Brock Jackolski, who scored two touchdowns against Liberty on a 39-yard run and a 14-yard catch, and Miguel Maysonet, who scored on a 1-yard run to break a 31-31 tie in Stony Brook's 41-31 victory, are tied for the SBU lead with 16 touchdowns each in 11 games. Maysonet has rushed for 1,485 yards and Jackolski 1,229, with each averaging 6.9 yards per carry.

Jackolski, who totaled 242 all-purpose yards against Liberty, is in the top 25 in FCS history with 6,007 all-purpose yards for an average of 136.5 per game . . . Maysonet is 16 rushing yards shy of the Big South single-season record held by former Liberty back Rashad Jennings, now with the Jacksonville Jaguars.

Stony Brook quarterback Kyle Essington, who threw three touchdown passes against Liberty, has thrown 15 TD passes and only one interception since taking over as the starting quarterback Oct. 8.

Al-Majid Hutchins had 11 tackles and Dominick Reyes added nine for Stony Brook against Liberty. Liberty quarterback Mike Brown passed for 361 yards, with Chris Summers making 10 catches for 240 yards.

Stony Brook, which gained 537 total yards Saturday, is averaging 48.1 points per game in its eight-game winning streak. SBU, which scored more than 40 points for the seventh straight game, is averaging 39.6 points per game overall, which leads FCS.

The Seawolves have gone 16-2 in Big South play the last three years, winning the 2011 title outright after sharing it with Liberty and Coastal Carolina last year and with Liberty in 2009. Stony Brook's four-year conference record is 19-4.

A Newsday investigation revealed that Grumman Aerospace knew toxic chemicals were leaking into the ground in Bethpage. Newsday Associate Editor Paul LaRocco and Deputy Editor David Schwartz explain.  Credit: Newsday Studios

'It's depressing, it's frustrating' A Newsday investigation revealed that Grumman Aerospace knew toxic chemicals were leaking into the ground in Bethpage. Newsday Associate Editor Paul LaRocco and Deputy Editor David Schwartz explain.

A Newsday investigation revealed that Grumman Aerospace knew toxic chemicals were leaking into the ground in Bethpage. Newsday Associate Editor Paul LaRocco and Deputy Editor David Schwartz explain.  Credit: Newsday Studios

'It's depressing, it's frustrating' A Newsday investigation revealed that Grumman Aerospace knew toxic chemicals were leaking into the ground in Bethpage. Newsday Associate Editor Paul LaRocco and Deputy Editor David Schwartz explain.

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