Penn State football photo archive: Penn State vs. Syracuse in the Big Ten era

Penn State football photo archive: Penn State goes 3-0 in most recent meetings with Syracuse

One of Penn State’s oldest rivals outside of the Pitt Panthers is Syracuse. Syracuse is Penn State’s second-most played opponent with 71 all-time meetings between the two programs, with Penn State leading the all-time series 43-23-5. The only opponent Penn State has faced more has been the Pitt Panthers, with 93 all-time meetings.

By comparison, Penn State’s most-played Big Ten opponent is Maryland, with 45 meetings, and the most games played against a more historic Big Ten team is 36 against Ohio State (35 against Michigan State).

But when Penn State and Syracuse went their separate ways in conference affiliations in the early 1990s, as is typically the case, what used to be an annual matchup was put on the shelf for nearly three decades before the two schools met on the field again in 2008. It was a rough time for the series to be revived for the Orange, as the struggling Syracuse program was blown out at home by [autotag]Daryll Clark[/autotag] and the No. 17 Nittany Lions, 55-13. Penn State was victorious once more in the following season in Beaver Stadium for the second game in the home-and-home series, although by a much closer margin of 28-7. That game is perhaps most well known for featuring former Duke basketball standout Greg Paulus as Syracuse’s starting quarterback. Penn State linebacker [autotag]Sean Lee[/autotag] had three tackles for a loss, including one sack of the former Duke basketball star turned Syracuse quarterback.

After the brief home-and-home arrangement, it would be four more seasons until the two met again, this time opening the 2013 season in MetLife Stadium on a neutral field. Penn State responded to a good battle from the Orange and came up with big plays to come through for a 23-17 win highlighted by a 51-yard pass from [autotag]Christian Hackenberg[/autotag] to [autotag]Allen Robinson[/autotag] early in the second half and a 54-yard pass from Hackenberg to [autotag]Geno Lewis[/autotag] to extend Penn State’s lead to 23-10 early in the fourth quarter.

Here is a look back at these three games marking the only meetings between the schools since each joined a conference in the early 1990s.

Penn State Bowl History: Sean Lee’s redemption and Tony Hunt runs wild on Tennessee in 2007 Outback Bowl

Penn State bowl history: Sean Lee’s defining moment and Tony Hunt running wild in the 2007 Outback Bowl

A season removed from a run to a Big Ten championship, Penn State made a return trip to the Outback Bowl at the end of the 2006 season. And up against a Tennessee team that was ranked and believed to be the favorite, it was the Penn State fundamentals of a strong defense and dominant running game that led the Nittany Lions to pulling away for a double-digit victory against the favored Vols.

Head coach Joe Paterno watched the game from the press box as he was recovering from a broken leg suffered in a sideline collision earlier in the season.

Heading into the game, the popular suggestion was that Tennessee had better athleticism across its roster, and that would lift the Vols to a victory over Penn State. But Tony Hunt proved that sometimes it just pays to be bigger and stronger on the ground. Hunt rushed for 158 yards on 31 rushing attempts to pave the path to a 20-10 victory.

But this Penn State team was still very much reliant on its defensive successes. Against the Vols, Penn State forced three turnovers and Tennessee was held to a season-low 10 points in the game. After the game, Tennessee head coach Philip Fulmer noted Penn State played the exact kind of style you should expect against a team coached by Paterno.

“You play against Joe Paterno’s football teams, they’re going to be tough, they’re going to disciplined, they’re going to be able to run the football,” Fulmer said. “I knew that, having been there before. I learned some great lessons from him the last time. If we take care of the football better, at least it’s a more interesting game there at the end.”

For three quarters, it was a tight contest between the Nittany Lions and Vols. Tennessee opened the scoring with a field goal in the first quarter, and Kevin Kelly responded early in the second quarter to tie the game at 3-3-. Penn State took a 10-3 lead later in the second quarter when Anthony Morelli completed a short touchdown pass to tight end Andrew Quarless to cap a 92-yard drive.

Penn State’s lead did not make it to halftime, however. Out-muscling future NFL Pro Bowl linebacker Sean Lee, LaMarcus Coker sprung loose for a 42-yard touchdown run with a little over a minute before halftime.

After a scoreless third quarter, Tennessee was marching into position for a go-ahead score in the fourth quarter, but Tony Davis returned a Tennessee fumble, which was forced by Lee, 88 yards for a defensive touchdown to put the Nittany Lions in front for good. Kelly would later add a field goal to extend Penn State’s lead to 20-10 to seal the deal against the SEC opponent.

“I didn’t want to let our seniors down, and I felt like I was letting the whole team down playing like that,” Lee said after the game, reflecting on his forced fumble. “I knew I had to come out in the second half and make a big play. I had to make up for that play.”

With the win, Penn State improved to 3-0 all-time in the Outback Bowl. But their next trip, four years later, would not go as well. But this was Paterno’s 22nd all-time career bowl victory, extending his lead in the all-time bowl coaching victories list.

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Cowboys end offseason with different outlooks than 2020

After a disastrous 2020, the Dallas Cowboys have made changes to ensure that this season is better than the last.

The Dallas Cowboys’ offseason is essentially over, with only a rookie developmental program remaining before players report to training camp in July. After a truncated offseason in Mike McCarthy’s first season, things returned to mostly normal for his second campaign.

McCarthy and his staff never had a chance to fully implement everything cleanly last year because of the coronavirus pandemic. With so much turnover on the staff, an already rough transition was compounded by a lack of in-person tutoring as the whole world went virtual.

A new year brings new hope. This offseason has gone much smoother, which even allowed McCarthy to cancel the final minicamp practice before the giving the team off until training camp.  As it’s a wrap on the organized team practices, let’s look at where the Cowboys stand now, as opposed to where they were when they ended a disappointing 2020 season. Here’s a look at what has changed.

Cowboys News: Jerry talks Pitts ‘infatuation,’ Sean Lee’s future, Dak’s progress

Also, last-minute mock mania, how COVID affected scouting, how history says Dallas will draft, and Jerry’s star-clad helicopter.

Cowboys owner Jerry Jones has famously (over)shared what he thinks of when he’s in bed, what he dreams of at night, and even players he thinks about in the shower. But on Tuesday, he was quick to shoot down a story he is reportedly “infatuated” with Florida tight end Kyle Pitts. Jones was so adamant, in fact, that he may have inadvertently revealed that the team won’t be trading up to draft Pitts on Thursday night, one possibility that some draft pundits had considered.

The team owner also had plenty to say about linebacker Sean Lee, who seems to have a place at the Cowboys table whenever he’s ready. At the same press conference, coach Mike McCarthy updated the media on the status of Dak Prescott in his injury rehab efforts. There’s still plenty of draft-day strategy to dissect as the first round is nearly here; check out Cowboys Wire’s look at what Dallas’s history in the draft has to say about what they’ll do this year. More mocks forecast names to watch during the Cowboys’ ten picks, and explore how scouting during the pandemic could make for a wild and wacky draft. And finally, an inside look at the star-clad helicopter that serves as a state-of-the-art billboard for the Cowboys brand.

Jerry Jones on Sean Lee’s future with Cowboys: ‘It’s just starting’

The veteran linebacker has hung up his cleats, but Lee’s boss hopes to keep him in the Dallas fold and alluded to his future as a coach.

Wearing a suit coat and sitting at a table alongside his boss after announcing his retirement, Sean Lee spoke with the same passion that oozed from his pores for eleven seasons as a Dallas Cowboys linebacker.

“When you pour gasoline on a fire inside of yourself for twenty-five years,” Lee said, “it’s hard to put it out.”

If team owner Jerry Jones has his way, that fire’s not being doused, per se. Just allowed to let smolder temporarily.

Jones, despite a knack for sometimes talking in confusing circles, made it crystal-clear during the Tuesday press conference that there will always be a place for Lee at the Cowboys’ table.

“My dream would be that,” Jones offered, “relative to our organization, this wouldn’t be the last time- at all- that we’re sitting here in some manner together.”

 

Many expect Lee to transition to coaching, and Jones all but painted a picture of a not-too-distant future press conference announcing the two-time Pro Bowler as an addition to the Cowboys staff.

But first, Lee says, there’s a long beach vacation coming. So any decision to strap on a headset instead of a helmet will have to wait a while.

“Well, it’s hard to get off that beach once you’re out there and relaxing. It’s fun,” Lee laughed. “I know right now, I feel so lucky and blessed. So you take a little bit of a breather and you start to assess things. I know my wife likes being out on the beach more than I do, so I’m going to let her take control of that for a while, and we’ll figure out things as we go. I know that being here, I love this organization, I want to be involved. I want to help any way I can. I know that for sure.”

But Lee also acknowledged the heavy toll that coaching in the NFL demands. And until he can commit to that role with everything he has, Lee says it’s better- albeit more painful in the short-term- to step completely away for now.

“I think there’s a period right now where I’m going to miss playing. Dearly. And I think I need to get over that a little bit for a while, take some time with that, and then maybe make a decision on the back end of that.”

Lee admits, though, that as he vacations in Santa Barbara, he may just take a 45-minute cruise down the California coast to Oxnard, where the Cowboys will be holding camp.

“That’s an easy drive,” Lee joked. “I’ll definitely stop in in and say hello.”

Lee will no doubt be welcome. Jones has always saved a spot in the team’s inner circle for many of the franchise’s larger-than-life players, whether it’s as a coach, a brand ambassador, or a business partner.

“One of the great things about sports is that, especially with players, that fleeting time that they’re players doesn’t necessarily make an end to your relationship, your partnership, where you’re going forward with them,” Jones explained. “The facts are that they’re really just puppies when they leave here. They’re really just getting going when they’re not playing football. And it’s just starting.”

For Lee, the hardest part about walking away is walking away now. He expressed his fervent belief that the Cowboys are on the cusp of finally reaching the level he never quite got to experience as a player.

“This team is going in a direction where they’re going to win, and they’re going to win big soon. And that’s the thing that you always worry about. But you’re happy to watch it as you go out, because you know you were part of it in some way.”

Lee was a huge part of it. And he may be a part of it once again in the very near future.

Jones certainly hopes so.

“This is how you build on it,” Jones said of the team’s relationship with one of its all-time greats. “I’m a big believer that the legacy of the Cowboys and certainly, in this case, [Sean]’s story can be a big part of our future.”

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Former Penn State linebacker Sean Lee announces retirement from NFL

Former All-Big Ten linebacker Sean Lee is walking away from football, 11 years after leaving Penn State for the Dallas Cowboys.

Dallas Cowboys linebacker Sean Lee, a former Penn State Nittany Lions standout, has announced his retirement from the NFL. The 11-year veteran released a statement on Monday via the Dallas Cowboys to inform the football world of his decision.

“For 11 years I was privileged to wear the Cowboys star, Lee said in his released statement. “We want to play forever. But today, it’s my time to walk away. To the game of football, it changed my life.”

Lee retires after 11 successful seasons in the NFL, although riddled with injuries from time to time. Lee was a two-time Pro Bowl player in 2015 and 2016. He re-signed with the Cowboys in March 2020 on a one-year deal and was placed on injured reserve last September as he underwent surgery for a sports hernia. Lee did eventually appear in nine games for the Cowboys, in which he started twice.

Lee was a team captain for the Cowboys and was widely regarded as one of the most respected players on the Cowboys roster around the league.

Before heading to the NFL, Lee was continuing the legacy of Penn State linebackers by following in the footsteps of guys like Paul Posluszny and Dan Connor. Lee earned second-team All-Big Ten as a junior and a redshirt senior after taking a medical redshirt in 2008 due to a torn ACL. Despite redshirting, Lee served as an undergraduate assistant coach to stay actively involved in the game. The act more than won the respect of the locker room as he was voted a team captain for the 2008 season and again in 2009.

Lee was named the defensive MVP of the 2007 Alamo Bowl and went on to be a second-round draft pick of the Cowboys in the 2010 NFL Draft.

So, the Cowboys need a linebacker this offseason. Could they end up replacing one former Nittany Lion with another?

Follow Nittany Lions Wire on Twitter and like us on Facebook for continuing Penn State coverage and discussion.

Former Penn State linebacker Sean Lee announces retirement from NFL

Former All-Big Ten linebacker Sean Lee is walking away from football, 11 years after leaving Penn State for the Dallas Cowboys.

Dallas Cowboys linebacker Sean Lee, a former Penn State Nittany Lions standout, has announced his retirement from the NFL. The 11-year veteran released a statement on Monday via the Dallas Cowboys to inform the football world of his decision.

“For 11 years I was privileged to wear the Cowboys star, Lee said in his released statement. “We want to play forever. But today, it’s my time to walk away. To the game of football, it changed my life.”

Lee retires after 11 successful seasons in the NFL, although riddled with injuries from time to time. Lee was a two-time Pro Bowl player in 2015 and 2016. He re-signed with the Cowboys in March 2020 on a one-year deal and was placed on injured reserve last September as he underwent surgery for a sports hernia. Lee did eventually appear in nine games for the Cowboys, in which he started twice.

Lee was a team captain for the Cowboys and was widely regarded as one of the most respected players on the Cowboys roster around the league.

Before heading to the NFL, Lee was continuing the legacy of Penn State linebackers by following in the footsteps of guys like Paul Posluszny and Dan Connor. Lee earned second-team All-Big Ten as a junior and a redshirt senior after taking a medical redshirt in 2008 due to a torn ACL. Despite redshirting, Lee served as an undergraduate assistant coach to stay actively involved in the game. The act more than won the respect of the locker room as he was voted a team captain for the 2008 season and again in 2009.

Lee was named the defensive MVP of the 2007 Alamo Bowl and went on to be a second-round draft pick of the Cowboys in the 2010 NFL Draft.

So, the Cowboys need a linebacker this offseason. Could they end up replacing one former Nittany Lion with another?

Follow Nittany Lions Wire on Twitter and like us on Facebook for continuing Penn State coverage and discussion.

Cowboys’ Sean Lee, two-time Pro Bowler, retires after 11 seasons

Sean Lee calls it quits, walks away from football after 11 seasons.

The Dallas Cowboys have said goodbye to several of their stalwarts over the last two offseasons. After a brief hiatus, tight end Jason Witten returned for the 2019 season and then moved on in free agency. Earlier this offseason, the club and long-time long snapper L.P. Ladouceur went their separate ways. Those two combined for 32 seasons in a Cowboys uniform.

Their departure led to linebacker Sean Lee as the potentially longest-tenured player in Dallas, but alas, his career has reached its conclusion. After 11 years in the league and two Pro Bowls the 2016 First-Team All Pro has decided to call it quits.

Lee finished with 802 career combined tackles, 14 career interceptions (plus one in the 2019 playoffs), 4 fumble recoveries, two forced fumbles and 1.5 career sacks. He was known as one of the smartest defensive players of his generation, sometimes outsmarting his own defensive coaches and was an asset whenever he was on the field or the sideline.

Unfortunately Lee’s legacy will be about exactly how much time he was sidelined as injuries forced him to miss numerous games throughout his career. His 2014 season was wiped out after an ACL tear in training camp, but even without that missing season, lower body injuries derailed almost every season.

Drafted in the second round in 2010 due to a collegiate knee injury at Penn State, the first-round worthy talent would miss just three games over his first two seasons. In 2012 he would play just 6 games and then just 11 the following year before missing all of 2014.

In back-to-back Pro Bowl years he’d miss just three games between 2015 and 2016, showing the world how dynamic a player he was when healthy. He combined for 273 tackles over those seasons and in 2016 had an Approximate Value (a metric that quantifies performance across football eras) of 19, ranking fourth-best according to Pro Football Reference.

The injuries returned however and he’d see action in parts of just 17 games over the next few seasons. Relegated to a backup role after the drafting of Leighton Vander Esch in 2018’s first round, Lee was actually able to come in when injuries hit elsewhere and he played all 16 games in a season for the first time ever in 2019, starting 13 contests.

2020 saw him playing on a one-year, $4.5 million deal but only able to suit up for 9 contests.

Much speculation has been made on whether or not Lee would pursue a career in coaching, and while that has not been answered, it would seem to be an easy transition for him. In team documentaries and behind-the-scene clips from NFL Films, Lee is routinely coaching his fellow linebackers and has been noted as corrected scheme issues in play calls made by his coaches.

Lee has shown the physical ability to have had one of the league’s best careers at the position, but the brutality of the sport did him no favors in this regard.

The Cowboys signed former Atlanta Falcons safety Keanu Neal to play linebacker this past offseason. Dallas still has holes to fill at the position as Joe Thomas signed elsewhere this offseason and special teamer Justin March remains unsigned. Behind Vander Esch, Jaylon Smith and Neal, Dallas also has UDFA talents Francis Bernard and Luke Gifford, as well as Azur Kamara on the roster.

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ICYMI: Cowboys fire some staff in season aftermath, search for path to glory

The latest Dallas Cowboys news and notes: Nolan and Tomsula were fired, potential replacements are already being interviewed, and more.

The Dallas Cowboys season came to an abrupt end last Sunday, and now it is time to look forward to the offseason. Dak Prescott is recovering well from his injury. Amari Cooper had a “clean-up” procedure on his injured ankle, but should definitely be good-to-go for 2021.

Dallas waited no time after the season to make the coaching changes that the front office deemed necessary. This week, the Cowboys fired defensive coordinator Mike Nolan, as well as defensive line coach Jim Tomsula. Both coaches spent just a year in Dallas, and potential replacements are already set to be interviewed.

The Cowboys have so many decisions to make regarding free agents, it is impossible to tell which direction the front office will head with the personnel. There may be some positions that are actually worse off than they seem today for Dallas, including left tackle should Tyron Smith’s health continue to be a problem. Plus, what really means the most to Jerry Jones, building his brand, or winning football games?

Cowboys LB Sean Lee to weigh future: ‘I’ve been so, so lucky’

The 34-year-old was reflective after Sunday’s season-ending loss, but he’s not ready to make a decision about continuing his playing career.

Sometimes it’s what is said. Sometimes it’s what is not said. Sometimes it’s how a question is answered. Sometimes it’s what’s offered when there’s no question at all.

The interviews that players do with reporters in the moments following a game can be a tricky business. Win or lose, there’s recapping what just happened on the field, but there’s also plenty worth talking about that’s part of the bigger picture. The things that make up a stretch of games. The things that make up a season. The things that make up a career.

And whether or not it’s over.

Linebacker Sean Lee wanted to talk about the game on Sunday. He dissected the Cowboys’ 23-19 season-ending loss to the Giants in the analytical way that has made Lee a team leader over his ten seasons on the field. He talked about the confusion over Wayne Gallman’s controversial fumble in the final two minutes. He talked about the defense’s slow start in allowing a New York touchdown on the game’s opening drive. He talked about how the officiating seemed lopsided early. He praised his teammates for their fight and called the snuffing of the team’s slim playoff chances “heartbreaking.”

Lee was methodical and measured in his answers, as he typically is. His is a mind that thinks in Xs and Os, recalling the details of the in-game situations with an exacting clarity that seemingly makes him a prime candidate for a coaching position whenever he decides to hang up his cleats.

So of course, the 34-year-old was also asked if that decision- to retire as a player- is forthcoming this offseason.

“I love this team. I love this organization. I love playing the game,” Lee told media members after Sunday’s loss. “As you get older, it is what it is: you get older and you question things. I still think I have a lot to give, but at the same point, you acknowledge as you get older, physically, things change. I’ll take time, I’ll talk to the family and really think it through. I’ve been so lucky to be part of this. I love all my teammates. To be able to play has been a complete dream. And to give it up is not something that’s easy. You want to win a Super Bowl. You love playing, you love practicing day in and day out. It’s a harder decision than I thought it would be. So we’ll see. We’ll see what happens, and I’ll take some time. But I’ve been so, so lucky and so blessed.”

That’s a lot of reflection on the topic all balled up in one answer. But that’s to be expected; it’s not the first time Lee has wrestled with walking away. The two-time Pro Bowler seriously contemplated retiring after the 2018 season, when a loss in the divisional round ended the Cowboys’ playoff run. He said then that he wanted to talk with his family before deciding whether to come back for 2019.

Lee did return, and even approached the front office with a plan for a restructured deal and pay cut to stay with the team in a reduced role supporting younger linebackers Jaylon Smith and Leighton Vander Esch.

For the former second-round draft pick who obsessively studies game film, it’s that fresh look from a different vantage point that helps him come up with a plan of attack. And that’s true whether he’s reading an opposing quarterback or determining the next step of his football journey.

“I’ve gotten great advice. You can’t make decisions in-season or right after the season. You need the perspective of getting away from it further. And you think about yourself physically, you think about yourself mentally. And then role-wise, can you still help the team? Can you go out on the field and play a role where you know that you can make sure that you’re helping the team win? So you have to check all those boxes and know it 100% before you make a commitment to come back. So that’ll be the process I go through. Can I help us? Physically, can I continue to do this? Mentally, am I ready? You really look deep into those before make a commitment.”

Lee technically hit free agency in March of 2020, but was resigned by the Cowboys to a one-year deal within days, just as the COVID-19 crisis gripped the country. He began the season on injured reserve, sidelined by a sports hernia that required surgery to repair. By the time he returned to action, quarterback Dak Prescott had been lost and Dallas was in freefall with a 2-5 record under first-year coach Mike McCarthy. A month later, the team’s strength and conditioning coordinator Markus Paul passed away suddenly.

Lee played just the last nine games of the Cowboys’ season and was in on just 20 tackles, a career low. But he played an integral relief role, especially with Vander Esch’s year being cut short due to injury. He recorded six tackles against New York on Sunday, a season high.

The All-Pro has dealt with numerous injuries of his own over his playing career, missing 42 games over 11 years. He was shelved for all of 2014; he’s played a 16-game season just once. Yet Lee called 2020 the most challenging he’s ever faced.

“I would say 100%,” he confirmed. “As a team, dealing with what we dealt with and how hard we fought. And then me personally, dealing with the surgery in-season. But what I’m proud of is how hard we fought down the stretch. Me personally, being able to battle back from surgery, being able to help us. And then the team, the guys who love being with each other, practicing every day the right way. No matter what situation was thrown our way, guys were able to rally and stay positive and really try to play the right way and gave us a shot to get into this thing. And we didn’t get there, but we have the right type of guys, we have the right type of attitude. And I really believe we’re on our way to things greater.”

Go back and read that again. Lee sounds just like a coach.

It’s widely believed that there will be a place on the Cowboys coaching staff for Lee if and when he wants it. McCarthy says he has talked with the linebacker about that very possibility. Lee wasn’t ready after the Giants loss- a game for which he was named a team captain- to make any pronouncements about his next move; he’ll take the time to analyze the situation, of course.

But as he stepped away from the mic at the end of Sunday’s postgame interview, the player nicknamed The General seemed to have something more substantial on his mind than just the throwaway acknowledgment that the Q-and-A was over.

“I appreciate you guys very much,” Lee said.

And then he came back to the mic. Not quite ready to leave. With just a little bit more to give before he went.

“Very much. Very, very much.”

Was that a final goodbye? Or just the conscious realization that it might be?

Sometimes it’s what is said. Sometimes it’s how it’s said. Sometimes it’s what’s offered when there’s no question at all.

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