Sunday, December 16, 2012

Gold Nuggets win by 20 in first road game of the season

HATTIESBURG, Miss. -- Andraquay Quinnine and SiMon Franklin scored 13 points apiece Friday to lead NAIA No. 9 Xavier University of Louisiana in a wire-to-wire 62-42 women's basketball victory against William Carey.

It was the first road game of the regular season for the Gold Nuggets (8-1), who won their sixth in a row and snapped a two-game losing streak at William Carey (6-5).

Quinnine's points were a season high, and it was the fourth time she scored in double figures. Franklin led Xavier with seven points during a 25-3 run which covered both halves and lasted nearly 10 minutes. Whitney Gaston-Loyd's two free throws with 14:03 remaining capped the run and gave the Nuggets their largest lead, 48-22.

Xavier's Chelsea Broussard scored 10 points, all in the first half, to equal her career best. Her final basket gave the Nuggets a 31-20 halftime lead.

Amber Jackson, with 12 points, was William Carey's only double-figure scorer. Xavier limited the Lady Crusaders' leading season scorer, Vechatita Bonner, to a season-low four points in 23 minutes.

Xavier outshot William Carey 41.7 to 33.3 percent from the floor. The Nuggets reached 40 percent for the first time since their opener. Xavier committed 18 turnovers and gained 33, 22 by steals. Quinnine, Franklin and Paige Gauthier each had four steals, and Carmen Holcombe had three.

Xavier, which entered the game No. 2 in scoring defense in NAIA Division I, allowed less than 50 points for the sixth time this season. William Carey scored its fewest points this season and lost for the first time in five games.

Xavier, a 62-59 and 60-51 loser in its previous two trips to William Carey, improved its series lead to 49-21. The teams will meet again Jan. 31 at Xavier's new Convocation Center.

It was the Nuggets' first game since the conclusion of semester exams earlier in the day, and it was their final game before Christmas. Their next games will be Dec. 28 against Belhaven and Dec. 29 against NAIA No. 24 Faulkner in the Coaches vs. Cancer Classic at Montgomery, Ala. The Nuggets' next home game will start at 2 p.m. against NAIA No. 12 Bethel (Tenn.) on Jan. 2.
 
By Ed Cassiere, Sports Information Director

XU's Jackson, Moses receive All-Louisiana honors again

Zahri Jackson
NEW ORLEANS — Xavier University of Louisiana's Zahri Jackson was a repeat selection on the 2012 All-Louisiana women's cross country team announced late Friday, and Joseph Moses was voted Coach of the Year for the fifth time.
    
Xavier had no representatives on the All-Louisiana men's team, which also was announced Friday.
    
Jackson, a sophomore from Kingwood, Texas, and a graduate of Kingwood Park High School, won the Gulf Coast Athletic Conference individual championship for the second consecutive year — this time in a school-record 18 minutes, 54.69 seconds for 5,000 meters — and led the Gold Nuggets to their seventh consecutive GCAC team title.
    
Jackson was GCAC Runner of the Week three times and tied the league's women's career record with eight Runner of the Week awards. Her time at the GCAC meet was the second fastest there since 1999. She is the first female in at least 13 seasons to win the GCAC individual championship as a freshman and sophomore.
    
Moses, in his eighth season at Xavier, led the Nuggets to another GCAC title and, for the fourth time in five years, a berth in the NAIA national meet. The XU women were 33-9 entering nationals, including a victory against Seton Hall of the Big East Conference, and posted the GCAC's first perfect score at the women's league meet since 1996.
 
Moses won the Louisiana coaching award for the second consecutive year, the fourth time in five years and the fifth time in seven years. He is the only Louisiana coach to win the women's award more than twice.
    
A Louisiana Sports Writers Association panel selected the teams.

Coach Joseph Moses
2012 All-Louisiana Women's Cross Country Team
Emmi Aguillard, senior, Tulane
Paige Callahan, sophomore, Tulane
Laura Carleton, senior, LSU
Tessni Carruthers, sophomore, Nicholls State
Allison Crawford, freshman, McNeese State
Anna Katherine Devitt, freshman, Louisiana-Lafayette
Zahri Jackson, sophomore, Xavier
Fionnuala Ross, senior, McNeese State
Runner of the Year: Laura Carleton, LSU
Newcomer of the Year: Jessica Stone, senior, New Orleans
Freshman of the Year: Anna Katherine Devitt, Louisiana-Lafayette
Coach of the Year: Joseph Moses, Xavier

2012 All-Louisiana Men's Cross Country Team
Alex Bruce-Littlewood, graduate, McNeese State
Alex Kiptoo, sophomore, McNeese State
Hillary Kirwa, junior, Louisiana-Monroe
Jarrett LeBlanc, senior, McNeese State
Mark Manion, sophomore, Tulane
Daniel Mutai, senior, Louisiana-Monroe
David Rooney, senior, McNeese State
Runner of the Year: David Rooney, McNeese State
Newcomer of the Year: Hillary Kirwa, Louisiana-Monroe
Freshman of the Year: Stephen Kerr, McNeese State
Coach of the Year: Brendon Gilroy, McNeese State

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

Gold Rush double up on Martin Methodist, win 64-57



MOBILE, Ala. -- Wanto Joseph, Anthony Simmons and Denzell Erves produced double-doubles Friday for NAIA No. 16 Xavier University of Louisiana in a 64-57 men's basketball victory against Martin Methodist in the Spring Hill Classic.

The Gold Rush (10-2), playing for the first time since the conclusion of semester exams earlier in the day, are 4-0 on the road this season.

Joseph, the reigning Gulf Coast Athletic Conference Player of the Week, and Xavier Rogers led Xavier with 15 points apiece. Joseph had a career-high 10 assists, nine in the first half. Simmons had 10 points and 10 rebounds, and Erves had 10 points and 12 rebounds. Nick Haywood made a season-high four 3-pointers and scored 13 points for Xavier, which produced five double-figure scorers for the second time this season.

Marlon Williams scored 18 points, Jeremy Rodgers a season-high 16 and Antonio Coleman 10 for Martin Methodist (6-7), which has lost three in a row.

Coleman's two free throws at 12:38 of the first half concluded a 16-0 run which gave the RedHawks an 18-7 advantage. Martin Methodist took its biggest lead, 20-8, on Davie Champagnie's basket at 10:58. Then Xavier scored 23 of the next 26 points -- including Haywood's 4-point play and Rogers' back-to-back 3-pointers -- and took the lead for good in the 16th minute. The Gold Rush led 33-28 at halftime. The final margin was Xavier's largest of the second half.

Rogers scored in double figures in consecutive games for the first time this season and scored his most points since the opener. Simmons' double-double was his fifth of the season, all in the last seven games, and 11th of his career. Erves' double-double was his seventh of the season and 14th of his career. It was the first time since the start of the 2003-04 season that Xavier had three double-doubles in a game.

Xavier outshot the RedHawks 42 to 39.6 percent from the floor and outrebounded them 34-30. Both teams committed 15 turnovers, but the Gold Rush had a 24-13 advantage in points off turnovers. Xavier's eight made 3-pointers -- its most since the opener -- in 17 attempts.

On Saturday, Xavier will play Voorhees (8-6) at 3 p.m., and Martin Methodist will play Spring Hill at 5 p.m. to conclude this event. Voorhees defeated Spring Hill 59-56 in Friday's second game.


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

Saturday, December 15, 2012

Maynor says Rams have ‘feeling’ they can win title

FLORENCE, Alabama  -- “We believe.”

That’s the simple answer Coach Connell Maynor of Winston-Salem State gave when asked why his team has been so good this season.

That motto has spread throughout campus and appears on T-shirts and other accessories with the WSSU logo. Now, the Rams are one win away from the school’s first Division II championship in football.

WSSU (14-0) will play Valdosta State (11-2) at 1 p.m. today at Braly Stadium in Florence, Ala. The game will be televised on ESPN2.

“Those guys know they have a chance to make history,” Maynor said.

The Rams can become the first historically black college to win the Division II championship and the second to win a national championship in football. Florida A&M won the I-AA title in 1978.

After WSSU advanced to the title game last week with a 41-18 victory against West Texas A&M, Maynor avoided two players trying to pour a cooler-size bucket of water on him. He scolded them and kept moving, because the Rams haven’t yet reached their goal.

READ MORE

WSSU fans take in Alabama history, gear up for game


FLORENCE, ALA. --  Cheryl Johnson and Rosyln Moffitt, alumnae of Winston-Salem State University, wanted to show their group of nine other WSSU alumni and students some of the history of the civil-rights movement as they drove Friday to Florence, Ala.
The group is among a large contingent of WSSU fans who traveled from North Carolina and the Southeast to attend the NCAA Division II National Championship football between Winston-Salem State and Valdosta State.
Johnson and Moffitt, both 1978 graduates of WSSU, decided to stop in Birmingham, Ala., and visit the 16th Street Baptist Church where four black girls were killed in a racially motivated bombing there in September 1963. Historians say that incident helped galvanize public support for the passage of the Civil Rights Act in 1964.

“We wanted to give the young men a sense of history,” Moffitt said.

The group then returned to the van and completed the 545-mile trek to Florence. For most of them, it was their first trip to Alabama. Johnson, a native of Winston-Salem, and Moffitt, a native of Raleigh, both live in Charlotte.

The group is staying at ...

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Friday, December 14, 2012

Alabama State holds on to beat Troy 74-68, earns season first win

WINSTON-SALEM, Alabama -- Alabama State made it interesting, but did manage to pick up its first win of the season with a 74-68 victory against Troy.

A 3-pointer from Shawntez Patterson with 11:28 left in the game gave the Hornets a 64-44 lead, which was also their largest lead of the game.

From there, Troy started to work its way back into the game by scoring nine consecutive points over the next five minutes to cut the lead to nine at 64-53.

A Stephawn basket and Denzell McDaniel three slowed the Trojans momentum pushing the lead back out to 69-53 with five minutes left, but Troy had one more push in them.

Troy closed the game out scoring ASU 15-5 to cut the deficit down to the final six- point margin.  Helping the comeback was ASU's problems at the free-throw line where at one point it missed six consecutive and only made six of their 19 attempts in the second half.

For the second consecutive game, the Hornets had four players score in double digits as Patterson, Brown and Phillip Crawford scored 12 points each.  Coming off the bench McDaniel added 10.

READ MORE

Ram Ramblings: Change of mindset a key during Maynor's tenue

WINSTON-SALEM, North Carolina  --   I haven’t arrived in Alabama yet but will get there later tonight to cover what has to be the biggest moment in athletics in Winston-Salem State history on Saturday.

Those players and students who were around when Coach Big House Gaines won the 1966-67 Division II basketball championship might beg to differ but Saturday’s Division II national championship game is a big deal. The 14-0 Rams will take on Valdosta State at 1 p.m. and if you can’t be in Alabama it will be live on ESPN2. Also WSJS (600) and WSNC (90.5) are scheduled to air the game on radio.


One of the things I remember about Connell Maynor’s three years here has been how he changed the culture. It used to be that winning a CIAA title was what it was all about, and then if the playoffs came, then that’s OK too.

I first noticed a big difference last season when the Rams won the CIAA title in Durham and beat Elizabeth City State. I was down on the sidelines and all Nic Cooper wanted to talk about was “the Natty.” And other players followed suit and while they were excited to have won a CIAA title that wasn’t the mindset.

Fast forward to this season and the mindset hasn’t changed. The Rams fell short last season losing in the semifinals but a win on Saturday will complete the three-year journey that Maynor and Athletics Director Bill Hayes started in the spring of 2010.

READ MORE

‘A huge deal,’ Winston-Salem State looks to be first HBCU to win national title

COACH CONNELL MAYNOR
WINSTON-SALEM STATE RAMS
FLORENCE, Ala. — No. 2 Winston-Salem State has already gone deeper into the playoffs than any other team from the Central Intercollegiate Athletic Conference. Now, the Rams are a win away from making history for black college football, too.

They face two-time national champion Valdosta State on Saturday hoping to become the first HBCU team to win Division II’s football national title.

“That’s a huge deal. For our conference, the HBCUs, to have a chance to play for a national championship and be the first one to win one, is a steppingstone,” Winston-Salem State coach Connell Maynor said. “It’s a great opportunity for us. We’re happy to be here carrying the flag for the CIAA and HBCU. It’d be a great thing if we could pull it off Saturday.”

2012 DII FOOTBALL CHAMPIONSHIP
Preview: Rams in search of history
Stats: Valdosta St. Winston-Salem St.
Scoreboard Interactive Bracket


The only other HBCU team to make the championship game, Central State of Ohio, lost 41-21 to North Dakota State in 1983.

Winston-Salem (14-0) is also trying to become just the fifth team to go 15-0.

Standing in the way is a Valdosta State team seeking its first title since 2007, David Dean’s debut season as head coach.

Winston-Salem is in its third season since aborting a Division I move for financial reasons. The program’s former status is just one more reason for Valdosta State (11-2), which ended the regular season ranked 17th, to keep the underdog mentality that formed with a rough start.

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Division I gambit a distant memory for Winston-Salem Rams

WINSTON-SALEM, North Carolina  --   There’s not much talk on the Winston-Salem State campus these days about “that Division I thing.”

As the WSSU football team prepares to play Valdosta State for the NCAA Division II football championship Saturday, the focus, quite naturally, is on that game. But there was a time, not long ago, when alumni and fans were divided after the administration stopped the transition to Division I.

“I remember that day vividly,” senior safety Malcolm Rowe said this week.

“That day” was Sept. 11, 2009 — the day Chancellor Donald Reaves announced that WSSU would remain in Division II and end the costly move to the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference and Division I.

By the time the 2009 football season ended, WSSU was 1-10, and the athletics department was in deep turmoil.

Reaves said this week he’d rather talk about the turnaround that Coach Connell Maynor and Athletics Director Bill Hayes have made in revitalizing the football program. He wasn’t interested in rehashing the decision to stay in Division II.

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Thursday, December 13, 2012

Southern set to choose Odums

BATON ROUGE, Louisiana  --  Ninety days after Dawson Odums took over as interim football coach at Southern University, 19 days after the end of the regular season and 10 days after Athletic Director William Broussard began digging into a pool of six semifinalists, the Jaguars have apparently ended their search where it began.

With Odums.

According to sources familiar with the search, Broussard will recommend Odums’ name to the SU System Board of Supervisors at their on-campus meeting Friday afternoon, ending a search that effectively began when Southern reassigned Stump Mitchell on Sept. 14.

The Jaguars played nine games after that, going 4-5 with Odums in charge. Three of those wins came against their top rivals — Jackson State, Florida A&M and Grambling.

Four of their losses were close. One of them — a 50-21 wipeout against Arkansas-Pine Bluff, the eventual champion — was not close.

Broussard declined to confirm the recommendation.

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Brian Jenkins Inks Contract Extension at B-CU

COACH BRIAN JENKINS
DAYTONA BEACH, Florida  --  It was announced Thursday morning that Bethune-Cookman University head football coach Brian Jenkins has signed an extension to stay at B-CU to lead the Wildcats Football program into the future.

Jenkins, recently completing his third year at the helm in Daytona Beach, has taken the Wildcats to the NCAA Football Championship Subdivision (FCS) Playoffs in two of his three years (2010, '12) with the program. As the 2012 Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference (MEAC) Coach of the Year, he led the Wildcats to an MEAC title and the first undefeated conference season for the Maroon and Gold since 1984. This past season, the Wildcats went 9-3 (8-0 MEAC) and played host to Coastal Carolina in the opening round of the FCS Playoffs at Municipal Stadium in Daytona Beach. It was the second MEAC title for the Cats under Jenkins - the fifth of its kind in school history - and they played host to an FCS Playoff competition for the third time in the past 10 years.

Since his arrival in Daytona Beach, Jenkins has compiled an overall record of 27-8, and an unprecedented 21-3 mark in league play. He has helped the Wildcats to two MEAC titles, two FCS Playoff appearances and been named the MEAC Coach of the Year twice.

"This is a place where I come to work each day and know that I'm surrounded by family," said Jenkins. "I want to thank so many people, but most importantly our President - Dr. Edison O. Jackson, and Lynn Thompson, our Director of Athletics, for giving so much of their time and talents to make this contract extension happened. I learned so much about them, not only as administrators, but I spent time with them as men. That really helped me to make my decision staying at Bethune-Cookman that much easier."

Jenkins' name had been associated with a job of similar position at Southern University in Louisiana as recently as this week.



"Southern has a great tradition and that is a great university with a wonderful athletic director," commented Jenkins. "But after spending time with God, my family at home, my family at work, and just hearing from so many passionate fans of Bethune-Cookman University - I just knew staying in Daytona Beach at B-CU was the right decision for me and all involved. Our fans are the best."

A graduate of the University of Cincinnati, Jenkins was recently tabbed as the AFCA FCS Region Two Coach of the Year for the second time, as well as being named a finalist for the Eddie Robinson Award.

For all the latest information on the Bethune-Cookman Wildcats, follow the official Twitter feed, @BCUathletics, or "Like Us" on Facebook at Bethune-Cookman Athletics.


COURTESY BETHUNE-COOKMAN UNIVERSITY MEDIA RELATIONS

Winston-Salem seeks first NCAA Division title against Valdosta on Saturday

FLORENCE, Alabama -- Not that you're hustling to plop down a bet on the NCAA Division II national championship game this Saturday, but if you do, you might want to take the over. This one promises to keep the scoreboard operator busy.

Winston-Salem State, ranked No. 2 in the final coaches' poll, averaged 42.69 points per game this year. Opponent Valdosta State, ranked No. 17, averaged 42.67 points. Those were the fifth- and sixth-most productive scoring machines in Division II.

Meanwhile, Winston-Salem was a modest eighth in scoring defense, Valdosta just 31st.

NCAA VIDEO: WSSU ON CAMPUS

Winston-Salem State (14-0) comes into the title game (noon CST at Braly Stadium, ESPN2 live telecast) as the least-experienced but in some ways most motivated of the two.

The Rams were also undefeated as they cruised into last season's tournament semifinals, standing at 13-0 before losing to Wayne State, 21-14.

The pass-happy Rams are led by quarterback Kameron Smith, who has completed 198 of 322 passes for 3,043 yards and 42 touchdowns.

Winston-Salem, the Central Intercollegiate Athletic Association champ, has had little exposure to the NCAA tournament. The Rams reached the second round in 1978, then lost in the first round in 1987, 1990 and 1991 before their march to the semis last season.

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Stellar play catapults WSSU Rams into title game




WINSTON-SALEM, North Carolina  --  A few days have passed since Winston-Salem State administered a 41-18 beat-down of West Texas A&M  in the NCAA Division II football semifinals.

The Ramatized crowd at Bowman Gray Stadium had good reason to dance and prance with glee. The victory catapulted their beloved home team into Saturday’s national championship in Florence, Ala. WSSU takes on Valdosta State (Ga.) at 1 p.m. in a nationally televised game on ESPN2.

“We played great (in the semifinals), almost flawless,” said Connell Maynor, Winston-Salem State’s head coach. “Now we have to play great just one more time.”

Advancing to the title game, however, is not nearly enough for this bunch. There’s more to come. Maynor has groomed his team to be ready for this appointed time. It’s safe to say that for WSSU, complete fulfillment will only come by winning the championship trophy and the banner that comes with it.

“From the very first day he got here, Coach Maynor has constantly preached to us about winning a national championship,” said linebacker Carlos Fields, who had 10 tackles against West Texas A&M. “This is bigger than WSSU, bigger than Coach Maynor, bigger than the city of Winston-Salem.”

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Gold Rush in NAIA top 25 for the 14th consecutive time

NEW ORLEANS — Xavier University of Louisiana fell three places to 16th Tuesday in the NAIA Division I Men's Basketball Coaches' Top 25 Poll. But despite the drop, the Gold Rush are in the top 25 for the 14th consecutive time — the program's longest streak since the start of the 1999-2000 season.

Xavier is in the top 25 for the 27th time in 28 polls.
    

This is the third poll of 2012-13 and the second of the regular season. The next poll will be announced Jan. 8.
    

The Gold Rush lost 77-67 at home to city rival Loyola in the only XU game of the past week. Xavier will play Martin Methodist at 5 p.m. Friday and Voorhees at 3 p.m. Saturday in the Spring Hill Classic at Mobile, Ala.
    

This is the third time in as many polls this season that the Gulf Coast Athletic Conference has a pair of top-25 teams. Joining GCAC member Xavier in the rankings is city rival SUNO, which fell four places to 25th.
    

Oklahoma Baptist received 8-of-11 first-place votes and is No. 1 for the second consecutive week.

   
NAIA Division I Men's Basketball Coaches' Top 25 Poll
(first-place votes in parentheses — records through Sunday, Dec. 9)
Rank
Team
Record
Points
Last
1
Oklahoma Baptist (8)
10-1
279
1
2
Cumberlands (3)
12-0
274
2
3
Lee (Tenn.)
11-0
263
3
4
Pikeville
11-1
250
tie-4
5
Westmont
7-1
242
NR
6
Columbia (Mo.)
9-0
235
6
7
Westminster (Utah)
9-1
228
7
8
Lindsey Wilson
12-1
219
8
9
Rogers State
10-2
215
tie-4
10
William Carey
9-1
183
15
11
Lewis-Clark State
12-0
181
10
12
Texas Wesleyan
8-1
180
11
13
MidAmerica Nazarene
10-2
174
12
14
Science & Arts
7-1
162
14
15
Cal State San Marcos
8-4
160
9
16
Xavier
9-2
140
13
17
Bethel (Tenn.)
12-1
132
24
18
Evangel
9-3
130
16
19
Concordia (Calif.)
6-3
119
NR
20
Campbellsville
8-3
92
tie-18
21
Faulkner
10-2
90
17
22-tie
Oklahoma City
6-1
89
22
22-tie
Montana State Northern
11-2
89
23
24
Texas College
9-1
83
RV
25
SUNO
4-1
79
21

Others receiving votes: John Brown 68, Biola 37, Southwestern Assemblies of God 29, Georgetown (Ky.) 25, Loyola 11, Montana Western 10, Mid-Continent 5, Culver-Stockton 5, Wiley 4.


By Ed Cassiere, SID
XULAATHLETICS
XAVIER UNIVERSITY OF LOUISIANA