ALBANY — The University at Albany football team is no match for first-place Rhode Island, and having a bye last week couldn’t solve that problem.
Rhode Island
Bye offers no relief for UAlbany football, blown out again by URI
UAlbany running back Griffin Woodell looks for running room against Rhode Island on Saturday, Oct. 18, 2025, at Casey Stadium in Albany, NY. (Jim Franco/Times Union)
Jim Franco/Times UnionWith extra rest and preparation following their worst loss in the Stony Brook rivalry on Oct. 4, the Great Danes stumbled to a 58-17 loss to URI on Saturday, their most lopsided defeat in a Coastal Athletic Association game.
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UAlbany committed four turnovers on two interceptions and two fumbles while falling to 1-6 overall, 0-3 in the CAA.
“I figured we would (play a cleaner game),” UAlbany interim coach Jared Ambrose said. “We made too many mental errors in the game for a team that’s this good. And when you’re playing teams that have this amount of talent, you don’t have that luxury. You have to be ice cold, locked in and no errors. They (URI) saw the benefits of that.”
The margin of defeat surpassed UAlbany’s 37-0 home defeat against CAA rival Villanova in 2015. The Great Danes entered the league in 2013.
UAlbany has lost its three CAA games this season by a combined score of 129-35, including the 47-12 setback to SUNY rival Stony Brook two weeks ago.
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“We’ve got five football games left,” UAlbany redshirt junior running back Griffin Woodell said. “That’s five games we’re trying to win.”
Woodell, a Glens Falls native, rushed for a team-high 62 yards and took a short pass from Jack Shields for a 46-yard touchdown in the third quarter.
UAlbany trailed URI 38-3 before Woodell scored and backup quarterback Aidan Semo added a 2-yard touchdown run to get within 38-17 with 2:42 left in the third.
“They showed fight and they will continue to fight,” Ambrose said. “No doubt it. I don’t question my team’s effort at all and I do not think that 41-point differential is an accurate depiction of who this football team is.”
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After stopping UAlbany on downs to start the fourth quarter, URI (6-2, 4-0) poured on three straight touchdowns in the fourth quarter. The final indignity came when freshman running back Keon Kenner fumbled on his fourth career carry and URI’s Leisaan Hibbert ran it back 47 yards for a score with 51 seconds left.
Even though UAlbany struggled last season, the Great Danes nearly upset URI on the road. They jumped out to a 17-0 lead before the Rams pulled out a 20-17 lead.
Saturday’s rematch was never really in doubt.
“I think it’s a lapse in focus,” Woodell said. “I think we’re struggling focusing on what our assignments are and what we need to do.”
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UAlbany senior safety Denzel Patrick, who had a team-high 11 tackles, blamed the blowout on a lack of discipline.
“No matter how many points are on the board, I feel a loss is a loss,” Patrick said. “We’ve just got to be able to look at film tomorrow and keep pushing.”
URI receivers broke wide open against UAlbany’s coverage. Greg Gaines, who had no receiving touchdowns entering the game, grabbed scoring passes of 32 and 42 yards in the second quarter.
Rams quarterback Devin Farrell finished 19-of-20 passing for 333 yards and four touchdowns.
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“When you battle a quarterback like him, as veteran as he is, you’ve got to throw stuff at him that’s going to give him a hard time,” Ambrose said. “We busted a couple of coverages. I think (defensive coordinator) Bill (Nesselt’s) plan was a solid one. We’ve just got to execute it.”
Shields, in his first game back from a knee injury, was 12-of-26 for 192 yards with a touchdown. His two interceptions both came on deflected passes.
“Not going to excuse our performance because I have to own everything this program does,” Ambrose said. “But those guys (URI) are as as you’re going to find in this conference.”
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UAlbany returns to action at Villanova next Saturday.
Rhode Island
Thieves steal $470K worth of electrical wire from Rhode Island highways
PROVIDENCE, R.I. (WJAR) — The Rhode Island Department of Transportation is facing a costly and dangerous problem after thieves stole roughly 11 miles of electrical wire from highways across the state, leaving long stretches of road without lighting and drivers at risk.
RIDOT spokesperson Charles St. Martin said there have been at least 16 thefts in recent weeks, mostly in Providence, but also in Cranston, Johnston and Warwick. The agency first realized something was wrong after drivers began calling to report unusually dark sections of highway.
“Right now, about 16 sites or so around the Providence Metro area down into Cranston and Warwick and Johnston that we have different lengths of highway where the lights are out,” St. Martin said in an interview with NBC10.
Cars driving on the highway with no overhead lights. (WJAR)
St. Martin says thieves accessed underground electrical systems through manholes, cutting and removing large quantities of wire.
RIDOT Director Peter Alviti, speaking on WPRO Radio with NBC10’s Gene Valicenti, said the scale of the problem is staggering and growing.
“You would not believe how many locations throughout the state that we are experiencing the theft of our underground electric cables,” Alviti said. “They’re pulling it out and then selling it for scrap to make money.”
The thefts pose serious safety risks. St. Martin said the suspects are cutting into live electrical wires leaving drivers to navigate dark highways and roads.
The cost to taxpayers is also significant. According to RIDOT, the stolen wire alone carries a material cost of about $470,000, not including labor to reinstall it.
“When you just look at the amount of wire that we are talking about that we are missing now, it is about 11 miles worth of wire,” St. Martin said. “Just the material cost about $470,000.”
RIDOT says it will likely take several weeks to fully restore lighting along impacted highways, including I-195, I-295, Route 37, Route 10 and Route 6. The agency plans to install heavier, anti-theft manhole covers in the coming months and is working with state and local police to identify those responsible.
Drivers like Perry Cornell say the outages make already challenging roads even more dangerous.
“Dangerous,” Cornell said when asked how it feels driving through dark stretches of highway. “It’s unsafe.”
Lights off on the highway. (WJAR)
Cornell said the situation raises questions about whether more could have been done to prevent the thefts.
“Why wasn’t this stopped and why wasn’t there a preventative action taken by RIDOT to stop this from continuing to happen?” he asked.
RIDOT is asking the public to remain vigilant. Anyone who sees suspicious activity near highway manholes is urged to contact local police immediately.
Rhode Island
Former Pawtucket police officer pleads no contest to DUI, disorderly conduct – The Boston Globe
Dolan was also ordered to pay a $100 fine, and has completed community service and a driving while impaired course, the records show. Dolan previously lost his license for three months.
“This plea was the culmination of two years of hard work and negotiations by both sides, resulting in a reasonable, fair, and equitable resolution which allows all concerned to move forward,” Michael J. Colucci, an attorney representing Dolan, said in a statement.
Dolan was arrested and charged in September 2023 in Coventry, where he also allegedly threatened to shoot police officers.
A felony charge of threatening public officials was downgraded to the misdemeanor disorderly conduct charge on Wednesday, according to court records. A third charge of reckless driving and other offenses against public safety was dismissed.
Dolan resigned from the police department in November 2023 while the City of Pawtucket was attempting to fire him. He was acquitted by a jury earlier that year after he shot a teenager in 2021 while off-duty that summer outside a pizza restaurant in West Greenwich.
Dolan, who had an open container of beer in his truck at the time, had argued he pursued the teen and his friends after seeing them speeding on Route 95. The group of teens saw him coming at them in the parking lot of Wicked Good Pizza and tried to drive away, while Dolan claimed he wanted to have a “fatherly chat” and shot at them fearing he was going to be hit by their car.
The teen driver, Dominic Vincent, of West Greenwich, was shot in the upper arm.
In 2022, Dolan was also charged with domestic disorderly conduct and domestic vandalism after he allegedly grabbed his 10-year-old son by the neck and threw him outside, according to an affidavit by Coventry police supporting an arrest warrant.
Then, while the children were in the car with his wife, Dolan was accused of throwing a toy truck at the vehicle and breaking the windshield, according to the affidavit. The domestic case against Dolan was dismissed about a week after it was filed, per court records.
Material from previous Globe stories was used in this report. This story has been updated to include comment from Michael Colucci.
Christopher Gavin can be reached at christopher.gavin@globe.com.
Rhode Island
Former Rhode Island governor Gina Raimondo nominated to Costco board – The Boston Globe
Costco is nominating former US commerce secretary and Rhode Island governor Gina Raimondo to serve on its board of directors, the Washington state-based retail giant announced last week.
“We are very pleased to nominate Secretary Raimondo for election to our Board,” Costco chairman Hamilton James said in a statement. “Her vast experience in global business, politics and international security at the highest level will add an important dimension to our current expertise. We look forward to her contributions.”
Raimondo served as Rhode Island governor from 2015 to 2021, when she was tapped to serve as the Biden administration’s secretary of commerce. Before entering politics in 2010, she worked in venture capital.
Her nomination will likely be voted on at the company’s next shareholders’ meeting, scheduled for Jan. 15.
The nomination comes days after the warehouse store announced it would sue the Trump administration over its tariff policy. Costco says the administration’s tariffs are unlawful, since they were imposed under a law that has historically been used to impose sanctions against other nations.
Earlier this year, Raimondo said she is considering running for president in 2028, becoming one of the first Democrats to do so. She also criticized the direction of the party and suggested it had ignored bread-and-butter economics issues in 2024 election loss to Donald Trump.
She added, though, that “if I thought somebody else would be better, or better able to win, I’d get behind that person in a minute.”
Costco does not currently operate any stores in Rhode Island. The nearest location is located on Interstate 95 in Sharon, Mass., according to the company’s website.
Last year, the company seemed to back away from a plan to build a warehouse at a shuttered correctional facility in Cranston, WPRI reported. Officials in Warwick and Smithfield have also expressed interest in bringing the box store to their communities.
Material from previous Globe coverage and Globe wire services was used.
Camilo Fonseca can be reached at camilo.fonseca@globe.com. Follow him on X @fonseca_esq and on Instagram @camilo_fonseca.reports.
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