Saturday, August 2, 2014

Williams takes over at middle linebacker as Bethune-Cookman rebuilds defense

NEW SMYRNA BEACH, Florida Even a veteran like LeBrandon Richardson needed to get acclimated Friday as Bethune-Cookman opened its first preseason training camp at the New Smyrna Beach Sports Complex.

And not just because of the mid-summer heat and high humidity. The defensive end was surrounded by new faces and unsure paces as the Wildcats embarked on a rebuilding project — replacing eight departed defensive starters.


“It's a new crew. We're putting the pieces to the puzzle together, and it was a great start today,” Richardson said.
With only three defensive starters returning — including Richardson, a two-time all-MEAC selection — the Wildcats are looking for several of last season's reserves to step up.

NCCU Eagles dodge rain to get to work for Mack

DURHAM, North Carolina   — That moment when rain pushes back the first day of football practice: “We’ve got to get on the grass some kind of way,” first-year N.C. Central coach Jerry Mack said shortly after 3 p.m. Friday.


NCCU was supposed to start practice at 3:30 p.m. Soaking rain flipped the script.
But make no mistake, the Eagles were going to work Friday.



“Rain, sleet or snow, we’re going to practice,” Mack said.
Having the East Carolina Pirates waiting in Greenville on Aug. 30 can create such a sense of urgency, although NCCU senior defensive end Ty Brown would tell you Mack’s intense like that all of the time. 
Football players at Duke and North Carolina can go hard in indoor practice facilities when the weather outside is frightful. NCCU doesn’t have that option.

North Carolina A&T Begins Football Practice

GREENSBORO, North Carolina -- The North Carolina A&T's football team returned to the field for its first official practice on Saturday.

A&T practiced for two and a half hours in preparation for a 12-game 2014 schedule.

Twenty-nine days later the Aggies will open the season in the MEAC/SWAC Challenge presented by Disney at 11:45 a.m., Sunday, Aug. 31 at Bright House Networks Stadium in Orlando, Fla. A&T's home opener is Saturday, Sept. 6 at 6 p.m., against FCS playoff quarterfinalist Coastal Carolina at Aggie Stadium.

The Aggies were 7-4 overall and 4-4 in the MEAC last season. The Aggies return five starters on offense and four players on defense.

The Aggies have four preseason first-team All-MEAC players in reigning MEAC Rookie of the Year running back Tarik Cohen, fifth-year offensive lineman William Ray Robinson III, senior wide receiver Desmond Lawrence and fifth-year linebacker D'Vonte Grant.

 


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Brian Von Bergen joins Albany State as QB coach

ALBANY, Georgia — For the second straight offseason, Albany State has landed a quarterback coach with an impressive resume and Division I coaching experience.

ASU announced the hiring of Brian Von Bergen as its newest QB coach on Thursday, filling the void left by Willie Totten, who left his post with the Rams after one season to take an assistant coaching job at Alabama A&M.



Like Totten — a former head coach and legendary receiver at Mississippi Valley State — did last summer, Von Bergen brings plenty of experience to the Rams.

“I feel very fortunate to be at Albany State,” said Von Bergen, who was the passing game coordinator and wide receiver coach for Division I Montana State the past five seasons and helped turn the Bobcats into one of the top offensive teams in the Big Sky Conference. “Ultimately I feel like I’m on a championship team and feel very blessed to work with these guys.”

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2014 CIAA Media Day Commissioner's Observation


2014 CIAA Media Day Commissioner's Observation from CIAA Media Relations on Vimeo.

DURHAM, North Carolina -- CIAA Commissioner Jacqie McWilliams said last Thursday as she kicked off the 2014 Preseason Football Media Day at the Durham Convention Center that the cancellation of last year's CIAA Football Championship Game was a "dark day in history" for the conference but a significant lesson was learned.

"It reminded us," McWilliams said, "of what we should be focused on and what is most important to this conference, and that is the welfare and the experience of our student/athletes." Speaking prior to media interviews with coaches and players from each of the league's 12 teams, McWilliams said an ad hoc committee of the conference's Board of Directors, the league's presidents, decided that no further action would be taken against the institutions involved but also made changes to the conference's constitution so that "what happened last year will never happen again."

"The bottom line," McWilliams said in also announcing conference initiatives to promote fair play, ethical conduct and sportsmanship, "isthere is zero tolerance for behaviors that diminish the values and the mission of this great conference." When it got down to play on the field, Winston-Salem State in the South and Virginia State in the North, the two teams that were scheduled to meet in last year's championship game, were the preseason selections by the league's head coaches and sports information directors to repeat in their respective divisions. But things will be a little different, at least at WSSU.

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FAMU finds solid lineman in Fuse

TALLAHASSEE, Florida --Despite being a key player on an undefeated state championship team, Daikwon Fuse didn't get too many offers to play college football.

While he and the Dwyer High School Panthers were blowing over the competition, the Rattlers were struggling to a 3-9 record last season. Even so, he didn't hesitate to take the offer to become a Rattler.

He figured the combination of FAMU needing to win and his familiarity with winning was a good match.

"Who doesn't like to win," Fuse said, explaining his decision. "I'm coming to win. I want to be a competitor. I'm going to bust my behind until we win.

"Coming from a winning team to a team that's struggling, I have nothing but time to help turn everything around."

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FAMU coaches participate in NFL minority internship

HEAD COACH EARL HOLMES
Florida A&M University

(Photo Courtesy: FAMU Athletics)
TALLAHASSEE, Florida -- Don't be surprised to see Quinn Gray, offensive coordinator for FAMU's football team, being a little more creative on short yardage plays than he's been in the past.

What he's experienced during the recent NFL Bill Walsh Minority Coaching Fellowship Program, has given him a new perspective on play-calling, Gray said.

Especially on second or third down with short yards to go, he said Saturday.

"It gave me the opportunity to just sit back and better understand play-calling in situations, understand why you do certain things in a situation," Gray said of the stint he had with the Detroit Lions' coaching staff. "It gave me a better overall understand on being able to lead a group of men."

Secondary coach Corey Fuller also participated in the program at Minnesota, while linebacker's coach Levon Kirkland spent time with the Tennessee Titans. Walsh initiated the program while with the 49ers in 1987, before the entire league adopted it for the last 25 years.

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Claude Humphrey, from Hazzard County to the Hall of Fame

CANTON, Ohio  -- Atlanta fans don't get to do this often. There's Deion Sanders, but the team's three other enshrinees -- Eric Dickerson, Chris Doleman, and Tommy McDonald -- played a combined five years in Atlanta. Even Deion played only five, though Falcons fans can fully claim every bit of him without thinking twice.

Humphrey, the imposing former Tennessee State Tiger, played 11 of his 14 seasons in Atlanta. That includes starring on the 1977 Falcons, the lunatic "Grits Blitz" that often blitzed nine of 11 defenders and gave up the fewest points in NFL history.


(That means he also played a major role in changing all of football, as the NFL swung its rules in the offenses' favor the following year. Don't like defense-free shootouts? Blame Claude Humphrey and company for being too good at stopping them.)
And even though he briefly retired mid-career and lobbied for a trade, ending up with theEagles, one cannot be blamed for wanting to leave the pre-Arthur Blank Falcons. "Pre-Arthur Blank" is a really spacious-sounding era and must describe a whole lot of years as being bad years, you say, and you are right. He then helped the Eagles reach Super Bowl XV, where he threw a penalty flag back at a ref.

Didinger: TSU's Humphrey Takes His Rightful Place

CANTON, Ohio --The head slap was a devastating weapon for a defensive lineman, the football equivalent of a Joe Frazier left hook.

At the snap of the ball the lineman would come out of his stance and club the blocker upside the head with his forearm. Done with sufficient force, it could knock an opponent off-balance or even off his feet.

The NFL eventually outlawed the head slap because it was deemed too dangerous, but in the 1960s and ‘70s it was the go-to move for pass rushers and none used it better than Claude Humphrey.
 




When the 6-foot-5, 260-pound Humphrey slammed his hand against the helmet of an offensive lineman, it sounded like a sledgehammer hitting a rock. There were times when Humphrey landed a blow and the opponent’s knees would buckle. The poor guy’s ears would be ringing the rest of the day.


“Deacon Jones (Rams Hall of Famer) may have invented the head slap, but Claude Humphrey got it outlawed,” said former Eagles coach Dick Vermeil. “Claude’s head slap was devastating.”

Claude Humphrey got head start to Hall of Fame at TSU

NASHVILLE, Tennessee -- Playing for Tennessee State gave Claude Humphrey a head start on what turned out to be a legendary NFL career.

The preparation from TSU coach John Merritt and his staff left the 6-foot-4, 252-pound defensive end with little to learn after the Atlanta Falcons made him the third overall pick of the 1968 draft.



So began a run that would last 14 years and include the NFL Defensive Rookie of the Year award, five first-team All-Pro selections and six Pro Bowls. The 70-year-old Humphrey will receive his greatest honor on Saturday with enshrinement in the Pro Football Hall of Fame.

"Everything I did my first year in professional football was stuff I had learned at Tennessee State," Humphrey said. "I did it in a Falcons uniform and a Falcons helmet, but it was all Tennessee State. The stuff that I was learning at Tennessee State, the pros hadn't caught onto it yet."



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Texas Southern's Michael Strahan ranks right below Lawrence Taylor amongst NY Giant greats



CANTON, Ohio − He sat in a locker room as a rookie, taking orders from Lawrence Taylor. He spent so much time during his career with Harry Carson (S.C. State) that he considers him “my big brother.” He is enough of a student of history that Michael Strahan can list all the greatest defensive players in Giants history.

It still seems strange to him that his name is placed so prominently on that list.

“To hear names like that and think I’m in that same group is unbelievable,” Strahan said on Friday. “Because I never planned on it. The fact it came down to this, being mentioned in that (group), it’s something. I mean, LT? Are you kidding me? Harry Carson? These guys are guys that I grew up watching and I loved and appreciated them.”

And they appreciate him, and have accepted the soon-to-be Hall of Famer into their notable group of former Giants. Yes, when discussing the list of greatest Giants defenders, it starts with Taylor and there’s a gap before anyone else. But on that next tier of names, Strahan − who will be inducted into the Hall on Saturday night − has to be included.

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Texas Southern's Michael Strahan: Pro Football Hall of Fame where he belongs

CANTON, Ohio  -- Michael Strahan takes his rightful place in the Pro Football Hall of Fame on Saturday. Enshrinement comes a year later than it should have for the gap-toothed former New York Giants great, who missed out in his first year on the ballot. It is, however, an honor that is richly deserved for Strahan, probably the second-best defensive player in Giants history behind Hall of Famer Lawrence Taylor.
Strahan's 15-year career with the Giants ended when he helped them defeat the New England Patriots, 17-14, in Super Bowl XLII. There were many, many great moments during a career that began in 1993 and ended in 2007.  The video below illustrates many of hem.


When we put together the '2014 New York Giants Almanac' I asked Big Blue View contributors for their favorite Strahan memories. Here are a couple of them.

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2014 Pro Football Hall of Fame: Aeneas Williams gets emotional during Gold Jacket Ceremony



CANTON, Ohio  --  Aeneas Williams tried not to get emotional Friday night as he was welcomed into the exclusive fraternity of the Pro Football Hall of Fame by the gauntlet Gold Jackets awaiting.


Williams had promised himself he wouldn't.

But three steps into the line of Hall of Famers, which included one-time nemesis Dallas Cowboy receiver Michael Irvin, Williams' eyes were already beginning to fill. By the time Williams reached fellow New Orleans native and former St. Louis Rams teammate Marshall Faulk, there was no controlling his emotions.

Williams and Faulk shared a long embrace as the more than 4,000 attendees of the Gold Jacket Ceremony applauded at the Civic Center in Canton. The seven Hall of Fame enshrinees were presented their signature Gold Jackets.

Texas Southern and Tennessee State University Marching Bands Play in 2014 Pro Football Hall of Fame Parade

CANTON, Ohio - Tens of thousands of fans line the parade route to honor Michael Strahan and the six other 2014 enshrinees to the Pro Football Hall of Fame in Canton, Ohio.

The morning crowds watched as the class of 2014 Enshrinees - Derrick Brooks, Ray Guy, Claude Humphrey, Walter Jones, Andre Reed, Michael Strahan, Aeneas Williams - and many more returning Hall of Famers were escorted in cars through downtown Canton.

There were specialty units, giant helium balloons, fabulous floats and marching bands including Tennessee State University and Texas Southern University "Ocean of Soul" as the enshrines were cheered by the crowds that were five rows deep.




Watch Tennessee State University Aristocrat Marching Band at the 40:00 mark.
Watch Texas Southern University Ocean of Soul Marching Band at the 56:00 mark.

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Hall of Fame notebook: Mel Blount gets some Southern support in Canton

CANTON, Ohio Mel Blount finally is getting some company from Southern University in the Pro Football Hall of Fame.
Exactly 25 years after being enshrined in 1989, following a spectacular career with the great Pittsburgh Steelers teams of the 1970s, Blount will be joined Saturday night by former Southern star Aeneas Williams.
Being only the second former Southern player to be elected to the Hall has even more meaning for Williams, who like Blount played cornerback for 14 NFL seasons.
It’s extra special to Williams because his father, Lawrence, attended Southern when Blount was on his way to stardom during his career with the Jaguars in the late 1960s.
“I love football and I’m a historian of the game, so I knew Mel’s statistics and all of that,” Williams said Friday, on the eve of his induction along with six other former NFL greats.
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Southern's Aeneas Williams still ‘enjoying this wave’ all the way to the Pro Football Hall of Fame

CANTON, Ohio — After 14 productive seasons in the NFL and another 10 years removed from the game he played so well, Aeneas Williams turned back the clock Friday.
From an early-morning photo shoot on the steps of the Pro Football Hall of Fame museum surrounded by 106 members of the shrine, to the Ray Nitschke Luncheon, to a solemn Gold Jacket Dinner that capped a busy day, Williams was a wide-eyed rookie again.
Williams, a New Orleans native and former Southern University star, harkened back to his days as a third-round draft pick by the then-Phoenix Cardinals by doing a lot of listening on the eve of his induction into the Hall of Fame.
“Being in that room with those guys,” a smiling Williams said during an afternoon news conference, “I’m a rookie all over again.”
At the same time, Williams wasn’t intimidated by ...



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As SU Jaguars open camp, no early clues on QB situation

BATON ROUGE, Louisiana  -- Southern’s quarterback competition resumed Friday with the first practice of preseason camp.

Every snap, every throw and every decision of four inexperienced players is being dissected by the coaching staff as they try to choose the one most capable of leading the offense when the Jaguars open the season Aug. 30 at Louisiana-Lafayette.

While the coaches look for clues as to which player deserves to start, observers are looking for clues as to what the coaches are thinking.
On Friday, Deonte Shorts worked with the first-team offense, and fellow redshirt freshman Frances Kennah worked with the second team.
And just what does that mean?

Friday, August 1, 2014

SC State To Begin Preseason Football Camp With 95 Student-Athletes

COACH BUDDY POUGH
ORANGEBURG, South Carolina  --  SC State will begin preparing for the 2014 football season Friday (Aug.1) when players report to the campus for orientation, team seminars, and physicals. The Bulldogs will conduct their first two practices in helmets Saturday (Aug.2) and Sunday (Aug.3) —at 9:30 a.m.

SC State will also conduct, single workouts in shorts and helmets on Monday (Aug. 4) and Tuesday (Aug.5) at 9:30 a.m. and Tuesday at 3:10 p.m. First workout in full pads begin Wednesday (Aug.6) at 9:30 a.m., with two-a-day practices, on an alternating basis, beginning Thursday (Aug.7), with the morning workout set for 9:30 a.m., on Friday (Aug. 8) as well.

Coach Buddy Pough's team will hold its annual "Press and Picture Day" Saturday (Aug. 9), beginning at 9 a.m. at the O.C. Dawson Stadium before conducting its first preseason scrimmage at 7 p.m. The team will take Sunday off before resuming practice Monday (Aug.11) at 9:30 a.m., followed by evening practice at 7:10.

The team's annual "Meet the Players Day", sponsored by The STATE Club, will be held August 16th at 12:30 p.m. and will be preceded by the second preseason scrimmage at 10 a.m.
 
The Bulldogs open their 12-game 2014 schedule Aug. 30 on the road against intrastate rival Benedict College in the Palmetto Capital City Classic at 5 p.m.at Charles W. Johnson Stadium in Columbia. SC State has five home games slated this season at Oliver. C. Dawson Stadium in Orangeburg. Pough's team was picked to finish second in the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference for the second straight season in a preseason poll of head coaches and sports information directors.

2014 Bulldog Preseason Football Information
Friday Aug. 1 Players report/Orientation/Seminars/Physicals/Team Meeting/Sports Information- 6:30 p.m.
Saturday Aug. 2
Practice # 1 (helmets) 9:30 a.m.
Sunday Aug. 3
Practice # 2 (helmets) 9:30 a.m.
Monday Aug. 4
Practice # 3 (shells) 9:30 a.m.
Tuesday Aug. 5
Practice # 4 (shells) 9:30 a.m.
Wednesday Aug. 6
Practice #5 (full pads) 9:30 a.m.
Thursday Aug. 7 Two-a-day Practices Begin
Practices #6 (full pads) 9:30 a.m.
Practices # 7(shells) 7:10 p.m.
Friday Aug. 8
Practice #8 (full pads) 9:30 a.m.
Saturday Aug. 10 Media & Picture Day-9 a.m. O.C. Dawson Stadium
Practice#9
(Scrimmage #1-full pads)-7 p.m.
Sunday Aug. 11 No practice
Monday Aug. 11 Two-a-day Practices
Practice # 10(full pads) 9:30 a.m.
Practice # 11(shells) 7:10 p.m.
Tuesday Aug. 12
Practice # 12(full pads)-9:30 a.m.
Wednesday Aug. 13 Two-a-day Practices
Practice # 13(full pads) 9:30 a.m.
Practice # 14(shells) 7:10 p.m.
Thursday Aug. 14
Practice #15 (full pads)-9:30 a.m.
Friday Aug. 15 Two-a-day Practices
Practice # 16(full pads) 9:30 a.m.
Practice # 17(shells) 7:10 p.m.
Saturday Aug. 16
Practice# 18 (Scrimmage # 2-full pads) 10 a.m.
Sunday Aug. 17 No practice
Monday Aug.18 Two-a-day Practices
Practice # 19(full pads) 9:30 a.m.
Practice # 20(shells) 7:10 p.m.
Tuesday Aug. 19 Classes Begin, No Practice

**In-season practice schedule begins Aug. 20 (times vary, consult Athletic Media Relations Office).**

 
COURTESY SOUTH CAROLINA STATE UNIVERSITY SPORTS INFORMATION

Freshman linebacker in hurry-up mode at FAMU

TALLAHASSEE, Florida  -- The sense of urgency to play college football was obvious in Fitzgerald Mofor's voice, as he talked about finally getting his college football career started.He had to make an unexpected stop at a prep school. He's at FAMU now, hoping to make the team as one of four starting linebackers.

"I'm really pumped," he said. "I want to showcase my talent; try to show what I can do."He would have been doing that a year ago at Benedict College, which signed him in the spring of 2013 out of Sherwood High School in Maryland. Instead, he ended up at Jireh Preparatory Academy high school in Matthews, N.C., for a semesterHe's been attending summer classes at FAMU, hoping the stay ahead of the academic curb.

"I'm really pumped," he said. "I want to showcase my talent; try to show what I can do."

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Thursday, July 31, 2014

B-CU football begins preparation for another MEAC title run

DAYTONA BEACH, Florida  -- Bethune-Cookman coach Brian Jenkins can be high-strung and excitable on the football field, but he was calm and collected earlier this week as he and his staff completed final preparations for the team's preseason camp.

For Jenkins, it was business as usual.

“I'm kind of used to it,” he said. “You have to stay on an even keel and focus in on what you want to accomplish. You don't want to get too high or too low.”

Despite losing eight defensive starters and two of its most accomplished offensive players over the past four seasons, B-CU was picked last week to win its fourth MEAC title in five years.

SWAC Football 2014 Season Preview

DALLAS, Texas  -- The winds of change howled fiercely following the 2013 SWAC football season, claiming three of the conference’s top coaches and creating a high level of anticipation as the 2014 season approaches.


Doug Williams, the most recognizable name among SWAC coaches – and the conference’s most successful coach with five championships during his nine-year tenure at Grambling State – Anthony Jones, the dean of SWAC coaches with 12 seasons at Alabama A&M where he led the Bulldogs to five championship game appearances and won the 2006 title, and Rick Comegy, the elder statesmen among college coaches with 23 seasons on the sidelines, including the last eight at Jackson State, where he guided the Tigers to a 55-35 record, won the 2008 SWAC crown and made back-to-back appearances in the title game in 2012 and ’13, are all gone Also out is Karl Morgan, whose 8-35 record in four years at Mississippi Valley State belies the stride the Delta Devils made.

Roderick Fobbs has taken over at Grambling, James Spady is the new man in charge at Alabama A&M; Harold Jackson has returned to his alma mater and is the head man at Jackson State, while Comegy moved from Jackson to the Mississippi Delta to run the program at Mississippi Valley.

Wednesday, July 30, 2014

Xavier Gold Rush sign six more for 2014-15 recruiting class

Chris Adams

Chris Adams

Malik Harrison

Malik Harrison
    Langston Adams

Langston Adams

Erwin Simmons

Erwin Simmons
    Devante Bailey

Devante Bailey

Alex Xavier

Alex Xavier


NEW ORLEANS — Coach Joseph Moses on Wednesday announced six more signings to Xavier University of Louisiana's men's track and field recruiting class. Newcomers signed to scholarships for the 2014-15 academic year were:

       •  Chris Adams, a hurdler from Richardson, Texas, and Bishop Lynch High School in Dallas.
     •  Langston Adams, a long from Baton Rouge, La., and Christian Life Academy.
     •  Devante Bailey, a long sprinter from Baton Rouge and Southern Lab High School.
     •  Malik Harrison, a horizontal jumper from Baton Rouge and Christian Life.
     •  Erwin Simmons, a hurdler from St. James, La., and St. James High School.
     •  Alex Xavier, a hurdler and sprinter from Naples, Fla., and Golden Gate High School and a transfer from Warner (Fla.) University.

Bailey, Harrison and Simmons will be freshmen at Xavier. Chris Adams and Langston Adams, who
are not related, will be sophomores — they were biology/pre-medical majors at XU in 2013-14 — and Xavier will be a junior. Bailey will major in business marketing, Harrison will be a chemistry/pre-pharmacy major, and Simmons will be part of XU's dual-degree engineering program, studying physics and mechanical engineering.
 
Chris Adams finished third in the 110-meter hurdles in Class 5A at the 2013 Texas Association of Private and Parochial Schools state meet. His best times are 14.9 seconds for the 110 hurdles and 40.8 for the 300 hurdles. He was a standout in basketball, averaging 16 points per game as a senior with a high game of 27 points. At Xavier he was runner-up in the voting for Mr. Freshman.

Langston Adams was a member of Christian Life's 400 relay team which placed fourth at the 2013 Class 1A state meet. He also was a regional qualifier in the long jump. Adams was first-team all-district as a football middle linebacker his senior year and made the second team as a junior.

Bailey was a member of Southern Lab's 800 and 1,600 relay teams which finished first at the 1A state meet this year, and he was a member of the Kittens' state runner-up 400 relay team. He helped Southern Lab finish second at state in the 1,600 relay in 2012, and he was a starter in basketball as a junior and a senior.
 
Harrison was a district champion this year in the triple jump for Christian Life. His best marks were 43 feet, 11 inches in the triple jump and 19-6 in the long jump. As a senior in football, he accounted for 1,623 all-purpose yards and 20 touchdowns in 10 regular-season games.

 Simmons was a district champion in the 110 hurdles this year and helped St. James finish second in the district meet. His best time in the 110 hurdles was 15.32. He was voted his team's track MVP in 2014 and was the track MVP at Lutcher's Bulldog Invitational after winning the 110 and 300 hurdles and anchoring the winning 800 relay squad.

Xavier, a native of Haiti, placed 14th for Warner in the 110 hurdles at the 2013 NAIA National Outdoor Championships and was a two-time athlete of the week in The Sun Conference that year. This past season he was The Sun's 110 hurdles champion and was fifth in the 400 hurdles. His best time in the 110 hurdles is 14.46.
 
The previously announced Gold Rush signee was Joseph Moses III, a sprinter from Baton Rouge.
 
Ed Cassiere, Sports Information Director
XULAATHLETICS
XAVIER UNIVERSITY OF LOUISIANA

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Peele and Jordan Join TSU Men's Basketball Staff

Photo Courtesy Tennessee State University Athletics
NASHVILLE, Tennessee  -- Tennessee State men’s basketball coach Dana Ford announced the hiring of assistants Randy Peele and Pierre Jordan on Wednesday.

Peele becomes Ford’s associate head coach after 29 years of coaching experience at seven different universities including Saint Michael’s, Tennessee-Martin, Campbell, UNCG, Winthrop, Virginia Tech and most recently, Georgia Southern.
 
Peele coached at UNCG between 1995 and 1999, taking the Spartans to the NCAA Tournament in his first year with 20 wins. He also spent five seasons at Winthrop, and when head coach Gregg Marshall left for a position at Wichita State, Peele was promoted to lead the Eagles where he won the Big South Regular Season and Tournament Championship during the 2007-08 season. Winthrop also won the league’s tournament in 2009-10 for his third appearance in the NCAA Tournament.
 
“We are very fortunate to add someone with the pedigree, loyalty and expertise of Randy to our program. Having led three teams to the NCAA tournament as a head coach he has an understanding of the type of student athletes that we must recruit, coach and mentor in order to get our program to the level that we all aspire,” Ford said.
 
Ford also raided Georgia Southern for Jordan, who will serve as another of the team’s assistant coaches this season. Jordan will work with the guards and his job duties include recruiting, player development, scouting and academic assistance.
 
Jordan played basketball in the Atlantic Coast Conference for Florida State and Georgia Tech from 2008 to 2013. He was named to the Academic Honor Roll each of his two years at Tech and was a member of three NCAA Tournament teams at Florida State, helping the Seminoles advanced to the Sweet 16 of the 2011 NCAA Tournament and the championship game of the ACC Tournament for the first time in school history in 2009.
 
He graduated from FSU in three years and a summer session, earning his bachelor's degree in interdisciplinary social studies.
 
“Pierre comes to us highly recommended by many in the basketball circles across the country. He is a young energetic coach who does a great job of relating to today's student athlete.  He has been around basketball his entire life as the son of one of the premier AAU coaches in the Southeast region,” Ford said.

GCAC tourney champion Nuggets sign 4 for 2014-15

Eliqua Brooks

Eliqua Brooks

Ireyon Keith

Ireyon Keith
    Trana Hopkins

Trana Hopkins

Donyeah Mayfield

Donyeah Mayfield

NEW ORLEANS — Coach Bo Browder on Wednesday announced that four have signed women's basketball scholarships with Xavier University of Louisiana. Newcomers signed to scholarships for the 2014-15 academic year were:
    
• Eliqua Brooks, a 5-foot-8 guard/forward from Upper Marlboro, Md., Wise High School and Angelina College.
    
• Trana Hopkins, a 5-6 guard from Marietta, Ga., Marietta High School and Chattahoochee Valley Community College.
    
• Ireyon Keith, a 5-7 guard/forward from Tickfaw, La., and Independence High School.
    
• Donyeah Mayfield, a 5-11 forward from Vicksburg, Miss., and Vicksburg High School and a transfer from the University of South Alabama.
    
Brooks, Hopkins and Mayfield will be juniors at Xavier. Keith will be a freshman.
    
Brooks averaged 8.9 points and 3.2 rebounds per game as a freshman at Angelina and concluded her sophomore season with a 25-point performance in the quarterfinals of the Region XIV tournament. She averaged 20.2 points as a second-team all-metro senior at Wise — she scored 40 in one game — and helped the Lady Pumas finish second in the Class 4A state tournament each of her final two seasons.
    
Hopkins averaged nine points, 4.8 assists and 2.4 steals this past season to help Chattahoochee Valley win the Alabama Community College Conference North Division and reach the semifinals of the state tournament. She ranked second in the ACCC in assists per game and fourth in steals per game.
    
Keith averaged 24 points this past season for Independence and scored 28 in a first-round upset of 10th-seeded E.D. White in the Class 3A state playoffs. She was a four-time all-district selection and was honorable-mention all-state as a senior. Keith also excels in track and field; she recorded multiple top-4 finishes at the LHSAA outdoor state meet and has best marks of 36 feet, 6 inches in the triple jump and 17-7 1/2 in the long jump.
    
"Ireyon can do everything," Independence basketball coach Kovi Dillon said. "She's a good rebounder, scorer and defender. She's aggressive. She'll play hard from beginning to end. She's a leader."
    
Mayfield redshirted at South Alabama in 2013-14 after transferring from Tennessee State, where she averaged 2.6 points, 3.1 rebounds and 10 minutes in 38 games over two seasons. Mayfield was a two-time Vicksburg Post newspaper Player of the Year and averaged 15.8 points and 12 rebounds as a senior. Mayfield's game highs at Vicksburg included 33 points and 22 rebounds.
    
Brooks will major in mass communications at Xavier. Hopkins and Keith will major in health sciences, and Mayfield will major in psychology.
    
Xavier's Gold Nuggets were 24-10 in 2013-14, won the Gulf Coast Athletic Conference Tournament for the fourth time in five years and reached the second round of the NAIA Division I National Championship for the third time in four years.



Ed Cassiere, Sports Information Director
XULAATHLETICS
XAVIER UNIVERSITY OF LOUISIANA

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Albany State has stars to replace on defense

ALBANY, Georgia  -- Albany State’s football team will take the practice field next month with several goals in mind.

First, they’d like to win the SIAC again. The 2013 Rams did just that with five straight victories and a 17-14 win over Miles College in the conference championship game. But because they started 1-4, they missed the Division II playoffs.

Getting past the SIAC and into the national playoffs will be difficult. Even though they return quarterback Frank Rivers, there are holes to fill on both sides of the ball. On defense, the Rams are now without star safety Dexter Moody.

“The name of the game at Albany State is defense,” head coach Mike White said at SIAC’s media day. “We’ve got a lot of guys that we’ve got to replace on that side of the football.”

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