Thursday, December 15, 2016

TSU Tigers Cruise Past Alabama State, 68-46

NASHVILLE, Tennessee -- The Tennessee State men’s basketball team put on a dominating defensive performance on Wednesday night at the Gentry Center, defeating visiting Alabama State by a 68-46 final score. Jordan Reed (Philadelphia, Pa.) posted a team-high 13 points to go with 13 rebounds for Wayne Martin (Brooklyn, N.Y.).

Tennessee State (8-2) held the Hornets (1-9) to 25.4 percent shooting (15-for-59) and limited ASU to 13 first-half points. The Tigers also finished with 10 blocks and forced 21 turnovers.

Tennessee State sprinted out of the gate with an early 8-2 advantage four minutes into the game. TSU’s defense locked the Hornets down as the Tigers’ lead grew to double-digits at 22-12 on the second first-half three from Darreon Reddick (Belleville, Ill.) with 7:49 to go before halftime.



Tennessee State closed the first half on a 24-1 run, keeping the Hornets without a field goal for the last 8:47 of the half for a 40-13 halftime edge.

The Tigers held Alabama State to 18.5 percent shooting (5-for-27) in the first half and forced ASU in 11 first-half turnovers.

TSU reached 50 points in a frantic sequence where Christian Mekowulu (Lagos, Nigeria) and Xavier Williams (Fairfield, Ala.) had blocks on ASU's offensive possession leading to a three from Delano Spencer (Atlanta, Ga.) on the other end for a 50-19 lead with 14:20 left in the game.

The Tigers continued to dominate throughout the second half, leading by as many as 32 points with just over 12 minutes to play.

McCall dished out six assists to facilitate the offense with Mekowulu scoring in double figures with 12.

Tony Armstrong scored a team-b. to face Duke on Dec. 19 for a 7 p.m. ET (6 p.m. CT) start. The game will air live on ESPN2.

BOX SCORE

PHOTO GALLERY - By Sam Jordan

GAME NOTES: TSU moves to 19-9 in the all-time series versus Alabama State… It is TSU’s first win in the series since the 1977-78 season… Tennessee State is 8-2 through 10 games for the second year in a row… Nine different TSU players scored in the first half… The 13 points allowed by TSU in the first half were the fewest this season. It is the second time TSU has held an opponent under 20 points this season... The Tigers are now 2-0 at the Gentry Center this season and 18-11 in Head Coach Dana Ford’s three-year tenure… The previous most blocks TSU had in a game this season was five on four occasions. It is the first time TSU has had 10 or more blocks since recording 10 at TCU on Dec. 29, 2014.

Head Coach Dana Ford

“I was really pleased with our guys maturate tonight. Their competitiveness, especially early in the first half; and I felt like we came out and paid attention to detail. We had a purpose to use defensively, something we try to emphasize every day. I’m just really happy that we were able to hold a lead for most of the game and never really feel threatened. We also had the opportunity to play some people who have not played a lot and hopefully we built some confidence. And then we were able to rest guys who have been logging a lot of minutes. All-in-all it was a good night for us.”

- On Teams Performance

“I thought we had a lot of purpose to us. We sat down and guarded the ball and we had a tremendous amount of urgency, we communicated and tried not to get screened. Those are the things that really help you defend. They missed some shots too, but I thought we contested shots as well. Whenever we can get to the point where we allow teams just one shot at the rim, I think it is going to be even better. Tonight we gave up 18 offensive rebounds and that is something we are going to need and clean up. We still have work to do.”

- On Key to Defensive Performance

“I think it is very important. It is a good place to be. We want to build leads and we feel we are deep enough to do that against certain opponents. We’ve gotten out to leads this past year and not hold on to them. If you want to be good in March and you want to be good in the league race, well then you have to be able to start fast and finish strong. I thought for the most part we did that today. Human nature sneaks in a bit when you hold a team to 13 points in one half, and that is something we need to try and eliminate. It’s a long year and we have a lot of room for improvement. We will take tonight and move on.”

- On the Importance to Holding a Lead

“I think they are the best team in America. Definitely the best coach in America. Very talented and they do a tremendous job at Duke. Everything is first class. They’re champions. You do not even have to know people inside the program to tell you what you are dealing with. You can see it from the outside looking in. Now that this game is over we’ll dive into them and try to put together the best game plan available to give our guys the best chance to go out there and win the next game. We are just very appreciative, our entire university, our program and our alums, that we are going to have the opportunity to play at Cameron Indoor Stadium against a first class program.”
- On the Upcoming Game at Duke

Junior Guard, Darreon Reddick

“I thought it was a good game. It showed our leadership and how mature we are after coming off a tough road loss against an ACC opponent. We came back home and grinded during practice and get better for our game against Alabama State.”
- On the Teams Play Against Alabama State

“It’s hard to scout our team when everybody can score between eight and 15. You don’t know who is going to be hot on any night. Balance Scoring is good; it makes you hard to scout and hard to guard.”
- On the Teams Balance Scoring

“It is a big game on national TV against the number one team in the nation. It is going to be a challenge, but we are ready for it and we are going to go out, play hard and compete.”
- On Playing Duke

Redshirt Senior Guard, Jordan Reed

“I trusted my shots. I have been working with the coaches. Its maturity as far as not looking at an opponent, we were just trying to get better.”
- On what was Working Individually

“It was about taking on the challenge. One of our main goals every game, which is compete, so that’s what I tried to do.”
- On Key to the Defense

“I feel like it is an outstanding opportunity to show the nation the team we really and truly are. We are excited to have a chance to play this game.”

TENNESSEE STATE UNIVERSITY ATHLETIC MEDIA RELATIONS

Wednesday, December 14, 2016

Lessons learned pay off a year later for Grambling State

ATLANTA, Georgia -- Grambling State coach Broderick Fobbs still remembers the 2015 Southwestern Athletic Conference Championship game against Alcorn State.

The Tigers lost 49-21 and missed out on a trip to the inaugural Celebration Bowl at the Georgia Dome. In the game, Grambling State was forced into several mistakes, including three interceptions. Fobbs said the game taught him a lesson. He had to get his team bounce back from their mistakes.



“We don’t look at losing as losing, but we look at it as learning,” Fobbs said. “Anytime we go through different things, we learn from it and become a better team. I think our team has learned from that.”

In the offseason, Fobbs made it a point to mold the team into a closer unit. He analyzed the players individually and worked on building their mental and physical strengths. As a result, the Tigers learned how to compete as one — which is named the Grambling way.

“We are only as strong as our weakest link,” Fobbs said. “We focused on making our weaknesses our strengths and our strengths even stronger. We set a foundation that focuses on playing a certain brand of football regardless of the situation.”

CONTINUE READING

Grambling gets recruiting boost from bowl

GRAMBLING, Louisiana — Recruiting at Grambling has changed right before Broderick Fobbs' eyes during his first three seasons with the program.

Yes, winning cures many things, including recruiting, but Fobbs is noticing how differently, in a good way, Grambling is viewed externally. The brand is resuming relevancy, and recruits are starting to take notice.

"Things have picked up tremendously," Grambling's coach said Monday. "We are a lot more welcome at different places than normal. That speaks to the way our team has played on television and our team has played just in general. Our coaches are very well respected because they do an exceptional job of teaching.



"It's not just about athletes running around, jumping over people and catching balls and making plays. Parents are seeing that, student-athletes are seeing that, and I think high school coaches are seeing that. Things have gone rather well for us in recruiting thus far."

Grambling is 10-1 this season with a Southwestern Athletic Conference championship trophy sitting in the football office, the program's first since 2011. The stakes become much higher in terms of recruiting and branding this weekend when Grambling plays on national television in the Celebration Bowl against North Carolina Central.

CONTINUE READING

FOR FAMU RATTLERS ONLY: Athletic Director Milton Overton's Address

TALLAHASSEE, Florida -- FAMU Director of Athletics, Milton Overton, sits down with Vaughn Wilson to discuss the outcomes of 2016 and the outlook for 2017.



FLORIDA A&M UNIVERSITY SPORTS INFORMATION

JSU Women's Basketball Cruises Past Southeastern Louisiana

JACKSON, Mississippi – Derica Wiggins scored a game high 20 points to lead the Jackson State Lady Tigers to the 83-66 win over the Southeastern Louisiana Lady Lions in non-conference action Tuesday night at the Lee E. Williams Athletic and Assembly Center.

With the win JSU improves to a 4-3 overall record and Southeastern falls to 2-6.

Daisha Williams came off the bench to score 14 points for the Lady Tigers and Kierra Adams added 13 points. Sumer Williams, Maria Conyers-Jordan and Chelsea Causey each pulled down eight rebounds for JSU.

Bre Warren led SLU in scoring with 15 points.

JSU led 45-38 at halftime. For the game JSU shot 41 percent from the field (25-61), 31.3 percent in threes (5-16) and 70 percent from the line (28-40). SLU made 38.3 percent of its field goal attempts (23-60), went 23.8 percent from three-point range (5-21) and 62.5 percent from the line (15-24).

The Lady Tigers held the edge in rebounding (54-34), second chance points (18-6) and bench scoring (47-34).

JSU returns to action Dec. 16 to participate in the Florida Atlantic University Holiday Tournament in Boca Raton, Fla.

BOX SCORE

JACKSON STATE UNIVERSITY ATHLETIC MEDIA RELATIONS

Monday, December 12, 2016

ESPN3: #25 Cincinnati Bearcats Welcome Texas Southern on Tuesday at 7 p.m.ET



Cincinnati Game Notes | WatchESPN | Buy Tickets

The No. 25/23 Cincinnati Bearcats (7-2) begin a three-game homestand Tuesday when they welcome Texas Southern (4-5) to Fifth Third Arena. The game tips at 7 p.m. ET and will be broadcast on ESPN3 and 700 WLW. 

The Bearcats saw their five-game win streak snapped Saturday at No. 16 Butler, 75-65. Troy Caupain led all scorers with a season-high 22 points on 9-of-15 shooting with a pair of three-pointers and five rebounds. Gary Clark posted his second double-double of the season with 14 points on 7-of-13 shooting with a game-high 12 rebounds. Jacob Evans added 14 points. 

The Tigers have lost four in a row after dropping a 102-71 decision at No. 11 Louisville on Saturday. Freshman point guard Demontrae Jefferson made his debut, scoring a game-high 27 points on 10-of-30 shooting with a trio of threes. Derrick Griffin posted a double-double with 15 points and a game-high 26 rebounds, the most by a player in an NCAA Division I game this season. 

Cincinnati has won all three previous meetings with Texas Southern, including a 94-57 decision on Dec. 1, 2009 at Fifth Third Arena. 

The Bearcats will also play host to 2016 NCAA Tournament participant Fairleigh Dickinson (Dec. 17 at 2:30 p.m. FOX Sports Ohio/ESPN3/700 WLW) and Marshall (Dec. 22 at 7 p.m. CBS Sports Network/700 WLW) before the holiday break.

GAME AT A GLANCE

SERIES INFO: Fourth meeting; Cincinnati leads 3-0 overall; Cincinnati leads 3-0 in Cincinnati
LAST MEETING: Cincinnati won 94-57 on Dec. 1, 2009 at Fifth Third Arena in Cincinnati
STREAK: Cincinnati - 3
COACHES: Mick Cronin is in his 11th season at Cincinnati (214-131); 14th season overall (283-155)
Mike Davis is in his fifth season at Texas Southern (80-62); 17th season overall (317-214)
AP/USA TODAY RANKINGS (DEC. 12): Cincinnati (25/23); Texas Southern (--/--)
RADIO: 700 WLW; Dan Hoard provides play-by-play with color analyst Chuck Machock.
TV: ESPN3; Tom Gelhrter provides play-by-play with color analyst Mark Adams. 
UC TWITTER PAGES: @GoBearcats and @GoBearcatsMBB

SCOUTING TEXAS SOUTHERN

Texas Southern (4-5) comes to Fifth Third Arena on Tuesday looking to snap a five-game losing streak. Two of the losses during the stretch include setbacks at No. 16 Arizona (85-63 on Nov. 30) and at No. 11 Louisville (102-71 on Dec. 10).

Texas Southern is in the midst of playing its first 16 games of the season away from home. In fact, the Tigers will play only nine home games all year. 

Sophomore forward Derrick Griffin was named the 2016 SWAC Player of the Year, Defensive Player of the Year and Newcomer of the Year. He averages 12.4 points and 11.4 rebounds. He entered Saturday ranked first in the nation with 6.2 offensive rebounds per game. 

Against Louisville, Griffin posted a double-double with 15 points and a game-high 26 rebounds, the most by a player in an NCAA Division I game this season. His effort included 15 offensive rebounds against the Cardinals.

Guard Zach Lofton (18.9 points and a team-best 58 field goals) has been named the SWAC Player of the Week twice this season. 

Freshman point guard Demontrae Jefferson debuted with 27 points on 10-of-30 shooting with a trio of three-pointers against Louisville. 

Texas Southern finished 18-15 overall and took first place in the SWAC with a 16-2 league mark a year ago, advancing to the NIT. 

The Tigers have advanced to postseason play each of the last three seasons with two NCAA Tournament appearances. 

Former Indiana and UAB head coach Mike Davis is in his fifth season with Texas Southern. He was named the 2015 SWAC Coach of the Year and claimed his 300th career win last season. 

TEXAS SOUTHERN SERIES HISTORY

Cincinnati leads Texas Southern series 3-0 with all three meetings coming at Fifth Third Arena. 
Tuesday marks the third meeting between the teams during the Mick Cronin era. 

The Bearcats claimed a 94-57 win in the last meeting between the schools, on Dec. 1, 2009. 
The series began with an 87-44 UC win on Dec. 1, 1992.

CINCINNATI VS. THE SWAC

Cincinnati holds a 14-0 record against current members of the Southwestern Athletic Conference: Alabama State (1-0), Alcorn State (2-0), Arkansas-Pine Bluff (3-0), Jackson State (1-0), Mississippi State (2-0), Prairie View A&M (1-0), Southern (1-0), Texas Southern (3-0). 

BEARCAT TIP-INS

The Bearcats have won 13 consecutive home games dating back to a 76-57 win over Tulsa (1/2/16). 

Cincinnati is one of eight teams to appear in the NCAA Tournament each of the last six seasons (along with Duke, Gonzaga, Kansas, Michigan State, North Carolina, VCU and Wisconsin). 


UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI BEARCATS ATHLETIC MEDIA RELATIONS

TV: SEC Network, LSU Tigers Host NCCU Eagles Tuesday at 9 p.m. ET at PMAC

BATON ROUGE, Louisiana -- Exams are finally finished and a 14-day layoff will end Tuesday night at 8 p.m. as the 5-2 LSU Tigers host North Carolina Central University at the Pete Maravich Assembly Center.

Tickets for the game are on sale at the LSU Athletics Ticket Office all day Tuesday from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. and online at LSUtix.net. Tickets will go on sale at the upper concourse windows of the Maravich Center beginning at 6:30 p.m. LSU students are admitted free of charge with a valid student ID.

The game will be broadcast on the LSU Sports Radio Network affiliates around Louisiana (Eagle 98.1 FM in Baton Rouge) with the “Voice of the Tigers” Chris Blair and Henry Hays on the call. The audio is also available at LSUsports.net. The game will also be televised on the SEC Network with Matt Stewart and Jon Sundvold calling the action.

The Tigers are coming off a win in the game prior to the break which began after LSU soundly knocked off previously unbeaten Houston, 84-65, on Nov. 29 in the Maravich Center. The Tigers played perhaps their best overall half of basketball in shooting 58 percent in the second half (making 20-of-34 shots) while out rebounding Houston, 46-28 with 20 offensive rebounds. LSU posted a 23-8 advantage on second chance points and 46-26 on points in the paint.

Antonio Blakeney had 23 points to lead LSU, while Brandon Sampson hit four treys in scoring 16 points. Craig Victor II had 13 points and Aaron Epps scored 11 off the bench, hitting all five field goal attempts.

The Tigers will not be able to come out with an exam break sluggishness as North Carolina Central has shown its ability to play well in big-time road arenas with a win at Missouri this year and a six-point loss at Ohio State. Senior Patrick Cole has had big games in their last two outings last week, with 13 assists and 18 points in a 79-56 win against LIU-Brooklyn and 28 points in a 70-67 loss Saturday at Coastal Carolina.

LeVelle Moton is in his eighth season as the Eagles head coach with 20-plus win seasons in 2013, 2014 and 2015 reaching the NCAA second round in 2014. He is a former player at the school having graduated there in 1996.

Look for the Tigers to probably keep the same starting lineup from the Houston game with Jalyn Patterson at the point (4.4 ppg, 4.6 rpg, 3.0 apg) and Antonio Blakeney (15.6 ppg, 4.3 rpg) and Brandon Sampson (11.7 ppg, 3.1 rpg) at the other two guard positions and Duop Reath (13.6 ppg, 5.7 rpg, 2.1 bpg) and Craig Victor II (7.5 ppg, 5.3 rpg) at the forward spots.

This will be the first of three home games in seven days for the Tigers and four games in 10 days, closing out the pre-Christmas schedule with a Dec. 22 game at Wake Forest. The Tigers open up Southeastern Conference play in December for the first time in many years on Dec. 29, hosting Vanderbilt.

LSU’s next action will be Saturday at 5 p.m. against Texas Southern in the Maravich Center.

Coach Johnny Jones met with the media earlier and here are his comments heading into the game:

HEAD COACH JOHNNY JONES
Opening statement …
“We are certainly counting down the days until we have an opportunity to take the floor again against a very tough opponent in North Carolina Central. They have had some really good wins and some close defeats, one of them being by about five or six points at Ohio State. We have had a long layoff. It will have been 14 days to be exact before we have an opportunity to take the floor in a game, but our guys have done a good job in taking care of their studies, their finals. We have had some good practices, and we have had an opportunity to allow for some guys who were banged up with injuries to heal. We are looking forward to being full speed. We do know that coming off of a layoff like that sometimes you’re not as sharp. We (have tried) to make sure that our practices are simulated like games and at game speed and the pace we play. We try to make sure that we include some scrimmages in there as well. At the end of the day, it’s not necessarily games and we know that it certainly will be different at that time. I certainly like the growth of this team. We like how we finished up in our last outing against a really tough, talented Houston team. We feel like we grew and a lot of good things happened. We are hopeful that
we can continue to build off of that at home having three games here before hitting the road again. We certainly hope that we put ourselves in position to continue to grow from that.”

LOUISIANA STATE UNIVERSITY ATHLETIC MEDIA RELATIONS

TV: ESPNU: South Carolina State Bulldogs Takes on Clemson Tigers, Tuesday at 7 p.m. ET

CLEMSON (6-2) vs. SC STATE (2-7)
Tipoff: 7 p.m. ET
Arena: Littlejohn Coliseum (9,000)
Radio: CTSN (Tony Castricone-pbp; Tim Bourret-color)
TV: ESPNU (Tom Werme-pbp; Jason Capel-color)
• Clemson has put together consecutive victory margins of at least 40 points for the first time since 2009-10 when Oliver Purnell's final team defeated Presbyterian (+43) and Liberty (+40) in back to back games.
• The Tigers made a season-high 13 three-point goals Saturday in a 90-47 win over Mercer, just one shy of the program high under head coach Brad Brownell.
• Five players scored in double figures for Clemson on Saturday, the fourth occurrence in 2016-17, after just two all of last season.

SERIES HISTORY
CU Series W-L record: Clemson leads 12-1
Streak: Clemson has won the last seven meetings



TIGER TRACKS
• Senior guard Avry Holmes has a special couple of days on deck. Following Tuesday's game, his next appearance in Littlejohn Coliseum will come Thursday as he earns his undergraduate degree. He will be the third Tiger to play with a degree in hand, joining Jaron Blossomgame and Riley McGillan.
• Jaron Blossomgame made his 100th start in a Clemson uniform against the Bears, responding with 16 points. He needs just 22 points to move into the top 20 in Clemson history in career scoring.
• Donte Grantham, who started off slowly behind the arc, has made 10 of his last 18 three-point attempts (.555) over Clemson's four straight home games.
• Shelton Mitchell made multiple three-pointers against Mercer, a first in his career. He finished with an impressive all-around stat line of 13 points, seven rebounds and five assists.
• Legend Robertin has produced four blocked shots in consecutive games. He also surpassed his career high in both minutes (16) and rebounds (6) against Mercer on Saturday.
CLEMSON UNIVERSITY ATHLETIC MEDIA RELATIONS

Air Force Reserve Celebration Bowl teams set for a throw-back matchup

ROBINS AIR FORCE BASE, Georgia -- Now that all the dust has settled, the Air Force Reserve Celebration Bowl has the two top teams from the Southwestern Athletic Conference and Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference set to battle for the crown of historically black college and university national champion.

The Grambling State University Tigers, led by Head Coach Broderick Fobbs, are set to take on the North Carolina Central University Eagles, led by Head Coach Jerry Mack.

This marks the second year for the Air Force Reserve Celebration Bowl, which showcases the heritage, legacy, pageantry and tradition of HBCUs. The game will be televised live on ABC to open the bowl season. The postseason college football bowl game will kick off at noon ET on Saturday at the Georgia Dome in Atlanta.



This year’s matchup of Grambling and North Carolina Central is a case of history repeating itself in a sense as the Air Force Reserve Celebration Bowl is a reincarnation of the original SWAC vs. MEAC championship game that went by the name of the Pelican Bowl back in 1972, which only lasted three years. The Heritage Bowl brought back the series in the 1990s. The current game has the financial backing and support of ESPN.

Back when the Pelican Bowl was first envisioned, times were much different in the college football scene and the American landscape. Many of the social injustices that students at HBCUs were fighting against, were being resolved. Ironically these positive changes had a negative impact on HBCU athletic programs. The Southeastern Conference and Atlantic Coast Conference had begun integrating their football teams, and the HBCU teams were competing for recruits with these larger programs.

From this environment it was determined that a holiday bowl game to determine the HBCU champion would bring some attention to these institutions.

CONTINUE READING

Sunday, December 11, 2016

TSU Lady Tigers Down Lipscomb in Overtime, 77-71

NASHVILLE, Tennessee -- The Tennessee State University women’s basketball team rallied from a fourth quarter deficit to defeat Lipscomb in overtime, 77-71, Sunday afternoon in Allen Arena.

TSU (2-5) trailed by nearly double-digits in the fourth quarter when Olivia Jones scored six of the team’s next eight points to get the Lady Tigers back into the game.

Five Lady Tigers scored in double-digits led by I’mani Davis’ 16 points. Olivia Jones had 15 points and six rebounds in her debut while Diamond Beatty (13), Jayda Johnson (10) and Maxine Beard (10) also reached double-figures.

Lipscomb fell to 1-9 on the season.



After Lipscomb opened the game with a three-pointer, Tennessee State used a 12-2 run to grab a 12-5 lead before the first media timeout. Out of the break, however, the Lady Bisons outscored the Lady Tigers, 9-2, to tie the game up at 14-all heading into the second quarter.

The teams traded buckets in the second stanza and played to a 23-23 deadlock with 5:54 on the clock. TSU reclaimed the advantage after back-to-back triples from Olivia Jones and Diamond Beatty sparked an 8-0 run.

TSU shot 62.5 percent from three-point range in the first half and led 31-27 at the break.

The teams continued to trade buckets in the second half, as the game was knotted at 37-all at the 3:37 mark. TSU went up, 41-39, following a steal and break-away lay-up by Jayda Johnson but LU answered with a triple on the next possession to take the lead. TSU trailed 46-43 at the end of the quarter.

Lipscomb was the aggressor in the fourth quarter and used consecutive three-pointers to go up, 52-43. The Lady Bisons maintained at least a six point cushion over the next several minutes.

Following the final media timeout, TSU trailed 54-48.

With the Lady Tigers down, Olivia Jones got going. She scored six straight points to pull TSU within one, 57-56 with 2:03 remaining.

TSU took the lead when I’mani Davis used a crafty move to score on the next play but Lipscomb stayed within striking distance and pulled even with just over 30 seconds remaining.

The Lady Tigers had the ball for the final possession of the game but both shot attempts were off the mark.

In the extra period, TSU moved ahead, 67-64, when Olivia Jones connected in the paint with just over two minutes left to play.

With TSU leading, 69-65, Diamond Beatty came up with a timely steal to give the possession back to the Lady Tigers with 38 seconds remaining. Lipscomb was forced to foul and Maxine Beard stepped up and made both freebies.

Over the next three possessions, the Lady Tigers made six more free-throws to seal the win.

TSU shot 48.4 percent (30-of-62) from the field, including 38.9 percent (7-of-18) percent from three-point range.

Tennessee State returns to action on Wednesday, Dec. 14 at home versus Fisk. Game time is set for 5:30 p.m. in the Gentry Center.

BOX SCORE

TENNESSEE STATE UNIVERSITY ATHLETIC MEDIA RELATIONS

Alcorn State Braves Unveil 2017 Football Schedule, Six Home Games



LORMAN, Mississippi – Featuring six home contests and a new seven-game SWAC schedule, the Alcorn State University football program released its 2017 slate on Sunday.

"Having six home games is big for us and I'm all for that," said Alcorn head coach Fred McNair. "Anytime you're at home it excites you. I love having all the fans come out and support Alcorn."

The Braves will kick-off the campaign on Saturday, Sept. 2 when they host Miles College. They will also play a non-conference home contest against McNeese State on Sept. 16.

Non-conference road affairs include a trip to Miami, Florida to face Florida International University on Sept. 9, and a trip to Houston to play Texas Southern on Sept. 30. The game against TXSO will not count toward either team's SWAC record.

Alcorn's first conference game is Sept. 23 when it hosts Southern for the second year in a row. The Braves will also take on Prairie View A&M, Alabama A&M and Mississippi Valley State at Jack Spinks-Marino Casem Stadium.

SWAC road games include at Alabama State, Grambling State and Jackson State.

In 2017, Alcorn will bring back eight starters on offense and seven on defense. The Braves will return all of their quarterbacks and running backs, and five of their top six wide receivers. Defensively, they bring back three of their four starting defensive linemen and four of their five defensive backs.

Alcorn announced its 2017 spring game will be held on April 22.



2017 Alcorn Football Schedule

2-Sep Miles College Lorman, Miss. 6 p.m.
9-Sep at Florida International U., Miami, Fla. TBA
16-Sep McNeese State Lorman, Miss. 6 p.m.
23-Sep Southern University* Lorman, Miss. 6 p.m.
30-Sep at Texas Southern Houston, Texas TBA
7-Oct at Alabama State* Montgomery, Ala. TBA
14-Oct Prairie View A&M* Lorman, Miss. 2 p.m.
21-Oct at Grambling State* Grambling, La. TBA
28-Oct Bye Week
4-Nov Alabama A&M* Lorman, Miss. 2 p.m.
11-Nov Mississippi Valley State* Lorman, Miss. 2 p.m.
18-Nov Jackson State* Jackson, Miss. TBA

*SWAC Conference Games

ALCORN STATE UNIVERSITY BRAVES ATHLETIC MEDIA RELATIONS

Gold Nuggets remain 32nd in NAIA coaches poll

NEW ORLEANS — Xavier University of Louisiana gained six points from the preseason but remained 32nd in the NAIA Division I Women's Basketball Coaches Top 25 Poll announced Tuesday.
Including the 2015-16 season, it's the seventh time in the last eight polls that the Gold Nuggets are in the "others receiving votes" category.

XULA is 6-6 after playing one of the NAIA's most difficult schedules to date this season. The best victory was 71-67 Nov. 11 against then-No. 3 Our Lady of the Lake in the LSUS Classic at Shreveport, La. The Gold Nuggets also defeated then-No. 29 Langston and split a pair with then-No. 26 LSUS. But OLLU fell to 21st Tuesday, and Langston and LSUS received no points.

XULA's losses include city rival Loyola, which climbed from 24th to 22nd; Lewis-Clark State, 13-0 and No. 2 after a No. 7 preseason ranking; and Carroll (Mont.), which still is 25th.

XULA is one of two Gulf Coast Athletic Conference teams receiving votes. Talladega, 21st in the preseason, dropped to 26th. Edward Waters, which was tied for 30th in the preseason, had zero points this time.

Freed-Hardeman replaced MidAmerica Nazarene at No. 1. MNU fell to third. The next poll will be announced Jan. 3.

The Gold Nuggets' next opponent will be Concordia (Ala.) at 1 p.m. Dec. 15 in XULA's Convocation Center. Concordia is 7-1 against 4-year colleges, 10-1 overall and No. 1 in the season's first United States Collegiate Athletic Association poll.

NAIA Division I Women's Basketball Coaches Top 25 Poll
(first-place votes in parentheses — records through Dec. 4)

Rank Team Record Points Last
1 Freed-Hardeman (8) 8-0 219 8
2 Lewis-Clark State (1) 13-0 207 7
3 MidAmerica Nazarene 7-1 206 1
4 Westmont 6-1 199 2
5 Lindsey Wilson 9-0 195 5
6-tie Vanguard 6-1 178 6
6-tie Campbellsville 7-2 178 4
8 Lyon 7-1 168 9
9 Oklahoma City 8-1 159 19
10 Shawnee State 12-0 158 tie-11
11 Montana State-Northern 8-2 147 16
12 Baker 8-1 143 13
13 Columbia (Mo.) 8-1 128 20
14-tie Benedictine (Kan.) 7-3 126 tie-11
14-tie Great Falls 9-2 126 18
16 The Master's 6-1 120 14
17 Central Methodist 7-2 102 15
18 Bethel (Tenn.) 5-4 99 10
19 Cumberland 9-2 96 23
20 John Brown 7-4 87 RV
21 Our Lady of the Lake 3-5 83 3
22 Loyola (N.O.) 7-2 62 24
23 Lindenwood-Belleville 6-2 61 NR
24 Pikeville 8-3 58 17
25 Carroll (Mont.) 8-2 53 25

Dropped from previous rankings: No. 21 Talladega, No. 22 Wayland Baptist
Others receiving votes: Talladega 39, Wayland Baptist 28, Martin Methodist 15, Wiley 14, Montana Western 13, Harris-Stowe 12, XULA 11, William Penn 6, William Woods 5, San Diego Christian 3

Ed Cassiere, Sports Information Director
XULAgold.com
XAVIER UNIVERSITY OF LOUISIANA 
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Grambling's Martez Carter has four distinct ways he can impact the game, and all are on display lately



GRAMBLING, Louisiana -- Martez Carter picked a good time to turn it up in all the ways he can.

The explosive Grambling junior has been a dynamic force in the Tigers’ past three games. In fact, it’s not hard to envision different outcomes in the Bayou Classic and Southwestern Athletic Conference championship games had it not been for Carter’s all-around excellence.

In the three games leading up to this week's Celebration Bowl against North Carolina Central, Carter has tallied a whopping 913 all-purpose yards and six touchdowns.

“He has the ability to run the football,” Grambling coach Broderick Fobbs said.

That’s a bit of an undersell, though it was only truly evident in the past three games — his first three 100-yard efforts of the year.

It started with a 10-carry, 122-yard, two-touchdown performance in a comeback win against Texas Southern.

CONTINUE READING

MEAC Debuts “WE ARE MEAC” Vïdeo



NORFOLK, Virginia — The Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference (MEAC) will debut its “We Are MEAC” community outreach video, on MEAC social media platforms, the conference announced today.

The “We Are MEAC” video is an initiative by the conference to celebrate the diversity of its student-athletes. The initiative also calls upon MEAC student-athletes to challenge stereotypes against them and to find strength when faced with adversity.

The video release comes the same day as Human Rights Day.

The video features student-athletes, from all 13 MEAC institutions, who attended the fall MEAC-Student Athlete Advisory Committee (SAAC) meeting. In the video, the student-athletes proclaim how their diversity brings them together and how they won’t allow stereotypes in their respective MEAC sports.

“The MEAC strives to provide an inclusive, diverse and welcoming environment to our student-athletes, their families and our fans,” said MEAC Commissioner Dr. Dennis E. Thomas. “We want all of our student-athletes to take pride in who they are, on and off the field. This video gives us the opportunity to celebrate our student-athletes and showcase their talents and commitment to diversity and inclusion.”

MID-EASTERN ATHLETIC CONFERENCE MEDIA RELATIONS

ESPN3: TSU Cross-town Battle at Lipscomb Set for Sunday at 3 p.m. ET

#0 Ciara Pettis

TENNESSEE STATE (1-5) vs LIPSCOMB (1-8)  
SUNDAY | DEC. 11 | 2 P.M. CT | NASHVILLE, TENN. | ALLEN ARENA
GAME NOTES: TENNESSEE STATE
LIVE STATS: STATBROADCAST
VIDEO: ESPN 3
AUDIO: 102.1 FM
GAMEDAY
Following a 10-day break away from action during finals week, the Tennessee State University women’s basketball team will return to the hardwood on Sunday, Dec.11 at Lipscomb. Game time is set for 2 p.m. in Allen Arena.       
THE LADY TIGERS AT A GLANCE
Tennessee State (1-5) has played five of its first six games on the road to begin the season and has lost three straight. The Lady Tigers have faced teams from the Big 10, Big 12, Big East, Mountain West and SEC so far this season. 
Through four games the Lady Tigers are averaging 55.3 points per contest while shooting 35.3 percent from the field and 26.1 percent from three-point range. TSU is struggling from the free-throw line and is only shooting .583 from the charity stripe.
Seniors and All-OVC preseason selections Jayda Johnson (14.0 ppg) and I’mani Davis (11.7 ppg) lead the team in scoring while senior Diamond Beatty rounds out the top three scorers with 9.3 points per game. Johnson recently recorded her 1,000th career point. Olivia Jones will make her debut as a Lady Tiger versus Lipscomb.
The Lady Tigers are led by fifth year head coach and Hall of Famer, Larry Joe Inman.
LAST TIME OUT
TSU trailed 21-10 after the first quarter and played from behind the rest of the way in an 86-36 loss to No. 22/16 Tennessee. Maxine Beard led TSU with seven points while Kaliya Griffin managed to score six. TSU shot 20 percent (13-of-65) from the field and 22.7 percent (5-of-22) from three-point range. 
ABOUT THE OPPONENT
Lipscomb, a member of the Atlantic Sun is off to a 1-8 start. The Bisons have lost five straight and are recently coming off a 79-63 loss to SEMO on Tuesday. LU has also faced OVC members Murray State (L, 79-59), Belmont (L, 100-62) and Morehead State (L, 73-53). 
SERIES INFORMATION
TSU and Lipscomb will meet for the 25th time in the series history with the Lady Tigers holding a 20-4 lead. TSU claimed last year’s meeting 77-65 in the Gentry Center and has won two straight. The Lady Tigers have also won three of the last four contests. 
COVERAGE
Links for live stats, audio and video can be found under the schedule on tsutigers.com. Updates will also be posted during the game on Twitter (TSU_Tigers). 
UP NEXT
TSU will host Fisk on Dec. 14 before traveling to Florida to participate in the Hatter Classic hosted by Stetson, Dec. 19-20. TSU will face Bethune Cookman on Monday before matching up with Stetson on Tuesday. 

TENNESSEE STATE UNIVERSITY ATHLETIC MEDIA RELATIONS

ESPN3:Transfer Olivia Jones Set to Make TSU Debut versus Lipscomb at 3 p.m. ET

#34 Olivia Jones

NASHVILLE, Tennessee  -- After nearly a year away from the court, transfer Olivia Jones will make her debut as a Tennessee State Lady Tiger on Sunday,
Dec. 11 at Lipscomb.

“Olivia is going to make an instant impact with our team,” said head coach Larry Inman. “We’re very excited about her getting the opportunity to play again. She possesses a tremendous skill set and she is a great young lady that believes in team ball. She has a great basketball IQ and that’s something that will help a lot of our young kids. She’s very vocal, she’s a good leader and I think she’ll do a lot of great things for our program.”

Jones transferred to Tennessee State in January 2016 after competing at Middle Tennessee for two-and-a-half seasons. Per NCAA rules, she became eligible to play at TSU following the completion of the Fall semester.

The Murfreesboro, Tenn. native was named the Conference USA Freshman of the Year before averaging 19.8 points per game the following season. Additionally, she ranked in the top five in three categories including rebounding, minutes and steals during her sophomore campaign. As a junior, she was voted the C-USA Preseason Player of the Year and reached the 1,000-point milestone while ranking third on the team in scoring.

“It’s a bittersweet moment,” commented Jones. “No senior wants to sit out a half of a year, especially her senior year. Me and my family are happy that the time has come.”

Jones has been an observer from the sideline since last season and sees how she will fit in with the Lady Tiger team.

“I’ll fit in on the rebounding and defensive side,” she added. “I’m obviously an offensive person but I take pride in defense. That’s something that I was born with and I like to rebound.”

Tennessee State will face Lipscomb in non-conference action on Sunday, Dec. 11. Game time is set for 2 p.m. in Allen Arena.

TENNESSEE STATE UNIVERSITY ATHLETICS MEDIA RELATIONS

TV: SEC Network: Auburn Women Back Home Sunday vs. Savannah State at 3 p.m. ET


 2016-17 Auburn Women's Basketball - Game #9
 Auburn Tigers (6-2) vs. Savannah State Lady Tigers (2-6)
 Date/Time Sunday, Dec. 11 | 2 p.m. CT
 Location Auburn, Ala. | Auburn Arena (9,121)
 Tickets Purchase Tickets Online | WBB Ticket Information & Options
 TV SEC Network + (Brad Law, Joe Ciampi) | Watch Live
 Radio WTGZ 93.9 FM (Andy Burcham, Brit Bowen) | Listen Live
 Live Stats GameTracker
 Twitter @AuburnWBB
 Additional Info Auburn Notes Get Acrobat Reader | Savannah State Notes Get Acrobat Reader | SEC Notes Get Acrobat Reader
AUBURN, Alabama -- After a nine-day break for final exams, the Auburn women's basketball team is back in action Sunday afternoon against Savannah State at Auburn Arena. Game time is set for 2 p.m. with the broadcast on SEC Network +.
Auburn (6-2) had played six games in 12 days leading up to exam week, but the Tigers are now set for the stretch run of non-conference play that sees Auburn play six more games in December leading up to the start of SEC play.
The Tigers' defense continues to be its strength as Auburn ranks among the nation's top teams in turnovers forced (2nd - 26.3), steals per game (3rd - 14.6) and turnover margin (5th - +9.6). All eight Auburn opponents have been held below their season scoring average, and five of those eight have been held at least 10 points below their normal total.
Senior Katie Frerking has been the Tigers' leader over the most recent stretch. In the last six games, she has posted three double-doubles and topped the 20-point margin two straight outings. In Auburn's last contest, she led the Tigers in scoring (22), rebounds (6), assists (4) and blocks (2) and also recorded two steals. Frerking is the SEC's steals leader with 3.4 per game, which ranks her 19th in the nation.
Savannah State (2-6) enters Sunday on a five-game skid, falling to Jacksonville State 67-54 in their last contest. The Lady Tigers' two victories this season came against Alabama State and Division II Columbia College.
This is the third straight year these teams have met. Auburn won both previous meetings, earning a 62-56 win at home in 2014 and leaving Savannah with a 62-40 victory last season.
Andy Burcham will have the radio broadcast on WTGZ 93.9 FM beginning at 1:45 p.m. CT. Fans can also listen live via TuneIn Radio or the above link to AuburnTigers.com. SEC Network + has the broadcast with Brad Law and Joe Ciampi calling the action; fans can watch online via WatchESPN.com or the ESPN app on mobile devices.
Promotions



• Toys for Tots - Bring a new, unwrapped toy and receive one (1) free general admission ticket!
• Teddy Bear Toss - Bring a new, unwrapped teddy bear for the Teddy Bear Toss at halftime! The fan closest to the target will win a prize!
Auburn Quick Hitters



• This is the third meeting between Auburn and Savannah State
• Auburn won last year's meeting 62-40 in Savannah; also won in 2014 at home 62-56
• Auburn is 31-2 in home non-conference games under Terri Williams-Flournoy and 40-6 in all non-conference games at Auburn Arena
• Auburn is 17-2 all-time against members of the MEAC (1-0 this season; def. N.C. A&T 68-36 on Nov. 17)
• Auburn has held six of eight opponents at least 10 points below their season scoring average
• Five of Auburn's eight opponents have been held to a season-low scoring total
• In the initial NCAA RPI released this week, Auburn is ranked No. 12
• Auburn was ranked No. 23 in the Week 4 AP Top 25; it was the first ranking for Auburn since 2009
• The Tigers have received votes in every AP poll this season
• As of Dec. 7, Auburn ranks 2nd in the nation in turnovers forced (26.3/game), 3rd in the nation in steals (14.6/game), and 5th in turnover margin (+9.6)
• Auburn is 5-0 this season and 33-6 under Coach Flo when forcing 25+ turnovers; Auburn forced 38 vs. Troy, 27 at North Carolina A&T, 30 at East Carolina, 27 vs. Ball State, 30 vs. Marist
• Auburn forced 20 turnovers vs. Indiana but turned that into a season-high 33 points
• Auburn trailed Indiana by 17 points in the fourth quarter before mounting a comeback for a 71-67 win on Nov. 27
• Auburn's 32 fourth-quarter points vs. Indiana were the most in a single period since women's basketball went to a four-quarter game in 2015-16
• Brandy Montgomery scored 28 points in the comeback win over Indiana, including 16 in the fourth quarter and 10 straight over a 2-minute stretch to tie the game
• Montgomery is Auburn's scoring leader and ninth in the SEC through seven games with 16.1 points/game
• Katie Frerking leads Auburn in rebounds (8.5), assists (3.4) and steals (3.4) and is second in scoring (14.9)
• Frerking has double-doubles in three games this year; she had two in her career entering the season
• Frerking leads the SEC and ranks 19th in the nation with 3.4 steals per game
• Frerking had a career-high 7 steals in the win at N.C. A&T, then matched that with 7 vs. Indiana
• Auburn's 32-point win over North Carolina A&T was its largest margin of victory in a road game since Nov. 11, 2011 at Mercer (34 points; 77-43)
Last Time Out



>> Senior Katie Frerking scored a season-high 22 points, but No. 23 Auburn could not overcome foul trouble and a big rebounding deficit Thursday night in a 71-66 loss at Kansas State in the SEC/Big 12 Challenge.
>> The Tigers had three players -- two key rebounders -- foul out and saw an early rebounding advantage turned into a big deficit by the end of the game. Despite that, the Tigers rallied to take a five-point lead midway through the fourth quarter but could not hang on.
>> Frerking's 22 points led all scorers as the Tigers shot 37 percent (23-of-62) from the field. Auburn hit a season-high eight 3-pointers, three of them from Brandy Montgomery, who finished with 11 points. Janiah McKay added 15, and Emari Jones finished with a season-high eight. Auburn also had its best free-throw shooting night of the season, hitting 12-of-14 attempts (85.7%).
>> K-State was 47 percent from the floor, led by a 16-point night from Kindred Wesemann. The Wildcats pulled down 39 rebounds to Auburn's 25, and the much taller Wildcats scored 32 points in the paint to Auburn's 22.
Noteworthy



AUBURN-SAVANNAH STATE SERIES
>> This is the third meeting between Auburn and Savannah State in women's basketball, all in the last three seasons.
>> Auburn won the previous two meetings, winning 62-57 in Auburn in 2014 and 62-40 in Savannah last season.
SCOUTING SAVANNAH STATE
>> Savannah State is 2-6 on the season and enters Sunday's game on a five-game skid. The Lady Tigers lost to Jacksonville State 67-54 in their last game.SSU's two wins came against Columbia College and Alabama State.
>> The Lady Tigers average 54.4 points per game and shoot 32.6% from the field. SSU averages 40.5 rebounds per game 
>> SSU is led by Lauren Moss, a graduate transfer from Georgia State, who averages 13.5 points per game. Jeremica Edwards is SSU's leading rebounder with 8.1/game. 
>> Senior guard Kenyatta Hendrix is the school's all-time leading 3-point shooter with 157 made 3s in her career. She is 14-of-58 from long-range this season.
>> Savannah State finished 10-18 last season, 7-9 in the MEAC. All five starters returned from last year's squad.
LAST MEETING: AUBURN 62, SSU 40 (11/22/15)
>> Brandy Montgomery scored 16 points, and Auburn forced Savannah State into 25 turnovers en route to a 62-40 victory at Tiger Arena.
>> Auburn shot 42.9 percent from the floor and dominated the boards, out-rebounding Savannah State 38-24. Turnovers were the name of the game, however, as the teams combined to turn the ball over 47 times on the day.
>> Senior Tra'Cee Tanner scored 12 points. Tanner also pulled down a game-high eight rebounds to go along with two assists, two blocks and a steal. 
>> Auburn never trailed in the game, although a cold spell early in the third quarter allowed Savannah State to pull back within as few as 12 points. But SSU would get no closer, and a flurry in the fourth quarter helped Auburn pull away for the 24-point win.
SCOUTING AUBURN
>> Auburn is 6-2 to open the 2016-17 season. The Tigers' only blemishes on the schedule are a 56-52 loss to then-No. 19 West Virginia in the Savannah Invitational championship game, and a 71-66 loss at Kansas State in the SEC/Big 12 Challenge.
>> Senior Brandy Montgomery is the Tigers' leading scorer, averaging 15.5 points per game. She averaged 14.0 points per game as a junior and was named to the preseason All-SEC Second Team by the league's coaches. She scored a season-high 28 points - 16 in the fourth quarter - to lead Auburn's comeback from a 17-point deficit against Indiana on Nov. 27.
>> Senior Katie Frerking leads the SEC and ranks 19th in the nation in steals with 3.4 per game through eight games. Frerking has posted three double-doubles this season and leads the team with 8.5 rebounds/game, which ranks seventh in the SEC.
>> Junior forward Jessica Jones has been a force defensively for the Tigers, posting a career-high four blocks twice already this year and pulling down a career-high 9 rebounds vs. Marist. She also had five steals in the opener vs. Troy.
>> Sophomore point guard Janiah McKay and junior forward Jazmine Jones are the Tigers' other two returning starters. McKay played in all 33 games last year, starting 19, and averaged 9.2 points and 2.3 assists per game. She scored a career-high 24 points to lead Auburn to an NCAA first-round win over St. John's. Jones started all 33 games as a sophomore and had one of the best shooting percentages on the team, shooting 51.5% from the floor.
>> Pressure defense remains a staple of Coach Flo's strategy as the Tigers forced an average of 20.0 turnovers per game in her first four seasons. Auburn is averaging 26.3 opponent turnovers through eight games (1st in SEC; 2nd in nation) and has forced 27 or more in five of eight contests.
GETTING DEFENSIVE
>> Auburn is holding opponents to 53.1 points per game, ranking 22nd nationally in scoring defense. The Tigers are also near the top of the nation in turnovers forced (2nd - 26.3) and steals per game (3rd - 14.6).
>> Auburn has held every opponent thus far under their season average, and six of eight were held 10 or more points below their average.

ALBURN UNIVERSITY ATHLETIC MEDIA RELATIONS