Thursday, October 11, 2012

Reeling JCSU Golden Bulls put resolve to the test

CHARLOTTE, North Carolina -- Johnson C. Smith’s resolve is being tested. 

The Golden Bulls, who’ve given up a combined 118 points in losses to Lincoln (Pa.) and Winston-Salem State, are out of sorts going into the Oct. 13 game at Fayetteville State. Over the last two weeks, anything that could go wrong has, which is perplexing to JCSU coach Steve Aycock.

“We’ve got to reevaluate some attitudes,” he said. “These guys know what we expect as a coaching staff out of them. We’ve got to go back to the basics and check our character and make sure these guys don’t desert us and desert each other.”

The Golden Bulls continued on the wrong track in last week’s 63-7 loss to No. 4 Winston-Salem State in a CIAA South game. JCSU (2-4, 1-2) was never in contention as Rams quarterback Kam Smith threw five touchdown passes and completed 13-of-15 passes for 259 yards. WSSU scored on all seven first-half possessions while rolling up 399 yards before intermission. The Rams finished with 553 total yards while JCSU struggled to 263, and just 43 rushing on 35 carries.

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Linebacker Bryce Williams has become leader at Fayetteville State

BRYCE WILLIAMS
(COURTESY FSU BRONCOS ATHLETICS)
FAYETTEVILLE, North Carolina  -- Fayetteville State linebacker Bryce Williams isn't sure how effective he was during his year as a junior varsity assistant coach at his old high school.

Only a few years removed from high school himself and in the midst of a year off between colleges, Williams prowled the sideline as a de facto defensive coordinator.

He said he ran a basic defense. He tried to get his team to understand that preparation and sound football can trump strategy most of the time. He tried to convince his players of the importance of studying film.
He tried, but sometimes it can be tough to coach kids that aren't too much younger than you are.

"I wasn't a full-grown man, I was only 21," Williams said.

But of all the players reached by Bryce Williams, the coach, the one that might have learned the most was Bryce Williams, the player.

These days, that Williams is the Broncos' defensive linchpin. His coaches say he's got a keen sense for the game and use his work ethic as an example for his teammates.

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Alcorn State faces tough test at Alabama A&M

NORMAL, Alabama  -- Coming off its come-from-behind 20-17 win over Southern University last week, Alcorn State will look to pull off perhaps the upset of the SWAC season this week when it travels to unbeaten and Eastern Division-leading Alabama A&M.

The Bulldogs (6-0, 5-0 SWAC) lead the Eastern Division thanks to a defense that is allowing a league-low 12.7 points per game and an offense that has scored just under 30 (29.7) points per contest, good for second-most in the SWAC.

Suffice to say, Braves coach Jay Hopson knows his team faces an uphill battle Saturday in Huntsville, Ala.

“They’re a well-coached football team,” Hopson said during Monday’s SWAC teleconference. “We got to do what we do. We won’t do anything different than what we do. That’s kind of a cliche, but that’s reality.

“We have to worry about what we’re doing and how we’re executing our calls and playing good fundamental defense.”

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TSU Tigers take undefeated record on the road to SEMO

NASHVILLE, Tennessee --  After playing four of its first six games of the season at home, first place Tennessee State will take to the road to play four of its final five games away from home. That stretch begins at Southeast Missouri on Saturday at 6:00 p.m.

Tennessee State climbed to 18th in the Sports Network poll and No. 20 in the FCS Coaches poll this week. Southeast Missouri has lost its last three games against nationally-ranked opponents. The team’s last win over a Top 25 team was on Sept. 18, 2010, a 24-21 victory at then No. 5 Southern Illinois. Its last win at home against a ranked team was a 27-20 overtime win over No. 19 Tennessee State on Oct. 25, 2008. In last year’s meeting TSU outgained SEMO 536 yards to 158 yards on its way to a 55-3 victory at LP Field.
Trabis Ward had 135 yards and two touchdowns to lead TSU.

Off to its best start since 2001, Tennessee State scored two touchdowns in the final 8:49 on Saturday to upend No. 16 Eastern Kentucky 23-20. The win vaulted the Tigers from un-ranked to 18th in the Sports Network poll and up four spots in the FCS Coaches Top 25. Trabis Ward, who had 113 yards on the ground, scored on a 3-yard run with 8:49 to play.

Later in the fourth quarter sophomore linebacker
Nick Thrasher, who was named OVC Defensive Player of the Week, had a key sack on third down, and a play later EKU failed to convert on fourth down deep in TSU territory. The Tigers then took the ball and went 68 yards in 13 plays with quarterback Michael German scoring from 1-yard out with eight seconds to go. German passed for 227 yards and a touchdown to go along with his game-winning rush.

Although the 20 points were the most allowed by TSU this season, the Tigers are one of just two teams at the FCS level (Bucknell is the other) to not allow more than 20 points in a game this year. TSU ranks eighth nationally in scoring defense (14.5 points/game) and 28
th nationally in total defense (323.5 yards/game); TSU is the only OVC team to rank in the Top 60 nationally in total defense.

Southeast Missouri was idle last week, a week after losing at Jacksonville State to slip to 1-1 in OVC play. The team is 1-4 in games following a bye week under head coach Tony Samuel. In the JSU contest, the Redhawks pulled to within a point early in the fourth quarter, but failed to convert the PAT and then saw the Gamecocks score two touchdowns over the final 10:57 to win the contest.

Southeast failed to force a turnover in the game, the first time this season that has happened; the Redhawks currently rank sixth nationally in turnovers gained (16) and 10th in turnover margin (+1.40/game) on the season.

In the game senior Levi Terrell rushed for 146 yards, the third time this year he has reached the 100-yard rushing mark; Terrell enters this week ranked 13th nationally in rushing (118.0 yards/game). As a team the Redhawks rank first in the OVC and 15th nationally in rushing offense (218.4 yards/game).

Senior linebacker Blake Peiffer currently has 298 career tackles, which ranks seventh all-time in Southeast Missouri history; Peiffer is averaging 11.2 tackles/game, which ranks second in the OVC and ninth nationally in 2012. Defensive back Tylor Brock, who had 10 tackles in the loss at JSU, ranks fifth nationally interceptions (0.60/game).
The Tigers and Redhawks are deadlocked 10-10 in the all-time series and a different team has won the game each of the last eight years. Not since Southeast Missouri won in each 2003 and 2004 have one of these teams won back-to-back in the series. Overall the home team has won the game in each of the last 11 meetings dating back to 2000 (the 2000 and 2001 games were both at TSU while the 2002 and 2003 were each at SEMO due to a quirk in scheduling).


Trophies taken away, but memories remain for TSU

HOUSTON, Texas  --  Former Texas Southern linebacker Dejuan Fulghum held out hope that the NCAA would have spared the program's Southwestern Athletic Conference championship and records from the 2010 season once the details of an investigation into major violations were made public.

But when the NCAA handed down its ruling Tuesday morning, Fulghum, his teammates and former coaches were left with just memories of that season.

TSU's athletic department was placed on five years' probation for numerous infractions, including several committed by the football program under the watch of former coach Johnnie Cole, and a lack of institutional control. As a result, the school decided to vacate all team records for the 2006-07 and 2009-10 academic years in all sports and those from football and soccer in 2010, self-imposed penalties incorporated into the NCAA's broader punishment.

The ruling effectively eliminates any statistical existence of the Tigers' record-setting 2010 football season, which included a 9-3 finish, the program's first SWAC championship since 1968 and first outright conference title, first SWAC Western Division title and a No. 1 ranking in total defense among all Football Championship Subdivision programs.


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Wednesday, October 10, 2012

2012 Circle City Classic: NCCU vs. SCSU

NCCU working on 'special' season

DURHAM, North Carolina  --   N.C. Central is playing above .500 and has cracked the Sheridan Broadcasting Network Black College Football Poll, coming in at No. 10.

After four straight losing seasons, the Eagles are relevant again.

Football fans around the Triangle are basking in the successes of Duke, North Carolina and N.C. State. Those who root for NCCU can brag a little bit, too.

"We're not an embarrassment to the Triangle right now, and we're not an embarrassment to our fans and our alums," NCCU coach Henry Frazier III said.

"This could be a really special year. We've got a lot of work to do, but it can be special."

NCCU is 3-2, undefeated in two games in the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference.

Either Morgan State (3-2, 2-0) or NCCU will have picked up its first conference loss of the season once the final horn sounds on Saturday when the Bears host the Eagles for homecoming (1 p.m., WNCU 90.7-FM, nccueaglepride.com).

There still will be a lot of football left in the season after this weekend, and a loss for either team wouldn't necessarily extinguish their chances at a league title and a Football Championship Subdivision playoff berth.

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Following loss, Pough focused on remaining games at this point

ORANGEBURG, South Carolina  --  Buddy Pough was subdued, candid and yet resilient Monday during his weekly press conference.

In 11 seasons as South Carolina State head football coach, he’s never witnessed the low level of play exhibited by his team, particularly on offense and special teams.

Having experienced the worst Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference loss of his tenure at the hands of North Carolina Central, 40-10, Pough finds himself in a position of being a long shot for a postseason berth. Nevertheless, he’s vowed to use the second half of the season to get the program back on track.

“We’re going to try to win these five games at this point,” he said. “We’ve got more issues than I care to get involved with here this morning. But I can tell you that our main goal right now is to play the very best we can for the next five games.”

As to which quarterback will guide the Bulldogs over the final stretch is an open issue with Pough.
With starter Richard Cue coming off another subpar performance against the Eagles, backup Derrick Wiley having seen limited action and his younger brother TeDarius still hobbled by an arm injury, Pough described the position as having “hit about rock bottom” to the point where he joked about possibly suiting up again.





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Tuskegee coach Willie Slater ready for first Thursday game of career at Stillman

TUSCALOOSA, Alabama  --  In 27 years coaching college football, Willie Slater has seen it all, heard it all and been through it all with one exception---a Thursday night game.

The Tuskegee head football coach will be able to check that off his list when he leads the Golden Tigers into Tuscaloosa to face Stillman College for a key Southern Intercollegiate Conference matchup.

Kickoff is scheduled for 6:30 p.m. at Stillman Stadium. The game will be broadcasted live regionally on CSS.

"I've had never done it before," Slater said of preparing during the short week. "This is my first experience at this. So, it's a new thing for me. Our major practices are over, yesterday and today (Tuesday). That's about it. The rest of the time will be walkthrough stuff."

Since falling 7-6 against undefeated Alabama A&M, in the season opener at Legion Field, the Golden Tigers (4-1, 3-0) have strung together four straight victories, besting Johnson C. Smith (N.C.) Lane (Tenn.) Fort Valley State (Ga.) and Morehouse (Ga.). Stillman has been hot as of late as well. The Tigers (4-2) also, undefeated in conference play at 3-0, have won three in a row, downing Kentucky State at home and Lane and Benedict (S.C.) on the road in consecutive weeks.





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St. Aug's should be formidable test for WSSU

WINSTON-SALEM, North Carolina  --  Third-ranked Winston-Salem State expects its stiffest CIAA test yet on Saturday at home against St. Augustine's.  The Falcons have plenty of firepower on offense and a defense that's been playing well of late.

Saturday's game is an important one for the Rams, who are coming off an easy 63-7 win over Johnson C. Smith. Coach Connell Maynor likes to keep his Rams focused on one opponent each week but admits that when he looked at his schedule in the summer, he knew the St. Aug's game would be a pivotal one.

The Rams are 27-3 with only one regular-season loss at home Since Maynor took over three years ago. That loss was in 2010 — when the Falcons won 40-35.

"It was two years ago, but we avenged that loss last year when we beat them at their place," Maynor said about beating the Falcons 35-28. "But what that loss does, is it reminds us that they have beaten us before — right here at our home — and we were 6-0 then when we lost. Now we are 6-0 again."

The Rams are 3-0 in the CIAA and have yet to be tested. They scored on their first seven possessions last week against Johnson C. Smith.



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Tuesday, October 9, 2012

Ten Texas Southern University band members suspended

HOUSTON, Texas -- Ten members of the Texas Southern University marching band will face punishment for an alleged hazing incident, FOX 26 News has learned.

Sources tell FOX 26 that those band members will be suspended for the rest of the year from the band and university.

The students will also have their scholarships revoked as a result of their actions.

The full marching band will have limited performances as a result of the hazing investigation, FOX 26 has learned from the university.



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Texas Southern University cited, sanctioned for lack of institutional control by NCAA

HOUSTON, TEXAS  --  Texas Southern demonstrated a lack of institutional control and was responsible for booster involvement in recruiting, academic improprieties, ineligible student-athlete participation and exceeding scholarship limits, according to a decision announced Tuesday by the Division I Committee on Infractions.

In addition, the former head basketball coach was cited for unethical conduct and the former head football coach did not promote an atmosphere for compliance, the committee said in its report.

The committee noted that as a double repeat violator, Texas Southern either has been on probation or had violations occurring on campus, or both, for 16 of the past 20 years. At various times during the earlier probation periods the university reported to the committee it was taking certain remedial actions when it actually was not, which was of particular concern to the committee.

In this case, the university allowed 129 student-athletes in 13 sports during seven academic years to compete and receive financial aid and travel expenses when they were ineligible. The majority of these student-athletes had not met progress toward degree or transfer requirements. The committee noted “particularly serious violations” occurred when the former head football coach knowingly allowed a booster to recruit for the football program and the former head men’s basketball coach provided false or misleading information during the investigation.

The men’s basketball team also failed to serve its academic performance program penalty. During the 2009-10 season, the university was required to limit scholarships and restrict its athletically related activity to five days a week. The team awarded two more scholarships than allowed in the penalty and did not adhere to the practice restrictions.

The former head football coach and three former assistant football coaches were all aware that a booster was contacting potential transfers and their parents, according to committee findings. The booster also purchased an airline ticket for a prospective student-athlete’s girlfriend through an acquaintance of the former head football coach. The committee notes the staff not only failed to dissuade the booster from making such contacts but also actively encouraged him and did not attempt to determine if the booster’s activities were permissible under NCAA rules.

Over two academic years, the former head basketball coach and former head football coach made an arrangement to put two student-athletes on football scholarships for the purpose of circumventing the scholarship limits placed on the men’s basketball program. One of the student-athletes admitted he had initially been untruthful about playing football during the investigation and both student-athletes did not participate in the football program.

The university exceeded financial aid limits during the 2008-09 through 2010-11 academic years. Compounding the problems with oversight was that no squad lists were produced by the compliance office during the years the violations occurred.

The former head football coach failed to promote an atmosphere for compliance in the football program and monitor the activities regarding compliance by assistant coaches. The report states, “The former head football coach’s purported ignorance of well-understood and long-standing NCAA rules is not persuasive.” The committee noted the former head football coach demonstrated that rules compliance was not of foremost importance. Additionally, he did not establish a culture for rules compliance within his program and he did not monitor his staff’s interactions with the booster.

The former head basketball coach was cited for unethical conduct for knowingly providing false or misleading information concerning improperly awarded scholarships to two men’s basketball student-athletes. In its findings, the committee noted that the coach’s sole purpose in asking the head football coach to put the two student-athletes on a football scholarship was to procure athletically related scholarships beyond what the men’s basketball program was able to provide.

Because of the scope and nature of the findings, Texas Southern lacked institutional control due to its failure to have necessary safeguards in place to prevent violations; ensure the academic performance program sanctions were fully understood and complied with; and make certain that all scholarships were properly awarded and to generate squad lists. The university also insufficiently investigated academic issues that involved 24 student-athletes and allowed 12 of the 24 student-athletes to receive unearned academic credit. Texas Southern also failed to notify the NCAA about the ineligible competition of some of the student-athletes.

Penalties in this case include:

•Public reprimand and censure.
• Five years probation from October 9, 2012, through October 8, 2017.
• Postseason ban for the 2013 and 2014 football seasons and 2012-13 men’s basketball season.
• Three-year show-cause orders for the former head men’s basketball coach and the former head football coach. The public report contains further details.
• A limit of no more than 65 overall counters, 25 initial counters (from 30 maximum) and 60 equivalency scholarships (from 63 maximum) in football for four academic years.
• A limit of 11 men’s basketball scholarships (from 13 maximum) for three academic years.
• Due to health and safety concerns related to the reductions in scholarships and squad size, during probation, the football team may only compete against FCS member schools.
• Vacation of all team records for the 2006-07 through 2009-10 academic years in all sports, and vacation of all team records for the 2010-11 academic year in football and woman’s soccer (self-imposed by the university).
• Reduction in the available number of recruiting person days by 10 for men’s basketball during the 2011-12 and 2012-13 academic years (self-imposed by the university).
• During the 2012-13 and 2013-14 academic years, the university may only use half the available evaluation days in both the spring and fall evaluation periods in football.
• Football official paid visits are limited to 30 total per year for football and nine total per year for men’s basketball during the 2011-12 and 2012-13 academic years.
• An in-person review of the university’s athletics policies and practices must be conducted annually, at the university’s expense, through the term of probation. The review must generate a report of his/her findings, to be submitted with the annual compliance reports and submitted to the committee.
 

The members of the Division I Committee on Infractions who reviewed this case include Melissa (Missy) Conboy, acting chair of the Committee on Infractions and deputy director of athletics at the Notre Dame; John S. Black, attorney; Christopher L. Griffin, attorney; Roscoe C. Howard, Jr., attorney; Eleanor W. Myers, faculty athletics representative and law professor at Temple; James O’Fallon, law professor and faculty athletics representative at Oregon; Josephine (Jo) R. Potuto, faculty athletics representative and the Richard H. Larson Professor of Constitutional Law at the University of Nebraska College of Law; Greg Sankey, executive associate commissioner and chief operating officer for the Southeastern Conference; and Rodney J. Uphoff, coordinator of appeals and law professor at Missouri.

COURTESY NCAA.COM

Remembering A Legend: FAMU's Coach Alonzo S. "Jake" Gaither

TEACHER, COACH, CITIZEN --  Alonzo Smith "Jake" Gaither



Video 3: Willie Galimore; Video 4: Bob Hayes 100m final at 1964 Tokyo Olympics; and Video 5: Bob Hayes 400m Relay World Record at 1964 Tokyo Olympics.

Robert Booker: Basketball legacy at Knoxville College celebrated

Knoxville College President Dr. Horace Judson
KNOXVILLE, Tennessee  -- On Oct. 26, a ballroom at the downtown Holiday Inn will be filled with the largest group of former Knoxville College athletes and fans ever assembled. The event will mark the 84th anniversary of the first varsity basketball team to take the hardwood and to celebrate the Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Conference championship teams of 1956 and 1957. Organized by Dr. McKinley Dillingham, a member of the 1956 team, the festivities will include a panel of athletic standouts, a slide-show history of Knoxville College athletics and an old-fashioned meet and greet.

It is expected that all of the living members of both championship teams will be present. Representatives of women's basket ball teams and other sports have been invited to participate. Several members of the 1956 team will speak to the Knoxville College student body at its Contemporary Issues Program on Thursday morning.

The gathering at the Holiday Inn comes 56 years after the big tournament win in 1956 and 84 years after the Knoxville College gymnasium was built in 1928. That year the alumni raised $10,000 for the construction of the building. It was "a place to practice and a good excuse to form a team," said one observer.

A member of that first team was Theodore E. "Ted" Gross, who also played football and baseball and ran track. After graduating from Knoxville College in 1930, he taught at Maynard Elementary School and later became the highly successful basketball and football coach at Beardsley Junior High School.

As the new kids on the block, that first team lost ...

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Sports Fans:

If you do not know where Knoxville College stand in American history, following is a brief list of notable alumni of this historical institution.  Without Knoxville College, there may have never been an Alonzo S. "Jake" Gaither in the College Football Hall of Fame, or the countless young men that went on to successful professional careers in the NFL -- and in life -- from Florida A&M, under Coach Gaither.


George E. Curryeditor-in-chief of the National Newspaper Publishers Association news service (NNPA) and www.BlackPressUSA.com.
Michael Eric DysonProfessor of sociology at Georgetown University, author, media commentator, talk radio show host[1]
C. Virginia Fieldssocial worker and former Borough President of Manhattan, New York
Johnny FordMayor of Tuskegee, Alabama
Jake GaitherLegendary Florida A&M University football coach who won more than 85 percent of his games over a 24-year period, from 1945 to 1969.  College Football Hall of Famer. 
Grady Jacksonformer defensive tackle in the National Football League
Vernon Jarrettfirst African-American columnist for the Chicago Tribune and former president of the National Association of Black Journalists (NABJ)
Ken Johnsonformer defensive end in the National Football League
Lyman T. Johnsoneducator and influential leader of racial desegregation in the state of Kentucky during the 1940s
Dr. Edith Irby Jonesfirst female president of the National Medical Association
Barbara Rodgersanchor for KPIX TV in San Francisco
Ralph Wileynoted author, speaker, and sports columnist for The Oakland Tribune, Sports Illustrated, and ESPN

Xavier Gold Nuggets defeat Dillard in three at The Barn

Xavier University of Louisiana's 2012 women's volleyball team
ROSTER
COACHES

NEW ORLEANS — Chinedu Echebelem and Taylor Reuther had 14 kills apiece Monday, leading Xavier University of Louisiana to a 25-20, 25-12, 25-22 Gulf Coast Athletic Conference women's volleyball victory against city rival Dillard at The Barn.

The Gold Nuggets (12-4, 6-0 GCAC) have a seven-match win streak and 20 consecutive victories against conference opponents over the last two seasons.  They beat the Lady Bleu Devils (3-6, 2-5) in three sets for the first time.

Carolyn Baker had 17 kills for Dillard.

Xavier trailed 15-12 in the first set before taking the leading for good with a 7-2 run which included two Reuther kills. An Echebelem kill put Xavier ahead to stay, 10-9, in the third set.

"I'm so proud of our team," XU coach Christabell Hamilton said. "We wanted them to serve tough, ball control and take advantage of the free balls. They executed the game plan."

Echebelem and Reuther each hit .423 in 26 attacks. Echebelem had 10 digs to tie Reuther for the team lead in double-doubles this season with five. Reuther, the NAIA leader in aces per set, served four more against Dillard and has 27 aces in the last seven matches.

Darian Harris led Xavier with 11 digs, and Franziska Pirkl assisted on 36 kills.

Xavier out hit Dillard .309 to .229 and had advantages of 44-28 advantage in kills, 7-5 in aces and 35-25 in digs. The Gold Nuggets hit at least .300 for the fourth consecutive time and the sixth time in their last seven matches.

Dillard leads the series 7-5, but Xavier has won the last five meetings.

The Gold Nuggets will play another city rival, Loyola, in a non-conference match at 7 p.m. Wednesday at The Barn.

Box score

By Ed Cassiere, Sports Information Director
VISIT: XULAATHLETICS
VISIT: XAVIER UNIVERSITY OF LOUISIANA

Livingstone's Edwards fitting in

DORIAN EDWARDS
Livingstone College Blue Bears
5'-10'' DT, Senior
Hometown: Kinston, N.C.
(Courtesy LC Athletics)
 
SALISBURY, North Carolina --  As a kid growing up in Kinston, Dorian Edwards had his heart set on playing football at N.C. State.

In high school, Edwards played center for the Kinston Vikings, earning All-Area honors his freshman and sophomore years and All-Conference honors his junior and senior years. During his senior season, he was selected to play in the prestigious East-West All-Star game.

Edwards was good, but at 5-foot-10 and 280 pounds, Division I coaches didn't consider him big enough to compete at the Division I level. Edwards was offered a chance to play for the Wolfpack - via an academic scholarship.

"I was almost in tears when I realized I was too small to play football for a Division 1 school," Edwards recalled this week. "To be so close to the opportunity to live out my dream and have something I couldn't control stop me really hurt."

Edwards didn't remain disappointed for long.

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Monday, October 8, 2012

Winston-Salem Rams Moves to #3 in AFCA Division II Poll

WACO, Texas  --  With its 23-20 win over Southern Arkansas, Harding (Ark.) moved its record to 5-0 and jumped into the AFCA Division II Coaches’ Top 25 Poll for the first time since September 20, 2005, at No. 23. Pittsburg State (Kan.) still sits at No. 1 with 29 first-place votes after a 30-21 victory over Central Missouri. Colorado State-Pueblo still sits No. 2, but a loss by then-No. 3 Grand Valley State (Mich.) causes some change with the rest of the Top 5.

Winston-Salem State (N.C.) moves up to No. 3, followed by No. 4 Missouri Western State and No. 5 New Haven (Conn.).

Grand Valley State (Mich.) fell 11 spots to No. 14 after its 40-24 loss to Ferris State (Mich.). West Alabama, Sioux Falls (S.D.) and Humboldt State (Calif.) all fell out of the poll this week after losses, causing two more teams to join Harding (Ark.) as newcomers this week.

North Carolina-Pembroke enters the poll at No. 24 after a 20-10 victory over Tusculum (Tenn.), moving its record to 5-1. The last time the Braves were in the Top 25 was October 4, 2010. Shepherd (W.Va.) is the final newcomer this week. The Rams re-enter the poll at No. 25 after a five week layoff. They beat West Virginia Wesleyan, 37-6, to move their record to 5-1.

2012 American Football Coaches Association Division II Coaches’ Poll – October 8, 2012
RankSchool (1st votes) Rec. Pts.Prev.Week SixNext Game
1.Pittsburg St. (Kan.) (29)5-07491D. Central Missouri, 30-21Oct. 13 vs. No. 7 Northwest Missouri St.
2.Colorado St.-Pueblo6-07082D. Chadron St. (Neb.), 45-38 OTOct. 13 at Colorado School of Mines
3.Winston-Salem St. (N.C.) (1)6-06814D. Johnson C. Smith (N.C.), 63-7Oct. 13 vs. St. Augustine’s (N.C.)
4.Missouri Western St.6-06585D. Northeastern St. (Okla.), 45-31Oct. 13 vs. Missouri Southern St.
5.New Haven (Conn.)5-06326D. Assumption (Mass.), 65-7Oct. 13 at Bentley (Mass.)
6.Bloomsburg (Pa.)6-06007D. Millersville (Pa.), 38-14Oct. 13 vs. East Stroudsburg (Pa.)
7.Northwest Missouri St.5-15408D. Central Oklahoma, 70-7Oct. 13 vs. No. 1 Pittsburg St. (Kan.)
8.Ashland (Ohio)6-05389D. Ohio Dominican, 44-21Oct. 13 vs. Walsh (Ohio)
9. Minnesota-Duluth5-147210D. Minnesota St.-Moorhead, 45-14Oct. 13 at Minot St. (N.D.)
10.Minnesota St.-Mankato6-045812D. Augustana (S.D.), 52-14Oct. 13 vs. Southwest Minnesota St.
11.Ouachita Baptist (Ark.)5-045611D. Southwestern Oklahoma St., 33-12Oct. 13 at Arkansas-Monticello
12.Henderson St. (Ark.)6-038814D. Arkansas-Monticello, 71-0Oct. 13 at No. 23 Harding (Ark.)
13.Midwestern St. (Texas)4-137013D. No. 18 West Alabama, 42-27Oct. 13 vs. Angelo St. (Texas)
14.Grand Valley St. (Mich.)5-13353Lost to Ferris St. (Minn.), 40-24Oct. 13 at Northern Michigan
15.California (Pa.)5-129616tD. Clarion (Pa.), 41-22Oct. 13 vs. Lock Haven (Pa.)
16.Shippensburg (Pa.)6-029316tD. LIU Post (N.Y.), 36-20Oct. 13 at Kutztown (Pa.)
17.Saginaw Valley St. (Mich.)5-128615D. Northwood (Mich.), 28-20Oct. 11 vs. No. 18 Wayne St. (Mich.)
18.Wayne St. (Mich.)4-124719D. Hillsdale (Mich.), 24-21Oct. 11 at No. 17 Saginaw Valley St. (Mich.)
19.Washburn (Kan.)5-120920D. Lincoln (Mo.), 51-18Oct. 13 vs. Truman St. (Mo.)
20.West Texas A&M5-119721D. Angelo St. (Texas), 35-9Oct. 13 vs. Abilene Christian (Texas)
21.Emporia St. (Kan.)6-016225D. Southwest Baptist (Mo.), 19-15Oct. 13 vs. Lindenwood (Mo.)
22.Indiana (Pa.)5-115322D. Slippery Rock (Pa.), 33-16Oct. 13 at Edinboro (Pa.)
23.Harding (Ark.)5-0132NRD. Southern Arkansas, 23-20Oct. 13 vs. No. 12 Henderson St. (Ark.)
24.North Carolina-Pembroke5-139NRD. Tusculum (Tenn.), 20-10Oct. 13 vs. Charleston (W.Va.)
25.Shepherd (W.Va.)5-124NRD. West Virginia Wesleyan, 37-6Oct. 13 at West Liberty (W.Va.)
Dropped Out: West Alabama (18), Sioux Falls (S.D.) (23), Humboldt St. (Calif.) (24)

Others Receiving Votes: Bentley (Mass.), 20; Miles (Ala.), 17; Michigan Tech, 16; West Alabama, 16; Indianapolis (Ind.), 14; Sioux Falls (S.D.), 13; New Mexico Highlands, 8; North Alabama, 6; Tuskegee (Ala.), 5; Hillsdale (Mich.), 4; St. Cloud State (Minn.), 3; Southern Arkansas, 3; American International (Mass.), 2.

South Carolina State’s woes can be summed up in two words: no offense

INDIANAPOLIS, Indiana — The final nail in what was South Carolina State’s Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference title hopes was potentially hammered in in resounding fashion Saturday afternoon at Lucas Oil Stadium.

Quite literally doing the hammering was North Carolina Central, a team which in a losing effort last year scored the most points by a conference team against S.C. State. Not only did the Eagles equal the feat in a 40-10 win at the 29th annual Circle City Classic, it also now holds the distinction of having the largest margin of victory in MEAC play over a Buddy Pough-led Bulldog team.

With five games remaining, S.C. State (2-4, 1-2) could still salvage a 12th consecutive winning season . Yet for many Bulldog supporters, the epitaph for the 2012 campaign can already be summed up in two words — NO OFFENSE.

It’s an expression which for this year’s S.C. State football team has a double meaning. For Pough, his assistants and players, “NO OFFENSE” could sum up their feelings toward a frustrated fan base where high championship expectations are the norm.

From fans and an observers’ standpoint, “NO OFFENSE” means exactly what it says. Exclude the dominating performance in the season-opener against Georgia State and one could see what’s been missing.




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St. Augustine's 32, Livingstone 27

SALISBURY, North Carolina  -  Livingstone's drive for a Southern Division championship hit a minor speed-bump Saturday afternoon.

With a chance to reinforce their newborn identity and win a third straight CIAA game, the Blue Bears fell to the occasion and suffered a 32-27 homecoming day loss to St. Augustine's.

"I've got a bad taste in my mouth," senior receiver Anthony Holland said at lively Alumni Stadium, where LC fell 32-27. "As a team we didn't execute like we should have in the first half. We dug ourselves a hole and never got out of it."

The loss dropped Livingstone (2-4, 2-1) out of a tie for first place in the division standings and may have set off some alarms. The Blue Bears surrendered 495 total yards, had no sustainable running game (35 yards) and even misfired on a couple of extra-point attempts.

"It would have been a nice one to win," said LC coach Elvin James. "But we were always fighting to catch up. If we had only played the whole game the way we played the second half, we might have come out on top."

Livingstone's first half was a 30-car pile-up. St. Aug's (4-2, 2-1) jumped to ...

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Virginia State Trojans stuns Elizabeth City State Vikings 28-17

ETTRICK, Virginia -- Virginia State quarterback Jarred Battle said earlier this week he had to step his game up if the Trojans are to turn around their season. Battle, a senior from Norfolk, made true his declaration.

Battle completed 12 of 14 passes for 231 yards and three touchdowns, and the Trojans' defense got a key turnover with four minutes remaining to stun Elizabeth City State 28-17 Saturday at Rogers Stadium.

"I was very relaxed," Battle said. "I knew we had to get the win to stay within the means of getting the championship.

"I just think we came out here and played as a team. That was the No. 1 thing and that's why we won, as a team."

The loss halted the Vikings' three-game winning streak.

"It was a big win for us. We were playing the defending Northern Division champs and it was kind of like our season," said Trojans coach Andrew Faison. "Everything is on our side now. We still have to play everybody, so we kind of control our own destiny."


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THE SHOW: Southern University Human Jukebox vs. Alcorn State University Sounds of Dynomite Marching Band

Alcorn rallies by Southern

ALCORN STATE, Mississippi  --  Jordan Payne ran for two touchdowns as Alcorn State rallied to beat Southern University 20-17 on Saturday in Southwestern Athletic Conference action.

The Braves opened the scoring with a 1-yard touchdown run from freshman backup quarterback Payne. Alcorn State (2-4, 2-2) then jumped ahead 14-0 after John Gibbs connected with Joe Price on a 42-yard strike. Four different quarterbacks took snaps for the Braves.

Southern (2-3, 1-2), however, did not give up, tying the game 14-all behind a 50-yard punt return for a touchdown by Virgil Williams. Southern took a 20-17 lead after Greg Pittman converted his first career field goal.

Alcorn State and Southern traded possessions until the Braves got the ball on their 29 with 6:10 remaining for the final drive of the game.

The Braves drove to the Jaguars 1 and capped the 14-play drive with a touchdown run from Payne with 20 seconds remaining.

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Jaguars take loss to Braves in good fashion

LORMAN, Miss. For a team that had just fallen in heartbreaking fashion and seen its brief win streak dashed, Southern took its 20-17 loss to Alcorn State remarkably well.

Unlike in the Jaguars’ last loss, which came to Mississippi Valley State, there wasn’t a flood of tears or seething anger.

Disappointed? Sure. But that’s really all this amounted to — a disappointing outing that put the kibosh on some grandiose visions of where their season could go.

Mathematically, Southern is still in the Southwestern Athletic Conference title hunt. At 1-2 in the conference and a game-and-a-half behind Arkansas-Pine Bluff, all it takes is six straight wins to book a spot in the SWAC Championship.

But unlike at this time last week, when SU was coming off back-to-back victories and on top of the world, that doesn’t seem likely.

Southern was outworked by a struggling Alcorn team, dispelling the notion that the Jaguars were somehow invincible under interim coach Dawson Odums.

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Savannah State remains winless in 2012

SAVANNAH, Georgia - Travis Davidson ran 13 times for 125 yards and three touchdowns to lead Morgan State University to a 45-6 victory over Savannah State University in a Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference football game Saturday night at T.A. Wright Stadium.
 
A crowd of 1,978 watched as SSU (0-5, 0-3) took a 6-0 lead with 8:20 left in the first quarter on quarterback Antonio Bostick’s 1-yard touchdown run, which capped an 11-play, 74-yard drive. Preston McCarthy’s kick for the extra point was blocked.
 
Morgan State (3-2, 2-0) responded immediately. Chris Flowers returned the ensuing kickoff for an 88-yard touchdown and Earvin Gonzalez kicked the extra point to give the Bears a 7-6 lead with 8:06 remaining in the first quarter.
 
“There was nothing special about our special teams, and that has been a continuing issue all year,” SSU head coach Steve Davenport said. “We’ll continue to address it. But it really is putting us in bad situations right now.”
 
In the second quarter, Morgan State made it 14-6 when Brian Mann ran for a 4-yard touchdown and Gonzalez kicked the extra point with 1:50 remaining before halftime.
 Morgan State led, 14-6, at halftime.
 
“I am happy for the kids that they’re playing one half, but the game is two halves, 60 minutes, and we’ve been preaching that since Day 1, and we’ve got to fix it,” Davenport said. “It does us no good to play a good half if we’re not going to follow it up with a second half.”
 
Morgan State, playing its fourth consecutive road game, scored 31 unanswered points in the second half to improve to 7-0 in the series with SSU.


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THE SHOW: North Carolina A&T State University Blue & Gold Marching Machine vs. Bethune-Cookman University Marching Wildcats

Bethune-Cookman defense, Williams topple N.C. A&T, 28-12




DAYTONA BEACH, Florida  --  Bethune-Cookman let quarterback Quentin Williams air it out on the first series of Saturday's 28-12 MEAC win over North Carolina A&T at Municipal Stadium and it was not pretty.

Operating out of a five-receiver set, Williams missed on three straight passes and the Wildcats punted.
 
“That was on me, I was a little too hyped up,” Williams said.
 
Williams said a conversation with receiver Preston Cleckley with the Wildcats trailing 7-0 helped him settle down and get going in leading Bethune-Cookman (4-2, 3-0) past North Carolina A&T (2-3, 0-2).
 
“He just said ‘Q' be you,” Williams said.
 
The first series might not have been pretty, but for the majority of the game “Q” being “Q” was a thing of beauty. The redshirt freshman accounted for 239 yards – 111 rushing and 128 passing. He scored twice on runs and passed for another touchdown.
 
“Quentin is a very good athlete,” Bethune-Cookman head coach Brian Jenkins. “He can operate our offense at a high level as well as Brodrick (Waters) as well as Jackie (Wilson).