There has been criticism aimed at coach Glenn Caruso and his St. Thomas juggernaut for a number of outlandish beatings administered to football teams from the MIAC's second division in recent years.
A record number of complaints on this subject were fielded in the St. Thomas athletic department earlier this month after the 97-0 victory over St. Olaf that concluded another unbeaten run through the MIAC schedule for the Tommies.
The second round of the NCAA Division III national tournament is not a reasonable place for pleas of mercy, even though it appeared early on a gorgeous Saturday afternoon in St. Paul that the Tommies were on the way to another landslide victory.
The opponent was Berry College, a liberal arts school that sits on the high ground of northwest Georgia. There are 2,200 undergraduates on a campus that covers more land — 27,000 acres — than any college in the world. And it was only six years ago that Berry hired coach Tony Kunczewski to put together a football program that would start play in 2013.
Berry had gone from winless to unbeaten in five seasons, and came into Saturday with some gaudy statistics. Those stats were looking a bit suspicious in the game's first 18 minutes, as Berry totaled 25 yards and no first downs and was trailing the Tommies 22-0.
Fifty or 60 to nothing seemed possible.
It wasn't. The Berry defense that was rated No. 5 in the country started to do some hard hitting against the bigger, more powerful Tommies. The visitors switched quarterbacks and Tate Adcock was able to hit a couple of big passes.
The tournament matchup turned competitive and the Tommies wound up grateful for a 29-13 victory. That's because they fumbled five times (losing two) and also had an ill-advised throw for an interception by quarterback Jacques Perra.