Monday, October 1, 2007

10,000 fans show for 1st Rocket City Battle of Bands at AAMU

Photo: Miles College Purple Marching Machine Band

Johnson High wins Battle of the Bands

In 1st Rocket City event, school beats Butler and Lee; AAMU, Alabama State, BCU, Miles College and Texas Southern University compete.

By PATRICIA C. McCARTER, Huntsville Times

Johnson High School - already known as one of the best marching bands in North Alabama - got some extra bragging rights Sunday evening when it won the first Rocket City Battle of the Bands, edging out its local rivals Butler and Lee.

The high school bands got to perform before an audience of nearly 10,000 people at Louis Crews Stadium at Alabama A&M, as well as before five university bands. The event was part of A&M's annual homecoming festivities.

"It's been an amazing day," said Johnson High senior Kiara Horton, captain of the dance team. "That's a big crowd. But when I dance, I don't see anyone. It's like a blur. I'm in my own zone."

Event organizer Derick Moore, who runs AFG Enterprises in Atlanta, said he and partner Yasin Shahid wanted to put on the show at A&M because of their history with Historically Black Colleges and Universities.

Moore said he attended A&M and graduated from Alabama State University, and he played percussion in both marching bands; Shahid is an A&M alum who played saxophone in the band.

Photo: Bethune Cookman University Marching Wildcat Band

Other colleges represented at Sunday's Battle of the Bands besides their alma maters were Bethune Cookman College, Texas Southern University and Miles College. "It was an excellent, excellent event," Moore said when the battle was over. "We utilize the premier college bands, the feature bands for the HBCU schools. There were no losers."

Officially, there were no winners of the colleges, either. Moore explained that it was an exhibition - not a contest - for the four-year schools.

A&M will end the weekend with money in its pocket. Moore said, the event will yield up to $15,000 for the local college's band instrument fund.

"We plan to do it again next year, but even bigger," Moore said. "We spoke to athletic director Betty Austin, and she said she'd like to have us back."

Johnson High's dance captain hopes to be back, too.

"I'll definitely come back to see my alma mater compete," Horton said. "And maybe I'll be on the field dancing for one of the colleges."

Marching to the beat


Photo: Giving back--SCSU 101 and FVSU Marching Bands perform at Festival to help raise money for high school marching band program.

Festival raises money for marching band

By Timothy Cox, The Augusta Chronicle

Spencer Gartrell said he wasn't alarmed Sunday afternoon as he watched more than a thousand people pour into Butler High School Stadium to see bands perform - void of football teams.

"What many people don't realize is that when it comes to black college football games, people generally come to watch the bands compete, not the football teams," said Mr. Gartrell, a co-organizer of the first CSRA Battle of the Bands festival.

"Historically, it's been that way," added Angelo Hatcher, Mr. Gartrell's business partner.

"It even happens at a Josey-Laney high school game. It's all about the bands," he said.

Sunday's festival's proceeds help fund the CSRA All-Star Marching Band, founded three years ago by Mr. Hatcher.

Ticket proceeds help cover costs of uniforms, transportation, instruments and other costs associated with successfully funding a marching band made up of area middle and high school musicians, Mr. Hatcher said.

In addition to the all-star band, Sunday's festival lineup featured bands from South Carolina State University, Fort Valley State University, Beach High School of Savannah and local units from Glenn Hills High School, South Augusta Marching Unit and the Garden City Panthers.
Eddie Ellis, South Carolina State's band director, and Spike Nealy, his assistant, appeared in the movie Drumline, which filmed in Atlanta at Morris Brown College.

"The movie finally gave credibility to the black college marching style," Mr. Ellis said, adding that he has since witnessed major colleges adopting a similar format, focused on drums and choreography.

Photo: An enthusiastic crowd gathered to watch the action. Bands from around the area participated in the festival.

Mr. Nealy, a former James Brown percussionist, said the movie has generated a renewed interest in drums for young musicians.

Sherry Puryear, Glenn Hills' band director, applauded Mr. Hatcher's efforts.

"His work assists all the band directors county-wide, because he keeps our kids active throughout the summer," she said.

Many area school bands and students don't perform during the summer, she said.

As founder of Step-A-Rama, a local college step show, Mr. Gartrell said he also supports Mr. Hatcher financially.

"It's because of his dedication to young people, this is why he deserves the financial help," said Mr. Gartrell.

He added that he hopes the festival will generate $30,000 to aid Mr. Hatcher's group.
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Reader Comments

dang, how i wish i could have come home that weekend!--i bet it was something else!
Posted by istp on Mon Oct 1, 2007 8:01 AM

I was there my wife, sons and daughter....it was their first time seeing and hearing a black college, university band that had over one hundred members. Our black children need to see the positive side of being black, and our HBCUs are our back bones in this country. Mr. Hatcher keep pushing..........Jellyroll, Laney and Josey get on board please...
Posted by belapris55 on Mon Oct 1, 2007 10:26 AM

Bayou Classic

Photo: Southern University Human Jukebox Marching Band and Dancing Dolls are major attractions for most SU fans.

by Richard A. Webster, New Orleans City Business

The Bayou Classic had a $175-million economic impact on the New Orleans economy in 2004, ranking it third in the top 10. And yet it remains an event somewhat under the radar of locals because it falls at the end of November close to Thanksgiving, said Janet Speyrer, associate dean for research in the University of New Orleans College of Business Administration.

“People tend not to think of it quite as much because they’re at family gatherings and aren’t downtown to see the impact it has,” Speyrer said. “A lot of people are at home with the family or going somewhere, so they tend to underestimate how important it is to the local economy. People don’t think of that being such a big event.”

But the Bayou Classic, which pits Grambling State University against Southern University, typically draws close to 70,000 people to the game. Up to 200,000 more come to take part in additional activities, said Cydni Bickerstaff, CEO of Bickerstaff Sports and Entertainment, which manages the event.

“A lot of people may not be able to go to the game, but they go to the Battle of the Bands or one of the other ancillary events that take place that weekend,” Bickerstaff said. “It’s like a big reunion. People come back and see people they haven’t seen in a while and reconnect.”

Photo: Members of GSU Marching Tiger Band performs for crowd at University of Pittsburgh game.

After playing in Houston in 2005 following Hurricane Katrina, the Bayou Classic returned in 2006 to significantly smaller crowds. Last year the game drew 47,136 compared with 68,911 in 2004, a 31 percent drop.


The dip in attendance would have resulted in a significant drop in the Classic’s top 10 ranking, but an economic impact study on the game has not been conducted in three years.
Based on 2004 figures the Sugar Bowl, with an economic impact of $250.5 million, would have ranked well ahead of the Bayou Classic at $175 million.

Ralph Slaughter, president of the Southern University System, said people’s fears of New Orleans stifled attendance in 2006.

“People were afraid to come,” Slaughter said. “They thought the air and water were bad. There were so many people who had it in their minds that New Orleans was underwater. People were encouraging us not to have the game, but I haven’t seen those kinds of e-mails this year.”

Bickerstaff said she hopes the people who attended the Bayou Classic last year and this year’s Essence Music Festival have spread the word New Orleans is safe and just as much fun as it was before the storm. She expects this year’s attendance to approach what it was before the hurricane.

“There was never a question of bringing the Bayou Classic back to New Orleans,” she said. “This is where the game belongs, where the history is. And as much as the schools contribute to the city of New Orleans, it’s only natural for them to come back and be able to help rebuild the city.”
Southern University Jaguars Human Jukebox Marching Band at Chicago Football Classic 2007

Southern shuts down ASU Hornets


Special to the Advertiser

SOUTHERN 21, ALABAMA STATE 2:

MOBILE -- Before the season, Alabama State head football coach Reggie Barlow chose the theme: "Push it to the Limit," which turned out to be quite apropos, as each of the first four games came down to pivotal plays in the final few minutes.

In the Gulf Coast Classic -- against a formidable Southern defense -- the Cinderella season hit its first bit of adversity as ASU simply ran out of magic dust and fell 21-2 to Southern on Saturday.

"It was a tough game," Barlow said. "We were really bad on offense. We moved the ball, but we couldn't take advantage of the opportunities."

Alabama State quarterbacks Alex Engram and Chris Mitchell combined to go 8-of-33 for only 84 yards and two interceptions. Southern's Bryant Lee, who had not thrown an interception in 183 consecutive attempts, tossed three picks during a 16-of-29, 242-yard performance.

Between the teams, there were 14 punts and eight turnovers.

Still, the Jaguars made just enough big plays to get an important SWAC win. However, the ASU defense would get none of the blame from Barlow.

"Those guys (ASU defense) are great," he said. "They play so hard, but we just didn't get them any help from the other side of the ball."

Rechard Johnson tallied 10 tackles, forced a fumble, recovered a fumble and broke up a pass. Not to be outdone, Leland Jones had his breakout game of the season with seven tackles -- including two for loss -- forced a fumble, broke up a pass and picked up a quarterback hurry. Also, his third-quarter tackle of Chad Harris in the end zone accounted for the Hornets' only points of the night.

"We don't care what happens, we are one team," Jones said. "If one side of the ball is struggling, it's our responsibility as teammates to pick them up. That's what we do for each, and that's what we'll do this week as we get ready for Jackson State."

The Hornets will travel to Jackson, Miss., to take on the Tigers at 3 p.m.

Circle City Classic: FAMU vs. WSSU on NFL Network

by USA Today

On tap: NFL Network spokesman Dan Masonson says the channel will announce Monday (October 1, 2007) that it will air its first-ever regular-season college game Saturday: Winston-Salem State-Florida A&M, with announcers Spero Dedes and Sterling Sharpe.

by Winston Salem Sports Information

WINSTON-SALEM, NC - The 2007 Circle City Classic that pits the Winston-Salem State University Rams versus the Florida A&M University Rattlers at the RCA Dome in Indianapolis, Indiana on October 6, 2007 at 4:00 pm will air live on the NFL Network.

The Coca-Cola Circle City Classic enters its third decade as one of America's top football classics and favorite weekend celebrations. While the name and the quality of the game remains the same, the weekend has gained a name of its own, the American Family Insurance Classic Weekend featuring the Coca-Cola Circle City Classic.

The football game is the showcase event as it features some of the best rivalries in black college football. The weekend is a celebration of cultural excellence and educational achievement while showcasing the spirit, energy and tradition of America's historically black colleges and universities.

The 2007 Classic features the Rams of Winston-Salem State University and the Rattlers of Florida A&M University taking to the gridiron at 4:00 pm on October 6, 2007.

The game will air live on the NFL Network with Spero Dedes calling the play-by-play and seven-year NFL veteran Sterling Sharpe providing the analysis.

Play-by-play announcer Spero Dedes joined the NFL Network in 2006 as a host and as a play-by-play announcer.

Dedes serves as the play-by-play voice for NFL Network's NFL preseason games, college bowl games and other selected events.

The only year-round show dedicated to the NFL, NFL Total Access provides daily news, interviews and analysis from around the league. NFL Total Access airs six days a week, Monday at 6:00 PM ET and Tuesday through Saturday at 7:00 PM ET.

Dedes also currently serves as the play-by-play radio voice of the Los Angeles Lakers alongside Mychal Thompson on XTRA Sports 570. Prior to working with the Lakers, he was the host of NBA TV's Hardwood Classics and the NBA "Insiders."

Dedes has extensive play-by-play experience including NFL on Fox games, YES Network's coverage of college football and basketball and first-round playoff games for NBA TV. He began his broadcasting career at WFAN Radio in New York where he handled updates and served as the Jets' beat reporter. Dedes also worked as the radio voice of the Arena Football League's New Jersey Gladiators.

Dedes, a 2001 Fordham graduate from Paramus, N.J. was the inaugural recipient of the Marty Glickman Award, given to the Fordham announcer who best exemplifies the standards set by the late sports broadcasting icon. He continues a long line of sports excellence produced by Fordham University's WFUV Radio that began with the legendary voice of the Dodgers' Vin Scully in the late 1940's.

Providing game analysis for the Rams vs. Rattlers will be former NFL wide receiver Sterling Sharpe who begins his fifth season with NFL Network after joining at the network's kickoff in November 2003.

Sharpe serves as a co-host with Brian Baldinger on Playbook, the ultimate NFL chalkboard program utilizing the same "all 22" game film that coaches and players use to preview all of the upcoming games. Airing each Thursday and Friday at 8:00 PM ET, Playbook gives fans an insider's look at who could win each game as well as coach and player interviews conducted by Solomon Wilcots on-location at team headquarters. Playbook re-airs every Sunday morning at 11 AM ET with the latest pregame updates from around the league.

Previously, Sharpe spent seven years as an NFL analyst for ESPN and one season with NBC.

Sharpe never missed a game in seven stellar NFL seasons with the Green Bay Packers. His 595 career receptions are tops in Packers history. Sharpe led the NFL in catches three times, touchdown catches twice and receiving yards once.

A five-time Pro Bowl selection, Sharpe had five 1,000-yard seasons. From 1992-94, Sharpe joined with Brett Favre to form one of the most prolific tandems in NFL history. The duo combined for 300 receptions, 3,696 yards and 41 touchdowns. Sharpe was the first receiver in NFL history to post at least 300 receptions in a three-season span and was the first player in NFL history with consecutive 100-catch seasons (1992-93).

Sharpe was the Packers' first-round draft choice in 1988 from the University of South Carolina.

NFL Network is the year-round programming network fully-owned and operated by the NFL.

It is every football fan's dream. Seven days a week, 24 hours a day, 365 days a year, a network solely devoted to the most popular sport in America, football. NFL Network is a destination for all that happens around the league, on and off the field - during the season and throughout the non-playing season.

Each year, NFL Network televises nearly 200 NFL games, including 52 preseason games, eight regular season primetime games, 98 game replays, the Senior Bowl, Insight Bowl and Texas Bowl, plus past Super Bowl and NFL Classic games.

With a camera at each of the 32 NFL team facilities, plus tremendous cooperation from the NFL players, coaches, owners, officials and executives, the unique access allows viewers to get closer to the NFL experience than ever before.

NFL Films, created by the NFL more than 40 years ago, is a key supplier of NFL Network's programming. With more than 100 million feet of film in its library, NFL Films is the backbone of NFL Network.

NFL Network is the gathering place of the NFL, using the latest digital media applications to bring a new dimension to the NFL experience. The passion, the excitement, the highs and the lows are covered by NFL Network from an insider's perspective.

Locally the NFL Network is available on DirecTV channel 212 and the Dish Network channel 154. The broadcast begins at 4:00 pm as the 2007 Circle City Classic airs live.

SU’s perfect start to get big test this week


Photo: Del Roberts runs back kickoff against Alabama State in Gulf Coast Classic.

By JOSEPH SCHIEFELBEIN, Advocate sportswriter

Southern is the last unbeaten team in the Southwestern Athletic Conference. How long can the run last?

The Jaguars (5-0, 3-0 SWAC) knocked off previously unbeaten Alabama State 21-2 in the 34th Gulf Coast Classic on Saturday in Mobile, Ala.

Now, here come two games which will tell much about Southern.

First, defending conference champion Alabama A&M (4-1, 2-1) visits for homecoming at 5:30 p.m. Saturday at A.W. Mumford Stadium. Then, Jackson State (2-2, 2-0) comes to Mumford Stadium on the following Saturday.

On deck, this A&M game is absolutely huge.

A&M, with senior Kelcy Luke at quarterback and rapidly emerging sophomore Ulysses Banks at running back, has averaged 45.8 points per game in its four victories. The Bulldogs, of course, also play some of the SWAC’s best defense every season.

This game alone may tell all about Southern.

“If you’re not there, you’re going to miss an experience,” SU strong safety Glenn Bell said.

SU coach Pete Richardson, around for 15 seasons, has always said October is where championships are won.

The last two Octobers, the Jaguars are 2-5, including 0-3 last season. In comparison, SU went 5-0 en route to the 2004 Western Division championship.

This team, of course, is different than the last two editions. The 5-0 start has put this team in position.

“We have to keep the momentum and keep the focus,” Southern quarterback Bryant Lee said.

What Southern has shown so far has been impressive.

Southern’s defense, using its speed and playing with passion, has been the difference-maker in all five games — shutting down Mississippi Valley State, Alabama State and Prairie View and, after first-down breakdowns, putting clamps on Tennessee State and Florida A&M.

The offense, meanwhile, may not have found consistency from game to game or quarter to quarter, but the playmakers make plays, Lee is an efficient winner and the running game, headlined by Darren Coates and a zone-blocking scheme, has been vastly improved.

Together, starting with the way the offensive linemen have selflessly adopted to their changes after losing so many teammates to grades and continuing to how the defense will pick up the offense and vice versa, this has been a team effort.

“We have to play, regardless of what happens. It’s a team sport,” Richardson said.

Richardson keeps talking about how this team has learned how to play hard for 60 minutes.

There’s a big 60 minutes ahead Saturday.

Do more of this
The balance rushing, even without Smith, was there again Saturday. Coates had 13 carries for 65 yards, Brian Threat had 14 for 52 yards and a touchdown and Lee had 16 carries for minus-2 yards and a touchdown (losing 22 yards on a sack and 21 yards on a bad snap, so effectively 14 positive carries for 41 yards).

Work more on this
Southern has to find a way to get a consistent offensive tempo, and the Jaguars have to do so quicker. So far this season, SU has had one sustained scoring drive in the first quarter. SU’s best scoring quarter is the second, with 53 points.

Up next
Southern hosts Alabama A&M for homecoming at 5:30 p.m. Saturday in A.W. Mumford Stadium. The Bulldogs won 28-21 last season. Though A&M return man Ulysses Banks took the opening kickoff 90 yards for a touchdown and the Bulldogs took a 14-0 lead in the second quarter, A&M trailed 21-14 entering the fourth quarter before scoring two touchdowns to win. A&M has beaten SU the last two seasons. Both teams have beaten Ohio Valley Conference member Tennessee State this season, with A&M winning 49-23 and SU winning 41-34. And both beat Mississippi Valley State, with A&M winning 45-14 and SU winning 23-6.

Challenge awaits SU's defense

By JOSEPH SCHIEFELBEIN, Advocate sportswriter

Alabama A&M’s offense against Southern’s defense looms as an exciting matchup Saturday.

A&M averages 443.6 yards and 37.8 points per game — both marks ranking 12th nationally — while Southern is fifth in pass efficiency defense (87.17), ninth in scoring defense (14.2 ppg) and 17th in total defense (301.0 ypg).

A&M (4-1, 2-1 Southwestern Athletic Conference) visits SU (5-0, 3-0) for homecoming at 5:30 p.m. Saturday in A.W. Mumford Stadium.

The normally conservative, defense-oriented Bulldogs have raised eyebrows for their explosive scoring — even as they had to replace a host of running backs and wide receivers.

A&M blew out Texas Southern 48-24 in the Bulldogs’ homecoming Saturday in Normal, Ala. Ulysses Banks ran for 112 yards and a touchdown, with senior quarterback Kelcy Luke throwing for 206 yards and four touchdowns.

Meanwhile, SU held Alabama State junior running back Jay Peck to 35 yards on 16 carries — his lowest total since the 2006 season opener, before he broke out and became an All-SWAC first-teamer — in a 21-12 win Saturday in Mobile, Ala.

“We saw some things on film,” Southern defensive coordinator Terrence Graves said. “Our thing was, we had to stone the run. We brought guys off the edge, because they were trying to outflank us. So we just brought the pressure to the side where they were trying to outflank us and it worked out for us.”

Two Alabama State quarterbacks combined to go 8-for-33 for 84 yards and two interceptions.

Southern made a fourth-down stand to win last season’s Bayou Classic, and the Jaguars have made several fourth-down stops deep in their territory this season.

Saturday, SU held on a fourth-and-goal at the 2 midway through the third quarter, preserving a 12-point lead.

“If it comes down to it, we’re going to step up,” SU linebacker Gary Chapman said.


By George
Southern senior free safety Jarmaul George, the SWAC’s preseason defensive player of the year, made his fourth interception this season Saturday. He has had one in each of the last three games.

George is tied with five other players, behind the five interceptions for Chris Wynn of Penn, for second in the Football Championship Subdivision.


He has 12 in his career at Southern.

Go for it
Alabama State made quarterback Alex Engram its punter the week before playing Southern and the move immediately paid off, with Engram named one of the SWAC’s co-special teams players of the week. What helped Saturday was Engram used his option to scamper twice in the second half to run for first downs.

First, he converted a fourth-and-4 with a 5-yard dash to the Southern 35 with 6:14 left in the third quarter. That drive ended on downs at the SU 16 with 4:22 to go.

Second, he converted a fourth-and-4 with a 16-yard run to the SU 35 with 14:49 left in the game. That drive ended on downs at the SU 13.

“We were going to try to fake them last week but the time didn’t present itself,” Engram said. “The first one, I watched Southern’s guy. He didn’t come. He kind of stayed flat-footed and back. I said, ‘OK.’ (Special teams coordinator Brian) Williams told me he trusts my judgment. The second one, we don’t run it to the left. When the guy crashed, he was out of control, to me, so I felt if I just faked, it would be alright.”

Duran Duran
SU punter Josh Duran was erroneously charged with a minus-2 yard punt in the first quarter. He fumbled the ball before he could kick it, with SU’s Antuanya Antoine recovering, but the Jaguars, of course, turning the ball over on downs at their own 40-yard line.

Duran actually had five punts for 227 yards — averaging 45.4 yards per punt (not 37.5). He also was 3-for-3 on PATs.

Quick hits
SU backup RB Kendrick Smith (24 carries, 135 yards; six catches, 48 yards, two touchdowns) missed Saturday’s game because of a strained Achilles’ tendon. He did not dress and wore a walking boot. There was no timetable for Smith’s return. Alabama State was held to its fewest points since losing 38-0 at Troy, a Football Bowl Subdivision member, to start the 2006 season. Alabama State true freshman K Jeremy Fetterhoff missed a 22-yard field-goal try in the second quarter, making him 0-for-3 this season. Saturday’s game was tape-delayed that evening on ESPNU. Alabama State spokesperson Kelvin Datcher said he was not informed until late Thursday night that the game would not be televised live.

Notes
SU had 10 quarterback hurries, five by Chapman (who also had a sack), and six pass breakups Saturday. The Jaguars have totaled nine interceptions and 24 breakups this season. Last season, SU had 14 interceptions and 30 breakups. In three of SU’s games this season, the Jaguars have shut out an opponent for a full half (Mississippi Valley State in the second half and Prairie View and Alabama State in the first half, with both of those teams getting their only points on a safety). SU has won six straight games, dating to last season. Sophomore QB Bryant Lee is 6-1 as a starter.

Alabama A&M notebook

Photo: SWAC pre-season defensive player of the year, FS Jarmaul George is just one of the many game breakers that SU has available to stop opponents.

Huntsville Times

Bulldogs have concerns about secondary

Alabama A&M's secondary had held up pretty well in wins over Tennessee State, Clark Atlanta and Mississippi Valley State. The Bulldogs had allowed under 160 yards per game in those three victories.

However, A&M gave up 235 yards in a 31-6 loss at Grambling and then allowed a season-high 352 yards in Saturday's 48-24 win over Texas Southern as quarterback Tino Edgecombe was 29-of-59 with three touchdowns and three interceptions.

While A&M coach Anthony Jones voiced some concerns about the Bulldogs' secondary play, he admitted the nature of the game dictated some of the things that happened.

"They were trailing throughout the game and that forced them to throw the ball almost 60 times," he said. "We had three interceptions and we had our hands on a few more that we let slip away."

But Jones admitted the Bulldogs would have to play a lot better if they hoped to beat Southern this weekend.

The Jaguars are 5-0 overall and 3-0 in SWAC play after beating Alabama State 21-2 Saturday.

"We'll go back to the drawing board and try to make some adjustments to curb that," Jones said in reference to his team's problems in the secondary.

"We know if Southern has that kind of success against us the results won't be the same."

A different Southern team: Southern's best teams under coach Pete Richardson have usually been highly productive through the air.

This year's squad has been effective throwing the football with sophomore quarterback Bryant Lee. But the Jaguars have been equally impressive running the ball, led by senior Darren Coates, who has been among the SWAC's top rushers.

"They're going to run the football," Jones said. "They still have a relatively young quarterback and their coaches are doing a great job of putting him in situations where he can manage the game.

"They're going to try to run the ball and we've got to be geared up to stop it. They've got some serious weapons when they throw the ball. (Gerard) Landry is really fast. They are an explosive unit. They're going to be a group that will be hard to contain."

A little worried in warmups: Jones is usually pretty good about gauging his team during pregame warmups. That wasn't the case Saturday.

Fortunately for A&M, it worked out as the Bulldogs rolled to an easy win over Texas Southern.

"Coach (Ben) Blacknall and I talked during pregame and we were trying to figure out which team was going to show up," Jones said. "I couldn't make a good assessment. Either we were going to come out and explode or lay an egg.

"Thank God we exploded."

A&M scored on four of its first five possessions and rolled up 514 yards in total offense.

Reggie Benson

Alabama A&M after Southern harmony


By REGGIE BENSON, Times Sports Staff

'Dogs hope second trip to Louisiana more fruitful

Alabama A&M failed miserably in its first big test of the season. On Saturday, the Bulldogs hope to pass their second one.

They will travel to Baton Rouge, La., to take on Southern in a big Southwestern Athletic Conference game at Mumford Stadium. Kickoff is at 5:30 p.m.

The Jaguars, coming off back-to-back losing seasons for the first time in Pete Richardson's tenure, have been the class of the conference so far. Southern is 5-0 overall and 3-0 in league play following Saturday's 21-2 thumping of previously unbeaten Alabama State.

"They're playing the best football in the conference right now," A&M coach Anthony Jones said Sunday. "They're the only undefeated team left. When Pete has them playing this way, they're hard to handle.

"Then, you've got to do it on the road in front of their crowd and their fans. It's their homecoming and I guarantee you they'll have close to 40,000 there."

A&M failed to show up just over a week ago in its first trip to Louisiana. Grambling whipped the Bulldogs 31-6, limiting A&M's potent offense to a pair of Jeremy Licea field goals and only 147 total yards.

However, quarterback Kelcy Luke and company got back on track Saturday as the Bulldogs whipped Texas Southern 48-24. A&M rolled up 514 yards in total offense, including 308 on the ground, to take out the Tigers.

The Bulldogs scored on four of their first five possessions and topped the 40-point mark for the fourth time in five games.

"I liked our focus when we came out and the energy that we had," Jones said.

It'll take that same kind of focus and energy, Jones said, if A&M is going to come away with a win over a Southern team that is playing as well as it has since winning the SWAC and the black college national championship in 2003.

"Coach Richardson has them playing great football right now," Jones said. "He is the dean of this conference for a reason. He's been here the longest for a reason and it's very, very evident this year why he has the record he's had over the years.

"He's going to have his team ready to play. I've got to do the same thing."

That wasn't the case against Grambling, but Jones predicted his team would be ready to play this time around.

"I think our guys will be up for this game," he said. "We're not going down there just to be going down there."

Things tougher for BC-U Wildcats

Photo: Morgan State's #2 Chad Simpson steamrolled BC-U run defense in a second half run controlled offense. Expect more of the same this week from a strong DSU running game.

By SEAN KERNAN, Daytona Beach News-Journal

Just when the Bethune-Cookman Wildcats are at their lowest point in 10 seasons, and just when it seems like things can't get any tougher, the 'Cats are facing what might be their most difficult week of the season.

B-CU, winless after three Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference games, has to travel to Dover, Del., for a Thursday night nationally televised showdown with new conference power Delaware State (2-0 in league play including a 24-17 victory Saturday over three-time defending champion Hampton). The shorter amount of preparation time, coupled with the necessary travel for B-CU's longest road trip of the year, puts the 'Cats at a distinct disadvantage.

"We have our work cut out for us," Wildcats head coach Alvin Wyatt said. "It's going to take us some time to get it right. You cut two days out of your preparation and a team like us that needs to be nourished right now, that can have an effect right now. I think if we go in there with the right frame of mind and get some of these injuries behind us we can put up a good fight."

The Wildcats, 2-3 overall, played without injured defensive lineman Dennis King (knee) and fullback Justin Brannon (sprained ankle) in Saturday's 33-9 homecoming loss to Morgan State at Municipal Stadium. Additionally, slotback Corey Council, who also returns kicks and punts, left the game due to a bruised lung, and defensive lineman Dexter Jackson is out due to a shoulder injury.

Though beaten on the field Saturday, several Wildcats remained optimistic and anxious to turn things around.

"It was a difficult loss for homecoming, but we have to come right back," said linebacker Ronnie McCullough, who had 20 tackles.

Despite the short week and six-game conference losing streak, B-CU's players vow not to have a physical letdown.

"We're going to play our hearts out," defensive back James Monds promised.

Free safety Bobbie Williams admitted the team is hurting right now, but has to focus on the task at hand.

"It's a bad feeling, but we have to take every game game-by-game," Williams said. "Win, lose or draw we have to leave it all on the field. We have to follow the scheme. The coaches are putting us in the right spots, we just have to go out and execute."

B-CU at Delaware St.

WHEN: 7:30 p.m., Thursday

WHERE: Dover, Del.

RECORDS: B-CU 2-3 (0-3 MEAC), Delaware St. 3-1 (2-0)

TV: ESPNU

SCSU: The grass is not always greener

Following the Bulldogs by Thomas Grant
Times and Democrat Blog

The Grass is not always greener

Could South Carolina State depart the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference for the Southern Conference?

Apparently, SCSU chairman Maurice Washington believes the school should take a serious look into such a possibility. At Thursday’s board meeting, Washington brought up the issue in suggesting the move would reduce travel costs for the athletics department in allowing SCSU to play teams closer to home.

“We need to make a prudent examination into this,” Washington said.

SCSU President Andrew Hugine provided a rebuttal, stating the MEAC plans to expand in future years and this could divide the conference into two separate subdivisions like the Southeastern Conference. This would allow SCSU to schedule more non-conference opponents which could also allow games taking place closer to Orangeburg.

Considering both the MEAC and the NCAA for that matter currently have moratoriums in place preventing further conference expansions, such a prospect could be years in the making if ever.

But back to Washington’s proposal.
On the surface, it looks like a good idea for both revenue-making sports like football and basketball. The football team would get to compete in one of the best Football Championship Subdivision conferences in America, one with a significantly higher power ranking in the MEAC and face teams geographically close like Furman, Wofford, Georgia Southern and Appalachian State. SCSU would also bring a loyal fan following to these venues, insuring higher gate attendance for the SoCon teams they face on the road.

For the positives for the revenue-sports, there are several unspoken negatives about making such a move. Number one, none of the non-revenue sports are in position right now to even compete in the SoCon with exception to tennis. Track and field, cross-country, softball, volleyball and soccer have all performed poorly in recent years not only in the MEAC, but outside the conference against teams from the SoCon and even Big South. Those same schools also even a major advantage in recruiting since - let’s be honest - it’s easier to recruit a white student-athlete who’s only at an FCS level to attend a Furman or Wofford than it is to attend SCSU. Unless the current coaches or administration at SCSU are willing to expand their reach, such a development will not change anytime soon and they can count on being one of the bottom-feeders for years to come in the SoCon or Big South.

There’s also another unspoken truth which applies to football and basketball and it pertains to attendance. While SCSU will bring a crowd to a road stadium, it’s been shown that those same fans at Wofford, Furman and Georgia Southern will not return the favor and flock to Oliver C. Dawson Stadium. SCSU football has accounted for two of the four largest crowds at Wofford College and one of the largest in Coastal Carolina’s school history, but only the game against Coastal Carolina drew well over 10,000 fans in Orangeburg.

The same was true last season in men’s basketball when the men’s team hosted two Big South opponents (North Carolina-Asheville and Coastal Carolina) and drew less than 500 fans. Truly, it’s been a win-lose proposition for SCSU when it comes to dealing with FCS schools. If anything, SCSU will be perceived as the ‘outsider’ among the veteran teams of the SoCon and Big South and those schools will look to get what they can out of SCSU without giving anything in return.

Granted, the MEAC is a conference in dire need of change. Commissioner Dennis Thomas’ administration has gone the way of his coaching tenure at SCSU - uninspiring and forgettable. The Presidents in this conference also seem more concerned about their own well-being and interest rather than working towards a collective goal for the good of the conference. There are no forward-thinking leaders in this conference and an argument could be add the CIAA has done more with less.

Perhaps SCSU could work out an arrangement should it join the SoCon to perhaps regulate its non-revenue sports to competing in a Division II conference during the transition. Or maybe SCSU could stay in the MEAC, but work diligently to demand the other conference members to ’shape up or ship out’. There’s also the independent route where SCSU could schedule MEAC, SoCon, Big South and Football Bowl Subdivision teams, but only Notre Dame makes money as an independent.

At the end of the day, it’s all about money when it comes to making a decision to end a longtime relationship and the rivalries which come with it to start new ones. While moving to the SoCon would mean less travel costs, it does not mean more money coming into the coffers especially if the same fundamental problem exists of drawing fans to the stadium. Until season ticket sales are at a level equivalent to USC or Clemson and the administration demands a higher level of excellence from all of its sports, it will not make a difference what conference SCSU joins in the future.

If joining the SoCon would guarantee higher revenues and better sports teams for SCSU, I would jump at the opportunity. Right now, however, I doubt it.

Sunday, September 30, 2007

FAMU Gallery: 2007 Atlanta Football Classic








(Atlanta) Classic fuels education

FAMU, TSU get $100K each; rest goes to Atlanta schools

By St. Clair Murraine, DEMOCRAT STAFF WRITER

ATLANTA - A little more than a dozen children were so engrossed during a math-class discussion that they seemed oblivious to the presence of principal Curt Green on Friday. Hardly any of them looked around when Green began to explain the roundtable setting to a visitor.

A few doors down the hall, an English teacher worked with a handful of students at the chalkboard. At the same time, several other students had group discussions going on.

Nothing seemed traditional in any of the other classes at the all-boys BEST Academy, housed in the old Thurgood Marshall School on Atlanta's northwest side. The curriculum is like most elementary schools, but the way it's presented is completely out of the box.

"Most boys seem to be hands-on in terms of studies," said Green, explaining the teaching concept. "They need a lot of movement associated with the work that they're learning in class. They get to touch and manipulate the (leaning tools) that they're using in class versus sitting down and hearing a lecture and taking notes all the time. We're focusing on their strengths."

The school's future looks bright, thanks in part to money raised through the Atlanta Classic football game. The game has become the 100 Black Men of Atlanta's biggest annual fundraiser.

While the Atlanta School Board provides funding for the school, the 100 Black Men pays for the boys' uniforms. But the biggest financial beneficiary is Project Success, a mentoring program initiated by the 100 Black Men.

Project Success offers children from low-income families an opportunity to develop life skills. The men take a lead role with actual involvement with the children.

Since taking over promotion of the annual rivalry game between FAMU and Tennessee State University 19 years ago, Project Success has benefited to the tune of $2.6 million, said John Grant, CEO of the organization, who didn't disclose exactly how much has been raised.

A huge chunk of gate receipts goes to payouts in the range of more than $100,000 to each university. About $6 million has been paid to the schools over the years.

The partnership goes hand in hand with the 100 Black Men's mission to motivate children from underprivileged communities to attend college, Grant said. He also said that several corporate supporters have offered internship opportunities and jobs to graduates of Project Success.

The Classic remains pivotal, though.

"I think the important thing to know is the fact that we're partnering with two colleges that have a long history of rivalry," he said. "We want those institutions to be strong institutions because we're sending kids.

"Our goal is to continue to increase the amount of payout that goes to the schools every year and raise money for more kids from challenged societies. We are impacting a lot of lives in a lot of communities."

The school is the brainchild of Beverly Hall, Atlanta's superintendent of schools, and the 100 Black Men of Atlanta. It's the latest mentoring project for the non-profit organization.

The academy opened for the first time in August with 138 sixth-grade boys. The plan is to add a grade every year through 12th. In two years, renovation work will be completed at Benjamin Carson School, which will become the permanent home of the academy.

Project Success, like the BEST Academy, is about letting children know that education is a sure way to change their fortunes, Grant said. Some of the boys are proteges of Project Success.

"Going through that, I got help with school and my homework, too," said Chad Gordon, 11. "I really appreciated it because I could get a scholarship to a college. My parents are really happy about that, and I'm really excited because I can't wait to go to college."

The emphasis at BEST, which stands for Business, Engineering, Science and Technology, is just that. Scientists such as Lonnie Johnson, who is known for his work in the study of alternative fuel, have had discussion sessions with the boys.

In the classroom, some of their work is done on special computerized programs in each room.

"I find it interesting because at this school we have iPods," said Marcquel Culberson, a former traditional-school student. "I'm enjoying it a lot."

The children's parents are just as involved as their mentors and teachers. They have to commit to giving volunteer hours and participating in educational projects themselves, Grant said.

"This is about changing the paradigm," Grant said. "We want them to know this is not an entitlement program; it's an opportunity program. You have to want the opportunity; we're not here to pull you along."

Classic is just a huge homecoming'

By JOHN T. GRANT, (AS TOLD TO BILL BANKS) , Atlanta Journal Constitution

The Atlanta Football Classic, and all the events surrounding it, has profound relevance for me personally.

I grew up in a small town, Potecasi, N.C., and I went to North Carolina A&T State University. Like many who've attended historically black colleges and universities, I was the first person in my family to go to college.

This game started because 100 Black Men of Atlanta needed to raise more money for our (mentoring and tuition assistance program) Project Success, which was then in its second year.

That first game was at Bobby Dodd Stadium, and we drew 40-something thousand, which was crucial. If we had only drawn 20,000 or so, we would've been dead in the water. We never would've met expenses.

From there, the game has just grown into a Wednesday-through-Saturday festival. We have a big college fair with about 5,000 high school juniors and seniors who show up. We have a health fair, an intellectual debate, a concert, and our Georgia Power Parade of Excellence.

In other words, we use this game as a way to promote our mission, which is to provide support and improve the quality of life for African-American kids.

Further, I think that remains the mission of HBCUs. I think a lot of people in recent years have wondered if HBCUs have outlived their usefulness. But I believe they are needed today more than ever.

In the beginning, HBCUs were needed because of discrimination. Now the reasons are more economic.

We have had in the current generation, because of the policies of our country, a whole new cycle of poverty. As a result, you have children growing up today who don't know anything about the college experience.

It seems like everywhere I turn, I see kids who don't envision college as a part of their future.

They don't think of themselves in academic terms, and neither do their parents. So, I think, given those conditions, HBCUs are as vital today as they were 100 years ago.

And I think the same of HBCU football. There is a climate, an energy that is different from mainstream college football. HBCU football is more of a community and cultural experience.

There is something about our football that hearkens back to an earlier era, before big business and big media took over sports.

Our game reminds us of a more casual era when there was barely any separation between players and spectators, when we were all part of one large community.

Here's an interesting fact: 59 percent of those coming (to the Classic) are women, who in turn bring children. So we have more of a family atmosphere than your typical football game.

Many of the people, perhaps more than half of the 70,000 people who show up, aren't even alumni of the two schools.

This is just a huge homecoming and reunion for HBCU fans and graduates in general. We have people buying tickets who come from 33 states, plus Canada and the Virgin Islands.

Of course, there is one other major difference between black football and mainstream football.

At [mainstream] games, people rush to the concession stands at halftime. But at our games, people are rushing to their seats.

No one in their right mind would want to miss the battle of the bands.

— John T. Grant, 50, became CEO of 100 Black Men of Atlanta in November, 2001, but he joined the organization in 1988 and worked on the very first Atlanta Football Classic (then called "The Ebony Classic" ) in 1989. The Classic remains the largest fund-raiser for 100 Black Men of Atlanta.

Florida A&M wins Atlanta Football Classic

By STAN AWTREY, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Atlanta Football Classic: Attendance - 56,990

Tennessee State misses late field goal attempt

Rubin Carter better be in church this morning.

After seeing his opponent rip 90 yards down the field with no timeouts in less than a minute, the Florida A&M coach knew it was time to put his trust in a higher power.

As he watched Tennessee State's sure-footed kicker Eric Benson lined up for the go-ahead 27-yard field goal with eight seconds left, Carter's only thought was, "Lord, I sure hope he misses this kick."

He did.

Photo: Tennessee State kicker Eric Benson (left) watches his field goal attempt sail wide left, while Florida A&M defensive back LeRoy Vann (right) celebrates.

Benson, who hadn't missed a kick all year, shanked it wide left. The missed kick, which never had a chance, enabled Florida A&M to escape the Georgia Dome with an 18-17 win over rival Tennessee State in the 19th annual Bank of America Atlanta Football Classic.

It was the fifth straight year the game has been decided in the final period and the sixth straight time FAMU has beaten TSU. Tennessee State leads the series 25-22, but FAMU is now 11-3 against the Tigers in the Atlanta Football Classic.

"I had all the confidence in the world that he was going to make that kick," said Tennessee State coach James Webster. "I thought when he lined up, game over, end of the streak. I was already starting to think about how we were going to squib the kickoff."

Carter admitted, "It didn't look real good with eight seconds left."

Tennessee State took possession with 50 seconds left, having spent its final timeout on FAMU's previous possession. The Tigers (2-3) began on their own 5 after a holding penalty on the punt return.

But quarterback Antonio Heffner put Tennessee State in position to win the game with a pair of clutch passes, a 25-yarder to Ronald Evans and a 55-yarder to Chris Johnson, who almost scored before being gang tackled at the 5. Tennessee State suffered a 5-yard penalty for illegal procedure, then waited through a FAMU timeout before Benson attempted the kick.

"He's a very poised young man," Webster said. "He just didn't kick it right."

FAMU (2-2) won the game with a strong second half. The Rattlers, who trailed 14-5 at halftime, were more aggressive on defense and became more effective on offense after Leon Camel replaced starter Albert Chester late in the third quarter.

"We played awful football in the first half, not up to game tempo," Carter said. "At halftime we talked about the urgency we needed to have in the second half."

Photo: The Rattlers' Philip Sylvester, left, stiff arms the Tigers' #10, Reno Thompson for extra yardage.

Freshman Qier Hall came up with the big plays the Rattlers needed in the third quarter. He returned a punt 82 yards for a touchdown, then returned the next punt 20 yards to set up the go-ahead score.

"We told the special teams last night that we needed to make a big play and they did," Carter said. "That turned it around for us."

Webster agreed. "You take that [touchdown] away and we win the game," he said. "Those were two critical plays on the punt coverage team."

FAMU's Philip Sylvester provided the offensive stability needed. The freshman rushed 25 times for 131 yards and caught two passes. He was named the team's MVP.

Heffner, voted Tennessee State's MVP, led the Tigers by completing 12 of 22 passes for 309 yards and one touchdown. He also rushed for 67 yards and one touchdown. But Heffner was pursued more aggressively by the FAMU defense in the second half and could not produce another touchdown.

"They started taking more chances," Webster said. "The first half they sat back and let things happen. The second half they started blitzing and take chances.

The FAMU defense had only two sacks, but made eight tackles behind the line. Carlos Rolle led the Rattlers with nine tackles.

Atlanta Classic: Who needs football? Stylish tailgating at Classic


By JENNIFER BRETT, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Tailgating, classic style: Hot dogs on the grill, brews in the cooler.

Tailgating, 100 Black Men of Atlanta style: Carving stations, proper silverware — and fantastic people watching.

"I don't do tailgating," said Charita Gray, among the crowd at the posh reception preceding Saturday's Bank of America Atlanta Football Classic at the Georgia Dome.

But the club-level shindig, held hours before Florida A&M and Tennessee State University took the field, suited her fine. The event featured live music, a cash bar and buffet stations with pasta, vegetables, maple-glazed turkey breast and Cajun roast beef. Some guests claimed comfy seats near a wall of televisions airing various sporting events, while others worked the crowd.

"This is absolutely the way to do it," said Cynthia Williams, vice president of resource development for the National Coalition of 100 Black Women of Atlanta, Metro Atlanta Chapter. She was seated near the keyboardist with Virginia Harris, the group's president.

Cynthia and Bobby Smith of Mableton attended as guests of former Assistant Secretary of State Terrell Slayton Jr., president-elect of 100 Black Men of Atlanta. Cynthia Smith chuckled as she contemplated the poor tailgaters having to get by without china or linen serviettes.

"They need to get in the know," she joked.

Kidding aside, of course, the Classic benefits Project Success, a mentoring program run by 100 Black Men of Atlanta that prepares young people to excel academically, professionally and in civic life.

And there's certainly nothing wrong with standard game-day fare, said a sharp-dressed Fonzworth Bentley, the former personal assistant of Sean "Diddy" Combs and author of "Advance Your Swagger: How to Use Manners, Confidence and Style to Get Ahead."

"That is the real thing, sitting outside, barbecuing, sweating," said Bentley, an Atlanta native known as Derek Watkins during his Morehouse College days. Casually elegant in blue jeans, blazer with pocket square and velvet slippers, he caught up with friends Leigh Jones and Tannis Williamson, both Clark Atlanta University alumnae.

(Yes, they both said, he was fabulous even before he became Fonzworth.)

Other notable attendees included Earl Martin and Hiram Little, both members of Atlanta chapter of the Tuskegee Airmen. Earlier in the day they participated in the Classic parade, and heads swiveled as the gents made their way through the reception crowd.

"I appreciate all the attention I get," Little said. "I'm not going to lie, I love it. Although sometimes I think it's a little overdone."

"I don't," said Martin.

Last-second field goal sails wide left for TSU

Photo: Tennessee State running back Javarris Williams hurdles Florida A&M's Marquiste Ramos (91) for a first down. Williams led TSU in rushing with 87 yards in 19 carries.

By GUY CURTRIGHT, For The Tennessean


ATLANTA — Tennessee State kicker Eric Benson fell to the turf in disbelief. He wasn't the only one who couldn't believe it.

"I think if he kicks it 10 times, he'll make it 10 times," Coach James Webster said.

But this was the Atlanta Football Classic, where the games almost always come down to the end and where the Tigers repeatedly have had their hearts broken.

Benson, who had made all five of his previous field-goal attempts this year, was wide left from 27 yards out with four seconds remaining as Florida A&M held on for an 18-17 victory against the Tigers on Saturday at the Georgia Dome.

"It was a good snap and a good hold," Webster said. "He just missed it."

With the miss came more frustration for TSU (2-3), which has lost six straight to FAMU (2-2). The past five all have been decided in the final minutes, but this might have been the most disappointing of all for the Tigers.

"I didn't think there was any way we'd miss that kick," said quarterback Antonio Heffner, who had set up the attempt with a 55-yard completion to Chris Johnson that carried the Tigers to the FAMU 5.

Thinking ahead

With no timeouts remaining, Heffner spiked the ball with eight seconds left. An illegal procedure penalty moved the ball back 5 yards, but it was still almost a chip shot for Benson, who had been the difference in TSU's two victories and kicked a 19-yarder earlier in the fourth quarter.

"I had all the confidence in the world that he'd make that kick," Webster said. "There was nothing in me or about me that made me think he was going to miss that kick. … I was already thinking about squibbing the kickoff."

But there was no kickoff, just jubilation on the FAMU sideline and stunned silence on the TSU side of the field.

"I told him to keep his head up," Heffner said of Benson, who was off limits to the media afterward.

"We just have to trust in God and stay strong."

As far as FAMU Coach Rubin Carter was concerned, the Rattlers' prayers were answered.

"I was thinking, 'Lord, I sure hope he misses this kick,'" Carter said.

Heffner passed for 309 yards, including a 55-yard touchdown strike to Troy Smith on TSU's third play, and ran for 67 with a 1-yard touchdown sneak. But the Tigers couldn't hold an early 11-point lead.

"We keep playing well enough to almost win, but not well enough to do it," the junior said. "It's good to come close I guess, but really frustrating to lose."

Special teams sink TSU this week


By GUY CURTRIGHT, For The Tennessean

ATLANTA — Turnovers didn't cost Tennessee State like they did a week earlier at Southern. On Saturday, it was special-teams problems.

A botched punt snap resulted in a safety just before halftime. An 83-yard punt return for a touchdown by Qier Hall put Florida A&M within three points in the third quarter. And a 20-yard return by Hall later in the third led to what proved to be the winning touchdown in the 18-17 TSU loss.

"That was a big play in the game," TSU Coach James Webster said of the touchdown return, during which Hall eluded the grasp of four would-be tacklers.

The Tigers' only turnover came on a third-quarter fumble by Javarris Williams, who had 87 yards on 19 carries. But quarterback Antonio Heffner did drop a direct snap on a fourth-down play in the fourth quarter.

Richardson plays: Despite a sore shoulder and knee, All-OVC defensive end Shaun Richardson played in the second half and had a sack in the fourth quarter.

"We thought we could get one big play out of him," Webster said. "He didn't play in the first half and I don't know if he should have in the second."

Gouch gets start: With Richardson hurting, freshman Branden Gouch got his first college start in his hometown. He went to Therrell High School, just a few miles from the Georgia Dome.

Other homecomings: Gouch was one of four players from Georgia to see plenty of action against FAMU. Nahshon Bigham, a senior from Macon, and Kalvin Baker, a sophomore from Columbus, started a linebacker. Ozzie Harrell, a freshman from the Atlanta suburb of Lithonia, played extensively at cornerback.

Time off: The Tigers are idle next weekend before returning to OVC play at Tennessee Tech on Oct. 11, a Thursday night game. TSU, which beat Austin Peay 33-32 in overtime in its OVC opener, defeated Tennessee Tech 30-20 last year in Nashville.

Howard's Bailey Wins His First


by Washington Post

Attendance: 3,302

Brian Johnson's three touchdown passes and Dennis Wiehberg's 28-yard field goal gave Howard Coach Carey Bailey his first victory, a 24-21 overtime victory over Winston-Salem State yesterday at Greene Stadium.

In overtime, the Bison (1-3) stymied the Rams (2-3) with three straight sacks by Rudolph Hardie, Jarrett Burgess and James Robinson, and James Carter. The combo sack by Burgess and Robinson knocked Winston-Salem State quarterback Monte Purvis from the game.

On fourth and 42, Howard's Thomas Claiborne intercepted a pass from backup quarterback Jarrett Dunston.

Howard's Terry Perry then rushed for 20 yards on five carries to align Wiehberg for the game-winner. Perry finished with career highs of 87 yards on 23 carries.

Johnson completed 20 of 35 passes for 251 yards, including touchdowns of 12 and four yards to Jarahn Williams, who has a career-high six touchdown receptions this season.

Freshman Xavier Fowler's 32-yard touchdown reception gave the Bison a 21-14 lead late in the third quarter. He also had a 53-yard catch-and-run that set up Howard's second touchdown.

Michael Scarbrough had six receptions for 107 yards and one touchdown for the Rams.

Howard edges WSSU in OT


JOURNAL STAFF REPORT

Rams give up three straight sacks, lose 24-21 on field goal

WASHINGTON - Brian Johnson’s three touchdown passes and Dennis Wieh-berg’s 28-yard field goal gave Coach Carey Bailey of Howard his first victory, a 24-21 overtime win over Winston-Salem State yesterday.

In overtime, Howard (1-3) stymied Winston-Salem State (2-3) with three straight sacks, knocking Rams quarterback Monte Purvis out of the game.

On fourth-and-42, Howard’s Thomas Claiborne intercepted a pass from backup quarterback Jarrett Dunston.

Howard’s Terry Perry then rushed for 20 yards on five carries to align Wiehberg for the winning kick.

“Howard stepped up big late in the game and forced us out of our rhythm,” said Coach Kermit Blount of Winston-Salem State.


WSSU 0 7 7 7 0 — 21

Howard 7 7 7 0 3 — 24

First Quarter

Howard—Williams 12 pass from Johnson (Wiehberg kick), 4:15.

Second Quarter

Howard—Williams 4 pass from Johnson (Wiehberg kick), 13:26.

WSSU—Kinzer 20 pass from Purvis (M.Mitchell kick), :35.

Third Quarter

WSSU—Scarbrough 28 pass from Purvis (M.Mitchell kick), 9:06.

Howard—Fowler 32 pass from Johnson (Wiehberg kick), 4:42.

Fourth Quarter

WSSU—Hubbard 0 run (M.Mitchell kick), 1:14.

Overtime

Howard—FG Wiehberg 28.

A—3,302.

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS

RUSHING—WSSU, Fluellen 17-58, Bines 15-30, Dunston 1-(minus 1), Sherrod 1-(minus 5), Purvis 13-(minus 24). How., Perry 23-87, Johnson 6-17, Whittaker 4-14, Moore 1-3.

PASSING—WSSU, Purvis 14-24-1-261, Dunston 0-3-1-0. How., Johnson 20-35-0-251.

RECEIVING—WSSU, Scarbrough 6-107, Thomas 2-50, Bayne 2-20, Fluellen 1-37, Reaves 1-21, Kinzer 1-20, Bines 1-6. How., Moore 6-44, Williams 4-36, Hood 3-34, Fowler 2-85, Perry 2-14, Whittaker 1-24, Blake 1-8, Duncan 1-6.

UD-DSU can be done, but when?

By KEVIN TRESOLINI and KRISTIAN POPE, The News Journal

Delaware won't elaborate on refusal to play Hornets

Omar Cuff is concerned only with whom the University of Delaware does play in football, not the teams it doesn't play. But when the Blue Hens' All-American tailback was informed last week that UD and Delaware State had never met in a football game, his expression turned curious.

"They never did?" said Cuff, a Landover, Md., resident whose mother has lived in Wilmington for several years. "I do find that kind of strange. They're so close. They're I-AA, just like us?"

Yes, Delaware and Delaware State are both members of NCAA Division I-AA and are located less than an hour apart.

They have never played because UD has been unwilling to schedule the game. As the more established of the two academically and in football, Delaware has less to gain from a UD-DSU matchup than Delaware State, while DSU has craved a game for many years.

The latest overture was made Tuesday, when Delaware State athletic director Rick Costello contacted UD athletic director Edgar Johnson to discuss the possibility of setting up a game.

Johnson told him he was not interested, but both parties agreed to talk further when the football season is over. If the NCAA does not add a 12th game for Division I-AA, there appears to be an opening on UD's schedule in 2012.

Historically, Delaware State schedules its football games no further than one or two years out. That started to change under former AD Chuck Bell, but the Hornets have many dates open in the next few years, unlike UD, which schedules many years in advance.

"I talked to Edgar, and they are not interested at this point," Costello said. "So, we agreed to wait until the season is over. Right now, the best chance is 2012.

"If they're not interested, then we'll just move on."

Costello's predecessors, Bell and former DSU assistant AD Tripp Keister, made overtures to Johnson in 2004 and 2005. They were rebuffed. Bell believed after talking to Johnson that the game never would be played.

Costello remains optimistic.

"Everyone mentioned it to me when I took this job," said Costello, who was hired in June. "I'm hoping, with Delaware's new leadership [president Patrick Harker], it will get done. Unfortunately, the athletic director [Johnson] doesn't want it.

"I'm going to devote time and energy into the things we can control. If they don't want to play us, then we won't play."

Costello said when he does meet with Johnson after the season regarding a matchup, the Hornets won't settle for a one-game deal. He said DSU would be interested only in a contract for a home-and-home series against Delaware, which means the Blue Hens would have to play at Alumni Stadium, which seats just 6,800.

"We'll play anywhere, any place and anytime," Costello said. "But it would have to be a fair and equitable situation."

After DSU's victory over Hampton (ranked No. 13 in I-AA) Saturday, Costello believes this controversy might be canceled out should the Hens and Hornets make the Division I-AA playoffs.

"We feel like we have a lot to offer. ... It would be great for the kids and great for the state," Costello said. "We'd love to play them. We just beat the No. 13-ranked team in the nation. This was a huge win over a top-ranked opponent. Let's savor the moment. If we met in the playoffs ... it would be great."

Johnson said "it's way too premature" to elaborate on the discussions with Costello and that it's his policy not to "kiss and tell."

Cuff said he isn't interested in the politics of the great First State divide. He also doesn't consider it, as some do, a racial issue, especially when he looks around and sees that nearly half of Delaware's football players, such as Cuff, are black.

DSU is a historically black college created late in the 19th Century because of Delaware's segregated education system, which existed until the 1950s.

It's about football, Cuff said. And the more he thought about it, the more logical a football matchup seemed.

"Next year, let's take West Chester [an annual Division II foe] off the schedule and play them [the Hornets]," Cuff said. "... It would be good for the morale of the whole state."

Escaping from UD's shadow

The Hornets have long existed in the Blue Hens' giant football shadow, and a game against them is one way to emerge from it.

Delaware has won six national championships, has had just eight losing seasons since 1940 and has been to the NCAA playoffs 18 times since the format was introduced in 1973.

Delaware State never has made the NCAA postseason.

DSU junior fullback Adam Shrewsbury, a Middletown High graduate who has several friends attending UD, was raised around a line of thinking that claims the Hornets are lower class and unworthy of playing the Hens.

"I guess their reason why [the game isn't played] is, they have nothing to gain from it," Shrewsbury said of UD. "And if we were to go to their house or wherever, all our fans would be there, and they have respect to lose. Like people wouldn't look at them the same, you know what I'm saying? That's just because people look so down on us, like we're not as good of a team and we can't roll with the big boys."

He wonders why people believe the Hornets would be the underdog in a game against the Hens.

"Anybody is beatable on any given day, just like what happened at Michigan [in its loss to I-AA Appalachian State]," Shrewsbury said. "It would definitely be an emotional game. Football's an emotional game. It would be a great game, a very good game to watch. It would be a championship game."

A UD-DSU matchup could occur in the playoffs, since the NCAA intentionally matches teams that are geographically close.

"That would be cool," said UD linebacker J.T. Laws, a Delaware native and William Penn High graduate. "I think it could be good for the state. But, you know, it's not something that is really a big thing to me. It's never been. I wish Delaware State would play Delaware, or the other way around. ... I always thought if they were meant to play, they would play."

Hornets senior defensive lineman Kelly Rouse said he recently has paid close attention to the topic. Looking at each team's current schedule, Rouse wonders why UD seems to believe it is in a different class.

"Personally, I've been reading the comments saying racism still exists here and 'when UD beats Delaware State,' " Rouse said. "They played a Division II school [West Chester] and we played a Division I-A school [Kent State]. They're not playing anybody that we're not playing or who we can't beat. We played a Top 25 team [Coastal Carolina] and a I-A. All they played was a Division II school and a conference opponent [Towson] who almost lost to Morgan State [DSU's Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference rival].

"We're putting our time in, and we'll meet them in the playoffs."

Delaware sophomore receiver Mark Duncan said he's received many e-mails and read numerous stories about the UD-DSU standoff and also would relish seeing it resolved.

"Let's get this whole, big, Delaware thing off our backs and show who's the better team," the Rockville, Md., resident said. "It's something that's getting a lot of attention. Let's settle it on the field."

As for an uncomfortable racial undertone, Duncan doesn't buy it.

"I don't think it's a race thing," he said. "I think Delaware being a predominantly white school and DelState being a predominantly black school, maybe some people are going to feel we're not going to play them because of that. It's easy to say that's what's going on. Maybe that would have been the case when we would have played them in soft helmets, but I know that's not the case now."

Coaches' input

Now in his fourth season as DSU's coach, Al Lavan said he's constantly reminded of his predecessors' failure to make the game a reality.

He isn't certain why former DSU coach Bill Collick and former UD coach Tubby Raymond never brought the two programs together.

Collick, a UD graduate, was coach and athletic director at DSU and had a friendly relationship with Raymond, who never pushed for a Hens-Hornets get-together during his reign from 1966 through 2001. Collick made periodic overtures and was rebuffed, but knew he had more important missions.

"We're all proud people," said Collick, now dean of students and football coach at Sussex Tech High. "You want to go to the dance with someone who wants to go with you. I never put a lot of time and effort into [pursuing a game] because I knew better.

"Was it right?" he said of UD's resistance. "I didn't think so. But I knew better. ... There were a lot of positive things we were doing that measured our success."

Lavan said the game could move a step closer to fruition if he and Hens coach K.C. Keeler met.

The two coaches never have been introduced. Perhaps they could set the example, Lavan said.

"Let me put it this way: Students and players will follow leadership," Lavan said. "That's why I've said it's so simple. ... We make it whatever it is, we make it as difficult as it is. It's not complicated. You do what you want to do."

Keeler had been forbidden by higher-ups to comment publicly on the DSU controversy, an example of how sensitive the topic is at UD.

But on Monday he broke that silence and said that DSU fits into his scheduling philosophy of playing more games at 22,000-seat Delaware Stadium.

"If that means Delaware State," Keeler said, "I think it would be great for the state."

Keeler said coaches often get acquainted through recruiting but that Delaware and Delaware State recruit an entirely different set of players. He agreed, however, that he and Lavan could become catalysts in breaking the logjam and setting up a game.

"He's done a great job down there, and I have a lot of respect for what they're doing," Keeler said. "Because of the uniqueness of Delaware, there's a lot of interest in a game."

Lavan said that around 1992 he was asked by a Sports Illustrated reporter his opinion on the lack of black coaches in the NFL. He said the question is similar in tone to the question of why UD won't schedule a game against DSU.

"I said, 'You're really asking the question to the wrong person,' " Lavan said. "Me, I can give you a good answer, but then, so what? What you need to do is ask the guy who's in the decision-making position.

"If I was in the decision-making position, I could give you an answer in three seconds. After that, it's not totally useless but it's insignificant because, in three years, you're going to be asking the same question, until someone wants to get real and not just give you the answer you know is coming even before you ask."

Easy enough to do

Edgar Johnson makes the Blue Hens football schedules. His explanations have followed the same pattern for more than 20 years: The UD schedule is full and Delaware would rather play other schools than DSU. He continues to say Delaware will play Delaware State eventually, but won't say when or why UD has been disinclined so far.

In 2004, when Delaware scheduled conference rival New Hampshire, which it was not required to play that year, in a nonconference game, Johnson said, "We like to play New Hampshire." Likewise, in 2006, UD played league cohort Hofstra in a nonconference game.

Lavan said he believes the national attention brought by a Sept. 20 ESPN.com column, in which UD's resistance was viewed as racially motivated by author and UD graduate Jeff Pearlman, might cause change.

Some wonder, however, if the latest backlash will make UD dig in its heels even more so it isn't perceived as caving in, and thereby agreeing with, the criticism. Johnson isn't saying.

Harker, the new UD president, has pledged to give the issue close scrutiny, with some suggesting his arrival may signal a new way of thinking.

"It sounds complex, but it's not complex," Lavan said. "Just schedule the game."

DSU finds solace in big win over Hampton

By KRISTIAN POPE, The News Journal

Attendance: 7,195

Hornets honor victims of shooting

HAMPTON, Va. -- One special gesture in one sacred place would happen Saturday only if Delaware State was victorious in the one football game it knew it had to win.

On a picture-perfect afternoon at Hampton's Armstrong Stadium, Delaware State helped soothe the pain from the recent shooting of two students on campus by defeating the 13th-ranked Pirates, 24-17, in a game that could help determine the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference championship.

In the wake of the shooting in the early morning hours Sept. 21 that left students Shalita Middleton and Nathaniel Pugh wounded, the Hornets football team found solace in the end zone.

"We thought it was incredibly important to put into context, and that starts with our student-athletes," said DSU coach Al Lavan, who asked band director H. Wade Johnson to have his unit and the DSU cheerleaders join the team in the end zone. "The end zone is a sacred place for us.

"When we came back [the day after the shooting], we all talked about our success and failures as a society. They came back and practiced well [that day]."

Following the game, the Hornets somberly shook hands with Hampton players and then met in the end zone. There, they dedicated the game ball to the shooting victims, the first time under Lavan that someone other than a player received the game ball.

DSU, pursuing its first league championship since winning a share of the 1991 title, finally beat a championship contender on the road.

Photo: Kareem Jones fights his way past Hampton's Henti Baird. Jones rushed for a game-high 135 yards.

The win over Hampton, just the Hornets' second in the past 13 meetings with the Pirates, placed DSU (3-1 overall, 2-0 MEAC) atop the league standings.

It was the first loss for Hampton (3-1, 3-1) this season, and the first against a league opponent since Oct. 21, 2006, against South Carolina State.

The Pirates, looking every bit the team vying for its fourth straight championship, drove 75 yards to open the game, and took a 7-0 lead on Jerry Cummings' 15-yard run with 12:50 to go.

But DSU regrouped and began playing like a contender in the second quarter.

Hornets quarterback Vashon Winton found the end zone on a 1-yard carry early in the second quarter to tie it 7-7 with 11:45 left.

After a Hampton touchdown and a DSU field goal, Winton led a 90-yard drive and capped it with an 11-yard run with 21 seconds remaining in the first half.

Winton, looking to pass, instead found space through the front line, changed direction and scooted to the end zone, just squeaking between a defender and the pylon. The play gave DSU a 17-14 lead.

Winton finished 10-of-16 passing for 131 yards and rushed for 59 yards.

"That changed the game dramatically," Lavan said. "We simply couldn't do enough to make a difference early on."

Photo:The Hampton defense slows down Delaware State quarterback Vashon Winton in the first quarter Saturday. Winton threw for one TD and ran for two more as the Hornets improved to 2-0 in the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference.

Hampton tied it 17-17 on Carlo Turavani's 33-yard field goal in the fourth quarter. DSU scored what proved to be the winning touchdown on junior tight end Jeff Postell's 5-yard catch with 11:39 remaining. Postell leaped in the middle of several Hampton defenders but still brought down the ball. He was mauled afterward by teammates.

"I think the [shooting] incident made us more focused to get our goal," Postell said. "And that goal is to win a championship."

Junior running back Kareem Jones, starting his first game since the season opener, rushed for a game-high 135 yards.

Jones said he wasn't certain how his teammates would respond in this game, particularly after a bye week and against a team like Hampton.

"I wasn't sure how the team would react after an incident like this," Jones