Tuesday, January 1, 2008

FAMU Coach Joe Taylor: Sermon on the Rattlers

Photo: Is another National Football Championship in the plans for the Joe Taylor led FAMU Rattlers? Only time will tell as Step One in the process has been completed. Photo is FAMU's 1978 National Championship Team, the hardware and Miss FAMU 1978.

The dialogue from FAMU's press conference on December 31, with the presentation of Florida A&M University new head football coach Joe Taylor quickly became an ole fashioned revival of Rattler Pride and an awaking of the Jake Gaither mystique.

Coach Taylor, like FAMU President Dr. James Ammons and director of athletics William "Bill" Hayes vowed to return Florida A&M University to its former greatness on the gridiron. The synergies of these three leaders are remarkable and Rattler Nation finally has the leadership and commitment necessary for us to work collectively together to accomplish these lofty goals.

As you read the transcript of Coach Taylor's remarks, you will have no doubts that this is all part of the master's plan or the master plans of the Ammons Administration.

Joe Taylor is now the highest paid football coach in Black College Football and is predestined to take the mighty Rattlers to their traditional place of football supremacy in the Football Championship Subdivision.

Here are the remarks made by Coach Joe Taylor.

Thank you so much.

I didn’t have a prepared speech. I guess when you’ve been here and done some things for a while, it’s kind of here what you do. [Taylor points to his heart.] I do want to thank Dr. Ammons and let him know that really he’s the reason I’m here. I’ve researched. I’ve looked around. Everywhere I looked, everything I heard said this is a guy you really want to work for. That’s why I’m here.

When you look at Eddie Robinson, certainly he did a great job of molding and building and sending men forward. Then there is another guy I had the real fortunate occasion to meet. That’s the great Jake Gaither. He had built, in my mind, one of the most storied programs ever. I tell the story all the time when Eddie and Jake got together in the Orange Blossom Classic. Bob Hayes was one of the great receivers out of here.

This story I always share with my players because it sends a message. Bob was running down the sideline. He had caught a pass and he was about to score. One of the Grambling corner-backs was in pursuit and about to make the tackle. The fans from FAMU started to yell, ‘Go Bob Hayes. Go Bob Hayes.’

The corner-back stopped running. He was about to make the tackle. When he got back to the sideline, Eddie said, ‘Son, what happened? You could have made the tackle.’ The corner-back responded,‘I didn’t know that was Bob Hayes. I’m not supposed to be able to catch him.’ So I use that often because that’s a mystique.

You want that kind of tradition. You want people to know that what you stand for they can’t compete against. I would think that spirit can return. That spirit can still be here. With that in mind, what I intend to bring here is no magic. There’s no mystery.

In my mind, coaching is a ministry. Whenever you are trying to improve the lives of young people, it’s a ministry. We’re not going to be concerned with what happens on Saturday; we’re going to be concerned with what happens all week. You can not be a champion all week and expect to be one on Saturday.

I think that every Sunday everybody should start off in some-body's church. Find a man’s spirit, there also you find him. When his spirit is right, then everything else follows. On Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday – class. You’ve got to go to class. That’s what champions do. You can’t get smarter turning in someone else’s homework. You’ve got to do it for yourself.

In the weight room, it’s not osmosis. You lift to get smarter. That’s what champions do. On the track, again you’ve got to run to get faster. If you could lay under a shade tree and drink kool-aid to get in shape, then we’d do that. But we know that doesn’t work.

Study hall – we’ve got to be there. Whatever responsibility there is, you have to manage. If you do that, the only thing that changes on Saturday is the atmosphere because you are already a champion.

In my mind there are four numbers that we all have. Those four numbers we have nothing to do with. That’s the year we were born. There will be, at some other time, four other numbers. Those will represent expiration. We really have nothing to do with that. But in between those numbers is a dash. That’s the only thing we have control over – that’s your dash.

How do you control your dash? Let’s spell it out.

Now, I’m letting you know that the players are going to hear this a little more intensely but I want you to hear the philosophy.

The ‘D’ is for discipline. I don’t care what you try to get done in life, it must start with discipline. You’ve got to do the right thing. There is no short cut. You’ve got to do the right thing.

‘A’ is attitude. We will never accept invitations to pity parties. Attitude. Attitude. We’re not concerned about what the naysayers are saying. We’re not concerned about what people say you can’t do.

We’ll find a way to reach inside and flush all of that negative programming because it’s about your attitude. And your attitude can get derailed by what I call noise. We’ve got to rise above the noise. Attitude. Attitude. You have to control your attitude.

‘S’ is for sacrifice. You were not put here on this earth to be served. You were put here to serve. It’s about sacrifice. When you put forth the necessary effort to be the best person that you can be, that’s a sacrifice. But look at how many people it serves and who can sit there and feel great about what’s happening on that field or in that classroom. It’s a sacrifice. You need to think about that.

We are ambassadors for all the great things that ever happen here. We have to connect that. We need to understand that. Others made great sacrifices so that you could be here. How dare you think you don’t need to be of that same nature. You must sacrifice.

Then the ‘H.’ The ‘H’ is for habits. Man does not decide his future. Man decides his habits. And his habits decide his future.

A player comes into me and says, ‘Coach, I want to be a doctor.’ ‘That sounds good, son, but I heard you were out drinking last night.’ ‘Yeah, but I want to be a doctor.’ ‘No, you want to be an alcoholic.’ Let’s get that straight.

When you can get that D-A-S-H, when you can control that, then you’ve got a chance. The program has a chance. The people around you have a chance. More importantly, you will have a life that is full of quality. That’s what the Lord wants. He wants you to have a great life. But you’ve got to control the dash.

In a nutshell, that’s really the key to success.

Certainly, this profession has been great to me. Really, I was called for this. It’s not like you came out of the womb and said that’s what you wanted to do. As my life went on in terms of going on to college with a scholarship and graduating within four years and having all kinds of opportunities, my high school coach kept calling me back. It just evolved. I’m just being obedient.

Someone says, ‘Wow, 16 years and 13 championships and you want to move?’ I’m being obedient. I told them I wasn’t moving. I’m expanding the neighborhood.

This is another opportunity to come and to minister and to let young men understand why they are on this earth. We want the Jake Gaither spirit to rise. We want all of Rattler Nation to be proud of what’s going on and we want to be a part of that.

As I said, Dr. Ammons is the biggest reason but Bill Hayes and I go back a long ways. We faced each other across the field. I don’t know who got the record over the other one. I’m just saying let’s put both records together. Then, too, we all know this place has so much potential. Let’s let people know we were sleeping for a little while but we’re back.

Thanks for giving me the opportunity. I vow to you my best. My wife already knows that football is 13 months a year. It’s non-stop. It’s something you can always do because you enjoy. It’s not a job. It’s an opportunity and it’s something we look forward to doing in this community.

Straight No Chaser, Julian "Cannonball" Adderley and Nat Adderley 1974

Alcorn State completes football coaching staff

by beepbeep

Alcorn State University new head football coach Ernest Jones wasted no time in assembling a staff of assistant coaches for the 2008 Braves. The staff consists of 11 assistant coaches, equipment manager and two graduate assistants. Jones was hired on December 11, 2007, to replaces Dr. Johnny Thomas who was fired after a 10 year record of 48-61 and a 2-8 season last year.

The 37 year old Jones move away from hiring former Alcorn State coaches and players on his staff. The biggest name is defensive coordinator/associate head coach Earnest Collins. Collins served as secondary coach for C-USA champion Central Florida in 2007, where he was one of three new hires on the defensive side of the ball.

Photo: Alcorn State University Head Football Coach Earnest Jones

The football staff includes:
(previous school in parenthesis)

Head coach: Ernest Jones (Cincinnati)
Defensive coordinator/associate head coach: Earnest Collins (Central Florida)
Offensive coordinator: Dino Dawson (Illinois)
Wide receivers: Michael Armour (Lane)
Running backs: Terrance Robinson (Central Michigan)
Linebackers/recruiting coordinator: Zach Shay (Marion, Ill., High School)
Defensive backs: Jack Phillips (former Alcorn State player)
Defensive line/special teams: Keith Majors (Arizona Western College)
Offensive line: Adam Shorter (Cincinnati)
Strength and conditioning: Lorenzo Guess (Kentucky State)

CONTINUE TO READ ON THIS NEW DEVELOPMENT BY CLICKING ON THE BLOG TITLE ABOVE.

Florida A&M's investment in Joe Taylor makes perfect sense

Photo: Florida A&M University President Dr. James Ammons hired the best coach in America, Joe Taylor to head Rattler Football.

Consider the message sent. Loud, clear and with no chance to be misinterpreted.

Florida A&M President James Ammons wants to taste success again on the football field. And he's willing to spend money to make that happen. With a smile on his face and an extra dose of pride in his voice, Ammons introduced Joe Taylor as FAMU's football coach on Monday afternoon. Taylor, an eight-time conference champion at Hampton, accepted a five-year contract worth $225,000 annually that also includes a $12,000 housing allowance.

PLEASE CONTINUE READING THE STORY BY CLICKING THE BLOG TITLE ABOVE.

There is no argument that the 58 year old Joe Taylor is head and shoulders above ALL African-American head football coaches in the Football Championship Subdivision (FCS). Jim Lamar, Sports Editor, Tallahassee Democrat lays it out clearly for all to see and read in the referenced article.

Dr. James Ammons has determined the price of success on the gridiron will cost the Rattlers $237,000 annually or $1,185,000 over the next five years.

This is a very small price to pay for the annual income stream of $12 - $16 million annually or the $80 million that is expected to come from Rattler football during the contract terms. The deal for Joe Taylor just makes solid business sense for the vision that Ammons has for Florida A&M University and the impact that football has on all aspects of university life.

More importantly, the contracted amount is more than fair and reasonable in the context of current market pricing for hall of fame winning coaches working in the FCS and lower hierarchy of the FBC subdivision. We blogged about this topic on December 21, 2007, and provided current contract data showing that the average cost for procuring a successful head football coach has risen to the low $200,000 range.

We knew that envy and jealousy would raise its ugly head among small minded individuals within Rattler Nation and other HBCUs. The issue for some is more social than pure business economics. You see, some African-Americans have a very bad habit of devaluing each other, their own institutions or their talented black leadership.

Some would have no problem with Joe Taylor signing for the same amount and terms with Western Carolina University.

The chatter on most message boards, given by individuals who were hoping that this superior, talented coach leave the MEAC and sign with perennial loser, Western Carolina University of the Southern Conference, was based on social aspects.

Few expected Coach Taylor to sign on with FAMU.

Why? So that it would help continuation of the black talent drain from HBCUs and justification of their stupid mystique that any white school is a better place than Florida A&M University, Grambling State or any HBCU. Even, lowly ranked WCU in Southern Conference football with no winning history.

Rattler Nation must acknowledge this one fact in their thought process: Joe Taylor is not Rubin Carter, some other first time head coach or lesser coach.

He is a long term proven winner, leader and developer of successful student-athletes. He can be trusted with our children and is committed to developing them to their full potentials.

To Coach Taylor, football is a part of his overall ministry to improve the lives of young people. His success and record speak volumes about himself as a person and a coach.

Twenty-five years of winning experience and a record of 197-78-4 is more than worthy of an income of $237,000 in today's coaching market. Coach Taylor is worth every penny that President Ammons and the FAMU Board of Trustees have committed to his position.

Florida A&M University is not a starting point for a head coaching career. It is the mecca for hall of fame coaches that are worthy of wearing the Orange and the Green, and winning national championships. That's the tradition and legacy of Jake Gaither.

Rightfully so, Dr. Ammons is bring back the Jake Gaither mystique and the legacy.

Discussion of another man's income for taking care of his family is not worthy of my time nor the energy of true Rattlers that are committed to a championship program. Some must change their attitude and rise up above the petty chatter and become true supporters of FAMU.

Florida A&M University hired the best football coach in America and Coach Taylor should be paid as such. You can never over pay the best.

-beepbeep

Hampton University football makes smooth transition

Photo: FAMU Rattlers at Hampton University Pirates - 2007.

Hampton University football players label Jerry Holmes as passionate, aggressive, businesslike, a players' coach. All of those traits emerged, even as he submerged, during a rainy practice last fall.

Holmes, then the Pirates defensive coordinator and now the Pirates new head coach, was displeased with the players' lethargy, something he believed was the result of the wet conditions.

CONTINUE READING THE ARTICLE BY CLICKING THE BLOG TITLE ABOVE.

South Carolina transfer corner back Sam Pope said, "He'll keep the same offense and defense, and you can talk to him about anything. He's real down to earth."

That's what Rattlers want to hear--same offense and defense of Joe Taylor's former team coming to Tallahassee in 2008. This will be a playoff styled game for both programs.

-beepbeep

Ex-Husker coach Wagner to lead Western Carolina

Compiled by beepbeep

Dennis Wagner was hired yesterday as Western Carolina’s 12th football coach.

Wagner is a former offensive line coach at Nebraska and a former head coach at Wayne State College of Nebraska. Prior to Wagner’s four-year stint at Nebraska, he served as assistant head coach and offensive line coach for seven years at Fresno State.

The 49 year old coach was the head coach at Wayne State College from 1989 to 1996, leading the Wildcats to a 44-37-1 record while guiding the team from NAIA to NCAA Division II classification. His 1993 team led NCAA Division II in total offense at 581.5 yards per game.

Wagner, who has seven years of head coaching experience, will be formally introduced at a press conference scheduled for 2 p.m. Friday at Western Carolina University.

Western Carolina committed more than three-quarters of a million dollars with the hope that Wagner can turn the Catamounts' program around, too. Wagner agreed to a contract worth at least $830,000 over the next five years.

Wagner's contract will pay him $100,000 for the first season, $180,000 for each of the second through fourth seasons and $190,000 for the fifth season. Smith said the contract includes incentives for beating an NCAA Division I Bowl Subdivision team, winning a conference championship, winning playoff games and attaining certain academic progress achievements.

WCU athletic director Chip Smith said the contract's lower first-year salary was requested by Wagner's agent and is not related to the fact that WCU still owes former coach Kent Briggs $110,823 annually over the next two years.

Photo: Western Carolina new head football coach Dennis Wagner brings seven years of head coaching experience at NAIA and Division II levels.

Former Hampton coach Joe Taylor was offered the position but he elected to take the Florida A&M job instead.

Western Carolina did not win a Southern Conference game while going 3-19 overall the last two seasons under WCU graduate, Kent Briggs, who was fired on November 12, 2007.

Briggs was moved to another job at the university after the 1-10 season of 2007, and an overall six-year record of 22-43.

Bill Callahan brought Wagner to Nebraska shortly after he was hired in 2004.

Wagner last month was one of seven assistant coaches that Bo Pelini chose not to retain after replacing Callahan as the Nebraska Huskers' head coach.

The Catamounts will open the 2008 season at Florida State University.

WCU annually play reigning FCS champion Appalachian State and Georgia Southern in the Southern Conference and they played at Georgia and Alabama in 2007.

READ MORE ABOUT WESTERN CAROLINA COACHING HIRE BY CLICKING ON THE BLOG TITLE ABOVE.

The Dennis Wagner Profile
Age: 49.
Birthplace: Waverly, Iowa.
Education: Utah, bachelors in psychology, 1982; St. Cloud State, masters in athletic administration, 1987.
Playing experience: Drake, 1976; Ellsworth (Iowa) Community College, 1977; Utah, 1978-79.
Coaching experience: Luther College (assistant coach/offensive line), 1980; UNLV (assistant coach/tight ends), 1981-82; William Penn (head track and field coach), 1983; UNLV (assistant strength coach), 1984; St. Cloud (Minn.) State (offensive coordinator/offensive line), 1985-88; Wayne (Neb.) State (head coach), 1989-96; Fresno State (assistant head coach/offensive line), 1997-2003; Nebraska (assistant coach/offensive line), 2004-2007.

Seton Hall runs past Delaware State Hornets

Photo: DSU senior forward Roy Bright leads the Hornets in scoring averaging 17.6 ppg., 4.6 ast.

In a battle of contrasting styles, Seton Hall’s fast paced attack prevailed over Delaware State’s ball control in the Pirates’ 77-54 win at the Prudential Center Monday afternoon. Seton Hall won for the second time in three games to improve to 9-3 on the season, while the Hornets lost their fifth straight to fall to 3-9.

Senior guard Roy Bright was the only Hornet to finish with double-digit scoring (24 points). His team shot a woeful 34 percent in the first half, a stat that served as its biggest setback, before a quiet crowd of 5,285 at the Prudential Center. Bright’s performance included four three-point field goals. Donald Johnson added eight points, while Kyle White had a season-high seven for the Hornets.

CONTINUE READING THE GAME STORY BY CLICKING ON THE BLOG TITLE ABOVE.

On the Hornets west coast swing last week, Roy Bright averaged 23.5 points per game, 4.5 rebounds and shot 46% from the floor in two games. He had a game high of 25 points against California and led all scorers with 22 points in the Southern California game.

Delaware State University returns to action on January 12, 2008 when MEAC play resumes with a contest at South Carolina State.
-beepbeep

Baylor Bears cruise past Florida A&M

Photo: Ernest Maul, 6-0/180 senior Guard, Indianapolis, Indiana, Black Hawk CC

The Florida A&M University Rattlers men basketball team completed their Southwest holiday swing with another tough match up with the 10-1 Baylor Bears. This was the first meeting ever between the Rattlers and the Bears on the hardwood, who has a 5-0 record all-time against teams from the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference.

The Rattlers are 3-8, 1-6 on the road, most recently dropping an 83-54 decision at AP ranked #12 Texas A&M University (12-1) on Saturday.

The Rattlers faced Baylor Coach Scott Drew (4th season, 46-70 record) who is an outstanding recruiter. The Rattlers faced players from his nationally ranked recruiting classes that were No. 17 in 2006, No. 11 in 2005 and No. 10 in 2004 at Baylor.

Prior to Baylor, Drew spent 10 seasons at Valparaiso, the last as head coach after nine seasons as an assistant to his father Homer. During his decade at Valpo, the Crusaders earned six NCAA Tournament berths, including five straight from 1996-2000. Drew is responsible for five national Top-20 recruiting classes over the last eight years.

This was a learning experience for the FAMU Rattlers both in the big-time game atmosphere and in the necessary patience required to build a mid-major basketball program. The key word for Rattlers fans this season is--PATIENCE. FAMU coach Eugene Harris is in his first season over the Rattlers program and has not had a recruiting class.

Here is the game's outcome:

WACO, Texas -- Henry Dugat scored 21 points for Baylor as the Bears defeated Florida A&M 84-61 Monday. Curtis Jerrells added 19 for Baylor (11-1).

Lamar Twitty scored 14 for Florida A&M (3-9), Larry Jackson had 11 and Ernest Maul scored 10. L.C. Robinson opened the second half for Florida A&M with three consecutive 3-point baskets and finished with nine points.

CONTINUE READING THE ARTICLE BY CLICKING ON THE BLOG TITLE LINK ABOVE.

The Rattlers showed improvement in this game with only 10 personal fouls and hit 10-22 three point shots (45.5%).

The Rattlers next game is scheduled for January 5, 2008, with Warner Southern in Tallahassee's Gaither Gym in a 4:00 p.m. contest.

-beepbeep