NORFOLK, Virginia -- Norfolk State, a season after advancing to the Round of 32, went a perfect 16-0 to win the MEAC regular season title last season. Dreams of a return trip to the NCAA tournament were dashed when Adrien Coleman and eighth-seeded Bethune-Cookman took down the Spartans in overtime, 70-68, in the MEAC tournament quarterfinals. Norfolk State had to settle for the NIT, losing to Virginia in the first round.
Head coach Anthony Evans took the vacancy at Florida International in mid-April, once Richard Pitino left for Minnesota. Robert Jones has taken over the program in the interim, and if his team can live up to the hype, Norfolk State will likely remove that interim label as the Spartans for the third straight year are eyeing the NCAA tournament. Norfolk State returns four starters, including reigning MEAC Player of the Year Pendarvis Williams.
The MEAC tournament has been unpredicatable in recent seasons with the last three regular season champions not gaining the automatic berth for the NCAA tournament. Norfolk State is the clear-cut favorite, and will take no one lightly in tournament play following last year’s upset, but the Spartans will have some competition. North Carolina Central finished only a game back of Norfolk State last year, and the Eagles bring back the versatile Jeremy Ingram. Morgan State and Hampton both return four starters. Even towards the middle of the pack, a team like Florida A&M could cause chaos in the MEAC this season with a backcourt of Jamie Adams, Reggie Lewis and Muhammad Abdul-Aleem.
PRESEASON SWAC PLAYER OF THE YEAR: Pendarvis Williams, Norfolk State
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Sunday, October 6, 2013
Duhart, Defense Leads ASU Past Texas Southern
HOUSTON, Texas -- Daniel Duhart threw for 223 yards and a career-high three touchdowns to lead Alabama State to a 34-2 win over Texas Southern in a Southwestern Athletic Conference (SWAC) match up. The win was ASU's fourth consecutive win.
Most of the scoring was done in the first half as ASU went into the locker room with a 28-0 lead. The second half saw the Hornets backups get most of the playing time as ASU scored six points on two Alex Lauthan field goals in the second half.
"This was a game we knew we needed to win and the guys came out and played hard," Head Coach Reggie Barlow said. "We played with good energy early on. We were proud of the effort the guys gave."
The story of the game was the Hornets defense holding TSU's offense to -38 yards rushing on 29 attempts. That number was even larger in the first half as TSU had -77 yards rushing.
ASU's defense came up with eight sacks lost 73 yards and the defense registered 18 tackles behind the line of scrimmage that lost 102 yards. Seven players registered sacks with Daerius Washington and Ray Heningburg leading the way with two each. Leland Baker led the defense with four stops behind the line of scrimmage and Kourtney Berry had 3.5.
TSU did throw for 262 yards to finish the game with 185 total yards. Their two points came in the fourth quarter when they were able to stop an ASU running back in the endzone.
"In my eyes the defense pitched a shutout tonight," Barlow said. "We gave up a safety there at the end which is unfortunate, but I thought our defense played with a lot of energy. They lined up and were very combative and got to the quarterback. We were able to get a couple of turnovers so we are proud of how they played."
For the sixth time this season, the Hornets were able to hit the 200 yards rushing threshold. Isaiah Crowell led the way with 68 yards on 14 carries. He started the scoring with his six yard scoring run early in the game.
With the game in hand, Crowell sat out the second half while other runners played. Malcolm Cyrus finished the game with 60 yards and Khalid Thomas, in his most extensive action of the season, gained 53 yards on seven attempts.
Duhart finished the game completing 19 of his 29 passing attempts to gain his 223 passing yards. Nine players caught passes in the game with Earl Lucas leading the way with seven receptions for 81 yards.
Duhart's three first-half touchdowns went to two different receivers as two went to Justin Robinson and one to DeMario Bell, which covered 43 yards. The scores came after Crowell's six yard scoring run..
The Hornets defense was outstanding in the first half holding TSU to only eight yards on 27 plays. That includes -77 yards rushing on 15 running attempts.
"This was another building block against a team that was looking for a victory and our guys fought through it," Barlow said. "When you play a team that is 0-4 sometimes you have a mental breakdown and I am proud of these guys for not allowing that to happen."
ASU (4-2/ 4-1 SWAC) will be back home next week, Saturday, Oct. 12 when they host Prairie View A&M at 1 p.m. in New ASU Stadium.
COURTESY ALABAMA STATE UNIVERSITY SPORTS INFORMATION
Most of the scoring was done in the first half as ASU went into the locker room with a 28-0 lead. The second half saw the Hornets backups get most of the playing time as ASU scored six points on two Alex Lauthan field goals in the second half.
"This was a game we knew we needed to win and the guys came out and played hard," Head Coach Reggie Barlow said. "We played with good energy early on. We were proud of the effort the guys gave."
The story of the game was the Hornets defense holding TSU's offense to -38 yards rushing on 29 attempts. That number was even larger in the first half as TSU had -77 yards rushing.
ASU's defense came up with eight sacks lost 73 yards and the defense registered 18 tackles behind the line of scrimmage that lost 102 yards. Seven players registered sacks with Daerius Washington and Ray Heningburg leading the way with two each. Leland Baker led the defense with four stops behind the line of scrimmage and Kourtney Berry had 3.5.
TSU did throw for 262 yards to finish the game with 185 total yards. Their two points came in the fourth quarter when they were able to stop an ASU running back in the endzone.
"In my eyes the defense pitched a shutout tonight," Barlow said. "We gave up a safety there at the end which is unfortunate, but I thought our defense played with a lot of energy. They lined up and were very combative and got to the quarterback. We were able to get a couple of turnovers so we are proud of how they played."
For the sixth time this season, the Hornets were able to hit the 200 yards rushing threshold. Isaiah Crowell led the way with 68 yards on 14 carries. He started the scoring with his six yard scoring run early in the game.
With the game in hand, Crowell sat out the second half while other runners played. Malcolm Cyrus finished the game with 60 yards and Khalid Thomas, in his most extensive action of the season, gained 53 yards on seven attempts.
Duhart finished the game completing 19 of his 29 passing attempts to gain his 223 passing yards. Nine players caught passes in the game with Earl Lucas leading the way with seven receptions for 81 yards.
Duhart's three first-half touchdowns went to two different receivers as two went to Justin Robinson and one to DeMario Bell, which covered 43 yards. The scores came after Crowell's six yard scoring run..
The Hornets defense was outstanding in the first half holding TSU to only eight yards on 27 plays. That includes -77 yards rushing on 15 running attempts.
"This was another building block against a team that was looking for a victory and our guys fought through it," Barlow said. "When you play a team that is 0-4 sometimes you have a mental breakdown and I am proud of these guys for not allowing that to happen."
ASU (4-2/ 4-1 SWAC) will be back home next week, Saturday, Oct. 12 when they host Prairie View A&M at 1 p.m. in New ASU Stadium.
COURTESY ALABAMA STATE UNIVERSITY SPORTS INFORMATION
TSU Tigers Run by Southeast Missouri, 40-16
NASHVILLE, Tennessee -- Running back Telvin Hooks had a career-high 159 yards and Tennessee State defeated Southeast Missouri State, 40-16, on Saturday night at LP Field.
On the ensuing point after, Southeast could not handle the snap and TSU’s Michael Murphy ended up the ball. He then tossed it behind him to Antinio Harper and the senior from Huntsville, Ala. ran 80 yards, giving the Tigers two points.
Later in the fourth, a great punt by Leon Holderhead and heads-up play by the TSU punt team downed the ball at the Redhawk one-yard line. On the next play, Lewis Washington raced 99 yards for a touchdown.
Senior Tim Broughton added 95 yards on 14 carries as the Tigers (5-1, 2-0 OVC) piled up 544 yards and recorded their third straight game with at least 40 points.
After the teams traded possesions, quarterback Ronald Butler drove the TSU offense 71 yards down the field for a touchdown. Butler found tight end A.C. Leonard on a crossing pattern and Leonard did the rest, scampering 20 yards for the score.
Butler was 5-of-6 on the series for 57 yards and Big Blue led the Redhawks, 7-3, with 14:08 to go before halftime.
The TSU defense forced another punt on Southeast’s next possession, giving its offense good field position at the TSU 38-yard line. Tim Broughton gained 23 yards on a pair of carries but on the next play, Butler was sacked and the freshman fumbled. Southeast’s Cantrell Andrews picked up the ball and raced 68 yards for a Redhawk touchdown.
On the ensuing point after, Southeast could not handle the snap and TSU’s Michael Murphy ended up the ball. He then tossed it behind him to Antinio Harper and the senior from Huntsville, Ala. ran 80 yards, giving the Tigers two points.
The wild two plays made the score even at nine a side with nine minutes to play in the second quarter.
Michael German came in after the offense’s last miscue and hit Weldon Garlington with a 16-yard touchdown two possessions later.
The scoring toss gave the Tigers a 16-9 advantage, where the score would remain for the rest of the half.
Big Blue outgained the Redhawks 243 to 71 during the game’s first 30 minutes.
TSU received to begin the second half and German was a perfect 3-of-3 until the Tigers got into the red zone. Two TSU runs proved unsuccessful and a pass to Vernon Frett fell incomplete, leading to a field goal attempt. Godfrey drilled the 21-yarder, putting TSU up, 19-9, with 9:22 to go in the third period.
With Godfrey’s kick, he passed Javarris Williams’s 264 points for second place on the school’s all-time scoring list.
Junior safety Daniel Fitzpatrick got his second interception of the season on Southeast’s second play of the second half, and returned it to the 36.
Broughton broke off a run of 14 yards two plays into TSU’s next drive and the senior ended up scoring a four-yard touchdown on a fourth-and-one. Broughton’s run brought the score to 26-9 at the 5:16 mark of the third quarter.
After another Redhawk punt, the Tigers took over on their own 16-yard line. Hooks ran for nine yards on first down, and a perfectly executed screen pass sprung Ryan Mitchell loose for a 75-yard touchdown. The quick strike gave TSU a commanding 24-point lead.
Fitzpatrick got his second pick of the game and fourth of his career on Southeast’s next possession, but Godfrey missed a 43-yard field goal attempt on TSU’s following drive.
Later in the fourth, a great punt by Leon Holderhead and heads-up play by the TSU punt team downed the ball at the Redhawk one-yard line. On the next play, Lewis Washington raced 99 yards for a touchdown.
The run was the longest offensive play in Redhawk history and brought the score to 33-16, with TSU on top.
On TSU’s next possession, Hooks ran six times for 65 yards including a 28-yard touchdown to cap off the drive and end the scoring.
The Tigers limited the Redhawks to 229 yards and Nick Thrasher led the team in tackles with five solo stops.
TSU will hit the road next weekend when the team travels to Jacksonville State on Saturday Oct. 12.
Final Box
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Final Box
COURTESY TENNESSEE STATE UNIVERSITY SPORTS INFORMATION
JCSU convincingly defeats Lincoln 49-10
CHARLOTTE, North Carolina -- The Johnson C. Smith University football team topped The Lincoln University 49-10 in a conference matchup on Saturday, October 5th at the Irwin Belk Complex. JCSU improves to 4-1 overall and 2-1 in the CIAA, while the Lions drop to 1-4 overall and 0-2 in the conference.
Junior running back LeAnder Barney (Erie, PA) broke the game open with a 41 yard touchdown run on the Golden Bulls second offensive possession. The first quarter ended with the Lions still trailing 7-0. In the second, Lincoln capped a 12 play drive with a 23 yard field goal. With the score 7-3, JCSU wasted no time producing more points.
Three penalties against Lincoln on the following JCSU drive helped the Golden Bulls get into scoring position. JCSU went 70 yards in seven plays to get into the end zone with a one yard run from Barney. Barney accounted for 20 yards on the drive, but 30 yards came from Lincoln penalties.
Akeem Jordan broke loose on the next Lions' possession for their only touchdown. Jordan took a pass from Doug Cook 65 yards for the TD. The score cut Lincoln's deficit down to 14-10 with 3:45 remaining in the second quarter. JCSU held the Lions scoreless from that point and went on to produce two more touchdowns before halftime.
First, senior running back Denzel Hartley (Lithonia, GA) dashed nine yards for a touchdown on the next drive. Senior defensive back Damion Miles (Beaufort, SC) intercepted a pass at the LU 36 to shorten Lincoln's next offensive series. Then junior quarterback Keahn Wallace (Miami, FL) connected with junior receiver Avius Capers (Charlotte, NC) for a touchdown reception.
The Golden Bulls held a 28-10 lead heading into the locker room at the half. JCSU pretty much routed the Lions in the second half, outscoring them 21-0. Lincoln gave up three consecutive touchdowns to JCSU off two 14 play drives and one 15 play drive.
JCSU held the Lions to 72 yards rushing without one individual rusher accounting for more than 18 yards. Junior linebacker Jerel Miller (Rock Hill, SC) had a team-high eight tackles (4 solo), including a tackle and a half for a loss and an interception returned 15 yards. Miles had six tackles (5 solo) and an interception.
Wallace completed 28-of-39 pass attempts for 259 yards passing with three touchdowns and no turnovers. He also had 29 yards on the ground. Barney had a MVP performance with 166 yards of total offense and two touchdowns. He carried the ball 15 times for 94 yards and two scores. Barney also had five catches for 72 yards.
Four different receivers had touchdown catches led by Capers. Capers had nine catches for 77 yards and a TD.
Both Cook and freshman Khari Ngozi took snaps at quarterback for Lincoln. Cook finished the game with 164 yards and a touchdown, while Ngozi started things off and accumulated 130 yards completing 6-of-13 attempts. Jordan finished with 146 yards receiving off six catches.
The Golden Bulls will attempt to take their show on the road for a divisional clash against Winston-Salem State University. JCSU will travel to Winston-Salem, NC on Saturday, October 12th to face the Rams of WSSU as their homecoming opponent. Winston-Salem State is the two-time defending CIAA Champions and has not suffered a conference loss in three seasons. Kickoff is scheduled for 1:30 p.m. at Bowman Gray Stadium.
Box Score
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Junior running back LeAnder Barney (Erie, PA) broke the game open with a 41 yard touchdown run on the Golden Bulls second offensive possession. The first quarter ended with the Lions still trailing 7-0. In the second, Lincoln capped a 12 play drive with a 23 yard field goal. With the score 7-3, JCSU wasted no time producing more points.
Three penalties against Lincoln on the following JCSU drive helped the Golden Bulls get into scoring position. JCSU went 70 yards in seven plays to get into the end zone with a one yard run from Barney. Barney accounted for 20 yards on the drive, but 30 yards came from Lincoln penalties.
Akeem Jordan broke loose on the next Lions' possession for their only touchdown. Jordan took a pass from Doug Cook 65 yards for the TD. The score cut Lincoln's deficit down to 14-10 with 3:45 remaining in the second quarter. JCSU held the Lions scoreless from that point and went on to produce two more touchdowns before halftime.
First, senior running back Denzel Hartley (Lithonia, GA) dashed nine yards for a touchdown on the next drive. Senior defensive back Damion Miles (Beaufort, SC) intercepted a pass at the LU 36 to shorten Lincoln's next offensive series. Then junior quarterback Keahn Wallace (Miami, FL) connected with junior receiver Avius Capers (Charlotte, NC) for a touchdown reception.
The Golden Bulls held a 28-10 lead heading into the locker room at the half. JCSU pretty much routed the Lions in the second half, outscoring them 21-0. Lincoln gave up three consecutive touchdowns to JCSU off two 14 play drives and one 15 play drive.
JCSU held the Lions to 72 yards rushing without one individual rusher accounting for more than 18 yards. Junior linebacker Jerel Miller (Rock Hill, SC) had a team-high eight tackles (4 solo), including a tackle and a half for a loss and an interception returned 15 yards. Miles had six tackles (5 solo) and an interception.
Wallace completed 28-of-39 pass attempts for 259 yards passing with three touchdowns and no turnovers. He also had 29 yards on the ground. Barney had a MVP performance with 166 yards of total offense and two touchdowns. He carried the ball 15 times for 94 yards and two scores. Barney also had five catches for 72 yards.
Four different receivers had touchdown catches led by Capers. Capers had nine catches for 77 yards and a TD.
Both Cook and freshman Khari Ngozi took snaps at quarterback for Lincoln. Cook finished the game with 164 yards and a touchdown, while Ngozi started things off and accumulated 130 yards completing 6-of-13 attempts. Jordan finished with 146 yards receiving off six catches.
The Golden Bulls will attempt to take their show on the road for a divisional clash against Winston-Salem State University. JCSU will travel to Winston-Salem, NC on Saturday, October 12th to face the Rams of WSSU as their homecoming opponent. Winston-Salem State is the two-time defending CIAA Champions and has not suffered a conference loss in three seasons. Kickoff is scheduled for 1:30 p.m. at Bowman Gray Stadium.
Box Score
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Miles Golden Bears Declaw Benedict Tigers, 27-13
COLUMBUS, South Carolina -- For the second consecutive week junior quarterback Demetrice Price led the Golden Bears to victory, as Miles College defeated the Benedict College Tigers, 27-13, at Charlie W. Johnson Stadium.
MC improves to (2-2, 2-0 SIAC) while Benedict drops to (2-3, 0-2 SIAC).
After exchanging punts on the first four processions the Tigers drew first blood just before the end of the first quarter as Kenneth Hurley, Jr. ran it in from four yards out giving BC the early 7-0 lead.
The teams continued the defensive battle through the second quarter before the Golden Bears tied the game at 7-7 just before the halftime horn as Price led MC on an 11 play, 80-yard touchdown drive capped by his 5-yard plunge into the endzone.
The teams continued to battle, and after stopping the Tigers on downs, the Golden Bears needed only a minute five seconds to take the lead as Emmett Terry scampered into the endzone from eight yards out putting MC on top 13-7.
MC extended the lead to 20-7 when Price used his legs to strike again this time from 23 yards, closing out a seven play, 67-yard drive that took a little over two minutes.
Benedict College closed that gap when Tavion Wright plunged into the endzone from three yards out cutting the lead to 20-13.
Late in the fourth quarter Golden Bear's All-SIAC safety, Joe Beckham, intercepted BC quarterback Marcus Graham and returned it 30 yards to the Benedict four yard line. It didn't take long for MC to capitalize on the turnover as senior running back Floyd Graves ran it in from three yards out closing out the scoring and giving Miles the 27-13 victory.
The Golden Bears offense was led by Price who finished 14-of-19 passing for 116 yards while also rushing for two touchdowns. MC's trio of running backs Denzel Veal (8 Carries/99 Yards), Emmett Terry (13 Carries/83 yards, 1 TD) and Floyd Graves (9 Carries/41 yards, 1 TD) leading the Golden Bears to 261 yards on the ground.
Defensively MC again was led by Julantate English who finished with a game-high 13 tackles (8 solo) and Antonio Marshall who finished with nine tackles (7 solo).
Miles College returns to action next Saturday, October 12th as they travel to Wilberforce, OH to take on the Marauders of Central State University. Kick-off is set for 1:30 p.m.
Box Score
COURTESY MILES COLLEGE GOLDEN BEARS SPORTS INFORMATION
MC improves to (2-2, 2-0 SIAC) while Benedict drops to (2-3, 0-2 SIAC).
After exchanging punts on the first four processions the Tigers drew first blood just before the end of the first quarter as Kenneth Hurley, Jr. ran it in from four yards out giving BC the early 7-0 lead.
The teams continued the defensive battle through the second quarter before the Golden Bears tied the game at 7-7 just before the halftime horn as Price led MC on an 11 play, 80-yard touchdown drive capped by his 5-yard plunge into the endzone.
The teams continued to battle, and after stopping the Tigers on downs, the Golden Bears needed only a minute five seconds to take the lead as Emmett Terry scampered into the endzone from eight yards out putting MC on top 13-7.
MC extended the lead to 20-7 when Price used his legs to strike again this time from 23 yards, closing out a seven play, 67-yard drive that took a little over two minutes.
Benedict College closed that gap when Tavion Wright plunged into the endzone from three yards out cutting the lead to 20-13.
Late in the fourth quarter Golden Bear's All-SIAC safety, Joe Beckham, intercepted BC quarterback Marcus Graham and returned it 30 yards to the Benedict four yard line. It didn't take long for MC to capitalize on the turnover as senior running back Floyd Graves ran it in from three yards out closing out the scoring and giving Miles the 27-13 victory.
The Golden Bears offense was led by Price who finished 14-of-19 passing for 116 yards while also rushing for two touchdowns. MC's trio of running backs Denzel Veal (8 Carries/99 Yards), Emmett Terry (13 Carries/83 yards, 1 TD) and Floyd Graves (9 Carries/41 yards, 1 TD) leading the Golden Bears to 261 yards on the ground.
Defensively MC again was led by Julantate English who finished with a game-high 13 tackles (8 solo) and Antonio Marshall who finished with nine tackles (7 solo).
Miles College returns to action next Saturday, October 12th as they travel to Wilberforce, OH to take on the Marauders of Central State University. Kick-off is set for 1:30 p.m.
Box Score
COURTESY MILES COLLEGE GOLDEN BEARS SPORTS INFORMATION
2013 Atlanta Football Classic: S. C. State Marching 101 vs. N.C. A&T Blue and Gold Marching Machine
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South Carolina State captures Atlanta Football Classic, 29-24
ATLANTA, Georgia — A year ago, poor special teams’ play proved critical in a 17-7 loss to North Carolina A&T which ended South Carolina State’s streak of consecutive winning seasons.
Saturday at the Georgia Dome, key plays by the special teams sparked a second-half surge by the Bulldogs which ended the Aggies’ 7-game winning streak in a 29-24 victory at the 25th annual Atlanta Football Classic.
Trailing 17-14 in the third quarter, the Bulldogs (4-2, 2-0) scored 15 unanswered points to claim their fourth straight win. It started with a blocked punt by Darius Drummond which resulted in a safety and a career-long 49-yard field goal by Nick Belcher which put S.C. State ahead for good.
Quarterback Richard Cue added a 65-yard touchdown pass to Tyler McDonald in the fourth quarter to close out the scoring run. The Florence native finished 17-28 for 236 yards and two touchdowns to carry the offense which had its difficulties running the football.
“They were great in defending the run,” S.C. State head football coach Buddy Pough said. “We knew that and felt that we would have to throw the ball to have a chance at winning. Richard (Cue) had one of his better games throwing the ball and the receivers made some plays.”
N.C. A&T (3-1, 1-1) made a late push with less than three minutes left following a touchdown pass by quarterback Lewis Kindle to Desmond Lawrence. They drove the football to the S.C. State 33 before the Bulldogs’ defense got a sack from Andrew Carter and deflected away three straight downfield passes to force a turnover on downs with 1:05 left.
2013 Atlanta Football Classic Photo Gallery
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Saturday at the Georgia Dome, key plays by the special teams sparked a second-half surge by the Bulldogs which ended the Aggies’ 7-game winning streak in a 29-24 victory at the 25th annual Atlanta Football Classic.
Trailing 17-14 in the third quarter, the Bulldogs (4-2, 2-0) scored 15 unanswered points to claim their fourth straight win. It started with a blocked punt by Darius Drummond which resulted in a safety and a career-long 49-yard field goal by Nick Belcher which put S.C. State ahead for good.
Quarterback Richard Cue added a 65-yard touchdown pass to Tyler McDonald in the fourth quarter to close out the scoring run. The Florence native finished 17-28 for 236 yards and two touchdowns to carry the offense which had its difficulties running the football.
“They were great in defending the run,” S.C. State head football coach Buddy Pough said. “We knew that and felt that we would have to throw the ball to have a chance at winning. Richard (Cue) had one of his better games throwing the ball and the receivers made some plays.”
N.C. A&T (3-1, 1-1) made a late push with less than three minutes left following a touchdown pass by quarterback Lewis Kindle to Desmond Lawrence. They drove the football to the S.C. State 33 before the Bulldogs’ defense got a sack from Andrew Carter and deflected away three straight downfield passes to force a turnover on downs with 1:05 left.
2013 Atlanta Football Classic Photo Gallery
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Clark Atlanta topples rival Morehouse
ATLANTA, Georgia -- The new motto for the Clark Atlanta football team is “Trust. Believe. Succeed.”
On Saturday night at rival Morehouse College, the Panthers trusted in their wing-T offense, which had mustered only 21 points in the first three games of the season — all losses. They believed they could overcome three turnovers, two of which led directly to 10 Tigers points. And Clark Atlanta (1-3, 1-2) succeeded in breaking their four-game losing streak to Morehouse with a 21-17 win at a packed B.T. Harvey Stadium.
Clark Atlanta first-year coach Kevin Weston, a longtime defensive coordinator at Tusculum, brought the new motto with him, along with the wing-T. In the Panthers’ first three games of the season the offense hadn’t produced much. But things came together Saturday night, as the Panthers shredded the Morehouse defense for 445 yards, 288 on the ground. Freshman slotback Montavious Taylor (Carver-Atlanta) led the charge with 166 yards on 33 carries, including touchdown runs of 35 and 9 yards, while South Florida transfer Bradley Battles, a graduate student, added 95 yards on 25 carries, and a 5-yard touchdown run.
Meanwhile, the Clark Atlanta passing game, which had been nearly nonexistent, came alive as well, as freshman quarterback Trenton Earl (Stockbridge) completed 12 of 16 passes for 157 yards. Clark Atlanta held the Maroon Tigers’ high-octane spread offense, which had averaged 30 points during Morehouse’s two-game winning streak, to only 177 yards.
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Edward Waters falls 37-20 to Virginia University Lynchburg
JACKSONVILLE, Florida -- Edward Waters played on its home campus for the first time but fell to 0-6 with a loss to Virginia-Lynchburg (1-4) before an estimated crowd of 1,500 on Saturday.
The new Edward Waters College Football Field was ready for the homecoming game on Saturday against Virginia-Lynchburg. It was the first game played on EWC campus in the school's 147 year history.
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The new Edward Waters College Football Field was ready for the homecoming game on Saturday against Virginia-Lynchburg. It was the first game played on EWC campus in the school's 147 year history.
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KSU Thorobreds Earn 49-20 Victory After Weather Forces Cancellation
FRANKFORT, Kentucky -- Jacquise Lockett rushed for 135 yards and three touchdowns before weather ended Saturday's non-conference football game at Alumni Stadium between the Kentucky State University Thorobreds and the Alderson-Broaddus Battlers. The Thorobreds earned a 49-20 victory after rain and lightning forced officials to call the game early.
The Thorobreds (3-2, 1-1 SIAC) were cruising to their third victory of the season before bad weather ended the contest with 1:40 left in the third quarter. KSU had just scored its seventh touchdown of the game on a 1-yard Lockett rush when lightning struck. The teams returned to the field and ran out the third quarter clock before the game was officially ended.
Lockett, who entered the game leading the SIAC in several rushing and offensive categories, added to his totals with 135 more rushing yards on 17 carries and three more touchdowns. Lockett now has 650 yards and 12 touchdowns in five games this season.
Junior quarterback Adam Robinson had arguably his best game of the season going 7-for-14 with 139 yards and two touchdowns through the air. Robinson connected on a 33-yard pass to Troy Churchill and a 26-yard pass to Clayton Patton Jr., both in the second quarter.
Sophomore quarterback Alex Springs also spent some time under center in the second quarter going 2-for-2 with 31 yards and a 19-yard touchdown pass to receiver Derek Woodmore. Woodmore finished the game with a game leading 87 yards on three catches.
Senior receiver Jakar Turner was a difference maker on special teams. Turner took an Alderson-Broaddus kick-off and returned it 91-yards for a touchdown in the first quarter. Turner finished with 110 return yards.
The Battlers (2-3) were led offensively by redshirt freshman quarterback Wesley Nesmith who finished the game with 165 yards and a touchdown on 13-for-24 passing. Redshirt freshman Brandon Jones was the leading rusher for Alderson-Broaddus finishing the game with 51 yards on 13 carries.
Next up for Kentucky State is a match-up against Fort Valley next Saturday, Oct. 12. The game is part of the Kentucky State University homecoming weekend. Kick-off is set for 1:30 p.m.
For ticketing information please call the KSU Athletic Department at 502-597-6011.
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The Thorobreds (3-2, 1-1 SIAC) were cruising to their third victory of the season before bad weather ended the contest with 1:40 left in the third quarter. KSU had just scored its seventh touchdown of the game on a 1-yard Lockett rush when lightning struck. The teams returned to the field and ran out the third quarter clock before the game was officially ended.
Lockett, who entered the game leading the SIAC in several rushing and offensive categories, added to his totals with 135 more rushing yards on 17 carries and three more touchdowns. Lockett now has 650 yards and 12 touchdowns in five games this season.
Junior quarterback Adam Robinson had arguably his best game of the season going 7-for-14 with 139 yards and two touchdowns through the air. Robinson connected on a 33-yard pass to Troy Churchill and a 26-yard pass to Clayton Patton Jr., both in the second quarter.
Sophomore quarterback Alex Springs also spent some time under center in the second quarter going 2-for-2 with 31 yards and a 19-yard touchdown pass to receiver Derek Woodmore. Woodmore finished the game with a game leading 87 yards on three catches.
Senior receiver Jakar Turner was a difference maker on special teams. Turner took an Alderson-Broaddus kick-off and returned it 91-yards for a touchdown in the first quarter. Turner finished with 110 return yards.
The Battlers (2-3) were led offensively by redshirt freshman quarterback Wesley Nesmith who finished the game with 165 yards and a touchdown on 13-for-24 passing. Redshirt freshman Brandon Jones was the leading rusher for Alderson-Broaddus finishing the game with 51 yards on 13 carries.
Next up for Kentucky State is a match-up against Fort Valley next Saturday, Oct. 12. The game is part of the Kentucky State University homecoming weekend. Kick-off is set for 1:30 p.m.
For ticketing information please call the KSU Athletic Department at 502-597-6011.
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Errors cost Stillman College in 28-27 loss to Lane
TUSCALOOSA, Alabama---Nearly 600 yards of offense couldn't undo the damage caused by turnovers and poor special team's play in Stillman College's 28-27 loss against Lane (Tenn.) at Tigers Stadium Saturday.
The Tigers were picked off twice and lost two fumbles, both of which led to touchdowns and had an extra point that could have sent the game into overtime with less than two minutes to play blocked.
"Every time something big would happen, we would something stupid to mess it up," Stillman coach Teddy Keaton said of the back-and-forth battle. "They never just let us get where we wanted to get...The name of this game was turnovers and missed opportunities, in my opinion.
The Tigers (3-2, 2-1) came into the contest leading the Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Conference in scoring offense, scoring defense, pass offense, pass defense, total offense, total defense, sacks and interceptions.
Stillman quarterback Josh Straughan finished with 437 yards and three touchdowns on 31-for-46 passing. Wide receiver Dondre Purnell had 188 yards on 14 catches and Reese Sturgis had 187 on nine grabs.
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The Tigers were picked off twice and lost two fumbles, both of which led to touchdowns and had an extra point that could have sent the game into overtime with less than two minutes to play blocked.
"Every time something big would happen, we would something stupid to mess it up," Stillman coach Teddy Keaton said of the back-and-forth battle. "They never just let us get where we wanted to get...The name of this game was turnovers and missed opportunities, in my opinion.
The Tigers (3-2, 2-1) came into the contest leading the Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Conference in scoring offense, scoring defense, pass offense, pass defense, total offense, total defense, sacks and interceptions.
Stillman quarterback Josh Straughan finished with 437 yards and three touchdowns on 31-for-46 passing. Wide receiver Dondre Purnell had 188 yards on 14 catches and Reese Sturgis had 187 on nine grabs.
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Monkey Still on the Back: UAPB Lions struggle in clutch again, drop to 0-5
JACKSON, Mississippi — Until Arkansas-Pine Bluff finds a way to finish a game, it could be a long season in the SWAC. No matter how many opportunities it finds.
UAPB missed out on another game-winning drive when Ben Anderson was sacked on fourth down with 2:05 left. The drive was set up by a lost Jackson State fumble.
Hoping to make a stop and get the ball back, the Golden Lions could not find a way to contain Tommy Gooden.
With 1 minute left, the senior took a third-and-8 carry up the middle and turned it into a 30-yard touchdown run that put away the Lions in a 42-33 Tiger victory Saturday night, extending UAPB’s losing skid to five games to start the season. The attendance was 9,087, relatively low for a rematch of last December’s conference championship won by UAPB.
Gooden finished with a career-high 214 yards and four touchdowns on 20 carries. He gained 153 yards in the second half.
“I take my hat off to the young man,” UAPB coach Monte Coleman said. “He took advantage of what they were calling. If you go back and look at the film, 140-something yards of that were missed tackles. That’s part of the game. You miss a tackle, they run for 40 yards. Not taking anything away from him, but we’ve got to get better as a defense tackling. We’ve said that from the very beginning.”
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UAPB missed out on another game-winning drive when Ben Anderson was sacked on fourth down with 2:05 left. The drive was set up by a lost Jackson State fumble.
Hoping to make a stop and get the ball back, the Golden Lions could not find a way to contain Tommy Gooden.
With 1 minute left, the senior took a third-and-8 carry up the middle and turned it into a 30-yard touchdown run that put away the Lions in a 42-33 Tiger victory Saturday night, extending UAPB’s losing skid to five games to start the season. The attendance was 9,087, relatively low for a rematch of last December’s conference championship won by UAPB.
Gooden finished with a career-high 214 yards and four touchdowns on 20 carries. He gained 153 yards in the second half.
“I take my hat off to the young man,” UAPB coach Monte Coleman said. “He took advantage of what they were calling. If you go back and look at the film, 140-something yards of that were missed tackles. That’s part of the game. You miss a tackle, they run for 40 yards. Not taking anything away from him, but we’ve got to get better as a defense tackling. We’ve said that from the very beginning.”
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Prairie View A&M establishes new high-water mark after third straight victory over Grambling State in State Fair Classic
DALLAS, Texas -- When a storm cell moved over the Cotton Bowl during the third quarter of the State Fair Classic on Saturday night, with wind howling and rain pouring, officials announced a weather delay could come at any moment.
Luckily, the lightning held off until the game’s completion. But had there been a delay, it would have only prolonged the inevitable, as Prairie View A&M rolled Grambling State, 31-3.
Prairie View A&M continued what’s become a historic winning streak in the series. Its 31-14 victory in this game last season marked its first back-to-back State Fair Classic wins since 1963-1964. A three-game winning streak establishes a new mark of success.
“I think we’re doing things the right way, and we’re headed in the right direction,” Prairie A&M coach Heishma Northern said. “It’s big for Prairie View to beat Grambling three times in a row.”
Grambling State (0-6, 0-3 Southwestern Athletic Conference) turned the ball over on its first play from scrimmage, when a slew of Prairie View A&M (4-2, 3-1) defenders knocked the ball from running back Jeremy Runner off a swing pass.
Prairie View A&M scored on its first two possessions in the first quarter — a 22-yard field goal and a 12-yard touchdown pass from quarterback Jerry Lovelocke to running back Courtney Brown — for a quick 10-0 lead.
Grambling State had chances to swing momentum before halftime.
Special teams come through as NCCU drops Howard
WASHINGTON, D.C. — N.C. Central turned a pair of third quarter Howard mistakes into touchdowns and that proved to be the difference as the Eagles defeated the Bison 37-28 in a Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference showdown at Howard’s Greene Stadium.
NCCU (3-2, 1-0 MEAC) set the tone early, driving 49 yards on its first possession capped by Idreis Augustus’ six-yard touchdown run.
Oleg Parent’s point-after kick was blocked.
Howard (1-4, 0-2 MEAC) countered immediately when Jonathan Booker caught a 20-yard scoring strike from Greg McGhee to make it 7-6.
The Eagles returned the favor and regained the lead, 13-7, when Dequadis Tucker scored from 17 yards out early in the second quarter.
But the Bison answered late in second quarter when McGhee threw his second touchdown pass of the day, this one to Stewart Hartman for nine yards to take its final lead of the game 14-13.
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Tuskegee defeats Fort Valley 21-13 in rematch of 2012 SIAC title game
FORT VALLEY, Georgia - Tuskegee defeated Fort Valley State in their fifth consecutive road game to start the 2013 season by a score of 21-13 Saturday, in a rematch of the 2013 SIAC Championship Game. With the victory came a possible momentum-shifting moment in the 2013 season, as Tuskegee experienced the ultimate agony after being initially exuberant upon taking a lead that they wouldn't surrender in the second quarter.
Tyree fumbled a pitch from quarterback Justin Nared but was able to run the pigskin in from 36 yards out to give the Golden Tigers a 14-7 lead. However, starting Junior Nared sustained a serious injury on what looked to be on his throwing shoulder, and he did not play a down in the game's final two and a half quarters.
A quick drive to start the second half gave the Golden Tigers a 21-7 lead, as Michael D. Thornton ran in the game-clinching touchdown from two yards out. Jonquez Sanders scored on an eight-yard touchdown run for the Wildcats late in the game, but Tuskegee was able to run the remaining 4:13 in regulation off of the clock.
A quick drive to start the second half gave the Golden Tigers a 21-7 lead, as Michael D. Thornton ran in the game-clinching touchdown from two yards out. Jonquez Sanders scored on an eight-yard touchdown run for the Wildcats late in the game, but Tuskegee was able to run the remaining 4:13 in regulation off of the clock.
Fayetteville State Clipps Chowan 35-29 in Triple Overtime
FAYETTEVILLE, North Carolina -- Fayetteville State (3-2 overall), riding a two-game win streak, clipped the Hawks of Chowan (2-3 overall) 35-29 in triple overtime at Luther "Nick" Jeralds Stadium. CIAA Quarterback of the Week Derek Bryant (Carrboro, NC), once again took over the game with 324 passing yards on 22-of-33 attempts and three throwing touchdowns. Juwan Moye hauled in seven receptions for 165 yards and two scores.
"It was an emotional rollercoaster for the most part; but our guys hung in there. We talked about it all week that they (Chowan) were going to be a good football team coming in. I told the guys that it was probably going to come down to the wire; and tonight it did," Head Coach Lawrence Kershaw recaps.
"We were tired of losing in the second half; we came to a conclusion that we have to finish the game. Coach always talks about momentum changers. They are going to have their ups and downs; but we have to keep playing ball and doing what we were told to do", adds junior linebacker John Brown, who finished the game with four tackles for a combined loss of 30 yards.
Fayetteville State gained 587 total yards on offense. The Broncos gained 146 on the ground with 41 attempts and 441 yards through the air. Fayetteville State decreased its penalties to seven for 62 yards.
Chowan (1-1 CIAA) had five turnovers (two fumbles and three interceptions) and were whistled for seven penalties for 164 yards. The Hawks had 330 yards of total offense; which came from 301 yards of passing and 29 yards of rushing.
Fayetteville State, which has a rich history of producing teachers, dedicated today's game to all of the educators in Cumberland County and around the world during the National Educator Appreciation Day. The Broncos, 2-0 in conference play, also donned pink articles within its uniform to help raise the awareness of breast cancer.
The Broncos stalled on its first drive of the game but found the end zone with its second opportunity. On a four-play 75-yard drive, Jemeryn Jenkins slipped would-be tacklers and advanced the ball 49 yards down the field for his longest rush of the season. With the ball on the 24-yard line and facing the red zone, Andre Montgomery dashed up the middle for the first score of the game with 10:47 on the clock. Antonio Mayo nailed the extra point.
The FSU defense forced Chowan into its second three-and-out drive which provided the offense with its third attempt on its own nine-yard line. A pass interference call moved the line of scrimmage to the Broncos 22-yard line. Jenkins continued with the pass attack to move the chains. The starting QB connected with Juwan Moye for 32 yards and FSU's second 1st down of the drive. He found Tevin Clay for another 1st with a 10-yard reception. On the pursuing play, the two linked up again for 18 yards and finally from 11 yards out for the Broncos second touchdown of the game. As the holder for extra-point kicks, Moyer kept the snap for a two-point conversion and 15-0 lead. The nine-play drive covered 91 yards in a little over five minutes.
Late in the second quarter, Chowan scored with 1:19 left before intermission. Willie Hickman snatched a Jenkins pass at the 41-yard line and returned it for a pick-six. Alex Noboa kicked the extra point which led to the 15-7 halftime score.
The Hawks evened the score at 15-15 near the top of the third quarter. Chowan started its successful drive with 10:56 on the clock and the ball on its 18-yard line. Cameron Stover threw the long ball to Robert Holland who ran 45 yards to the Broncos seven-yard line. Dain McFarland finished the drive with a two-yard pass to Ryan Nolan with 7:06 left in the quarter. The drive lasted 11 plays and covered 82 yards.
Derek Bryant took over FSU's offense after the thrown interception in the second quarter and remained under center after intermission. Bryant led the Broncos first drive of the fourth quarter from its four-yard line down to Chowan's 20. The drive accumulated 172 yards but ended without putting points on the boards. FSU missed a 38-yard field goal with 9:14 left in the game.
Fayetteville State gained an advantage with 38 seconds left in the game.
Bryant threw a 20-yard completed pass to Dwayne Lorrick which advanced the score to 22-15. The 79-yard drive took five plays. Chowan faced 34 seconds left in the game and the ball on its 40-yard line. McFarland threw to Holland for a 21-yard gain and ball placement on the Broncos 39-yard line. McFarland found Nolan for 24 yards which advanced the line of scrimmage to FSU's 15. The Hawks stopped the clock with five seconds left and caught a break on the following play with a pass interference call that placed the ball on the two-yard line with two seconds left.
The Broncos secondary missed an assignment which led to McFarland throwing a touchdown pass to the wide open Holland. The made extra point knotted the score at 22 at the end of regulation.
Chowan faced 34 seconds left in the game and the ball on its 40-yard line. McFarland threw to Holland for a 21-yard gain and ball placement on the Broncos 39-yard line. McFarland found Nolan for 24 yards which advanced the line of scrimmage to FSU's 15. The Hawks stopped the clock with five seconds left and caught a break on the following play with a pass interference call that placed the ball on the two-yard line with two seconds left. The Broncos secondary missed an assignment which led to McFarland throwing a touchdown pass to the wide open Holland. The made extra point knotted the score at 22 at the end of regulation.
Fayetteville State deferred after winning the coin toss which gave Chowan the first possession in overtime. On the Hawks first play, Travis Scales intercepted McFarland pass in the end zone. The Broncos, facing fourth-and-three, missed a 35-yard field goal that sent the game into double-overtime. With the next possession, Bryant completed a nine-yard pass to Antonio Allen to one-up the Hawks 29-22.
The last time Fayetteville State faced extra periods in Luther "Nick" Jeralds Stadium was in 2009 when the Broncos lost the inaugural Two Rivers Classic to UNC Pembroke. The one-score advantage vanished when Chowan's Mcfarland threw a six-yard score to Holland. On the second play of the third overtime period, Simeon Marshall intercepted the ball which ended the Hawks chances.
With hopes of ending the game, Bryant incited pandemonium with a ten-yard pass to Juwan Moye which became the game winner.
Final Stats
COURTESY FAYETTEVILLE STATE UNIVERSITY SPORTS INFORMATION
"It was an emotional rollercoaster for the most part; but our guys hung in there. We talked about it all week that they (Chowan) were going to be a good football team coming in. I told the guys that it was probably going to come down to the wire; and tonight it did," Head Coach Lawrence Kershaw recaps.
"We were tired of losing in the second half; we came to a conclusion that we have to finish the game. Coach always talks about momentum changers. They are going to have their ups and downs; but we have to keep playing ball and doing what we were told to do", adds junior linebacker John Brown, who finished the game with four tackles for a combined loss of 30 yards.
Fayetteville State gained 587 total yards on offense. The Broncos gained 146 on the ground with 41 attempts and 441 yards through the air. Fayetteville State decreased its penalties to seven for 62 yards.
Chowan (1-1 CIAA) had five turnovers (two fumbles and three interceptions) and were whistled for seven penalties for 164 yards. The Hawks had 330 yards of total offense; which came from 301 yards of passing and 29 yards of rushing.
Fayetteville State, which has a rich history of producing teachers, dedicated today's game to all of the educators in Cumberland County and around the world during the National Educator Appreciation Day. The Broncos, 2-0 in conference play, also donned pink articles within its uniform to help raise the awareness of breast cancer.
The Broncos stalled on its first drive of the game but found the end zone with its second opportunity. On a four-play 75-yard drive, Jemeryn Jenkins slipped would-be tacklers and advanced the ball 49 yards down the field for his longest rush of the season. With the ball on the 24-yard line and facing the red zone, Andre Montgomery dashed up the middle for the first score of the game with 10:47 on the clock. Antonio Mayo nailed the extra point.
The FSU defense forced Chowan into its second three-and-out drive which provided the offense with its third attempt on its own nine-yard line. A pass interference call moved the line of scrimmage to the Broncos 22-yard line. Jenkins continued with the pass attack to move the chains. The starting QB connected with Juwan Moye for 32 yards and FSU's second 1st down of the drive. He found Tevin Clay for another 1st with a 10-yard reception. On the pursuing play, the two linked up again for 18 yards and finally from 11 yards out for the Broncos second touchdown of the game. As the holder for extra-point kicks, Moyer kept the snap for a two-point conversion and 15-0 lead. The nine-play drive covered 91 yards in a little over five minutes.
Late in the second quarter, Chowan scored with 1:19 left before intermission. Willie Hickman snatched a Jenkins pass at the 41-yard line and returned it for a pick-six. Alex Noboa kicked the extra point which led to the 15-7 halftime score.
The Hawks evened the score at 15-15 near the top of the third quarter. Chowan started its successful drive with 10:56 on the clock and the ball on its 18-yard line. Cameron Stover threw the long ball to Robert Holland who ran 45 yards to the Broncos seven-yard line. Dain McFarland finished the drive with a two-yard pass to Ryan Nolan with 7:06 left in the quarter. The drive lasted 11 plays and covered 82 yards.
Derek Bryant took over FSU's offense after the thrown interception in the second quarter and remained under center after intermission. Bryant led the Broncos first drive of the fourth quarter from its four-yard line down to Chowan's 20. The drive accumulated 172 yards but ended without putting points on the boards. FSU missed a 38-yard field goal with 9:14 left in the game.
Fayetteville State gained an advantage with 38 seconds left in the game.
Bryant threw a 20-yard completed pass to Dwayne Lorrick which advanced the score to 22-15. The 79-yard drive took five plays. Chowan faced 34 seconds left in the game and the ball on its 40-yard line. McFarland threw to Holland for a 21-yard gain and ball placement on the Broncos 39-yard line. McFarland found Nolan for 24 yards which advanced the line of scrimmage to FSU's 15. The Hawks stopped the clock with five seconds left and caught a break on the following play with a pass interference call that placed the ball on the two-yard line with two seconds left.
The Broncos secondary missed an assignment which led to McFarland throwing a touchdown pass to the wide open Holland. The made extra point knotted the score at 22 at the end of regulation.
Chowan faced 34 seconds left in the game and the ball on its 40-yard line. McFarland threw to Holland for a 21-yard gain and ball placement on the Broncos 39-yard line. McFarland found Nolan for 24 yards which advanced the line of scrimmage to FSU's 15. The Hawks stopped the clock with five seconds left and caught a break on the following play with a pass interference call that placed the ball on the two-yard line with two seconds left. The Broncos secondary missed an assignment which led to McFarland throwing a touchdown pass to the wide open Holland. The made extra point knotted the score at 22 at the end of regulation.
Fayetteville State deferred after winning the coin toss which gave Chowan the first possession in overtime. On the Hawks first play, Travis Scales intercepted McFarland pass in the end zone. The Broncos, facing fourth-and-three, missed a 35-yard field goal that sent the game into double-overtime. With the next possession, Bryant completed a nine-yard pass to Antonio Allen to one-up the Hawks 29-22.
The last time Fayetteville State faced extra periods in Luther "Nick" Jeralds Stadium was in 2009 when the Broncos lost the inaugural Two Rivers Classic to UNC Pembroke. The one-score advantage vanished when Chowan's Mcfarland threw a six-yard score to Holland. On the second play of the third overtime period, Simeon Marshall intercepted the ball which ended the Hawks chances.
With hopes of ending the game, Bryant incited pandemonium with a ten-yard pass to Juwan Moye which became the game winner.
Final Stats
COURTESY FAYETTEVILLE STATE UNIVERSITY SPORTS INFORMATION
Saturday, October 5, 2013
MVSU Delta Devils get Revenge upsetting A&M on Homecoming 28-9
NORMAL, Alabama -- Head coach Anthony Jones could only hang his head as he watch a second straight homecoming loss at the hands of another Mississippi team.
Alabama A&M loss Homecoming 2013 28-9 to Mississippi Valle State University for the second straight year in a row and a first against the Delta Devils since 2006.
The Bulldogs completed a season low four passes on 22 tries between two different quarterbacks. Brandon Wells, who started the contest, finished three of 16 for 56 yards while Chris Leachman went one of six for 21 yards. Wells threw four interceptions partially due to a broken finger while Leachman totaled one turnover after trying to score on a Hail Mary. Well's also ran the ball eight times for 20 yards.
Ball State transfer Barrington Scott rushed for a season high 159 yards on 22 carries with a long of 25 yards. This was his third game with 20 plus carries and his second with 100 plus yards. Brandon Eldemire went 57 yards on 10 touches and the only score for AAMU. Coming off an ACL tear in the spring, Brendon Johnson carried the ball three times for 26 yards.
"When I fumbled the ball I got rolled up on my legs which caused me to let the ball go," Scott mentioned. "No matter what I did it's another loss which does not feel good."
A&M was never in the game offensively posting only one double digit drive and four out of 16 drives that went eight plays or more. Of the 16 drives five ended in interceptions, six ended in punts, while one ended in a fumble, a missed field goal and downs. Eldemire's TD was the only drive that finished with a score.
After the Maroon & White won the toss and chose to defer, Valley scored after three plays to take a 6-0 lead. The Delta Devils then increased their lead after a pick allowed Valley to take a 12-0 lead in the first quarter.
A&M finally got things started when MVSU's punt returner Kenneth Dabney fumbled a punt and recovered it in the end zone giving A&M their second safety of the year.
Valley then scored again on a pick six by Avery Boykins for 52 yards. The Bulldogs finally got things going on Brandon Eldemire's 14 yard rush to put A&M within striking distance 18-9. Unfortunately Valley would add to their lead with a 37 yard field goal to give the Delta Devils a 21-9 advantage at halftime.
The third quarter was played with no one scoring but the fourth showed Valley was the dominate team after another touchdown to seal the deal and give them their first victory of the season.
"Offensively we had our opportunities but we didn't take advantage of them," Jones commented. "A lot of people blame the QB when you lose and congratulate him when you win, that's what comes with the position. We tried different things to help the passing game but we still couldn't make plays."
"When you don't take advantage of your opportunities and don't give yourself a chance then you will not win," said Jones. "We didn't do that today and that's why we didn't win."
A&M falls to 2-4 overall on the year and 2-2 in the Eastern division conference of the Southwestern Athletic Conference.
The Maroon & White will hit the road for the remainder of October. First up is a date with the Jaguars of Southern University on Saturday, October 12th, at 6:00 p.m.
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Howard Mistakes Doom The Bison in Loss to NCCU
WASHINGTON, D.C. -- Greg McGhee and Jonathan Booker put on an impressive offensive play, combining for three touchdowns, but too many mistakes, including two on special teams, proved to be too much to overcome as Howard dropped a 37-28 decision to North Carolina Central in a Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference game at Greene Stadium.
It was the first home game of the season for the Bison (1-4, 0-2 in the MEAC), who entered the game with a five-game win streak. But the Eagles (3-2, 1-0 in the MEAC) set the tone early by scoring on their first possession. Idreis Augustus capped off an eight-play drive with a six-yard run. The PAT attempt was blocked but NCCU held a 6-0 lead.
Howard countered on its first possession when McGhee engineered a 13-play, 78-yard drive that used almost five minutes off the clock. Booker caught a 20-yard strike from McGhee as the Bison led, 7-6.
NCCU came back with another short drive that set up by one of its fine special teams plays on the day. Dequadis Tucker scored from 17 yards to make, 13-7 early in the second quarter.
But McGhee was not to be outdone. The junior put together another drive, this time 64 yards on 10 plays. It ended with McGhee connecting with Stewart Hartman on a 9-yard hookup.
It was Howard's last lead of the game.
It was there that the Eagles began to take control. With less than two minutes remaining in the half, NCCU's Jordan Reid drove his team 52 yards in 10 plays to set up a 48-yard field goal at the half to give NCCU the lead for good at 16-14 at intermission.
The Eagles used that as a momentum builder. The defense forced the Bison to turn over the ball on downs. Howard's John Fleck hit a 46 yard punt that Adrian Wilkins field at his own 11, found a seam in the Howard defense and raced 89 yards for the score.
NCCU was not finished. After Howard had to settle for a field goal attempt on its next possession, the Eagles struck again with a big play on special teams. Fleck's field goal attempt was blocked and returned 50 yards by Tim Thaniel for a TD that opened a 30-14 advantage at the 5:52 mark of the third quarter.
"We had a lot of missed opportunities," lamented Howard head coach Ray Petty. "We had a missed field goal and our special teams just wasn't as good as theirs today."
Added NCCU interim head Coach Dwayne Foster. "We talked all week about special teams and the importance of making something happen in the kicking game. Whether it was get a big return, block a punt or field goal, these guys stepped up to the challenge of making something happen."
Howard appeared to wake up when McGhee went to work, this time taking his team 90 yards in 15 plays, finishing it off with a 20-yard strike to Booker for their second hookup.
But NCCU was not to be denied. The visitors put the game away when Reid scored on a 54-yard scamper with 4:24 remaining.
The Bison would add a late touchdown when McGhee and Booker got together for the third time on the day from 19 yards out. McGhee accounted for 366 yards of total offense, going 31 of 48 for 328 yards and a career-high four TD passes. Booker grabbed a career-high 10 passes for 154 yards and three TDs.
"Overall, tempo was pretty high. We got line up the way and were moving the ball okay. But we didn't win and that's what matters. We fought through all four quarters but we have got to make corrections because we have to get a win."
The Howard defense held the Eagles to 269 yards of total offense, but the Eagles offset that with 270 yards of return yards and three blocked kicks.
"We did not ensure protection on the special teams," said Petty. "We did some good things on defense and we moved the ball and scored some points but the two special teams mistakes in the third quarter were crucial because we were never able to recover from it. We have to find a way to bounce back."
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It was the first home game of the season for the Bison (1-4, 0-2 in the MEAC), who entered the game with a five-game win streak. But the Eagles (3-2, 1-0 in the MEAC) set the tone early by scoring on their first possession. Idreis Augustus capped off an eight-play drive with a six-yard run. The PAT attempt was blocked but NCCU held a 6-0 lead.
Howard countered on its first possession when McGhee engineered a 13-play, 78-yard drive that used almost five minutes off the clock. Booker caught a 20-yard strike from McGhee as the Bison led, 7-6.
NCCU came back with another short drive that set up by one of its fine special teams plays on the day. Dequadis Tucker scored from 17 yards to make, 13-7 early in the second quarter.
But McGhee was not to be outdone. The junior put together another drive, this time 64 yards on 10 plays. It ended with McGhee connecting with Stewart Hartman on a 9-yard hookup.
It was Howard's last lead of the game.
It was there that the Eagles began to take control. With less than two minutes remaining in the half, NCCU's Jordan Reid drove his team 52 yards in 10 plays to set up a 48-yard field goal at the half to give NCCU the lead for good at 16-14 at intermission.
The Eagles used that as a momentum builder. The defense forced the Bison to turn over the ball on downs. Howard's John Fleck hit a 46 yard punt that Adrian Wilkins field at his own 11, found a seam in the Howard defense and raced 89 yards for the score.
NCCU was not finished. After Howard had to settle for a field goal attempt on its next possession, the Eagles struck again with a big play on special teams. Fleck's field goal attempt was blocked and returned 50 yards by Tim Thaniel for a TD that opened a 30-14 advantage at the 5:52 mark of the third quarter.
"We had a lot of missed opportunities," lamented Howard head coach Ray Petty. "We had a missed field goal and our special teams just wasn't as good as theirs today."
Added NCCU interim head Coach Dwayne Foster. "We talked all week about special teams and the importance of making something happen in the kicking game. Whether it was get a big return, block a punt or field goal, these guys stepped up to the challenge of making something happen."
Howard appeared to wake up when McGhee went to work, this time taking his team 90 yards in 15 plays, finishing it off with a 20-yard strike to Booker for their second hookup.
But NCCU was not to be denied. The visitors put the game away when Reid scored on a 54-yard scamper with 4:24 remaining.
The Bison would add a late touchdown when McGhee and Booker got together for the third time on the day from 19 yards out. McGhee accounted for 366 yards of total offense, going 31 of 48 for 328 yards and a career-high four TD passes. Booker grabbed a career-high 10 passes for 154 yards and three TDs.
"Overall, tempo was pretty high. We got line up the way and were moving the ball okay. But we didn't win and that's what matters. We fought through all four quarters but we have got to make corrections because we have to get a win."
The Howard defense held the Eagles to 269 yards of total offense, but the Eagles offset that with 270 yards of return yards and three blocked kicks.
"We did not ensure protection on the special teams," said Petty. "We did some good things on defense and we moved the ball and scored some points but the two special teams mistakes in the third quarter were crucial because we were never able to recover from it. We have to find a way to bounce back."
COURTESY HOWARD UNIVERSITY ATHLETIC MEDIA RELATIONS
WEEK 6: HBCU Football Schedule and ScoreCard Finals
Saturday, Oct 5, 2013
WATCH IN 720p HD, WIDE SCREEN
OVC
Tennessee State 40, Southeast Missouri State 16
MEAC
Norfolk State 26, Savannah State 24
Morgan State 34, Florida A&M 21 (Homecoming)
North Carolina Central 37, Howard 28
Bethune-Cookman 21, Delaware State 7
South Carolina State 29, North Carolina A&T 24 Watch Replay
SWAC
Mississippi Valley State 28, Alabama A&M 9
Alcorn State 57, Warner Southern 0 (Homecoming)
Prairie View A&M 31, Grambling State 3 at Dallas
Jackson State 42, Arkansas Pine Bluff 33
Alabama State 34, Texas Southern 2
CIAA
Virginia Union 32, Livingstone 25
Virginia State 14, Shaw 10
Winston-Salem State 56, Bowie State 21
Elizabeth City State 26, Saint Augustine’s 25
Johnson C. Smith 49, Lincoln (Pa.) 10
Fayetteville State 35, Chowan 29, 3 OT
SIAC
Kentucky State 49, Alderson-Brodus 20
Miles 27, Benedict 13
West Texas A&M 72, Central State (Ohio) 0 (Homecoming)
Lane 28, Stillman 27
Tuskegee 21, Fort Valley State 13
Clark-Atlanta 21, Morehouse 17
OTHER CONFERENCES & INDEPENDENTS
Ave Maria 48, Concordia-Selma 34 (Homecoming)
Mercyhurst 63, Cheyney 14
Urbana 62 West Virginia State 10 (Homecoming)
Virginia University-Lynchburg 37, Edward Waters 20 (Homecoming)
Emporia State 52, Lincoln (Mo.) 14 (Homecoming)
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OVC
Tennessee State 40, Southeast Missouri State 16
MEAC
Norfolk State 26, Savannah State 24
Morgan State 34, Florida A&M 21 (Homecoming)
North Carolina Central 37, Howard 28
Bethune-Cookman 21, Delaware State 7
South Carolina State 29, North Carolina A&T 24 Watch Replay
SWAC
Mississippi Valley State 28, Alabama A&M 9
Alcorn State 57, Warner Southern 0 (Homecoming)
Prairie View A&M 31, Grambling State 3 at Dallas
Jackson State 42, Arkansas Pine Bluff 33
Alabama State 34, Texas Southern 2
CIAA
Virginia Union 32, Livingstone 25
Virginia State 14, Shaw 10
Winston-Salem State 56, Bowie State 21
Elizabeth City State 26, Saint Augustine’s 25
Johnson C. Smith 49, Lincoln (Pa.) 10
Fayetteville State 35, Chowan 29, 3 OT
SIAC
Kentucky State 49, Alderson-Brodus 20
Miles 27, Benedict 13
West Texas A&M 72, Central State (Ohio) 0 (Homecoming)
Lane 28, Stillman 27
Tuskegee 21, Fort Valley State 13
Clark-Atlanta 21, Morehouse 17
OTHER CONFERENCES & INDEPENDENTS
Ave Maria 48, Concordia-Selma 34 (Homecoming)
Mercyhurst 63, Cheyney 14
Urbana 62 West Virginia State 10 (Homecoming)
Virginia University-Lynchburg 37, Edward Waters 20 (Homecoming)
Emporia State 52, Lincoln (Mo.) 14 (Homecoming)
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Williams sparks B-CU to 21-7 win over Delaware State
DOVER, Delaware -- After a sluggish first half, Bethune-Cookman needed a spark. So, Quentin Williams provided it.
The quarterback came off the bench to start the second half and led 21st-ranked B-CU to a 21-7 victory over Delaware State in its Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference opener Saturday in Dover, Del.
“This definitely was a big win today,’’ said safety Nick Addison, whose interception with 4:33 left iced the win for the Wildcats (4-1, 1-0), their 14th in a row against MEAC competition. “We needed this to help us get momentum.’’
Williams ran for a 31-yard touchdown and connected with Eddie Poole on a 15-yard TD pass. Williams completed all four of his passes for 86 yards.
Poole had four catches for 103 yards, including a 50-yard reception that set up his touchdown grab with 4:40 remaining.
“It was good for us to find a way to get it done in the second half,’’ B-CU coach Brian Jenkins said.
The Wildcats went into halftime tied 7-7 and looking for a way to stop the Hornets’ passing attack.
NSU Spartans Survive Late Field Goal Try, Top Savannah State 26-24
NORFOLK, Virginia -- Cameron Marouf kicked the go-ahead 33-yard field goal with 1:10 left, and the Spartans deflected Savannah State kicker John Barron's 49-yard field goal attempt with 2 seconds left to hold on for a 26-24 win over the Tigers on Saturday afternoon at Dick Price Stadium.
Barron's field goal was tipped at the line by NSU linebacker Lynden Trail and fell harmlessly into the end zone as the Spartans improved to 2-3 overall, 2-0 in the MEAC. The Tigers dropped to 1-5 overall, 0-2 in the MEAC.
Trail had another monster game, finishing with 10 tackles, 1.5 tackles for loss, one sack and two pass breakups. For the second straight week, he made a substantial impact in other areas of the game, catching a touchdown pass for the second game in a row in addition to his blocked field goal at the end.
The Spartans got all they wanted from Savannah State. After a scoreless first quarter, the Tigers struck first on a 26-yard field goal by Barron with 12:46 left in the second quarter. On their next drive, Antonio Bostick capped a four-play, 48-yard drive with a 37-yard touchdown pass to Jeremy Moore. SSU went for a two-point conversion and failed, keeping the score at 9-0.
SSU began both of its first-half scoring drives in NSU territory after the Spartan offense was backed up deep in its own end and had to punt.
Box Score
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Barron's field goal was tipped at the line by NSU linebacker Lynden Trail and fell harmlessly into the end zone as the Spartans improved to 2-3 overall, 2-0 in the MEAC. The Tigers dropped to 1-5 overall, 0-2 in the MEAC.
Trail had another monster game, finishing with 10 tackles, 1.5 tackles for loss, one sack and two pass breakups. For the second straight week, he made a substantial impact in other areas of the game, catching a touchdown pass for the second game in a row in addition to his blocked field goal at the end.
The Spartans got all they wanted from Savannah State. After a scoreless first quarter, the Tigers struck first on a 26-yard field goal by Barron with 12:46 left in the second quarter. On their next drive, Antonio Bostick capped a four-play, 48-yard drive with a 37-yard touchdown pass to Jeremy Moore. SSU went for a two-point conversion and failed, keeping the score at 9-0.
SSU began both of its first-half scoring drives in NSU territory after the Spartan offense was backed up deep in its own end and had to punt.
Box Score
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Alcorn Braves Shutout Warner for Homecoming 57-0
LORMAN, Mississippi -- The Braves snapped a two-game losing streak for homecoming and accumulated 589 yards of total offense today as the Braves win homecoming 2013 demolishing Warner University, 57-0.
John Gibbs, Jr. help the Braves get on the board early in the first quarter when he connected with Jordan Payne for a 28-yard touchdown to go up 6-0. Six minutes later Gibbs found senior wide receiver Tavoris Doss for a nine-yard touchdown to extend the lead to 13-0.
The ensuing drive CJ Morgan intercepted a pass and returned it for 50-yard touchdown and to the give the Braves a 20-0 going into the second quarter.
Freshman kicker Haiden McCraney nailed a 27-yard field goal to push the Braves up lead to 23-0.
Gibbs hit sophomore wide receiver LaDarrien Davis for completions of nine and 24 to setup a one-yard run touchdown by senior running back Arnold Walker. The Braves had increased their lead to 31-0 just before the half.
Walker was at his best again after the half pounding the ball on the ground for a 14-yard touchdown continuously increasing the lead to 38-0 with 12:47 to play in the third quarter.
Warner fumbled the ball on a bad snap and the ball ended up in the end zone for the Braves first safety of the season. The score now was 40-0.
Zerick Rollins, Jr. stepped in for Gibbs in the third quarter and hit Felando Warr for a 57-yard strike to give the Braves a 47-0 lead.
Transfer T.J. Menning saw some action at quarterback today as well finding Jordan Payne for his second touchdown of the game. With Payne's touchdown the Braves hit the 50-point mark leading the Royals 54-0. McCraney would score the Braves final points of the game with .30 seconds to play putting a 30-yard field goal through the uprights.
The offense scored majority of the points but it was the defense that shut down the Royals holding them to 65 yards of total offense.
Walker finished the game 111 yards on 15 carries and two touchdowns. It was the second time this season that Walker wasn't tackled for a loss. Gibbs posted another solid game completing 14 of 18 passes for 188 yards and two touchdowns. Although he didn't score a touchdown, junior Tollette George racked up 103 yards on seven catches which is the first time a Braves receiver has gone over 100 yards in a single game this season.
Defensively, the Braves were led by freshman Michael Hurns made his presence felt recording a career-high six tackles, one tackle for a loss, and a pass break-up. Defensive back Warren Gatewood recorded his first career interception in the Braves win.
The Braves (4-2, 2-1) are 3-0 at home on the season and return to action next Saturday as they travel to Indianapolis, Ind. to face SWAC foe Grambling State in the 30th Annual Circle City Classic. Kickoff at Lucas Oil Stadium is set for 3:00 p.m. (ET).
ALCORN STATE UNIVERSITY ATHLETIC MEDIA RELATIONS
John Gibbs, Jr. help the Braves get on the board early in the first quarter when he connected with Jordan Payne for a 28-yard touchdown to go up 6-0. Six minutes later Gibbs found senior wide receiver Tavoris Doss for a nine-yard touchdown to extend the lead to 13-0.
The ensuing drive CJ Morgan intercepted a pass and returned it for 50-yard touchdown and to the give the Braves a 20-0 going into the second quarter.
Freshman kicker Haiden McCraney nailed a 27-yard field goal to push the Braves up lead to 23-0.
Gibbs hit sophomore wide receiver LaDarrien Davis for completions of nine and 24 to setup a one-yard run touchdown by senior running back Arnold Walker. The Braves had increased their lead to 31-0 just before the half.
Walker was at his best again after the half pounding the ball on the ground for a 14-yard touchdown continuously increasing the lead to 38-0 with 12:47 to play in the third quarter.
Warner fumbled the ball on a bad snap and the ball ended up in the end zone for the Braves first safety of the season. The score now was 40-0.
Zerick Rollins, Jr. stepped in for Gibbs in the third quarter and hit Felando Warr for a 57-yard strike to give the Braves a 47-0 lead.
Transfer T.J. Menning saw some action at quarterback today as well finding Jordan Payne for his second touchdown of the game. With Payne's touchdown the Braves hit the 50-point mark leading the Royals 54-0. McCraney would score the Braves final points of the game with .30 seconds to play putting a 30-yard field goal through the uprights.
The offense scored majority of the points but it was the defense that shut down the Royals holding them to 65 yards of total offense.
Walker finished the game 111 yards on 15 carries and two touchdowns. It was the second time this season that Walker wasn't tackled for a loss. Gibbs posted another solid game completing 14 of 18 passes for 188 yards and two touchdowns. Although he didn't score a touchdown, junior Tollette George racked up 103 yards on seven catches which is the first time a Braves receiver has gone over 100 yards in a single game this season.
Defensively, the Braves were led by freshman Michael Hurns made his presence felt recording a career-high six tackles, one tackle for a loss, and a pass break-up. Defensive back Warren Gatewood recorded his first career interception in the Braves win.
The Braves (4-2, 2-1) are 3-0 at home on the season and return to action next Saturday as they travel to Indianapolis, Ind. to face SWAC foe Grambling State in the 30th Annual Circle City Classic. Kickoff at Lucas Oil Stadium is set for 3:00 p.m. (ET).
ALCORN STATE UNIVERSITY ATHLETIC MEDIA RELATIONS
Morgan State breaks through vs. Florida A&M, 34-21, in Homecoming game
BALTIMORE, Maryland -- Morgan State coach Donald Hill-Eley looked to the heavens and smiled as a cooler of Gatorade rushed down his back just minutes before the Bears put the finishing touches on their first victory in a year.
Junior linebacker Cody Acker had just sealed the win by returning an interception 19 yards for a touchdown, allowing Morgan State to snap an 11-game losing streak with a 34-21 victory over Florida A&M before an announced 1,259 in its Homecoming game. Afterward, Bears players and coaches converged in the middle of a raucous locker room to sing the school's fight song.
"It's been a long time," Hill-Eley said. "I just feel excited for these young men. They've been working hard. We needed to have some success to continue to move forward."
Morgan State junior quarterback Seth Higgins (Edgewood) had his most complete game to date. He had 17 carries for 102 yards and a touchdown. Higgins also completed 12 of 20 passes for 144 yards and another score with no interceptions.
"The difference is we didn't beat ourselves," Higgins said. "We didn't do anything special except ...
CONTINUE READING
Junior linebacker Cody Acker had just sealed the win by returning an interception 19 yards for a touchdown, allowing Morgan State to snap an 11-game losing streak with a 34-21 victory over Florida A&M before an announced 1,259 in its Homecoming game. Afterward, Bears players and coaches converged in the middle of a raucous locker room to sing the school's fight song.
"It's been a long time," Hill-Eley said. "I just feel excited for these young men. They've been working hard. We needed to have some success to continue to move forward."
Morgan State junior quarterback Seth Higgins (Edgewood) had his most complete game to date. He had 17 carries for 102 yards and a touchdown. Higgins also completed 12 of 20 passes for 144 yards and another score with no interceptions.
"The difference is we didn't beat ourselves," Higgins said. "We didn't do anything special except ...
CONTINUE READING
WSSU rolls to another easy victory
WINSTON-SALEM, North Carolina -- Winston-Salem State made it look easy in a 56-21 win over Bowie State on Saturday at Bowman Gray Stadium.
The 16th-ranked Rams scored on seven of their first nine possessions to win their fourth in a row. The Rams improved to 4-1 overall and 2-0 in the CIAA; the Bulldogs fell to 2-3 and 0-2.
The Bulldogs actually led 7-6 early in the second quarter but that didn’t last long. Quarterback Rudy Johnson scored on a 5-yard run for the Rams and they never trailed after that.
Johnson completed 19 of 35 passed for a career-high 390 yards and four touchdowns; he also rushed for 73 yards and two touchdowns.
Maurice Lewis scored from 2 yards out late in the third quarter to extend the Rams' lead to 49-7.
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The 16th-ranked Rams scored on seven of their first nine possessions to win their fourth in a row. The Rams improved to 4-1 overall and 2-0 in the CIAA; the Bulldogs fell to 2-3 and 0-2.
The Bulldogs actually led 7-6 early in the second quarter but that didn’t last long. Quarterback Rudy Johnson scored on a 5-yard run for the Rams and they never trailed after that.
Johnson completed 19 of 35 passed for a career-high 390 yards and four touchdowns; he also rushed for 73 yards and two touchdowns.
Maurice Lewis scored from 2 yards out late in the third quarter to extend the Rams' lead to 49-7.
CONTINUE READING
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