Monday, September 10, 2007

Grambling laments missed opportunities

Photo: GSU RB #23 Frank Warren missed pass vs. Pitt.

The Times - Shreveport

PITTSBURGH — Grambling State left Heinz Field with more than a 34-10 defeat at the hands of the University of Pittsburgh on Saturday.
They left knowing they had squandered some opportunities as well.

The Tigers (1-1) had a punt blocked and a pass intercepted to lead to two Pitt touchdowns and eventually a 21-0 lead with 11 minutes gone.

The Tigers also hurt themselves with 108 yards of penalties. They also failed to score three times after moving the ball inside the Pitt 10 during the second half.

"They (Pitt) played an excellent game and I take nothing away from it, but we helped them a great deal," GSU coach Rod Broadway said. "When you have three passes intercepted, a punt blocked and get the ball inside the 20-yard line four times without scoring, then you've got a problem.

"Pitt's a very talented team but I thought we missed an opportunity to close the gap a little bit. We need to do a better job of coaching."

Photo: GSU Tiger Band performs before 30,852 at Heinz Field, Pittsburgh, PA .

Despite giving up 34 points, Grambling's defense allowed 321 yards offense to Pitt. The Panthers had 202 yards passing and 119 rushing.

"I thought our defense actually played pretty well," Broadway said. "We gave up 34 points and 280 yards (actually 321), but most of that came in the first half when Pitt had the ball on our side of the 50 a lot."

Offensively, though, the Tigers struggled against Pitt.

Grambling quarterback Brandon Landers was 19-of-40 passing for 155 yards. He threw one touchdown, but he was intercepted three times.

"We have to get better at converting in the red zone," Landers said. "That's one thing that coach really stressed to us after the game, and we know it's true.

"You have to convert those kinds of chances if you're going to be successful against a team like Pitt. We'll keep working on it. We have two more weeks before our next game to get it right."

SU Jaguars can’t overlook Prairie View this time


By JOSEPH SCHIEFELBEIN, Advocate sportswriter

What Southern has to do this week, the Jaguars should already know.

Southern is 2-0, just like last year. Southern is facing Prairie View on Saturday, just like the Jaguars did at this point last year.

For them, what happened last year has to be remembered — and what happened last year can’t be allowed to happen again.

A year ago, their season dissolved in an amazing fourth-quarter collapse on a cauldron of a field in Houston. The result of blowing a two-touchdown lead late in the fourth quarter: PV won its first game against Southern since 1971 with a 26-23 overtime decision.

That loss began a stretch, for Southern, of five losses in six games.

What Southern (2-0, 1-0 Southwestern Athletic Conference) will face in a 6 p.m. season opener Saturday in A.W. Mumford Stadium is a Prairie View team (2-0, 1-0) that is better than last season’s edition and one which has the confidence, unlike previous Panthers teams, that Southern is no longer invincible.



This looms as a big early season Western Division showdown.

Southern beat Mississippi Valley State 23-6 Saturday in Chicago, while PV, with Val Ford returning two blocked punts for first-half touchdowns, beat Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference member North Carolina A&T 22-7 in Los Angeles.

Southern, after two straight losing seasons, is trying to live up to the program’s good name under Pete Richardson and A.W. Mumford. A win Saturday would continue the momentum and help erase memories of last season, with Prairie View players taunting Southern players relentlessly at game’s end.

Prairie View is still trying to scratch out respect as a conference contender, something the program, so down in the 1990s, hasn’t had for decades. A win Saturday would give them consecutive victories over Southern, something which last happened when the Panthers won three straight from 1962 through ’64. That would be a powerful statement.

There should be a tremendous sense of clarity and will from both sides.

This is going to be quite the home opener.

Make sure you’ve got tickets.

Photo: SU QB Bryant Lee vs. MVSU, runs for first down.

Do more of this

Southern has a nice trio at running back, with Darren Coates (25 carries, 197 yards, two touchdowns), Brian Threat (15 carries, 117 yards, one TD) and Kendrick Smith (nine carries, 61 yards — plus two receiving TDs Saturday). Coates, in the season opener, and Threat, Saturday, have already posted their first career 100-yard games.

Make that a four-man threat, with quarterback Bryant Lee (30 carries, 88 yards, one TD) included.

The Jaguars already have 531 rushing yards so far. At this point last season, they had 58. More, the 531 is almost half of what SU totaled in 11 games last season: 1,233.

Work more on this

Southern has to avoid the slow starts on offense. Granted, the first offensive play of the season was a 90-yard touchdown run. The point here, though, is getting into a rhythm as a unit. Once SU gets going, the Jaguars have been dynamite.

“We made a few adjustments. &hellip We have to figure out what defenses are doing,” said Richardson, who also mentioned the exuberance of youth as a possible factor in keeping SU from settling in.

Quick hits

Saturday’s reported attendance of 49,872, though the entire upper deck on the West side was empty and the stadium seats 61,500, was better than any total, even the Bayou Classic (47,136), that saw the Jaguars last season. The total was certainly better than the last time SU played Valley in Chicago, with 9,069 coming to see the Jaguars win 51-30 in the 1997 season opener. The public address announcers were often way out of line, talking about betting on the game while in progress and drinking Courvoisier after the game. Then, there were lines like, “He jumped on that boy like he caught him stealing out of his momma’s purse.”

Up next

Southern hosts Prairie View at 6 p.m. Saturday in A.W. Mumford Stadium. The home opener begins a stretch where SU plays five of its next six games at home. SU is at home for three games in October and will take that final Saturday off.

Little time to lick wounds for Jackson State Tigers

Photo: Daniel Brooks, 6-4/235 Sr. DE

By David Brandt, Clarion Ledger

The JSU Game
Who: Texas Southern (0-2, 0-2 SWAC) at Jackson State (0-2, 0-0)
When: Thursday, 6:30 p.m.
TV: ESPNU
Radio: JSU Network (WOAD-1300 AM and 105.9 FM, Jackson)

Listed at 6-foot-4 and 235 pounds, Jackson State defensive end Daniel Brooks can be funny and gregarious - almost a larger than life comic influence on the Tigers' locker room.

But in the rare moments when he's angry - when his eyes cloud over and his expression turns grim, he can also be downright intimidating.

And the half hour following JSU's 16-13 loss to Tennessee State on Saturday would certainly qualify as one of those extended moments.

But after a little time to cool down, Brooks' face softens and the senior sighs for a second before scratching his head, trying to find a bit of good news despite the Tigers' 0-2 start to the season.

He finally has to settle for this:

"What doesn't kill us will make us stronger," Brooks said. "You've got to go through rough times to enjoy the success. This is our rough time. But it won't last forever."

And Jackson State would probably prefer that the troubles end immediately, especially considering the Tigers have just three days to prepare for a Thursday night game at 6:30 p.m. against Texas Southern.

It is JSU's first Southwestern Athletic Conference game of the season and is also nationally televised on ESPNU.

Comegy's mantra during the preseason has been winning a SWAC championship. And if that's the case, the only thing lost so far is a little shine off the second-year coaching staff who could seemingly do no wrong in last season's 6-5 rejuvenation.

And even though it's undeniable that JSU has struggled through the first two games, there were a few more positives against Tennessee State than in the season-opening debacle against Delta State. Among them:

Kicker Eric Perri's school-record 50-yard field goal and earlier 44-yard field goal.

Running back Erik Haw, who returned from injury to rush for 82 yards on 17 carries. It was the junior's best game since midway through last season.

A defense that has consistently been stingy, allowing Tennessee State only 16 points on Saturday.

"I think we're playing good enough defense to win ballgames," Comegy said. "I'm just concerned with our offense. We need to be moving the ball better and generating a little more offense."

Texas Southern (0-2 overall, 0-2 SWAC) has also lost twice to open the season. The Maroon Tigers were blown out by Prairie View A&M 34-14 in their opener before falling 21-10 to Alabama State on Saturday.

Haw said the shorter week to prepare for Texas Southern could be a positive, forcing JSU to immediately focus on the upcoming game instead of dwelling on the Tennessee State loss.

"It's the ups and downs of football and you've got to deal with adversity," Haw said. "There's no time to sit and feel sorry for ourselves. We've got to get back to work."

Jackson State University Sonic Boom of the South Marching Band

Tennessee State coach says some fans gave up on Tigers

Photo: TSU Athletic Director Teresa Phillips

By MIKE ORGAN, The Tennessean

James Webster is most proud of his Tennessee State players for not giving up on themselves and hanging on to win Saturday's game against Jackson State.

The Tigers coach is perplexed, however, by those who did give up on his team before the game ever started.

Webster said he heard from fans that threw in the towel on the Tigers after their season-opening, 49-23 loss to Alabama A&M. It was the first thing he brought up after Saturday's 16-13 win at the Memphis Liberty Bowl.

"I think there were some people who gave up on us for the season after we lost by whatever we did to Alabama A&M,'' Webster said. "That is something I don't understand."

One person who didn't give up was TSU athletics director Teresa L. Phillips, one of the first to greet the Tigers Saturday night as they came out of the locker room after rallying to win.

"Our president (Melvin Johnson) didn't give up on us and our AD didn't give up on us,'' Webster said. "And that's all I worry about because they're my boss and they're leaders. They were very supportive of us and encouraged us, and that's what matters to me."

Mentally tough

Webster said his players proved their tenacity Saturday, not becoming frustrated despite scoring only two touchdowns, and hanging tough until the final play. That's when Eric Benson kicked a 35-yard field goal in the rain for TSU's only lead.

"There was no question about it, mental toughness was the main thing we improved on from the first game to the second,'' Webster said.

"If we would have had the same mental toughness in the Alabama A&M game that we had in this game, I think we would have won the Alabama A&M game. We showed it when we were behind the entire game (against JSU) but continued to play hard."

It won't get easier for TSU this week when the Tigers travel to Austin Peay, even though the Governors were picked to finish last in the OVC in their first year back in the league. They beat Indiana State Saturday 32-17 and are off to a 2-0 start for the first time since 2002.

Hall's status: Starting cornerback Marquez Hall, a transfer from Vanderbilt, suffered a high ankle sprain in the fourth quarter against JSU. He is day-to-day.

SCSU Pough ready to talk about USC


By THOMAS GRANT JR., T&D Senior Sports Writer

COLUMBIA — Let the talk begin.

For weeks, South Carolina State head football coach Oliver "Buddy" Pough deliberately avoided talking about the first-ever game against the University of South Carolina. The reason was simple as the Bulldogs had a very important ‘prior engagement’ a week earlier with Bethune-Cookman which demanded their full attention.

A loss to the Wildcats now only would have put SCSU behind the ‘eight ball’ for the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference regular-season title, but created the nightmarish prospect of having to defeat a Football Bowl Subdivision team to avoid an 0-3 start.

With the 24-13 win over the Wildcats, the Bulldogs can head to Columbia this Saturday relaxed knowing their standing in the conference will remain unchanged regardless of the outcome with the Gamecocks.

The lifted burden was especially evident in a relieved Pough’s post-game comments when asked about returning to the university he spent five years as a running backs’ coach under Lou Holtz. While excited about coaching at Williams-Brice Stadium again, Pough’s much happier about going there off a conference win.

"This makes me feel 100 times better going in there not 0-2," he said.

Quarterback Cleveland McCoy, who was a freshman when the Bulldogs faced Benedict in the 2004 Palmetto Capital City Classic at Williams-Brice Stadium, also believes his team will play more loose because of Saturday’s win.

"If we lost this game, it would been...because Bethune-Cookman is a MEAC team," McCoy said. "That counts and going into Carolina with your head down, that’s not a good thing. They’re coming in there to embarrass us, so that’s the great thing we wanted to do (Saturday)."

McCoy also believes the experience with Air Force, plus taking inspiration from what fellow Football Championship Subdivision team Appalachian State did to Football Bowl Subdivision team Michigan, will aid the Bulldogs against USC.

"We want to go in there and win and by any means necessary," McCoy said. "We don’t want to say ‘Well, we’re going up there to lose because that defeats the purpose of playing football. We want to have a shot at winning. Appalachian State won, so there’s no telling what we can do."

The one Bulldog whose arguably most looking forward to facing USC is former Clemson defensive lineman Xavier Littleberry. As the only SCSU player who have played against the Gamecocks during his one season with the Tigers, he still carries a ‘grudge’ against his former school’s biggest rival.

"I just feel like once they’re my rival, they’re always my rival and that’s going to be a real big game for me," he said.

Kickoff for Saturday’s first-ever contest between USC and SCSU is 7 p.m. Tickets can be purchased at the SCSU Ticket Office by calling (803) 536-8579 and Time Warner Cable will air the game on a pay-per-view basis.

Bulldog notes

The Bulldogs’ 279 rushing yards were 32 more than the combined total yards of Bethune-Cookman. Travil Jamison came off the bench to lead SCSU with 70 yards...With the win, SCSU improved to 37-5 under head coach Oliver "Buddy" Pough when leading or tied at halftime. Last year’s 10-9 loss to Delaware State was the only time that has taken place in conference play...Pough evened his record to 3-3 against Bethune-Cookman, leaving Hampton as the only MEAC team he does not own a winning record against...Corey Council’s 98-yard kickoff touchdown return was just the latest by a Wildcat player against SCSU. In fact, four of the five longest kickoff returns in Bethune-Cookman history have come at the Bulldogs’ expense, including current head coach Alvin Wyatt, who had a 102-yard return against SCSU in 1972. Wyatt’s return is tied for second in school history with John Osbourne, who also had a 102-yard return in 1972 against SCSU and four shy of the school mark set by Vincent Nobles in 1966 against the Bulldogs...A week after averaging 40.9 yards a punt in the high altitude at Air Force, punter Aaron Haire of Orangeburg-Wilkinson did even better with five punts averaging 48 yards, including a 61-yarder...Saturday’s game lasted three hours and seven minutes...Pough will hold his weekly press conference at 9 a.m. today in the athletics building.

FAMU narrows search for men's basketball coach to final five


By Heath A. Smith, Tallahassee Democrat

The search for Florida A&M's next men's basketball coach has been narrowed to a list of five finalists.

University of Michigan assistant coach Jerry Dunn, Mississippi State assistant coach Robert Kirby, Georgia State assistant coach Eugene Harris, Chipola Junior College coach Greg Heiar and former Colorado assistant men's basketball coach Paul Graham are expected to be interviewed for the position in person or by phone this week, according to FAMU Athletic Director Nelson Townsend.

"No one has been contacted yet," Townsend said. "We have some very good candidates."

Townsend said he expects to meet the self-imposed Sept. 15 deadline to name a new coach. FAMU fired Mike Gillespie Sr., the university's coach for the past six years, last month.

"I feel confident that we'll be on time," Townsend said. "We have not set an interview schedule yet."

The seven-member search committee met for three hours Saturday after going through the resumes of more than 50 applicants last week, according to state Sen. Al Lawson, who is on the committee.

Lawson said each committee member chose a list of 10 applicants to be voted on by the committee Saturday.

Each applicant from that pool who received two votes from the committee moved on to the next round of votes until the list was paired down to five finalists.

Lawson said that in addition to picking the five finalists, the committee made a motion that he be a part of the interviewing process along with Townsend and FAMU President James Ammons.


Sunday, September 9, 2007

MEAC/SWAC Scoreboard - Week 3 (Sept 13th-15th)


MEAC Scoreboard - Week 3, Sept. 13-15, 2007

Norfolk State (1-0)
@Rutgers (2-0) #15 AP Poll
3:30 PM ET
Rutgers Stadium, Piscataway, NJ
Internet & TV: ESPN 360, GamePlan Pay-Per-View
Radio: WOR, WCTC, WENJ, WRSU
TV: MSG in the New York/New Jersey; Cox Cable in New Orleans; Charter Cable in St. Louis and Time Warner-Wisconsin.
Radio: WNSB Hot 91.1 FM in the Hampton Roads area. WNSB’s audio stream is also available on the web by logging onto www.nsu.edu/athletics and following the ‘Listen Live’ link.

Delaware State (2-0)
@Kent State (1-1)
4:00 PM ET
Dix Stadium, Kent, OH
Internet Audio & Video: http://www.kentstatesports.com/liveEvents/liveEvents.dbml?DB_OEM_ID=11400&KEY=
http://www.dsuhornets.com/

Bethune Cookman (1-1)
@Savannah State (1-1)
4:00 PM ET
Ted Wright Stadium, Savannah, GA

Winston Salem (1-1)
@ Morgan State (1-1)
4:00 PM ET
Hughes Stadium, Baltimore, MD
RADIO: Morgan State Radio Network WEAA - 88.9 FM:
Rob Long (play-by-play) & Kelvin Bridgers (color).
INTERNET: http://www.morganstatebears.com/
http://wssurams.cstv.com/
INTERNET COVERAGE: Live Audio and Live Stats

Hampton (1-0)
@North Carolina A&T (0-2)
6:00 PM ET
Aggie Stadium, Greensboro, NC
TV: Tape Delay ESPNU (10 PM)

Howard U.(0-1)
@ Florida A&M (0-2)
6:00 PM ET
Bragg Memorial Stadium, Tallahassee, FL
Howard Internet Live TV: http://www.broadcasturban.net/player/hubison/player.htm
FAMU Internet Live TV: http://www.BlackCollegeSportsNetwork.net/FAMU/Men.html

South Carolina State (1-1)
@ South Carolina (2-0)
7:00 PM ET
Williams-Brice Stadium, Columbia, SC
Internet & TV: ESPN 360 & ESPN GamePlan

SWAC Scoreboard - Week 3

Thursday, Sept 13th
Texas Southern (0-3) 7
@Jackson State (1-2) 28 Final
7:30 PM ET
Veterans Memorial Stadium, Jackson, MS
TV: ESPNU live

Saturday, Sept 15th

Alcorn State (0-2)
@UAB (0-2)
7:00 PM ET
Legion Field, Birmingham, AL
Internet Audio & TV: Gameday Central: http://all-access.cstv.com/cstv/player/player.html?code=albr&sport=m-footbl&category=live&media=43266

Alabama State (2-0)
@Arkansas Pine Bluff (1-1)
7:00 PM ET
Pumphery Stadium, Pine Bluff, AR

Prairie View A&M (2-0)
@Southern University (2-0)
7:00 PM ET
Mumford Stadium, Baton Rouge, LA
TV: Cox Sports TV
Radio: SU Sports Network

Mississippi Valley State (1-1)
@Alabama A&M (2-0)
7:30 PM ET
Milton Frank Stadium, Normal, AL

Grambling State-Idle

Division I Independent - Scoreboard Week 2

Elizabeth City State
@North Carolina Central (2-1)
2:00 PM ET
Giants Stadium – The Meadowlands – East Rutherford, N.J. (80,242 capacity)
The New York Urban League's 37th Annual Whitney Young Football Classic
Audio: http://web.nccu.edu/campus/athletics/audio.html

Bethune Cookman (1-1)
@Savannah State (1-1)
4:00 PM ET
Ted Wright Stadium, Savannah, GA

Guest Band: Mississippi Valley State University "Valley Band"

Battle of Bands: 2007 Chicago Football Classic- Southern U. vs. MVSU Valley Band

Southern University Human Jukebox Marching Band, Half-Time Show @ 2007 Chicago Football Classic


Mississippi Valley State University Delta Devils, Half-Time Show @ 2007 Chicago Football Classic

Southern University Dolls Cupid Shuffle, Chicago Classic 2007





Hornets top Florida A&M University


Hornets top Florida A&M; Jones and McBride go down with injuries

Delaware State News

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — Sure, there were plenty of highlights for Delaware State in its Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference opener Saturday night.

Wide receiver Shaheer McBride tied Albert Horsey for the school’s all-time receptions record. Quarterback Vashon Winton again proved that he can manage a game with his arm and legs. And kicker Peter Gaertner nailed two field goals, looking like he was back to his former All-MEAC form.

But DSU left Bragg Memorial Stadium after dispatching Florida A&M 20-7 with some key injuries that might cause concern.

Transfer running back Kareem Jones, who seemed like a mainstay in the Hornets opener last week, carried the ball only four times and left with an injury in the first quarter.


Later in the third, McBride, after catching five passes to tie the record, was sidelined with an injury.

Without Jones and McBride, though, DSU still escaped Tallahassee earning its third straight win over the Rattlers, who beat the Hornets 10 consecutive times from 1994-2003.

As DSU struggled to run the ball, the offense rested on Winton. The junior threw for 179 yards and two touchdowns on 17-for-26 passing.

With the game scoreless early in the second quarter, Winton found his favorite target — McBride — on a crossing route in the end zone. The score gave DSU a 7-0 lead with 10:00 remaining before halftime.

Moments later, Winton tossed his first interception of the season and FAMU (0-1, 0-2) capitalized to knot the score at 7 when quarterback Albert Chester II hit tight end Todd Jenkins in the end zone with 1:17 left.

Winton then performed the two-minute drill perfectly, marching the Hornets 57 yards to allow Gaertner to kick a 35-yard field goal, which gave DSU a 10-7 lead at the break.

In the third, and in McBride’s absence, Winton hit redshirt sophomore William Griggs for his first career touchdown. The score gave the Hornets a 17-7 lead with 12:29 left in the third. Gaertner later hit a 36-yard field goal in the fourth for the final margin.

So, even with the win, questions remain for DSU especially in the running game.

With Jones, who ran for 174 yards last week, out, Central Florida transfer Chris Strother became the featured back. He had only 35 yards on 11 attempts.

Southern University Jaguars explode again

Quick score sparks Southern to victory

By JOSEPH SCHIEFELBEIN, Advocate sportswriter

CHICAGO — Southern quarterback Bryant Lee is missing out. Kind of.

For the second straight week, he didn’t get to see wide receiver Gerard Landry mash a defender en route to a long score.

That’s OK with Lee. He heard the crowd react, and he can always watch the film. And, best of all, the Jaguars are on a nice early roll to their season.

That play, good for a 54-yard touchdown down the right sideline, sparked Southern to a 23-6 Southwestern Athletic Conference victory over Mississippi Valley State in the Chicago Football Classic on Saturday at Soldier Field.

“It was an explosive play,” said Lee, named the game’s offensive MVP after throwing for 206 yards and three touchdowns and running for another 38 yards. “I really couldn’t see it. I had to listen to the crowd’s reaction.”

Starting with that play, Southern (2-0, 1-0 SWAC), which is undefeated after two games for the second straight season, scored on four of five possessions to pull away.

“The play was very important,” said Landry, who blasted through four Florida A&M defenders on a 46-yard TD catch in a 33-27 win the week before. Lee didn’t see that one, either. “It just gave us that momentum. Other guys started making plays, and we started clicking.”

Sophomore Brian Threat, who ran for 69 yards all last season, ran for 106 yards on 11 carries and Del Roberts had 74 yards on seven catches.

“The defense held up for us in the first half, and we had to execute on the offensive side,” said Lee, who won his third straight start, getting MVP honors in all three.

Meanwhile, Southern’s defense did some soul-searching in the locker room for the second straight week, and again responded.

This time, after Valley (1-1, 1-1) closed to within 14-6 Paul Roberts’ 20-yard touchdown pass with 6 seconds before halftime, SU held Valley to 9 yards and one first down in the second half.

“I thought that was going to give us a lot of energy, but we just didn’t have enough in the second half,” Valley coach Willie Totten said. “I felt pretty good right there at the end of the half. I felt we were in the ballgame and we had a chance, but we were too flat in the second half and made too many mistakes. We’ve got some work to do.”
Maybe the missed extra point, glancing off the right upright, was a portent of disaster.

Or maybe the touchdown, like the way Southern gave up two deep scores to Florida A&M in the second quarter the week before, simply sparked the Jaguars defense, like how the game played out a week earlier.

“We gave away a free touchdown, but they told us to step up, make sure they don’t score again, and that’s what we did,” said SU defensive end Vince Lands, the game’s defensive MVP. “We came out to prove a point, and that’s what we did.”

The first 21 minutes were a bore, with the teams combining for nine punts and Southern freshman Josh Duran missing his first career field-goal try, a 37-yard attempt glancing off the right upright.

Then, Southern scored on consecutive touches, converting a big play and staging a long drive, to take control by halftime.

First, Lee hooked up with Landry for the 54-yard TD, with Landry trucking over Valley cornerback Pierre Marshall along the way for a 7-0 lead with 8:18 until halftime. Then Lee directed a 10-play, 85-yard march, finding wide-open running back Kendrick Smith for a 12-yard touchdown and a 14-0 lead with 2:17 until halftime.

Roberts, despite an erratic first half, nevertheless led the Delta Devils on a 70-yard touchdown drive in the final two minutes, connecting with Clarence Cotton on a 20-yard touchdown with 6 seconds before halftime. Jamie Whitworth hit the right upright with a PAT, leaving the score at 14-6.

Roberts was 4-for-4 for 43 yards, with his hookup to Cotton going for Valley’s longest play of the game, and ran for two first downs. Until then, he was 9-for-21 and once threw three incomplete passes with Valley taking over at the Southern 34-yard line late in the first quarter.

“We had a mental lapse,” Richardson said. “We work on that. (The defender) bit up, and the guy ran a beautiful route to the corner.”

The vice grip came in the second half.

SU punted on its first possession but then drove 51 yards for another Lee-to-Smith TD pass. And a 74-yard drive produced a 30-yard Duran field goal and a 23-6 lead a minute into the fourth quarter. The Jaguars then powered away, eating the clock with a dominating running game and holding Valley to no yards in the final quarter.

For the game, Valley had seven three-and-outs and punted 11 times.

“It was just pride,” Lands said. “(Defensive coordinator Terrence) Graves kept preaching to us, pride, Jaguar pride.”

So far, through two games, Southern has shown a defense and an offense that gets better as games progress. The Jaguars, off two straight losing seasons, want that to translate to the season picture as well.

“Just a little more (work), and we’ll be good,” Lee said.

Lagniappe
Southern’s charter flight left Baton Rouge at 6 p.m. Thursday but didn’t arrive until around 11 p.m. The team had to put down for a couple hours in St. Louis to wait out a rainstorm blasting Chicago. Neither team got on Soldier Field until before the game Saturday. Friday, Southern had a short walkthrough practice at Niles West High School, while Valley went through its walkthrough, without footballs, at its hotel, the Midway Marriott. SWAC Commissioner Duer Sharp made his second straight Southern game. He caught the MEAC/SWAC Challenge a week earlier. Sharp also went to Thursday’s televised game, with Arkansas-Pine Bluff winning at Alcorn State. Valley coach Willie Totten asked Sharp before the game if a Howitzer, firing blanks, could be moved from his team’s sideline. No luck there, though.

Southern Jags roll before 49,872 at Soldier Field


BY CLYDE TRAVIS, Chicago Sun-Times

What began as a potential one-night stand has turned into a 10-year love affair between the city and the Chicago Football Classic.


The Classic annually has brought the atmosphere of black college football to Soldier Field. On Saturday, Southern University of Baton Rouge, La., and Mississippi Valley State, which were the original participants in the Classic, took the stage before a crowd of 49,872.

Southern won the first Classic 51-30 and the 10th as well with a 23-6 victory.

The Jaguars (2-0) took a 14-0 lead on a 54-yard touchdown pass from Bryant Lee to Gerard Landry with 8:18 left in the second quarter and on a 12-yard strike from Lee to Kendrick Smith six minutes later.

Mississippi Valley (1-1) drove 80 yards in nine plays and scored on a 20-yard pass from quarterback Paul Roberts to Clarence Cotton with six seconds left in the half.

Lee tossed his third touchdown pass, hitting Smith again from 20 yards out with 6:04 left in the third quarter. Josh Durant completed the scoring by nailing a 30-yard field goal with 14:09 left in the fourth quarter.

Lee, the game's offensive MVP, said he never was worried despite his team's slow start.

''Everything was perfect. It wasn't too hot, it wasn't too cold, we were playing at Soldier Field. It just took awhile for everyone to get on the same page,'' said Lee, a redshirt sophomore who completed 16 of 28 passes for 206 yards. ''The offensive line really was the key. They dug in and give me enough time.''

Southern rushed for 293 yards, 106 of them by Brian Threat.

The Jaguars' Vince Lands was named the game's defensive MVP

Two Chicago players played in the game: Harlan's Johey Hargrett of Mississippi Valley State and Homewood-Flossmoor product Sir-Edward Staten of Southern.

''It felt great to be home with family and friends and getting some of that home cooking,'' Hargrett said. ''This is a dream come true. Not many people get a chance to come back and play at Soldier Field.''

Field goal on final play knocks off careless JSU Tigers

By David Brandt, Clarion Ledger

MEMPHIS — The one-two punch of carelessness and miscommunication came at the absolute worst time for Jackson State on Saturday night.

And be-cause of that, JSU stood and watched helplessly as Tennessee State's Eric Benson kicked a 35-yard field goal as time expired to steal a 16-13 victory at the Southern Heritage Classic in front of an announced crowd of 50,987.

Photo: The Jackson State University Sonic Boom of the South Band performs at the Southern Heritage Classic in Memphis, TN

A sullen JSU coach Rick Comegy offered little in the way of an explanation of the team's Liberty Bowl troubles.

"We're all a little tired of excuses on this football team right now," Comegy said. "What we need instead are results."

The loss is the fifth in a row for JSU against Tennessee State, dating back to 2002. It's also JSU's sixth loss overall in seven games dating back to last season.

What was even more heart-wrenching about Saturday's final result was that the game was tied at 13 and appeared destined for overtime before two JSU (0-2) mistakes gave Tennessee State (1-1) new life.

First was the carelessness: Tennessee State was set to punt the ball away with 46 seconds remaining in the game before JSU was whistled for an illegal substitution to give TSU a new set of downs.

And on the very next play was the miscommunication: Tennessee State quarterback Antonio Heffner found Antonio Graham down the middle of the field on a wide-open 30-yard pass play, eventually setting up the game-winning field goal and a raucous TSU celebration.

"I'm not even sure what happened," said JSU linebacker Daniel Brooks of the 30-yard pass. "I was playing off adrenaline and trying to win the game. We'll have to look at the tape to see where we messed up because I truly have no idea."

Once again, Jackson State mixed and matched quarterbacks Tray Rutland and Jimmy Oliver with limited success. Rutland saw the majority of time and was 5-of-14 passing and 54 yards. He also rushed for 14 yards and a touchdown.

Oliver played briefly in the third quarter and finished 3-of-10 for 28 yards. He rushed for 25 yards.

Running back Erik Haw played in his first game of the season and rushed for 82 yards on 17 carries. JSU S was outgained 385-280 in total yards.

"We've got some problems offensively right now," Comegy said. "We've got to get this thing right soon, because (TSU) was beatable and we just didn't get it done."

Jackson State jumped to a 7-0 lead early in the first quarter partly thanks to a botched TSU punt attempt. With a short field, JSU drove 25 yards for the touchdown in five plays, capped by Rutland's 1-yard sneak.

Eric Perri stretched the Tigers' lead to 13-6 by midway through the third quarter with a pair of field goals.

The first was a 44-yarder that gave JSU a 10-6 lead going into halftime. The second was even more impressive, a 50-yard blast that set a school record and gave JSU a 13-6 advantage midway through the third quarter.

But that's about the time Jackson State's previously stingy defense started breaking down.

TSU's Terrence Wright scored his second touchdown of the game on an 11-yard pass from Antonio Heffner to tie the score at 13 with 8:03 left in the game.

The teams traded scoreless possessions throughout the rest of the fourth quarter until Benson nailed the field goal to win.

"This is our most important game all season," TSU coach James Webster said. "I know it's not a conference game, but we put a lot into it. That's why winning it is such a big thrill each year."

Heffner finished 18-of-31 passing for 232 yards, one touchdown and two interceptions.

Jackson State Perri's record-setting night - a 50-yarder - spoiled.


Perri's record-setting night - a 50-yarder - spoiled by late block

In a lot of ways, Jackson State sophomore kicker Eric Perri had a career night.

He set the school record with a 50-yard field goal in the third quarter that gave JSU a 13-6 lead. In the first half, he knocked down a 44-yarder - the fourth longest in school history.

But what will stick in his head is the 22-yard attempt that was blocked by Tennessee State. It would have given JSU a three-point lead in the fourth quarter.

"(TSU) was already on top of me by the time I kicked the ball," Perri said. "I don't really know what else I could have done, but it still hurts to not be able to help the team late."

JSU coach Rick Comegy agreed that the blocked field goal had nothing to do with Perri.

"We had a breakdown in our line," Comegy said. "Eric did a nice job of keeping us in the game early."

With his two kicks on Saturday, Perri solidified his ability to kick long field goals. His 50-yarder easily cleared the uprights and suggested the sophomore's range is pushing 55 to 60 yards.

Perri kicked a 52-yard field goal in Jackson State's spring game last year, but this is his first 50-plus make in a real game.

"It certainly gives me a lot of confidence," Perri said. "I know coach (Comegy) feels I can make a difference."

Even with the record-setting performance, Perri's night ended sourly as he watched Tennessee State kicker Eric Benson hit the 35-yard, game-winning field goal in the rain.

"It's a really helpless feeling sitting there and knowing there's nothing you can do," Perri said. "But give credit to (Benson). He did what he's supposed to do."

-David Brandt

Defense shines in Alabama State University victory


HOUSTON -- Trailing 10-7 with less than four minutes remaining, Alabama State seemed destined to lose to Texas Southern and repeat a scenario that played itself out over and over again in 2006: A great defensive effort wasted by a struggling offense.

However, Jay Peck, Rahmod Traylor and a determined offensive line pounded out two late touchdowns in a 21-10 win Saturday night.

"It was ugly," said ASU head coach Reggie Barlow, "but we'll take it. We made so many turnovers (five) that I stopped counting. Our defense kept us close and we were finally able to break through."

Neither offense was able to muster a score in the first half, with the only points being a fumble recovered for a touchdown by ASU's Leland Jones.

TSU finally got on the scoreboard when Tino Edgecombe -- who'd been benched earlier in the game -- hit Daniel Davis for a 13-yard touchdown to even the score with 1:49 to go in the third quarter.

ASU was poised to take the lead on several possessions, but turned the ball over twice in the red zone.

"We simply can't afford to give away those kind of opportunities," Barlow said. "I really thought it would come back to bite us."

ASU fumbled on three consecutive trips inside the TSU 20, including a 4th and 1 at the 1-yard line, when quarterback Chris Mitchell was unable to handle the snap. Peck also had one of the fumbles, but redeemed himself when he slammed off the left side for a 3-yard touchdown with 2:40 to go in the game. ASU led 14-10.

The Tigers were unable to get a first down on their next possession, and after a penalty, a sack and three incomplete passes, ASU got the ball back with a chance to run out the clock.

On the first play of their final drive, Traylor plowed into the end zone from 22 yards out, clinching the win.

"When we had to, we were really able to run the ball," Barlow said. "The guys just kept fighting through their mistakes and found a way to win. It definitely wasn't pretty but we'll take it."

The Hornet defense held TSU to 257 total yards and 2-16 on 3rd downs. Peck finished with 150 yards on 23 carries. Traylor added 97 yards rushing on 14 attempts.

"We lean on our defense," Barlow said. "When we aren't able to move the ball, those guys continue to step up. We have to find a way to help them out on offense."

ASU (2-0, 1-0 SWAC) will travel to the University of Arkansas-Pine Bluff for another conference match up next Saturday. Kickoff is set for 6 p.m.

Alabama A&M notebook


Huntsville Times

Bulldogs bite early

After struggling early in last week's season opener against Tennessee State, Alabama A&M's offense wasted little time in getting it going Saturday night against Clark Atlanta.

The Bulldogs went 73 yards in just five plays to take the lead two minutes into the game.

Quarterback Kelcy Luke found Thomas Harris for a pair of 13-yard gains and tailback Ulysses Banks ripped off a 39-yard gain down to the Clark Atlanta 3 and scored one play later.

Garrett on the prowl

Defensive tackle Whitney Garrett hasn't been much of a sackmaster during his first two seasons with the Bulldogs. Garrett had one sack in 2005 and was credited with half a sack last season.

It didn't take him long to get his first sack of the season Saturday night.

On the Panthers' third play from scrimmage, Whitney, a 6-foot-3, 287-pound junior from Talladega, broke through and sacked Clark Atlanta quarterback Corey Jones for a 3-yard loss.

Tucker takes a seat

A week after being called out by defensive coordinator Brawnski Towns for gambling defensively and giving up a 66-yard pass play that led to a Tennessee State touchdown, defensive back Stephan Tucker was beaten for a long touchdown pass midway through the first quarter against Clark Atlanta.

Mortimer Lightburn got behind Tucker and hauled in a 61-yard touchdown pass from Jones. Henry Boynton's extra made tied the game at 7-all. Frank Moore replaced Tucker two possessions later.

Moore, a preseason All-Southwestern Athletic Conference selection, didn't start after violating a team rule, Towns said. Moore, a 5-foot-9, 170-pound junior from Gadsden, led the league in interceptions last season with six.

Sophomore Maurice Thomas, who came on last season after Tucker sustained an ankle injury against Arkansas-Pine Bluff during the regular season, started in place of Moore.

Johnson goes long

Rashad Johnson sat out last a season as a academic casualty. After two games, he has already made his presence felt.

Johnson, a 5-foot-10, 185-pound wide receiver out of Murphy High School, caught a 65-yard touchdown pass from Luke with just less than three minutes remaining to give Alabama A&M a 21-7 advantage.

Harper takes the field

Defensive tackle Justin Harper, who underwent surgery on his left thumb during preseason practice and wasn't expected to return until the Grambling game on Sept. 22, entered the Clark Atlanta game late in the first quarter.

Banks burns up field

Banks had a huge first half Saturday night. Banks, who led the nation in kickoff returns last season, had 122 yards on just nine carries in the first 30 minutes, including a pair of touchdowns.

New Bulldogs in lineup

Alabama A&M had two new starters in the lineup on defense Saturday night.

David Winston, who sustained a back injury during preseason practice, started at left defensive tackle, while Dominique Cummings was back in the starting lineup at right end.

Winston replaced Renaldo Askew in the starting lineup, while Cummings replaced Jeremy Maddox.

Rematch may be ahead

Clark Atlanta athletics director Brenda Edmond-Square said she would be more than happy to play Alabama A&M again.

Edmond-Square said Clark Atlanta received "more than $20,000" to play A&M.

"We're interested in doing it again if the opportunity presented itself," she said.

Edmond-Square and A&M athletics director Betty Austin have had a long-going relationship and that led to the schools playing each other.

Edmond-Square said the game serves as more than a payday for Clark Atlanta.

"It puts a little money in our pocket, but we also saw this as a test," she said. "We've been rebuilding. We saw a big improvement in our team last year and we saw this game as an opportunity to see how much we've grown."

'Dogs no stranger to Georgia

Alabama A&M's roster is filled with players from Georgia. Thirteen Bulldogs call the Peach State home.

The list includes outside linebackers Bobby McClain (Atlanta) and Dorian Waluyn (Tucker), defensive back Jonathan McConico (Atlanta), punter Rashan Cylar (Stone Mountain), inside linebackers Quinton Holmes (Norcross) and Afu Okusun (College Park), defensive ends Chris Traylor (West Point) and Dominique Cummings (Atlanta), offensive linemen Russell Jackson (Riverdale) and Leon Thompson (Roswell), wide receiver Darius Griffin (Decatur) and defensive tackles Frank Kearse (Savannah) and Renaldo Askew (Atlanta).

Clark Atlanta's roster included three players from Alabama.

The list included running backs Arthur Stokes (Montgomery), linebacker Joel Allen (Mobile) and offensive lineman Alphonso Johnson (Montgomery).

Seven inducted to A&M Hall

Seven new members were added to the Alabama A&M Athletic Hall of Fame Friday night at the Ernest L. Knight Reception Center. They were recognized during halftime of Saturday's game.

The list included wide receiver Roy Dean, Ernest French, who played football and baseball for the Bulldogs, running back Reginald Gipson, former head football coach Ray Greene, Ananias Harris, who played football and baseball for the Bulldogs, defensive back Cleveland Jarman Jr. and former basketball standout Frank Sillmon.

French was a four-time All-Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Conference performer in football and a three-time pick in baseball.

He finished his career with 22 interceptions, 347 tackles and was twice named the league's Defensive Back of the Year. In baseball, French led the nation in hitting with a .525 batting average in 1980.

Gipson was the SIAC Player of the Year in 1981 when he set the A&M single-season rushing record.

Green compiled a 53-27-5 record during eight seasons and won three SIAC championships and led the Bulldogs to their first-ever appearance in the NCAA Division II playoffs in 1979.

Sillmon helped A&M compile a 55-9 record during two seasons in the late 1980s.

Furthermore

Alabama A&M had 318 yards - 157 rushing and 161 passing - in the first half. ... Quinton Carlock made his A&M debut as a punt returner and had two for 19 yards in the first half. ... Jeremy Licea's consecutive extra point streak was snapped at 17 in a row when Clark Atlanta's Michael Porter broke through to block his point after following Alabama A&M's first touchdown of the third quarter. .... Traylor, who has more sacks in the SWAC than anybody the last three seasons, picked up his first one of the season midway through the third quarter.

-Reggie Benson

Banks rushes for an Alabama A&M-record 211 yards in victory


By REGGIE BENSON, Huntsville Times

Banks rushes for an A&M-record 211 yards in victory.

There was some concern about Alabama A&M's running game entering the season. After all, the Bulldogs had lost Nic Luke and Ta'mar Scott, who had combined for more than 3,500 yards the last three years, and didn't have a tailback on their roster that had carried the ball from scrimmage.

That concern grew even more after the Bulldogs managed just 147 yards last week against Tennessee State. In fact, many of those yards came late after the game had long been decided.

Saturday night, A&M fans began to put those concerns to rest after Ulysses Banks, in only his second career start, put together a game for the ages.

Banks, a 5-foot-8, 172-pound redshirt sophomore from Birmingham, set a school record with 211 yards on just 19 carries and scored two touchdowns and A&M finished with 608 yards in total offense in a 41-10 shellacking of Clark Atlanta in its home opener at Louis Crews Stadium.

Banks, who averaged a whopping 11.1 yards per carry, broke the record of Jeremiah Bonds, who had 197 yards rushing against Mississippi Valley State on Sept. 20, 2003.

"It hasn't sunk in yet," Banks said when asked about his record-breaking performance. "The offensive line blocked excellent tonight. They opened up the holes, I saw them and I tried to hit them hard. It was good blocking, good vision and good running."

A&M's offense overpowered Clark Atlanta's defense.

The Bulldogs rushed for 307 yards and threw for 301. It is the second time in Football Championship Subdivision play that an A&M offense has surpassed 600 yards in total offense. The Bulldogs had 650 yards in a 52-6 win over Jackson State in 2005.

"We came out clicking," said A&M quarterback Kelcy Luke, after compiling his first career 300-yard passing game, going 21-of-32 for 301 yards and four touchdowns. "Everybody was on the same page. We knew what we wanted to do and we executed the game plan."

It is the first time in school history A&M has opened the season with back-to-back 40-point plus games.

The offense is vastly different from the ball-control units seen from Anthony Jones' teams the past five years.

"We've got some speed out there now," Jones said. "We had some guys on the shelf last year because we decided to go with experience. We rode that experience to a championship.

"Now, we're trying to do the same thing with speed. We've got some young guys who are making big plays for us."

Banks is one of them.

He led the nation in kickoff returns last season and if he can have a few more games like he had Saturday night, he could lead the nation in rushing.

"He did a great job of running the football," Jones said. "He made some great reads and some great cuts. I'm happy for Banks because he worked extremely hard to put himself in the position he's in now."

The win lifted A&M to 2-0 for the only second time since 1966, when the Bulldogs finished 8-1.

A&M wasted little time in getting on the scoreboard.

The Bulldogs went 73 yards in just five plays to take the lead as Banks scored on a 3-yard run barely two minutes into the game.

After Clark Atlanta tied the game, the Bulldogs scored a pair of touchdowns within a four-minute span to take control.

Banks scored on a 4-yard run and Luke found Rashad Johnson with a 65-yard touchdown pass to make it 21-7 at the end of the first quarter.

"We wanted to break their will," Jones said.

Johnson, who had a 20-yard touchdown catch late in the third quarter, finished with three catches for 94 yards and two touchdowns. He was one of nine players to catch passes. Thomas Harris finished with a team-high six catches for 92 yards, while tight end Charles Moody had five catches for 68 yards and a touchdown.

"We've got some good receivers outside and we're going to take advantage of them," Luke said.

The Panthers pulled within 21-10 after Henry Boynton kicked a 39-yard field goal to open the third quarter, but Luke found Nate Baxter with a 15-yard touchdown pass to complete a seven-play, 76-yard drive with nine minutes remaining and Johnson's second touchdown iced the game.

"We've got the right kids with us and they're believing in what we're saying," Jones said.

Former Alabama State QB Tarvaris Jackson ready to lead NFL Minnesota Vikings


Photo: Vikings Starting QB #7, Tarvaris Jackson (Alabama State University)

BY SEAN JENSEN, Twin Cities Pioneer Press

'I'm doing this because he's ready'

Everyone is looking at Tarvaris Jackson now after coach Brad Childress named him the starting quarterback. What the second-year pro shows them in his first full season as the starter should determine the Vikings' fortune in 2007.

This wasn't about his ego, Vikings coach Brad Childress will tell you.

That's not why he jettisoned Brad Johnson, ignored a handful of veteran replacements and thrust second-year quarterback Tarvaris Jackson into the starting role.

This wasn't simply about trying to copy the template of his last prodigy, Donovan McNabb, who in his second season led the Philadelphia Eagles to the playoffs. Or about trying to legitimize his team's decision to trade up and, by some accounts, "reach" on the Division I-AA quarterback at the end of the second round.

After inheriting a 9-7 team and struggling to 6-10 last season, Childress wasn't going to sabotage himself and his veteran roster just to make a point with Jackson.

"I'm doing this," Childress said, "because he's ready."

How ready? That will be the biggest question facing Childress and the Vikings in 2007.

With only four December games, including two nondescript starts, behind him, with so little national exposure before that to judge him, Jackson will lead the Vikings into their opener today against Atlanta in a Metrodome packed with skeptics.

"I haven't given anyone a reason not to question me," Jackson said. "I've started two games, and we're 0-2, so I can't get mad when people question, 'OK, is this guy ready?' That's just how it is.

"I have to go out there and prove them wrong."

For Childress, ready is a relative term.

"Does that mean that all of a sudden he's a seven-year pro?" Childress said. "No. But if I turned on the film here and had you watch (Jay) Cutler against the Dallas Cowboys, you'd say, 'Wait a minute now. Who's the first-round (pick)? Who's the second-round (pick)?' "

Denver drafted Cutler out of Vanderbilt 11th overall in 2006, 53 spots ahead of Jackson, and he looked anything but comfortable in that exhibition game two weeks ago against Dallas, when he completed 7 of 13 passes for 58 yards and lost a fumble. Still, during Cutler's five December games last season, he passed for nine touchdowns with five interceptions. Jackson finished with two TD passes and four interceptions.

Too much has been made of Jackson's tenure at Alabama State, according to Childress. Jackson has impressed the Vikings' coaches with his work ethic and his physical and mental makeup, and Childress points out that Jackson began his career at Arkansas.

In the Southeastern Conference.

Same as Cutler.

"He started out at a pretty high-end program and, but for a twist or turned ankle, he could have been the quarterback and Matt Jones a receiver," Childress said, referring to Jones getting the nod to start ahead of Jackson, prompting Jackson's transfer to Alabama State. "But I never begrudge a guy for wanting to play.

"I don't worry about the stage. I worry about, 'Does he have the physical skills? Does he have the mind?' "

THE CHALLENGE

Over the past eight seasons, three second-year quarterbacks have led their teams to Super Bowl titles. One was mostly a backup at a major program (Tom Brady at Michigan), one starred at the other Miami (Ben Roethlisberger at the Mid-American Conference school), and one started only his senior year at Northern Iowa but had a stint in the Arena League (Kurt Warner).


Photo: Tarvaris Jackson enters his first season as the starting quarterback with support from veteran teammates who noted Jackson's offseason dedication in the video room at Winter Park. "He just shows up every day, busting his butt," fullback Tony Richardson said. "He's in the weight room, he runs with us, and he spends that extra time with coach Rogers. So he's really put the time in, and, as a veteran player, that's what you want to see."

Jackson knows his NFL history, and he knows a quarterback often struggles in his first full year as a starter.

"But you have to start somewhere," he said. "Do you want a guy who sits out five or six years before he starts? Guys that are doing good right now, they went through growing pains, except for Tom Brady and Ben Roethlisberger. They're the only two who came in just winning. Other guys had losing records. Peyton Manning started kind of slow, but look at where he's at right now. He got better each year, and now he's a Hall of Fame quarterback."

Phil Simms said the Vikings opted for Jackson because of their own tempered expectations.

"I do not think Tarvaris Jackson would be the starting quarterback of the Vikings, if the Vikings, deep down, believed they were a Super Bowl contender," said Simms, an analyst for CBS who led the New York Giants to two Super Bowl championships. "Now it could still happen. But if they thought they were that close, then they would go get a veteran quarterback that would not make youthful mistakes."

Former Philadelphia Eagles quarterback Ron Jaworski said the Vikings have to exercise patience with Jackson.

"That's absolutely critical," said Jaworski, the color commentator for ESPN's "Monday Night Football." "There are going to be some bumps in the road. I don't care who it is."

Childress understood the template for developing a young quarterback, based on the 2000 NFL season. He was the quarterbacks coach in Philadelphia at the time, and the Eagles boasted an elite and experienced defense. The Eagles won 11 games and advanced to the postseason behind McNabb's 21 touchdowns against 13 interceptions.

Childress said continuity is essential for a young quarterback, which is why he worked so hard to keep quarterbacks coach Kevin Rogers from leaving for the University of Miami offensive coordinator job during the offseason. Rogers, who coached McNabb at Syracuse, has worked closely with Childress in scrutinizing every aspect of Jackson's development.

Childress said the lessons from his development of McNabb in Philadelphia are "too voluminous to enumerate." But he has addressed his quarterbacks on everything from how to lead the team to how to act on Monday mornings.

When you are the quarterback, Childress said, "everybody is looking."

Childress is guarded about his game plan. Childress acknowledged the strength of his defense and run offense, saying it doesn't hurt to put a young quarterback in that situation, but adds he won't harness Jackson.

"I'm not silly enough to think you're going to be able to run it 50 out of 60 snaps," Childress said.

"Coach always stresses the running game, which is our strong point, and we're going to feed off of that," Jackson said. "But I'm not just out here to hand the football off. I'm here to make plays."

Jackson impressed Simms and Jaworski coming out of Alabama State. Simms remembers seeing out of the corner of his eye a clip of Jackson on the NFL Network and thinking, "Wow, that was really good." Simms says Jackson might have been the "best thrower" he saw entering the 2006 draft. Jaworski said Jackson did have the best arm in a class that included Cutler, Matt Leinart and Vince Young.

There isn't a quarterback play, Jackson said, he can't make.

"I just feel I can do everything," he said. "I just bring that full dimension to our offense."

He is mobile enough to flee the pocket and accurate enough to pass the ball into a tight spot. He also needs to be disciplined enough to know when to simply get rid of the ball, a message Childress and Rogers have drilled into him.

"Nothing good ever happens when you hold onto the football. Nothing," Childress said. "I think it's an art to learn how to live to play another day, throw the ball away."

THE PREPARATION

As quarterbacks coach in Philadelphia, Childress received credit for McNabb's development into a Pro Bowl quarterback. This exhibition season, Childress said that Jackson in some regards is further ahead of where McNabb was at the same point in his career.

Childress said McNabb, the second overall pick in the 1999 draft, didn't spend all his time at the Eagles' headquarters during the offseason. Except for about a month he spent visiting his family in Montgomery, Ala., Jackson all but lived at Winter Park. He worked out with strength and conditioning coach Tom Kanavy and his staff, and he reviewed every offensive snap from the 2006 season, including Johnson's. He analyzed the play-action passes, the handoffs, the decisions, all in hopes of picking up tips.

He would pop into Rogers', Childress' or offensive coordinator Darrel Bevell's office, and he was sometimes at Winter Park when no coaches were around. Whenever possible, he worked with receivers, tight ends or running backs on deep balls, hooks and handoffs.

"When I say further ahead, I'm talking about the time that he spent at it, to build that equity, that knowledge," Childress said of Jackson vs. McNabb. "Donovan would drop in and drop out. But Tarvaris was here for the long haul."

After the draft, as Rogers worked closely with seventh-round pick Tyler Thigpen, Jackson joined them for all the classroom and field sessions.

"He took advantage of it," Rogers said. "Any time I was meeting with Tyler, (Jackson) was in there too, at his own discretion. He put in the time."

His teammates noticed. Among the players impressed: cornerback Antoine Winfield, linebacker Ben Leber, guard Steve Hutchinson, fullback Tony Richardson, center Matt Birk, tight end Visanthe Shiancoe and receivers Bobby Wade and Troy Williamson.

"He just shows up every day, busting his butt," Richardson said. "He's in the weight room, he runs with us, and he spends that extra time with coach Rogers. So he's really put the time in, and, as a veteran player, that's what you want to see."

Several veterans indicated Jackson is further along than they expected. In 2005, Shiancoe was playing for the New York Giants when Eli Manning, the No. 1 pick in the 2004 draft, was set to take over as the starting quarterback. This offseason and exhibition season, Shiancoe said he was impressed with Jackson's accuracy, athleticism and, most importantly, poise.

"As far as talent, Tarvaris Jackson is probably the best quarterback I've seen in my football career," said Shiancoe, who also played with Warner and Kerry Collins. "Physically he's there, and mentally he's willing."

Shiancoe was careful not to toss any barbs at Manning but said, "All I know is, with this team here, Tarvaris is where he needs to be right now. Tarvaris has picked up this offense, and he can lead this team very far."

Jaworski and former Vikings quarterback Rich Gannon said the Vikings can be playoff contenders. But Gannon, who spent a day with Jackson during the spring, said the Vikings' ability to succeed is almost foolproof.

"They have a good offensive line, and they have two really solid backs that could be 1,000-yard rushers," said Gannon, who will be an analyst for CBS this season. "If they can run the ball and play defense like they did last year and kick the ball well, they can win.

"I could come back and play for the Vikings and win 10 games. Brad has a formula in place, that if (Jackson) manages the game, and he doesn't turn the ball over, that's the formula for success."

Jackson hasn't set any firm statistical goals, but he doesn't want to reach double digits in interceptions, and he wants to rank among the top dozen or so quarterbacks in the league. To Jackson, it's about the W's - winning and taking care of the football.

"I want to be with the playoff guys, but you want to be the best," Jackson said. "There are a lot of people who are very good right now. But you strive to be the best. I'm not going to say, 'I want to be the second best.'

"That's just not me."

Last-gasp field goal lifts TSU


Photo: TSU's Javarris Williams (28) breaks free on a first-half run. He finished with 94 yards on 21 carries.

By MIKE ORGAN, the Tennessean

MEMPHIS — Tennessee State's Eric Benson had to be reminded afterward that his game-winning field goal had come in a torrential downpour.

Benson waded onto the field at the Liberty Bowl and booted a 35-yarder with no time left that lifted TSU to a 16-13 victory over Jackson State in the Southern Heritage Classic.

"At first the rain bothered me — while I was standing on the sideline, I was a little worried," Benson said.

"But once you get out there, you can't think about anything but the kick. That's what I did. The rain didn't affect me at all. I forgot all about it."

Most of the 50,987 fans missed the thrilling finish. They had been chased away by the rain that started in the fourth quarter.

Benson had made another critical, pressure-packed kick earlier in the fourth quarter. After Terrence Wright raced 11 yards for a touchdown, which cut the deficit to 13-12, TSU was penalized for excessive celebration.

That moved the extra point attempt back 15 yards, but Benson still was able to connect.

"Benson is a warrior,'' TSU Coach James Webster said. "Maybe people don't think about kickers being warriors, but he is a warrior. He kicked that long extra point and then came back with the field goal in the rain."

Benson's winning boot helped TSU avoid a third consecutive overtime in the Southern Heritage Classic.

The Tigers needed a two-point conversion in overtime last year to beat Jackson State 31-30, and they edged JSU 20-14 in overtime the year before.

It was TSU's fifth consecutive win over Jackson State and helped the Tigers (1-1) bounce back after losing last week to Alabama A&M 49-23. JSU fell to 0-2 after falling last week to Delta State 27-15.

TSU never led before Benson's end-game field goal.

In fact, Jackson State kicker Eric Perri had been the star of the game up to that point.

Perri kicked a school-record 50-yard field goal early in the second half, which followed a 44-yarder at the end of the first half. His second field goal gave Jackson State a 13-6 lead.

TSU's offense, which moved the ball well at times as it did last week — but also failed to capitalize, just like last week — took advantage of a huge Jackson State blunder on the final drive. TSU punted from its own 40, but JSU was penalized for having too many men on the field.

That gave TSU a first down, and quarterback Antonio Heffner took advantage on the next play by tossing a 30-yard strike to Antonio Graham, who was down at Jackson State's 25.

Even with the rain, Webster said he was confident in Benson and planned to rely on a field goal to win the game.

"I wasn't thinking about overtime; I was thinking about winning the game on Benson's kick," Webster said.

Prairie View A&M rocks LA Coliseum in win


The Panthers beat North Carolina A & T, 22-7, before 32,278 in the Angel City Classic.

By Lonnie White, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer

The celebrated Angel City Classic halftime battle of the bands lived up to its billing as both North Carolina A&T and Prairie View A&M rocked the Coliseum crowd with music and dance on Saturday.

But when it came to the football game, it was a much different story, especially for the Aggies, who lost their 18th consecutive game.

Defensive back Val Ford returned two blocked punts for touchdowns and recorded a safety for Prairie View, which won easily, 22-7, before an estimated crowd of 32,278.

"I guess that I was Johnny-on-the-spot all day today," said Ford, a junior from Canton Springs, Md. "Every day in practice, we work on scoop-and-score and today, I got two of them."

Prairie View, which set an NCAA record for ineptitude with an 80-game losing streak from 1989 to '98, improved to 2-0.

North Carolina A&T, which moved within two defeats of matching the third-worst losing streak in NCAA history, dropped to 0-2.

"It's one of those things where we keep making too many mental mistakes," North Carolina A&T receiver Curtis Walls said. "If we can get rid of those mistakes, we'd be a dominant team. We just have to find a way to finish off plays."

North Carolina A&T, which lost to Winston Salem to open the season, started off like a team determined to end its losing streak.

The Aggies took the opening kickoff and drove the ball deep into Prairie View's territory behind the passing and running of quarterback Herbert Miller -- who even caught a pass on the drive.

But the Panthers got tough near the goal line and North Carolina A&T failed to score when Eric Houston missed a 26-yard field goal.

Prairie View's special teams made the game's first big play early in the second quarter when North Carolina A&T punter Lee Woodson's kick was blocked by Riante Jones and returned for a score by Ford, who gave the Panthers a 7-0.

Before halftime, Prairie View extended its lead to two scores when Ford returned the Panthers' second blocked punt for a touchdown to extend their lead to 13-0.

"They were moving the ball, but just like last week when we gave up over 500 yards -- we still won the football game," Prairie View Coach Henry Frazier III said.

"We made too many mistakes where we left points on the board, but we did what we had to do coming out to California."

The Panthers added to their score at the end of the third quarter when quarterback Chris Gibson scrambled for a 10-yard touchdown run and they clinched the victory in the fourth quarter when Ford tackled David Robinson for a safety.

North Carolina A&T, which will play its first home game of the season next week against Hampton, avoided a shutout with a late fourth-quarter touchdown pass from backup quarterback Shelton Morgan to Giorgio Lowrance that covered 32 yards.

WSSU Purvis can't lift Rams to win

By Travis Sawchik, Special to the Winston Salem Journal

CONWAY, S.C.- The Monte Purvis Show wasn’t enough to top Coastal Carolina, which defeated Winston-Salem State 28-21 last night at Brooks Stadium.

Purvis rushed for 165 yards and three touchdowns on 33 carries but the Chanticleers rallied late behind quarterback Will Richardson to score twice in the fourth quarter.

“Every day, Coach tells us to come out and prove ourselves,” Purvis said. “(Teams) are not just going to lie down for us.”

With the Rams trailing 18-7 early the third quarter, Purvis rushed for 66- and 80-yard touchdowns to give them a 21-18 lead with 1:24 to play in the quarter.

“(Coach) said to make a play for the team,” Purvis said, “They were taking away our receivers and running backs.”

While Purvis was electric on the ground, Richardson was very good through the air. Richardson was 19 of 26 passing for 301 yards with a touchdown pass and a 50-yard pass to Jerome Simpson that set up the winning touchdown.

Richardson’s sharp play prevented Winston-Salem State from improving to 2-0 after topping N.C.A&T last week.

Coastal built a 6-0 lead early thanks to Justin Durham’s two field goals. Richardson finished off a 70-yard second-quarter drive with a 10-yard touchdown pass to Jamar Anderson that gave Coastal a 12-0 lead.

WSSU answered with its own touchdown drive, keyed by Jed Bines’ 43-yard run, followed by a 1-yard scoring plunge by Purvis to cut Coastal’s lead to 12-7.

After the Rams lost a fumble, Tommy Fraser punched the ball in from the 1 to give Coastal an 18-7 lead.

Purvis then put on a show, but the Chanticleers survived Purvis, and survived the day.

WSSU 0 7 14 0 - 21

Coastal 6 6 6 10 - 28

First quarter

CC-FG Durham 24, 6:18

CC-FG Durham 44, 1:48

Second quarter

CC-Anderson 10 pass from Richardson (kick failed), 7:20

WSSU-Purvis 1 run (Mitchell kick), 2:23

Third quarter

CC-Fraser 1 run (pass failed), 10:21

WSSU-Purvis 66 run (run failed), 4:53

WSSU-Purvis 80 run (Reaves pass from Purvis), 1:24

Fourth quarter

CC-FG Durham 28, 11:15

CC-Fraser 1 run (Durham kick), 08:15

TEAM STATISTICS

WSSU CC

First downs 12 22

Rushes-yards 47-300 52-96

Passing yards 11 301

Comp-Att-Int 10-2-0 24-16-0

Return Yards 82 106

Punts-Avg 6-32.7 3-34.7

Fumbles-Lost 3-3 7-1

Penalties-Yards 13-90 7-45

Possession 26:08 33:52

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS

RUSHING-WSSU, Purvis 19-165, Bines 18-123, Fluellen 4-23, McRae 3-14, Johnson 1-3, Dunston 1-2, Team 1-(minus-30). Coastal Carolina-O’Neal 17-77, Fordham 15-47, Tolbert 5-26, Fortson 3-4, Fraser 3-3, Richardson 5-(minus-14), Team 4-(minus-47).

PASSING - WSSU, Purvis 2-10-0-11. Coastal Carolina, Richardson 16-24-0-301.

RECEIVING - WSSU, Scarbrough 1-10, Bryant 1-1. Coastal Carolina, Simpson 3-90, Fordham 3-52, Washington 3-23, O’Neal 2-44, Anderson 2-12, Usher 1-36, Fambrough 1-30, Tolbert 1-14.

Coastal rallies over WSSU for first victory


Coastal rallies for first victory

By Travis Sawchik, The Sun News

The journey for the Coastal Carolina Chanticleer on Saturday, with all its young hands on deck, again had its rough patches.

Seven CCU fumbles were akin to cut rigging and there was a snapped mast in the form of two long touchdown runs surrendered. But unlike the Dover experience, CCU hung on and sailed into port with a 28-21 win to even its record on the season.

"Every win is going to be gutty," CCU coach David Bennett said of his young team. "We did improve."

Starting quarterback Will Richardson was among those who improved.

After missing his first seven passes last week - though several catchable balls were dropped - the CCU starting quarterback completed 9 of 12 passes in the first half for 145 yards and a touchdown.

Richardson finished 16 of 24 for 301 yards (his first 300-yard game), with a touchdown pass and a strike to Jerome Simpson that setup up the game-winning touchdown. Richardson said of the 50-yard strike that it was "probably" the best pass he had thrown.

His sharp play rolled over to a better performance on third downs.

At Delaware State, CCU converted just 1-of-16. On Saturday, the Chants were 7-of-15, including a Richardson to Trent Usher 36-yard connection on third-and-30 to set up the game's first score, a 24-yard field goal from freshman kicker Justin Durham.

"I never [lacked] confidence," Richardson said. "The [two late touchdown drives at Dover] carried over.

"You can't replicate game speed but I've been in this offense so long I've practiced against the first team defense. I know where to look."

Among the others who improved were freshman Eric O'Neal, who gained 132 of the Chants' 483 yards.

And of course Simpson was, well, Simpson. He had three catches for 90 yards and come up one yard short of lengthening his touchdown streak to 10 games. That particular catch setup Tommy Fraser's go-ahead touchdown in the fourth quarter.

Still, the Chants are not without their flaws.

Bennett had spoken at length this week about how his defense preformed well at Dover, if you takeaway a 53-yard touchdown pass, a 63-yard touchdown run and a long reverse gain. And again the defense played well in spurts but fell victim to big plays as the third quarter turned in the Monte Purvis Show.

In the quarter, the Rams' quarterback rushed for 66- and 80-yard touchdown runs to turn a five-point Winston Salem State halftime deficit into a 21-18 lead with 1:24 to play in the third.

"Missed assignments," Bennett said of the plays.

The miscues momentarily pulled CCU heads down on the sideline as the Chants trailed for the first time in the game and were staring at an 0-2 start.

CCU had built a lead early thanks to Justin Durham's two field goals. Richardson added to it by finishing off a 70-yard second-quarter drive with a 10-yard touchdown strike to Jamar Anderson to give Coastal a 12-0 lead.

Winston Salem-State answered with its own touchdown drive, a Jed Bines' 43-yard run shortly followed by a one-yard touchdown dive by Purvis that cut CCU's lead to 12-7.

The Rams continued to threaten, but a second fumble lost cost them as a few shifty runs from O'Neal led to a Fraser touchdown from one-yard out to give Coastal a 18-7 lead.