Photo: UAPB Head Football Coach Mo Forte
Huntsville Times
Golden Lions have no controversy at QB
Arkansas-Pine Bluff coach Mo Forte said the Golden Lions are not entrenched in a quarterback controversy.
Starter Chris Wallace, the reigning Southwestern Athletic Conference Offensive Player of the Year, started the first two games before Jonathan Moore moved into the starting lineup. According to UAPB officials, Wallace didn't play against Alabama State and New Mexico State because of exhaustion, but saw action against Southern Illinois and Grambling.
In fact, Wallace threw what could have been a potential game-winning 63-yard touchdown pass to Jason Jones Saturday night against Grambling, but the play was nullified by a penalty.
Wallace replaced Moore, who bruised his throwing hand on a helmet, in the fourth quarter.
Moore was 16-of-32 for 276 yards, one touchdown and one interception before leaving the game. Wallace was 9-of-13 for 93 yards and a touchdown.
"It's never a controversy," Forte said when asked about the quarterbacks. "We don't deal with that up here. We go with the person that will give us the best opportunity to win."
Forte said Moore's status remains uncertain for Thursday's game at Alabama A&M.
"I'm not sure," he said. "It's up in the air right now. It depends on how he progresses over the next couple of days. Hopefully, he's going to be ready to play."
If Moore is unable to go, Forte says Wallace will be ready.
"Chris is as fine a person as you'll ever find and he's always ready to take the reigns," Forte said.
Richardson's career is over at A&M: Inside linebacker Jimmy Richardson has elected not to rejoin the team, A&M coach Anthony Jones confirmed Tuesday.
Richardson, a 6-foot-1, 232-pound senior from Orrville, left the team on Sept. 30 and never returned. He didn't practice the following week and didn't accompany the team to Baton Rouge, La., for an important game against Southern on Oct. 5.
Richardson met with Jones and his staff on Oct. 8 and hasn't been heard from since.
He was slated to start at inside linebacker before losing his job during training camp to Mississippi State transfer Carlton Rice. Richardson left the team for that reason, sources say.
"Jimmy Richardson has decided to pursue other endeavors," Jones said. "We wish him well."
Affordable tickets: Tickets for Thursday night's game against Arkansas-Pine Bluff are available at a reduced rate.
Any school in the Huntsville area is eligible to sell tickets to their students for $1. School officials have to pick up the tickets and distribute them on consignment at their respective schools.
Local church groups of 25 adults or more can purchase tickets in group quantity for $10 apiece. All student tickets (ages 6-18) are half price for the game at $3. These tickets are available at any time. General admission tickets that do not fall under one of these specials are $15 in advance and $18 the day of the game. For more information, contact the A&M ticket office at 372-4059. The offer ends today at 5 p.m.
Reggie Benson
The "unofficial" meeting place for intelligent discussions of Divisions I and II Sports of the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference (MEAC), Southwestern Athletic Conference (SWAC), Central Intercollegiate Athletic Association (CIAA), the Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (SIAC) and HBCU Athletic Conference (HBCUAC). America's #1 blog source for minority sports articles and videos. The MEAC, SWAC, CIAA, SIAC and HBCUAC colleges are building America's leaders, scholars and athletes.
Wednesday, October 17, 2007
Season is not golden for UAPB Lions
By REGGIE BENSON, Times Sports Staff
UAPB is 1-5 going into Thursday night's A&M game
This time last year, Arkansas-Pine Bluff was in the midst of one of the biggest turnarounds in school history.
The Golden Lions opened the season losing three of their first four games, but beat Tuskegee in the Gateway Classic that started a string of seven straight victories that carried them to the Southwestern Athletic Conference West Division title and a berth in the championship game.
Alabama A&M downed UAPB 22-13 in the title game. With a number of their top players returning, the Golden Lions were picked to repeat as West Division champions during the league's annual media day.
But UAPB hasn't lived up to the hype.
The Golden Lions are 1-5 overall and 1-3 in league play heading in Thursday night's game at Alabama A&M. Kickoff is 6:30 and the game will be televised live on ESPNU.
"This is one of the strangest seasons I've ever been in," UAPB coach Mo Forte said earlier this week. "We're 1-5 and five of those games have been on the road. This is the second Thursday night game we've had and both of them have been on the road and you only have two days to prepare.
"But, we're not going to complain. It's football and we're going to play the hand that we've been dealt."
Few expected the Golden Lions to be out of the West Division race this early.
Quarterback Chris Wallace, the reigning Offensive Player of the Year, was benched after two games. Running back Martel Mallett, who had almost 1,300 yards rushing and led the league with 15 touchdowns a year ago, has just 240 yards and two touchdowns. Wide receiver Jason Jones has been productive with 28 catches for 435 yards and two touchdowns, but even his numbers are down compared to last season.
The biggest problem, Forte said, has been UAPB's disappointing play along the offensive line. The Golden Lions have allowed 28 sacks through six games.
"We've struggled there," he said. "We've had a tough time with them. They've gotten better every week, but it hasn't been good enough to put a 'W' on the board."
UAPB suffered yet another tough loss Saturday as Grambling outlasted the Golden Lions 30-24 in Little Rock. It was UAPB's fourth loss by seven points or less this season.
"We've lost games by 2, 3, 6 and 7 points and all have been with under a minute left in the game," Forte said.
UAPB hurt itself with five turnovers and had more than 100 yards in penalties.
"You can't do that against a quality football team like Grambling and expect to beat them," Forte said.
About the visit to A&M, Forte said: "Our kids don't quit. We're going to play hard."
UAPB is 1-5 going into Thursday night's A&M game
This time last year, Arkansas-Pine Bluff was in the midst of one of the biggest turnarounds in school history.
The Golden Lions opened the season losing three of their first four games, but beat Tuskegee in the Gateway Classic that started a string of seven straight victories that carried them to the Southwestern Athletic Conference West Division title and a berth in the championship game.
Alabama A&M downed UAPB 22-13 in the title game. With a number of their top players returning, the Golden Lions were picked to repeat as West Division champions during the league's annual media day.
But UAPB hasn't lived up to the hype.
The Golden Lions are 1-5 overall and 1-3 in league play heading in Thursday night's game at Alabama A&M. Kickoff is 6:30 and the game will be televised live on ESPNU.
"This is one of the strangest seasons I've ever been in," UAPB coach Mo Forte said earlier this week. "We're 1-5 and five of those games have been on the road. This is the second Thursday night game we've had and both of them have been on the road and you only have two days to prepare.
"But, we're not going to complain. It's football and we're going to play the hand that we've been dealt."
Few expected the Golden Lions to be out of the West Division race this early.
Quarterback Chris Wallace, the reigning Offensive Player of the Year, was benched after two games. Running back Martel Mallett, who had almost 1,300 yards rushing and led the league with 15 touchdowns a year ago, has just 240 yards and two touchdowns. Wide receiver Jason Jones has been productive with 28 catches for 435 yards and two touchdowns, but even his numbers are down compared to last season.
The biggest problem, Forte said, has been UAPB's disappointing play along the offensive line. The Golden Lions have allowed 28 sacks through six games.
"We've struggled there," he said. "We've had a tough time with them. They've gotten better every week, but it hasn't been good enough to put a 'W' on the board."
UAPB suffered yet another tough loss Saturday as Grambling outlasted the Golden Lions 30-24 in Little Rock. It was UAPB's fourth loss by seven points or less this season.
"We've lost games by 2, 3, 6 and 7 points and all have been with under a minute left in the game," Forte said.
UAPB hurt itself with five turnovers and had more than 100 yards in penalties.
"You can't do that against a quality football team like Grambling and expect to beat them," Forte said.
About the visit to A&M, Forte said: "Our kids don't quit. We're going to play hard."
Case of deja vu confronts JSU Tigers
Rick Comegy received a reminder that he could have gone without Tuesday morning.
The second-year Jackson State coach was asked about being in familiar territory going into Saturday's noon kickoff against Grambling State (5-1, 5-0 SWAC).
JSU (4-2, 4-0) was undefeated in the SWAC after a win over Southern University last year. Up next was Grambling State. A 36-7 loss was the first of three straight before dropping four of five to end the season.
Comegy was asked how he planned to stop history from repeating itself.
"I don't plan to think about it," Comegy said. "I also plan to just play football.
"We grew as a football team. That's the major difference. No matter what happens ... if we stumble, I don't think we'll spiral."
40 YEARS AT MEMORIAL
A face-off between the last two teams undefeated in conference play draws plenty of interest.
The game being broadcast nationally on ESPN Classic adds a little more flavor.
Tack that onto the fact that Jackson State will celebrate 40 years of football at Mississippi Veterans Memorial Stadium by hosting Grambling State, and the atmosphere grows to red-line type proportions.
Jackson State College first kicked off a football game inside Memorial Stadium on Oct. 21, 1967 - a homecoming game against Grambling State.
Roderick Paige coached Jackson State to a 20-14 victory.
Hall of Fame coach Eddie Robinson led Grambling College. JSU will honor Robinson during Saturday's game.
INJURY REPORT
Starting center Lorenzo Breland suffered a stinger in the victory over Southern. Comegy said he should be fine to play Saturday.
Photo: Transfer RB, #3 Erik Haw, 6-1/215, Columbus, OH/Ohio State gain yards against Southern University in last week game.
-Kareen Copeland
The second-year Jackson State coach was asked about being in familiar territory going into Saturday's noon kickoff against Grambling State (5-1, 5-0 SWAC).
JSU (4-2, 4-0) was undefeated in the SWAC after a win over Southern University last year. Up next was Grambling State. A 36-7 loss was the first of three straight before dropping four of five to end the season.
Comegy was asked how he planned to stop history from repeating itself.
"I don't plan to think about it," Comegy said. "I also plan to just play football.
"We grew as a football team. That's the major difference. No matter what happens ... if we stumble, I don't think we'll spiral."
40 YEARS AT MEMORIAL
A face-off between the last two teams undefeated in conference play draws plenty of interest.
The game being broadcast nationally on ESPN Classic adds a little more flavor.
Tack that onto the fact that Jackson State will celebrate 40 years of football at Mississippi Veterans Memorial Stadium by hosting Grambling State, and the atmosphere grows to red-line type proportions.
Jackson State College first kicked off a football game inside Memorial Stadium on Oct. 21, 1967 - a homecoming game against Grambling State.
Roderick Paige coached Jackson State to a 20-14 victory.
Hall of Fame coach Eddie Robinson led Grambling College. JSU will honor Robinson during Saturday's game.
INJURY REPORT
Starting center Lorenzo Breland suffered a stinger in the victory over Southern. Comegy said he should be fine to play Saturday.
Photo: Transfer RB, #3 Erik Haw, 6-1/215, Columbus, OH/Ohio State gain yards against Southern University in last week game.
-Kareen Copeland
JSU Perri gives boot to concerns about consistency
By Kareem Copeland, Clarion Ledger
THE JSU GAME
What: Jackson State vs. Grambling State
When: Saturday, noon
TV: ESPN Classic
The Jackson State football staff nearly went recruiting for another kicker after last season.
Eric Perri was good as a freshman, connecting on 6 of 8 field goals. He had a strong leg, tying a school record that had stood since 1975 with a 45-yarer against Arkansas-Pine Bluff. The Miami native had the nerves, burying a 22-yarder to beat Southern University 31-28 in double overtime.
But he was erratic.
"We didn't know how good he would be," JSU coach Rick Comegy said. "He was kind of inconsistent that first year. We thought we might have to go out and find another guy because we didn't know if he would last."
The Tigers are no longer looking for another kicker.
Perri is one field goal from tying Eric Dozier (1983) and Adam Harris (1996) for the single-season school record (12). The sophomore is likely to cruise past that mark when Grambling State comes to town Saturday for a noon kickoff. He has gone 3-for-3 in three consecutive games and is 11-for-13 on the season, ranking No. 1 in the SWAC amongst kickers with eight or more attempts.
Perri leads the league in points (50), field goals made (11) and attempts (13). He is on track to shatter the JSU career record (29) set by Brian Reynolds.
"I never did imagine that," said James Hartfield, JSU's kicking coach. "I saw him on film and knew he was a good kicker. But I never imagined him doing what he's doing now."
Perri's progression from Year No. 1 to Year No. 2 has mostly taken place between the ears.
There was a lot repetition and technique work, but the mental hurdle was the largest.
"I've gotten him to just calm down," Hartfield said. "He gets upset in practice if he misses a field goal or misses an extra point.
"It was a mental thing. Last year we got a few of them blocked and he started looking up at the linemen instead of watching the ball and seeing where he was going. We've got him to trust his offensive linemen. If it gets blocked, it's not his fault; it's the linemen's fault."
Perri added, "I wanted it more. I've only got two years after this. I want to make (the most out of it). Be the best kicker I could."
The league's No. 1 kicker has added another dimension to offensive coordinator James Woody's weaponry.
The Jackson State offense ranks No. 3 in the conference in red zone offense, scoring on 22 of 27 trips (81.5 percent). Nine of those were field goals.
"It's a luxury situation," Woody said. "It does change the play-calling depending on the situation of the game. You would like to have that touchdown, but a lot of times you've got a great kicker and you really try to pound that clock and you can be conservative knowing you've got three solid points."
But there's a dangerous side to a life of luxury - complacency.
"It can make you relax and not push as hard on third down to get that crucial first down because you've got Eric in the corner," Comegy said. "We don't want to go there. But it's good to have a guy there who can really nail it when you need it."
Woody added, "I tell the quarterbacks, you don't want to try to force it ... and risk throwing an interception when you've got a kicker that can get you three points. (But) you don't want to get comfortable."
The situation makes no difference to Perri. He possesses a strong sense of self-motivation.
He has dedicated the season to his grandfather, William Perri, who died just before Perri returned for August football camp.
He just wants to win and fulfill a few personal goals along the way.
"Coming into the season I just wanted to do my job, basically try to improve on what I did last year," Perri said. "I wasn't really trying to break a record. I try to bail the guys out. Just in case they don't come out with seven, I come out with three.
"I want to be an All-American and have big dreams. If God puts me in the NFL that'd be great. That's what I'm working towards and hopefully get a championship ring here."
That and to keep Comegy from having to scour the nation for a kicker for another couple years.
THE JSU GAME
What: Jackson State vs. Grambling State
When: Saturday, noon
TV: ESPN Classic
The Jackson State football staff nearly went recruiting for another kicker after last season.
Eric Perri was good as a freshman, connecting on 6 of 8 field goals. He had a strong leg, tying a school record that had stood since 1975 with a 45-yarer against Arkansas-Pine Bluff. The Miami native had the nerves, burying a 22-yarder to beat Southern University 31-28 in double overtime.
But he was erratic.
"We didn't know how good he would be," JSU coach Rick Comegy said. "He was kind of inconsistent that first year. We thought we might have to go out and find another guy because we didn't know if he would last."
The Tigers are no longer looking for another kicker.
Perri is one field goal from tying Eric Dozier (1983) and Adam Harris (1996) for the single-season school record (12). The sophomore is likely to cruise past that mark when Grambling State comes to town Saturday for a noon kickoff. He has gone 3-for-3 in three consecutive games and is 11-for-13 on the season, ranking No. 1 in the SWAC amongst kickers with eight or more attempts.
Perri leads the league in points (50), field goals made (11) and attempts (13). He is on track to shatter the JSU career record (29) set by Brian Reynolds.
"I never did imagine that," said James Hartfield, JSU's kicking coach. "I saw him on film and knew he was a good kicker. But I never imagined him doing what he's doing now."
Perri's progression from Year No. 1 to Year No. 2 has mostly taken place between the ears.
There was a lot repetition and technique work, but the mental hurdle was the largest.
"I've gotten him to just calm down," Hartfield said. "He gets upset in practice if he misses a field goal or misses an extra point.
"It was a mental thing. Last year we got a few of them blocked and he started looking up at the linemen instead of watching the ball and seeing where he was going. We've got him to trust his offensive linemen. If it gets blocked, it's not his fault; it's the linemen's fault."
Perri added, "I wanted it more. I've only got two years after this. I want to make (the most out of it). Be the best kicker I could."
The league's No. 1 kicker has added another dimension to offensive coordinator James Woody's weaponry.
The Jackson State offense ranks No. 3 in the conference in red zone offense, scoring on 22 of 27 trips (81.5 percent). Nine of those were field goals.
"It's a luxury situation," Woody said. "It does change the play-calling depending on the situation of the game. You would like to have that touchdown, but a lot of times you've got a great kicker and you really try to pound that clock and you can be conservative knowing you've got three solid points."
But there's a dangerous side to a life of luxury - complacency.
"It can make you relax and not push as hard on third down to get that crucial first down because you've got Eric in the corner," Comegy said. "We don't want to go there. But it's good to have a guy there who can really nail it when you need it."
Woody added, "I tell the quarterbacks, you don't want to try to force it ... and risk throwing an interception when you've got a kicker that can get you three points. (But) you don't want to get comfortable."
The situation makes no difference to Perri. He possesses a strong sense of self-motivation.
He has dedicated the season to his grandfather, William Perri, who died just before Perri returned for August football camp.
He just wants to win and fulfill a few personal goals along the way.
"Coming into the season I just wanted to do my job, basically try to improve on what I did last year," Perri said. "I wasn't really trying to break a record. I try to bail the guys out. Just in case they don't come out with seven, I come out with three.
"I want to be an All-American and have big dreams. If God puts me in the NFL that'd be great. That's what I'm working towards and hopefully get a championship ring here."
That and to keep Comegy from having to scour the nation for a kicker for another couple years.
Photo: Jackson State University J-Settes member is ready for a high kick.
With Lee sidelined, Matthews ready to take helm for Southern
By JOSEPH SCHIEFELBEIN, Advocate sportswriter
There will be no safety net for Southern quarterback Warren Matthews on Saturday.
Last Saturday, Matthews knew all week he was going to start the Jackson State game. But he also knew the team’s No. 1 quarterback, Bryant Lee, had warmed up well and was ready to go on a sore right ankle that caused him to miss the major work days of game-week practice. With Lee’s ankle dramatically worse, Matthews will be on his own this Saturday.
“I feel comfortable with him,” offensive coordinator Mark Orlando said. “We’re not going to shut anything down of what we’re doing. We’ll keep rolling with what we’ve been doing.
“He’s excited about it. He’s enthused. He’s got a great attitude. He works hard.”
Southern (5-2, 3-2 Southwestern Athletic Conference) hosts Alcorn State (1-5, 1-4) at 3 p.m. Saturday in A.W. Mumford Stadium.
Matthews, who was redshirted and did not play last season after being out of football as a nonqualifier in 2005, is 6-for-12 for 83 yards and one touchdown.
Lee is 144-for-223 for 1,585 yards, 15 touchdowns and three interceptions this season.
“I know the offense and everything,” Matthews said. “It’s just a matter of execution.
“We’re just going to try to get the timing down.”
Matthews likely will be without senior wide receiver Gerard Landry (409 yards, eight touchdowns) but should have Del Roberts (279 yards, one touchdown).
Landry went out in the third quarter with a high ankle sprain. Roberts (back) missed all of the Jackson State loss and most of the Alabama A&M loss.
Junior C.J. Byrd, who missed most of preseason camp after being in a car accident in late July, will back Matthews.
Byrd started four games last season. He was 32-for-52 for 389 yards, three touchdowns and six interceptions. He also ran for 155 yards and four TDs.
“C.J. is going to have to get ready, because I think there are some things he can do,” Orlando said.
Matthews is a physically imposing 6-foot-3, 230 pounds, with the strongest arm on the team. Byrd is 5-11, 170. Lee is 6-2, 195.
“As far as knowing what we’re doing, he knows it, because, Lord, he’s had a ton of reps at it,” Orlando said. “I feel comfortable with the entire system with him.”
Last month, fifth-year senior J.C. Lewis, the No. 1 quarterback the previous two seasons, left the team after not seeing any action in the first two games.
Redshirt freshman Gary Hollimon is third on the depth chart.
Though the decision on who would be SU’s No. 1 quarterback was expected to be between Lee and Lewis, Matthews’ dramatic improvement in the spring changed all that.
Lee, SU’s starter at the end of last season, eventually outdueled Matthews in preseason camp. But the work Matthews, from Warren Easton High in New Orleans, put in during the spring and summer left an impression on coaches.
“Warren worked hard,” Orlando said. “It was a heckuva battle coming out of spring.
“He’s really improved a lot in the last year or so. He’s got a big-time arm.”
Though he had gotten the majority of practice reps the last two or three weeks to allow Lee more recuperative time, Matthews’ only collegiate action — until Saturday’s start — had been running the ball late in a season-opening win over Florida A&M.
With Matthews starting Saturday, Southern was three-and-out on its initial series. Matthews completed his first collegiate pass, a 5-yarder to Nick Benjamin, to set up a third-and-4. But the shotgun snap got botched, with Matthews falling on the ball for a 3-yard loss.
“I thought he was a little jittery early in the game but when he got settled down he did some good things,” Orlando said. “He was in a tough situation and I thought he did fine.”
Matthews didn’t return until after Lee went out midway through the third quarter.
Matthews directed a 10-play, 72-yard touchdown drive to get the Jaguars within 30-26 with 6:22 left in the game. He converted three third downs — a third-and-5, a third-and-10 and, on a 22-yard TD pass to Benjamin, a third-and-16.
“That’s why I practice,” Matthews said. “I knew going into the week I was going to start. I just had to do what I had to do to get prepared. I did all I could.”
The tradeoff for not having Lee to back him Saturday is Matthews now has some game experience.
“Now I have some experience dealing with the game speed,” Matthews said. “It’s much different. Since I have the experience, it’ll slow down for me once I get into my rhythm.
“After that first completion, it started to slow down.”
What Landry did best is what Matthews will have to do best: stay within the offense.
“Like I told Warren last week, you’ve got a lot of kids around you to help you win this ballgame,” Orlando said. “Don’t feel like you’ve got to go out there and win it yourself.”
“We’re not asking Matthews to win the game for us,” SU coach Pete Richardson said. “We’re just asking him to manage our football team. The players have confidence in him — and we have confidence in him — to do that.”
There will be no safety net for Southern quarterback Warren Matthews on Saturday.
Last Saturday, Matthews knew all week he was going to start the Jackson State game. But he also knew the team’s No. 1 quarterback, Bryant Lee, had warmed up well and was ready to go on a sore right ankle that caused him to miss the major work days of game-week practice. With Lee’s ankle dramatically worse, Matthews will be on his own this Saturday.
“I feel comfortable with him,” offensive coordinator Mark Orlando said. “We’re not going to shut anything down of what we’re doing. We’ll keep rolling with what we’ve been doing.
“He’s excited about it. He’s enthused. He’s got a great attitude. He works hard.”
Southern (5-2, 3-2 Southwestern Athletic Conference) hosts Alcorn State (1-5, 1-4) at 3 p.m. Saturday in A.W. Mumford Stadium.
Matthews, who was redshirted and did not play last season after being out of football as a nonqualifier in 2005, is 6-for-12 for 83 yards and one touchdown.
Lee is 144-for-223 for 1,585 yards, 15 touchdowns and three interceptions this season.
“I know the offense and everything,” Matthews said. “It’s just a matter of execution.
“We’re just going to try to get the timing down.”
Matthews likely will be without senior wide receiver Gerard Landry (409 yards, eight touchdowns) but should have Del Roberts (279 yards, one touchdown).
Landry went out in the third quarter with a high ankle sprain. Roberts (back) missed all of the Jackson State loss and most of the Alabama A&M loss.
Junior C.J. Byrd, who missed most of preseason camp after being in a car accident in late July, will back Matthews.
Byrd started four games last season. He was 32-for-52 for 389 yards, three touchdowns and six interceptions. He also ran for 155 yards and four TDs.
“C.J. is going to have to get ready, because I think there are some things he can do,” Orlando said.
Matthews is a physically imposing 6-foot-3, 230 pounds, with the strongest arm on the team. Byrd is 5-11, 170. Lee is 6-2, 195.
“As far as knowing what we’re doing, he knows it, because, Lord, he’s had a ton of reps at it,” Orlando said. “I feel comfortable with the entire system with him.”
Last month, fifth-year senior J.C. Lewis, the No. 1 quarterback the previous two seasons, left the team after not seeing any action in the first two games.
Redshirt freshman Gary Hollimon is third on the depth chart.
Though the decision on who would be SU’s No. 1 quarterback was expected to be between Lee and Lewis, Matthews’ dramatic improvement in the spring changed all that.
Lee, SU’s starter at the end of last season, eventually outdueled Matthews in preseason camp. But the work Matthews, from Warren Easton High in New Orleans, put in during the spring and summer left an impression on coaches.
“Warren worked hard,” Orlando said. “It was a heckuva battle coming out of spring.
“He’s really improved a lot in the last year or so. He’s got a big-time arm.”
Though he had gotten the majority of practice reps the last two or three weeks to allow Lee more recuperative time, Matthews’ only collegiate action — until Saturday’s start — had been running the ball late in a season-opening win over Florida A&M.
With Matthews starting Saturday, Southern was three-and-out on its initial series. Matthews completed his first collegiate pass, a 5-yarder to Nick Benjamin, to set up a third-and-4. But the shotgun snap got botched, with Matthews falling on the ball for a 3-yard loss.
“I thought he was a little jittery early in the game but when he got settled down he did some good things,” Orlando said. “He was in a tough situation and I thought he did fine.”
Matthews didn’t return until after Lee went out midway through the third quarter.
Matthews directed a 10-play, 72-yard touchdown drive to get the Jaguars within 30-26 with 6:22 left in the game. He converted three third downs — a third-and-5, a third-and-10 and, on a 22-yard TD pass to Benjamin, a third-and-16.
“That’s why I practice,” Matthews said. “I knew going into the week I was going to start. I just had to do what I had to do to get prepared. I did all I could.”
The tradeoff for not having Lee to back him Saturday is Matthews now has some game experience.
“Now I have some experience dealing with the game speed,” Matthews said. “It’s much different. Since I have the experience, it’ll slow down for me once I get into my rhythm.
“After that first completion, it started to slow down.”
What Landry did best is what Matthews will have to do best: stay within the offense.
“Like I told Warren last week, you’ve got a lot of kids around you to help you win this ballgame,” Orlando said. “Don’t feel like you’ve got to go out there and win it yourself.”
“We’re not asking Matthews to win the game for us,” SU coach Pete Richardson said. “We’re just asking him to manage our football team. The players have confidence in him — and we have confidence in him — to do that.”
Photo: Southern University Dancing Dolls performs during half-time.
Tuesday, October 16, 2007
Gallery & Half-Time Show: UAPB M4
The University of Arkansas Pine Bluff, Marching Musical Machine of the Mid-South (M4) and the Golden Girls (10/13/2007).
Making Tracks: WSSU Jeptolo excels in athletics, academics
Photos: Irene Jeptolo, 5-3 Jr.,St. Joseph's Girls H.S., Kapsabet, Kenya
By John Dell, JOURNAL REPORTER
It’s a shame that Irene Jeptolo’s cross-country season has come to an end because she has been on a serious roll for Winston-Salem State.
Jeptolo, a 23-year-old junior from Kenya, dominated just about every race she was in this fall, winning four times in six races. In the other two races she was good enough to finish in the top 10.
“I have been running well,” said Jeptolo, whose English has improved in her three years on campus. “I have had some good training thanks to my coaches and it’s given me a boost.”
Last week, in the Rams’ final meet of the fall, Jeptolo helped them to a third-place finish at the Erskine Invitational in Due West, S.C. She won the 5K with a time of 19 minutes, 12 seconds.
“It was nice to win again,” said Jeptolo, who transferred to WSSU three years ago from a community college in Arizona.
When the Rams were still competing in Division II, she was good enough at the regionals to qualify for the nationals in 2005. But since the Rams are in their transition to Division I they aren’t eligible for the postseason.
Coach Halcyon Blake, who is in her third season of coaching the cross-country and track teams, said that what is most amazing about Jeptolo is her mental toughness. Jeptolo is a nursing major who has been busy working at Baptist Hospital this semester.
“She is doing her clinical-rotation class at the hospital and makes rounds there all throughout the week and even some on the weekends,” Blake said. “And she still finds time to fit in her training.”
Jeptolo’s normal day begins at around 4:30 a.m. She gets to the hospital by 6 a.m. and is there until 2 p.m. before heading to practice.
“I want to either be a pediatric or geriatric nurse, I haven’t decided,” she said. “So this has been a busy semester but I don’t mind.”
Jeptolo is an honor-roll student who plans to graduate in December of 2008.
Perhaps Jeptolo’s best race came near Orlando, Fla., in a meet that had 386 runners. She ran the 5K in 18:16 and finished seventh.
“It was a sprint to the finish and she was right there, so it could have gone either way,” Blake said.
With the indoor-track season starting in late November, Jeptolo will turn her attention to the 3,000 and 1,500 meters. Blake said that Jeptolo might eventually be an outstanding steeplechase runner.
Jeptolo said that her success this fall has a lot to do with her training during the summer, a regimen that was set up by Blake.
“I was feeling that I was prepared for these races,” said Jeptolo who also won at the UNC Pembroke Invitational, the Old North State Championships in Greensboro and the Greensboro Invitational.
“Winning makes me very happy and I’m looking forward to the indoor season,” Jeptolo said.
“I’m having a lot of fun.”
It’s a shame that Irene Jeptolo’s cross-country season has come to an end because she has been on a serious roll for Winston-Salem State.
Jeptolo, a 23-year-old junior from Kenya, dominated just about every race she was in this fall, winning four times in six races. In the other two races she was good enough to finish in the top 10.
“I have been running well,” said Jeptolo, whose English has improved in her three years on campus. “I have had some good training thanks to my coaches and it’s given me a boost.”
Last week, in the Rams’ final meet of the fall, Jeptolo helped them to a third-place finish at the Erskine Invitational in Due West, S.C. She won the 5K with a time of 19 minutes, 12 seconds.
“It was nice to win again,” said Jeptolo, who transferred to WSSU three years ago from a community college in Arizona.
When the Rams were still competing in Division II, she was good enough at the regionals to qualify for the nationals in 2005. But since the Rams are in their transition to Division I they aren’t eligible for the postseason.
Coach Halcyon Blake, who is in her third season of coaching the cross-country and track teams, said that what is most amazing about Jeptolo is her mental toughness. Jeptolo is a nursing major who has been busy working at Baptist Hospital this semester.
“She is doing her clinical-rotation class at the hospital and makes rounds there all throughout the week and even some on the weekends,” Blake said. “And she still finds time to fit in her training.”
Jeptolo’s normal day begins at around 4:30 a.m. She gets to the hospital by 6 a.m. and is there until 2 p.m. before heading to practice.
“I want to either be a pediatric or geriatric nurse, I haven’t decided,” she said. “So this has been a busy semester but I don’t mind.”
Jeptolo is an honor-roll student who plans to graduate in December of 2008.
Perhaps Jeptolo’s best race came near Orlando, Fla., in a meet that had 386 runners. She ran the 5K in 18:16 and finished seventh.
“It was a sprint to the finish and she was right there, so it could have gone either way,” Blake said.
With the indoor-track season starting in late November, Jeptolo will turn her attention to the 3,000 and 1,500 meters. Blake said that Jeptolo might eventually be an outstanding steeplechase runner.
Jeptolo said that her success this fall has a lot to do with her training during the summer, a regimen that was set up by Blake.
“I was feeling that I was prepared for these races,” said Jeptolo who also won at the UNC Pembroke Invitational, the Old North State Championships in Greensboro and the Greensboro Invitational.
“Winning makes me very happy and I’m looking forward to the indoor season,” Jeptolo said.
“I’m having a lot of fun.”
Grambling's knack for the timely turnover keys its run
By Nick Deriso, Monroe News Star
GRAMBLING — Grambling State has built a 5-0 mark in the Southwestern Athletic Conference with an opportunistic defensive attack.
In fact, a league-best plus-eight turnover margin — which ties GSU with Alabama A&M — already includes 12 forced fumbles and 7 interceptions over the first six games.
Grambling had the same number of picks and just three more forced fumbles over the complete 11-game campaign in 2006.
There's a reason for the quick turnaround on takeaways, first-year GSU coach Rod Broadway says: Focus.
"We work on it every day," Broadway said. "We have a five-minute period each day where we work on takeaways — fumble recoveries, stripping the ball and interceptions. We work on all of those things."
In all, GSU would snatch four of five fumbles against Arkansas-Pine Bluff last week, while picking off two passes that led to 84 return yards in the other direction.
The result: A 30-24 win which, coupled with Southern's loss against Jackson State, put Grambling (5-1 overall; 5-0 in the SWAC) up by two the league race for the Western Division crown.
Most impressive was one stretch early in the third quarter when the Tigers held a slim 17-10 lead against Pine Bluff. Grambling would reel off three consecutive momentum-changing turnovers: DeMichael Dizer and Keefe Hall recovered consecutive fumbles, then Kenneth Anio picked off a pass.
The defense kept UAPB on its heels, even while Grambling's offense sputtered.
Anio also had a first-quarter takeaway last Saturday, though kicker Tim Manuel's subsequent 45-yard field goal attempt sailed wide left.
GSU quarterback Brandon Landers then gave the ball right back with his own interception between the Dizer and Hall fumble recoveries.
"We are plus-eight, but we are still turning ball over way too much," Broadway said. "We've had a chance to distance ourselves, scorewise, over the course of a couple of games, and we turned the ball over and let teams hang in there with us. That's the part that we've got to get corrected."
Up 14 points as the fourth period began, Landers saw another interception returned 50 yards to set up what would be UAPB's final score.
"That was a huge turnover," Broadway said. "They ran it back down to the 28-yard line and they were right back in the football game."
It was a scenario eerily similar to Grambling's late-game fade against Prairie View, another contest that saw takeaways lead to a razor-thin margin of victory. Landers had an untimely interception returned 24-yards for a touchdown to tie things up in the first possession of the fourth quarter at the State Fair Classic.
A penalty for an illegal shift saved Grambling last week, as a blocked kick had before in Dallas against Prairie View.
"Even though we are plus-eight," Broadway said, "we've got to protect the football a little bit better than we have been."
Yet another forced UAPB fumble, again by Dizer, led to Grambling's final touchdown — the deciding points of the game in Little Rock.
NEW ALL OVER AGAIN: Freshman Grambling running back Frank Warren has won his third player of the week honor from the Southwestern Athletic Conference.
Each time, he was named newcomer of the week.
Warren helped Grambling to a Saturday night win against Arkansas-Pine Bluff with 92 yards and two critical touchdowns on 17 carries. He ran for 14-yard, second-quarter TD to begin a rally after GSU fell behind 10-0 then completed the Tigers' scoring with an 18-yard blast on the way to a 30-24 victory.
Warren earned previous newcomer awards after victories over Alcorn State and Mississippi Valley. He is currently third in the SWAC with 528 yards, second with 110 attempts and fifth in the league for yards per game with 88.
Grambling teammate Tim Manuel was also named the SWAC's specialist of the week, after averaging 43 yards per punt, hitting a 45-yard field goal to pull GSU even with Pine Bluff and adding three extra points.
MOVING ON UP: With its fourth straight SWAC win, and fifth overall, Grambling moved from No. 25 to 23 in the Sports Network's poll of Football Championship Subdivision (formerly I-AA) teams.
GSU is the only SWAC team in the Top 25, though Alabama A&M appears at No. 28. Grambling's Saturday foe Jackson State follows at No. 37, with in-state rival Southern at No. 41.
GRAMBLING — Grambling State has built a 5-0 mark in the Southwestern Athletic Conference with an opportunistic defensive attack.
In fact, a league-best plus-eight turnover margin — which ties GSU with Alabama A&M — already includes 12 forced fumbles and 7 interceptions over the first six games.
Grambling had the same number of picks and just three more forced fumbles over the complete 11-game campaign in 2006.
There's a reason for the quick turnaround on takeaways, first-year GSU coach Rod Broadway says: Focus.
"We work on it every day," Broadway said. "We have a five-minute period each day where we work on takeaways — fumble recoveries, stripping the ball and interceptions. We work on all of those things."
In all, GSU would snatch four of five fumbles against Arkansas-Pine Bluff last week, while picking off two passes that led to 84 return yards in the other direction.
The result: A 30-24 win which, coupled with Southern's loss against Jackson State, put Grambling (5-1 overall; 5-0 in the SWAC) up by two the league race for the Western Division crown.
Most impressive was one stretch early in the third quarter when the Tigers held a slim 17-10 lead against Pine Bluff. Grambling would reel off three consecutive momentum-changing turnovers: DeMichael Dizer and Keefe Hall recovered consecutive fumbles, then Kenneth Anio picked off a pass.
The defense kept UAPB on its heels, even while Grambling's offense sputtered.
Anio also had a first-quarter takeaway last Saturday, though kicker Tim Manuel's subsequent 45-yard field goal attempt sailed wide left.
GSU quarterback Brandon Landers then gave the ball right back with his own interception between the Dizer and Hall fumble recoveries.
"We are plus-eight, but we are still turning ball over way too much," Broadway said. "We've had a chance to distance ourselves, scorewise, over the course of a couple of games, and we turned the ball over and let teams hang in there with us. That's the part that we've got to get corrected."
Up 14 points as the fourth period began, Landers saw another interception returned 50 yards to set up what would be UAPB's final score.
"That was a huge turnover," Broadway said. "They ran it back down to the 28-yard line and they were right back in the football game."
It was a scenario eerily similar to Grambling's late-game fade against Prairie View, another contest that saw takeaways lead to a razor-thin margin of victory. Landers had an untimely interception returned 24-yards for a touchdown to tie things up in the first possession of the fourth quarter at the State Fair Classic.
A penalty for an illegal shift saved Grambling last week, as a blocked kick had before in Dallas against Prairie View.
"Even though we are plus-eight," Broadway said, "we've got to protect the football a little bit better than we have been."
Yet another forced UAPB fumble, again by Dizer, led to Grambling's final touchdown — the deciding points of the game in Little Rock.
NEW ALL OVER AGAIN: Freshman Grambling running back Frank Warren has won his third player of the week honor from the Southwestern Athletic Conference.
Each time, he was named newcomer of the week.
Warren helped Grambling to a Saturday night win against Arkansas-Pine Bluff with 92 yards and two critical touchdowns on 17 carries. He ran for 14-yard, second-quarter TD to begin a rally after GSU fell behind 10-0 then completed the Tigers' scoring with an 18-yard blast on the way to a 30-24 victory.
Warren earned previous newcomer awards after victories over Alcorn State and Mississippi Valley. He is currently third in the SWAC with 528 yards, second with 110 attempts and fifth in the league for yards per game with 88.
Grambling teammate Tim Manuel was also named the SWAC's specialist of the week, after averaging 43 yards per punt, hitting a 45-yard field goal to pull GSU even with Pine Bluff and adding three extra points.
MOVING ON UP: With its fourth straight SWAC win, and fifth overall, Grambling moved from No. 25 to 23 in the Sports Network's poll of Football Championship Subdivision (formerly I-AA) teams.
GSU is the only SWAC team in the Top 25, though Alabama A&M appears at No. 28. Grambling's Saturday foe Jackson State follows at No. 37, with in-state rival Southern at No. 41.
Alabama A&M notebook
Huntsville Times
Despite record, Golden Lions concern Jones
Alabama A&M coach Anthony Jones admits Arkansas-Pine Bluff scares him. The Golden Lions should.
UAPB (1-5 overall, 1-3 Southwestern Athletic Conference) has been in virtually every game aside from being blown out at nationally ranked Southern Illinois.
That includes a 20-17 loss at New Mexico State in a game where the Aggies kicked a field goal as time expired to escape with the victory.
"I know the potential that UAPB has," Jones said. "They have a good coaching staff. They were picked to win the West. They're putting their stuff together. They've been in all of their games except one. This is a team you can't overlook. They're going to be very, very tough."
The Golden Lions came within an eyelash of knocking off West Division-leading Grambling on Saturday in Little Rock before falling 30-24.
"Anytime you play Grambling down to the wire, it says something about your program and about your team," Jones said. They're playing everybody tough. I know this team is capable of beating us.
They proved that last year. They're a team that concerns me."
Contract still unsigned:Jones had hoped to sign his contract last week, but after reviewing it, he gave it back to athletic director Betty Austin with some revisions.
"I gave my thoughts to it and now I'm just waiting," said Jones, who gave the contract back to Austin on Thursday. "I'm hoping everything is going in a positive manner. I'm not really concerned with that now. I'm just waiting to hear back from there."
The school's board of trustees approved a package last summer that would pay Jones a total package of $155,000, which would make him the fourth-highest paid coach in the league.
Affordable tickets: Tickets for Thursday night's game against Arkansas-Pine Bluff are available at a reduced rate.
Any school in the Huntsville area is eligible to sell tickets to their students for $1.
School officials have to pick up the tickets and distribute them on consignment at their respective schools.
For more information, contact the A&M ticket office at 372-4059. The offer ends Wednesday at 5 p.m.
Local church groups of 25 adults or more can purchase tickets in group quantity for $10 apiece.
All student tickets (ages 6-18) are half price for the game at $3. These tickets are available at any time. General admission tickets that do not fall under one of these specials are $15 in advance and $18 the day of the game.
The A&M ticket office will be open this week from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Reggie Benson
Alabama A&M coach Anthony Jones admits Arkansas-Pine Bluff scares him. The Golden Lions should.
UAPB (1-5 overall, 1-3 Southwestern Athletic Conference) has been in virtually every game aside from being blown out at nationally ranked Southern Illinois.
That includes a 20-17 loss at New Mexico State in a game where the Aggies kicked a field goal as time expired to escape with the victory.
"I know the potential that UAPB has," Jones said. "They have a good coaching staff. They were picked to win the West. They're putting their stuff together. They've been in all of their games except one. This is a team you can't overlook. They're going to be very, very tough."
The Golden Lions came within an eyelash of knocking off West Division-leading Grambling on Saturday in Little Rock before falling 30-24.
"Anytime you play Grambling down to the wire, it says something about your program and about your team," Jones said. They're playing everybody tough. I know this team is capable of beating us.
They proved that last year. They're a team that concerns me."
Contract still unsigned:Jones had hoped to sign his contract last week, but after reviewing it, he gave it back to athletic director Betty Austin with some revisions.
"I gave my thoughts to it and now I'm just waiting," said Jones, who gave the contract back to Austin on Thursday. "I'm hoping everything is going in a positive manner. I'm not really concerned with that now. I'm just waiting to hear back from there."
The school's board of trustees approved a package last summer that would pay Jones a total package of $155,000, which would make him the fourth-highest paid coach in the league.
Affordable tickets: Tickets for Thursday night's game against Arkansas-Pine Bluff are available at a reduced rate.
Any school in the Huntsville area is eligible to sell tickets to their students for $1.
School officials have to pick up the tickets and distribute them on consignment at their respective schools.
For more information, contact the A&M ticket office at 372-4059. The offer ends Wednesday at 5 p.m.
Local church groups of 25 adults or more can purchase tickets in group quantity for $10 apiece.
All student tickets (ages 6-18) are half price for the game at $3. These tickets are available at any time. General admission tickets that do not fall under one of these specials are $15 in advance and $18 the day of the game.
The A&M ticket office will be open this week from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Reggie Benson
Matthews to start at QB for SU
By JOSEPH SCHIEFELBEIN, Advocate sportswriter
Southern likely will be without sophomore quarterback Bryant Lee and senior wide receiver Gerard Landry when the Jaguars host Alcorn State at 3 p.m. Saturday.
Lee and Landry both went down with ankle injuries in the third quarter of a 32-26 loss to Jackson State on Saturday.
SU coach Pete Richardson said both are “questionable.”
Lee re-aggravated a right ankle sprain that has bothered him since the second game of the season.
Lee had a brace around the injury last week and sophomore Warren Matthews got most of the first-team reps throughout the week, then started and played the first series against Jackson State in place of Lee.
Matthews, who did not return to the game until Lee went out, will make his second start and this time he’ll stay in the game.
Lee, who started late last season, edged Matthews, who never played last season, in a preseason duel.
Photo: QB Warren Matthews will make his second start for Southern.
“The only thing he’s lacking is experience,” Richardson said of Matthews. “And the only way to get that is to play.”
SU coaches want Lee (144-for-223 for 1,585 yards, 15 touchdowns and three interceptions) to rest Saturday and then have the benefit of an open week. They’d prefer Lee not to risk further injury.
Junior C.J. Byrd, who started in the middle of last season, will be Matthews’ backup, Richardson said.
With fifth-year senior J.C. Lewis leaving the team last month, the team’s three healthy quarterbacks are Matthews, Byrd and redshirt freshman Gary Hollimon.
Matthews, who was 6-for-12 for 83 yards and one touchdown Saturday, likely won’t have the benefit of throwing to the team’s top playmaker.
Landry has a high left ankle sprain and, like Lee, needs rest.
Landry has a touchdown catch in all seven games and eight TDs overall, along with team highs of 34 catches and 409 yards.
“It’s just how much pain tolerance he’s going to be able to take,” Richardson said.
The injuries to Lee and Landry are just two concerning Southern.
True freshman linebacker Corey Ray (left shoulder) will need arthroscopic surgery that likely will end his season, Richardson said.
Ray had reconstructive surgery on the left shoulder in February after having surgery on the right one in late December.
“It depends on him. It’ll take awhile (to recover),” Richardson said.
Sophomore linebacker Allan Baugh (left knee) had an MRI on Monday. Baugh was on crutches Sunday when the Jaguars had a light practice. (SU did not practice Monday.)
Richardson said he expects junior linebacker Johnathan Malveaux to return Saturday after missing the previous three games with a high ankle sprain. Malveaux is the team’s most experienced linebacker and he was SU’s top tackler before the injury.
Malveaux dressed for the Jackson State game, and coaches considered playing him.
Richardson said he also expects junior wide receiver Del Roberts (back) and senior center Demarcus Stewart (calf) to return Saturday. Both missed the Jackson State game.
Roberts, with 30 catches for 279 yards and one touchdown and five rushes for 55 yards, plays a key role in the offense. With Roberts playing little in the loss to Alabama A&M and not at all in the JSU game, the SU offense lost a key component.
Also, Richardson said sophomore wide receiver Juamorris Stewart (concussion) to be fully recovered. Juamorris Stewart did not start, played sparingly and did not catch a pass for the first time this season.
Richardson said junior running back Kendrick Smith (foot), who has missed the last three games, is “questionable” to play Saturday. Smith is off crutches and out of his walking boot, but was still not walking smoothly.
Southern University Human Jukebox Marching Band and the Dancing Dolls (10/13/2007) vs. JSU Tigers
Southern likely will be without sophomore quarterback Bryant Lee and senior wide receiver Gerard Landry when the Jaguars host Alcorn State at 3 p.m. Saturday.
Lee and Landry both went down with ankle injuries in the third quarter of a 32-26 loss to Jackson State on Saturday.
SU coach Pete Richardson said both are “questionable.”
Lee re-aggravated a right ankle sprain that has bothered him since the second game of the season.
Lee had a brace around the injury last week and sophomore Warren Matthews got most of the first-team reps throughout the week, then started and played the first series against Jackson State in place of Lee.
Matthews, who did not return to the game until Lee went out, will make his second start and this time he’ll stay in the game.
Lee, who started late last season, edged Matthews, who never played last season, in a preseason duel.
Photo: QB Warren Matthews will make his second start for Southern.
“The only thing he’s lacking is experience,” Richardson said of Matthews. “And the only way to get that is to play.”
SU coaches want Lee (144-for-223 for 1,585 yards, 15 touchdowns and three interceptions) to rest Saturday and then have the benefit of an open week. They’d prefer Lee not to risk further injury.
Junior C.J. Byrd, who started in the middle of last season, will be Matthews’ backup, Richardson said.
With fifth-year senior J.C. Lewis leaving the team last month, the team’s three healthy quarterbacks are Matthews, Byrd and redshirt freshman Gary Hollimon.
Matthews, who was 6-for-12 for 83 yards and one touchdown Saturday, likely won’t have the benefit of throwing to the team’s top playmaker.
Landry has a high left ankle sprain and, like Lee, needs rest.
Landry has a touchdown catch in all seven games and eight TDs overall, along with team highs of 34 catches and 409 yards.
“It’s just how much pain tolerance he’s going to be able to take,” Richardson said.
The injuries to Lee and Landry are just two concerning Southern.
True freshman linebacker Corey Ray (left shoulder) will need arthroscopic surgery that likely will end his season, Richardson said.
Ray had reconstructive surgery on the left shoulder in February after having surgery on the right one in late December.
“It depends on him. It’ll take awhile (to recover),” Richardson said.
Sophomore linebacker Allan Baugh (left knee) had an MRI on Monday. Baugh was on crutches Sunday when the Jaguars had a light practice. (SU did not practice Monday.)
Richardson said he expects junior linebacker Johnathan Malveaux to return Saturday after missing the previous three games with a high ankle sprain. Malveaux is the team’s most experienced linebacker and he was SU’s top tackler before the injury.
Malveaux dressed for the Jackson State game, and coaches considered playing him.
Richardson said he also expects junior wide receiver Del Roberts (back) and senior center Demarcus Stewart (calf) to return Saturday. Both missed the Jackson State game.
Roberts, with 30 catches for 279 yards and one touchdown and five rushes for 55 yards, plays a key role in the offense. With Roberts playing little in the loss to Alabama A&M and not at all in the JSU game, the SU offense lost a key component.
Also, Richardson said sophomore wide receiver Juamorris Stewart (concussion) to be fully recovered. Juamorris Stewart did not start, played sparingly and did not catch a pass for the first time this season.
Richardson said junior running back Kendrick Smith (foot), who has missed the last three games, is “questionable” to play Saturday. Smith is off crutches and out of his walking boot, but was still not walking smoothly.
Southern University Human Jukebox Marching Band and the Dancing Dolls (10/13/2007) vs. JSU Tigers
Thomas expects loud fans at Southern
By JOSEPH SCHIEFELBEIN, Advocate sportswriter
Alcorn State coach Johnny Thomas on Monday used the word “hostile” twice, first describing the crowd and then the environment at A.W. Mumford Stadium, while discussing Saturday’s game at Southern.
However, avoiding a duplicate of the firestorm that began with Jackson State coach Rick Comegy’s remarks on the same Southwestern Athletic Conference teleconference the week before, Thomas quickly explained he meant “hostile” in a positive manner.
“They’re going to be excited, loud and ready for the football game,” Thomas said.
A week earlier, Comegy talked about the upcoming game at Southern as being played in a “hostile situation.”
“I know a lot of people aren’t taking their families. They’re leaving their kids here,” Comegy said.
Those remarks eventually drew a Tuesday statement regretting any misunderstanding from the school’s president and a Wednesday reprimand from the SWAC.
Before a 32-26 victory over Southern in front of 24,600, including a large contingent of Jackson State fans, Saturday, Comegy did not come on the field during pregame warmups and, when he took to the sideline with his team, was flanked by law enforcement representatives.
The game was Comegy’s first at Mumford Stadium.
There were no apparent major incidents Saturday.
Alcorn’s run at SU
Alcorn has won its last three games at Mumford Stadium — 22-20 in 2002, 36-34 in ’03 and 38-16 in ’05.
Thomas said there is no common thread to the successful run.
“I don’t know what it is. I certainly can’t put my hand on it,” Thomas said.
The biggest victory of those three came in 2003, when Donald Carrie, with a Southern defender wrapped around his waist, threw a 24-yard touchdown strike to Charlie Spiller with 40 seconds left in the game. That was the only loss that season for SU, which won the SWAC and black college national titles with a 12-1 mark.
Close first win
In a game matching winless teams, Alcorn escaped from Texas Southern with a 22-20 victory Saturday after a 23-yard field-goal try from TSU’s D’Javan Conway went wide right as time expired. TSU, behind third-string quarterback Donnie Shorts, drove 72 yards with no time outs in the final 1:11 to set up the try.
“Our team now has some confidence,” Thomas said. “We still need to make tremendous improvement on offense, defense and special teams. We can’t play the way we did against Texas Southern against Southern.”
TSU outgained Alcorn 309-147.
Quick look at Southern
Of Southern, Thomas said, “Southern has a winning tradition, outstanding coaching staff and a quality football program. Going down on the Bluff is going to be a tremendous challenge.”
Quick look at Alcorn
Of Alcorn, SU coach Pete Richardson said, “Offensively, they have seven or eight starters who are seniors. (Nate) Hughes is one of the finest wide receivers in the whole conference. Defensively, they’re going to create a lot of pressure. They’re going to play man-to-man (in the secondary).”
Notes
After going 0-11 in 2000, Alcorn has had six straight winning seasons — going 7-4 in 2003 and ’04 and 6-5 in the other four seasons. SU true freshman P Josh Duran is 35th nationally in punting, at 40.5 yards per punt.
Alcorn State coach Johnny Thomas on Monday used the word “hostile” twice, first describing the crowd and then the environment at A.W. Mumford Stadium, while discussing Saturday’s game at Southern.
However, avoiding a duplicate of the firestorm that began with Jackson State coach Rick Comegy’s remarks on the same Southwestern Athletic Conference teleconference the week before, Thomas quickly explained he meant “hostile” in a positive manner.
“They’re going to be excited, loud and ready for the football game,” Thomas said.
A week earlier, Comegy talked about the upcoming game at Southern as being played in a “hostile situation.”
“I know a lot of people aren’t taking their families. They’re leaving their kids here,” Comegy said.
Those remarks eventually drew a Tuesday statement regretting any misunderstanding from the school’s president and a Wednesday reprimand from the SWAC.
Before a 32-26 victory over Southern in front of 24,600, including a large contingent of Jackson State fans, Saturday, Comegy did not come on the field during pregame warmups and, when he took to the sideline with his team, was flanked by law enforcement representatives.
The game was Comegy’s first at Mumford Stadium.
There were no apparent major incidents Saturday.
Alcorn’s run at SU
Alcorn has won its last three games at Mumford Stadium — 22-20 in 2002, 36-34 in ’03 and 38-16 in ’05.
Thomas said there is no common thread to the successful run.
“I don’t know what it is. I certainly can’t put my hand on it,” Thomas said.
The biggest victory of those three came in 2003, when Donald Carrie, with a Southern defender wrapped around his waist, threw a 24-yard touchdown strike to Charlie Spiller with 40 seconds left in the game. That was the only loss that season for SU, which won the SWAC and black college national titles with a 12-1 mark.
Close first win
In a game matching winless teams, Alcorn escaped from Texas Southern with a 22-20 victory Saturday after a 23-yard field-goal try from TSU’s D’Javan Conway went wide right as time expired. TSU, behind third-string quarterback Donnie Shorts, drove 72 yards with no time outs in the final 1:11 to set up the try.
“Our team now has some confidence,” Thomas said. “We still need to make tremendous improvement on offense, defense and special teams. We can’t play the way we did against Texas Southern against Southern.”
TSU outgained Alcorn 309-147.
Quick look at Southern
Of Southern, Thomas said, “Southern has a winning tradition, outstanding coaching staff and a quality football program. Going down on the Bluff is going to be a tremendous challenge.”
Quick look at Alcorn
Of Alcorn, SU coach Pete Richardson said, “Offensively, they have seven or eight starters who are seniors. (Nate) Hughes is one of the finest wide receivers in the whole conference. Defensively, they’re going to create a lot of pressure. They’re going to play man-to-man (in the secondary).”
Notes
After going 0-11 in 2000, Alcorn has had six straight winning seasons — going 7-4 in 2003 and ’04 and 6-5 in the other four seasons. SU true freshman P Josh Duran is 35th nationally in punting, at 40.5 yards per punt.
Streaking JSU Tigers eye penalty woes
By Kareem Copeland, Clarion Ledger
THE JSU GAME
What: Jackson State vs. Grambling State
When: noon Saturday
TV: ESPN Classic
Life is sweet around the campus of Jackson State with the football team winning four straight games.
The Tigers (4-2, 4-0 SWAC) rank in the league's top four in total offense, total defense, scoring offense and scoring defense.
And a victory over Grambling State (5-1, 5-0) on Saturday would leave JSU as the lone undefeated team in conference play.
But two statistical categories loom over the team, waiting to wreak havoc at an inopportune time.
Jackson State is dead last in penalty yardage (105.2 ypg) and No. 6 in turnover margin (minus-1).
The Tigers pulled out a 32-26 victory over Southern last weekend, but were flagged nine times for 53 yards. The Jaguars were plus-3 in turnovers.
JSU was flagged eight times for 142 yards in a 32-20 win over Alabama State two weeks ago. The Hornets were plus-1 in turnovers.
Neither game would have been as close if not for JSU penalties and turnovers.
PLAYERS OF THE WEEK
Jackson State receiver Chris Johnson was tabbed SWAC Offensive Player of the Week after five receptions for a career-high 160 yards and a touchdown.
Prairie View A&M defensive end Jon Johnson was the defensive representative after 10 tackles, one for loss, three quarterback hurries and a sack in a 17-6 win over Alabama State.
Grambling State freshman running back Frank Warren was named Newcomer of the Week after 92 rushing yards on 17 carries, including two touchdowns.
Grambling State's Tim Manuel was the top specialist of the weekend. The senior averaged 43.1 yards on seven punts, downing three inside the 20-yard line. Manuel also connected on a 45-yard field goal and three extra points.
Jackson State University Sonic Boom of the South Marching Band and the J-Settes (10/13/2007) leaving Southern's A.W. Mumford Stadium after VICTORY over Jaguars.
THE JSU GAME
What: Jackson State vs. Grambling State
When: noon Saturday
TV: ESPN Classic
Life is sweet around the campus of Jackson State with the football team winning four straight games.
The Tigers (4-2, 4-0 SWAC) rank in the league's top four in total offense, total defense, scoring offense and scoring defense.
And a victory over Grambling State (5-1, 5-0) on Saturday would leave JSU as the lone undefeated team in conference play.
But two statistical categories loom over the team, waiting to wreak havoc at an inopportune time.
Jackson State is dead last in penalty yardage (105.2 ypg) and No. 6 in turnover margin (minus-1).
The Tigers pulled out a 32-26 victory over Southern last weekend, but were flagged nine times for 53 yards. The Jaguars were plus-3 in turnovers.
JSU was flagged eight times for 142 yards in a 32-20 win over Alabama State two weeks ago. The Hornets were plus-1 in turnovers.
Neither game would have been as close if not for JSU penalties and turnovers.
PLAYERS OF THE WEEK
Jackson State receiver Chris Johnson was tabbed SWAC Offensive Player of the Week after five receptions for a career-high 160 yards and a touchdown.
Prairie View A&M defensive end Jon Johnson was the defensive representative after 10 tackles, one for loss, three quarterback hurries and a sack in a 17-6 win over Alabama State.
Grambling State freshman running back Frank Warren was named Newcomer of the Week after 92 rushing yards on 17 carries, including two touchdowns.
Grambling State's Tim Manuel was the top specialist of the weekend. The senior averaged 43.1 yards on seven punts, downing three inside the 20-yard line. Manuel also connected on a 45-yard field goal and three extra points.
Jackson State University Sonic Boom of the South Marching Band and the J-Settes (10/13/2007) leaving Southern's A.W. Mumford Stadium after VICTORY over Jaguars.
A welcome opportunity for JSU
By REGGIE BENSON, Times Sports Staff
Once hoping to land at Tennessee, Johnson is thankful to be at A&M
Two years ago, Rashad Johnson was headed to the University of Tennessee. At least, that was the plan. However, those plans were derailed and he landed at Alabama A&M instead.
The Vols' loss has clearly been the Bulldogs' gain as Johnson has emerged into a key contributor at wide receiver in his first season.
A 5-foot-10, 185-pound freshman from Mobile, Johnson had an outstanding senior year at Murphy High School, catching 37 balls for more than 700 yards and 12 touchdowns. A number of schools recruited Johnson, but he wanted to play at Tennessee.
That dream ended when Johnson failed to make the required score on the ACT. Then Jones got in trouble with the law when one of his friends picked him up from work in a stolen car.
"We got pulled over," Johnson said. "I had no idea it was a stolen car."
With few options, Johnson's mother spoke with then-A&M offensive coordinator Stan Conner.
"Coach Conner told me if I came up here and got eligible, I could get a scholarship and play," Johnson said.
Johnson isn't on scholarship yet, but if he keeps playing the way he has through the Bulldogs' first six games, he'll certainly earn one.
Johnson has just only nine catches, but four have gone for touchdowns, which is second on the team. He is averaging 16.2 yards per catch, third-best on the squad.
That's not bad for a guy who wasn't invited to training camp until after it began.
"I guess they figured I really didn't want to play," said Johnson, who was named A&M's offensive player of the week after catching three passes for 40 yards, including a pair of touchdowns in the Bulldogs' 33-28 win over Southern more than a week ago. "I was determined to play. I sat out last year and I realized how much I loved football.
"I went out there with the mind-set I wanted to play and showed them what I could do."
Receivers coach Willie Totten noticed Johnson on his first day of practice.
"It was a Wednesday night," Totten said. "He was wearing No. 46 and we were doing 1-on-1s. He had great acceleration. He was aggressive. He's got a little different attitude than some of our other receivers. That caught my attention.
"I knew he could help us. He kept getting better and better and I told Coach (Anthony) Jones we needed to consider him. He was hungry. He was very attentive to what we were doing."
It didn't take Johnson long to make an impact.
He had just two catches for 14 yards in the season opener against Tennessee State, but had three catches for 94 yards and a pair of touchdowns in the home opener against Clark Atlanta, including a 65-yarder.
Johnson managed just one catch over the next three games, but he came up big against Southern as A&M hung on for a big conference road win.
"Coach Totten told me to be patient and just keep running my routes," Johnson said. "I had to wait until my number was called and that's when I stepped up."
Johnson hauled in a 12-yard touchdown pass from Kelcy Luke to stake the Bulldogs to an early 7-0 lead. Later, Johnson threw a key blocked that allowed wide receiver Gerald Stockdale to find Thomas Harris with a 55-yard touchdown pass. Then, early in the second quarter, Luke found Johnson with a 18-yard touchdown pass.
While Johnson was happy with the touchdown catches, he was more thrilled about throwing the block that led to Harris' touchdown.
"When Stockdale came in motion, I knew his man was going to come with him," Johnson explained. "As soon as he got the ball, he faked like he was going to run the ball and his man came crashing down. I pushed him as far as I could to the sideline and Stockdale was able to throw it to Harris."
Johnson hopes to continue his strong play Thursday night when A&M hosts Arkansas-Pine Bluff in a Southwestern Athletic Conference game. Kickoff is at 6:30 and the game will be televised live on ESPNU.
While Johnson is happy to be at A&M, Jones is equally excited to have him on the team. "He's been a great addition to our program," Jones said. "He just needed polishing. Coach Totten has done a great job of grooming him. "While he's been a great addition to our program, we've been a great addition to him and his development on and off the field."
Totten agreed.
"After the Clark Atlanta game, he came to me and said thank you," Totten said. "I didn't understand what he meant at the time. He said 'I appreciate you giving me a chance.' That still sticks with me today.
"He wants to prove to people that he's not the person people think he is. Those are the things that encourage me about Johnson. He's got a great attitude and he's trying to find his place in society. ... This football program is probably saving Johnson's life."
Once hoping to land at Tennessee, Johnson is thankful to be at A&M
Two years ago, Rashad Johnson was headed to the University of Tennessee. At least, that was the plan. However, those plans were derailed and he landed at Alabama A&M instead.
The Vols' loss has clearly been the Bulldogs' gain as Johnson has emerged into a key contributor at wide receiver in his first season.
A 5-foot-10, 185-pound freshman from Mobile, Johnson had an outstanding senior year at Murphy High School, catching 37 balls for more than 700 yards and 12 touchdowns. A number of schools recruited Johnson, but he wanted to play at Tennessee.
That dream ended when Johnson failed to make the required score on the ACT. Then Jones got in trouble with the law when one of his friends picked him up from work in a stolen car.
"We got pulled over," Johnson said. "I had no idea it was a stolen car."
With few options, Johnson's mother spoke with then-A&M offensive coordinator Stan Conner.
"Coach Conner told me if I came up here and got eligible, I could get a scholarship and play," Johnson said.
Johnson isn't on scholarship yet, but if he keeps playing the way he has through the Bulldogs' first six games, he'll certainly earn one.
Johnson has just only nine catches, but four have gone for touchdowns, which is second on the team. He is averaging 16.2 yards per catch, third-best on the squad.
That's not bad for a guy who wasn't invited to training camp until after it began.
"I guess they figured I really didn't want to play," said Johnson, who was named A&M's offensive player of the week after catching three passes for 40 yards, including a pair of touchdowns in the Bulldogs' 33-28 win over Southern more than a week ago. "I was determined to play. I sat out last year and I realized how much I loved football.
"I went out there with the mind-set I wanted to play and showed them what I could do."
Receivers coach Willie Totten noticed Johnson on his first day of practice.
"It was a Wednesday night," Totten said. "He was wearing No. 46 and we were doing 1-on-1s. He had great acceleration. He was aggressive. He's got a little different attitude than some of our other receivers. That caught my attention.
"I knew he could help us. He kept getting better and better and I told Coach (Anthony) Jones we needed to consider him. He was hungry. He was very attentive to what we were doing."
It didn't take Johnson long to make an impact.
He had just two catches for 14 yards in the season opener against Tennessee State, but had three catches for 94 yards and a pair of touchdowns in the home opener against Clark Atlanta, including a 65-yarder.
Johnson managed just one catch over the next three games, but he came up big against Southern as A&M hung on for a big conference road win.
"Coach Totten told me to be patient and just keep running my routes," Johnson said. "I had to wait until my number was called and that's when I stepped up."
Johnson hauled in a 12-yard touchdown pass from Kelcy Luke to stake the Bulldogs to an early 7-0 lead. Later, Johnson threw a key blocked that allowed wide receiver Gerald Stockdale to find Thomas Harris with a 55-yard touchdown pass. Then, early in the second quarter, Luke found Johnson with a 18-yard touchdown pass.
While Johnson was happy with the touchdown catches, he was more thrilled about throwing the block that led to Harris' touchdown.
"When Stockdale came in motion, I knew his man was going to come with him," Johnson explained. "As soon as he got the ball, he faked like he was going to run the ball and his man came crashing down. I pushed him as far as I could to the sideline and Stockdale was able to throw it to Harris."
Johnson hopes to continue his strong play Thursday night when A&M hosts Arkansas-Pine Bluff in a Southwestern Athletic Conference game. Kickoff is at 6:30 and the game will be televised live on ESPNU.
While Johnson is happy to be at A&M, Jones is equally excited to have him on the team. "He's been a great addition to our program," Jones said. "He just needed polishing. Coach Totten has done a great job of grooming him. "While he's been a great addition to our program, we've been a great addition to him and his development on and off the field."
Totten agreed.
"After the Clark Atlanta game, he came to me and said thank you," Totten said. "I didn't understand what he meant at the time. He said 'I appreciate you giving me a chance.' That still sticks with me today.
"He wants to prove to people that he's not the person people think he is. Those are the things that encourage me about Johnson. He's got a great attitude and he's trying to find his place in society. ... This football program is probably saving Johnson's life."
Bethune Cookman women's golf captures Rutgers Invitational Tournament title
by BCU Sports Information
Wildcats beat Ivy League power Yale by nine strokes in victory
Piscataway, N.J. - Freshman Kimberly Wong posted her third consecutive Top 5 finish of the fall season over the weekend while leading Bethune-Cookman University women's golf team to a much-heralded first place trophy at the Rutgers Women's Invitational in Piscataway, N.J.
Bethune-Cookman is looking like one of the best teams on the east coast right now as they played their way to their second first place title of the season, while finishing second in the only other tournament thus far. The Wildcats shot a two-day score of 624 (+48) to finish nine strokes ahead of the field of 18 teams.
Kim Wong, only a freshman mind you, continues to blaze her way towards all kinds of B-CU freshman records as she collected a two-day score of 154 (80 / 74) for her season low in a 36-hole event to finish third overall for the weekend. She has now finished amongst the top five golfers overall in every tournament she has suited up for the Wildcats this season. All-America honors certainly appear to be in the future of this young golfer.
Photo: BCU's Fern Grimshaw collected her first Top 10 finish of the fall.
Yale University--a perennial power amongst the Ivy League, rode the strength of its top golfer Ellie Brophy to finish second place as a team. The Bulldogs shot a team total of 633 (+57).
Meanwhile, junior golfer Becky Dowell still remains as one of the most steadfast golfers in the past four seasons at B-CU as she finished tied for fourth overall. Dowell's 154 (+10) allowed her to finish alongside Siena's Katelynn Mannix.
For Dowell, this was her first top five finish of the campaign, while registering her second top 10 mark for the fall.
Transfer Emma Tayler was just behind her fellow Wildcat golfers with a 158 (+14) for a sixth place finish, and her third top 10 finish of the season. Tayler is now second on the team in total wins-losses with a 190-13 record.
Also shooting well for the `Cats was sophomore Maria Garrido with her first-ever top 10 finish at Bethune-Cookman with a two-round mark of 160 (+16) to tie for ninth place. Alongside Garrido was junior Fern Grimshaw, just another in a long line of great European student-athletes to cross the path of B-CU head coach Dr. Gary Freeman, with a 160 (+16) as well.
For Grimshaw, it was her first top 10 finish of the fall season, as well as her second top 20 finish.
Sophomore Maria Urquiola posted a 164 (+20) to tie for 24th place in the tournament.
B-CU is now, as a team, 35-1 this season ... making this the best start for the Wildcats in recorded history.
Brittany Lambertson earned a medal in second place for St. John's as she scored a 151 (+7) on rounds of 77 and 74 for the Red Storm. St. John's finished third as a team.
Siena (645) would be fourth, while Bucknell, Rutgers and USC Upstate all posted a 666 to finish tied for fifth overall.
Wildcats beat Ivy League power Yale by nine strokes in victory
Piscataway, N.J. - Freshman Kimberly Wong posted her third consecutive Top 5 finish of the fall season over the weekend while leading Bethune-Cookman University women's golf team to a much-heralded first place trophy at the Rutgers Women's Invitational in Piscataway, N.J.
Bethune-Cookman is looking like one of the best teams on the east coast right now as they played their way to their second first place title of the season, while finishing second in the only other tournament thus far. The Wildcats shot a two-day score of 624 (+48) to finish nine strokes ahead of the field of 18 teams.
Kim Wong, only a freshman mind you, continues to blaze her way towards all kinds of B-CU freshman records as she collected a two-day score of 154 (80 / 74) for her season low in a 36-hole event to finish third overall for the weekend. She has now finished amongst the top five golfers overall in every tournament she has suited up for the Wildcats this season. All-America honors certainly appear to be in the future of this young golfer.
Photo: BCU's Fern Grimshaw collected her first Top 10 finish of the fall.
Yale University--a perennial power amongst the Ivy League, rode the strength of its top golfer Ellie Brophy to finish second place as a team. The Bulldogs shot a team total of 633 (+57).
Meanwhile, junior golfer Becky Dowell still remains as one of the most steadfast golfers in the past four seasons at B-CU as she finished tied for fourth overall. Dowell's 154 (+10) allowed her to finish alongside Siena's Katelynn Mannix.
For Dowell, this was her first top five finish of the campaign, while registering her second top 10 mark for the fall.
Transfer Emma Tayler was just behind her fellow Wildcat golfers with a 158 (+14) for a sixth place finish, and her third top 10 finish of the season. Tayler is now second on the team in total wins-losses with a 190-13 record.
Also shooting well for the `Cats was sophomore Maria Garrido with her first-ever top 10 finish at Bethune-Cookman with a two-round mark of 160 (+16) to tie for ninth place. Alongside Garrido was junior Fern Grimshaw, just another in a long line of great European student-athletes to cross the path of B-CU head coach Dr. Gary Freeman, with a 160 (+16) as well.
For Grimshaw, it was her first top 10 finish of the fall season, as well as her second top 20 finish.
Sophomore Maria Urquiola posted a 164 (+20) to tie for 24th place in the tournament.
B-CU is now, as a team, 35-1 this season ... making this the best start for the Wildcats in recorded history.
Brittany Lambertson earned a medal in second place for St. John's as she scored a 151 (+7) on rounds of 77 and 74 for the Red Storm. St. John's finished third as a team.
Siena (645) would be fourth, while Bucknell, Rutgers and USC Upstate all posted a 666 to finish tied for fifth overall.
WSSU Notebook: $5 million field house and new practice facility will be ready for next season
COMPILED BY JOHN DELL, Winston Salem Journal
• The Rams have 11 seniors on the roster, but Blount wishes they could stay with the team for one more year.
Next season, the Rams will have full access to a $5 million field house being built near Bowman Gray Stadium and also will have a new practice facility.
“The only thing that I regret with this bunch of seniors is they will miss a lot of stuff that we will have next season,” Blount said. “From the field house to the new practice facility, they won’t get to use those things, but these guys are important because they laid the foundation that helped us get to where we are.”
Photo: Head Football Coach Kermit Blount
• Linebacker Juan Corders is questionable for Saturday’s game at Bethune-Cookman with a foot infection.
Corders, a sophomore, stepped on something in his bare feet while the team was in Indianapolis earlier this month. The Rams beat Florida A&M 27-23, but Corders hasn’t been the same since the team got back.
“I’m worried whether he will be ready to go or not,” Coach Kermit Blount said.
Defensive coordinator Mike Ketchum said that if Corders doesn’t play, it would hurt the Rams’ defense. Corders has 17 tackles and two sacks this season.
“After we got back from Indianapolis they drained (the infection), but you can’t be too careful,” Ketchum said. “We’ll have to be careful to make sure he’s all right before we send him out there again.”
• One of the most unusual offenses in the MEAC is Bethune-Cookman’s “Wyattbone” which is named for Coach Alvin Wyatt. The offense is a triple-option attack that mixes in the I-formation and sometimes uses split backs.
Defensive coordinator Mike Ketchum of WSSU said that facing the Wyattbone always presents problems.
“They are really going to attack your defensive ends, your outside linebackers and your strong safety,” Ketchum said. “If they get the fullback going up the middle, then it’s really going to be tough to deal with. If you can make them go wide and the more their quarterback has to handle the option, the more likely you can force them into mistakes.
“It’s a different ballgame against them. When you build your defense on speed and aggressiveness and are always going hard, you really have to be assignment-oriented against them.”
• After taking a chartered flight to Indianapolis for the Circle City Classic in their last game, the Rams are back to their usual mode of transportation for Saturday’s game at Bethune-Cookman. They will take the long bus ride to Daytona Beach, Fla., for their sixth road trip in a row.
Monte Purvis said that he and his teammates should be used to all the traveling.
“We’ve been up and down the highways all season,” he said, “so if you aren’t used to it by now, you will never get used to it.”
The Rams are 2-3 on the road this season, but will get to play three straight home games after Saturday.
• The Rams have 11 seniors on the roster, but Blount wishes they could stay with the team for one more year.
Next season, the Rams will have full access to a $5 million field house being built near Bowman Gray Stadium and also will have a new practice facility.
“The only thing that I regret with this bunch of seniors is they will miss a lot of stuff that we will have next season,” Blount said. “From the field house to the new practice facility, they won’t get to use those things, but these guys are important because they laid the foundation that helped us get to where we are.”
Photo: Head Football Coach Kermit Blount
• Linebacker Juan Corders is questionable for Saturday’s game at Bethune-Cookman with a foot infection.
Corders, a sophomore, stepped on something in his bare feet while the team was in Indianapolis earlier this month. The Rams beat Florida A&M 27-23, but Corders hasn’t been the same since the team got back.
“I’m worried whether he will be ready to go or not,” Coach Kermit Blount said.
Defensive coordinator Mike Ketchum said that if Corders doesn’t play, it would hurt the Rams’ defense. Corders has 17 tackles and two sacks this season.
“After we got back from Indianapolis they drained (the infection), but you can’t be too careful,” Ketchum said. “We’ll have to be careful to make sure he’s all right before we send him out there again.”
• One of the most unusual offenses in the MEAC is Bethune-Cookman’s “Wyattbone” which is named for Coach Alvin Wyatt. The offense is a triple-option attack that mixes in the I-formation and sometimes uses split backs.
Defensive coordinator Mike Ketchum of WSSU said that facing the Wyattbone always presents problems.
“They are really going to attack your defensive ends, your outside linebackers and your strong safety,” Ketchum said. “If they get the fullback going up the middle, then it’s really going to be tough to deal with. If you can make them go wide and the more their quarterback has to handle the option, the more likely you can force them into mistakes.
“It’s a different ballgame against them. When you build your defense on speed and aggressiveness and are always going hard, you really have to be assignment-oriented against them.”
• After taking a chartered flight to Indianapolis for the Circle City Classic in their last game, the Rams are back to their usual mode of transportation for Saturday’s game at Bethune-Cookman. They will take the long bus ride to Daytona Beach, Fla., for their sixth road trip in a row.
Monte Purvis said that he and his teammates should be used to all the traveling.
“We’ve been up and down the highways all season,” he said, “so if you aren’t used to it by now, you will never get used to it.”
The Rams are 2-3 on the road this season, but will get to play three straight home games after Saturday.
NSU notebook: Spartans stand 6th in FCS in home attendance
By VICKI L. FRIEDMAN , The Virginian-Pilot
Saturday's crowd of 27,756 was the largest at Price Stadium since the inaugural game was played there in 1997. Before Saturday's total, the crowd of 26,970 that watched the Spartans defeat Virginia State 33-7 in the Labor Day Classic on Sept. 1 was the second-largest.
Norfolk State is sixth nationally in Division I-AA with an average attendance of 19,920. Ahead of NSU: Montana, Delaware, Appalachian State, Youngstown State and Southern University. North Carolina A&T is the closest MEAC school at No. 11, averaging 12,803 fans.
Not so special
Daryl Jones described Saturday's victory against Hampton as "extra special," but one area where the Spartans weren't clicking was special teams. Particularly abysmal was NSU's coverage on punts and kickoffs, which almost cost the Spartans the game.
Among the blunders:
Maury grad James Butts recovered an onside kick that allowed Hampton to attempt a field goal in the final seconds.
Before that, Hampton scored its final touchdown after a 28-yard punt by Brian Jackson allowed the Pirates to start the drive at the NSU 41.
After Jones' second touchdown put the Spartans ahead 20-10 in the fourth quarter, Dennis McPhearson returned the following kickoff 48 yards to the NSU 20. That led to a Hampton field goal.
"Our special teams stunk," NSU coach Pete Adrian said. "Our kickoff coverage was horrendous. Our kickoff returns weren't very good. We made some crucial mistakes that could have cost us the ballgame.
"But the nice thing about our football team is nobody complains. They just say, 'Let's go to work.'"
One game at a time
Spartans fans might be riding high with dreams of a playoff bid after knocking off Hampton and preseason favorite South Carolina State, but Adrian and the NSU players refuse to entertain the notion.
"If you're focusing on something like playoffs, that's basically distracting you," senior linebacker Maguell Davis said. "I'd rather keep playing hard and we'll look back - and then I think we'll be pretty happy with the results."
Saturday's crowd of 27,756 was the largest at Price Stadium since the inaugural game was played there in 1997. Before Saturday's total, the crowd of 26,970 that watched the Spartans defeat Virginia State 33-7 in the Labor Day Classic on Sept. 1 was the second-largest.
Norfolk State is sixth nationally in Division I-AA with an average attendance of 19,920. Ahead of NSU: Montana, Delaware, Appalachian State, Youngstown State and Southern University. North Carolina A&T is the closest MEAC school at No. 11, averaging 12,803 fans.
Not so special
Daryl Jones described Saturday's victory against Hampton as "extra special," but one area where the Spartans weren't clicking was special teams. Particularly abysmal was NSU's coverage on punts and kickoffs, which almost cost the Spartans the game.
Among the blunders:
Maury grad James Butts recovered an onside kick that allowed Hampton to attempt a field goal in the final seconds.
Before that, Hampton scored its final touchdown after a 28-yard punt by Brian Jackson allowed the Pirates to start the drive at the NSU 41.
After Jones' second touchdown put the Spartans ahead 20-10 in the fourth quarter, Dennis McPhearson returned the following kickoff 48 yards to the NSU 20. That led to a Hampton field goal.
"Our special teams stunk," NSU coach Pete Adrian said. "Our kickoff coverage was horrendous. Our kickoff returns weren't very good. We made some crucial mistakes that could have cost us the ballgame.
"But the nice thing about our football team is nobody complains. They just say, 'Let's go to work.'"
One game at a time
Spartans fans might be riding high with dreams of a playoff bid after knocking off Hampton and preseason favorite South Carolina State, but Adrian and the NSU players refuse to entertain the notion.
"If you're focusing on something like playoffs, that's basically distracting you," senior linebacker Maguell Davis said. "I'd rather keep playing hard and we'll look back - and then I think we'll be pretty happy with the results."
Hampton University-S.C. State will be televised
BY MARTY O'BRIEN, Daily Press
The Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference announced Monday that Saturday's South Carolina State at Hampton University football game will be televised via tape delay on ESPNU.
Kickoff for the game is set for 2 p.m. The ESPNU telecast will begin at 8 p.m.
"We are very elated that ESPNU decided to add this game to our TV package," MEAC Commissioner Dennis Thomas said. "With this game on ESPNU, fans will be able to see two outstanding teams as they vie for the conference championship."
South Carolina State (3-3, 2-1 MEAC) was picked during the preseason to end the three-year run of Hampton (4-2, 2-2) as conference champion. The Pirates and Bulldogs shared the title in 2004, but the Pirates have earned the MEAC's automatic playoff berth three consecutive seasons.
Both are fighting to remain in the conference and playoff races after losing on consecutive weekends at Norfolk State. The Spartans beat S.C. State 20-13 in overtime on Oct. 6, then followed with a 20-19 win on Saturday over Hampton.
"We're not conceding anything," Hampton coach Joe Taylor said. "We feel if we go 9-2, with wins over Princeton (48-27 on Oct. 6) and Southern Illinois (the Pirates' opponent on Nov. 17), we still can get playoff consideration.
"Televising this game is great exposure. The biggest thing is that it gives
The Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference announced Monday that Saturday's South Carolina State at Hampton University football game will be televised via tape delay on ESPNU.
Kickoff for the game is set for 2 p.m. The ESPNU telecast will begin at 8 p.m.
"We are very elated that ESPNU decided to add this game to our TV package," MEAC Commissioner Dennis Thomas said. "With this game on ESPNU, fans will be able to see two outstanding teams as they vie for the conference championship."
South Carolina State (3-3, 2-1 MEAC) was picked during the preseason to end the three-year run of Hampton (4-2, 2-2) as conference champion. The Pirates and Bulldogs shared the title in 2004, but the Pirates have earned the MEAC's automatic playoff berth three consecutive seasons.
Both are fighting to remain in the conference and playoff races after losing on consecutive weekends at Norfolk State. The Spartans beat S.C. State 20-13 in overtime on Oct. 6, then followed with a 20-19 win on Saturday over Hampton.
"We're not conceding anything," Hampton coach Joe Taylor said. "We feel if we go 9-2, with wins over Princeton (48-27 on Oct. 6) and Southern Illinois (the Pirates' opponent on Nov. 17), we still can get playoff consideration.
"Televising this game is great exposure. The biggest thing is that it gives
Talk about silly stuff: How band leader hit wrong note
Before I read this story, I knew it had to be a black man involved because if several fights between high school students break out in a stadium that seats 10,000 people (after the game is over), it had to be caused by the music the marching band was playing. I am beginning to wonder if anyone can find a college degree and a ounce of common sense within the resume of any of these local Hampton cops.
Moreover, I don't get the correlation--fight(s) with non-band members; cops that can't hear; high school band playing louder than FAMU, Southern or Norfolk State in the 5th Quarter; band director arrested because he would not stop students performance in outdoor football stadium. The entire city should be marching against this injustice to Mr. Smart.
One question for the cops? How did you hear on your radios when the stadium was full with 10,000 screaming fans in the stands and both bands were playing during the game? Wasn't the decibels 1000X louder then, than when Mr. Smart was arrested. Case closed!
By PETER DUJARDIN
Hampton High's Tory F. Smart is on administrative leave after his arrest for failing to stop playing.
Photo: Band Director Tory F. Smart
HAMPTON -Even after Phoebus High School beat rival Hampton High School on the football field late Friday night, the bands were still going at it.
But as people filed out of Darling Stadium by the thousands at about 9:30 p.m., several fights broke out. Police, trying to quell the disturbances, were having a hard time hearing each other on their radios. So they asked both bands — on opposite sides of the stands, going back and forth in a traditional, competitive duel — to stop the music.
While the Phoebus band eventually stopped playing, police say, Hampton High School's band played on — to the point that officers at the game arrested Hampton High's band director, Tory F. Smart, on an obstruction charge. Police said he ignored "at least four" demands to stop.
Smart, 31, a band teacher at the school in addition to his director role, is on paid administrative leave as school investigators try to piece together what happened in the bizarre twist capping the greatly anticipated game between two undefeated rivals.
A few officers, police say, asked Smart to cut his band's music.
"He was asked directly to stop playing, and disregarded the officers' orders," said Hampton police spokeswoman Paula Ensley.
"The last time, he was told, 'If you don't stop you'll be arrested for obstruction.' And he continued to play, after which time he was taken into custody."
But Alfred L. Davis Jr., the band director at Hampton University who has worked closely with Smart in the past, said he thinks the incident was the result of miscommunication between Smart and the police.
"I've known Tory for a long time," Davis said. "He was great as my assistant. This comes as a shock to me ... He is an outstanding person."
Though Davis did not witness the arrest, he said police must have simply overreacted to the misunderstanding. "I'm very sure that's what happened," Davis said.
Ensley said there were 40 officers assigned to the game, which had 10,000 spectators. "We needed to get everyone out safely," she said, saying Smart understood the police orders, but decided to keep his band playing.
Sam McGill, who provided some security services at the game, said he was on the Phoebus side of the stadium, so didn't see Smart get arrested. But when he drove his truck out of the stadium, he said, he saw Smart seated on a chair, surrounded by police officers, with his band gone.
Smart was transported away in a police car, but released on a summons to appear in court at a later date.
He did not return several phone calls left on his home and cell phone Monday morning and afternoon.
He is on administrative leave with pay from Hampton High School pending the outcome of the investigation, said School Department spokeswoman Ann Stephens. Obstruction is a Class 1 misdemeanor, punishable by up to a year in jail and a $2,500 fine.
Smart, who was hired at Hampton High School in July 2006 as both band director and a teacher of band classes, is the son of former Hampton University band director Barney E. Smart, who died in 2004 after leading the university's band for 14 years.
The younger Smart, a percussionist by expertise, worked as the assistant band director at Delaware State University under Davis. Smart was also a graduate assistant for Hampton University's band, also under Davis.
In an interview before a game this month against Heritage High School at Darling Stadium, Smart said he has tried to bring some pizazz to the band since he arrived at Hampton High School just over two years ago.
"The main thing I wanted to do was add a little excitement," he said Oct. 5. "When I first got here morale was a little low. And music seems to make the world go 'round, and makes everybody feel good ... so we wanted to give the kids an opportunity to play the songs they wanted to do and add a little music education into it at the same time."
He likened the band's combination to a "home-cooked meal ... Everybody likes what we're cooking. Right now it smells good, but you can always add a little spice with it."
As for his philosophy about the battle of the bands between schools, he said: "We're going to give everybody a run for their money ... As long as they do it with respect and making it fun, that's what it's all about."
Asked what was in store for the game against Phoebus, Smart said: "A surprise."
What happened
When a fight broke out after Friday night's football game between Phoebus and Hampton, police asked both bands to stop playing. Hampton's band continued to play on despite repeated demands, police said, and the director, Tory F. Smart, was arrested and charged with obstruction. He is on paid administrative leave.
Moreover, I don't get the correlation--fight(s) with non-band members; cops that can't hear; high school band playing louder than FAMU, Southern or Norfolk State in the 5th Quarter; band director arrested because he would not stop students performance in outdoor football stadium. The entire city should be marching against this injustice to Mr. Smart.
One question for the cops? How did you hear on your radios when the stadium was full with 10,000 screaming fans in the stands and both bands were playing during the game? Wasn't the decibels 1000X louder then, than when Mr. Smart was arrested. Case closed!
By PETER DUJARDIN
Hampton High's Tory F. Smart is on administrative leave after his arrest for failing to stop playing.
Photo: Band Director Tory F. Smart
HAMPTON -Even after Phoebus High School beat rival Hampton High School on the football field late Friday night, the bands were still going at it.
But as people filed out of Darling Stadium by the thousands at about 9:30 p.m., several fights broke out. Police, trying to quell the disturbances, were having a hard time hearing each other on their radios. So they asked both bands — on opposite sides of the stands, going back and forth in a traditional, competitive duel — to stop the music.
While the Phoebus band eventually stopped playing, police say, Hampton High School's band played on — to the point that officers at the game arrested Hampton High's band director, Tory F. Smart, on an obstruction charge. Police said he ignored "at least four" demands to stop.
Smart, 31, a band teacher at the school in addition to his director role, is on paid administrative leave as school investigators try to piece together what happened in the bizarre twist capping the greatly anticipated game between two undefeated rivals.
A few officers, police say, asked Smart to cut his band's music.
"He was asked directly to stop playing, and disregarded the officers' orders," said Hampton police spokeswoman Paula Ensley.
"The last time, he was told, 'If you don't stop you'll be arrested for obstruction.' And he continued to play, after which time he was taken into custody."
But Alfred L. Davis Jr., the band director at Hampton University who has worked closely with Smart in the past, said he thinks the incident was the result of miscommunication between Smart and the police.
"I've known Tory for a long time," Davis said. "He was great as my assistant. This comes as a shock to me ... He is an outstanding person."
Though Davis did not witness the arrest, he said police must have simply overreacted to the misunderstanding. "I'm very sure that's what happened," Davis said.
Ensley said there were 40 officers assigned to the game, which had 10,000 spectators. "We needed to get everyone out safely," she said, saying Smart understood the police orders, but decided to keep his band playing.
Sam McGill, who provided some security services at the game, said he was on the Phoebus side of the stadium, so didn't see Smart get arrested. But when he drove his truck out of the stadium, he said, he saw Smart seated on a chair, surrounded by police officers, with his band gone.
Smart was transported away in a police car, but released on a summons to appear in court at a later date.
He did not return several phone calls left on his home and cell phone Monday morning and afternoon.
He is on administrative leave with pay from Hampton High School pending the outcome of the investigation, said School Department spokeswoman Ann Stephens. Obstruction is a Class 1 misdemeanor, punishable by up to a year in jail and a $2,500 fine.
Smart, who was hired at Hampton High School in July 2006 as both band director and a teacher of band classes, is the son of former Hampton University band director Barney E. Smart, who died in 2004 after leading the university's band for 14 years.
The younger Smart, a percussionist by expertise, worked as the assistant band director at Delaware State University under Davis. Smart was also a graduate assistant for Hampton University's band, also under Davis.
In an interview before a game this month against Heritage High School at Darling Stadium, Smart said he has tried to bring some pizazz to the band since he arrived at Hampton High School just over two years ago.
"The main thing I wanted to do was add a little excitement," he said Oct. 5. "When I first got here morale was a little low. And music seems to make the world go 'round, and makes everybody feel good ... so we wanted to give the kids an opportunity to play the songs they wanted to do and add a little music education into it at the same time."
He likened the band's combination to a "home-cooked meal ... Everybody likes what we're cooking. Right now it smells good, but you can always add a little spice with it."
As for his philosophy about the battle of the bands between schools, he said: "We're going to give everybody a run for their money ... As long as they do it with respect and making it fun, that's what it's all about."
Asked what was in store for the game against Phoebus, Smart said: "A surprise."
What happened
When a fight broke out after Friday night's football game between Phoebus and Hampton, police asked both bands to stop playing. Hampton's band continued to play on despite repeated demands, police said, and the director, Tory F. Smart, was arrested and charged with obstruction. He is on paid administrative leave.
Labels:
Hampton High School,
Phoebus High School
Rested WSSU Rams ready to move on
Photo: WSSU Head Football Coach Kermit Blount
By John Dell, JOURNAL REPORTER
WSSU, coming off open date, is headed to Bethune-Cookman
There have been times in recent years when a week off has come at the wrong time for Winston-Salem State. But last Saturday’s open date couldn’t have come at a better time, according to Coach Kermit Blount.
“We needed it, that’s for sure,” said Blount, whose Rams were back at practice yesterday in preparation for Saturday’s game at Bethune-Cookman. “It just gave everybody a chance to take a step back because we’ve been going at this pretty hard since August.”
The Rams (3-3) are coming off a 27-23 win over Florida A&M on Oct. 6 in Indianapolis. Blount was pleased with his team’s effort and with getting the victory, but he was a little worried about a hangover effect of such a big win.
“I hope they aren’t still celebrating because it’s time to get back to work,” Blount said before yesterday’s practice. “I think these guys realize that we have more work to do this season, and it starts this week in practice.”
Blount said that the Rams had just two short practices last week, and he gave them the weekend off, something that quarterback Monte Purvis took advantage of.
Purvis, who has been nursing a sore left shoulder, said he mostly watched football and stayed on the couch.
“This break came at a good time for us seniors because it lets us know that we only have five more games left in our careers,” Purvis said. “I think in four of these next five games we lost to them last year, so we want to make up for that.”
Even though Purvis didn’t have very good passing numbers against Florida A&M, his grasp of the offense and confidence level in the second half was evident.
Photo: QB Monte Purvis
The Rams had two key series against the Rattlers in which Purvis used his savvy and his feet to gain valuable yardage. They scored touchdowns on both drives.
Purvis has rushed for 299 yards on 101 carries this season, and while the average is just three yards a carry, his leadership has been invaluable. He didn’t have a turnover in the win over A&M, and in the previous game against Howard, an overtime loss, he passed for a career-best 261 yards.
“I’m real happy for Monte for a lot of reasons,” Blount said. “He’s a local kid, and it’s tough to play in your own backyard and play consistently because he probably knows more people in this town than anybody on our team. Everywhere he goes, he’s the subject of criticism with somebody saying something negative.”
Purvis, a three-year starter, hasn’t backed down from any of this season’s challenges.
“His maturity, that’s been the biggest part,” Blount said. “To see him mature and grow into a leader and do the things I knew he was capable of doing all along is great to see. It’s his last season, and I think he’s having fun. I’ve seen him go from being a quiet guy to being the jokester in the locker room.”
The Rams have been learning a new offense under coordinator Nick Calcutta, and Purvis has picked it up.
“Hopefully, this break doesn’t slow us down (but) just enhanced us a little more,” Blount said. “It gave those guys a chance to rest and hopefully the guys … got that rest they needed.”
Blount said that part of the reason for the Rams’ resurgence in the past two games has been the play of the line.
“It’s been a matter of them continuing to learn this new system,” Blount said. “That system we ran last year and the year before is totally different than what we are doing this year.
“I think the great part of it is I have some real great football coaches on staff, and they have put in the time and energy to get this done and it’s taken the pressure off me.”
By John Dell, JOURNAL REPORTER
WSSU, coming off open date, is headed to Bethune-Cookman
There have been times in recent years when a week off has come at the wrong time for Winston-Salem State. But last Saturday’s open date couldn’t have come at a better time, according to Coach Kermit Blount.
“We needed it, that’s for sure,” said Blount, whose Rams were back at practice yesterday in preparation for Saturday’s game at Bethune-Cookman. “It just gave everybody a chance to take a step back because we’ve been going at this pretty hard since August.”
The Rams (3-3) are coming off a 27-23 win over Florida A&M on Oct. 6 in Indianapolis. Blount was pleased with his team’s effort and with getting the victory, but he was a little worried about a hangover effect of such a big win.
“I hope they aren’t still celebrating because it’s time to get back to work,” Blount said before yesterday’s practice. “I think these guys realize that we have more work to do this season, and it starts this week in practice.”
Blount said that the Rams had just two short practices last week, and he gave them the weekend off, something that quarterback Monte Purvis took advantage of.
Purvis, who has been nursing a sore left shoulder, said he mostly watched football and stayed on the couch.
“This break came at a good time for us seniors because it lets us know that we only have five more games left in our careers,” Purvis said. “I think in four of these next five games we lost to them last year, so we want to make up for that.”
Even though Purvis didn’t have very good passing numbers against Florida A&M, his grasp of the offense and confidence level in the second half was evident.
Photo: QB Monte Purvis
The Rams had two key series against the Rattlers in which Purvis used his savvy and his feet to gain valuable yardage. They scored touchdowns on both drives.
Purvis has rushed for 299 yards on 101 carries this season, and while the average is just three yards a carry, his leadership has been invaluable. He didn’t have a turnover in the win over A&M, and in the previous game against Howard, an overtime loss, he passed for a career-best 261 yards.
“I’m real happy for Monte for a lot of reasons,” Blount said. “He’s a local kid, and it’s tough to play in your own backyard and play consistently because he probably knows more people in this town than anybody on our team. Everywhere he goes, he’s the subject of criticism with somebody saying something negative.”
Purvis, a three-year starter, hasn’t backed down from any of this season’s challenges.
“His maturity, that’s been the biggest part,” Blount said. “To see him mature and grow into a leader and do the things I knew he was capable of doing all along is great to see. It’s his last season, and I think he’s having fun. I’ve seen him go from being a quiet guy to being the jokester in the locker room.”
The Rams have been learning a new offense under coordinator Nick Calcutta, and Purvis has picked it up.
“Hopefully, this break doesn’t slow us down (but) just enhanced us a little more,” Blount said. “It gave those guys a chance to rest and hopefully the guys … got that rest they needed.”
Blount said that part of the reason for the Rams’ resurgence in the past two games has been the play of the line.
“It’s been a matter of them continuing to learn this new system,” Blount said. “That system we ran last year and the year before is totally different than what we are doing this year.
“I think the great part of it is I have some real great football coaches on staff, and they have put in the time and energy to get this done and it’s taken the pressure off me.”
WSSU women's basketball team has influx of new players
Photo: WSSU Head Women's Basketball Coach Dee Stokes
http://www.coachdeestokes.com/
By John Dell, JOURNAL REPORTER and staff reports
Stokes, staff welcome nine fresh faces as Rams' practice starts
Dee Stokes, the coach of the Winston-Salem State women’s basketball team, has wasted little time assembling a team of her own recruits.
Stokes, whose team will begin practice Saturday, has nine new players thanks to one of the largest recruiting classes in the country.
“We actually signed 10 players, but we lost one of them to academics,” said Stokes, whose first WSSU team went 8-21 last season.
“We’ve got eight freshmen and one junior-college player among all the new players.”
The only returning player is guard Keoshia Worthy, a senior from Augusta, Ga., who averaged 6.2 points a game last season.
“I’m a lot more excited,” Stokes said of her second season at WSSU. “We’ve got our own players in now, and the kids have been hitting their preseason conditioning pretty well.”
Stokes’ new team will be on display tonight at 5:30 at the Gaines Center as part of Ram Madness, when both the men’s and women’s teams will officially begin practice.
Three players graduated, two others were cut, one transferred and another player quit. This opened several scholarships, and Stokes and her assistants went into action.
“We are a young team, but hopefully we’ll be energetic,” Stokes said. “When you teach them something new they are like sponges, they just soak it up. That’s one benefit of having such a young team.”
Among the players who might make the biggest impact, according to Stokes, is 5-8 guard Patrice Wade, a junior-college transfer. She will give the Rams needed experience after one season at Arkansas Little-Rock and at a junior-college last season.
Nora Campbell, 6-2 is expected to help the Rams in the post. But she was involved in a car accident last summer, according to Stokes, so it will take time for her to be 100 percent.
“Once she gets back and is totally healthy, I think she can do some nice things for us,” Stokes said.
Stokes says that the Rams needed to improve in the frontcourt.
She said that freshman Vontisha Woods, a 6-0 forward from Danville, Va., should help Campbell.
“If we can get her to play hard every second, then she’ll be something else,” Stokes said. “She can score and is very athletic.”
Among the other new players are Rene Rector, a 5-6 point guard from Winston-Salem who is a former star at Mount Tabor, and forward Nikki Kee, who played at Greensboro Dudley.
“Teaching young kids in a way is a little easier,” Stokes said.
“They may have some bad habits but we are trying to change those habits.”
Despite the youth of her team, Stokes has high expectations.
“We are bigger at the guard position, and we really had to be,” Stokes said. “We are still a little lean in the post, but we’ll be OK. We’ll address that in the next recruiting class.”
The Rams will play a full MEAC schedule and a challenging nonconference schedule starting with a road game at Virginia Tech on Nov. 14.
“I think staying healthy and not hitting the wall too early will be key for us,” Stokes said. “You are going to hit the wall with young kids, so how I handle that will be important as well. You have to back off some when that happens.”
Photo: WSSU cheerleaders expression shows displeasure towards 8-21 record of last season. Major improvements are expected this season for the Lady Rams.
2007-08 Lady Rams Basketball Roster
No. Name Ht. Pos. Cl. Hometown/Last School
03 Jalesa Byrd 5-10 Guard/Forward FR Charlotte, NC/Myers Park HS
11 Nikki Kee 5-8 Forward FR Greensboro, NC/Dudley HS
13 Nora Campbell 6-2 Center FR Long Island, NY/St. Anthony's HS
14 Corbin Bradford 5-7 Guard FR High Point, NC/High Point Andrews HS
15 Keoshia Worthy 5-7 Guard SR Augusta, GA/USC Upstate
20 Quintoya Mobley 5-11 Forward FR York, SC/York HS
21 Montague Austin 5-6 Guard FR Greensboro, NC/Dudley HS
22 Rene Rector 5-6 Guard FR Winston-Salem, NC/Mount Tabor HS
23 Patrice Wade 5-8 Guard JR Clarksville, TN/Chattanooga State
34 Vontisha Woods 6-0 Forward/Center FR Danville, VA/George Washington HS
Coaching Staff
Dee Stokes - Head Coach
Michelle Fortier - Assistant Coach
Kristina Baugh - Assistant Coach
Angie Abraham - Assistant Coach
http://www.coachdeestokes.com/
By John Dell, JOURNAL REPORTER and staff reports
Stokes, staff welcome nine fresh faces as Rams' practice starts
Dee Stokes, the coach of the Winston-Salem State women’s basketball team, has wasted little time assembling a team of her own recruits.
Stokes, whose team will begin practice Saturday, has nine new players thanks to one of the largest recruiting classes in the country.
“We actually signed 10 players, but we lost one of them to academics,” said Stokes, whose first WSSU team went 8-21 last season.
“We’ve got eight freshmen and one junior-college player among all the new players.”
The only returning player is guard Keoshia Worthy, a senior from Augusta, Ga., who averaged 6.2 points a game last season.
“I’m a lot more excited,” Stokes said of her second season at WSSU. “We’ve got our own players in now, and the kids have been hitting their preseason conditioning pretty well.”
Stokes’ new team will be on display tonight at 5:30 at the Gaines Center as part of Ram Madness, when both the men’s and women’s teams will officially begin practice.
Three players graduated, two others were cut, one transferred and another player quit. This opened several scholarships, and Stokes and her assistants went into action.
“We are a young team, but hopefully we’ll be energetic,” Stokes said. “When you teach them something new they are like sponges, they just soak it up. That’s one benefit of having such a young team.”
Among the players who might make the biggest impact, according to Stokes, is 5-8 guard Patrice Wade, a junior-college transfer. She will give the Rams needed experience after one season at Arkansas Little-Rock and at a junior-college last season.
Nora Campbell, 6-2 is expected to help the Rams in the post. But she was involved in a car accident last summer, according to Stokes, so it will take time for her to be 100 percent.
“Once she gets back and is totally healthy, I think she can do some nice things for us,” Stokes said.
Stokes says that the Rams needed to improve in the frontcourt.
She said that freshman Vontisha Woods, a 6-0 forward from Danville, Va., should help Campbell.
“If we can get her to play hard every second, then she’ll be something else,” Stokes said. “She can score and is very athletic.”
Among the other new players are Rene Rector, a 5-6 point guard from Winston-Salem who is a former star at Mount Tabor, and forward Nikki Kee, who played at Greensboro Dudley.
“Teaching young kids in a way is a little easier,” Stokes said.
“They may have some bad habits but we are trying to change those habits.”
Despite the youth of her team, Stokes has high expectations.
“We are bigger at the guard position, and we really had to be,” Stokes said. “We are still a little lean in the post, but we’ll be OK. We’ll address that in the next recruiting class.”
The Rams will play a full MEAC schedule and a challenging nonconference schedule starting with a road game at Virginia Tech on Nov. 14.
“I think staying healthy and not hitting the wall too early will be key for us,” Stokes said. “You are going to hit the wall with young kids, so how I handle that will be important as well. You have to back off some when that happens.”
Photo: WSSU cheerleaders expression shows displeasure towards 8-21 record of last season. Major improvements are expected this season for the Lady Rams.
2007-08 Lady Rams Basketball Roster
No. Name Ht. Pos. Cl. Hometown/Last School
03 Jalesa Byrd 5-10 Guard/Forward FR Charlotte, NC/Myers Park HS
11 Nikki Kee 5-8 Forward FR Greensboro, NC/Dudley HS
13 Nora Campbell 6-2 Center FR Long Island, NY/St. Anthony's HS
14 Corbin Bradford 5-7 Guard FR High Point, NC/High Point Andrews HS
15 Keoshia Worthy 5-7 Guard SR Augusta, GA/USC Upstate
20 Quintoya Mobley 5-11 Forward FR York, SC/York HS
21 Montague Austin 5-6 Guard FR Greensboro, NC/Dudley HS
22 Rene Rector 5-6 Guard FR Winston-Salem, NC/Mount Tabor HS
23 Patrice Wade 5-8 Guard JR Clarksville, TN/Chattanooga State
34 Vontisha Woods 6-0 Forward/Center FR Danville, VA/George Washington HS
Coaching Staff
Dee Stokes - Head Coach
Michelle Fortier - Assistant Coach
Kristina Baugh - Assistant Coach
Angie Abraham - Assistant Coach
Former WSSU Legends pitching in to raise money
By John Dell, JOURNAL REPORTER
In order to have a better future, Winston-Salem State is turning to its past for help.
Banking on the fame of the pro careers of Earl “The Pearl” Monroe and Timmy Newsome, Winston-Salem State is hoping to raise money for an endowed athletics scholarship.
“It starts with money,” said Newsome, a former Dallas Cowboys’ running back who spent nine seasons in the NFL. “When you move into the next level like they are doing, you need a lot more financial resources to be competitive. It doesn’t just start with basketball and football - you have women’s sports that need financing as well.”
A Celebration of Champions banquet will be held Nov. 2 on campus at 6 p.m. at the Anderson Center. It will celebrate the 40th anniversary of WSSU’s NCAA Division II basketball championship and the 30th anniversary of its 1977 and ’78 CIAA football titles.
The cost is $50 a ticket, and there are fewer than 200 tickets available.
Monroe was the star of the 1966-67 basketball team that went 31-1 and became the first historically-black college to win a national championship.
“We’re trying to raise a little bit of money so that maybe we can attract some of those athletes who might want to go elsewhere,” said Monroe, who lives in New York.
Monroe, who was named one of the top 50 NBA players of all-time, said that giving back to the university is something that the late Big House Gaines always stressed.
“Coach used to tell us all the time, even after we were long gone from school, that giving back is the right thing to do,” Monroe said. “So when you think about Winston-Salem State competing in Division I, you have to get those top-notch players. I think this is an opportunity to try and give back and to get those kinds of players that can help this school.”
The ’77 and ’78 football teams, which were coached by Bill Hayes, were two of the best teams in school and CIAA history. They went 11-1 each season and were led by Newsome and fellow running backs Randy Bolton and Arrington Jones.
The quarterback was Kermit Blount, who ran the Veer offense to near perfection. Blount, who is in his 15th season as the football coach of his alma mater, said that recognizing past teams is important.
“This is huge,” Blount said, “because what it does is show our younger generation that nobody ever forgets what you do if you have done it in a positive way. I think this will shine a light on this football team and teams to come because we are honoring these championships.”
Newsome and Jones, who is the head coach at Virginia Union and has his team 6-0 this season and ranked 20th in the nation in Division II, were both drafted by the NFL coming out of WSSU in the late 1970s. Newsome had a nine-year career with the Cowboys and played fullback, tailback and even some at tight end.
Newsome, the second-leading rusher in school history with 3,843 yards, said that raising money for the athletics program means much more than it used to.
“It’s vitally important that we have individual giving to supplement everything else, because if you don’t you are going to put a mediocre product on the field,” Newsome said. “And that’s just unacceptable for Winston-Salem State’s athletics.”
Newsome, who lives in Dallas and is a former member of the board of trustees at WSSU, is grateful that the school is starting to recognize its athletics past more and more.
“Reaching back and going into yesteryear and bringing back players from that period is vitally important,” Newsome said. “It helps your giving, and you can’t expect former athletes to give unless you bring them back and show them your vision of where the athletic program is going. It’s like we are key stakeholders in the program, and we like coming back and seeing a winner.”
Newsome and Blount were asked who was the best back in the potent lineup of the ’77 and ’78 teams. Both tried hard to stay humble.
“My ego tells me that I was,” Newsome said. “But in all honestly, I thought Arrington Jones was a better back. He had better skills and better feet. I think in time I developed into a good runner, but he came to Winston-Salem State with a great pedigree.”
Said Blount with a laugh: “No, it was me.
“Each of those guys did something tremendously well. Timmy was a lot faster than people gave him credit for, and Randy probably ran harder than all of them. Arrington just made you miss, so they all had what it took for us to be successful.”
Newsome said: “I think clearly it was the best backfield in CIAA history. And the only reason Kermit didn’t play in the NFL was his size.”
Those Rams dominated their competition. In 1977, they went 11-0 but bypassed the Division II playoffs to play in the Gold Bowl in Richmond, Va. where they lost to S.C. State 10-7. The next season they went 11-0 again, won their first playoff game (17-0 over California State Poly) and then lost to Delaware 41-0 in the second round.
In order to have a better future, Winston-Salem State is turning to its past for help.
Banking on the fame of the pro careers of Earl “The Pearl” Monroe and Timmy Newsome, Winston-Salem State is hoping to raise money for an endowed athletics scholarship.
“It starts with money,” said Newsome, a former Dallas Cowboys’ running back who spent nine seasons in the NFL. “When you move into the next level like they are doing, you need a lot more financial resources to be competitive. It doesn’t just start with basketball and football - you have women’s sports that need financing as well.”
A Celebration of Champions banquet will be held Nov. 2 on campus at 6 p.m. at the Anderson Center. It will celebrate the 40th anniversary of WSSU’s NCAA Division II basketball championship and the 30th anniversary of its 1977 and ’78 CIAA football titles.
The cost is $50 a ticket, and there are fewer than 200 tickets available.
Monroe was the star of the 1966-67 basketball team that went 31-1 and became the first historically-black college to win a national championship.
“We’re trying to raise a little bit of money so that maybe we can attract some of those athletes who might want to go elsewhere,” said Monroe, who lives in New York.
Monroe, who was named one of the top 50 NBA players of all-time, said that giving back to the university is something that the late Big House Gaines always stressed.
“Coach used to tell us all the time, even after we were long gone from school, that giving back is the right thing to do,” Monroe said. “So when you think about Winston-Salem State competing in Division I, you have to get those top-notch players. I think this is an opportunity to try and give back and to get those kinds of players that can help this school.”
The ’77 and ’78 football teams, which were coached by Bill Hayes, were two of the best teams in school and CIAA history. They went 11-1 each season and were led by Newsome and fellow running backs Randy Bolton and Arrington Jones.
The quarterback was Kermit Blount, who ran the Veer offense to near perfection. Blount, who is in his 15th season as the football coach of his alma mater, said that recognizing past teams is important.
“This is huge,” Blount said, “because what it does is show our younger generation that nobody ever forgets what you do if you have done it in a positive way. I think this will shine a light on this football team and teams to come because we are honoring these championships.”
Newsome and Jones, who is the head coach at Virginia Union and has his team 6-0 this season and ranked 20th in the nation in Division II, were both drafted by the NFL coming out of WSSU in the late 1970s. Newsome had a nine-year career with the Cowboys and played fullback, tailback and even some at tight end.
Newsome, the second-leading rusher in school history with 3,843 yards, said that raising money for the athletics program means much more than it used to.
“It’s vitally important that we have individual giving to supplement everything else, because if you don’t you are going to put a mediocre product on the field,” Newsome said. “And that’s just unacceptable for Winston-Salem State’s athletics.”
Newsome, who lives in Dallas and is a former member of the board of trustees at WSSU, is grateful that the school is starting to recognize its athletics past more and more.
“Reaching back and going into yesteryear and bringing back players from that period is vitally important,” Newsome said. “It helps your giving, and you can’t expect former athletes to give unless you bring them back and show them your vision of where the athletic program is going. It’s like we are key stakeholders in the program, and we like coming back and seeing a winner.”
Newsome and Blount were asked who was the best back in the potent lineup of the ’77 and ’78 teams. Both tried hard to stay humble.
“My ego tells me that I was,” Newsome said. “But in all honestly, I thought Arrington Jones was a better back. He had better skills and better feet. I think in time I developed into a good runner, but he came to Winston-Salem State with a great pedigree.”
Said Blount with a laugh: “No, it was me.
“Each of those guys did something tremendously well. Timmy was a lot faster than people gave him credit for, and Randy probably ran harder than all of them. Arrington just made you miss, so they all had what it took for us to be successful.”
Newsome said: “I think clearly it was the best backfield in CIAA history. And the only reason Kermit didn’t play in the NFL was his size.”
Those Rams dominated their competition. In 1977, they went 11-0 but bypassed the Division II playoffs to play in the Gold Bowl in Richmond, Va. where they lost to S.C. State 10-7. The next season they went 11-0 again, won their first playoff game (17-0 over California State Poly) and then lost to Delaware 41-0 in the second round.
Where no SCSU team has won before: Bulldogs prepare for trip to Hampton
By THOMAS GRANT JR., T&D Senior Sports Writer
Improved play by his team or catching an opponent having a bad day on defense?
It's an answer South Carolina State head football coach Oliver "Buddy" Pough hopes is proven to be the former going into Saturday's showdown at Hampton University. After putting up a season high in points (49) and total yards (611) against Florida A&M, the Bulldogs (3-3, 2-1) will look to carry over its newfound momentum into another Homecoming matchup with the Pirates (4-2, 3-2).
"I think that we found at least a method to get our offense going," he said Monday. "What we done is we simply focused on things that (quarterback Cleve McCoy) seems to do well and go to work from there. It seems to be pretty good."
McCoy's performance against FAMU (14 of 19 passing for 178 yards, 136 rushing yards) earned him his third career Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference Offensive Player of the Week award. He was one of four Bulldog players who won conference honors along with defensive back Markee Hamlin, linebacker Julius Wilkerson and offensive lineman James Lee.
Getting McCoy comfortable, as well as being able to work on offensive execution with key players like tight end Octavius Darby who were unavailable for practice paid off in the Bulldogs' best offensive showing in 27 years.
With Fall Break taking place, the Bulldogs held an even rarer Monday afternoon practice. Going to a place where no SCSU team has never won and playing before a national audience for the second straight week, Pough said it's important for his team to remain sharp.
"That's a concern the fact that we hadn't won there before," he said. "We just got to go in and play at least at a level that's as good or better than what we played last week. It's Homecoming, it's a great crowd. I think the most important part of the whole thing is not necessarily where we're playing but how we play. If we play well, then we should be okay."
SCSU's last visit to Armstrong Stadium saw it take a 10-0 lead, only to surrender two second-quarter touchdown passes by Antwan Smith in losing 14-10. Last year's game won by the Bulldogs 13-6 as their defense once again held the Pirates scoreless in the second half.
Although Hampton's coming off a 20-19 loss to Bay rival Norfolk State, Pough believes the Pirates will be at their best on Saturday.
"We'll see the very best that they have," he said. "Anytime your backs are against the wall, they are going to give you their best shot. You can add to the fact that this will be their largest crowd of the year at their stadium, that gives them extra incentive to play very, very well. It will be as good a Hampton team that has played all this year. It will be similar to what happened when they played Princeton (a game they won 48-27) and some of the other people they've beaten up on."
A major battle is expected upfront where Lee will line up against preseason MEAC Defensive Player of the Year Kendall Langford. Pough hinted how Lee fares against the Pirates' athletic defensive line could have some NFL draft ramifications.
"All of the pro scouts have been in here talking...and they told us that the true measure of James Lee will be once we play Hampton because Hampton's got two guys that are possible first-round guys. Langford for sure and (Marcus) Dixon possibly and when you see (Langford) on tape, he may be as active as any defensive lineman I've seen in a long time. He ran Cleve down last year. He ran Will Ford down last year. Those guys are extremely, extremely active as far as defensive line front personnel is concerned. They don't have (Justin) Durant, but the cupboard ain't bare."
A win not only places SCSU in the race for the MEAC title, but will also give Pough a .500 record against every MEAC team since his arrival in 2002. He's 2-3 against the Pirates, accounting for the Bulldogs only wins in the series.
Another motivation for the Bulldogs is extending their 13-0 record in nationally-televised games under Pough. ESPNU carried the SCSU/FAMU game on tape delay and will do the same this past weekend at Hampton.
"Anything that we can find out at this point that gives us more incentive to win this football game, we'll try and use," Pough said. "But, our overall perspective is to win each game now as we go and hopefully, the other situations would take care of themselves favorably for us as we attempt to continue to win."
BULLDOGS vs. PIRATES
WHO: South Carolina State (3-3, 2-1) at Hampton (4-2, 3-2)
WHEN: Saturday at 2 p.m.
WHERE: Armstrong Stadium in Hampton, Va.
TV: ESPNU (tape delay at 10 p.m.) on Channel 160 on Digital Time Warner Cable, Channel 609 on DirectTV and Channel 148 on The Dish Network
RADIO: WQKI 102.9 FM
Improved play by his team or catching an opponent having a bad day on defense?
It's an answer South Carolina State head football coach Oliver "Buddy" Pough hopes is proven to be the former going into Saturday's showdown at Hampton University. After putting up a season high in points (49) and total yards (611) against Florida A&M, the Bulldogs (3-3, 2-1) will look to carry over its newfound momentum into another Homecoming matchup with the Pirates (4-2, 3-2).
"I think that we found at least a method to get our offense going," he said Monday. "What we done is we simply focused on things that (quarterback Cleve McCoy) seems to do well and go to work from there. It seems to be pretty good."
McCoy's performance against FAMU (14 of 19 passing for 178 yards, 136 rushing yards) earned him his third career Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference Offensive Player of the Week award. He was one of four Bulldog players who won conference honors along with defensive back Markee Hamlin, linebacker Julius Wilkerson and offensive lineman James Lee.
Getting McCoy comfortable, as well as being able to work on offensive execution with key players like tight end Octavius Darby who were unavailable for practice paid off in the Bulldogs' best offensive showing in 27 years.
With Fall Break taking place, the Bulldogs held an even rarer Monday afternoon practice. Going to a place where no SCSU team has never won and playing before a national audience for the second straight week, Pough said it's important for his team to remain sharp.
"That's a concern the fact that we hadn't won there before," he said. "We just got to go in and play at least at a level that's as good or better than what we played last week. It's Homecoming, it's a great crowd. I think the most important part of the whole thing is not necessarily where we're playing but how we play. If we play well, then we should be okay."
SCSU's last visit to Armstrong Stadium saw it take a 10-0 lead, only to surrender two second-quarter touchdown passes by Antwan Smith in losing 14-10. Last year's game won by the Bulldogs 13-6 as their defense once again held the Pirates scoreless in the second half.
Although Hampton's coming off a 20-19 loss to Bay rival Norfolk State, Pough believes the Pirates will be at their best on Saturday.
"We'll see the very best that they have," he said. "Anytime your backs are against the wall, they are going to give you their best shot. You can add to the fact that this will be their largest crowd of the year at their stadium, that gives them extra incentive to play very, very well. It will be as good a Hampton team that has played all this year. It will be similar to what happened when they played Princeton (a game they won 48-27) and some of the other people they've beaten up on."
A major battle is expected upfront where Lee will line up against preseason MEAC Defensive Player of the Year Kendall Langford. Pough hinted how Lee fares against the Pirates' athletic defensive line could have some NFL draft ramifications.
"All of the pro scouts have been in here talking...and they told us that the true measure of James Lee will be once we play Hampton because Hampton's got two guys that are possible first-round guys. Langford for sure and (Marcus) Dixon possibly and when you see (Langford) on tape, he may be as active as any defensive lineman I've seen in a long time. He ran Cleve down last year. He ran Will Ford down last year. Those guys are extremely, extremely active as far as defensive line front personnel is concerned. They don't have (Justin) Durant, but the cupboard ain't bare."
A win not only places SCSU in the race for the MEAC title, but will also give Pough a .500 record against every MEAC team since his arrival in 2002. He's 2-3 against the Pirates, accounting for the Bulldogs only wins in the series.
Another motivation for the Bulldogs is extending their 13-0 record in nationally-televised games under Pough. ESPNU carried the SCSU/FAMU game on tape delay and will do the same this past weekend at Hampton.
"Anything that we can find out at this point that gives us more incentive to win this football game, we'll try and use," Pough said. "But, our overall perspective is to win each game now as we go and hopefully, the other situations would take care of themselves favorably for us as we attempt to continue to win."
BULLDOGS vs. PIRATES
WHO: South Carolina State (3-3, 2-1) at Hampton (4-2, 3-2)
WHEN: Saturday at 2 p.m.
WHERE: Armstrong Stadium in Hampton, Va.
TV: ESPNU (tape delay at 10 p.m.) on Channel 160 on Digital Time Warner Cable, Channel 609 on DirectTV and Channel 148 on The Dish Network
RADIO: WQKI 102.9 FM
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