St. Louis, MO - Missouri Southern isn’t quite sure what kind of defense it will face today against Lincoln.
“Lincoln has been very multiple on defense,” Lions coach Bart Tatum said. “They’ve shown in exactly one and one-half of their games an eight-man front … very aggressive, a stop-the-run type look. And then they have been very base defense-oriented the other game and a half. We’re preparing for both, which is the only choice we have.”
Regardless of the defense, the Lions need to be more productive on offense. The Lions gained 264 yards in last week’s 30-14 loss to Washburn, and more than one-third of them came in a 99-yard scoring drive in the second quarter.
Kickoff is at 11 a.m. for the first game of the St. Louis Gateway Classic doubleheader at the Edward Jones Dome in St. Louis, home of the NFL’s St. Louis Rams.
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Showing posts with label Lincoln University (Missouri). Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lincoln University (Missouri). Show all posts
Saturday, September 24, 2011
Tuesday, February 1, 2011
Michael Jones Named Lincoln University (Mo.) Head Football Coach
JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. – Michael Jones, known by many for making “The Tackle” in Super Bowl XXXIV, will make his return back to the state of Missouri after accepting the position of Head Football Coach at Lincoln University today, as announced by President Carolyn R. Mahoney.
“It feels incredible to get this opportunity,” Jones said of being named the new head coach. “I feel blessed getting the chance to be a head coach at this point in my career, as so many never get the opportunity to be a head coach at the collegiate level.”
“I am excited to have him as our new head coach,” LU Athletic Director Betty Kemna said. “His ties within the state of Missouri will hopefully help us recruit more local talent to Jefferson City.”
Jones spent the past season as linebacker coach at Southern University in Louisiana, where the Jaguars went 2-9. Southern’s defense recorded several solid numbers in 2010, including 26 sacks, eight interceptions and 92 tackles for loss.
Before his time at Southern, Jones spent six years at Hazelwood East High School in St. Louis, where he spent two years as head coach leading the team to a state title in 2008, when the team went 12-2. Overall as a head coach, he went 18-7. Jones will now look to transition his time as a head coach there to being the head coach at Lincoln.
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“It feels incredible to get this opportunity,” Jones said of being named the new head coach. “I feel blessed getting the chance to be a head coach at this point in my career, as so many never get the opportunity to be a head coach at the collegiate level.”
“I am excited to have him as our new head coach,” LU Athletic Director Betty Kemna said. “His ties within the state of Missouri will hopefully help us recruit more local talent to Jefferson City.”
Jones spent the past season as linebacker coach at Southern University in Louisiana, where the Jaguars went 2-9. Southern’s defense recorded several solid numbers in 2010, including 26 sacks, eight interceptions and 92 tackles for loss.
Before his time at Southern, Jones spent six years at Hazelwood East High School in St. Louis, where he spent two years as head coach leading the team to a state title in 2008, when the team went 12-2. Overall as a head coach, he went 18-7. Jones will now look to transition his time as a head coach there to being the head coach at Lincoln.
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Sunday, October 17, 2010
PVAMU Panthers Roll Past Lincoln 45-12
K.J. Black passed for two touchdowns and Chris Adingupu recorded a 53-yard interception return as Prairie View A&M defeated Lincoln University 45-12 before an overflow homecoming crowd at Blackshear Field.
Prairie View’s Jarvis Wilson recorded the game’s first big play as he scooped up a fumble and raced 32 yards to Lincoln’s 8-yard line on their opening possession. Four plays later, Prairie View’s Brady Faggard connected on a 21-yard field goal for a 3-0 lead. Prairie View moved ahead 10-0 on its second offensive possession as Black connected with wideout Brandon Bell for a 42-yard strike and upped its lead to 17-0 several minutes later in the first quarter following Donald Babers’ 13-yard touchdown run.
LU trimmed its deficit to 17-12 midway through the second quarter following a 75-yard touchdown run from Joseph Snell and a 15-yard return off a blocked punt from Demarkis Smith. Prairie View added another touchdown run from Babers with 8:08 left in the second stanza to move ahead 24-12 and put the game away in the third quarter as they exploded for 21 points.
Attendance: 12,000
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Prairie View’s Jarvis Wilson recorded the game’s first big play as he scooped up a fumble and raced 32 yards to Lincoln’s 8-yard line on their opening possession. Four plays later, Prairie View’s Brady Faggard connected on a 21-yard field goal for a 3-0 lead. Prairie View moved ahead 10-0 on its second offensive possession as Black connected with wideout Brandon Bell for a 42-yard strike and upped its lead to 17-0 several minutes later in the first quarter following Donald Babers’ 13-yard touchdown run.
LU trimmed its deficit to 17-12 midway through the second quarter following a 75-yard touchdown run from Joseph Snell and a 15-yard return off a blocked punt from Demarkis Smith. Prairie View added another touchdown run from Babers with 8:08 left in the second stanza to move ahead 24-12 and put the game away in the third quarter as they exploded for 21 points.
Attendance: 12,000
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Monday, September 27, 2010
Morehouse Tigers improve to 5-0 in 30-14 win over Lincoln (Mo.) Blue Tigers
Atlanta, GA - David Carter rushed for 211 yards and a touchdown and powered Morehouse to a 30-14 win over Lincoln University. At 5-0, the Maroon Tigers are enjoying the best season start since 1930.
After surrendering a 99-yard touchdown return on the opening kick, Morehouse settled down and limited the visiting Blue Tigers (1-3) to one touchdown the rest of the way.
The Maroon Tigers bounced back on their first possession with a seven-play, 68-yard drive that was capped off by a Carter one-yard touchdown run. Ian Mullen’s point-after attempt was blocked.
On the next Lincoln possession, defensive lineman Chigbo Anunoby, who played at Lincoln last year, forced a Blue Tiger fumble that led to a 33-yard Mullen field goal and game Morehouse a 9-7 advantage.
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Morehouse highlights against Kentucky State (last week)
After surrendering a 99-yard touchdown return on the opening kick, Morehouse settled down and limited the visiting Blue Tigers (1-3) to one touchdown the rest of the way.
The Maroon Tigers bounced back on their first possession with a seven-play, 68-yard drive that was capped off by a Carter one-yard touchdown run. Ian Mullen’s point-after attempt was blocked.
On the next Lincoln possession, defensive lineman Chigbo Anunoby, who played at Lincoln last year, forced a Blue Tiger fumble that led to a 33-yard Mullen field goal and game Morehouse a 9-7 advantage.
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Morehouse highlights against Kentucky State (last week)
Friday, June 4, 2010
CIAA: Run on the Right Track
Maybe it’s time to reassess the pecking order in black college sports. I know most of us will argue until we’re blue in the face that it should be what I refer to as the “barber shop sports” of football and basketball. Those are the games folks talk about at the shop, as in, “My team is gonna stomp your alma mater, and we’ll smoke your band at halftime, too.” It makes for animated debates, but HBCUs, don’t produce hoops and football national champions, let alone a consistent pipeline of NBA or NFL talent any more. Track and field does.
Saint Augustine’s College dominated the sprints to claim the NCAA Division II men’s track and field title last week at Johnson C. Smith University, the 31st national title in the school’s history. “The kids were on point,” Falcons head coach George Williams said. “Everything was just so smooth. We didn’t give up anything. I got good performance from all my kids. You don’t win championships with one guy, you win championships with everybody.”
That’s why black college track and field has been able to hold its own since southern white colleges were desegregated in the late 1960s while blue-chip football and basketball players opted for pro farm clubs in the ACC, SEC and Pac-10. Saint Augustine’s is the platinum standard and can hang with the best of Division I, but the Falcons have company. Lincoln University (Mo.) is a Division II national power; Lincoln University(Pa.) is one of the best programs in Division III and joins the CIAA next year. That league will be loaded, to say the least, with St. Aug’s and JCSU on the upswing.
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Saint Augustine’s College dominated the sprints to claim the NCAA Division II men’s track and field title last week at Johnson C. Smith University, the 31st national title in the school’s history. “The kids were on point,” Falcons head coach George Williams said. “Everything was just so smooth. We didn’t give up anything. I got good performance from all my kids. You don’t win championships with one guy, you win championships with everybody.”
That’s why black college track and field has been able to hold its own since southern white colleges were desegregated in the late 1960s while blue-chip football and basketball players opted for pro farm clubs in the ACC, SEC and Pac-10. Saint Augustine’s is the platinum standard and can hang with the best of Division I, but the Falcons have company. Lincoln University (Mo.) is a Division II national power; Lincoln University(Pa.) is one of the best programs in Division III and joins the CIAA next year. That league will be loaded, to say the least, with St. Aug’s and JCSU on the upswing.
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Saturday, March 7, 2009
Special Feature: Romona Robinson undaunted by risky solo-anchor format on TV
A six-time Emmy Award winning news anchor, Robinson is one of Cleveland's best-known and admired television Broadcasters. The Lincoln University grad is solo anchor at WKYC Channel 3 Television Station, Cleveland, Ohio.
On a June morning filled with promise, a teenage Romona Robinson stood up in her tiny church in rural Missouri to declare what her future would be. Each graduating senior announced their plans and dreams to the congregation. When it was Romona's turn, she said she was going to college to become a television anchor. The bold statement was her defining moment, a first step in a long career. Afterward, a well-meaning church lady buttonholed Romona's mother, Henrietta Robinson, for some frank talk, with Romona listening in the background.
"You tell that girl to get that notion out of her head. She ain't gonna get no job reading the television news. White people never gonna let black people sit next to them and give the news. Tell that girl to study something sensible." After all, in the 1970s, black news anchors were rare. Years later, as the minutes ticked down to Robinson's debut as Cleveland's first black female evening anchor on WUAB Channel 43's inaugural newscast, she flashed back to that well-meaning but narrow-minded advice. Her mind replayed the steps that had taken her from that Missouri childhood to an anchor desk. I've arrived, she thought. I'm here.
IN THE SPOTLIGHT, ON THE HOT SEAT
Robinson, a statuesque beauty who radiates the warmth and sincerity of a favorite sister, is the only solo anchor in Cleveland news, the 15th-largest media market in the country. She was named WKYC Channel 3's evening anchor after her longtime co-anchor, Tim White, left in December when he and the station could not agree on a contract. Robinson is the first black woman to be the sole anchor of a weeknight newscast here. She joined Channel 3 in 1997. Channel 3 news director Rita Andolsen said the solo-anchor format is a bit risky but Robinson is a proven talent in the Cleveland market. "I would not have tried it with anybody but Romona," she said.
CONTINUE READING, CLICK BLOG TITLE.
On a June morning filled with promise, a teenage Romona Robinson stood up in her tiny church in rural Missouri to declare what her future would be. Each graduating senior announced their plans and dreams to the congregation. When it was Romona's turn, she said she was going to college to become a television anchor. The bold statement was her defining moment, a first step in a long career. Afterward, a well-meaning church lady buttonholed Romona's mother, Henrietta Robinson, for some frank talk, with Romona listening in the background.
"You tell that girl to get that notion out of her head. She ain't gonna get no job reading the television news. White people never gonna let black people sit next to them and give the news. Tell that girl to study something sensible." After all, in the 1970s, black news anchors were rare. Years later, as the minutes ticked down to Robinson's debut as Cleveland's first black female evening anchor on WUAB Channel 43's inaugural newscast, she flashed back to that well-meaning but narrow-minded advice. Her mind replayed the steps that had taken her from that Missouri childhood to an anchor desk. I've arrived, she thought. I'm here.
Channel 3's anchor Romona Robinson goes solo on evening news |
IN THE SPOTLIGHT, ON THE HOT SEAT
Robinson, a statuesque beauty who radiates the warmth and sincerity of a favorite sister, is the only solo anchor in Cleveland news, the 15th-largest media market in the country. She was named WKYC Channel 3's evening anchor after her longtime co-anchor, Tim White, left in December when he and the station could not agree on a contract. Robinson is the first black woman to be the sole anchor of a weeknight newscast here. She joined Channel 3 in 1997. Channel 3 news director Rita Andolsen said the solo-anchor format is a bit risky but Robinson is a proven talent in the Cleveland market. "I would not have tried it with anybody but Romona," she said.
CONTINUE READING, CLICK BLOG TITLE.
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