ROCHESTER, N.Y. -- Daniel Bronson's biggest play on a record-setting day as the quarterback at the University of Rochester came off the field.
The 21-year-old junior from Lockport in Niagara County was leaving a restaurant in his hometown Nov. 5 when he saw a man run past a 73-year-old woman and yank her purse out of her arms as she walked with her husband.
Bronson took off after the man, who dropped the purse but kept on running. Bronson kept running, tackled the suspect and held him down with the help of his girlfriend's father and brother. Police arrived and arrested the 31-year-old suspect on a robbery charge.
Bronson's off-field heroics came just hours after he piled up almost 400 yards in total offense and ran 60 yards for a touchdown in a 37-34 home loss to Worcester Polytechnic Institute. His 192 rushing yards was the most ever by a quarterback at the Division III school. He also completed 21 of 32 passes for 195 yards and a touchdown, despite suffering what was later diagnosed as a separated right shoulder in the third quarter.
What happened after the game has the microbiology major in the spotlight.
After dinner with his girlfriend and her family at a Lockport restaurant, the group was walking to the parking lot when Bronson saw a man steal the purse of the elderly woman who had just left the eatery with her husband.
"She screamed, 'Help! Help!'" Bronson said.
The 6-foot, 190-pound quarterback took off in pursuit.
"I chased him a little over 100 yards and jumped on his back," Bronson told The Associated Press on Friday. "I rode him to the pavement because I didn't want to hit the concrete."
His girlfriend's father, Patrick Ellinger, and son, also named Patrick, soon caught up and helped subdue the suspect.
On Friday, troopers presented Bronson and the Ellingers with Citizen Recognition Awards during a ceremony in Lockport. Afterward, Bronson told the AP that the night of Nov. 5 was his first time he had ever eaten at that Lockport restaurant.
"I guess someone put me in the right place at the right time to help someone out," he said.