Sunday, August 16, 2009

MEAC/SWAC/OVC Sports: This Week in Review

PRO FOOTBALL & BASKETBALL

Bethune Cookman University Wildcats
Defensive end Baggs taking advantage of opportunity with Roughriders

Already it's been a career year for Stevie Baggs. Just six games into the 2009 CFL campaign, the Saskatchewan Roughriders' tenacious defensive end has registered single-season highs in tackles (17), sacks (four), interceptions (one) and fumble recoveries (two). Then again, that's really no huge accomplishment for a player who's played sparingly and bounced between three teams in four seasons.

But Baggs, a native of Fort Lauderale, Fla., is certainly serving notice that all he needed to prove himself was the chance to do so. "My talent and ability haven't changed," he said. "I finally have an opportunity to play and show people what I can do. "Every time I played in this league I tried to show I was worthy of being a starter or impact player. I'm just so happy and fortunate the Saskatchewan Roughriders gave me the opportunity to come in and show what I could do."

Keeping Baggs away from quarterback Quinton Porter will be a priority for the Hamilton Tiger-Cats (4-2) on Sunday when they face the Riders (3-3) at Mosaic Stadium (TSN, 7 p.m. ET). Baggs began his CFL career by signing with Winnipeg as a free agent in 2006. He split the '07 season between the Blue Bombers and Edmonton before joining the Riders as a free agent in September 2008, dressing for five games and starting three.

Stevie Baggs Football Camp 2009





But he finally got the opportunity to start full-time when the club dealt defensive end Kitwana Jones to Edmonton. Despite his early success, Baggs said he still has plenty to learn. "Right now I still feel I have head and shoulders to improve on my game because I still feel like a rookie," he said. "I'm really still getting my feet wet and acclimated to the defence and being on the field and playing special teams so it's a lot.

"I can improve my technique as far as using my tools to really rush the passer. I don't think I've used and utilized my abilities like I should have. I've been doing a lot of thinking and not really playing football and that's all my fault. I really need to hone in on it and just go, go, go."

Bouncing between teams is nothing new for Baggs. Prior to coming to Canada, he spent time in the NFL, NFL Europe and Arena Football League. Baggs enjoyed a stellar college career at Bethune-Cookman, where he was a three-time All-American and a three-time All Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference player. As a senior he became the school's all-time leader in sacks with 40 and was named the MEAC's top defensive player. What's more, Baggs, 27, has persevered to become a pro football player despite being badly pigeon-toed. "It has definitely given me character and resilience," Baggs said.

Tennessee State University Tigers
Former TSU star working on consistency with Cardinals

Arizona cornerback Dominique Rodgers-Cromartie made plenty of big plays during his rookie year.As he prepares for his second NFL season, the Cardinals want the former Tennessee State standout to pay more attention to the small ones. That means relying less on his dazzling speed and mastering techniques in practice. When it comes to pure exhilaration, learning proper footwork doesn't compare to the 99-yard interception return for a touchdown that Rodgers-Cromartie turned in last season.

Rodgers-Cromartie Makes the Right Calls on his Future in NFL



But the coaches say an improved practice regimen will help the 23-year-old Floridian turn his potential into consistent production at one of the game's most demanding positions."In order for him to take that step to the next level, which is an elite cornerback in this league, he has to do it every day on the practice field, every day that he's working, and then it has to show up in the games," coach Ken Whisenhunt said. As he walked off the practice field at Northern Arizona University this week, Rodgers-Cromartie nodded when told about Whisenhunt's assessment.

Norfolk State University Spartans
Jaguars Claim CB Don Carey Off Waivers

The Jaguars made a waiver claim on Don Carey, a corner-back who was cut by the Cleveland Browns. Carey is a player whom the Jaguars were reportedly interested in before the draft. He ended up being a 6th round selection, and came from a smaller school, Norfolk State. He's in the mold of most Gene Smith draft picks, having good measurables, and from all appearances he's a high character individual. I found this interesting overview.

Carey will be one of draftable cornerback prospects unearthed from outside the Football Bowl Subdivision. A four-year starter, he was second-team All-MEAC as a junior and was named on the first team in 2008. He accumulated eight interceptions and 14 pass breakups over those two seasons. An excellent student, Carey turned down a chance to attend Yale because it was cost prohibitive. His play at the East-West Shrine practices earned him a lot of credibility among scouts.

Don has acceptable speed, running a 4.5 40 yard dash at the combine, and he's showed adequite strength on the bench, with 18 reps. He played both free safety and corner in college, and shows the physicality necessary to be a cover 2 DB. The interesting aspect of this, is that we may have just claimed a player to put him on IR for a year. Carey suffered a shoulder injury, and it appears the Browns waived Carey because he wouldn't be likely to contribute this year.

The Flip Side of the Coin Coming Out of Cleveland on the Carey Waiver...

Curious case: When the Browns gave up on rookie cornerback Don Carey five days into training camp, it was a surprise. When the Jaguars claimed the injured player the next day, it was a shock. "That's the first time I've ever seen that," said an official with another team. "I would have bet money that nobody would have claimed him." It's not as if Carey was certain to even make the team. He is a developmental player, selected in the sixth round from Norfolk State. Plus, he suffered a shoulder injury on the first day of camp and probably will need surgery and be sidelined for the year.

Still, according to one source, "Everybody in the [Browns'] building liked him," and some coaches were against exposing Carey to waivers. So why did they? Until the first roster cut, teams have to expose an injured player to waivers before putting him on injured reserve. The Browns could have waited another two weeks to do that, but they would have lost the roster spot and continued with 79 players in camp. Coach Eric Mangini didn't want to do that. He filled Carey's spot with Brandon Anderson of Akron.

"So what?" said one source. "So you go one player down a little while. That was the most embarrassing thing I've ever seen. You never give up on a young cornerback you like." Another school of thought is that Jacksonville was out of line in claiming Carey. The Jaguars broke no rule but broke protocol, said the source. "We all have to 'waive/injured' players every year," the source said. "We're all in the same boat. You just don't claim those guys. What Jacksonville did was unethical."

Jacksonville General Manager Gene Smith has been aggressive in claiming healthy players waived by other teams to replenish a roster famished for talent. The Jaguars, who hired former Browns defensive coordinator Mel Tucker in the off-season, showed an interest in Carey before the draft. The Jaguars have to keep Carey on their active list until the first cut. Carey's specific injury and rehab timetable are unknown. The Jaguars declined to make him available for comment. Interestingly, they denied an interview request for Smith, too.


South Carolina State University Bulldogs
DE/LB Robert Ayers agrees to deal with Broncos

Robert Ayers was impressive all minicamp, quickly grasping his new responsibilities on defense as he rotated in with the first team. Now, the Denver Broncos rookie defensive end/linebacker is just hoping he didn’t lose his standing. Ayers, the brother of South Carolina State defensive end Jayson Ayers, signed a five-year deal Monday, showing up for training camp a week after his fellow rookies reported. The first-round pick knows he has some catching up to do to make up ground.

“Any day, any hour, any workout, anything you miss is always going to be a setback,” Ayers said. “Hopefully, I didn’t get too far behind.” With Ayers on board, that leaves tailback Knowshon Moreno, the team’s top pick, as the only unsigned player from its 10-member draft class. Ayers was on the field before the evening practice session, taking new coach Josh McDaniels’ mandatory — and difficult — interval sprinting test. He passed with a few seconds to spare.

Former S.C. State basketball standout signs with Chilean team

Former South Carolina State basketball standout Thurman Zimmerman has signed a pro contract to play for Liceo Mixto de los Andes in Chile’s top league, the Dimayor. Last season, Zimmerman suited up for Provincial Osorno, also in Chile, where he averaged 20.1 ppg, 13.3 rpg (second in the league), and 2.4 spg (third in the league) en route to being named All-Chilean League. This will be his fourth season as a pro.

A Columbia native and Keenan High graduate, Zimmerman averaged 15.1 points, 8.3 rebounds and 2.3 steals during his four-year (2002-06) S.C. State career. The 6-5, 220 Zimmerman was a four-time All-Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference (MEAC) performer and earned both Rookie of the Year and Player of the Year honors as a Bulldog.

Hampton University Pirates
NY Jets sign G Conley

The Jets signed free agent G Dennis Conley, who was waived by the Chicago Bears the same day the Jets opened training camp in Cortland. Conley (OG/6-2/300/Hampton University/Suffolk, VA) was waived by the Bears on July 31 after being signed as an undrafted free agent on April 26, 2009. A two-time All-MEAC choice from Hampton University, Conley played in 37 games, starting 30, as a left guard.

Q&A: Broncos rookie free-agent Chris Baker

It’s hard not to notice a guy who stands at 6 feet, 2 inches tall and weighs 326 pounds. Guys like that command the room, even if they don’t always mean to. Chris Baker has been 6 feet tall since he was 11, so forgive him if he seems used to drawing attention. When you’re a walking mountain, people are bound to stop and stare. Of course, like all swords, this one has two edges. Baker will be the first to tell you his size has been a blessing throughout his athletic career. It’s what drew him to basketball as a child. It’s the trait that turned his dream of playing professional football into a sure-fire reality. But possessing the mass to play any position along the defensive line is also one hell of a magnifying glass.

After allegations of involvement in two fights at Penn State, Baker found himself squarely in the middle of one of those rare situations in life that can determine your path, your future. And the target on his back, like the rest of him, was a little bigger than most. Baker could have quit. He could have accepted the public’s view of him as a “thug.” He could have curled up and accepted a fate handed to him by those unwilling to get to know the true Chris Baker. But giving up is a foreign concept to this young man.
Baker transferred to Hampton University, determined to succeed. He made up his mind that he would decide his own path. It was the right move. After a junior season that included 16.5 tackles for loss and 8.5 sacks, people are paying attention to the facts on the field, not the accusations off it. For this former Hampton Pirate, Penn State Nittany Lion and current Denver Bronco, life really is like a grinding wheel that either polishes you up or grinds you down, depending on what you’re made of.

MEAC/SWAC/OVC CHAMPIONSHIP SPORTS

Alabama State University Hornets
ASU finds motivation even without SWAC title shot

Reggie Barlow will use any motivational tool he can for his Alabama State Hornets, even if it means pointing to a success story that happened an hour down the road and 16 years in the past. The Hornets are ineligible for a Southwestern Athletic Conference title this season due to NCAA sanctions, so Barlow has to get creative. Remember the 1993 Auburn team that went undefeated in that situation? "We'll talk about Auburn," Barlow said. "We'll let them know how Auburn didn't lose a game that year and how people still recognize that team as one of the best teams in the nation that year. You've got to do all those things to motivate these guys and keep them motivated."


ALABAMA STATE FOOTBALL: Hornets hope to select starting QB soon

He's a year older -- and he believes a step slower -- but Chris Mitchell is once again looking like Alabama State's best option at quarterback. Mitchell, a junior who missed last season because of academic issues, has outperformed senior Anthony Speight and sophomore Devin Dominguez through a week of practices and appears poised to nail down the starting spot. "It has kind of surprised me a little (that I've been able to play consistently)," Mitchell said. "These other guys have had a year in the system and I'm trying to play catch-up. I still have a lot of work to do, but I feel like I've done pretty well so far."

Should he continue to do that, Mitchell could have the job by the end of the week. ASU is scheduled to hold its first full scrimmage of the fall -- a 50- to 55-play workout -- on Saturday morning. Head coach Reggie Barlow said he would like to name a No. 1 quarterback afterward. Offensive coordinator Richard Moncrief wants to name a starter prior to that. "You give me till Friday. I'll have one then," Moncrief said. "It's all about consistency for me, and (Mitchell) has given that to me more than the other guys, so far. That could change. I wouldn't say (that it's Mitchell's job to lose), because those other guys can still play well and take it."

Photo Galleries
ASU 1st practice
Reggie Barlow Golf Tournament


Florida Agricultural and Mechanical University Rattlers
FAMU's Taylor keeps his team grounded

Joe Taylor has a bit of concern about how this season will play out for his football team. And, it doesn't have a lot to do with the X's and O's of the game. With all of the preseason accolades that some individuals and his team have been receiving, Taylor has been coming up with ways to keep his players grounded. Guest speakers such as former Rattlers Curtis Miranda and legendary high school coach Jesse Heard have been lending a hand with speeches intended to keep the team focused.

The subject of how to keep his players from becoming overconfident as they take aim at wining FAMU's first MEAC title since 2001 was one of the topics covered during Saturday's Media Day. "The onus is really on the seniors," Taylor said. "They have been there, done that. They are the ones who are going to have to lead by example. That senior leadership makes a difference if you're trying to win a championship."

Rattlers are becoming a 'brotherhood'

Through the first few days of loose workouts on FAMU practice field, the scene on the sidelines has been like the first day back to school. Every day. The players seem happy to be back as a unit. They are calling it a brotherhood, unlike the cliquish kind of dissension that unraveled the team two seasons ago. "It's real good to have chemistry like this because we play so much better because we are together," said senior offensive lineman Robert Okeafor. "We can do stuff that other teams can't do just because we are a band of brothers. Everybody is on the same page and it helps our play."

It wasn't so two years ago. Back then, the holdovers from the Billy Joe Era appeared to be separated from recruits brought in by then-coach Ruben Carter. That quarterback Albert Chester left the team at mid-season didn't help. The end result was a 3-8 season that cost Carter his job. There seems to be more harmony on the hill these days. So much so that the players are walking around with swagger and talking about an undefeated season.

At the core of the new attitude are players like Cameron Houston and quarterbacks Curtis Pulley and Eddie Battle. It's not unusual to see the two quarterbacks talking techniques on the sidelines, although Pulley came in last season to win the starting role this year from Battle. There is no obvious separation between offensive and defensive players either.


Photo Galleries: FAMU Football Practice

Joke or not, FAMU looks to score big »

It might have been a joke. It could have been just a coach trying to pump up his unit. But the word around FAMU's Galimore Fieldhouse on the first day of practice Wednesday was all about a benchmark of 60 points per game that offensive coordinator Lawrence Kershaw just happened to mention. Kershaw laughed off a question about it, saying he just wants the offense to score.

Whether it was a joke or psychology, the offensive unit seems to be taking him seriously. The goal then would be to beat the 35.2 points per game the Rattlers averaged last season when they led all Football Championship Subdivision teams. "Of course, I think we can improve on last year," said quarterback Curtis Pulley. "We just have to cut down on the mistakes to get better. I think if everybody comes out with the right mind-set we'll have a special offense."

Last season's offense was all about Pulley. He rushed for 1,382 yards and 17 touchdowns. Pulley took the onus off Kershaw a bit, saying the idea of scoring more than 50 points per game is just that — an idea. "He really doesn't focus on us having to score that many points," Pulley said. "He focuses on us scoring more than our opponents, but 40-50 points sounds pretty good."

FAMU freshmen are right in the mix »

Just about all of the freshmen players on FAMU's football teams are turning heads — not for their abilities. That will come later. But the incoming class of players fresh out of high school is making their upperclassmen take notice of their willingness to fit in. As the Rattlers completed their third day of walk-through drills, the newcomers are right in the mix. "I appreciate the hustle on their part, but the big thing about being a freshman is you have to learn to follow before you lead," said back-up quarterback Eddie Battle. "That doesn't tell them not to work hard or not to be first in the drills because that's what we want. We want good work ethic."

Coach Joe Taylor is seeing that much. Obviously, though, the separation will come when the team suits up next week in full pads for two-a-days. The freshmen can expect to spend their days with the practice squad. But for now they are right where they can get noticed. "The upperclassmen have invited them to really participate; don't sit back," Taylor said. "They will see that they have to participate because that's the only way they can find out where they fit. I just think we have the kinds of kids that are going to be patient, but they're going to work."

Rattlers hit the track for work »

Just about every one of FAMU's football players — from those with an established name to the ones who hope to make a name for themselves — were on the track early Tuesday morning. They ran the 40-yard sprint, looking for their best times. They did the vertical jump, proving their ability to elevate themselves. It was a prelude to the grind of pre-season drills, which begins with two-a-days next week. But starting today, FAMU coach Joe Taylor will take the Rattlers through segment workouts. They seemed impatient just going through the running and jumping, though.

What Taylor saw impressed him. They seemed anxious to begin contact drills. "I see this group as being a group that's going through this, but they really can't wait to get this thing going, putting pads on and lining up and playing," Taylor said. "They are definitely ready." Understandably so. It's been an eight-month journey that stated with off-season drills — the early-morning runs and a long summer of lifting weights with conditioning coach Antonio Wallace. Taylor attributed FAMU's turnaround from 3-8 in 2007 to 9-3 last year to Wallace's off-season program. He intensified the workouts this summer and Taylor is expecting big dividends.

Local crooners to play celebration
Saturday's 450th birthday bash in downtown Pensacola, FL.

The singers will highlight a diverse lineup of performances Saturday that includes the Florida A&M University Marching 100, which performed at President Barack Obama's inaugural parade. "The FAMU band is phenomenal," said Nancy Halford, events coordinator for Celebrate Pensacola. "We're going to just give them free rein on Palafox to do what they do." The 420-member band will burst out of the Jefferson Street parking area onto Palafox Place at 7 p.m., following a time capsule ceremony at Jeweler's Trade Shop. They'll lead the crowd to the main stage area at Government and Palafox. Billy Harrell, project development manager for WSRE-TV, will emcee the night of music. He encourages revelers to stick around after the fireworks and dance to music by The Celebration Band.

Famu's Blazeski named the MEAC preseason volleyball player of year

Florida A&M's Jovana Blazeski was named the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference volleyball preseason player of the year, the conference announced on Monday. Preseason honors were voted on by the league's head volleyball coaches and sports information directors. Florida A&M and Maryland Eastern Shore were picked as the preseason favorites in the northern and southern divisions.

Out of 22 first-place votes in their respective divisions, Florida A&M received 19 while Maryland Eastern Shore tallied 20. Florida A&M posted a 7-1 conference mark and a 14-13 overall record in 2008 en route to their eighth consecutive MEAC title. Blazeski, a 2008 second team All-Conference performer, is one of four Lady Rattlers' returning from last year's championship team. She led the MEAC with 352 kills and 4.21 points per set and finished with 273 digs. She was also selected to the All-Tournament team. Joining Blazeski on the preseason team is teammate Susan Egoavil. South Carolina State's Bria Brimmer, Bethune-Cookman's Chelle Ticeson, Whitney Johnson of Maryland Eastern Shore and Delaware State's Cassandra Joyner round out the list of preseason honorees.

Around FCS: Ford vs. Pulley for 2009 MEAC title

From the moment the 2009 Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference football schedule was finalized, South Carolina State and Florida A&M have circled Oct. 17 on their calendars. The Bulldogs and Rattlers, who meet that day at South Carolina State's Dawson Bulldog Stadium, have top-20 potential going into 2009, with both of these proud programs aspiring to more than just reaching the FCS playoffs. Two-time Payton Award candidate and senior South Carolina State running back Will Ford will lead the Bulldogs into the 2009 season on the heals of their first MEAC Championship since 1994.

Fellow Payton Award nominee and senior Florida A&M quarterback Curtis Pulley will give Ford and SCSU a run for the title as the Kentucky transfer begins his first full season behind center. Norfolk State senior free safety Terrell Whitehead, a preseason Buchanan Award candidate for the second straight year, will lead a Spartan defense that ranked 15th nationally in pass defense last season. The league also features a talented Bethune-Cookman team looking to stay atop the MEAC standings and a Hampton squad that has made the playoffs three times in the past five seasons. Both teams finished tied for second in 2008.

Freshman linebackers take similar path to FAMU

Bobby Jackson and Jerod Brisbon didn't know how familiar their paths to FAMU were until they met Monday, the first day for football players to check into their dorms. Both freshmen linebackers received scholarship offers from Division I schools, before they were withdrawn. The withdrawals were for the same reason — the schools wanted bigger players. Ironically, both were being pursued by University of South Florida. Iowa also wanted Brisbon, and a coaching change at Alabama ended that school's effort to land Jackson.

They might not have measured up to the size that other schools wanted, but Florida A&M coach Joe Taylor said both have the credentials that could earn them playing time this season. Brisbon, at 5-foot-11, 200 pounds, recorded 110 tackles in his senior year at Tampa Hillsboro High School. At 6-foot-1, 213 pounds, Jackson had 103 tackles in his senior year at Miami Jackson High School. "The thing that we were impressed with is that they just fly around the football," Taylor said. "It's possible they'll get playing time but they have a lot of experience in front of them."

FAMU LB has eyes on more

Last season was supposed to be a time for FAMU redshirt freshman linebacker Alvis Graham to learn his role in the new defensive scheme that Coach Joe Taylor introduced during his first season as head coach. But consider this: Graham overcame an early season ankle injury and wound up as the second-leading tackler for the Rattlers. During the spring, Graham raised a few eyebrows. As the Rattles begin to count down to starting practice on Aug. 17, Graham knows that the bar has been taken up a notch to the point that he's expected to be an impact player.

"Now that I know the defense, I can put the speed behind it," he said. "I want to be the best that I can be to help my team out as much I can. I'm trying to work hard to be the kind of player who could do whatever I need to do on the field." Graham was a fast study last season. He credits senior Vernon Wilder for being his mentor and helping him grasp the system. But as fast as Graham was learning, linebackers coach Earl Holmes gave just enough for the freshman to handle. That was to Graham's advantage as he tried to work through a sprained left ankle that he sustained during the spring of 2008. The time he wasn't on the field allowed him to soak up all that Wilder passed on.

Morgan State University Bears
Q&A with Morgan State coach Donald Hill-Eley

When Morgan State football coach Donald Hill-Eley opens practice today, he'll see 40 returning lettermen and 14 starters from last season's 6-6 (4-4 in the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference) team. Although the Bears were picked to finish sixth in the MEAC preseason poll, there is reason for optimism. Seven Morgan State players were named to the Preseason All-MEAC team, including running back Devan James and defensive end Justin Lawrence. Hill-Eley, entering his eighth season, has a career mark of 36-43. The team opens the season Sept. 12 against Football Bowl Subdivision opponent Akron of the Mid-American Conference. The Baltimore Sun spoke with Hill-Eley at Sunday's media day at Hughes Stadium.

Question: You have a lot of lettermen and starters back from a team that went 4-4 in the MEAC last season. Yet you were picked sixth in the preseason poll. Is your team ready to surprise the MEAC this season?

Answer: Anytime you've got that many lettermen coming back, it's a good thing. It's pretty much 50-50 offense and defense. Sometimes you lose continuity when you lose seniors, but we're truly in a better position this year. We have a lot of young talent coming in, young men who have been part of high school championships. We have high hopes, and if we jell at the right time we can finish well.

Q: Who are the teams to beat in the MEAC?A: Week in, week out it can be any of them. The division is very strong. Last year we knocked off 7-2 [ Florida A&M] then lost to 2-7 Norfolk State. You've got to be prepared every week. You have to make sure you put your best self out there on the field every week.

Morgan Volleyball Picked 4th in MEAC Northern Division Preseason Poll

The Morgan State volleyball team was picked to finish fourth in the northern division of the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference (MEAC) preseason poll, as voted by the league’s head coaches and sports information directors. Defending MEAC North champion Maryland Eastern Shore received 20 of the possible 22 first place votes to earn the top nod in the North, while eight-time defending MEAC champion Florida A&M, who was slated to win the MEAC Southern Division, received 19 first place votes.

Last season Morgan State finished 3-25 overall and placed fifth in the MEAC North with a mark of 2-8. It was the first time in school history the Lady Bears missed out on the conference postseason championship. The Lady Bears begin the 2009 campaign in Raleigh, N.C., as they take part in the North Carolina State Tournament (Aug. 28-29). Morgan State will open up against host N.C. State, followed by Campbell on Aug. 28, before facing Charleston Southern and Davidson on Aug. 29.

Jackson State University Tigers
JSU opens basketball season at Memphis

A road game against Conference USA power Memphis on Friday, Nov. 13, will kick off Jackson State’s men’s basketball schedule, which the school released on Monday. The 31-game slate has 13 non-conference opponents, including Spring Hill, which the Tigers will meet for the first time on Dec. 30 at home. JSU opens its home schedule with matchups against Stephen F. Austin and Southeastern Louisiana on Dec. 2 and Dec. 5. The first Southwestern Athletic Conference game is against Alabama A&M at home on Monday, Jan. 4. Coach Tevester Anderson’s Tigers (18-15) finished second in the SWAC regular season and tournament last season.

JSU men’s basketball schedule

Nov. 5
— Millsaps; 10 — Miles; 13 — at Memphis; 17 — at Alabama; 21 — at Stephen F. Austin; 24 — at North Texas.

Dec. 2 — Stephen F. Austin; 5 — Southeastern Louisiana; 15 — at Baylor; 17 — at Tulsa; 19 — at Nebraska; 22-23 — Las Vegas Invitational; 30 — Spring Hill.

Jan. 4 — Alabama A&M; 6 — Alabama State; 9 — at Alcorn State; 11 — at Southern U.; 16 — Prairie View; 18 — Texas Southern; 23 — Grambling; 30 — at Miss. Valley.

Feb. 1 — at Arkansas-Pine Bluff; 6 — Alcorn State; 8 — Southern U.; 13 — at Prairie View; 15 — at Texas Southern; 20 — at Grambling; 27 — Miss. Valley.

March 1 — Arkansas-Pine Bluff; 4 — at Alabama A&M; 6 — at Alabama State; 10-13 — SWAC Tournament at Birmingham.

WR Richardson leaves Tigers

The last 48 hours have seen an odd string of events in the case of Jackson State receiver Rico Richardson. The freshman from Natchez had drawn rave reviews from coach Rick Comegy and was featured in a story in The Clarion-Ledger on Friday. Richardson left the team Thursday despite being optimistic about his role just days earlier. Comegy was hesitant to go into all of the details surrounding the situation, but his absence is thought to be caused by a junior college offering a better opportunity and the chance to go to a Division I-A program afterward.

The coaching staff, however, expected Richardson and his mom to return Friday afternoon and had plans to meet then. He hadn't shown up by the end of practice and coaches were still awaiting his arrival. Comegy did say that Richardson came to talk to him about the situation before leaving campus. "I want him to see that we care for him," Comegy said. "He's got some personal issues at home." The 6-foot-1, 185-pounder ranked No. 5 in the state among Class 5A receivers his senior season at Natchez with 891 receiving yards and seven touchdowns and was a second-team 5A All-State selection by the Mississippi Association of Coaches.

Comegy: D-line making strides

The offense had been ahead of the defense during the early practices of the Jackson State preseason camp, coach Rick Comegy noticed. That's not the norm as offense relies so much on timing, but JSU returns all of its starting players at the skill positions. Defense has worked new players on the line, at linebacker and in the secondary. The defense, however, was the first thing Comegy talked about after Monday's practice - the first full-pads, full-contact session of camp. "The defensive line is starting to come on and do some good things," Comegy said. "I was pleased with the movement up front.

"That's been (a concern) for me the last couple days." Defensive tackle Neal Pogue hasn't worried, considering the unit is replacing two starters coupled with the fact returning starting defensive end Sam Washington has had back issues. "Everybody's always rusty," Pogue said. "Everybody has to work the kinks out. It may take a day or two, but after that third day, we're going to roll."

Tigers place emphasis on outside speed

Comegy hopes elusive running backs boost offense...Rick Comegy made a conscious decision regarding recruiting strategy that has played out every day during preseason practices. The Jackson State coach wanted more speedy, slasher-type running backs that could be used in a variety of ways. So, in came Anthony Mayes (5-foot-9, 180 pounds) and Demario Pippen (5-9, 215 pounds) last year, and Alfred Moreland (5-6, 185 pounds) this year. Suddenly, JSU is able to put in packages using those players both in the backfield and in the slot with the goal of getting them the ball out in space.

"They give us team speed," Comegy said. "Those are the type of guys that can hit a home run for you and they're young. "Outside speed. We didn't have that kind of kid that could do those things." JSU has always run its share of screens under Comegy and offensive coordinator James Woody over the years, though with limited success. Fans became increasingly frustrated with the play in 2009, but it often involved a player without the type of speed and shiftiness that Mayes, Moreland and Pippen possess.

Edwards makes resounding hit

Jackson State practiced in shoulder pads for the first time Saturday, and it's always interesting how wearing pads can affect the entire atmosphere and tempo of a session. The Tigers were especially lively with real contact for the first time, so much that a no-tackle practice became the exact opposite during a 9-on-7, inside-running drill. The defense, which included linemen and linebackers, started strong and was letting the offense know about it. But the white jerseys, which included a quarterback, linemen and running backs, finished with the upper hand. Running backs Darius Bolela, Bloi-Dei Dorzan, Jeward Smith and Terrence Davis all popped through holes on what would have been significant gains during a game. But it was Luther Edwards who made the play of the day.

Norfolk State University Spartans
As NSU practice starts, five questions

Eighty-four football players will take the practice field when Norfolk State opens preseason camp this afternoon, and, for most of them, it will be familiar turf. The Spartans return the most mature team in the Pete Adrian era, featuring 34 juniors and seniors - 19 of whom took a redshirt year - and another 15 redshirt sophomore s on the roster. All that experience is the product of the program Adrian implemented when he took over in 2005. The Spartans are hoping the payoff comes this year. With 16 starters back from last year's 5-7 team, which was snakebitten by injuries and close losses, Adrian believes this squad can contend for a MEAC title. To do so, it will have to answer some the questions facing the team as practice opens. Questions like...

Will the offense be improved? NSU ranked seventh in the MEAC in total offense a year ago. Look for the Spartans to spread the field more this year to get the ball into the hands of their best athletes. That list begins with quarterback Dennis Brown, back for his senior season, and junior tailback DeAngelo Branche, a 1,000-yard rusher last year. They'll be joined by speedy receivers Chris Bell - a Penn State transfer - and Jeremy Wicker, the top returning receiver with 18 catches. Dwight Fluker-Berry, who returned two kicks for touchdowns last year, moves from safety to receiver.

South Carolina State University Bulldogs
SC State defense dominates

South Carolina State held its annual Media Day followed by a 3 p.m. preseason scrimmage Saturday at Oliver C. Dawson Stadium. The Bulldogs ended the scoreless contest with the defense shutting down the offense. "We had a bit of a struggle snapping the ball on the offensive line," Bulldogs coach Buddy Pough said. "We rotated a couple guys in there to see if we could get some things going, and it showed us where we need some work."

Senior fullback Kenneth Smalls had an impressive series running the ball for the Bulldogs. Senior All-MEAC running back Will Ford and Travil Jamison didn't play on the day. "When you got a guy like Smalls who can make things happen in the open space, that's a really good thing for our offense," said Pough. "He kind of gives us that flexibility to do more than one thing."

All-MEAC senior linebacker Marshall McFadden did not play in the scrimmage due to an injury to his wrist that will sideline him all season. Clemson transfer Barry Humphries also will not suit up for the Bulldogs this season because of a knee injury he suffered with the Tigers. The S.C. State players will receive their 2008 MEAC Championship rings during "Meet the Players Day" Aug. 22 at approximately 11:30 a.m.

Injured McFadden remains upbeat

S.C. State standout will miss season but hopes to return and take his shot at the NFL...South Carolina State linebacker Marshall McFadden had big plans for his final season. The fifth-year senior has started all 37 games in his career and was on the radar of several NFL scouts. He felt with a strong season, he could earn an invite to the NFL Combine and continue his playing career beyond college. But all those plans were derailed when McFadden broke his right wrist on the first day in full pads and will miss the season.

“Hearing the words that I was done for the season brought tears to my eyes,” the former Lamar High standout said Saturday morning during S.C. State’s media day at Oliver C. Dawson Bulldog Stadium. “After I talked to the doctor and coaches, and they said I might be able to play next year, it brought a little life back to me." McFadden said the school will petition the NCAA to allow for a sixth-year of eligibility. He played as a true freshman in 2005 but missed all but two games in 2007 with an elbow injury.

He returned last year and moved from strong safety to middle linebacker. He flourished in the new role and finished tied for the team lead with 88 total tackles, including a team-high 51 unassisted stops. That earned him second-team All-MEAC honors and he was a preseason first-team pick this year.

Bulldogs middle linebacker McFadden likely to miss season

South Carolina State middle linebacker Marshall McFadden has been lost for the season. McFadden collided with teammate Rafael Bush during Tuesday’s afternoon practice and suffered a dislocated wrist. "We were in Cover 2, and we were both going up to deflect a pass and we collided," a sullen McFadden said late Wednesday night. "I went today and they relocated my wrist," he continued. "They put the joint back in place. I’m getting a CAT scan. Next week, I’m supposed to have surgery to re-attach all the ligaments in my wrist."

McFadden was the clear-cut leader of the South Carolina State defense heading into the season. He was one of the few Bulldogs on campus for the second semester of summer school and was in impressive physical shape. A 176-pound safety four years ago, McFadden came into preseason camp at a chiseled 235 pounds, boasting a 4.6, 40-yard dash time. "I busted my (butt) this summer," McFadden said. "I was planning on having a big season. Up until this point, I was having a big camp." South Carolina State head coach Oliver "Buddy" Pough said McFadden was at his best through the first few preseason practices.

"He is just a beautiful athlete," Pough said. "He was looking good as a player along with the fact that he was our speed linebacker. He had the size and he could run as fast as anybody." McFadden led South Carolina State with 69.5 tackles, 11.5 for loss, last season. He was the top returning pass rusher after tallying five sacks last season. A fifth-year senior, McFadden was redshirted two seasons ago after dislocating his elbow against Bethune-Cookman.

Humphries calls it a career

Barry Humphries came to South Carolina State to compete for the starting center position. He never really got the chance. It was announced Thursday that Humphries, a fifth-year senior that transferred from Clemson last week, would not be able to play this season due to a pre-existing knee injury. “Barry was struggling with that knee,” Pough said. “From the very beginning, when they told me it was an ACL, I was worried. That’s a full year to recover from, and we were inside of that point. It looked like it would take a while longer.

They looked at the X-rays and gave him the prognosis of how long it would be before he would be full speed. He took that and said he better go and get a job. He finished school. He has no reason to continually beat that thing up. He’s better off giving it a chance to heal properly so he can go through the rest of his life in a normal manner.” Humphries was slated to battle Sam Timothy for the starting center position. With Humphries out of the equation, Pough said Casey Fortune would likely move back to center and that guard Juavahr Nathan would also see time at the position.

Asheton Jordan transferring to S.C. State

The Post and Courier is reporting that Asheton Jordan, The Citadel’s leading rusher a season ago, has opted to transfer to South Carolina State University. As a freshman last season, Jordan (6-0, 206) led the Bulldogs with 711 rushing yards and four touchdowns. In the story by The Post’s Jeff Hartsell, Jordan said he also considered Charleston Southern and Georgia Southern.

“But I wanted a program that was a little bit bigger than Charleston Southern and that ran the ball a lot,” Jordan told Hartsell. “S.C. State has a good team and they really pound the football, so I thought that would be a good place for me.” A former Stratford High School star, Jordan was found guilty of an honors violation at The Citadel last spring, but told Hartsell that was “just a big mix-up in the military stuff.” Jordan will sit out this year and have three seasons left to play for S.C. State.

Summer Camp Photo Gallery

The Top Dog: S.C. State’s Will Ford is ready to run wild

Nineteen players came before him in the countdown but no one is ranked above him.Thursday night, Will Ford, The T&D’s "Top Dog" in its top 20 countdown of South Carolina State football players, was on campus in Orangeburg hanging out with teammates Travil Jamison and Derrick Wiley."It feels good (to be back)," Ford said. "I’ve been away for a little while, but I’ve been patiently waiting for this and I’m ready.

"Today, the Bulldogs will officially open the 2009 season with their first practice of the year, scheduled for 6 p.m. at Oliver C. Dawson Stadium and Ford can barely wait. He spent the majority of his summer at home in Travelers Rest preparing for this season, his final as a Bulldog, and it doesn’t escape him that this is the most important season of his life to date. There are plenty of personal goals. Of course, he wants to perform well for scouts at the next level, and as long as he does that records will fall. Ford enters the year with 3,640 rushing yards, just 454 yards away from breaking Michael Hicks’ career rushing record at South Carolina State and 1,009 yards from running past former Hampton tailback Alonzo Coleman for the all-time career MEAC rushing record.

10 questions for the Bulldogs

The “Dream Season” of 2008 is officially in the archives for South Carolina State. As the Bulldog players return to campus today and start preseason practice at 3:10 p.m. Friday, the focus will be on preparation for defense of their Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference championship, Now the “hunted,” S.C. State enters this year’s campaign with a bevy of expectations based upon last year’s success and high preseason Football Championship Subdivision rankings.

For Bulldog fans, this is a welcome alternative to the past three weeks, where most of the talk concerned off-field issues such as the firing/rehiring of defensive line coach David Harrison and the decision not to fund summer workouts. How the recent controversy will affect the eighth season under head coach Oliver “Buddy” Pough is just one of 10 questions S.C. State will look to answer heading into the Sept. 6 season-opener against Grambling in Orlando, Fla.:

1. What do the oddsmakers think of the Bulldogs’ chances of repeating?

'Top Dogs': Long ready to prove he is worthy of his 'C'

Malcolm Long was in Gaffney Wednesday night closing out one crazy summer. The South Carolina State quarterback was in Orangeburg for the first session of summer school, but headed home for the second session. Turns out, he was just in time to witness his hometown (Gaffney) get terrorized by serial killer Patrick Tracy Burris. Luckily, Burris’ spree was brought to an end when he was gunned down by law enforcement officials in early July.

“When I first got back is when the serial killer came down,” Long said. “I was trying to be protective of my family and look over them. It really got hectic. I’ve never seen as many law enforcement officials in my life. They were everywhere trying to catch that guy.” Despite the tense situation, Long still managed to get out of the house and head down to his old stomping grounds at Gaffney High School to get work in. Throwing balls to the Indians in 7 on 7 passing drills however, the former South Carolina “Mr. Football” quickly learned that his arm is just a little too much for most high school players to handle.

Media Day and first scrimmage gallery

The T&D launches 'The Bulldog Zone'

South Carolina State kicked off the 2009 season with its first practice Friday and The Times and Democrat was there. Want the report from practice? Want exclusive news and notes in the Day 1 notebook? Want an exclusive with former North Carolina Shrine Bowl defensive back and new Bulldog Dominique Ellis, a former N.C. State player? Go to http://www.thebulldogzone.com/ for the stories, as well as exclusives, photos and video by the T&D Sports Staff.

While there, take a look around. “The Bulldog Zone” is The T&D’s new Web site aimed at providing in-depth coverage of S.C. State Athletics. The site, which is in its soft-launch phase, features plenty of news on the S.C. State Bulldogs football team, including video, a forum and photo galleries. Fans can look forward to exclusives on the site as well as practice reports. Want to know the inside scoop on the ‘Dogs? Check out the Dog Dish, and keep up with S.C. State through Thomas Grant’s “Following the Bulldogs” blog as well as the sports staff’s blog, “The Huddle.”

Tennessee State University Tigers
TSU looks to transfers to boost wide receivers

Tennessee State opened practice Monday with no receivers who caught a pass for the Tigers last season. But Coach James Webster is hoping three transfers will help fill a void that also includes the loss of former Louisville receiver JaJuan Spillman. "I've got three secret weapons that people don't know about,'' Webster said. "We had a great receiving corps last year but I really believe with this receiving corps we won't miss a beat." Spillman, who started for the Tigers last season and caught 43 passes for 570 yards and five touchdowns, has been ruled academically ineligible. Webster said he is treating it as a redshirt season for Spillman and expects him back for spring practice.

Javier Jackson, a redshirt junior from Memphis who had three catches for 71 yards, graduated early and decided not to return. The transfers are Oklahoma State's Jeremy Broadway, Illinois' Marques Wilkins and former Whites Creek High player Calvin Roberts. Broadway was a starter early in his career at Oklahoma State but lost his spot last year. He only had two catches last season, but one against Iowa State was a 95-yard TD that set a record for the longest play in school history. He was kicked off the team for violating team rules in December. Broadway still had a year of eligibility remaining after graduating last spring and enrolled in graduate school at TSU.

Alabama Agricultural and Mechanical University Bulldogs
Alabama A&M trying to rebound from losing season

Alabama A&M coach Anthony Jones is in an unfamiliar position. For the first time since taking over the Bulldogs in 2002, he must rebound from a losing season. The good news for Jones & Co. is that 17 starters return from a team that was a game away from making the Southwestern Athletic Conference championship game despite a 5-7 overall record. The Bulldogs couldn't quite overcome an 0-3 start, though, and Jones is looking to avoid a repeat performance. They open Sept. 5 at Tennessee State.

"We have to come out of the blocks hot," he said. "If we don't, we're going to dig ourselves a hole and we'll use the remainder of the season trying to get out of it like we did last year." Reasons for optimism include an offensive line that returns all five starters, led by center Xavier Manuel. Incumbent quarterback Kevin Atkins is trying to hold off a challenge from Kentucky transfer DeAunte Mason, a redshirt freshman. Atkins did return from an ankle injury to pass for 357 yards and five touchdowns in the season finale against Mississippi Valley State to end an up-and-down year. His favorite target, wide receiver Thomas Harris, is also back after catching 72 passes for 1,208 yards.

Hampton University Pirates
HU players say former assistant Rose right man for head coaching job

At first, LaMarcus Coker thought everything Donovan Rose was saying might be too good to be true. As Rose, then an assistant coach at Hampton University, tried to talk Coker into joining the Pirates, the running back wasn't sure what to believe. "I kind of thought, 'I might need to watch him,' because in recruiting, (coaches) will tell you anything," Coker said. "(Rose) was telling me about the water, and how beautiful the campus was, and the girls that are gonna be here, and the facilities that the football team had and all the things that they were trying to do, and how many players they put in the NFL.

"Rose's pitch worked, luring Coker to Hampton after his troubled Tennessee career ended. Once there, Coker found Rose to be true to his word. "I can say that everything he told me has come to pass," said Coker, who led the Pirates with 713 rushing yards last year. "(Rose) was basically my reason for coming. ... He's smart. I knew that he knew what he was talking about as far as football goes. He's a great person.

"The demeanor Rose, now in his first year as Hampton's head coach, displayed as a recruiter has the players he first met in that role confident that he can restore stability to a program beginning its second consecutive season with a new coach.Quarterback Herb Bynes, who threw for a school-record 2,713 yards last season as a sophomore, drew plenty of college attention at Boyd H. Anderson High in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. But when his test scores lagged behind the athletic prowess that saw him rack up almost 5,000 yards of total offense, some of that interest faded.

Savannah State University Tigers
QB Battle Rages on at Savannah State University



The position of starting quarterback at Savannah State continues to be up for grabs. Sophomores A.J. Defilippis and Kurvin Curry are both impressing head coach Robby Wells. Curry was the starter last season while Defilippis took the reigns in the Spring. That’s when Curry was held out due to academic reasons. The Tigers open up the season in Greenville against Livingstone College September 5th.

SSU struggles in first scrimmage

Tigers slow on offense, draw costly penalties... Savannah State did not record statistics during the football team's first scrimmage of fall training camp Saturday morning. That's probably a good thing because seemingly everyone struggled during a lackluster, two-hour outing. "We've got a lot of work to do," SSU second-year head coach Robby Wells said. "On a scale of one to 10, I'd say we're probably about a four. We've still got a good, long way to go to get where we want to be. "Every time that you come in, you've got to basically beat the dust off of everybody and get them all shaped up and ready to play. That's exactly what we're trying to do right now."

Sophomore quarterback A.J. DeFilippis, a Benedictine graduate, started the scrimmage with the first-team offense against the first-team defense. The first series ended when DeFilippis was intercepted by junior defensive back Darren Hunter. Sophomore quarterback Kurvin Curry started the second series with the second-team offense against the second-team defense. During a pitch from Curry to freshman Antonio Proctor, a Memorial Day graduate, the ball hit the ground and was scooped up by sophomore linebacker Michael Kuku.

Video: SSU Tigers hit the field for first scrimmage of 2009

Freshman quarterback Antonio Bostic, of Greensboro, Fla., started the third series with the third-team offense against the third-team defense. He fumbled and sophomore defensive lineman Juvaro Goodman picked up the ball and raced 25 yards for a touchdown.

North Carolina Central University Eagles
Briscoe leaving NCCU

Basketball guard Jamar Briscoe is transferring to Charlotte from N.C. Central. Coach Bobby Lutz announced Tuesday that Briscoe will be a walk-on with the 49ers. He will sit out this season under the NCAA's transfer rules and have three years of eligibility left.

NCCU jazzes up festival

North Carolina Central University's Jazz Ensemble took part in a jazz festival in Newport, Rhode Island over the weekend. Students played before thousands at the George Wein's CareFusion Jazz Festival 55. The event is one of the oldest annual jazz festivals. It started in 1954, and is where Duke Ellington, Ella Fitzgerald and others made music history.

Click here to view images from the event

The band was invited to play at the event four months ago. The young musicians of North Carolina Central University were gassed to be in Newport, shyly introducing themselves to legends such as Walton. “Just to be here — it has so much history, to be here where Coltrane played and everything,” trombonist Brad Maston said, shaking his head, before playing.

After the big-band set (a smaller combo played with Joey Calderazzo in the morning), it was the audience members who were shaking their heads. George Augustine, of Durham, N.C., has been coming to the jazz festival on and off since 1986, and he’s seen the NCCU band in their home state, but said “This is obviously another step up. They rose to the occasion.”

Ira Wiggins, director of jazz studies at NCCU, said that the gig came through Marsalis, who sat in with the big band in the afternoon. The idea of building a top-notch jazz program, Wiggins said, had two strikes against it at Central: Firstly, the arts and music don’t get a lot of academic respect anywhere; and secondly, what attention is paid to music at a historically black college goes to gospel and marching band. So how did they do it?

“A lot of will and a lot of perseverance,” said Wiggins, who has been at NCCU for 23 years. For Walton’s part, he pronounced himself “totally blown away” by the number of young jazz players and listeners, and their level of knowledge, thanks to university programs that didn’t exist when the 75-year-old was coming up. “That’s how we maintain,” he said after playing. Members told a local publication that the experience was surreal.

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Southern University and A&M College Jaguars
Battle in trenches tops Southern scrimmage

A few yards shy of the end zone, Southern’s first-team offense settled into a goal-line formation. The defensive line dug in. Saturday morning, as an angry sun hovered over the Jaguars during their first fall scrimmage, the offense and defense squared off for six final plays inside the 5-yard line. Four times, the offense tried to run it up the gut. Four times, the offense got stuffed — much to the delight of Terrence Graves, the defensive coordinator, who smiled and screamed at his troops. On play No. 5, quarterback Bryant Lee threw a fade to wideout Roderick Banks. His pass sailed out of bounds. Finally, on the last play of the day, freshman tailback Brandon Rice rumbled over the goal line. The defense had made a stand, and the offense closed on a good note. So went the first true test of training camp.

Stewart leads Southern wideouts

Slashing and burning like a store that’s going out of business, Southern wideout Juamorris Stewart tore up the Southwestern Athletic Conference last season, delivering on the potential he showed as a youngster from Istrouma High School. Yet this summer, when someone asked Stewart about some of his biggest plays, he grinned, shook his head and looked at the floor. “Prairie View,” Stewart said, referring to the Jaguars’ 24-23 loss in Houston.

“Just before halftime, a ball was in the air and I lost it in the lights. As I recall, that would have put us up by two scores. It could have broken their backs. That was one of the biggest plays of the season for me.” It was one of the few moments Stewart failed to come through in the clutch.
He led the conference in receptions (76), yards (1,138) and touchdowns (12).

For Jaguars linemen, it’s all about the hands

When Ted Jones started his college football career at Southern, he was a tight end. Then the coaches took a look at his strength and quickness, and they moved Jones to defensive end. He might have thought he’d never again use his hands on the football field. He was very, very wrong. He learned an interesting little surprise: While many offensive and defensive linemen have thighs that resemble tree trunks; no sign of a neck; and biceps that put Hulk Hogan to shame; often, their most important physical tools are two open palms and 10 chubby fingers.

At Southern, linemen are told they must have good hands.“For a defensive lineman, some people try to downplay how important ... your hands can be,” Jones said. “Then I got here, and they emphasize that your hands are crucial. Once I realized that, I realized I could be a better player.”

Southern's Hollimon moves from QB to RB

Southern’s Gary Hollimon, a fourth-year junior, moved from backup quarterback to running back Thursday in a move to get himself closer to playing in a game. Hollimon (6-foot-1, 215 pounds) started training camp with hopes of nailing down the No. 2 spot behind senior Bryant Lee, but Hollimon soon found himself behind two freshmen, Jeremiah McGinty and LeAndre Thompson. “He wants to have an opportunity to play,” Southern coach Pete Richardson said. “Right now we’re looking for ways to give him that opportunity and to make it work.”

SU coaches get 'late steal' in Ohio RB Rice

As a senior last year at Walnut Ridge High School in Columbus, Ohio, running back Brandon Rice never planned on coming to Southern. Now, as fall practice moves into its second week at SU, the two parties are glad they’ve found each other. According to Rivals.com, Rice (5-foot-8, 176 pounds) was a three-star prospect who had scholarship offers from Miami (Ohio) and Eastern Michigan — but coaches at both schools were fired, and the new coaches chose not to honor the offers. That left Rice without a college program, even after his high school graduation.

SU offensive coordinator Mark Orlando said he was recruiting Ohio for 2010 when coaches told him about Rice. He brought game tapes back to Baton Rouge, and coach Pete Richardson liked what he saw. Before fall camp, Rice became a Jaguar. “We feel like we got a late steal,” Orlando said. “He’s a true freshman, but he’s learning. He has some talent and ability to help us.”

Southern offensive line wants to be beastly
SU Coach Damon Nivens

On many mornings, Southern offensive line coach Damon Nivens often looks like he’s ready for a day in the rain forest than a day at training camp. Decked out in a safari hat and a shortsleeve windbreaker, he strolls into Louisiana’s subtropical heat and onto the practice fields, where he meets, among others, a burly beast named Ramon Chinyoung. Nivens says his senior center looks like a wolf — strong, loyal and, at times, a little out of control. Chinyoung, the line’s leader and unofficial spokesman, disagrees.

“No, coach,” Chinyoung says, only half-joking. “I’m a lion. I’m king of the jungle.” Chinyoung, who never needs much motivation, said he’s excited about his senior year —and although he’s a little biased, he says this group of linemen could be the best since he came to SU. To his left is a longtime partner — senior guard Adrian Banks, another cat from the Houston area, who thought about giving up football but decided to return for a fifth year.

Delaware State University Hornets
From Day 1, the battle for No. 1

Competition was the operative word as Delaware State University kicked off its preseason football camp at Alumni Stadium on Tuesday night. Opportunities to impress Delaware State coach Al Lavan and his staff abound as the Hornets look to replace their leading passer, leading rusher, leading receiver and four of the teams' five leading tacklers from last season. "I'm eager to get started because we have a lot of work to do before the opener at Florida A&M [Sept. 5]," Lavan said. "There's always a concern about conditioning as camp begins. We'll know early on who's in the best condition to compete."

The Hornets' long journey toward their Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference season opener against the Rattlers began with a 2 1/2-hour practice session. The fighting for starting spots, learning offensive and defensive playbooks and constant conditioning will continue on a near-daily basis until the team breaks camp with a scrimmage on Aug 29. "We lost a number of key players from last season, so there will be some interesting battles during camp," Lavan said. "We also have more new players than in the past several years, so it will be crucial that they learn our system and our way of doing things. "There will be little time to waste as we prepare for opening day."




Grambling State University
Orange's 'Big Cat" Ladd in Grambling Hall of Greats

Orange legend Ernie Ladd “Big Cat” continues to receive prestigious honors. Ladd, who passed away in March of 2007, was among the inaugural class of the Grambling University Sports Hall of Fame. Spearheaded by James “Shack” Harris (former NFL Pro Bowl Most Valuable Player) and Doug Williams (former Super Bowl MVP) the ceremony was held at the Monroe Civic Center in Monroe, Louisiana.

At 6-9 and 315 pounds, Ladd arrived to Grambling in the late 1950s and immediately made an impact. A first-team all-league defensive lineman in his final season at Grambling in 1960, he helped Grambling to its first-ever SWAC championship. He may have been known as a ferocious All-Pro defensive lineman as well as “The Big Cat” in the professional wrestling ranks, but Ernie Ladd was also known as the gentle giant from Orange, Texas.

Remembering: Ernie "Big Cat" Ladd, #77 AFL San Diego Chargers

Ladd, who was born and raised in Orange, Texas passed away in 2007 after a long bout with cancer. The “Big Cat,” has claim to fame in being enshrined in both the American Football League Hall of Fame and the World Wrestling Entertainment Hall of Fame. Ladd was a fierce product of the former Wallace High School in Orange and was coached by the late legendary coach Willie Ray Smith. He played on the 1954 state championship team as a sophomore and was also an All-State basketball player in helping lead the Dragons to a state crown as well in that sport.

Ladd went on to play for another legend, Eddie Robinson, at Grambling State University. With Ladd’s efforts, Robinson was able to land his first Southwest Athletic Conference championship. The American Football League’s San Diego Chargers selected Ladd with their 15th pick in the 1961 draft. At 6-9, 315 pounds, Ladd was arguably the biggest and strongest man in pro football during his era. He had a 52-inch chest, 39-inch waist, 20-inch biceps, 19-inch neck, 20-inch calf, and size 18D shoes.

Ladd went on to become a three-time All-AFL player and he played in four consecutive Pro Bowls. The Chargers made strong runs to the AFL championship games. The Chargers won it all during the 1963 season, defeating the Boston Patriots. They also advanced to three title games, falling to Houston in 1961 and Buffalo in 1964 and 1965. Ladd spent the 1966 season playing for the Houston Oilers before moving, in 1967, to the Kansas City Chiefs. There, with Buck Buchanan, a former Grambling teammate, he filled out what was probably the biggest defensive tackle tandem in history, and won another AFL title. Both Ladd and Buchanan are members of the Grambling State University Athletic Hall of Fame.

While playing football, Ladd began making appearances at wrestling events at first as a special referee and later as a wrestler. Knee problems, and what at the time ended up being a more lucrative career as a wrestler, ended his football career. Ladd started wrestling in 1961. As a publicity stunt, some wrestlers in the San Diego area challenged Ladd to a private wrestling workout. Before long, Ladd was a part-time competitor in Los Angeles, during football's off-season. Ladd became a huge draw in short order.

Butter fingers!: Drops plague Grambling receivers in scrimmage

They gathered, Grambling’s receivers, in a circle to pay their penance. Balls had littered the Robinson Stadium turf throughout Saturday’s scrimmage. Now it was time to get up close and personal with that grassy surface. Over and over, in this grueling drill, the receivers hit the ground flat — as if doing a push up — then jumped back to a standing position. Enclosed in a damp blanket of humidity, a few struggled to rise again. Quarterback Greg Dillon, in a day that underscored his quick maturation after less than a year as a starter, was right there with his teammates.

CATCHING ON: Grambling's receiving corps are young but talented

Take a look at the Grambling roster and you won’t find a lot of experience among the wide receivers. The Tigers’ top returner in the passing game is sophomore wideout Kiare Thompson, who had 25 receptions for 310 yards and seven touchdowns in 2008. Beyond Thompson, the returnees who made the best targets for quarterback Greg Dillon last season are two running backs (Kenneth Batiste and Frank Warren) and a tight end (Larry Donnell). Finding a few more reliable receivers to stretch opposing defenses is one of the Tigers’ biggest concerns as the Sept. 6 season opener against South Carolina State approaches.

Ball-hawking GSU secondary back at work

A cornerstone of Grambling’s success last season was gritty play in the secondary. So expectations run high, as fall sessions get underway, for a group that led the SWAC in interceptions, returns all but one starter, and boasts talented depth like Desmond Lenard — who led the team in picks a year ago. That starts with the starters, who have returned with some lofty goals. How lofty? Only setting school records. A second straight Southwestern Athletic Conference crown.

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Sunday, August 9, 2009

MEAC/SWAC/OVC Sports: This Week in Review

North Carolina Central University Eagles
Eagles still knocking on MEAC's door

Stop me if you've heard this one before: N.C. Central is this close to becoming a member of the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference. Yep, any day now; yes sir, Bud, just you wait -- and wait and wait. The conference last Friday hosted its annual kickoff football luncheon in Newport News, Va., and once again the Eagles were on the outside looking in. When asked for the umpteenth time about NCCU's status, Commissioner Dennis Thomas said -- for the umpteenth time -- "Both schools [Savannah State is the other] are still under review. We are in the process of reviewing and a decision is very soon. We're on the tail end."

That tail must be on the end of a donkey. NCCU is doing everything on its end: the athletics department has combined all the booster clubs into one, a suggestion the NCAA strongly recommends to keep better track of funds; increased scholarships and coaching staffs; an enlarged sports information department to further expand coverage of all its programs, and now the installation of artificial turf at O'Kelly-Riddick Stadium to curtail costs.

Commissioner, Dr. Dennis E. Thomas, Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference

And let's not forget NCCU's most important asset: its countrywide fan base. With the economy squeezing wallets and advertisers scaling back on sponsorships, the MEAC needs all the leverage it can get. Somebody needs to remind them of that since NCCU can't. Instead of saying something like "What the heck is taking so dang long? Do we have to turn into Keith Sweat and beg all night long?"

NC Central looks to make progress in Division I

Maturing Eagles face ambitious schedule...N.C. Central is in position to put together its best Division I season ever. The Eagles return 18 starters from a team that went 4-7 last year. Improving that record in 2009 will be difficult with a schedule that includes Championship Subdivision powerhouse Appalachian State and Bowl Subdivision rival Duke. NCCU finished strong in ‘08, winning three of its final four games. Half of the returning starters are juniors, with six on defense, but head coach Mose Rison is looking to boost depth through competition with the addition of several redshirt freshmen and a highly-regarded recruiting class.

The Eagles’ offense, a weak link over the past two seasons, could be an asset with more experienced personnel throughout the lineup. NCCU has 33 letter winners on offense, with 16 who were in the starting lineup at some point a year ago. “Unlike in years past, we do have returning starters and people who have played on offense,” Rison said. “They will be comfortable. They will not be shell-shocked playing in their first game.” Four starters return to the offenisve line, anchored by senior tackle Gabriel Manns (6-6, 305), a three-year starter. “We are going to line up with some experience, size and athleticism up front,” Rison said.

Helmet auction bodes well for Central

Maybe the helmet is a good sign. One of the highlights of the Triangle Pigskin Preview is the auctioning off of the four universities' helmets. Last Thursday for the first time in a long while, if ever, N.C. Central's helmet wasn't the lowest bid. It came in third at $500 behind Duke ($1,000) and UNC ($600). Those cheap N.C. State folks were last at $350. The Eagles are nowhere near the caliber of major Division I programs yet, but maybe, just maybe, the helmet signals that better times are ahead.

Coach Mose Rison sounded cautiously optimistic as his team tries to rebound from a 4-7 season. "We have tremendous speed on both sides of the ball," he said. "And, unlike two years ago, we return a veteran of core players." NCCU won all of its games either at home or on a neutral site. But it must be emphasized that one of those wins was against hated rival N.C. A&T. That lone made the season a success.

Stephens Inks Three Year Deal

Cheyney University Men’s Basketball Coach Dominique Stephens (NCCU '92) signed a three year contract extension. Last season, as interim head coach, Stephens guided the Wolves to the PSAC post season tournament compiling an 18-9 mark along the way. He also led the Wolves to a victory over Division I Delaware State. It was the first time in more than 20 years that Cheyney knocked off a D I opponent.

On the signing of his contact Cheyney athletic director China Jude stated, “Coach Stephens has demonstrated his commitment not only to the athletic department’s success but to the University. He is a strong teacher, administrator and role model for our student athletes. We are very proud of his contribution and are happy that he has committed to remain at Cheyney.” The previous five seasons, Stephens served as an assistant coach under Cleo Hill Jr. Stephens is a native of Philadelphia and younger brother of Cheyney University women’s head coach and former Temple All-American women’s basketball player Marilyn Stephens.

Stephens has been part of many championships and great team from Philadelphia and Durham, NC. From past to present, Stephens was a member of the Dobbins High School Football team and 1984 basketball team that consisted of Doug Overton, Bo Kimble, and the late Hank Gathers. That famous hoop squad went onto win the Philadelphia Public League Championship. After high school, Stephens enrolled at North Carolina Central University. As a sophomore, NCCU posted a 26-3 mark. The following year the NCCU won the NCAA Division II title with a 28-4 season. The championship season, Stephens was named to the NCAA Tournament Team. His senior year, the Eagles went 28-5. Stephens was inducted into the North Carolina Central University Hall of Fame in 1995.

After college Stephens signed to play professionally in the Philippians Basketball League. In 2000, he was a member of the Lancaster Storm of the Eastern Basketball League. While always dreaming to play in the NBA, Stephens continued his schooling earning his Bachelors of Science in Mathematics from NCCU in 1992. Stephens went on to earn a Masters of Science in Human Services from Springfield College in 2002. He is the father of Cheyney standout Dominique Curry.

Brickey named assistant coach at NC Central

North Carolina Central University head men's basketball coach LeVelle Moton has announced the hiring of former Duke University standout Robert Brickey as assistant coach with the Eagles. Brickey comes to NCCU after serving a one-year stint with the women's basketball program at Duke University as the assistant director of basketball operations. Prior to that, he was the head coach at Shaw University for three years (2005-2008).

Before his arrival at Shaw, Brickey was an assistant coach at James Madison (2004-05), Southern Methodist (2002-04), and the United States Military Academy (2000-02). He also served as the community outreach coordinator with the Blue Devils from 1999-2000, before going into the coaching business.

"Robert brings a wealth of knowledge and experience to our staff," Moton said. "Because of his previous stops at the Division I level at places like James Madison, West Point, and SMU, his recruiting territories expand outside of North Carolina. At the same time, he is a hometown guy, with strong ties to the Triangle and Fayetteville areas. Everything he does and everything he stands for is parallel to what I was looking for in an assistant coach."

A native of Fayetteville, N.C., Brickey played four years at Duke from 1986-90. He served as team captain in 1990 and received first team All-Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) Tournament honors in 1988. He was a member of three Final Four teams and started in the national championship game in 1990. During his Blue Devil career, Brickey amassed 1,299 points, 649 rebounds, 146 assists, 115 steals and 90 blocked shots in 134 games played. Known for his athleticism, Brickey had a brief stint with the Global Basketball Association's Fayetteville Flyers in the early 1990s. He received his bachelor of arts degree in political science from Duke University.

Moton, named head coach at his alma mater on March 25, has now completed his full-time coaching staff with the addition of Brickey. Ray Martin, a former men's basketball student-athlete at Notre Dame with more than 30 years in the coaching profession, returns for his third season on the NCCU bench as assistant coach.

NCCU leases buses for school use

North Carolina Central University announced Friday that it signed a 5-year lease for two 56-passenger motor coaches. The brand new 2009 buses will be used to transport students, faculty and staff to cultural and athletic events. The buses are named Eagle One and Eagle Two. They are equipped with satellite TV and radio, Wi-Fi, video monitors and a DVD player. "The division of student affairs takes very seriously the stewardship of the student fees and other monies," says Vickie McNeill, special assistant to the vice chancellor.

Texas Southern University Tigers
TSU football program taking steps in right direction

Johnnie Cole wants to see more improvement from his young TSU team this season... Texas Southern’s 2008 season can be summed up in one word — inconsistency. TSU went on a three-game winning streak after dropping its first two but lost six out of its last seven to finish 4-8 overall and 1-6 in the Southwestern Athletic Conference, fifth in the Western Division. The start of preseason camp is less than a week away, and more consistent play is a priority for second-year coach Johnnie Cole.

“During the season, teams make jumps from game to game,” Cole said. “We’re expecting better things this year in order to make a jump from season one to season two.” In Cole’s first year back at his alma mater, the Tigers did produce the program’s best finish in six seasons, but that’s not good enough for Cole. Part of TSU’s problem in 2008 can be attributed to youth. The Tigers played 30 freshmen, including both starting cornerbacks. Moreover, their starting safeties were only sophomores.

Delaware State University Hornets
2009-10 DSU Men's Basketball Schedule Announced


Twenty-one teams from nine different conferences highlight the 2009-10 Delaware State Men's Basketball slate as announced by Head Coach Greg Jackson. The 2009-10 schedule will feature four teams that earned berths in the 2009 NCAA Tournament. Included in this year's schedule will be three former NCAA Division I Champions (Arkansas, Ohio State and UCLA) as well as the first meeting between Delaware State and Delaware since 2000.

"This year's schedule is a challenging one," said Jackson. "That will give us a chance to gauge where our team is at heading into MEAC play. We have gone to a lot of tough places during my 10 years here at Delaware State and this year's trips to UCLA, Arkansas, Ohio State and Arizona State continue that trend. Our home schedule, once again, will be exciting as teams like Maine, Lehigh and Delaware along with a number of tough MEAC foes come to Memorial Hall."

DSU opens the season with a five-game home stand, featuring Holy Family (Nov. 14), Wilmington University (Nov. 16), Maine (Nov. 18), Mary Washington (Nov. 24) and Delaware (Dec. 1). A pair of Central Atlantic Collegiate Conference (CACC) teams in Holy Family and Wilmington visiting Memorial Hall. The season-opening meeting between the Hornets and Tigers will be the first-ever. Wilmington University will visit Dover two days later as the Hornets look to improve their all-time record versus the Wildcats to 4-0. Last season, DSU downed Wilmington, 71-59, to tip off the 2008-09 campaign. America East's Maine Black Bears come to town on Nov. 18 before Mary Washington (Capital Athletic Conference) takes on the Hornets on Nov. 24. DSU closes out its five-game home stand with the Delaware Blue Hens on Dec. 1. This will mark the first meeting between the two teams since Nov. 20, 2000 - Coach Jackson's first-ever contest at Delaware State.

Prairie View Agricultural and Mechanical University Panthers
Westminster star signs with Prairie View A&M

Westminster Christian Academy graduate James Fontenot has received an athletic scholarship to Prairie View A&M. The son of Tellin and C. James Fontenot, he has played baseball, basketball and football for the school, but it was his skill at baseball that attracted the attention of more than one university. Southern University and the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff have expressed interest in the former Westminster shortstop, but Prairie View appealed to him more than the other two schools.

"I wanted to be someplace I felt comfortable," he said. After meeting with Prairie View's baseball coach, he decided the Texas university was that place. A good student, as well as a good athlete, Fontenot attended LSU E and took online courses from South Louisiana Community College, said his mother, Tellin Fontenot, a native of Ville Platte. His mother and father, C. James Fontenot, were with him Thursday at Westminster as he signed the papers that made his future association with Prairie View official. He plans to major in management.

Former UL wide receiver Jawanza Mitchell has transferred to Prairie View A&M...

Former University of Louisiana - Lafayette, wide receiver Jawanza Mitchell has transferred to Prairie View A&M, a FCS school in Prairie View, Texas. The Mesquite, Texas native redshirted as a true freshman in 2007 and did not make any catches in 2008 …

Data find more injuries for girls there than in any other sport

Although Title 9 has increased the participation of girls and women in high school and college sports, little has been done to address the most serious source of catastrophic injuries for young female athletes — cheerleading.

Data from the Consumer Products Safety Commission show that the number of catastrophic injuries — those involving death or disability caused by head or spine trauma — have grown from fewer than 5,000 in 1980 to 26,000 to 28,000 per year in the past few years, said Dr. Amy Miller Bohn, a family medicine specialist at the University of Michigan Health System in Ann Arbor. According to the National Center for Catastrophic Sports Injury Research, cheerleading accidents account for 65 percent to 66 percent of all female catastrophic sports injuries in high school and college.

The problem, Bohn said, is that cheerleading has become a competitive sport, with girls being tossed high into the air, jumping off pyramids and trying other risky stunts, often without adequate supervision. Prairie View A&M University cheerleader Bethany Norwood, 24, was left paralyzed in January 2004 after a fall during cheerleading practice. She died two years later. Injuries such as Norwood's are repeated every day around the country, Bohn said on Monday.

On the heels of a 9-1 season, the Panthers find themselves wanting more: a SWAC championship

Prairie View may be coming off its best season in years, but make no mistake about it, the Panthers finished short of their goal of winning a conference championship. Last season, Prairie View finished 9-1, its best record since it went 9-0 in 1964, claiming both the Southwestern Athletic Conference and Black College national championships. Prairie View's last SWAC title came that year. The Panthers have played 35 seasons of football since.

If they do make a championship push, Anthony Beck's play will have a lot to do with it. “We had a lot of individual accomplishments and broke a lot of records last season, but we didn't win a championship, so that stuff doesn't mean that much,” Beck said. Somehow, Prairie View will try to replace the leadership and experience of fifth-year senior quarterback Mark Spivey. Junior Jay Bluford and Western Kentucky transfer Kenneth “KJ” Black will battle it out in training camp to determine who takes the starting role. Camp begins Aug. 10, and coach Henry Frazier III expects to name a starter by the third week of camp. Defensively, Prairie View lost Zach East, its best linebacker. “You start looking at those holes losing East and Spivey — those were our leaders,” Frazier said.

Winston Salem State University Rams
WSSU recruit Wells academically eligible


Victories haven't been plentiful for Coach Bobby Collins in his first three basketball seasons at Winston-Salem State, but that could change with the latest news about this year's recruiting class. Collins signed three players in April, including point guard Marcus Wells of Southern Durham High School. Wells, however, had yet to qualify for freshman eligibility through the NCAA clearinghouse. That changed this week, and Collins got word Thursday that Wells (6-2, 160) is eligible for the 2009-10 season.

"We're definitely excited, and now we feel this class is complete," Collins said. "It's the first great step in the right direction with us having a team that can compete at the Division I level." ESPN.com, in its ranking of senior guards at North Carolina high schools last season, called Wells "a true point guard who possesses terrific vision with passing skills you just can't teach."

ESPN.com ranked Wells as the No. 3 senior point guard in the state after last season, behind John Wall (who signed with Kentucky) and Akeem Richmond (who signed with Rhode Island). Wells' status as a non-qualifier might have caused several schools to back off, but WSSU stayed with him. According to Collins, James Madison, George Mason, Cincinnati, N.C. State and Southern California also recruited Wells. Wells started for four years at Southern Durham and averaged 15 points and six rebounds over his final two seasons. He averaged 18 points, six rebounds, four steals and five assists as a senior, and the Durham Herald-Sun named him its player of the year.

Grant interviews for AD position at WSSU

Tim Grant, a former basketball player, assistant coach and administrator at Winston-Salem State, has been interviewed for the vacant athletics director's job at WSSU. According to several sources, Grant was on campus earlier this week for a lengthy interview with the 15-person search committee. Grant, now the director of Winston-Salem's Recreation & Parks Department, did not respond to phone messages left by the Journal.

Grant, 50, is the second candidate known to be interviewed by the search committee, according to sources. Michael Bailey, the AD and football coach at Virginia Union, was interviewed in mid-July. Several sources said that another candidate who has experience as a Division I athletics director also has been interviewed, but none of those sources knew the candidate's name.Dennis Felder, an assistant compliance coordinator in athletics and the head of the Human Performance & Sports Science major at WSSU, is the chairman of the search committee. He would not comment on any facet of the search.

Winston-Salem State Adds New Members To Hall Of Fame

The Winston-Salem State University Clarence E. "Big House" Gaines Athletic Hall of Fame will welcome seven former WSSU student-athletes and athletic supporters in the induction class of 2009. The WSSU C.E. "Big House" Gaines Athletic Hall of Fame enshrines a 2009 class of distinguished individuals in four different categories as football, wrestling and track and field will see members inducted into the Hall of Fame and two members of the 2009 induction class will be enshrined for their untiring service to the WSSU Department of Athletics.

Three former Ram football players will be enshrined as Derrick Beasley, Hubert "Muddy Waters" Hargett and Harrison Junior Stokes will earn the highest WSSU athletic honor in 2009. Willie Mouzon will be enshrined after a record-setting wrestling career with the Rams a history that saw him earn a pair of CIAA titles and receive back-to-back All-America honors. Vanessa Kaye Smith Johnson will be the sole Lady Ram to be inducted after a stellar track and field and women's basketball career.

DeValdean Penn and Michael McCoy will be inducted for their 30-plus total years of meritorious service to the WSSU Department of Athletics. The seven inductees will be honored with enshrinement into the Winston-Salem State C.E. "Big House" Gaines Athletic Hall of Fame in a formal ceremony to be held on September 4, 2009 at the Anderson Center McNeill Banquet Hall. The inductees will also be honored at halftime when the Rams take on the North Carolina A&T Aggies on Saturday September 5, 2009.

Jackson State University Tigers
84 of 89 Tigers report on time

Eighty-four of Jackson State's expected 89 players reported for duty Tuesday to kick off the 2009 football preseason. The five absences were no reason to panic as coaches had excused the players and knew they wouldn't be arriving on time. Freshmen Qutavious Parks (athlete), Antowan Westry (offensive lineman) and Tobias Williams (linebacker) were among those expected to miss check-in. Transfer Akeem Williams (cornerback) and sophomore Marcellos Wilder (receiver) rounded out the quintet.

Not even listed on today's roster was linebacker LeBrandon Glover. The senior took the lion's share of the starting snaps, during the spring session, at the inside position vacated by 2008 SWAC defensive player of the year Marcellus Speaks. But Glover had knee surgery (meniscus) over the summer and is expected to miss at least four games. Freshman linebacker Todd Wilcher was another expected no-show after tearing an ACL this summer. He is out for the season.

Comegy seeking toughness

Tigers begin practice today with few spots to fill...Optimism hung thicker than imagined smoke in the hallways of Stewart Hall on Tuesday. Two false fire alarms and the subsequent evacuations couldn't even dampen spirits. Eighty-four Jackson State football players reported to preseason camp in the morning of what is routinely one of the most positive days of the year. There are no losses to cause stress. Two-a-day practices have yet to begin. Dreams of championships are still alive.

JSU Head Football Coach Rick Comegy

And no one has been benched yet. Newcomers and veterans alike know there's opportunity to impress coaches and fight for jobs. Truthfully, reality will be a disappointment for the majority of those 84. Several starting offensive positions were up for grabs in 2008 as every skill position was left open by departing seniors. That's not the case this season as experienced returners are the favorites to hold onto positions throughout the lineup. But there are holes to be plugged.

Season Opener
Jackson State at Mississippi State
Sept. 5, 2:30 p.m., ESPNU
Scott Field, Starkville, Mississippi

Takin' it back to the house: Ex-Dog now home at JSU

It was his crowning moment, the kind small boys dream about in front of the TV during SEC games every Saturday. When the moment happens, and 50,000-plus people in the stands cheer your name, it almost seems surreal. Sometimes, though, those moments can be fleeting and those who pat you on the back one second ask you to disappear the next. Anthony Johnson knows. Two years ago, the Jackson native returned an interception 100 yards for a touchdown, helping Mississippi State beat Alabama 17-12. The victory sparked MSU's first winning season in seven years and the play was, arguably, the biggest of the Sylvester Croom era.

"It felt like a dream come true," Johnson said. "A moment of a lifetime." The moment also feels like a lifetime ago. Less than six months after scoring that TD, Johnson had withdrawn from school after an on-campus gun charge. He subsequently pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor charge of obstructing an arrest. He was ineligible for the 2008 season and was released from the team in the spring of 2009. It wasn't until a week ago that the Provide High graduate signed to play with Jackson State.

Mile run brings thrills, chills

The first official Jackson State football practice featured plenty of enthusiasm and one extremely scary moment during the session that lasted just over two hours - and that was without a single football brought onto the field. The coaching staff put players through a conditioning session that included a timed mile run before heading to the weight room for 225-pound bench presses. "I wanted to see what they had, who worked out this summer," coach Rick Comegy said. "I see some excitement. That feeling of accomplishment ... we had to have that at the start before we do anything."

Strength coach Derek Scott signaled the beginning at 4 p.m. by shouting, "It's time to go to work!" Linemen, who were broken into two groups, had to finish the mile run in under 9 1/2 minutes. Defensive end Javarius Conner led all linemen with a time of 7:11, but it was offensive lineman Terrael Williams who was the talk of the day. At 6 feet 8, 350 pounds, Williams' size has been tantalizing to fans and coaches alike. His conditioning and mental approach have been in question. Williams had everyone roaring when he was the fourth among the second group, finishing in 9:07. He pointed to the sky and flexed both arms immediately afterward. Less than 20 minutes later, he would put up 225 pounds 22 times in the weight room.

South Carolina State University Bulldogs
Bulldogs Kick Off Preseason Camp


Unlike the past couple of years, S.C. State head football coach Buddy Pough did not have to answer questions about how close his team came to winning the conference title. Instead, Pough was talking about how his team will handle the role of defending MEAC champion. Pough guided the Bulldogs to their first playoff appearance in 26 years, but said his team needs to win a playoff game in order to stake its claim as one of the country's top programs.

The good news for the Bulldogs is that it will have All-America running back Will Ford. Ford rushed for nearly 1,500 yards in 2008 will be joined by in the backfield by returning starter Malcolm Long who set school records for passing yards and completions. Also back is running back Travil Jamison who led the Bulldogs with 16 touchdowns. Throw is receiver Tre Young who led the way with 48 receptions in 2008 and you have an offense that should not have trouble scoring.

Defensively, the Bulldogs should be fine with all-MEAC safety Markee Hamlin and second-team all-conference linebacker Marshall McFadden leading the way. S.C. State will open the season September 6 in the MEAC/SWAC Challenge against Grambling.

Excitement, expectations high for SC State football

The South Carolina State Bulldogs kicked off preseason football practice Friday afternoon in Orangeburg. The Bulldogs have the added pressure of being the defending champs of the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference. Buddy Pough is starting his eighth season as head coach of the Bulldogs. Last year was his best. SC State finished 10-and-3 overall and 8-and-0 in the MEAC as the Bulldogs won their first outright conference championship since 1994.

After having such a stellar season, the Bulldogs are eager to return to work. "It's been a long off-season," said Pough. "Anytime you've had some success, I think it makes it that much more excited just to go again, so our kids are excited and the staff's ready to go." "It's going to be kind of exciting until the ball snaps and we get back in the groove of things, you know, back to football," said defensive back Marshall McFadden.

Video: Excitement, expectations high for SC State football, Rick Henry reports

University of Arkansas Pine Bluff Golden Lions
GOLDEN LIONS DEFENSE RETURNS DEPTH IN SECONDARY

Returning three of four players who started games for what turned out to be — statistically speaking — the best defensive backfield in the Southwestern Athletic Conference last season would most likely garner high expectations. And that’s just the way Arkansas-Pine Bluff defensive coordinator Alonzo Hampton likes it. When thinking back to last season, Hampton, who will still coach defensive backs after being given defensive coordinator duties this summer, can quickly list off all of UAPB’s impressive statistics.

Without any quick glances he knows the Golden Lions allowed 160 passing yards per game (best in the conference), he knows they intercepted 15 passes and he also knows they gave up 12 passing touchdowns in 12 games. But he also knows every other team in the conference is curious to see if the Golden Lions can do it again. “People are going to throw the ball. They want to throw it,” Hampton said. “We’ve got to go out and prove ourselves, (prove) that it wasn’t a fluke.” Hampton is hoping the return of Kevin Thornton, Robert Mingo, Joseph Brown and James Harrell will prevent that from happening.

Thornton’s six interceptions last season are the most of any player returning to the SWAC this season. And Brown’s 13 passes defended are also the most of any returning player. Harrell, a true freshman last season, started the final three games of the season and intercepted two passes, one that was returned for a touchdown against Lincoln (Mo.) University.

Alcorn State University Braves
Braves report for Fall Camp

The countdown for the 2009 Football season has officially begun at Alcorn State University. First-year head coach, Earnest Collins, Jr., and his staff welcomed the returning players as well as newcomers to campus yesterday. “There seems to be a different temperament of the senior class. Players are also holding their teammates more accountable. We tested some things out today in practice to see what we needed to do,” says Collins.

Collins also feels that the incoming freshman class is one of the best in the Southwestern Athletic Conference (SWAC). Yesterday, the players were issued equipment, given physicals and had a series of meetings with the football staff. The Braves will face Southern Mississippi in their first game of the season on September 5, 2009 at 6 pm in Hattiesburg, Mississippi.

Alabama State University Hornets
Nixon's the one to run ASU defense


First-year Alabama State defensive coordinator Jo Nixon isn't into pacing himself.Tuesday morning, as the ASU players reported for their first practice for the fall, Nixon was seemingly in midseason form already. He was ready to move forward implementing his defensive schemes and appeared ready to start the season.

"Our motto this year is 'Restore the Tradition,'" Nixon said. "That's what we're going to do. I can't wait. You know, coming from NAIA, I had some success against SWAC programs, but there was always an excuse. They always said, 'We weren't really looking for you guys.' Now the playing field's level, and I just can't wait to hear the excuses. I'm so ready to do this." And that was before the first practice even started.

Photo Galleries: ASU 1st practice

Alabama State opens the season at home on Sept. 5 against Concordia College. Kickoff for the season opener is slated for 7 p.m. at Cramton Bowl.

Florida Agricultural and Mechanical University Rattlers
Big day comes for Dallas Cowboys' Hayes as his teammates kept the faith...

Mel Renfro never doubted he'd return to Canton one day to see his Cowboys teammate Bob Hayes join him in the Pro Football Hall of Fame. Keeping the faith in Hayes was easy for Renfro after the consternation over his own candidacy for the Hall of Fame. "I got passed over a long time myself," Renfro said. "I'd get real angry. My statistics were better than a lot of guys in the Hall. But Bob Lilly told me one time, 'Mel, you're going in. It's not a matter of if, it's a matter of when.'

"That's the way I felt about Bob Hayes. It was never a matter of if – it was always a matter of when. He revolutionized the game. He deserved to be in the Hall of Fame." Renfro waited 19 years for his own stamp of approval from the Hall of Fame selection committee. Three times he was a finalist and three times he was rejected before a fourth and triumphant trip to the finals in 1996. Hayes was enshrined Saturday – 35 years after playing his final NFL game. He spent 25 years as a modern-era candidate but never was a finalist.

That's a long time to be overlooked. His candidacy was resurrected by the Hall of Fame's seniors committee in 2004. That put Hayes in the finals for the first time but, in a cruel twist, he received a thumb's down from the selectors in a yes-no vote. Four of the finalists were enshrined that year and two were rejected – the two Cowboys, Hayes and Rayfield Wright.

Hayes became the ninth player on the Cowboys inducted into the Hall of Fame and the fourth in the last four years. He joined Staubach, Troy Aikman, Tony Dorsett, Michael Irvin, Rayfield Wright, Bob Lilly, Randy White and Mel Renfro. He is also the first FAMU Rattler inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame and the second Olympic gold medalist holder, joing Jim Thorpe. But the bust of Hayes honors the only athlete to win both an Olympic gold medal (2)and a Super Bowl ring.

Granbury sculptor carves Hall of Fame busts of Hayes, other stars ...

GRANBURY, Texas – He was 8 years old then, in the stands at the Cotton Bowl, so infatuated with the Dallas Cowboys that he'd memorized the jersey number of every player on the roster. But even on a team filled with superstars – Lee Roy Jordan, Don Meredith, Chuck Howley and Don Perkins – Scott Myers had his favorites: Bob Lilly on defense, and on offense, Bob Hayes, the man who changed the way the game was played.

Today, Hayes finally takes his place in the Pro Football Hall of Fame in Canton, Ohio. Myers will be there as the bronze bust of the late player is revealed, proud to have created his long-ago hero's image with his own hands. Trained as a veterinarian, a profession he still pursues three days a week, Myers is also a largely self-taught artist and sculptor, with seven Hall of Fame busts to his credit. But the bust of Hayes honors the only athlete to win both an Olympic gold medal and a Super Bowl ring – Myers' homage to the man he watched so many years before.

"It will be a little bit bittersweet," he said. "Bob's family is so happy this day has come, but they wished Bob could have been here for it. He's in several halls, but this is the one he always wanted." Hayes, a man so fast that no defensive player could cover him one on one, died of kidney failure in 2002. He was 59.

Health care is focus of FAMU TE

The politicians in Washington, D.C., might not care what FAMU tight end Brandon Hepburn thinks of their action on hot-button health-care issues, but he is watching their every move. With reason. Hepburn has dreams of one day building his own biochemistry company. One of his goals is to make prescription drugs affordable to everyone.In other words, he said, he wants to be a part of the change that he believes health-care reform could bring.

"The Lord put it in my heart to write goals from what the trend is from most pharmaceutical and biochemical companies today," said Hepburn, a devout Christian. "They're trying to turn people into dollar bills, kind of like the matrix." It's not like he doesn't have his own issues. Hepburn is looking to move up on the depth chart on FAMU's football team — although, as a redshirt freshman, he has some maturing to do. Max Purcell and converted quarterback Tobias Lee are the front-runners to replace Taj Jenkines, who held down the starting job the last two seasons.

FAMU volleyball team has full roster »

FAMU's volleyball team could end up having plenty of competitions for playing time at some positions this season. To anyone who has been following the program for the past two years, that might seem a little out of the norm. But for the first time since the 2007 season FAMU coach Tony Trifonov will have more than eight players on his roster. The team will be bolstered by three recruits and at least three experienced walk-ons. Samara Ferraz, one of the Rattlers' who transferred from Barry University last season and became a leading performer on the team, also is hoping to return.

Ferraz' fate rests with the NCAA, which has to decide whether it would reinstate a year of eligibility based on her petition for a medical hardship, Trifonov said. In all, Trifonov hopes to have a 12-player roster for the first time since the 2004 season. That year the Rattlers broke into the NCAA national rankings. Two of the three recruits – Pamela Barrera and Maria Cicccarelli – are former members of Peru's junior national team. The other recruit, Jessica Barnes, is just as experienced. She played two seasons at Southwestern Oregon Community College.

FAMU won't have Graham »

Lincoln High School standout receiver D'Vonte Graham didn't take North Carolina A&T's scholarship offer on National Signing Day, but when the 2009 season starts he will be wearing the Aggies' blue and gold. Graham changed his mind on signing day about taking a scholarship offer from A&T, deciding instead to walk-on at FAMU. He has since changed his mind again. FAMU coach Joe Taylor said it was a family decision for Graham to follow through on his commitment to the Aggies.

Graham's mother Gladys Pleas had said on signing day that she was glad that her son made his own decision to attend FAMU. Taylor seemingly wasn't bothered by the decision. Graham would have joined an already loaded receiving corps at FAMU. "I've learned a long time ago you've got to have a strong team," he said, "not a strong segment." Graham's move to North Carolina gives the Aggies five Tallahasseeans on its roster. They include Purdue transfer Kevin Green, a sophomore defensive back who starred in high school at Rickards.

FAMU LB has eyes on more

Last season was supposed to be a time for FAMU redshirt freshman linebacker Alvis Graham to learn his role in the new defensive scheme that Coach Joe Taylor introduced during his first season as head coach. But consider this: Graham overcame an early season ankle injury and wound up as the second-leading tackler for the Rattlers. During the spring, Graham raised a few eyebrows. As the Rattles begin to count down to starting practice on Aug. 17, Graham knows that the bar has been taken up a notch to the point that he's expected to be an impact player.

"Now that I know the defense, I can put the speed behind it," he said. "I want to be the best that I can be to help my team out as much I can. I'm trying to work hard to be the kind of player who could do whatever I need to do on the field." Graham was a fast study last season. He credits senior Vernon Wilder for being his mentor and helping him grasp the system. But as fast as Graham was learning, linebackers coach Earl Holmes gave just enough for the freshman to handle.

On the Recruiting Trails

Roberts getting interests from South Carolina...WR Dominique Roberts (6-0 203) of Daytona Beach, FL is getting interest from USC and he likes the Gamecocks and Wake Forest the most right now. Neither has offered. Roberts had planned to visit USC in late July but that visit was postponed. "They said they want to see me," Roberts said. "I met coach Spurrier Jr. last year."

Roberts has offers from Connecticut, Florida International, Western Kentucky, Florida A&M and Bethune-Cookman. He's also getting interest from Florida and Rutgers. Roberts plays quarterback but is being recruited as a receiver. He was 4A all state last season after rushing for 1227 yards and 17 touchdowns and passing for 1145 yards and 9 touchdowns.

Mississippi Valley State University Delta Devils
Cox signing with Mississippi Valley State

Cor-J Cox will officially become a member of the Delta Devils today. Thanks to some help from NBA player and fellow Washington native, Damien Wilkins, Cox will be signing a basketball scholarship with Mississippi Valley State University today. Cox also sparked interest from Tennessee Chattanooga, Auburn and Chipola (Fla.), but the former Pam Pack star said signing with Mississippi Valley State was an easy choice.

“I feel great about it,” Cox said. “ I feel comfortable with the coaching staff and the area.” Cox, who averaged 12.4 points, 11.9 rebounds, 5.7 assists, 2.3 steals and 1.0 blocks per game as a senior at Washington, played last year at Olney Central College. The 6-5, 215-pounder averaged around 4 points and 3 rebounds per game at Olney. Cox is ready to contribute right away at Mississippi Valley, a Division I program that plays in the Southwestern Athletic Conference (SWAC). The Delta Devils went 7-25 overall and 7-11 in SWAC play last year.

Tennessee State University Tigers
Receiver's eligibility leaves Tennessee State in the air

Rebuilding Tennessee State's offense might be tougher than expected because the eligibility of JaJuan Spillman, the Tigers' leading returning receiver, is in limbo.Spillman, a transfer from Louisville, was held out of spring practice so he could concentrate on academics. Coach James Webster said on Tuesday he is not sure whether Spillman, who is taking summer classes, will be allowed to report when the Tigers begin practice Monday.

"We'll have to wait and see what happens because he is in school right now,'' Webster said. "JaJuan has been a model player and person for us, and I have nothing but respect for him. We're going to work with JaJuan to help him be successful in life … whatever we need to do whether he's here for our first practice or not we're going to work with him to get that done." Spillman, who could not be reached for comment, would be one of the few returning starters for a unit that ranked third in the Ohio Valley Conference in total offense last year. TSU has three other offensive starters back — tight end Enoch Hill, left guard Jarvis Canty and right guard Alex Davis.

TSU Women's Hoops Coach Inks Contract Extension

Tennessee State University women’s basketball coach Tracee Wells has signed a contract extension. The deal adds five years from her previous contract and runs through the 2014-15 season. Wells, the 2008 OVC Coach of the Year, led the Lady Tigers to an 18-13 mark in 2008-09, marking the program's first winning season since the 1994-95 campaign.

The Lady Tigers also notched a 13-5 conference mark, the best OVC record since the 1993-94 season. This record led to TSU securing a third place finish in the league and hosting round one of the OVC tournament for the first time in school history.

The 2008-09 campaign was a season of history making accomplishments as TSU advanced to the OVC semifinals game for the first time since the 1998-99 season. The Lady Tigers were ranked in the top 10 nationally for most of the season in turnover margin and finished the campaign leading the OVC in steals.

Additionally, TSU had three players to receive All-OVC honors. Seniors Kendra Appling and Tiffany Jackson were named to the All-OVC first and second teams, respectively while sophomore Jasmine Smith made the All-Newcomer team.

“We are pleased to have come to an agreement with Coach Wells on extending her employment contract,” commented athletic director Teresa Phillips. “Coach Wells is one of the young, bright and ambitious coaches in women’s basketball, and we think she will continue to build a successful program here at TSU. “

TSU Football Camp Opened This Week

The 2009 football season will begin as Tennessee State football players report to campus on Saturday, August 8, and will begin one-a-day practices on Monday evening August 10. Two-a-day drills will begin on Saturday, August 15. The Tigers are scheduled to participate in one-a-day practices during the first week, culminating in Fan/Media Photo day on Friday, August 14. The first full scrimmage is set for Saturday morning, August 15.

Head coach James Webster, begins his fifth campaign at the helm of the Tigers' program, and looks to prepare his players to improve on last year's 8-4 record, the best in seven years. Webster says he and his staff face the task of re-tooling an offense that lost seven starters. TSU, however, will welcome back nine defensive starters from the top defensive unit in the Ohio Valley Conference in 2008.

Preseason practice will end on Sunday August 30 after which, the Tigers will prepare for their season opener against Alabama A&M in the John Merritt Classic on September 5.

* Fans /Media are welcome to attend Photo Day at Hale Stadium with cameras - Contact TSU Athletic Media Relations Personnel for assistance arranging shots of players/coaches.

Bethune Cookman University Wildcats
Pushing for more than athletes

There is a simple question Jerrell Cogmon (former Plant High and Bethune Cookman University Linebacker) poses to his players. "Do you want to be a $100,000 man or $6-an-hour man?" In other words, would you rather settle for a low-paying job or attend a university and transition into a lucrative career? That isn't a question used to test the players' football acumen, although it could bleed into the world of football smarts.

When Cogmon, who was hired in April to take over the Zephyrhills (Florida) Bulldogs' high school football program after Tom Fisher retired after 20 seasons, poses that question, he wants his group to think beyond the playing field. He's not looking to fill his roster with players that are just "jocks." "It's all about application," Cogmon said. "Applying yourself in all the things you need to do to get yourself to that point where you can actually see the light at the end of the tunnel and let it translate itself into going in any direction. I think the kids are doing a good job as far as buying into that. I know they are."

It appears the message has taken hold. Zephyrhills has several players on its roster with grade-point averages that are 3.0 or higher. Those players include: Stephen Cottrell (4.0), Adrian Sanchez (3.5), John Dodd (3.4), Josh Geiger (3.4), Nick Trujilo (3.3), Chris Reaves (3.1) and Ben Williams (3.0). Geiger, Williams and Anthony Viernes also have posted ACT and SAT scores that qualify them to play college athletics. So why the heavy hand when it comes to academics?

North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University Aggies
Freshmen could make immediate impact at NC A&T

Football practice officially began Tuesday morning at N.C. A&T and new head coach Alonzo Lee spoke about the senior leadership he's seen so far. But Lee also said his new recruits could make an immediate difference in the Aggies' efforts to stem the tide of six losing seasons in the last seven years. So far, leading the way among the freshmen are wide receiver Larry Raper from Shelby and two defensive linemen from Greensboro.

"We found out Mr. Raper can definitely fly," Lee said after the freshmen went through running tests starting at 6 a.m. Tuesday. "He can run. He's doing some great things. Matter of fact, he's worked his way into that starting huddle when we go to four wideouts." The running tests are no picnic. To pass, a player must run 110 yards in 16 seconds. If that sounds easy, there's a catch: The player has to run the 110 sprint 16 times. "You've got to be humpin' to make that happen," Lee said. "You can gut out about five or six of them, but come eight, nine, 10 and beyond, everything has to kick in right there. That's when being in shape comes into play."

Lee said more than 80 percent of the players passed the running tests, including most of the freshmen. "Chris Neal and those guys from right here at Dudley, oh, they look great with the running tests," Lee said. "We're looking for some real good things from those guys." Neal, a 6-foot-1, 230-pound defensive end, has a chance to get on the field right away. So, too, does Darius Hall, a 6-2, 260-pound freshman from Dudley who is working at both defensive tackle and defensive end.

NC A&T Adds Three Recruits to Football Team

The North Carolina A&T football program added three signees as the 2009 season approaches quickly. Head coach Alonzo Lee announced the signing of two defensive players and one offensive lineman. Cornerback Kevin Green (6-foot, 185 pounds, Tallahassee, Fla.) offensive tackle Terrance Humes (6-5, 320, Compton, Calif.) and linebacker Eteyen Edet (6-2, 240, Fort Washington, Md.) all signed with other schools before coming to N.C. A&T.

Green comes to North Carolina A&T after spending one season with the Purdue Boilermakers of the Big 10. He played in nine games for the Boilermakers in 2008. Purdue signed Green out of Rickards High School, where he put together a stellar career. Rivals.com ranked him 64th nationally among cornerbacks. As a senior, he recorded 49 tackles, recovered three fumbles, returned two fumbles for touchdowns and has an interception. Green's play earned him All-State, All-Big Bend and All-District honors.

Humes is a junior college transfer out of San Bernardino Valley Junior College. He was a two-year starter for SBVJC. As a high school standout at San Bernardino High School, Humes was a two-time All-San Andreas League member. Humes was named Cardinal Lineman of the Year during his junior and senior seasons in high school.

Edet was highly-recruited coming out of Friendly High School. Scouts.com rated him the No. 41 linebacker in the country. Edet turned down Louisville, Ohio, Pitt, Michigan State and UNC to sign with the University of Maryland. After his decision to play at Maryland did not work out, he spent one season at North Carolina Tech Prep School, where he had a successful season.

Renewed sense of optimism for A&T football

The day was already warm a few minutes before 9 a.m. Tuesday, the scheduled start of N.C. A&T's first football practice. And the players were already on the dew-covered field.Offense in gold jerseys. Defense in blue. Quarterbacks, kickers and punter in red. Everyone in blue "Aggie Pride" shorts and shiny new Riddell helmets that gleamed in the bright sun. It was hot. But it will only get hotter as the Aggies work toward their opener Sept. 5 at Winston-Salem State.

The heat is on this program, which is on its fifth head coach in eight years. Take away 2003 -- when A&T went 10-3 and won the MEAC title -- and the Aggies are 13-55 in that span, including a 27-game losing streak that mercifully ended last year during a 3-9 season. And this year? A&T was picked eighth among the MEAC's nine football-playing schools in a preseason poll.

Against that backdrop and under the hot sun, the Aggies officially started work Tuesday under new coach Alonzo Lee. If they lose again this season, it won't be for a lack of effort. "We're just thankful we were able to have most of our young men around working out this summer," Lee said. "It makes a difference. Look around. Those guys right now look good. We're looking like a football team. We're in shape."
They ought to be.

Southern University & Agricultural and Mechanical College Jaguars
SU’s Wells learning valuable lessons


Way back in his toddler years, before he could walk steadily or speak a complete sentence, Anthony Wells learned a valuable lesson: Sometimes it’s harder to get out of trouble than to keep away from it. He was about 3, strolling around his mother’s college apartment in Tennessee, when he decided to shove one of her keys into a light socket. The results? Not pretty.

“I don’t really remember much of it, but it shut off the electricity. The whole building went dark,” Wells recalls. “My mom told me that all I did was say ouch. I didn’t cry or anything.” Fast-forward to Sept. 30, 2008. That day, Wells woke up in a hospital, fresh from knee surgery, with a tube of morphine running into his leg. This time, he was truly in pain. This time, he cried. Southern’s starting free safety was a starter no more. The anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) in his right knee was a mess. In fact, Wells’ knee throbbed so heavily, he figured his football career was over.

Keys: Jaguars explain why they play football


Thirty more days. Thirty days still stand between the Southern Jaguars and their Sept. 5 season opener, just down the road at Louisiana-Lafayette. Between now and then, it’s all about practice, heat, fatigue and misery. Between now and then, at some point, almost every player will wonder if it’s worth the trouble. With that in mind, this week was a good time to ask two simple questions: What got you into football in the first place? And why do you still love it?

The answers varied. But they were always interesting. Defensive coordinator Terrence Graves: “I played soccer, baseball and basketball. I swam. I did it all. ... But eventually I had to make a decision, and football was my first love. My father was a baseball man; he wanted me to play baseball. “But there’s just something about football. It’s the excitement, the camaraderie, the team chemistry. It’s the strategy, the competition. It’s all that. ... And it’s not just the sport; it’s the building of the total man. That’s part of what keeps you going.” span>


Chinyoung happy man despite heat

It was shaping up to be a hot one, all right. Wednesday afternoon at Southern, for the first practice of training camp, the air was vintage south Louisiana — warm, humid and not very forgiving. By the middle of practice, even some of the Jaguars’ veterans started to drag a little, their bodies showing rust from the offseason. It was the start of the 17th fall camp at Southern under coach Pete Richardson, who noted Wednesday was just the beginning of a long journey — a season premiere in helmets, jerseys and shorts.

Still, Ramon Chinyoung could not have been happier. The senior center looked like a man who’d gotten an extra cookie from his grandmother. “I feel great, man,” he said. “I feel ready.” Although the Jaguars are much deeper on the offensive line than they’ve been for the past few seasons, Chinyoung is SU’s only proven commodity at center as camp begins. He also knows what it’s like to miss football. He was academically ineligible in 2007, then returned to the lineup in 2008, when the Jaguars went 6-5 and finished third in the Southwestern Athletic Conference Western Division. Naturally, Chinyoung hoped to close his career with a bang this fall.

SU football going digital in film room

When Southern University’s coaches move into the new field house at A.W. Mumford Stadium next month, they will not only move into the modern era of football offices, weight rooms and meeting rooms. They will go digital, too. For years, SU coaches have relied on old-fashioned, time-tested tools to review game film: VCRs, VHS cassettes and cathode-ray tube-style televisions. In some cases, they used projectors.

Heck, some staffers — including head coach Pete Richardson and defensive coordinator Terrence Graves — lived in an era when 16-millimeter film was the most modern development. That era is gone, much to the delight of interns and graduate assistants who usually had to cut and splice. “I did all that. Oh, yeah,” Graves said. “When I was a freshman in college, we went from black-and-white to color. But I actually learned how to splice film as a player.

Savannah State University Tigers
SSU in good 'Hans' with Batichon

Coach reflects upon journey from Haiti to becoming three-time national champion. As a football player at Appalachian State, Hans Batichon learned how to win. Now, can he teach it? The 23-year-old native of Port-au-Prince, Haiti, is the wide receivers coach at Savannah State, his first collegiate coaching job. He replaced second-year assistant Eddie Johnson, who was promoted to offensive coordinator in March.

Appalachian State finished with a 6-5 record during Batichon's freshman season in 2004. During his final three years, he helped the Mountaineers become the only program to win three consecutive national championships in the Football Championship Subdivision. "Isn't that cool?" said Robby Wells, SSU's second-year head coach. "These kids are going to gain a lot of experience and a lot of knowledge from this guy because this guy's been there and done it. Not just once. Not just twice. But three times he's done it. Actually scored a touchdown against Michigan in 'The Big House."

SSU's Baker hires two assistants

Savannah State University women's basketball head coach Cedric Baker has hired Sonya Wilson and Billy L. Hamilton II as assistant coaches, SSU announced. Wilson comes to SSU from Orangeburg-Wilkerson High School in Orangeburg, S.C. A 1994 cum laude graduate of South Carolina State University with a bachelor's degree in business administration, the Orangeburg native was a standout player for the Bulldogs. She was named the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference Tournament's Most Outstanding Player in 1992-93 and received a second-team All-America citation in 1993-94. After her collegiate playing career, Wilson spent two seasons playing in Switzerland and Italy.

Hamilton was an assistant at Tallahassee (Fla.) Community College last year and spent the 2007-08 season as an assistant at Albany State University. A 2008 graduate of Albany State with a bachelor's degree in recreation health and physical education, Hamilton was a member of the Rams' football team for two years as a tight end.

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