s starter midway through his freshman season.