
However, Bailey noted he wants to see his team improve sooner rather than later, and it starts with him. “I’m proud of our effort in the second half,” he said. Scots receiver, Izeem Graham, caught four passes for 52 yards.Īfter the game, Scots head coach, Richard Bailey, acknowledged his team’s unsuccessful comeback in the second half. Primus rushed 19 times for 101 yards and a touchdown.

McPhatter completed 2-of-4 passing attempts for 17 yards and an interception. Revelle would go 5-for-11 for 54 yards and three interceptions. Marlboro County racked up 461 yards of total offense on the night, compared to just 207 yards for the Scots. It is the second time the Bulldogs have defeated the Scots in the last 10 times the programs have played each other. With the Bulldogs already inside the Scotland 40-yard line, the Bulldogs would be able to run the clock out and pull off the road win. The Scots took over, but it wouldn’t last long.Ī mistake by the Scots’ center on a snap caused a fumble, which the Bulldogs would recover. Scotland’s defense would prevail on the ensuing drive, as they would force the Bulldogs to punt from their own 30-yard line with 3:22 left. It was 27-24 Bulldogs, after the Scots’ two-point conversion. With 5:58 to go in the game, Revelle would run an option play and pitch to Primus for a Scots touchdown. Heading into the fourth quarter, Pate Stadium was roaring with cheers, and the Scots would take advantage of the home crowd’s energy. Another converted two-point attempt would make the score 27-16 Bulldogs. Running back, Zay Jones, would then find the end zone on a rushing touchdown to give the Scots some much-needed momentum. In the third quarter, the Scots made adjustments defensively forcing the Bulldogs into a turnover on downs on the first drive of the second half. A two-point conversion made it 27-8 heading into halftime.Īt halftime, the Scots’ quarterbacks had already thrown four interceptions three from Carter Revelle, and one from Ji’San McPhatter. Marlboro County would strike right back, however, as receiver Keysahd Staggers, would score in Scots territory. After a successful two-point attempt, it was 19-8 Bulldogs.

By the time the Scots started their fifth drive of the game in the second quarter, they were already down 19-0.īut, a huge Scots kickoff return, after the third Bulldogs touchdown of the night, by running back, Patrick Primus, put the Scots on the scoreboard. The Fighting Scots were never able to get off on the right foot, as their first four drives of the game ended in three interceptions and a punt.

Switching smokers to lower FTC tar yield cigarettes, on average, reduces nicotine and other biomarkers considered surrogates of tar exposure.LAURINBURG – The Fighting Scots (1-2) dropped their home contest, Friday night, against the Marlboro County Bulldogs (2-0), 27-24. The other biomarkers of cigarette smoke constituents followed the same trend as nicotine at the end of the 24-week follow-up. Both nicotine and CO biomarkers trended similarly in the 24-week follow-up as in the short-term phase. In the short-term phase, switching from MFF to ML showed statistically significant decreases in nicotine exposure (-13%) and non-significant increases in CO exposure (+6%), while switching from MFF to MUL showed statistically significant decreases in nicotine (-27%) and CO (-13%) exposure. Biomarkers of exposure to nicotine, 4-(Methylnitrosamino)-1-(3-pyridyl)-1-butanone (NNK), pyrene, CO, benzene, acrolein, and mutagenic substances were measured. Subjects smoked MFF (a 15-mg Federal Trade Commission (FTC) tar cigarette) at baseline and were randomized to smoke 11-mg Marlboro Lights (ML) or 6-mg Marlboro Ultra Lights (MUL) cigarettes.
#Marlboro 27 full
Randomized, controlled, forced switching study in 225 adult smokers of full flavor Marlboro (MFF) cigarettes for 8 days with a 24-week follow-up. To date no state-of-the-art clinical study has been conducted to address the question as to whether switching to lower tar cigarettes reduces exposure to smoke constituents in humans.
