OCR Text |
Show 20 | MyWeberMedia.com | April 18, 2019 The Signpost Archives Weber State fell to Maine in the FCS on national television Continued from page 19 and when I got there, it didn’t seem like there was a family aspect to the team,” Harry said. “Coach Hill instilled that aspect into the team along with holding people responsible, getting everyone to buy into the team and hiring great coaches.” Harry’s final career game at WSU was also played in front of a Friday night national ESPN2 audience. The Wildcats battled neck and neck with top-ranked James Madison University in Virginia, holding the lead for most of the game. Weber State ended up falling in heartbreaking fashion when a last-second field goal split the up- rights for the Dukes. Harry graduated after the 2017 season and moved to Europe to play professional football. He watched the 2018 season-ending loss to Maine on television and said the key for the team going forward is to believe they can make it past the quarterfinals. “They need to believe they can make it,” Harry said. “It’s like my junior year to my senior year. We made it to the playoffs for the first time in a while and my senior year we believed that wasn’t enough for us. We had confidence in making it out of the first round and taking it game by game. We just came up short against James Madison.” Constantine has not been the starting quarterback at Weber State for very long, but he is aware of what the program has been through in the last decade. “I was grateful to come here out of junior college and into a winning program,” Constantine said. “That made my job a lot easier. There is nothing better than the tradition coach Hill brought into this program. He has solid discipline, and we are all brought into his plan of winning.” As the Wildcats continue their quest to bring home their first-ever national cham- pionship, Constantine is feeling confident in his team. “We need to get over that hump in the playoffs and make it to the national championship,” Constantine said. “This program is definitely good enough to do that. I think we should have been there the year before I got here and then last year as well. We have leadership now, and I think this is the year we get over that hump.” Comment on this story at signpost.mywebermedia.com Earn your BSN in less time Attending most classes online, you can earn your BSN in as little as 36 months at Eagle Gate College in Layton — even sooner with qualifying transfer credits. Get the knowledge and skills needed to excel as a sought-after Bachelors-prepared Nurse. • 80% of classes are online • Transfer up to 38 credits • CCNE* accredited program • Financing available for those who qualify * The Bachelor of Science in Nursing program at Eagle Gate College is accredited by the Commission on Collegiate Nursing Education, 655 K Street NW, Washington, DC 20001, (202) 887-6791. More at www.ccneaccreditation.org. Classes start soon at our Layton Campus. Visit EagleGateCollege.edu or call 801-546-7500 |