Wednesday, September 19, 2007

NCCU prepares for rivalry game

By MIKE POTTER, The Herald-Sun

Mose Rison was a part of some huge rivalries during his long career as an assistant football coach.

During his three seasons at Navy from 1988-90, it was the classic season-ender with Army that could make a bad season good or put a sour note on an otherwise successful year.

Ditto for his six seasons at Stanford from 1995-2000, where a win or loss in "The Big Game" with rival California could do the same thing.

And maybe, just maybe those experiences have prepared N.C. Central's first-year head coach for what he's about to see this weekend.

"Rivalry renewed," said the headline on the Eagles' weekly media notes for their game against North Carolina A&T, their bitterest historic rival, on Saturday at 6:30 p.m. at Aggie Stadium.

Fittingly, it's NCCU's first football game as a member of the Football Championship Subdivision against another FCS team. The Eagles, who were members of NCAA Division II until this season, are 3-1 against an all-Division II schedule so far and riding a three-game winning streak. A&T is 0-3, has a 19-game losing streak that is the longest in the FCS and is coming off a 59-14 home loss to Hampton.

So does all that make NCCU a prohibitive favorite?

Not on this planet, Rison said Tuesday during his weekly news conference.

"A&T will be the best football team we've played all season," Rison said. "As soon as we finished our game Saturday [an 18-10 victory over Elizabeth City State at Giants Stadium in East Rutherford, N.J.], I told our players 'Let's not get caught up in the hype.' We all know what this means to both universities."

Rison said beating the Aggies, coached by Lee Fobbs, won't be easy, but the formula is simple.

"I know I don't want to be part of history," Rison said. "We just have to go out and do what we have to do to get ready. We know what we have to do defensively -- we've got to create second- or third-and-long situations. Offensively, we need to avoid giving our defense short fields. And on special teams, we have to figure out a way to hit extra points."

Rison said he has plenty of respect for the Aggies' defense, even in the loss to Hampton.

"They played a very good football team," he said. "But their defense is getting better at running to the football. They tackle well, and they're physical."

The Aggies' sophomore middle linebacker Andre Thornton (6-3, 230) has been in on 25 tackles including 16 solos and four for losses, while junior back Marques Ruffin (6-2, 190) has 22 tackles including 12 solos and two for losses.

NCCU's strength also has been on defense.

"I tell them every week I hope we go on defense first so I can see what they can do," Rison said.

The Eagles' win in New Jersey was a coming-out party of sorts for redshirt freshman Tim Shankle, who picked up 116 yards and a touchdown on 24 carries. Rison said he liked the way sophomore quarterback Stadford Brown (10-of-23 for 103 yards and a TD) directed the offense and freshman Deshawn Spears (four catches for 28 yards) caught the ball against the Vikings.

NOTES -- A&T leads the series, which was interrupted last season, 45-28-5. ... The Aggies won the last meeting in Greensboro 48-0 in 1991, but three of the past four meetings have been classics at Raleigh's Carter-Finley Stadium. NCCU won 23-22 in 2005, lost 16-15 on Carlos Davalos' 50-yard field goal at the horn in 2004, and won 33-30 in overtime in 2002 after trailing 27-0 heading into the second quarter.

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