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You are here: Home / Archives for Bridgewater State University Football

Mike Buchanan finds a home on the gridiron

December 19, 2019 By Nate Rollins, Express Sports Correspondent

Mike Buchanan makes a block vs. Hingham. / Photo by: Sue Moss

Mike Buchanan credits football with helping shape the person he is today.


Without football, Mike Buchanan isn’t sure where or what he’d be.

When he looks down on the scale, he sees 278 pounds, but he knows, that could easily be a lot more.

“I’m big now, but without that motivation from football, I’d be way bigger,” Buchanan said. “Football has made me a better person.”

A senior starting left tackle at Whitman-Hanson Regional High, Buchanan recently committed to play at the next level for Bridgewater State University.

Football’s always been Buchanan’s passion and his weight has always been his biggest challenge. The two have crossed paths often.

In third grade, he was 40 pounds over the weight limit to make the Hanson Youth Football mites team. So he took the field with players who were two to three years older than him as a member of the peewees, instead.

“It was tough,” Buchanan said. “I almost quit after the first practice because I was playing with fifth and sixth graders.”

But his coach took him aside after that first day.

“He talked me into keep playing,” Buchanan said. “He knew I loved the game, I always have.”

From that point on, Buchanan had a new outlook on his playing career — no matter how tough the road would get.

“I was like, ‘If I’m going to stick with it now, I’m going to stick with it forever,’” he recalled.

That would be challenged again a few years later, when in seventh grade, he found himself 40 pounds over the peewees’ weight limit. So, he ended up suiting up for Weymouth Youth Football, where the teams were decided by grade not weight.

“It made me kind of nervous playing there,” Buchanan said. “You’re 12, 13 years old, going to a totally different town with totally different people. You’ve never talked to these people in your life.”

Buchanan credits his youth career for helping him morph into the player he is today.

“The coaches taught me so much,” he said. “That team in Weymouth is when I realized that football is just awesome because there were so many guys and we were so good.”

This past season, Buchanan helped spearhead a Panthers’ rushing attack that averaged 141 yards per game.

“Every time we needed a play, we went behind Mike,” said W-H football head coach Mike Driscoll. “He was the leader of our offensive line.”

Buchanan had never started a varsity game coming into the fall but put together an “amazing” offseason, according to Driscoll.

“He earned that spot,” Driscoll said. “He went in at left tackle the first practice and never left. He came into this season, determined to be the leader, determined to work hard every practice, there was never a practice where Mike didn’t want to be there.”

Buchanan said he’s going to build up his speed and strength before he heads to the collegiate level next fall.

“I’m already one of the biggest guys on the team,” he said. “I can’t be one of the weakest or slowest. I plan on getting there this year.”

Filed Under: Sports Tagged With: 2019-20 Coverage, Bridgewater State University, Bridgewater State University Football, College Commitment, Feature/Profile, Mike Buchanan, Mike Driscoll, Sports

A workman-like mentality: Whitman’s Kelly ready for sophomore season on Bridgewater State University football

September 5, 2019 By Nate Rollins, Express Sports Correspondent

After an offseason of hard work, Jack Kelly is ready for his sophomore season on the gridiron at Bridgewater State University.


For Whitman’s Jack Kelly, there’s only one word to describe his offseason — intense.

With a few aspirations in mind entering his sophomore campaign on the Bridgewater State University football team, it’s been a nonstop grind since walking off the field last fall. 

“My goal for myself, personally as a player, is to be on the field contributing to help my team win,” Kelly said. “My goal for our team, as a unit, would definitely be to win the MASCAC (Massachusetts State Collegiate Athletic Conference) and advance to the NCAA (National Collegiate Athletic Association) [Playoff]. Both goals can be achieved through hard work and dedication.”

And Kelly’s put in the hard work.

“I was working out basically every day,” he explained. “I was lifting six times a week, running three times a week and I also worked out at South Shore Boxing Club three to four times a week to help with my conditioning and hand speed. I wanted to make sure that I got as strong as I have ever been and got into the best shape I have ever been in.”

Bridgewater State football head coach Joe Verria, who also serves as the defense coordinator, noticed Kelly’s commitment. 

“Jack has definitely gotten bigger and faster since last year,” Verria said. “Unfortunately, Jack got hurt in camp and has missed a week of camp. I look forward to him returning.”

This offseason was about more than just growing physically, though. The Whitman-Hanson Regional High alum returned to his old stomping grounds to coach the Panthers’ passing league team to a title this summer. Kelly said it helped him grow as a player.

“Coach [Mike] Driscoll has known that I wanted to get into coaching and saw this as the perfect opportunity to get my feet wet,” Kelly said. “It was my first time being able to call plays for a team and I felt comfortable from the beginning and really enjoyed it. I was able to get a better understanding of the game in general. I was able to dissect offensive and defensive play calls and responsibilities.”

Kelly said the biggest difference going into his second campaign has been the heightened expectations. Last season, he came into camp as a linebacker before switching to defensive end. So, now with a whole fall under his belt to observe the guys in front of him, he’s ready to step in.

“[Watching them] has prepared me to help contribute on the field this year,” Kelly said. “This year, after having a successful offseason, which got me bigger faster and stronger, I am now a returner and expecting to be able to make plays I couldn’t have made before.”

Bridgewater State opens its season at home on Saturday, Sept. 7 at 12 p.m. against Morrisville State.

“I want to be able to say that I worked as hard as possible to improve my game and that I played every single down this year like it is my last,” Kelly said.

Filed Under: Sports Tagged With: Bridgewater State University Football, College Check In, Feature/Profile, Jack Kelly, Joe Verria, Sports, Whitman-Hanson Regional High, Whitman-Hanson Regional High Football

Jack Kelly agrees to play for Bridgewater State

February 22, 2018 By Nate Rollins, Express Sports Correspondent

Jack Kelly runs down field in the Panthers’ game against Abington on Thanksgiving. / Photo by: Sue Moss

Jack Kelly will play football at Bridgewater State University next season.


Whitman-Hanson Regional High senior Jack Kelly has committed to play football at Bridgewater State University.

“Bridgewater State is a great school for education,” Kelly explained. “My father attended there, and I am going to be a physical education major.

“The coaches who recruited me were in constant communication with me all throughout the season, and immediately made me feel a part of the program. The coaches stressed academics just as much as they did football. College football is a big deal, but they are also preparing us for our careers and to be successful in life.”

Kelly said he began being recruited by the Bridgewater State coaching staff after the New England Elite Football Clinic at Bentley University in July.

“After meeting them at the camp, the coaches stayed in constant communication through email, text and phone calls throughout the season,” Kelly said. “After the coaches had me up for two games in the fall, that solidified that Bridgewater [State] was the perfect fit for me.”

The 6-foot-1, 205-pound Kelly played two years for the Panthers, having moved to Whitman his junior year from Brockton, where he played his freshman and sophomore campaigns as a Boxer.

This past season, Kelly started at linebacker for the Panthers and recorded 47 tackles, seven for loss, and broke up three passes.

W-H football head coach Mike Driscoll lauded Kelly’s worth ethic.

“Jack was a very, very hard worker,” Driscoll said. “He really attacked the weight room hard last offseason to get stronger and that’s why we moved him to linebacker, because he played some defensive back for us, but he worked so hard in the weight room and got so strong that we knew we had a position for him and he earned it.”

Kelly said his most memorable tilt as a Panthers was Oct. 6 when W-H defeated Plymouth North, 28-24, in the last minute.

“They were a big, physical team, and as a defense we rose to the occasion and got many hard-fought stops in the second half, which allowed us to pull out a huge win late in the game,” Kelly said.

Driscoll said Bridgewater State is landing a hard-working kid, who is going to give it 100 percent every day in Kelly.

“He’s a smart kid, he’s a good kid,” Driscoll said. “They’re getting a well-rounded individual.”

Kelly said the two main facets of being successful at football he learned as a Panther were hard work and preparation.

“At Whitman-Hanson, the entire program bought into offseason workouts,” he said. Not only did it make us bigger, faster and stronger for the 2017 season, but it really brought us together and united us as a team. For me, as a linebacker on defense, coach [Keith] Sweeney had us thoroughly prepared week in and week out with film work and attention to detail every day at practice.”

Bridgewater State, which competes in the Massachusetts State Collegiate Athletic Conference of NCAA Division III, finished 2-8 last season.

“College football will be a big adjustment, going from playing against boys to playing against men,” Kelly said. “However, having played for many great coaches along the way, I will be ready for the next change in my football career.”

Filed Under: Sports Tagged With: 2017-18 Coverage, Bridgewater State University, Bridgewater State University Football, College Commitment, Jack Kelly, Mike Driscoll, Sports, Whitman-Hanson Regional High, Whitman-Hanson Regional High Football

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