Friday, April 12, 2013

Oak Ridge hires new coach; Ricky Watters will replace Elijah Williams, now an assistant at FAMU

ORLANDO, Florida  --  Oak Ridge has a new football coach, and he is a Super Bowl champion.

Ricky Watters, who rushed for more than 10,000 yards during a 10-year NFL career, was hired to replace Elijah Williams as the Pioneers' coach. Williams, who took an assistant coaching job at Florida A&M, played four seasons in the NFL and went to the University of Florida.

Former Gators defensive back Keiwan Ratliff was hired as an assistant coach at Oak Ridge.

Watters, 44, scored three touchdowns (two receiving) and rushed for 47 yards as the San Francisco 49ers beat the San Diego Chargers 49-26 in Super XXIX in 1995 in Miami. The former Notre Dame standout was taken in the second round of the 1991 draft by the 49ers.

UMES’ Ramirez says edge this season is in her head

CANTON, Michigan   By all accounts, Anggie Ramirez didn’t have many improvements to make after the 2011-12 season concluded. Her Maryland-Eastern Shore Hawks won the national championship, she was an All-MEAC first-team selection, earned All-American second-team honors and fired the highest single game in the MEAC (277).

However, it was an honor she didn’t get that let her know something was missing.

“After I didn’t make Team Colombia last year, it was a little bit rough,” Ramirez, a native of Bogota, Colombia, said. “I felt like I was a little bit weak, so this year was more about getting together my mental game. I think that was the next step I had to make to becoming a better bowler.”

And so, this star player who also has played volleyball on an international stage, began the process of improving her mental outlook.

“There were doubts in my game and my confidence, as well,” Ramirez said. “So I worked really hard on it. I’ve felt a real change. I just feel better prepared to compete tan I was a year ago.”

Part of that preparation included seeing two sports psychologists, one that normally works with the Maryland-Eastern Shore team and another in Colombia. Apart from the mental aspects, Ramirez also saw on-lane changes that she wasn’t expecting.

TSU's Cynthia Cooper-Dyke Named USC Women's Basketball Head Coach

Cynthia Cooper-Dyke
Head Women's Basketball Coach
University of Southern California
LOS ANGELES, California -- Basketball Hall of Famer Cynthia Cooper-Dyke, who as a player helped lead USC to a pair of NCAA championships before winning an Olympic gold medal and four WNBA titles and then as a head coach resurrected three collegiate programs, was named head coach of the USC women's basketball program, Trojan athletic director Pat Haden announced today (April 11).

"In Cynthia Cooper-Dyke, we have a proven winning coach who happens to be a USC basketball icon," Haden said. "She was a part of the best basketball ever played here at USC, and she has seen success at so many levels of the game. As a coach she has turned around several programs. We believe she can lead USC back to successful women's basketball, and we welcome her back to the USC campus."

"If you were to ask me what my dream job was at any point in my coaching career, I would always have said my dream is to come back and lead the USC women's basketball team," Cooper-Dyke said. "I'm literally living the dream coming back to California and being named the new women's basketball coach at USC.

"I want to thank Pat Haden and Donna Heinel and the entire Trojan Family for giving me this awesome opportunity. I don't take it lightly. I feel like the different programs I've been a part of, from Prairie View A&M to UNC Wilmington to Texas Southern, have prepared me in many ways for the Pac-12 and USC. We've been successful at these programs. I can't promise it will happen in a year like it did at these other programs, but I promise we will put forth our best effort as a staff to create a program that embraces the work ethic and mentality that will help us be successful.

"I also want to thank my coaching staffs and all the players I've coached. The players are always in the forefront of everything we do. It's about helping these women grow and succeed in this world. As a coach, you can't be successful without your players believing in you and performing to the best of their abilities. I wouldn't be here without them.

"I'm very excited to coach every one of these USC players. I'm excited about the talent we have. I'm excited to teach and learn and motivate and really see them blossom into the players they can truly become. It's a very talented group of women and I'm excited to be their new head coach."   Cooper-Dyke, 49, has an eight-year collegiate head coaching record of 150-106 (.586), with seven post-season appearances and three league Coach of the Year honors.   She takes over a tradition-rich USC program that is among the nation's elite. The Women of Troy have appeared in four Final Fours, winning twice, and produced such icons as Cheryl Miller, Lisa Leslie, the McGee twins, Tina Thompson and Cooper herself.

The 2013 USC squad was 11-20 overall and finished seventh in the Pac-12 with a 7-11 record under fourth-year head coach Michael Cooper (no relation). The Women of Troy last appeared in the NCAA tournament in 2006 and were a WNIT finalist in 2011.

Cooper-Dyke was the head coach at Texas Southern in 2013 and guided the Lady Tigers--who were 5-26 the previous year--to their first-ever Southwestern Athletic Conference regular season championship with a 16-2 league mark (14 more league wins than in 2012). TSU advanced to the SWAC Tournament's semifinals (as the tourney's No. 1 seed, a first in program history) and earned its first-ever WNIT berth. At 20-12 overall, the Lady Tigers set school records for season victories (20) and consecutive wins (15).

She spent the previous two seasons (2011-12) as the head coach at UNC Wilmington. Inheriting a Seahawks team that was 12-19 the prior season (and just 6-12 in league play), her debut 2011 squad notched a school record for victories with a 24-9 overall mark (14-4 for second place in the Colonial Athletic Association), won 11 consecutive home games, got to the semifinals of the CAA Tournament and advanced to the second round of the WNIT in the school's first-ever post-season appearance. She was the 2011 CAA Coach of the Year. Then in 2012, UNCW posted its second consecutive 20-win season (20-13) for the first time in school history, made it to the CAA tourney semis again after going 11-7 in the league and was a WNIT participant.

Cooper-Dyke began her college coaching career at Prairie View A&M, a program that had never had a winning season. She posted an 86-72 record with four post-season appearances during her five-year (2006-10) tenure there. After going 7-21 overall (6-12 in the SWAC) in 2006, she guided her second team in 2007 to the program's first winning campaign (19-14), its first SWAC regular season title (at 14-4), its first SWAC Tournament crown and its first NCAA Tournament berth, as she was named SWAC Coach of the Year. The Lady Panthers repeated as SWAC regular season champs in 2008 with a 15-3 league mark and finished at 22-12 with a trip to the WNIT. Prairie View won its third consecutive SWAC regular season title in 2009 (going 17-1), and also won the SWAC tourney title and played in the NCAA Tournament as she again was the SWAC Coach of the Year while her team had a 23-11 record. The Lady Panthers were 15-14 in 2010 (12-6 in for second in league play) and were a WNIT participant.

Cooper-Dyke was able to have such success at Prairie View, like Texas Southern a historically black college that faces financial and recruiting hurdles, despite having to endure NCAA sanctions her last 2 years that included scholarship reductions and probation. The program was penalized for violations that occurred during Cooper-Dykes' first season, but the NCAA said those violations were the result of the school's failure to educate her about NCAA rules.   One of the world's greatest and most decorated women's basketball players, Cooper-Dyke was the 1981 L.A. City Player of the Year at Locke High in Los Angeles while averaging 31 points a game and leading her team to the California State 4A championship. She also was on Locke's track team.

She then starred as a 5-10 guard for USC's 1983 and 1984 NCAA Championship teams. A four-time letterwinner (1982-84, 86), as a senior in 1986 she was named an All-Conference first teamer and made the NCAA All-Tournament team as the Women of Troy made it to the NCAA Final. She averaged 12.9 points, 3.1 assists and 2.1 steals during her career as USC won 114 of 129 games. She currently ranks ninth on USC's all-time scoring list (1,559 points), eighth in assists (381) and third in steals (256).

Cooper-Dyke began her pro career in Europe for Spain's Samoa Betera (1986-87) and Italy's Parma (1987-94) and Alcamo (1994-96) teams. She led the league in scoring once (36.7 average) with Samoa Betera and eight times in Italy. She was the MVP of the European All-Star team in 1987 and was named to the All-Star team of the Italian leagues in 1996 and 1997.   During that time, Cooper-Dyke collected five medals while representing the United States in international play. She won a gold medal at the 1987 Pan American Games, a gold at the 1988 Seoul Olympics, golds at the 1986 and 1990 FIBA World Championships and a bronze at the 1992 Barcelona Olympics.

She returned to the United States in 1997 at the age of 34 to play with the Houston Comets of the newly-formed WNBA. She led the Comets to a record four consecutive WNBA championships (1997-2000), being named WNBA Finals MVP each time. She was the league's MVP in 1997 and 1998 and was a two-time WNBA All-Star (1999-2000) before retiring in 2000. She led the league in scoring three consecutive years. She became the first WNBA player to hit the 500-, 1,000-, 2,000- and 2,500-point career scoring plateaus. She scored at least 30 points 16 times and had a 92-game double figure scoring streak.

She moved into the coaching ranks in 2001 as the head coach of the Phoenix Mercury and spent that season and the first half of the 2002 season there, going 19-23 overall, before returning to the Comets' 2003 playing roster until an early injury curtailed her season and led to her retirement. She earned her third WNBA All-Star honor in 2003 and, at 40, was the oldest player to play in a WNBA game at that time. She finished as Houston's all-time leader in scoring (2,601 points), free throw percentage (.871) and assists (602). She averaged 21.2 points per game in her career.

She was inducted into the USC Athletic Hall of Fame in 1999, the Women's Basketball Hall of Fame in 2009 and the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame in 2010 (the first WNBA player enshrined). She was the Women's Sports Foundation's 1998 Sportswoman of the Year. In 2011, she was voted by fans as one of the Top 15 players in WNBA history.

She was born on April 14, 1963, in Chicago, Ill., but grew up in Los Angeles as one of eight children. She speaks Italian fluently. She earned her bachelor's degree from Prairie View A&M.   She and her husband, Brian Dyke, who is a sports agent, have 10-year-old twins, son, Brian Jr., and daughter, Cyan.

In 2000, Cooper-Dyke published her autobiography, "She Got Game: My Personal Odyssey," chronicling her childhood, her basketball career and her mother's battle with breast cancer.

 Photo Gallery

WHAT THEY'RE SAYING ABOUT Cynthia Cooper-Dyke  

"Some people, when they hire a coach, the athletic department hits a home run. Southern California has hit a grand slam, with two out and down three with the bases loaded. They hit it out of the park. This is one of the greatest hires. She's the perfect fit. She's the hardest working person I've ever been around. She's a recruiting machine and she loves Southern California. As a player she had the most tenacity, she was gritty, hard-nosed and hard-working. And she possesses the same characteristics as a coach as she did as a player. They better tie up their shoe laces in Southern California and tie them up now!"
-- Van Chancellor, former Houston Comets head coach

"It's obvious that she's going to be an outstanding coach. She'll make a splash on the national stage. I've had the opportunity to play against her and it's obvious that she's knowledgeable and she knows what she wants to do. She's a great coach. Her teams play hard and with purpose. She was clearly a great competitor herself. When it comes to USC, that's her heart. I can think of no better representative than her. She's a wonderful person and a great ambassador for the sport. She has the great respect of coaches across the country. She has given so much of herself to the game, she won't be satisfied with anything less than the best. She'll put out a product that USC can be proud of. I'm very excited for her."
-- C. Vivian Stringer, Rutgers head coach

"I absolutely enjoyed playing with Cynthia Cooper. She is the ultimate winner. She has an incredibly work ethic and a deep passion for being the best in whatever she does. When I think about her, I think about passion, desire, and a work ethic to be a winner."
-- Coquese Washington, former Houston Comets teammate

 "She definitely has been an inspiration to my life on and off the court. She came to UNCW in my last year of playing and helped me become the all-time steals leader at UNCW. It was simple things, like jumping passing lanes. I got more steals because we focused on defense, and that defense created our offense. In her first year we made the WNIT for the first time ever. I found myself working harder just because of who was in front of me. It was motivating. It's hard not to give your all when you play for someone like that. Her energy and positivity on and off the court fed me and my teammates. She's been a listening ear when I needed her. There aren't words to describe the type of person she is. She has a passion for the game and for her student-athletes."
--Brittany Blackwell, former UNC Wilmington player

"One thing for sure she's really passionate about the game and the players. From the outside looking in, she's hard and she's in your face, but it's about positive reinforcement. It's really motivating. You want to do your best, but you need someone to bring it out of you and give you that extra push. All four years, our game developed so much every year. She took the time and taught us. She gave us a better basketball IQ and understanding. The way she had us work, she helped us create a strong work ethic and it was followed by victories. PVAMU hadn't won more than maybe eight games in a season and we had four straight winning seasons while I was there. Under anyone else's coaching we couldn't have done that. I really appreciated her as a coach."
-- Gaati Werema, former Prairie View A&M player

  "It is very exciting to see Cynthia Cooper return to USC as the head coach for women's basketball. Cynthia brings a wealth of experience as a player and coach as well as an unmatched spirit and passion for the game. I look forward to the next few years under coach Cooper, as USC women's basketball -- once again -- becomes a national championship program."
-- Barbara Hedges, former USC Senior Women's Administrator

YEAR-BY-YEAR WITH Cynthia Cooper-Dyke

YEARTEAMOVERALL RECORDLEAGUE RECORD/FINISH
POST-SEASON
2006Prairie View A&M7-216-21/8th tie SWAC
--
2007*Prairie View A&M19-1414-4/1st SWAC**
NCAA
2008Prairie View A&M22-1215-3/1st SWAC
WNIT
2009*Prairie View A&M23-1117-1/1st SWAC**
NCAA
2010Prairie View A&M15-1412-6/2nd SWAC
WNIT
2011*UNC Wilmington24-914-4/2nd CAA
WNIT
2012UNC Wilmington20-1311-7/4th tie CAA
WNIT
2013Texas Southern20-1216-2/1st SWAC
WNIT
COLLEGE CAREER150-106 (.586)105-39 (.729)
2001Phoenix Mercury13-195th
--
2002Phoenix Mercury6-4 --
--
WNBA CAREER 19-23 (.452)

*League Coach of the Year
**League Tournament Champion \


COURTESY UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA ATHLETICS MEDIA RELATION

Cooper-Dyke named head women's basketball coach at USC


HOUSTON, Texas - The University of Southern California announced the hiring of Texas Southern head women’s basketball coach today (April 11).  Cooper-Dyke leaves TSU after leading the program to unprecedented heights during her first year at the helm of the program.

“Texas Southern University is ecstatic for the opportunity Coach Cynthia Cooper-Dyke has to take over the USC women’s basketball program,” said TSU Director of Athletic Dr. Charles McClelland. “When we brought Coach Cooper-Dyke into our athletics program we asked her to recruit quality student-athletes, assist them with their progress towards graduation, and win championships. She was able to accomplish all of those goals during her first year at Texas Southern.”

“We’re extremely sad to see her leave but we’re very excited about the foundation that our women’s basketball program has built under her leadership and we look forward to our program continuing to succeed in the classroom and on the court.”

In 2013 Cooper-Dyke guided the Texas Southern Lady Tigers who were 5-26 the previous year to their first-ever Southwestern Athletic Conference regular season championship with a 16-2 league record.

TSU advanced to the SWAC Tournament's semifinals (as the tourney's No. 1 seed, a first in program history) and earned its first-ever WNIT berth. At 20-12 overall, the Lady Tigers set school records for season victories (20) and consecutive wins (15).

“This is a great opportunity for me but I will miss Texas Southern,” said Cooper-Dyke. “I’m excited for the opportunity to go back to California and coach at my alma mater where I have so many fond memories, where I grew up as a person, as a woman, and as a basketball player.”

A national search to find the next TSU head women’s basketball coach will begin immediately.

COURTESY TEXAS SOUTHERN UNIVERSITY SPORTS INFORMATION

NSU's Ward ties Division I mark with hit streak

NORFOLK, Virginia  --  Haley Ward didn't realize she made history.

When the Norfolk State sophomore outfielder grounded out in Game 2 of a doubleheader March 29, her streak of 13 consecutive at-bats with a hit ended.

That tied the NCAA Division I mark held by Boston University's April Setterlund, set in 2010.
"It shows that hard work is starting to pay off," said Ward, the preseason MEAC Player of the Year and former Cox High standout.



The key to her feat, Ward said, was staying focused and having a purpose when entering the batter's box. It also helped being oblivious to her hit parade.

"I probably would have had a differently mentality (if I knew about it)," Ward said.

Ward captured her second straight MEAC Player of the Week award on April 1. The first followed a 10-for-11, 12-RBI performance in a three-game sweep of Coppin State.

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In the FCS Huddle: Excellence starts with inner drive

ORANGEBURG, South Carolina  --  (Sports Network) Falling from the top perch of Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference football hasn't lessened the pressure on South Carolina State.

"I think it might be more," says head coach Buddy Pough, who wants nothing to do with the middle of the standings, where the Bulldogs found themselves at season's end last year.

"It gives you a little different sense of urgency. I think you go through years where you've been successful for so long, you just kind of think that's something that's given. You don't necessarily think there's a possibility that you could have a year like we had last year. And now that we've had, I think it's created a little sense of urgency, where we know we've got to do something special or that can happen to us again."

The Bulldogs believe last year's 5-6 record was a ...

NCCU Football Hosts Spring Game Tonigjht

DURHAM, North Carolina  --  The North Carolina Central University football program will host its “Maroon vs. Gray” spring game on Friday, April 12 at 6 p.m. inside O’Kelly-Riddick Stadium on the NCCU campus. Admission is free.

For many years, NCCU’s spring game has featured the offensive and defensive units going head-to-head with a spattering of special teams play.  On Friday evening, the Eagles will be divided into two teams to provide fans with more of a game-like experience.

The Eagles will begin warm-ups and go through position drills at 6 p.m., with game kickoff scheduled for 6:30 p.m.

NCCU is coming off of its first winning season since 2007, as the Eagles posted an overall record of 6-5 in 2012, with a MEAC record of 5-3.

The Eagles open their 12-game 2013 schedule with the “Bull City Gridiron Classic” at Duke on Aug. 31. The first of six NCCU home games will take place on Sept. 7 versus Saint Augustine’s.

Season tickets are on sale now for only $105, an $80 savings off of the value of a reserved seat for each home game. For complete details about season ticket specials, visit www.NCCUEaglePride.com or call the NCCU Ticket Office at (919) 530-5170.

For more information about NCCU football, visit www.NCCUEaglePride.com or download the NCCU Sports Network app available in the App Store, Google Play and Amazon.

Boxtorow’s 2013 National Spring Football Road Tour Makes Stop at NCCU

The fifth annual Boxtorow Spring Football Road Tour will stop in Durham, N.C., on Friday for the NCCU spring football game.

The nationally syndicated FROM THE PRESS BOX TO PRESS ROW with Donal Ware will broadcast live from 5:00-6:00 p.m. via its local radio affiliate, WAUG-AM 750 or online at www.boxtorow.com.

Visitors to the Boxtorow broadcast location underneath the O’Kelly-Riddick Stadium press box will receive free giveaways.

FROM THE PRESS BOX TO PRESS ROW is a sports talk show which places a major emphasis on HBCU Sports.  The show airs weekly on radio stations around the country including top markets such as Washington, D.C., Pittsburgh, Austin, Texas, Nashville, Raleigh, and Greensboro, N.C.  The show can also be heard via the Internet on Saturdays from 1-2 p.m. ET at www.boxtorow.com.

Football Season Tickets On Sale Now    

COURTESY NORTH CAROLINA CENTRAL UNIVERSITY SPORTS INFORMATION

Thursday, April 11, 2013

DSU Hornests to Hold Red/White Scrimmage This Saturday

DSU Head Coach Kermit Blount
DOVER, Delaware  --  The Delaware State University football team will wrap its 2013 spring drills with the annual Red/White scrimmage on Saturday (Apr. 13)  at 2:00 p.m. at Alumni Stadium.
More than 70 players have participated in this year's camp.

The Hornets are projected to return 12 starters from their 2012 squad, which posted the team’s first winning record since 2007. DSU was 6-5 overall and tied for third in the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference with a 5-3 mark in the league.

Delaware State must replace a number of key players, including quarterback Nick Elko, the 2012 MEAC Offensive Player-of-the-Year; and three other All-MEAC First Team performers.

Elko completed his DSU career as No. 2 in team history in passing yards (5,754) and completions (539); and third in touchdown passes (37). He set school season records for completions (259) and passing yards (2,828) last season.

Cory Murphy (r-jr.; 6-2, 205), a 2012 junior college transfer, and Esayah Obado (r-fr.; 6-200) have taken most of the snaps at quarterback this spring. Each was listed on the 2012 Hornet roster, but did not see playing time.

“Each of our quarterbacks is getting some valuable reps this spring,” said Delaware State head coach Kermit Blount. “This spring has been important in the development of our QBs; and I’m eager to see how each performs during our final scrimmage.”

The Hornets must also replace All-MEAC wide receivers Travis Tarpley and Justin Wilson.

Tarpley, also a 2012 Sheridan Broadcast Network Black College All-American, was tops in the MEAC in receptions (7.8 pg) and receiving yards (96.2 pg); and tied for first in the league in touchdown catches (7). Wilson was third in the MEAC in receptions (6.0 pg) and receiving yards (73.3 pg) last season. He led the league in receptions, receiving yards and touchdown receptions in 2010.

Milton Williams (jr.; 6-3, 200) and Mailk Golson (r-fr.; 5-10, 180) are among several players who will battle to replace Tarpley and Wilson as starting wide receivers.

Delaware State’s hopes to continue the improvement in the running game it began last season. The Hornets averaged 98.9 yards per game rushing in 2012, up from 50.3 per game in 2011. DSU also rushed for 13 touchdowns last season after tallying just six the previous year. 

Malcolm Williams (jr.; 5-10, 180) has had a productive spring after leading the Hornets with 437 yards rushing despite missing two games in 2012. Williams rushed for 120 yards, including a 60-yard touchdown, before hurting his ankle in Delaware State’s 23-7 loss to FBS Cincinnati last season.

Dae-Hon Cheung (so.; 5-9, 180) rushed for 410 yards (5.0 ypc) and three touchdowns, while Nagee Jackson had 238 yards rushing and a team-high seven touchdowns on the ground last season. Each player had at least one 100-yard rushing game in 2012.

The Hornet offensive line expects to return three starters this fall, led by 2012 All-MEAC Second Team center Brandon Cunningham (r-sr.; 6-2, 280). Keon Williams (so,; 6-2, 280) is emerging star at left guard.

The biggest loss along the offensive line is left tackle Nail Muradymov, a 2012 All-MEAC First Team performer.

Delaware State has seven projected starters returning on defense, led by 2012 All-MEAC First Team players Davon Moore (jr.; 5-11, 195) at free safety and inside linebacker Ernest Adjei (sr.; 6-0, 235).

Moore was third in the MEAC in tackles (8.8 pg; 97 total) and third for third with four interceptions in 2012.  His 175 interception return yards were tops in the MEAC and second among all FCS players last season.

Adjei was tied for sixth in the MEAC in tackles at 8.5 per game last season (93 total).

Delaware State defensive returners also include defensive back Terrick Colston (so.; 6-1, 190) and left end Rodney Gunter (jr.; 6-5, 300). Each was selected to the 2012 All-MEAC Second Team.

Colston, a 2012 Jerry Rice Award nominee (top FCS freshman), was second on the Hornets and fifth in the MEAC in tackles (8.6 pg; 95 total) last season.

Gunter was tied for seventh in the MEAC in sacks (0.5 pg; 5.5 total) and tops among DSU defensive linemen with 49 tackles (27 solo) last season.

Delaware State placekicker Mitchell Ward (jr.; 6-1, 180) and punter Marko Kano (jr.; 6-6, 220) also return. Ward was 12-for-19 on field goal attempts and perfect on 28 extra-point kicks in 2012. Kano averaged 39.4 yards (long 62) on 42 punts last season.

Returning defensive back Joe Boyd (jr.; 6-0, 195) was fourth on the team with 87 tackles last season. He was also credited with 3.5 tackles-for-loss, an interception and two forced fumbles. 

“I’m pleased with the progress we have made so far this spring,” Blount said. “It’s important that we have strong finish to camp and do the necessary off-season work to be ready for the new year.”    

2013 DSU Football Schedule

COURTESY DELAWARE STATE UNIVERSITY MEDIA RELATIONS

No shortage of title-winning pedigree in championship field

CANTON, Michigan  --  When you take a look at the list of teams vying for the 2013 NC Bowling Championship beginning Thursday at Super Bowl Lanes in Canton, Mich., two-time defending national champion Maryland-Eastern Shore is sure to grab your attention.

And it should. After all, the Hawks are two-time defending national champions and have won 10 tournaments this season. What’s more, they haven’t finished worse than second in any event they’ve competed in this year.

“We are honored to be the second overall selection,” head coach Kristina Frahm said. “I do feel, however that we have a top team and I think our experiences can help us make a serious run at winning another national championship.

“Obviously, we are looking for a three-peat.”

Look a bit further at the team list and you’ll notice that the field includes every school that has won the national championship since its inception in 2004.

Current NTCA No. 1 Nebraska won the first two championships in 2004 and ’05 and the Huskers hoisted the hardware again in 2009. The Huskers, like the Hawks, have participated in every national championship tournament. This season’s Huskers, however, sport a bit of a different look than in years past. The team boasts just one senior, team leader Kristina Mickelson, who suffered a cracked elbow in a car accident in September and has seen limited action this season.

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THE QUEST FOR A THREE-PEAT BEGINS TODAY

 CANTON, Mich. - While the University of Maryland Eastern Shore (UMES) women's bowling team is no stranger to history and records, they are heading into uncharted territory today when they embark on a quest for a third straight NCAA Championship and fourth overall. No team has won four NCAA titles and no one has won three-in-a-row.

The two-time defending champions, fresh off their dominating win for the MEAC title, are the No. 2 overall seed and will attempt to collect a third consecutive title - and fourth overall. UMES, along with seven other finalists, are competing April 11-13. The best-of-seven-games finals will air live on ESPNU on Saturday, April 13, at 8 p.m. with Dave Armstrong calling the action from the lanes, alongside analyst and PBA Hall of Famer Randy Pedersen.

Central Missouri, Nebraska, Arkansas State, Vanderbilt, Sam Houston State, Wisconsin-Whitewater and Fairleigh Dickinson round out the eight-team field. The final two days of the tournament will be played in the Baker format, in which teams of five compete against each other, with the members bowling one frame in order, through the 10 frames.

The event is held at Super Bowl Lanes, site of the 2009 Championships. While UMES didn't win in 2009, they did the last time they were in Michigan, 2011 when the event was in Taylor. Action begins Thursday the 11th at 11:00 a.m. The teams will bowl seven team games, facing each team in the field once. The second block starts at 5:30 p.m. and ends at 10:00 p.m. on the opening day. The first day determines seeding and the teams will then face-off in a double elimination bracket on Friday starting again at 11 a.m.

The official NCAA Bowling Championship digital program is available online and is free to view and will be updated after the championship. Fans can access that here.

The University of Detroit-Mercy is co-hosting the event and will update their website regularly throughout each day. Fans can find that by clicking here.The Detroit Sports Commission is the other host and will be updating social media regularly. The event is using a hash tag of #ncaabowling. Fans can find them at:

Facebook

Twitter

Fans can also match matches live via live streaming. Each match on Thursday and Friday is streamed and all matches are available here.

It can be found manually by going to www.ncaa.com, clicking the video tab, then NCAA Live-Winter Championships then the date.   The USBC will also be on hand and posting updates throughout the day at bowl.com

Everything will also be available on www.umeshawks.com

COURTESY UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND EASTERN SHORE SPORTS INFORMATION

Rand Paul goes to Howard University in peace, receives quiet

WASHINGTON, D.C.  -- Tea party titan Rand Paul, visiting Howard University on Wednesday, told students that he had been called “either brave or crazy to be here” at the historically black college.

Probably some of each: brave, because he’s trying to sell himself and fellow Republicans to African Americans, a singularly resistant demographic; and crazy, because he based his pitch on revised history and airbrushed facts — and the Howard kids weren’t fooled.

“No Republican questions or disputes civil rights,” the senator from Kentucky proclaimed. “I’ve never wavered in my support for civil rights or the Civil Rights Act.”

Howzat?


As a candidate in 2010, Paul questioned the constitutionality of the Civil Rights Act’s Title II, which prohibits private discrimination. “I don’t want to be associated with those people,” he said when MSNBC’s Rachel Maddow asked him about private businesses that refuse to serve black customers, “but I also don’t want to limit their speech in any way in the sense that we tolerate boorish and uncivilized behavior because that’s one of the things freedom requires.”

VIEW PAUL'S HOWARD U. VIDEO

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BC Purple-Gold Football Game Set For Saturday

COLUMBIA, South Carolina  --  The Benedict College Tigers will wrap up their 2013 spring football practice this Saturday with the annual Purple-Gold Game.

Kickoff at Charlie W. Johnson Stadium is 2:30 p.m.

A full day of fun, family activities is planned. The inaugural “Powder Puff Game” between the Benedict College cheerleaders and the female members of the Benedict College Marching Band of Distinction kicks things off at 11 a.m. An alumni flag football game is set to take place at 12:30 p.m.

A fan zone with a live DJ, a skills challenge for the kids, face painting and food will also be available. Fans can have their photo taken with the 2013 SIAC Men's Basketball trophy, cheerleaders and the tiger mascot. The official team shop will also be open for fans to purchase Benedict gear.

All events are free.

COURTESY BENEDICT COLLEGE SPORTS INFORMATION

Changes continue in rebuilding CIAA

CHARLOTTE, North Carolina  --  Changes continue to cycle in the CIAA office. Director of Public Relations Shera White and Associate Commissioner of Governance Monique Smith have left the conference.

Smith, a former St. Paul’s administrator, came to the league as its PR director after a tumultuous series of events. (Long, long story there.) When she was promoted, she hired White in her old position. That was 13 years ago.

For a while, I thought Monique and Shera would ride out the new administration under Commissioner Jacqie Carpenter. But it appears all parties were just trying to get through the CIAA tournament before going their separate ways.

Got to hand it to Carpenter. She was everywhere and in every thing during tourney week. No one could accuse her of sleeping on the job. And many of her initial critics are slowly coming around.

Hey, I was just happy the media got ...

FAMU's Smalls looking to fill big shoes at linebacker

TALLAHASSEE, Florida  --  The suggestion that he is now the guy to beat for one of two starting inside linebacker spots was enough to make Will Smalls chuckle.

It wasn’t that the FAMU junior found humor in the question. He knows that the competition will heat up when fall workouts begin.

But he clearly established himself during Saturday’s Orange and Green spring game with two interceptions that would put him ahead if Coach Earl Holmes were to make a depth chart today.



“I’m going to come out here and do the best I can to try to help my team,” Smalls said, downplaying his eight tackles in the intrasquad game and the fact that he took one of the picks back for a 33-yard touchdown.

One thing that Smalls didn’t want to be hyped too much is that he is constantly being compared to Brandon Hepburn, who led the Rattlers in tackles last season. The comparisons are coming now despite the fact that Smalls spent two seasons waiting to prove he could contribute.

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Wednesday, April 10, 2013

FAMU finds cure for athletics budget woes

TALLAHASSEE, Florida  --  How do you make a sea of red ink disappear?

Simple: You cover it with black ink. 
  
That is essentially what Florida A&M’s Budget and Finance Committee endorsed Wednesday for addressing an estimated $2.2 million deficit in athletics for the current academic year.

Following a plan proposed by Ronica Mathis from the budget division, FAMU will use more than $2 million in earnings on investments in scholarship funds to cover all athletic scholarships for the 2012-2013 school year. It would give the university a $645,000 surplus in athletics going into the coming school year, Mathis said.

Florida statute allows the university to use earnings on investments for scholarships, she said.

FAMU’s intercollegiate sports programs have lost ...

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FAMU football coach teaches schemes, lessons


Add caption

TALLAHASSEE, Florida  --  The chalkboard works just fine when Chris Cash wants to illustrate plays for the safeties he coaches on the FAMU football team.

But there is just no drawing up the bigger part of what the Rattlers’ assistant believes his players have to know when it comes to life choices and persevering in the face of adversity.

Cash just tells them about that.

Cash grew up in a single-parent household in a California neighborhood where drugs and gangs were right outside his door. He had to cope with the murder of a sibling. Another one is doing time in prison and another overcame prison time to earn a college degree.

Cash, who had a successful collegiate career at USC before spending five years in the NFL, said he doesn’t mind telling his story because some of his players might be facing similar challenges.

Stillman tennis heads to SIAC tournament

TUSCALOOSA, Alabama | The Stillman College women’s and men’s tennis teams have accomplished goal one of the 2013 season: to finish atop the conference standings. Now, the teams look to accomplish goal two: to win the conference tournament.

Both the Tigers and Lady Tigers are the No. 1 seed entering the SIAC tournament Thursday in Atlanta.

The men are 24-2 with a perfect 11-0 conference mark. The women are 28-1 and 11-0 in league play. The women are on a 25-match win streak and the men are on a 23-match win streak.

“This is going to be a tough tournament. There are some good teams who can win on any given day,” coach Will E. Riley said. “It is up to us to play well in each match if we are going to win the whole thing.”

In men’s singles, player of the year candidate ...

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Eight-team field selected for bowling national championship tournament

INDIANAPOLIS, Indiana  – The eight-team field competing for the 2013 National Collegiate Women’s Bowling Championship was announced Wednesday by the NCAA Women’s Bowling Committee. The seeded field includes the following teams, all selected at large:

NC WOMEN'S BOWLING CHAMPIONSHIP FIELD

1. Central Missouri
2. Maryland Eastern Shore
3. Nebraska
4. Arkansas State
5. Vanderbilt
6. Sam Houston State
7. Wisconsin-Whitewater
8. Fairleigh Dickinson

Competition begins with qualifying rounds in which each team bowls one five-person regular team game against each of the other seven teams participating in the championship for a total of seven games. Teams will be seeded for bracket play based on their win-loss record during the qualifying rounds. Teams will then compete in best-of-seven-games Baker matches in a double elimination tournament. In the Baker format, each of the five team members, in order, bowls a complete frame until a complete (10-frame) game is bowled. A Baker match tied 3½ games to 3½ games after seven games will be decided by a tiebreaker using the Modified Baker format.

UMES SEEKS THIRD STRAIGHT NCAA NATIONAL TITLE
The University of Detroit Mercy and the Detroit Sports Commission will host the championship, which will be held April 11-13 at Super Bowl Lanes in Canton, Michigan. Tickets can be purchased on www.NCAA.com prior to the championship.

Maryland-Eastern Shore won its second consecutive National Collegiate Women’s Bowling Championship in 2012 at Freeway Lanes in Wickliffe, Ohio defeating Fairleigh Dickinson in six games, winning the final game 203-176. With the victory, Maryland Eastern Shore became the first team since 2004-05 to win back-to-back national titles.

The championship finals will air on ESPNU Saturday, April 13 at 8 p.m. ET. A tape delay broadcast of the championship finals will air on ESPN Sunday, April 14 from 2 – 3:30 p.m. ET.

Tuesday, April 9, 2013

Maryland-Eastern Shore Hawks snags top spot in final regular-season poll

NASHVILLE, Tennesee Two-time defending national champion Maryland-Eastern Shore is back on top in the latest poll released Tuesday by the National Tenpins Coaches Association (NTCA). This is the final poll of the regular season and marks the first time the Hawks are on top since October when they were No. 1.

UMES, currently standing at 110-21, has had a dominating season and was recently named the No. 2 overall seed in the upcoming national championships. The Hawks are coming off of a sixth Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference (MEAC) Championship and a first-place finish in the Music City Classic. They have won 10 of the 13 events they have bowled in this season, finishing second in the other three.

Right below the Hawks is second-ranked Nebraska (69-22) with 694 points, trailing UMES’s 724 points. Nebraska earned six first-place votes while the Hawks got 15. Central Missouri (97-23), the new third-ranked team, got the other six votes and 689 points. The Jennies, who led the poll for several months, were ahead of Arkansas State (86-28) and Vanderbilt (85-38) who had 604 and 550 points, respectively.

Sam Houston State and Wisconsin-Whitewater traded places for sixth and seventh place and Fairleigh Dickinson (72-37; 408 points) stayed in the eighth spot. The top eight rankings mirror the recent NCAA announcement for the national championships in Canton, Mich.

Stephen F. Austin kept the No. 9 position, but Adelphi jumped from 14th after winning the Northeast Conference Tournament to complete the poll’s top 10.

Alabama A&M was the only newcomer, finishing in a tie for 20th place with Bethune-Cookman. Norfolk State and Delaware State represented the MEAC in 14th and 19th places, respectively.


NATIONAL TENPINS COACHES ASSOCIATION (NTCA) POLL

RANKSCHOOL (FIRST-PLACE VOTES)POINTSRECORDPREVIOUS
1Maryland Eastern Shore (15)724111-203
2Nebraska (5)69469-221
3Central Missouri (6)68997-232
4Arkansas State60486-283
5Vanderbilt55085-385
6Sam Houston State47897-367
7Wisconsin-Whitewater46866-346
8Fairleigh Dickinson40872-378
9Stephen F. Austin33066-3919
10Adelphi30879-3714
11Saint Francis (Pa.)25667-3510
12Kutztown20172-4013
13Sacred Heart19062-4612
14Norfolk State18261-3311
15Valparaiso12460-6715
16New Jersey City11962-4717
17LIU Brooklyn10553-4316
18Saint Francis (N.Y.)6169-69T18
19Delaware State2758-58T18
T20Bethune-Cookman1461-6420
T20Alabama A&M1445-41NR
Dropped out: None.

Others receiving votes: Alabama State, Bowie State, Fayetteville State, Monmouth, North Carolina A&T, Prairie View A&M.


COURTESY UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND EASTERN SHORE ATHLETICS AND NCAA.COM

SCSU Bulldog standout Jakar Hamilton trying to make the draft

ORANGEBURG, South Carolina  --  Playing football games in Arizona, Texas and Indiana this past season helped South Carolina State defensive back Jakar Hamilton become well-accustomed to long distance trips around the country.

The frequent flyer miles continue to add up for the University of Georgia transfer as he seeks to impress prospective NFL teams. The past week has seen Hamilton hop on flights destined to three different states to visit with the Dallas Cowboys, followed by San Diego and this past Monday in Green Bay.

At each visit, Hamilton has come away more optimistic about his chances of becoming the fourth straight former S.C. State player selected in the NFL draft which runs this year April 25-27 in New York City.

Wrongfully convicted former North Carolina A&T basketball player is free at last after 17 years

CHAPEL HILL, North Carolina  -- When Lamonte Armstrong stopped in a drug store early one Sunday last month, he watched curiously as the clerks hovered over the pages of a newspaper.

The 62-year-old peer-support counselor had just finished up a graveyard shift at Freedom House, the recovery center he's worked at since 2012.  He was tired but intrigued as he approached the counter.

The clerks were engrossed in The News & Observer's story of Joseph Sledge, whose murder conviction 34 years ago seems to be unraveling with recanted testimony and new DNA evidence bolstering his claims of innocence.

"I looked at the clerks, and I said, 'I know that man,'" Armstrong recounted. "You know how I know him, because the same thing happened to me.'"



Armstrong spent 17 years in prison, some of it with Sledge.

Armstong was wrongfully convicted of murdering an N.C. A&T University professor found dead in her Greensboro home in 1988.  He maintained his innocence throughout--from the first time Greensboro police interviewed him to a Guilford County jury returning a guilty verdict to his arduous appeals of his life-sentence.

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Millicent Van Norden Named UMES Head Volleyball Coach

Millicent Van Norden
PRINCESS ANNE, Maryland -- Millicent Van Norden has been named the new head coach of the University of Maryland Eastern Shore's women's volleyball team, Director of Athletics Keith Davidson announced today.

In 11 seasons as a collegiate head coach at Alcorn State, North Carolina A&T, South Carolina State and most recently Coppin State, Van Norden has amassed a career record of 176-206, earning 20 wins in a season three times and receiving two Coach of the Year honors.

"We are extremely excited to have Coach Van Norden start the next chapter of UMES Volleyball," said Davidson. "She is a proven winner in this conference and has national experience as well; we know we can look to her to continue our expectations of being at the top of the MEAC each season."

"I am very excited to become a part of the UMES family," said Van Norden. "The commitment to a successful volleyball program by the university, athletic administration, the student body, and the student-athletes is a rare commodity that I have always seen and admired at UMES. I am happy to become a part of the Hawk culture and to have the opportunity to continue the legacy of success."

Last season under former head coach Don Metil, who recently left to take the reins at Towson University, the Hawks went 28-6 and captured their second straight Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference (MEAC) Championship. Under Metil's tutelage, the Hawks currently have the nation's longest home-winning streak, standing at 30-straight won matches at the Hytche Athletic Center.

"We thank Coach Metil for his contributions," said Davidson. "He took the Hawks to new heights and helped us experience unparalleled success in the volleyball program. We wish him the best in his new endeavor."

Last season, Van Norden served as an assistant coach at the University of Pittsburgh under former Hawks head man Toby Rens. The Panthers went 17-14, falling in the Big East Tournament Quarterfinal round.

She was at Coppin State for the 2011 season and South Carolina State from 2007-2010. There, she transformed the Bulldogs from the bottom of the league to a MEAC Championship in 2010. SCSU defeated Delaware State in the title game 3-1, the first MEAC Volleyball title at South Carolina State since 1990. Her team was turned around from 1-7 in league play in 2007 to an impressive 6-2 in 2010.


Van Norden led South Carolina State to a .500 or better record in conference play in the 2008, 2009 and 2010 seasons. She was named the MEAC Coach of the Year in 2008.

"What I learned most from coaching the program at South Carolina State is that it is not about all that you have, but what you do with the opportunity in front of you. I taught discipline and sacrifice to my team and expected everything that they did to reflect the future success that they wanted," Van Norden said.

Prior to her stint at South Carolina State, Van Norden was the head coach at North Carolina A&T for three seasons. She compiled an overall record of 49-52 and was 23-7 in the MEAC and was named the conference Coach of the Year in 2005 after guiding the Aggies to a 9-1 record.

Van Norden began her coaching career at her alma mater Alcorn State.

In three seasons, she posted a record of 71-42 and won two Southwestern Athletic Conference (SWAC) Eastern Division titles and made two SWAC Tournament championship match appearances.

Van Norden was a highly decorated student-athlete at Alcorn State where she earned letters in volleyball and track and field. On the volleyball court, she was a two-time All-SWAC selection and was named the pre-season volleyball SWAC Player of the Year in 2000.

On the track, Sylvan-Van Norden was a 2000 USA Track and Field Indoor National Participant and a provisional qualifier in the long jump and the 100-meter hurdles in that same year. She currently owns the school and SWAC record in the heptathlon with 5,071 points.

During her time as a student-athlete she was a member several student organizations including the NCAA Student-Athlete Advisory Committee, SWAC Student-Athlete Association and the Alcorn State Student-Athlete Advisory Committee. A four-year SWAC scholar athlete, Van Norden was a two-time recipient of the NCAA Leadership Award and a recipient of the Arthur Ashe Sports Scholar Athlete Award in 2000.

She earned both her bachelor's in education (2000), and a master's degree in secondary education (2003) from Alcorn State. She is a member of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc. and was involved in the NYSP Extended program.

(The Coppin State sports information staff contributed to this release.)

COURTESY UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND EASTERN SHORE SPORTS INFORMATION

Monday, April 8, 2013

GCAC honors Fakler, Rolland, Kennie, Materre, Montrel

Amanda Materre

Amanda Materre
Kyle Montrel

Kyle Montrel

Catherine Fakler

Catherine Fakler
Devinn Rolland

Devinn Rolland



Christopher Kennie
Christopher Kennie
NEW ORLEANS — Xavier University of Louisiana collected five Gulf Coast Athletic Conference Athlete/Performer of the Week awards Monday: Catherine Fakler in women's outdoor track, Devinn Rolland in women's outdoor field, Christopher Kennie in men's outdoor field, Amanda Materre in women's tennis and Kyle Montrel in men's tennis. All were honored for performances from April 1-7.

Fakler, a sophomore from Phoenix, Ariz., and a graduate of Xavier College Preparatory Roman Catholic High School, was a double-winner Friday in the Mississippi College Twilight Invitational at Clinton, Miss. She recorded personal bests of 4 minutes, 48.87 seconds in the 1,500-meter run and 18:23.24 in the 5,000. This is Fakler's first GCAC weekly award in track after winning twice in cross country this past fall.

Rolland, a sophomore from Harvey, La., and a graduate of Cabrini High School, reached the NAIA Championships A-qualifying standard in the long jump for the fourth time in five meets. She placed third out of 19 competitors at Mississippi College with a season-best of 5.77 meters (18 feet, 11¼ inches). She also ran the second leg of the 400-meter relay which placed sixth in 47.99 and reached the NAIA A-standard. This is her fifth GCAC field award of the season; she's also won the track award twice.

Kennie, a freshman from New Orleans and a graduate of Holy Cross High School, earned his second GCAC award after a season-best 7.03 meters (23 feet, 0¾ inches) in the long jump which placed him fifth out of 22 at Mississippi College. He is the No. 5 NAIA performer in that event this outdoor season.

Materre, a sophomore from Richmond, Texas, and a graduate of Westside High School, won her second GCAC award of the season after going 2-0 in singles and 2-0 in doubles in the Gold Nuggets' dual-match victories against NAIA No. 2 William Carey and No. 3 Auburn Montgomery. Materre won 6-3, 6-2 on the road Friday against William Carey's Maja Vuzem, the Intercollegiate Tennis Association's 22nd-ranked singles player. Materre is ranked 39th.

Montrel, a freshman from Atlanta and a graduate of Southwest Atlanta Christian Academy, was 2-0 in singles and 2-0 in doubles against No. 6 William Carey and No. 1 Auburn Montgomery. The Gold Rush won 5-4 at Carey, and Montrel's 6-1, 6-4 victory against Robin Semal tied the dual at 4. This is the third time this season Montrel has won the GCAC award, which matches the conference's season record set by XU's Terry Richardson in 2009 and tied by XU's Zach Taylor in 2011 and 2012 and teammate Viktor Svoboda a week ago.

Xavier will be the host school for the GCAC Championships on Saturday at Tad Gormley Stadium in New Orleans. It's a one-day meet with field events starting at 8:45 a.m. and track events beginning at 9:30. The XU men's tennis team will conclude its regular season with an 11 a.m. Sunday dual against Jackson State at the new XU Tennis Center. The Gold Nuggets have nothing else on their regular-season schedule, but coach Alan Green said that could change.


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