Sunday, September 11, 2016

TSU Defeats Jackson State, 40-26, in Southern Heritage Classic



PHOTO GALLERY

MEMPHIS, Tennessee -- Southern Heritage Classic Player of the Game O’Shay Ackerman-Carter lifted the Tennessee State football team to a 40-26 victory over Jackson State at the Liberty Bowl on Saturday night. The victory helps TSU improve to 2-0 and drops Jackson State to 0-2.

Ackerman-Carter finished 14-for-18 for 227 yards and two passing touchdowns, while also recording his first career rushing touchdown. Defensively, Ebenezer Ogundeko posted a team-best 11 tackles with Ezra Robinson adding six tackles and an interception, which he returned for a touchdown.

TSU trailed Jackson State 23-19 at the half before outscoring JSU by a 21-3 margin in the second half to pull away.

Chris Rowland gave the Tigers great field position as he returned the opening kickoff 46 yards to the TSU 48. TSU was not able to take advantage going three and out setting up an Austin Rowley punt. The good start turned quickly into a score for Jackson State, as Kwame Bowens blocked the Rowley punt allowing Josh Miller the opportunity to scoop up the loose ball and scamper 40 yards for the first score of the game.

The Tigers found themselves 13-0 just over five minutes into the contest as Dan Williams converted a diving catch into a 30-yard scoring play.

TSU would respond on the following series as they moved 81 yards on seven plays. Erick Evans would get the drive started with a nine yard carry setting up back-to-back passes from O’Shay Ackerman- Carter to Rowland for 13 and 11 yards, respectively, to move into Jackson State territory.

Ackerman-Carter continued the aerial assault by hitting Evans for 16 yards and connecting with Sabree Curtis for 21 yards, before finding Patrick Smith for six yards.

Evans capped off the drive with a five yard blast through the left side of the line to pull the Tigers to within seven points, 13-6.

After a failed onside kick attempt, JSU would start its next possession at the TSU 43. The defense would hold strong forcing a missed field goal attempt and getting the offense back on the field with 2:26 remaining in the first quarter.

TSU would go back to the air and needed just three plays to reach the end zone. After a modest two yard pass to Smith, Ackerman-Carter hit Steven Newbold down the right side for 49 yards to the JSU 13. The combo teamed up on the final play for the 13-yard scoring play as Newbold went over the defender and pulled down the pass with one hand off the defenders back to even the score at 13-13.

JSU regained the lead midway through the second stanza as Rowley mishandled a Thomas Newberg snap and was hit in the end zone as he tried to get the ball away. A scrum ensued and JSU came up with the loose ball for a touchdown and a 20-13 advantage.

The Tigers once again drove down the field in response to the JSU score. Early in the drive, Ackerman-Carter found Chris Sanders-McCollum for 18 yards on a key third-and-long situation. The Big Blue would get rolling again with a 13 yard run by Evans and a 12-yard pass from Ackerman-Carter to Newbold.

After the aid of pass interference, Evans got the Tigers back within one on a two-yard plunge. The extra point was blocked making the score 20-19 with 2:36 to go in the half.

The Tigers looked to get the ball back before halftime, but an off-sides call on a JSU punt attempt gave the visitors a fresh set of downs. JSU would take advantage of the new life and make its way down the field for a 38-yard field goal to increase the lead to 23-19 at the break.

JSU opened the second half the same way as they closed the first, adding a 37-yard field goal to take a seven point lead. At that point it became all Tennessee State as they went on to score 21 unanswered points.

The Big Blue relied on the legs of Evans who finished with 109 yards on 21 carries. The Dallas, Texas native opened the following drive with three runs for 29 yards putting the Tigers into JSU territory. At that point, Ackerman-Carter teamed up with Smith for a 28 yard pass play, before tying the game, 26-26, with a three yard pass to the redshirt-junior. The signal caller kept the play alive scrambling long enough to let Smith make his way back to an open area of the end zone.

Ezra Robinson wasted no time in putting the Tigers in front for the first time in the game with 4:15 to go in the third. The senior cornerback jumped a LaMontiez Ivy pass and returned it 25 yards to the house just eight seconds after TSU had tied the game.

Ackerman-Carter closed out the scoring and the Tigers from JSU with a one yard quarterback sneak early in the fourth quarter.

The Tigers are back in action on Sept. 17 for a road test at Bethune-Cookman.

GAME NOTES: TSU won the coin toss and chose to receive the opening kickoff… Kickoff was at 6:05 p.m… Weather at time of kickoff was 86 degrees and partly cloudy… TSU captains were O’Shay Ackerman-Carter, Patrick Smith, Chris Collins and Thomas Burton… Southern Heritage Classic Player of the Game: O’Shay Ackerman-Carter… The official attendance was 46,263… Defensive End Ebo Ogundeko recorded 11 tackles, marking his first game with double-digit tackles… Quarterback O’Shay Ackerman-Carter recorded his first rushing touchdown… Running back Erick Evans went over the 100-yard rushing mark for the second time in his career… Tennessee State moves to 2-0 for the second year in a row and the third time under seventh-year Head Coach Rod Reed… TSU improves to 28-21-2 in the all-time series versus Jackson State... TSU is now 16-11 in the Southern Heritage Classic… TSU has won five in a row against Jackson State... Tennessee State moves to 10-3 versus SWAC teams under Head Coach Rod Reed.

Running Back Erick Evans
“I want to thank my offensive line, first of all, and second my coaches. We strain every day. We drew it up and we executed.”
- On the running game

“I love that we responded well to adversity tonight. We were down early, and we showed what type of team we have. That was the main thing I got out of this game.”
- On coming back after falling behind early

Defensive End Ebo Ogundeko
“The resilience of the defense starts with Chris Collins, Trevion Duncan and me as well. This was the first real test that we faced as a defense, and we did a good job showing the maturity of the defense.”
- On the resiliency of the defense

Cornerback Ezra Robinson
“We just told everybody not to keep their heads down. We told everybody to keep fighting and that’s what we did tonight. We just kept fighting and pressing against adversity.”
- On overcoming adversity

“They ran that play earlier, and I was sitting on it. When I saw the formation come back again I recognized it. I was able to jump the route, and I just did what I could with the ball.”
- On his interception for a touchdown

Wide Receiver Steven Newbold
“It was a big game for us. This is a rivalry game. Everybody just came in and stepped up when it was time to step up.”
- On the offense

“It’s just a mindset. When we went into the locker room, we came together as a team and had to make it happen as one.”
- On coming back from a first-half deficit

Attendance: 46,263

BOX SCORE

TENNESSEE STATE UNIVERSITY ATHLETIC MEDIA RELATIONS

Sights and Sounds from Southern Heritage Classic 2016



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Arizona Wins Home Opener, 31-21 Over Grambling State

TUCSON, Arizona -- Brandon Dawkins, starting in place of injured Anu Solomon, ran for two touchdowns and threw for another, all in the second half, and Arizona rallied from an 18-point deficit and escaped with a 31-21 victory over Grambling State on Saturday night.

The Wildcats (1-1), 45-point favorites, trailed 21-3 at halftime and looked in danger of their first-ever loss to an FCS school.

But the Tigers (1-1), who lost quarterback DeVante Kincade to injury late in the first half, committed six second-half turnovers, four of them in a row in the third quarter. Backup Trevon Cherry threw three interceptions and fumbled the ball away once.



PHOTO GALLERY

Dawkins, a redshirt sophomore, completed 15 of 29 passes for 223 yards and gained 97 yards in 16 carries. He scored on runs of 21 and 2 yards and threw a 34-yard touchdown pass to Trey Griffey. Nick Wilson rushed for 116 yards, including an 11-yard TD run.

Kincade completed 15 of 19 passes for 193 yards and two scores before leaving with a leg injury with 2:38 to play in the second quarter. Grambling's Chad Williams caught 13 passes for 152 yards,

Cody Ippolito recovered two fumbles, both leading to Arizona touchdowns, but was ejected from the game for targeting and must sit out the first half of next Saturday's game against Hawaii.

The Tigers took the opening kickoff and went 81 yards in seven plays, Kincade throwing a 2-yard touchdown pass to Verlan Hunter.

The Wildcats had Grambling pinned in a third-and-29 situation at the Tigers 17 when Kincade threw short to Martez Carter, who raced down the sideline 49 yards to the 34. Six plays later, Kincade threw 26 yards to Devohn Lindsey for a touchdown that made it 14-0 with 11:55 left in the half.

Dawkins' 42-yard run highlighted a drive to the Grambling 6 but, on fourth-and-1, Wilson was hit in the backfield and fumbled the ball away.

A 70-yard pass from Dawkins to Samajie Grant led to Arizona's only first-half points, Josh Pollock's 31-yard field goal.




BOX SCORE

INJURED QB

Kincade was sprinting into an open field for what looked to be a big gain when he came up lame, hopping out of bounds on one leg in front of the Arizona bench. He had to be carried from the field.


Cherry came on to direct another score. Carter 1-yard dive initially was ruled to come up inches short of the goal line. But a video review showed the ball was just over the line for a touchdown that put Grambling State up 21-3 with 16 seconds to play in the half.

THE TAKEAWAY

Grambling State looked like a SWAC contender when Kincade was in there and the extent of his injury could go a long way in determining how successful the Tigers are on from now on.

Arizona avoided what would have been the worst loss of the Rich Rodriguez era but the coach will have plenty to criticize in his team's first 30 minutes of play.

UP NEXT

Grambling State: The Tigers open SWAC play at Jackson State next Saturday.

UNIVERSITY OF ARIZONA ATHLETIC MEDIA RELATIONS

Lions Rally to Beat Blue Tigers In Battle of the Lincolns

LINCOLN UNIVERSITY, Pennsylvania -- The Lincoln (MO) football team jumped out to a 17-0 lead early in the second quarter, but Lincoln (PA) rallied in the fourth to hand the Blue Tigers a 33-23 loss on Saturday (Sept. 10).

The Blue Tigers (0-2) scored on their opening drive, traveling 49 yards before Alex Templeton hit a 31-yard field goal. That ended up being the only scoring of the first quarter, which featured 65 yards of offense by the Blue Tigers compared to just five by the Lions (1-1).

The first touchdown of the day came with 10:51 remaining in the second quarter, as Will Randolph scored on 4th & Goal from the one to put the Blue Tigers up, 10-0. After forcing the Lions into a quick three-and-out, Andrew McIntyre, making his first career start at quarterback, found Chris Othelot in the end zone for a 25-yard touchdown.

The Lions didn't get on the scoreboard until there was 3:05 remaining in the half, hitting a 23-yard touchdown pass to cut the Blue Tiger lead down to 17-7 at the intermission. The Blue Tigers out-gained the Lions, 211-98, in the first half, including 95-35 on the ground.





Highlights
- The Blue Tigers jumped out to a 17-0 lead in the second quarter thanks to a rushing touchdown by Will Randolph and a receiving score by Chris Othelot
- The Blue Tigers out-gained the Lions, 211-98, in the first half to take a 17-7 lead into the break
Will Randolph scored his second touchdown of the afternoon on a 66-yard run in the third quarter
- The Lions scored 13 points in the third quarter to cut the Blue Tiger lead down to 23-20
- The Lions shutout the Blue Tigers in the fourth quarter while scoring 13 more points
Will Randolph rushed for 131 yards
Andrew McIntyre made his first career start under center and threw for 230 yards


Early in the third quarter, a fumbled snap recovered by the Lions ended up making it a four-point contest. Immediately after Lincoln (PA) recovered the football, the Lions completed a 12-yard to pass to get within 17-13 of the Blue Tigers. Rashon Riddles blocked the point after try, and on the Blue Tigers' first play of the ensuing possession, Randolph rushed 66 yards for a touchdown. Randolph ended the day with 131 yards on the ground.


The ensuing extra point attempt bounced off the left upright, and that ended up being the final time the Blue Tigers would get on the scoreboard. A bad snap on a Blue Tiger punt allowed the Lions to take over on the 25, and two plays later a nine-yard run cut the Lincoln (MO) lead to 23-20 at the end of the third quarter.

The Lions took the lead for good on a 23-yard touchdown on their first drive of the fourth quarter, and the Blue Tigers never got any closer than the home 33 the rest of the way. The Lions closed the scoring on a 76-yard touchdown pass with just over five minutes remaining.

The Blue Tigers finished with a slight 353-348 advantage in total offense, and won the time of possession battle by holding onto the ball for 33:38 minutes. McIntyre completed 20 passes for 230 yards and a score, with 11 different Blue Tigers making at least one reception.

Reko Lysius added 32 yards on the ground while Bryson Winfrey led the Blue Tiger receiving corps with five receptions for 44 yards. Templeton averaged 62.8 yards on kickoffs and 32.3 yards on punts. Randolph also caught a 26-yard pass and led the Blue Tigers with 157 total yards.

Defensively, the Blue Tigers were led by Jeff Jones, who had seven tackles, including three for loss. Marvin Holley added six tackles and an interception while Taj Moore made five takedowns. Riddles had a sack while Noah Johnson and Anthony Mitchell combined for another. Riddles also had a pair of quarterback hurries.

The Blue Tigers will return home to Jefferson City next week to open GLVC play against Quincy. Kickoff for that contest is set for 2:00 p.m. CDT.

Box Score

Dan Carr, Assistant AD for Media Relations
LINCOLN UNIVERSITY OF MISSOURI ATHLETIC MEDIA RELATIONS

Grambling State serves an athletic dose of humble pie to Arizona 'Cats



TUCSON, Arizona -- Traditionally, FCS schools aren’t supposed to have two advantages over Division I schools, better athletes and better players. For a large portion of Saturday night’s football game against the Arizona Wildcats, Grambling State appeared to have both.

Ironically, the Grambling State University Tigers, imposed their will on the Wildcats through their defense, using the same 3-3-5 defensive scheme that former Arizona defensive coordinator Jeff Casteel was run out of town for. The difference, Grambling played tougher and faster than the Arizona the entire first half, stopping the Wildcats on several fourth-and-short situations.

On the offensive side of the ball for the Tigers, quarterback DeVante Kincade, a transfer from Ole Miss, was near impossible to tackle and played every bit the part of a legitimate SEC signal caller. Kincade was 15-of-19 for 193 yards and two touchdown passes before pulling up lame in the second quarter with an apparent leg injury. “You can see why I tried to recruit him, he may be the most athletic quarterback we face all year, he is just, wow!”, said Arizona head coach Rich Rodriguez. Kincade wouldn’t return and it would end up costing the Tigers dearly in the second half.

Between the third and fourth quarters the Tigers turned the ball over four times in a row and a total of six in the second half, leading to 28 consecutive points resulting in a 31-21 win for Arizona. “They took advantage of our mistakes, that is what good teams do … at the end of the day you just can’t turn the ball over like that.”, said Grambling State head coach Broderick Fobbs after the game.

CONTINUE READING

HBCU Football Judgment Day Scoreboard Week 2

Saturday, September 10

OVC
Tennessee State 40, Jackson State 26    27th Southern Heritage Classic

SWAC
Texas A&M 67, Prairie View A&M 0
Alabama A&M 35, Mississippi Valley State 16
Oklahoma Panhandle State 20, Arkansas Pine Bluff 16
Alcorn State 21, Alabama State 18
Tulane 66, Southern 21
Houston Baptist 24, Texas Southern 20
Arizona 31, Grambling 21



MEAC
Rutgers 52, Howard 14
Monmouth 34, Delaware State 20
North Carolina A&T 39, Kent State 36  4 O.T.
Marshall 62, Morgan State 0
William and Mary 24, Hampton 14
Richmond 34, Norfolk State 0
Western Michigan 70, North Carolina Central 21
North Texas 41, Bethune-Cookman 20
Coastal Carolina 49, Florida A&M 10
Southern Mississippi 56, Savannah State 0
Louisiana Tech 53, South Carolina State 24



OTHER CONFERENCE HBCUs
West Virginia State 37, Urbana 24
California (PA) 79, Cheyney 3
Louisiana College 49, Texas College 18
Langston 30, Bethany 7

CIAA
Lincoln (PA) 33, Lincoln (MO) 23  Battle of the LUs
Fordham 83, Elizabeth City State 21
Carson-Newman 48   Saint Augustine's 14
Wingate 56, Shaw 7
Virginia State 24, Tusculum 10
Livingstone 31, Edward Waters 28
Bowie State 52, Johnson C. Smith  0
Newberry 42, Virginia Union 22
Campbell 47, Chowan 14
Winston-Salem 23, Catawba 17
UNC Pembroke 50, Fayetteville State 28   Two Rivers Classic

SIAC
Clark Atlanta 20, Central State (OH) 13   19th Chicago Football Classic
Tuskegee 28, Albany State 18    3rd Annual Whitewater Classic
Morehouse 14, Kentucky State 3
Lane 10, Fort Valley State 7
West Georgia 29, Miles College 0
Limestone 19, Benedict 13

XULA's August earns GCAC's first weekly award of 2016

Christopher August
NEW ORLEANS — Xavier University of Louisiana's Christopher August, who won a Gulf Coast Athletic Conference-leading five Runner of the Week awards in men's cross country last season, has picked up where he left off.
     
August — a senior from Spring, Texas, and a graduate of Klein Collins High School — is the GCAC's first honoree of 2016 after finishing 24th out of 76 runners in the Mississippi College Season Opener this past Friday. His time for 5,000 meters was 17 minutes, 59.58 seconds. August was XULA's fastest finisher for the sixth consecutive race dating to the start of 2015, and he finished ahead of 11 runners from NCAA Division I schools.
     
August led the Gold Rush to sixth place out of 11 teams. XULA finished ahead of two NCAA Division I teams. It was the first time since 2014 that the Gold Rush beat NCAA DIs in team scoring.
     
XULA's men and women will compete Saturday in the Allstate Sugar Bowl Festival at Lafreniere Park in the New Orleans suburb of Metairie. The men's race will start at 7:50 a.m., followed by the women at 8:25. Distance of both races will be 5,000 meters. It will be the season debut of the XULA women.

Ed Cassiere, Sports Information Director
XULAgold.com
XAVIER UNIVERSITY OF LOUISIANA 
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WSSU Rams Hold On For 23-17 Win Over Catawba

SALISBURY, North Carolina – Winston-Salem State's TeVaughn Hurse rushed for 103 yards and a score, and Rod Tinsley passed for 142 yards and a touchdown, as the Rams held off Catawba College, 23-17, Saturday night at Shuford Stadium.

The win moves the WSSU Rams to 1-1 on the season, and Catawba College falls to 0-2, on the season.

Winston-Salem State would strike first, as Te'Vaughn Hurse scored from a yard out, capping a six-play 50 yard drive, with 8:53 left in the first quarter. Will Johnson converted the PAT to give the Rams an early 7-0 advantage.

The Catawba Indians bounced back with a score of their own, a nine yard pass to Keyon West from Mike Sheehan, to tie the score at 7-7 with 1:11 left in the first quarter.

WSSU would answer in the second quarter, and give them some breathing room, scoring twice in the quarter.

First, Will Johnson hit on a 37 yard field goal, after the Rams offense bogged down on an eight-play, 55 yard drive.

Then, after a Catawba punt, Rod Tinsley found a streaking Canard Brown down the right side, who then cut back across the field, to complete a 49 yard score. With the PAT from Will Johnson, the Rams were able to take a 17-7 lead into the locker room at the half.

Winston-Salem State would waste no time with putting some points on the board in the third, as they would take the kick to open the second half, and marched down the field, going 56 yards in nine plays, before another Will Johnson field goal, as the Rams jumped out to a 20-7 lead.

The Catawba Indians would answer with a field goal of their own with 2:33 left in the quarter, as Brennen Lambert connected on a 23 yarder, to trim the Rams lead to 23-10.

WSSU would add another field goal in the fourth quarter, as their longest drive of the night, a 67 yard, 12 play drive, would end on the foot of Johnson, as WSSU increased its lead to 23-10, with 12:17 left to play.

Catawba would not go away, and with 6:52 left in the game, Mike Sheehan scored from four yards out, to cut the Rams lead to 23-17, setting up another dramatic ending for the WSSU Rams.

The Rams offense would methodically move the move on their series, using a much of the game clock as possible, using 4:33 seconds on a 10-play drive. The Rams would eventually settle for a 36 yards field goal attempt from Will Johnson, who this time missed, as the ball sail wide right, to keep the score at 23-17, with 2:12 remaining in the game.

Catawba would get the ball back on their own 20 yard line, trying to get to the end zone, before the clock struck zero.

Back to back completions, and with the help of a roughing the passer call on the Rams, the Indians moved into the Rams territory, leaving the WSSU fans on the edge of their seat for the second consecutive week.

But after two incompletions, Sheehan's third down pass was completed, but came up short of the first down, and on fourth down and one, he inexplicably rushed to the line and spiked the ball of fourth down, turning the ball over on downs to Winston-Salem State.

The WSSU Rams would kneel on the ball, and come away with the 23-17 win.

The Rams were led in rushing by Te'Vaughn Hurse, who finished with a game-high 103 yards and one touchdown. Xavier Quick had five carries for 48 yards, and Kerrion Moore finished with 10 carries for 44 yards. Justus Pickett had 10 carries for 19 yards.

Rod Tinsley had a solid night guiding the Rams, as he finished 12 of 18 passing for 142 yards and one touchdown. He had a long pass of 49 yards.

Reggie Wilkins led the Rams receiving corps, hauling in three catches for 42 yards and Demeeko Jones also had three catches for 27 yards. Canard Brown had two catches for 54 yards and one touchdown. Te'Vaughn Hurse also hauled in two catches. Will Walton and Xavier Quick each had one catch.

Defensively, WSSU was led by Braxton Daye, who finished with nine tackles, one tackle for loss, two forced fumbles and two quarterback hurries. Kailan Chavis had six tackles and two pass breakups, and CJ Washington, Daryus Skinner and PJ Clyburn each had five tackles. Clyburn also picked up a fumble recovery. Jarrell Bright finished with four tackles, and eight other Rams defenders had three tackles each.

Winston-Salem State will return home to B
owman Gray Stadium next week, as they will host the inaugural Winston-Salem Football Classic, featuring the Rams hosting the Virginia Union Panthers.

BOX SCORE

WINSTON-SALEM STATE UNIVERSITY ATHLETIC MEDIA RELATIONS

XULA wins again, this time in 3 sets at Edward Waters

JACKSONVILLE, Florida --  Xavier University of Louisiana stretched its volleyball win streak to a season-best three matches Saturday in a 25-19, 25-20, 25-15 Gulf Coast Athletic Conference victory against Edward Waters.
    
 The Gold Nuggets (5-10, 2-0) also have won 11 straight and 74 of their last 75 matches against GCAC opponents. In the regular season, XULA has won nine straight and 61 of its last 62 GCAC matches.
     
XULA hit .406 in the first and third sets and finished at a season-high .298. The Gold Nuggets closed the first set with a 10-1 run and the second set with a 9-2 surge. XULA never trailed in the final set and won in three sets for the first time this season.
     
Juliana Tomasoni had eight kills, 10 digs and hit .389 for XULA. Monet Fontaine had seven kills, andHasani Salaam and Adili Rikondja had six kills apiece. Libero Amanda Perry produced a match-high 11 digs and extended to 14 her XU record of consecutive matches in double figures. The previous school mark was nine.
     
Kiara Morrell had nine kills for the Lady Tigers (2-3, 0-2), and Kaylin Davison served a pair of aces. XULA limited Davison — who had 53 kills and hit .233 in her team's first four matches — to season lows of four kills and a .000 hitting percentage.
    
"Playing a match after a long bus ride (Friday) can be a test of mental toughness," XULA coachHannah Lawing said. "We weren't ourselves in the first and second set, but by set three, we found a groove and were able to make some lineup adjustments due to our lead. It felt good to win in three, but it felt even better to be able to play everyone on our roster. There were a few times when (assistant coach) Hilary (Lobenstein) and I realized there were six freshmen on the court, and we were very impressed with the confidence and discipline they displayed."
     
XULA limited Edward Waters to .091 hitting and held a 43-21 advantage in kills.
     
XULA never has dropped a set against Edward Waters in 13 all-time meetings. The teams will meet again Oct. 2 at XULA.
     
The Gold Nuggets' next match will start at 5 p.m. Monday against GCAC opponent Philander Smith at XULA's Convocation Center.

BOX SCORE

Ed Cassiere, Sports Information Director
XULAgold.com
XAVIER UNIVERSITY OF LOUISIANA 
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Price's XULA record part of sweet day at Sugar Bowl


METAIRIE, Louisiana --  In her first collegiate cross country race, Taylor Price set a Xavier University of Louisiana record — one of several fast times for the Gold Nuggets and Gold Rush Saturday in the Allstate Sugar Bowl Festival.
      
 Price, a freshman from the Houston suburb of Missouri City, Texas, and a graduate of Ridge Point High School, ran the 5,000-meter course at Lafreniere Park in 18 minutes, 7.5 seconds. She bettered Catherine Fakler's XULA mark of 18:08.32 at the 2013 Gulf Coast Athletic Conference Championships. Price placed ninth out of 54 finishers and was faster than 23 entrants from NCAA Division I colleges.

"I was very excited to perform at my first collegiate meet," Price said. "I was nervous before and at the beginning of the race, but I thought about all the hard work and training and preformed my best."
    
 For the first time in the program's history, four Gold Nuggets finished a 5K in less than 20 minutes. Sophomores Brianna Pace (26th place, 19:08.7), Dionysia Love (28th, 19:16.5) and Maliya Vaughan (29th, 19:17.7) were considerably closer to 19 minutes than 20. Their times rank 9-12-13 on the all-time Gold Nuggets list.
    
 "Our ladies came out fast and ran very well," XULA coach Joseph Moses said.
    
 Leading the Gold Rush in the men's 5K were senior Christopher August (20th place out of 54, 15:41.6) and freshman Clydarius Everett (36th, 16:36.5), whose times rank second and 10th, respectively, on the XULA list covering 2002 to the present. (Complete 5K times are not available for 1994-2001, the first eight seasons of the program's modern era.)
    
 August was about 11 seconds from Kwame Jackson's XULA record of 15:30.90 set in 2014.
    
 Also competing were Imani Walker (50th, 22:34.3) of the Gold Nuggets and Oji Wells(38th, 17:16.6), Darrick Williams (42nd, 17:25.3) and Ammiel Williams (50th, 18:49.5) of the Gold Rush.
    
 Loyola, the host school, divided the team scoring into NCAA DI and non-DI. Both XULA teams finished second in the non-DI standings. The Gold Nuggets trailed Spring Hill 25 points to 40, and the Gold Rush trailed Spring Hill 20-52.
    
 Tulane produced both individual winners. Mckenzie Melius won the women's race in 17:31.0, and Emmanuel Rotich led the men in 14:13.0.
    
 The Gold Nuggets and Gold Rush will travel to Baton Rouge, La., for the LSU Invitational next Saturday at Highland Road Park. The women's 5K will start at 7:30 a.m., and the men's 5K will start at 8:10.

Results:  Men    Women

Ed Cassiere, Sports Information Director
XULAgold.com
XAVIER UNIVERSITY OF LOUISIANA 
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Saturday, September 10, 2016

HBCU Football Judgment Day Schedule Week 2



Saturday, September 10

OVC
Jackson State vs. Tennessee State at Memphis Liberty Bowl, 7 PM, 27th Southern Heritage Classic

SWAC
Prairie View A&M at Texas A&M, 12Noon, TV: SEC Network/ESPN
Alabama A&M at Mississippi Valley State, 5 PM
Oklahoma Panhandle State at Arkansas Pine Bluff, 7 PM
Alabama State at Alcorn State, 7 PM, ESPN3
Southern at Tulane, 8 PM, ESPN3
Texas Southern at Houston Baptist, 8 PM
Grambling at Arizona, 10:45 PM  PAC 12 Network

MEAC
Howard at Rutgers, 12 NOON, TV: Big Ten Network
Monmouth at Delaware State, 5 PM
North Carolina A&T at Kent State, 6 PM, ESPN3
Morgan State at Marshall, 6 PM
William and Mary at Hampton, 6 PM
Norfolk State at Richmond, 6 PM
North Carolina Central at Western Michigan, 7 PM, ESPN3
Bethune-Cookman at North Texas, 7 PM
Florida A&M at Coastal Carolina, 7 PM
Savannah State at Southern Mississippi, 7 PM
South Carolina State at Louisiana Tech, 7 PM



OTHER CONFERENCE HBCUs
West Virginia State at Urbana, 1 PM
California (PA) at Cheyney, 1 PM
Louisiana College at Texas College, 5 PM
Bethany at Langston, 7 PM

CIAA
Lincoln (MO) at Lincoln (PA), 1 PM, Battle of the LUs
Elizabeth City State at Fordham, 1 PM
Carson-Newman at Saint Augustine's, 1 PM
Shaw at Wingate, 1:30 PM, ESPN3
Tusculum at Virginia State, 2 PM
Edward Waters at Livingstone, 3 PM
Johnson C. Smith at Bowie State, 4 PM
Virginia Union at Newberry, 4 PM
Campbell at Chowan, 6 PM
Winston-Salem at Catawba, 6 PM
Fayetteville State at UNC Pembroke, 7 PM,  Two Rivers Classic,   Live Video

SIAC
Kentucky State at Morehouse, 2 PM
Fort Valley State at Lane, 3 PM
Clark Atlanta vs. Central State (OH), 4:30 PM, 19th Chicago Football Classic
Albany State vs. Tuskegee, 5 PM  Phenix City, AL  3rd Annual Whitewater Classic
West Georgia at Miles College, 5 PM
Limestone at Benedict, 6 PM



ALL GAME TIMES SHOWN IN EASTERN STANDARD TIME ZONE

Friday, September 9, 2016

SWAC Rivals Prepare for Annual SWA State Fair Classic Showdown

DALLAS, Texas -- Ask about “the game of the year” in college football and an endless list of DI colleges roll off the tongue. Add in “and the halftime showdown,” and the list narrows down to one: the Southwest Airlines State Fair Classic between Grambling and Prairie View A&M.

The stage is set for this year’s event, with the Cotton Bowl slated to host the two teams at 4 p.m. on Oct. 1.

It’s a storied rivalry on the football field between the two Historically Black Universities, but unlike any other game at the collegiate level, the rivalry carries on into halftime as both schools muster up first class, energetic and wild marching bands.

The event will actually cap off an entire week of celebrations for students and alumni, as well as fans, of both universities. All of which will kick off with a press conference on Monday, Sept. 26 at 11 a.m. in the City Hall Flag Room. More events sponsored by each school’s alumni will lead up to game time. More info is available at http://www.alwe.com/event/state-fair-classic/

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In first matchup, TSU, HBU seek to turn page on Week 1 losses



HOUSTON, Texas -- Houston Baptist and Texas Southern are in need of a win after opening their respective seasons with a road loss.

In the first meeting between the two Houston schools on the football field, the Huskies from the Southland Conference and the Tigers from the SWAC have a 7 p.m. kickoff Saturday at Husky Stadium.

"It's a fun game when you have two teams that call Houston their home," HBU coach Vic Shealy said. "We need to have a great crowd to show up and show that we can play better than what we did last week, and it would be a great feeling to leave having done that and to come away with a win. But we got to get better, and so this is a good test for us.

"I didn't know much about them until this year. They are very athletic, which we understood that they would be. I know it will be a real challenge, but it will be a fun game. We need to have a big win and get the momentum back."



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Tulane welcomes Southern to Yulman Stadium this Saturday


NEW ORLEANS – The Tulane football team opens its home slate this Saturday at Yulman Stadium against Southern out of the Southwestern Athletic Conference.

Storylines

• Tulane (0-1, 0-0 American Athtletic Conference West) kicks off a three-game homestand in the friendly confines of Yulman Stadium against an area foe from right down I-10 in Southern (0-1, 0-0 Southwestern Athletic Conference West).

• In the 2016 home opener for the Green Wave and first-year head coach Willie Fritz, Tulane looks to earn its first win on the young season and grab its first victory in a home opener since defeating Jackson State, 34-7, on Aug. 31, 2013. The Olive and Blue fell to Georgia Tech (38-21) in its 2014 home opener and and Duke (37-7) on Sept. 6 in its 2015 home opener on Sept. 3.

Week 2: Tulane Green Wave (0-1) vs Southern Jaguars (0-1)
When Saturday, Sept. 10 // 7 pm CT
Where New Orleans // Yulman Stadium (30,000)
Watch ESPN3
Commentators Joel Meyers (PBP), Brian Kinchen (analyst)
Radio Fox Sports 1280 AM New Orleans // Tune-In
Radio Talent Todd Graffagnini (PBP), Steve Barrios (Color)
Gus Kattengell (Sideline)
Tickets To Purchase, Click Here
Live Stats Sidearm – Click Here
Notes Tulane
Twitter @GreenWaveFB // @TulaneAthletics // #RollWave

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Game Day Preview: Alabama State at Alcorn State

FOUR-DOWN TERRITORY

1. Back to work: Alabama State head coach Brian Jenkins said his team showed some promise during its 26-13 loss at UTSA last Saturday, but said that there were too many mistakes to overcome in the second half. “Our guys went in there and played hard from beginning to end,” Jenkins said Monday morning. “We didn’t play well enough to win, but now we’re getting ready for our next game.” That next game is with defending SWAC champion Alcorn State, which Alabama State hasn’t beaten since 2013. “We’re really excited and ready to play Alcorn,” Jenkins said. “I expect it to be a great weekend for a football game, and we’re looking forward to a big challenge.”

2. Running start: Alabama State senior running back Khalid Thomas got off to a solid start to his 2016 season, rushing for 93 yards and a touchdown during last Saturday’s loss. Jenkins said that he expects a big year from his starting running back. “Khalid is a veteran who knows how to prepare for games, and he’s been in many situations,” Jenkins said. “It was good to see him get off to a good start, and we expect him to be successful.” Thomas averaged 4.8 yards per carry last season.

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Alabama A&M opens SWAC play Saturday at Mississippi Valley State

HUNTSVILLE, Alabama -- The Bulldogs have put last week's loss to Middle Tennessee State behind and are focused on Mississippi Valley State in the Southwestern Athletic Conference opener for both teams.

They visit the Delta Devils with a 4 p.m. kickoff Saturday.

"It's kind of a luxury that we can't lick our wounds," Head Coach James Spady said. "We definitely want to erase last week's game."

The Bulldogs were stunned last year as MVSU rallied for a 27-24 overtime win at Louis Crews Stadium. It was the Delta Devils' first win of the season and the only home loss for A&M.

This game is important for the Bulldogs in their quest to reach the SWAC championship game as they travel to Itta Bena, Miss.

"This is a conference game and it's the first step in reaching our goal," Spady said. "It's not about our opponent; it's about A&M trying to get better.

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Thursday, September 8, 2016

Morgan State’s transfer quarterback has Marshall’s attention

HUNTINGTON, West Virginia — If nothing else, Morgan State comes to Huntington on Saturday with an experienced quarterback, one of those graduate transfers.

Not that Chris Andrews comes from a football factory — Wagner College. But he is a dual-threat left-handed quarterback who has Marshall’s full attention.

Andrews and his Bears (0-1) take on the Thundering Herd in MU’s season opener at Joan C. Edwards Stadium. Kickoff is at 6 p.m., with the game airing on beIN Sports.



“You can tell he’s played,” MU coach Doc Holliday said of Andrews. “He plays with poise, he makes tremendous throws. They’ve got some guys who can run at the receiver position. They’ve got a back who’s not even starting who was a 1,000-yard rusher, player of the year in that conference.”


Holliday referred to Herb Walker Jr., who wasn’t the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference player of the year in 2015, but was offensive player of the week twice. He rushed for 1,408 yards and 15 touchdowns, but missed 2015 with eligibility issues.

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Tough dates await top teams in second week

HOUSTON, Texas -- There’s no sense in fooling with the BCSP Top Ten rankings this early in the season as the best black college teams, particularly those in the Football Championship Subdivision (FCS), are playing money games against mostly Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) teams. In translation, these are games that the HBCU programs are highly unlikely to win. But they are good measuring sticks as to gauge the talent and competitiveness of their teams. A highly competitive game means the HBCU program is among the better FCS teams. Blowouts mean they are unlikely to match up well with the top FCS teams.

But, at least the money is good! Take for example this week’s game between BCSP No. 1 North Carolina Central (0-1, 0-0), coming off a 49-6 thrashing at the hands of ACC-member Duke, travelling up to Kalamazoo, Michigan to take on Western Michigan in a 7 p.m. start. All Western Michigan did last week was upset Big Ten member Northwestern, 22-21. The Eagles can expect no break facing the Broncos.

Similar HBCU FCS vs. FBS foes Saturday include BCSP No. 2 Prairie View A&M (1-0, 1-0 SWAC), who squeaked out a 29-25 win over SWAC West Division rival Texas Southern Sunday, travelling to College Station, Texas for an 11 a.m. date with SEC power Texas A&M (1-0). Texas A&M knocked off Pac-12 member and 16th-ranked UCLA Saturday, 31-24. BCSP No. 3 Bethune-Cookman, No. 6 Grambling State and No. 7 South Carolina State also face formidable FBS opponents.



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Alcorn State may have found answer at running back



LORMAN, Mississippi  -- Alcorn State entered the season facing questions at running back when it lost All-SWAC second-teamer Darryan Ragsdale after he exhausted his eligibility last year.

But coach Fred McNair points to the returning running backs as enough to make up for someone who averaged 7.6 yards per carry and finished with eight rushing touchdowns.

“I think Marquis (Warford) has been doing a good job throughout the training camp and the spring getting ready to take over the role,” McNair said. “With De’Lance Turner and the young guys coming in and getting to play, we do have a little depth at the running back position. We’re going to continue to press the running game and do what we do best.

“Even when Ragsdale was here — he did a great job for us — we had guys coming in behind him doing a great job playing the role they played. It’s always next man up.”

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from THE EDITOR DWIGHT FLOYD -- GAME REPORT: FAMU/FSU Tournament Begins Tonight

DWIGHT FLOYD
GAME REPORT
2016 Schedule (printable)
TALLAHASSEE, Florida -- Tonight the young FAMU Volleyball Team will host the Trojans of Arkansas Little Rock in the first of three tough games over two days. Continuing the tournament FAMU will visit the FSU Seminoles at Tully Gym at 1:00 PM on Friday and return to the AL Lawson Center on Friday night to host the Baylor Bears.

An improved Rattler team will face tough competition. The Rattlers began the season losing three games in a row. Costly errors and the lack of experience for a team of mostly new players took a toll in those first few games. In the next three games the Rattlers went 2-1. The errors were vastly reduced and the players demonstrated a better feel for how to play with one another. Now 2-3, the Rattlers are skilled and athletic and show a lot of promise. Their keys to winning are to reduce the errors, play in system, and remain confident.

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