Williams Football Team Opens New Field on Saturday

By Stephen DravisiBerkshires.com Sports
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WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. -- Even at tradition-rich Williams College and in the tradition-mad Ephs football program, a little change can be a good thing.
 
And on Saturday afternoon, Williams makes its biggest change since it retired its leather helmets with the opening of Farley-Lamb Field at the renovated Weston Field athletic complex.
 
At Wednesday's weekly luncheon of the Ephs' booster club, the talk was of Bowdoin and bathrooms.
 
The Polar Bears have the honor of being Williams' first opponent on the new artificial turf field.
 
While student-athletes will enjoy on-site locker rooms, fans can look forward to greater proximity to the field, a better sound system, a scoreboard that everyone can read and better amenities.
 
"We have more women's restrooms in that building than on the whole campus," Williams head coach Aaron Kelton joked before an appreciative crowd at the weekly Sideline Quarterback Club meeting.
 
"There won't be a line for the women's room all the way down to the street."
 
While Kelton was kidding about the actual number of lavatories, there is no doubt that the fan experience will be enhanced at the new facility, part of a $22 million overhaul to Weston Field that includes a new field hockey/lacrosse and track complex adjacent to the football field.
 
The decision to eschew grass is a literal game-changer for Williams, which has won 634 games in 128 seasons of football, the sixth highest win total in Division III college football.
 
"It's good as a receiving corps to be on that turf," Williams assistant coach Scott Farley said. "It makes their cuts a little easier than on the muddy field I played on."
 
For the record, Farley did OK on that muddy field, earning all-America honors in 2002 before a pro career that landed him in NFL Europe as a team captain on the Berlin Thunder.
 
Farley helped Williams go 15-1 in 2001-02 playing for his father, Dick Farley, the namesake of the new field along with longtime Williams assistant football coach Renzie Lamb.
 
Now the younger Farley is helping Kelton bring Williams back to prominence in the region after going 11-13 over the last three seasons.
 
The new football complex -- which puts Williams at least on par with every team in the New England Small College Athletic Conference -- could figure prominently into the hoped for renaissance.
 
"I'm pushing all my guys in recruiting to get them up here," Kelton said, referring to the field. "If they get up here and see it, they're going to say, 'I want to go to Williams because I can play there.' "
 
Notes: Saturday's 2 p.m. kickoff is the first of four home games for the Ephs this fall. The athletic complex will be dedicated on the day of the third home game, Oct. 11, when the football team is home against Middlebury and the field hockey team hosts Wesleyan in games scheduled to run simultaneously. ... Parking figures to be a little tight on Saturday as the college lets the grass take hold in the lot behind the new home grandstand. Williams hopes to allow parking there later this season, but for now fans are directed to the Taconic Golf Club lot, the Lansing Chapman rink lot and the vacant town-owned property at 59 Water St. ... Among the leading candidates for Williams' starting quarterback job on Saturday is Boston College transfer Austin Lommen, who threw for 7,456 yards and 88 touchdowns in three seasons at Minnesota's Breck School, where he led his team to conference championships three times.
 
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Companion Corner: Priscilla at Second Chance Animal Shelter

By Breanna SteeleiBerkshires Staff

ARLINGTON, Vt. — There is a sweet girl awaiting her new family at Second Chance Animal Shelter.

iBerkshire's Companion Corner is a weekly series spotlighting an animal in our local shelters that is ready to find a home.

Priscilla is 2 years old and came to the shelter from a hoarding house.

Feline Program Administrator Santana Snyder introduced us to her.

"She came to Second Chance from a hoarding situation, and she had two little kittens with her when she came in. Her kittens have been adopted, but she's still looking for her forever home," she said.

She has been at the shelter for about a year and has not had anyone visit her.

"She came in April of 2025. There was a point in time where she wasn't available on the floor because she was still taking care of her kittens. So that is partially why she's been here this long, but also overlooked for unknown reasons," Snyder said. "She's very sweet. She's very playful. She gets along pretty well with the other cats."

She can go home with respectful kids, other cats, and a respectful dog as well, as she does like her boundaries sometimes as most cats do. She especially loves people and will follow you around.

"She is a bit bossy, so cats that kind of can give her some space, and know that when they get in her space, she will tell them that she's had enough," Snyder said. "Not sure how she would do with dogs. However, she is very confident in herself and not a very timid cat, so I think she would be fine with a feline savvy dog.

"She loves people. She loves to be around people. There's often times where she'll escape out the door from us because she's trying to follow the people that were in here loving on her."

Priscilla enjoys sunbathing and looking out the window at people or birds.

"This is a favorite pastime of hers, sitting and watching out the window. So she loves being up high and watching the cars and the birds."

Priscilla is healthy, litter-box trained, and knows her scratching posts, but does have a sensitive stomach.

"She does, right now, eat a sensitive-stomach diet, but it's not prescription, so easily accessible, not super expensive. She was just having some issues with vomiting up the food that wasn't sensitive stomach," she said.

Priscilla is ready to go to her new home where she can play and lay in the sun all day.

"She's really is a great cat, like I said, not sure why she's been here this long. She just wants to find her people and be loved."

Priscilla is sponsored by someone anonymous.

If you think Priscilla might be the cat for you, reach out to Second Chance Animal Shelter and learn more about him on the website.

Second Chance Animal Shelter is open Tuesday through Sunday 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. and Sunday from noon to 3 p.m. It is located at 1779 VT Route 7A. Contact the shelter at 802-375-2898 or info@2ndchanceanimalcenter.org.

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