ATLANTA, Georgia -- Morehouse College continued its early season dominance and remained undefeated with a 41-14 rout of Central State University Saturday afternoon in Atlanta.
The Maroon Tigers improve to 3-0 while the Marauders fall to 1-2 on the season.
MHC's offensive attack was again firing on all cylinders going 6-for-6 in the redzone and were led by sophomore quarterback Michael Sims (Detroit, MI) who threw a touchdown and ran for another and sophomore Santo Dunn who scored three touchdowns, with one on the ground and one on a kickoff return.
CSU waisted little time getting on the board as they took the opening drive 82-yards on four plays capped by a one yard plunge by Jerry Lanier giving Central State an early 7-0 lead. Morehouse responded with an eight play, 61-yard drive, that took 3:58 and ended with Dunn scampering into the endzone from three-yards out tying the score at 7-7.
The Maroon Tigers would take a 17-7 lead into the locker room with a 34-yard field goal from sophomore Fernando Sdelamora (Fairburn, GA) and Dunn's two-yard TD run.
Dunn continued to electrify as he took the second half kick-off and returned it 89-yards for a touchdown extending the Morehouse lead to 24-7. After freshmen punter Jordy Andrade (Union City, GA) pinned Central State at their own one yard line, the defense forced a three-and-out and used the field position to their advantage at Sims ran a quarterback draw 13-yards down the heart of CSU's defense for the touchdown making the score 31-7.
Sdelamora connected on his second 34-yard field goal of the night extending the lead to 34-7 with 10:34 remaining in the game. The Marauders cut into the lead when Trent Mays hit Robert Corbin, Jr. down the seam on a 62-yard touchdown pass making the score 34-14. Morehouse would closed out the scoring when Sims threw a dart to senior Amyr Smith (Atlanta, GA) extending the lead to 41-14.
The Maroon Tigers out rushed CSU 183-to-68 while amounting 410 yards of total offense. MHC was 7-of-15 on third down conversions while holding the Marauders to 1-of-9.
Offensively Dunn finished the night with a game-high 172 all-purpose yards, 73-yards on the ground, 10-yards from the air and 89 return yards. Sims had another stellar performance, completing 23-of-36 passes for 227 yards while accounting for touchdowns.
Defensively MHC was led by senior Mandell Ray (Lafayette, AL) who finished with a game-high two interceptions and four tackles. Senior Antonio Johnson (Birmingham, AL) had seven tackles including one for loss and sophomore Edward Nelson (Chester, PA) had five tackles and one sack. Sophmore Dedrick Vanover (Gainesville, FL) had three solo tackles, one tackle for loss and an interception.
BOX SCORE
Morehouse College will travel to Chicago, Ill., next weekend to take on The Golden Bears of Miles College at Soldier Field in the 21st Chicago Football Classic on Saturday, Sept. 22. Kick-off is set for 3:30 p.m. CST.
MOREHOUSE COLLEGE MAROON TIGER SPORTS INFORMATION
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Sunday, September 16, 2018
Patterson leads XULA harriers in season opener
NEW ORLEANS — Xavier University of Louisiana freshman Francis Patterson ran 5,000 meters in 17 minutes, 24.10 seconds Saturday to finish 10th in the men's division of the Allstate Sugar Bowl Cross Country Festival.
It was the 2018 opener for the Gold Rush and Gold Nuggets and the XULA debut of Yhann Plummer, hired this summer as head coach of men's and women's cross country and track and field.
Under a cloudless sky at City Park, nine colleges battled on a 5,000-meter course that was still soaked from late-summer rains. "It was muddy and slippery," Patterson said. "There was mud all over."
For Patterson, the weather was different than it was in his hometown of Arlington, Texas, a Dallas suburb. "It's a dryer heat back home," he said. "Here it's hot and humid. I was cramping up. I'd rather run in the dry heat."
Camren Sewell finished 20th for the Gold Rush in 18:18.81, Jordan Ashmore was 25th in 18:58.41, Kadeem Burton was 31st in 19:26.93, Oji Wells was 38th in 20:12.37, and Darrick Williams was 40th in 20:34.25.
Maliya Vaughan, the 2017 Gulf Coast Athletic Conference individual champion, led the XULA women in 21:21.63 and placed 11th. Taylor Price was 14th in 21:31.65, Brianna Pacewas 35th in 23:49.76, Mariah Cox was 46th in 26:07.55, and Toni Trail was 47th in 26:57.87.
XULA was fifth in men's and women's team scoring. NAIA rival William Carey won both team titles. Individual champions were Kemei Scolisticah of Mississippi Valley (18:40.96) in the women's race and Jacob Plocher of William Carey (16:17.25) in the men's.
XULA's next meet will be the McNeese Cowboys Stampede Sept. 29 at Lake Charles, La.
Ed Cassiere, Assistant Athletic Director for Communications
XULAgold.com
XAVIER UNIVERSITY OF LOUISIANA
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It was the 2018 opener for the Gold Rush and Gold Nuggets and the XULA debut of Yhann Plummer, hired this summer as head coach of men's and women's cross country and track and field.
Under a cloudless sky at City Park, nine colleges battled on a 5,000-meter course that was still soaked from late-summer rains. "It was muddy and slippery," Patterson said. "There was mud all over."
For Patterson, the weather was different than it was in his hometown of Arlington, Texas, a Dallas suburb. "It's a dryer heat back home," he said. "Here it's hot and humid. I was cramping up. I'd rather run in the dry heat."
Camren Sewell finished 20th for the Gold Rush in 18:18.81, Jordan Ashmore was 25th in 18:58.41, Kadeem Burton was 31st in 19:26.93, Oji Wells was 38th in 20:12.37, and Darrick Williams was 40th in 20:34.25.
Maliya Vaughan, the 2017 Gulf Coast Athletic Conference individual champion, led the XULA women in 21:21.63 and placed 11th. Taylor Price was 14th in 21:31.65, Brianna Pacewas 35th in 23:49.76, Mariah Cox was 46th in 26:07.55, and Toni Trail was 47th in 26:57.87.
XULA was fifth in men's and women's team scoring. NAIA rival William Carey won both team titles. Individual champions were Kemei Scolisticah of Mississippi Valley (18:40.96) in the women's race and Jacob Plocher of William Carey (16:17.25) in the men's.
XULA's next meet will be the McNeese Cowboys Stampede Sept. 29 at Lake Charles, La.
Ed Cassiere, Assistant Athletic Director for Communications
XULAgold.com
XAVIER UNIVERSITY OF LOUISIANA
twitter.com/xulagold
www.facebook.com/xulagold
Rushing UNLV Rebels Win Second Straight, Down PVAMU Panthers
LAS VEGAS, Nevada – UNLV (2-1) improved to 2-0 at home for the first time in a decade with a 46-17 victory over Prairie View A&M (1-3) Saturday night at Sam Boyd Stadium.
Sophomore Armani Rogers tied a school record with four rushing touchdowns and broke the UNLV mark for 100-yard rushing games by a quarterback in a career with his fourth century-mark game as a Rebel. Senior running back Lexington Thomas had a game-high 124 yards rushing and a score. Senior end Roger Mann led the way on defense, notching a pair of sacks as part of his four-tackle night that also featured a forced fumble and recovery.
Facing the Panthers for the first time since 1974, UNLV led 20-0 after the first quarter and went into halftime leading 34-0 powered by three straight rushing scores by Rogers.
STAT OF THE GAME:
UNLV boasted two 100-yard runners for the second consecutive week (Rogers with 122 and Thomas with 124) en route to out-rushing PVAMU 318-99.
REBEL OF THE GAME:
Armani Rogers became the first Rebel to rush for four touchdowns in a game since 2013 and the fifth in history. He was the first quarterback to get four and also threw for another score.
QUOTABLE:
"So far, in three games we've played - we went on the road and played a pretty tough game (at USC) and then to win two games back-to-back at home is a big deal. We haven't done that here in a long time. There were some really good things, there were some things that were frustrating, there always is. We're all happy with the win and we're moving on to Arkansas State."
-UNLV Head Coach Tony Sanchez
REBEL NOTES:
-UNLV won consecutive home games for the first time taking three straight in 2013.
-The Rebels improved to 2-0 vs. PVAMU and 5-0 vs. teams currently in the Southwestern Athletic Conference. The 44-year drought between games with these two schools was the longest in UNLV history.
-UNLV, which downed UTEP in Game 2, played opponents from Texas in back-to-back weeks for the first time since 1999 when the Rebels won at North Texas and Baylor in successive outings.
-Lexington Thomas' moved past Dominique Dorsey (2001-04) into third place on the school's career rushing yards list with 2,871.
-Thomas recorded his 15th career 100-yard rushing game, which ranks third in school history and moves him to within two of tying Mike Thomas' UNLV mark of 17 set in 1973-74. He is one short of second place (Tim Cornett 16 in 2011-14).
-Thomas' one-yard rushing TD gave him 32 in his career, which put him six short of Mike Thomas' UNLV record of 37 set in 1973-74.
-When PVAMU kicked the ball out of the end zone after a bad snap late in the game, it marked UNLV's first safety since a game vs. Northern Illinois in 2014.
-UNLV senior Evan Pantels saw his school-record streak of successful extra points snapped at 80 when his first attempt of the night hit the uprights. Pantels then missed a 24-yard field-goal attempt, which marked the first time he missed an attempt shorter than 39 yards in his collegiate career.
NEXT FOR THE REBELS:
UNLV closes out non-conference action with a trip to Arkansas State next Saturday. It will mark the Rebels' first trip to Jonesboro and the first meeting with the Red Wolves since UNLV won 28-23 in 1995 in Las Vegas. UNLV's next home game will be October 6 vs. New Mexico at 1 p.m. PT. To purchase tickets, visit UNLVtickets.com or call 702-739-FANS (3267). Parking is free at Sam Boyd Stadium for Rebel football games.
BOX SCORE
UNIVERSITY OF NEVADA LAS VEGAS ATHLETIC MEDIA COMMUNICATIONS
Sophomore Armani Rogers tied a school record with four rushing touchdowns and broke the UNLV mark for 100-yard rushing games by a quarterback in a career with his fourth century-mark game as a Rebel. Senior running back Lexington Thomas had a game-high 124 yards rushing and a score. Senior end Roger Mann led the way on defense, notching a pair of sacks as part of his four-tackle night that also featured a forced fumble and recovery.
Facing the Panthers for the first time since 1974, UNLV led 20-0 after the first quarter and went into halftime leading 34-0 powered by three straight rushing scores by Rogers.
STAT OF THE GAME:
UNLV boasted two 100-yard runners for the second consecutive week (Rogers with 122 and Thomas with 124) en route to out-rushing PVAMU 318-99.
REBEL OF THE GAME:
Armani Rogers became the first Rebel to rush for four touchdowns in a game since 2013 and the fifth in history. He was the first quarterback to get four and also threw for another score.
QUOTABLE:
"So far, in three games we've played - we went on the road and played a pretty tough game (at USC) and then to win two games back-to-back at home is a big deal. We haven't done that here in a long time. There were some really good things, there were some things that were frustrating, there always is. We're all happy with the win and we're moving on to Arkansas State."
-UNLV Head Coach Tony Sanchez
REBEL NOTES:
-UNLV won consecutive home games for the first time taking three straight in 2013.
-The Rebels improved to 2-0 vs. PVAMU and 5-0 vs. teams currently in the Southwestern Athletic Conference. The 44-year drought between games with these two schools was the longest in UNLV history.
-UNLV, which downed UTEP in Game 2, played opponents from Texas in back-to-back weeks for the first time since 1999 when the Rebels won at North Texas and Baylor in successive outings.
-Lexington Thomas' moved past Dominique Dorsey (2001-04) into third place on the school's career rushing yards list with 2,871.
-Thomas recorded his 15th career 100-yard rushing game, which ranks third in school history and moves him to within two of tying Mike Thomas' UNLV mark of 17 set in 1973-74. He is one short of second place (Tim Cornett 16 in 2011-14).
-Thomas' one-yard rushing TD gave him 32 in his career, which put him six short of Mike Thomas' UNLV record of 37 set in 1973-74.
-When PVAMU kicked the ball out of the end zone after a bad snap late in the game, it marked UNLV's first safety since a game vs. Northern Illinois in 2014.
-UNLV senior Evan Pantels saw his school-record streak of successful extra points snapped at 80 when his first attempt of the night hit the uprights. Pantels then missed a 24-yard field-goal attempt, which marked the first time he missed an attempt shorter than 39 yards in his collegiate career.
NEXT FOR THE REBELS:
UNLV closes out non-conference action with a trip to Arkansas State next Saturday. It will mark the Rebels' first trip to Jonesboro and the first meeting with the Red Wolves since UNLV won 28-23 in 1995 in Las Vegas. UNLV's next home game will be October 6 vs. New Mexico at 1 p.m. PT. To purchase tickets, visit UNLVtickets.com or call 702-739-FANS (3267). Parking is free at Sam Boyd Stadium for Rebel football games.
BOX SCORE
UNIVERSITY OF NEVADA LAS VEGAS ATHLETIC MEDIA COMMUNICATIONS
Fourth-Quarter Surge Lifts UW-Oshkosh Titans Past Division II Lincoln Blue Tigers
JEFFERSON CITY, Missouri -- Kyle Radavich ran for a 1-yard touchdown on the game's opening drive and threw a go-ahead 6-yard touchdown pass to Mitchell Gerend early in the fourth quarter as the nationally ranked UW-Oshkosh football team pulled away for a 17-7 victory at NCAA Division II member Lincoln University of Missouri on Saturday (Sept. 15) in Jefferson City, Mo.
UW-Oshkosh (2-1), ranked 15th in the NCAA Division III by D3football.com, secured its first win over an upper-division opponent since downing Division II's Upper Iowa University by scores of 33-21 in 2004 and 38-3 in 2003.
The Titans took a 7-0 lead after marching 85 yards in 14 plays while taking more than seven minutes off the clock on the first possession of the game. The drive culminated in Radavich's first collegiate touchdown.
Lincoln University (1-2), playing its home opener, answered with a game-tying touchdown midway through the second quarter, but UW-Oshkosh reclaimed the lead for good on Radavich's pass to Gerend in the back of the end zone. Titans placekicker Peyton Peterson later drilled a 34-yard field goal to cap the scoring with 5:31 remaining in the game.
FULL STATS
The Blue Tigers held advantages in offensive yards (285-273), first downs (14-11) and time of possession (32:22 to 27:38) during a contest that featured 11 punts. However, UW-Oshkosh blocked both of Lincoln University's field goal attempts and controlled field position as Titans punter Turner Geisthardt averaged 46.8 yards on his six punts, including five inside the Blue Tigers' 20-yard line.
Lincoln University, which was held to 4 yards on six plays during the first quarter, had a string of 20 consecutive offensive snaps in its own territory spanning the third and fourth periods.
Radavich concluded the contest 14 of 19 passing for 156 yards with his first career touchdown pass and zero interceptions. He completed his first nine passes during the opening quarter.
Riley Kallas caught six passes for 99 yards for the Titans, who also received four grabs for 26 yards from Dom Todarello.
Mitch Gerhartz led UW-Oshkosh with 17 carries for 50 yards. The balanced Titan rushing attack also featured seven carries for 29 yards from Todarello and six totes for 23 yards by JP Peerenboom. UW-Oshkosh ran the ball 36 times on its 52 offensive plays, gaining 117 yards on the ground against a Lincoln University defense that allowed just 32 first downs over its first two games.
Tory Jandrin paced the UW-Oshkosh defense, which has ceded just 23 points this season, with a season-high eight tackles. Brandon Hughes matched his career high with seven stops for the Titans while Tyler Jensen, Tyler Watson and Cole Yoder each added six tackles. Yoder, the Titans' leading tackler on the year, also notched his 14th career interception – eighth most in program history.
Derrick Jennings Jr., Tyler Staerkel and Brandon Kolgen all registered sacks for the Titan defense, which allowed just 4.5 yards per play against its Division II foe.
The Titans' scoring drive to begin the game featured 45 yards through the on 6-for-6 passing from Radavich, and Gerhartz and Peerenboom combining for 39 yards on seven carries ahead of Radavich's 1-yard run into the end zone.
The teams then exchanged punts on the four subsequent possession to end the first period as the Blue Tigers did not advance past their own 41-yard line during the opening quarter.
Lincoln University began the second quarter with a 15-play, 91-yard drive that was capped by a 2-yard touchdown run by Terry Hunter. The Tigers crossed midfield for the first time on Hunter's 7-yard rush to the Titan 44-yard line on the sixth play of the possession. Tigers quarterback Henry Ogala picked up a key first down with a 5-yard run to reach the UW-Oshkosh 17-yard line on a third-and-4 play. A 7-yard run by Hosea Franklin on a third-and-2 play preceded Hunter's run to the end zone.
The Blue Tigers recovered a Peerenboom fumble at the Titan 37-yard line with 6:12 remaining in the first half, but Jensen blocked a 35-yard field goal attempt by Lincoln College's Fernando Ramirez four plays later.
Following a UW-Oshkosh punt, the Blue Tigers once again advanced into UW-Oshkosh territory behind Ogala passes of 18 and 22 yards. However, on second-and-9 play from the Titan 39-yard line, Yoder intercepted an Ogala pass with 19 second to go before intermission.
Lincoln University recovered UW-Oshkosh's onside kick attempt at the Titan 47-yard line to open the second half. The Blue Tigers then ran the ball six straight times for 28 total yards to reach the UW-Oshkosh 19-yard line, but Jennings Jr. sacked Ogala to set up fourth-and-17 from the 25. UW-Oshkosh's Trenton LaCombe preserved the tie as he blocked Ramirez's 42-yard field goal attempt.
After the teams traded punts on the next three drives, UW-Oshkosh began the decisive possession at its own 28-yard line with 26 seconds left in the third quarter. Radavich hit a streaking Kallas for a 61-yard pass to reach the Lincoln University 5 on the first play of the fourth period. Following a 1-yard loss on the next play, Radavich fired his first career touchdown pass to Gerend on second down.
The Titans put the game away with a 10-play, 47-yard drive that ended with Peterson's 34-yard field goal. Gerhartz keyed the drive by gaining first downs on carries of 11 yards to reach midfield and 8 yards to advance the ball to the Blue Tigers 37-yard line.
Lincoln University answered with a long drive that reached the Titan 27-yard line, but a Kolgen sack of Ogala on first down preceded three consecutive incomplete passes by Ogala with less than two minutes to play.
Ogala went 13-for-22 passing for 134 yards with one interception.
Franklin had 19 carries for 116 yards for the Blue Tigers while Hunter added 10 rushes for 23 yards and a score. Franklin also led the team with five receptions for 24 yards.
Lincoln University's Edwin Durassaint led all players with 11 tackles, including three for loss. Amani Nelson chipped in nine tackles for the Blue Tigers.
UW-Oshkosh has won three of its six all-time games against upper-division NCAA opponents. The Titans suffered losses of 7-3 at Division II's Davenport University (Mich.) last Saturday (Sept. 8), 41-3 at Division I Football Bowl Subdivision member South Dakota State University in 2014 and 33-22 at Division II's Minnesota State University Mankato in 2006.
The Titans, who play their first five games of the season on the road, are idle until heading to UW-River Falls for the WIAC opener on Sept. 29.
UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN-OSHKOSH TITANS ATHLETIC COMMUNICATIONS
UW-Oshkosh (2-1), ranked 15th in the NCAA Division III by D3football.com, secured its first win over an upper-division opponent since downing Division II's Upper Iowa University by scores of 33-21 in 2004 and 38-3 in 2003.
The Titans took a 7-0 lead after marching 85 yards in 14 plays while taking more than seven minutes off the clock on the first possession of the game. The drive culminated in Radavich's first collegiate touchdown.
Lincoln University (1-2), playing its home opener, answered with a game-tying touchdown midway through the second quarter, but UW-Oshkosh reclaimed the lead for good on Radavich's pass to Gerend in the back of the end zone. Titans placekicker Peyton Peterson later drilled a 34-yard field goal to cap the scoring with 5:31 remaining in the game.
FULL STATS
The Blue Tigers held advantages in offensive yards (285-273), first downs (14-11) and time of possession (32:22 to 27:38) during a contest that featured 11 punts. However, UW-Oshkosh blocked both of Lincoln University's field goal attempts and controlled field position as Titans punter Turner Geisthardt averaged 46.8 yards on his six punts, including five inside the Blue Tigers' 20-yard line.
Lincoln University, which was held to 4 yards on six plays during the first quarter, had a string of 20 consecutive offensive snaps in its own territory spanning the third and fourth periods.
Radavich concluded the contest 14 of 19 passing for 156 yards with his first career touchdown pass and zero interceptions. He completed his first nine passes during the opening quarter.
Riley Kallas caught six passes for 99 yards for the Titans, who also received four grabs for 26 yards from Dom Todarello.
Mitch Gerhartz led UW-Oshkosh with 17 carries for 50 yards. The balanced Titan rushing attack also featured seven carries for 29 yards from Todarello and six totes for 23 yards by JP Peerenboom. UW-Oshkosh ran the ball 36 times on its 52 offensive plays, gaining 117 yards on the ground against a Lincoln University defense that allowed just 32 first downs over its first two games.
Tory Jandrin paced the UW-Oshkosh defense, which has ceded just 23 points this season, with a season-high eight tackles. Brandon Hughes matched his career high with seven stops for the Titans while Tyler Jensen, Tyler Watson and Cole Yoder each added six tackles. Yoder, the Titans' leading tackler on the year, also notched his 14th career interception – eighth most in program history.
Derrick Jennings Jr., Tyler Staerkel and Brandon Kolgen all registered sacks for the Titan defense, which allowed just 4.5 yards per play against its Division II foe.
The Titans' scoring drive to begin the game featured 45 yards through the on 6-for-6 passing from Radavich, and Gerhartz and Peerenboom combining for 39 yards on seven carries ahead of Radavich's 1-yard run into the end zone.
The teams then exchanged punts on the four subsequent possession to end the first period as the Blue Tigers did not advance past their own 41-yard line during the opening quarter.
Lincoln University began the second quarter with a 15-play, 91-yard drive that was capped by a 2-yard touchdown run by Terry Hunter. The Tigers crossed midfield for the first time on Hunter's 7-yard rush to the Titan 44-yard line on the sixth play of the possession. Tigers quarterback Henry Ogala picked up a key first down with a 5-yard run to reach the UW-Oshkosh 17-yard line on a third-and-4 play. A 7-yard run by Hosea Franklin on a third-and-2 play preceded Hunter's run to the end zone.
The Blue Tigers recovered a Peerenboom fumble at the Titan 37-yard line with 6:12 remaining in the first half, but Jensen blocked a 35-yard field goal attempt by Lincoln College's Fernando Ramirez four plays later.
Following a UW-Oshkosh punt, the Blue Tigers once again advanced into UW-Oshkosh territory behind Ogala passes of 18 and 22 yards. However, on second-and-9 play from the Titan 39-yard line, Yoder intercepted an Ogala pass with 19 second to go before intermission.
Lincoln University recovered UW-Oshkosh's onside kick attempt at the Titan 47-yard line to open the second half. The Blue Tigers then ran the ball six straight times for 28 total yards to reach the UW-Oshkosh 19-yard line, but Jennings Jr. sacked Ogala to set up fourth-and-17 from the 25. UW-Oshkosh's Trenton LaCombe preserved the tie as he blocked Ramirez's 42-yard field goal attempt.
After the teams traded punts on the next three drives, UW-Oshkosh began the decisive possession at its own 28-yard line with 26 seconds left in the third quarter. Radavich hit a streaking Kallas for a 61-yard pass to reach the Lincoln University 5 on the first play of the fourth period. Following a 1-yard loss on the next play, Radavich fired his first career touchdown pass to Gerend on second down.
The Titans put the game away with a 10-play, 47-yard drive that ended with Peterson's 34-yard field goal. Gerhartz keyed the drive by gaining first downs on carries of 11 yards to reach midfield and 8 yards to advance the ball to the Blue Tigers 37-yard line.
Lincoln University answered with a long drive that reached the Titan 27-yard line, but a Kolgen sack of Ogala on first down preceded three consecutive incomplete passes by Ogala with less than two minutes to play.
Ogala went 13-for-22 passing for 134 yards with one interception.
Franklin had 19 carries for 116 yards for the Blue Tigers while Hunter added 10 rushes for 23 yards and a score. Franklin also led the team with five receptions for 24 yards.
Lincoln University's Edwin Durassaint led all players with 11 tackles, including three for loss. Amani Nelson chipped in nine tackles for the Blue Tigers.
UW-Oshkosh has won three of its six all-time games against upper-division NCAA opponents. The Titans suffered losses of 7-3 at Division II's Davenport University (Mich.) last Saturday (Sept. 8), 41-3 at Division I Football Bowl Subdivision member South Dakota State University in 2014 and 33-22 at Division II's Minnesota State University Mankato in 2006.
The Titans, who play their first five games of the season on the road, are idle until heading to UW-River Falls for the WIAC opener on Sept. 29.
UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN-OSHKOSH TITANS ATHLETIC COMMUNICATIONS
Western Michigan Football Rolls Past Delaware State in 68-0 Shutout
KALAMAZOO, Michigan -- On the 27th annual CommUniverCity night at Waldo Stadium, Western Michigan football had seven different players register a touchdown en route to 68-0 shutout of Delaware State.
WMU's defense held Delaware State to just eight yards passing and 127 yards of total offense. The Broncos forced three fumbles, recovering two, one for a touchdown.
The 68-0 victory was WMU's largest margin of victory during the modern football era. The shutout was the Broncos' first since defeating Buffalo, 38-0 on Nov. 19, 2016.
Western Michigan forced Delaware State to a 3-and-out on the opening drive. On the Broncos' first offensive play, junior running back LeVante Bellamy sprinted 40 yards down the sideline for his third touchdown of the season. It was the second time in three years WMU has scored on their first play of the game on a CommUniverCity night.
Special teams played a key role as the Broncos had two punt returns for touchdowns. After initially bobbling the ball, freshman Jayden Reed scooped it up and raced 93 yards for a touchdown, marking the second longest punt return in school history and longest in the NCAA this season. In the fourth quarter sophomore Tyron Arnett returned a punt 75 yards for his first career return TD.
It was an offensive explosion for the Broncos in the second half, scoring 40 points and totaling 236 yards. In the second half alone, WMU scored on a receiving, rushing, punt return and fumble recovery. Freshman kicker Gavin Peddie also connected 24 and 25-yard field goals, the first two of his career.
Junior quarterback Jon Wassink completed 76 percent of his passes, going 23-of-30 for 286 yards and two touchdowns. On the ground, the Broncos accumulated 241 rushing yards with Bellamy leading the way with 83 yards on seven carries and a touchdown. Senior Jamauri Bogan had 11 carries for 33 yards and two touchdowns. Redshirt freshman Prince Walker recorded his first career TD with a 12-yard run in the fourth quarter and had a career-high 59 yards.
BOX SCORE
In the receiving core, seven different players had a reception. Junior Giovanni Ricci led all Broncos with 77 receiving yards and two touchdowns. Redshirt freshman Jaylen Hall made three catches for 70 yards. Redshirt senior Drake Harris had a team-high seven receptions and totaled 57 yards.
Defensively, junior Najee Clayton, freshman Roy McCree and freshman Andre Carter each forced a fumble. Freshman Patrick Lupro returned fumble recovery 17 yards for a touchdown in the fourth quarter. Junior Drake Spears led the team with seven tackles. WMU had two sacks and eight tackles for a loss.
The victory was WMU's (1-2) first of the season. The Broncos now hit the road for the next two games, traveling to Georgia State on Sept. 22 before opening up Mid-American Conference play at Miami, Sept 29.
WESTERN MICHIGAN UNIVERSITY ATHLETIC COMMUNICATIONS
WMU's defense held Delaware State to just eight yards passing and 127 yards of total offense. The Broncos forced three fumbles, recovering two, one for a touchdown.
The 68-0 victory was WMU's largest margin of victory during the modern football era. The shutout was the Broncos' first since defeating Buffalo, 38-0 on Nov. 19, 2016.
Western Michigan forced Delaware State to a 3-and-out on the opening drive. On the Broncos' first offensive play, junior running back LeVante Bellamy sprinted 40 yards down the sideline for his third touchdown of the season. It was the second time in three years WMU has scored on their first play of the game on a CommUniverCity night.
Special teams played a key role as the Broncos had two punt returns for touchdowns. After initially bobbling the ball, freshman Jayden Reed scooped it up and raced 93 yards for a touchdown, marking the second longest punt return in school history and longest in the NCAA this season. In the fourth quarter sophomore Tyron Arnett returned a punt 75 yards for his first career return TD.
It was an offensive explosion for the Broncos in the second half, scoring 40 points and totaling 236 yards. In the second half alone, WMU scored on a receiving, rushing, punt return and fumble recovery. Freshman kicker Gavin Peddie also connected 24 and 25-yard field goals, the first two of his career.
Junior quarterback Jon Wassink completed 76 percent of his passes, going 23-of-30 for 286 yards and two touchdowns. On the ground, the Broncos accumulated 241 rushing yards with Bellamy leading the way with 83 yards on seven carries and a touchdown. Senior Jamauri Bogan had 11 carries for 33 yards and two touchdowns. Redshirt freshman Prince Walker recorded his first career TD with a 12-yard run in the fourth quarter and had a career-high 59 yards.
BOX SCORE
In the receiving core, seven different players had a reception. Junior Giovanni Ricci led all Broncos with 77 receiving yards and two touchdowns. Redshirt freshman Jaylen Hall made three catches for 70 yards. Redshirt senior Drake Harris had a team-high seven receptions and totaled 57 yards.
Defensively, junior Najee Clayton, freshman Roy McCree and freshman Andre Carter each forced a fumble. Freshman Patrick Lupro returned fumble recovery 17 yards for a touchdown in the fourth quarter. Junior Drake Spears led the team with seven tackles. WMU had two sacks and eight tackles for a loss.
The victory was WMU's (1-2) first of the season. The Broncos now hit the road for the next two games, traveling to Georgia State on Sept. 22 before opening up Mid-American Conference play at Miami, Sept 29.
WESTERN MICHIGAN UNIVERSITY ATHLETIC COMMUNICATIONS
Deramus tosses three touchdowns,Tuskegee Golden Tigers down Clark Atlanta
ATLANTA, Georgia -- Tuskegee backup quarterback Ahmad Deramus tossed three touchdown passes and Golden Tigers topped Clark Atlanta 24-17 Saturday night on the road in Atlanta (Ga.)
After Clark scored on its opening drive, Tuskegee would respond with nine-play 56 yard drive, but would have to settle for a 25-yard Huskic Arnes field goal after the drive stalled in the redzone with a penalty, making the score 8-3 after of a pair of opening possessions.
CAU would drive the ball into TU territory again, but Darnell Hill end things with an interception, ending any threat of another score for the Panthers.
Early in the second quarter while attempting to throw the ball from its own endzone, Deramus was hit by Kam Rogers causing him to fumble the ball resulting in a safety, which gave the Panthers a 10-3 lead.
Perhaps the biggest momentum shift of the game came when Deramus found a streaking Javarrius Cheatham for a 34-yard touchdown pass to end the first half and tie the game at 10-10.
BOX SCORE
CAU opened the third quarter with a fumble returned 42 yards for a touchdown to take a 17-10 lead. A deficit the Golden Tigers would face until the start of the fourth quarter when the Deramus to Cheatham connection would strike again with a three-yard touchdown pass. The drive took up nearly six minutes on nine plays and 54 yards, which tied the game 17-17.
Freshman running back Ivonte Patterson paced TU's ground game with 62 yards on 12 carries. Deramus completed 10 of his 17 passes for 209 yards and three touchdowns including a 55 yard bomb to Peyton Ramzy with 8:16 left to play. That scored proved to be the difference, rounding out the scoring at 24-17
Davoris Thomas and Darnell Hill each finished with an interception. Ricky Norris led the Golden Tigers with nine tackles while Devonta Ramsuer totaled eight.
The TU defense held CAU to 93 yards rushing and only allowed the Panthers to convert 3-of-10 on third down conversions.
The Golden Tigers will play its home opener next Saturday hosting Missouri S&T. Kickoff is set for 1 p.m. with live video coverage on the Tuskegee Digital Network at 12:55 p.m.
TUSKEGEE UNIVERSITY GOLDEN TIGERS ATHLETIC COMMUNICATIONS
South Dakota State Beef Bowl one for the record books
BROOKINGS, South Dakota -- South Dakota State rewrote its record book numerous times Saturday night, including setting new standards for points and total yards, in a 90-6 victory over Arkansas-Pine Bluff in the 52nd Annual Beef Bowl at Dana J. Dykhouse Stadium.
The third-ranked Jackrabbits improved to 2-0 overall, while UAPB dropped to 1-2 on the season.
SDSU needed only five offensive plays to score its first three touchdowns — all on passes from senior quarterback Taryn Christion. After a 29-yard punt return by Marquise Lewisput SDSU deep in Golden Lion territory, the Jackrabbits needed only two plays to cash in as Christion found freshman tight end Blake Kunz over the middle for an 8-yard score.
A turnover on the next UAPB possession led to a 31-yard scoring pass from Christion to Adam Anderson, who leaped up and over two defenders to corral his first career touchdown. Moments later, Christion hooked up with reigning Missouri Valley Football Conference Offensive Player of the Week Cade Johnson deep down field for a 71-yard touchdown that gave SDSU a 21-3 lead.
On the play, Christion became the MVFC's career leader in touchdown passes, surpassing the 78 thrown by Illinois State's Matt Brown from 2009-12.
BOX SCORE
Jamie Gillan, who connected on a 47-yard field goal midway through the first quarter, added a 20-yarder later in the stanza to pull to within 21-6. However, the Jackrabbits would tally the final 69 points of the game and continued to churn out big plays as eight of the 13 touchdowns they scored on the night covered at least 30 yards.
Christion, who played only in the first half, threw two more touchdowns before exiting, finding Jacob Brownin the end zone from nine yards out late in the final minute of the first quarter and adding a 40-yard scoring strike to Johnson early in the second quarter. It marked the fifth five-touchdown game of Christion's career.
Combined, three Jackrabbit quarterbacks went 19-for-21 passing with single-game school records of 557 yards and eight touchdowns. Christion was 13-of-14 for 332 yards, while backup Kanin Nelson finished 4-of-5 passing for 136 yards with touchdowns on screen passes of 66 yards to Pierre Strong Jr. and 37 yards to C.J. Wilson.
Third-string signal-caller Justin Roberts completed both of his passes for 89 yards, including a 76-yarder toMichael Wandmaker, who caught a pass on a quick out pattern, broke a tackle along the right sideline and rambled the rest of the way to paydirt.
The Jackrabbit running game also got in the act, headlined by Isaac Wallace's 192 yards on only five carries. Wallace scored on runs of 58 and 79 yards, while Mikey Daniel plunged in twice on short runs and Blair Mulholland contributed a 14-yard touchdown run for his first collegiate touchdown.
SDSU tallied 369 rushing yards and a program-best 926 yards of total offense. The Jackrabbits' 90 points also established a new school record, eclipsing the 85 points scored against Columbus College way back in 1922.
Johnson posted his second consecutive 100-yard receiving game with five catches for 162 yards. Anderson also eclipsed the century mark with four catches for 128 yards.
UAPB, which played without regular starting quarterback Shannon Patrick, went with Roger Totten II under center. He completed 9-of-21 passes for 131 yards and was intercepted twice — both in the end zone by Zy Mosley.
Eric Kleinschmit paced the Jackrabbit defense with seven tackles.
Taeyler Porter led the Golden Lion running game with 106 yards as UAPB finished with 310 yards of total offense. Josh Wilkes caught a team-high four passes for 80 yards and Nijul Canada notched a game-high nine tackles.
UP NEXT
The Jackrabbits are idle until opening MVFC play Sept. 29 at top-ranked North Dakota State. The annual Dakota Marker game is set for a 2:30 p.m. kickoff at the Fargodome in Fargo, North Dakota.
SDSU SINGLE-GAME RECORDS SET – TEAM
SDSU SINGLE-GAME RECORD SET – INDIVIDUAL
• Extra Points: 11, by Chase Vinatieri (previous record – 9 by Parker Douglass, vs. Valparaiso, 9-10-2005)
OTHER NOTES
The third-ranked Jackrabbits improved to 2-0 overall, while UAPB dropped to 1-2 on the season.
SDSU needed only five offensive plays to score its first three touchdowns — all on passes from senior quarterback Taryn Christion. After a 29-yard punt return by Marquise Lewisput SDSU deep in Golden Lion territory, the Jackrabbits needed only two plays to cash in as Christion found freshman tight end Blake Kunz over the middle for an 8-yard score.
A turnover on the next UAPB possession led to a 31-yard scoring pass from Christion to Adam Anderson, who leaped up and over two defenders to corral his first career touchdown. Moments later, Christion hooked up with reigning Missouri Valley Football Conference Offensive Player of the Week Cade Johnson deep down field for a 71-yard touchdown that gave SDSU a 21-3 lead.
On the play, Christion became the MVFC's career leader in touchdown passes, surpassing the 78 thrown by Illinois State's Matt Brown from 2009-12.
BOX SCORE
Jamie Gillan, who connected on a 47-yard field goal midway through the first quarter, added a 20-yarder later in the stanza to pull to within 21-6. However, the Jackrabbits would tally the final 69 points of the game and continued to churn out big plays as eight of the 13 touchdowns they scored on the night covered at least 30 yards.
Christion, who played only in the first half, threw two more touchdowns before exiting, finding Jacob Brownin the end zone from nine yards out late in the final minute of the first quarter and adding a 40-yard scoring strike to Johnson early in the second quarter. It marked the fifth five-touchdown game of Christion's career.
Combined, three Jackrabbit quarterbacks went 19-for-21 passing with single-game school records of 557 yards and eight touchdowns. Christion was 13-of-14 for 332 yards, while backup Kanin Nelson finished 4-of-5 passing for 136 yards with touchdowns on screen passes of 66 yards to Pierre Strong Jr. and 37 yards to C.J. Wilson.
Third-string signal-caller Justin Roberts completed both of his passes for 89 yards, including a 76-yarder toMichael Wandmaker, who caught a pass on a quick out pattern, broke a tackle along the right sideline and rambled the rest of the way to paydirt.
The Jackrabbit running game also got in the act, headlined by Isaac Wallace's 192 yards on only five carries. Wallace scored on runs of 58 and 79 yards, while Mikey Daniel plunged in twice on short runs and Blair Mulholland contributed a 14-yard touchdown run for his first collegiate touchdown.
SDSU tallied 369 rushing yards and a program-best 926 yards of total offense. The Jackrabbits' 90 points also established a new school record, eclipsing the 85 points scored against Columbus College way back in 1922.
Johnson posted his second consecutive 100-yard receiving game with five catches for 162 yards. Anderson also eclipsed the century mark with four catches for 128 yards.
UAPB, which played without regular starting quarterback Shannon Patrick, went with Roger Totten II under center. He completed 9-of-21 passes for 131 yards and was intercepted twice — both in the end zone by Zy Mosley.
Eric Kleinschmit paced the Jackrabbit defense with seven tackles.
Taeyler Porter led the Golden Lion running game with 106 yards as UAPB finished with 310 yards of total offense. Josh Wilkes caught a team-high four passes for 80 yards and Nijul Canada notched a game-high nine tackles.
UP NEXT
The Jackrabbits are idle until opening MVFC play Sept. 29 at top-ranked North Dakota State. The annual Dakota Marker game is set for a 2:30 p.m. kickoff at the Fargodome in Fargo, North Dakota.
SDSU SINGLE-GAME RECORDS SET – TEAM
- Points: 90 (previous record – 85, vs. Columbus College, 1922)
- Total Offense – Yards: 926 (previous record – 689, vs. Missouri-Rolla, 10-22-2005)
- Passing Yards: 557 (previous record – 466, at Southern Illinois, 10-8-2016)
- Passing Touchdowns: 8 (previous record – 7, vs. Illinois State, 11-8-2008)
SDSU SINGLE-GAME RECORD SET – INDIVIDUAL
• Extra Points: 11, by Chase Vinatieri (previous record – 9 by Parker Douglass, vs. Valparaiso, 9-10-2005)
OTHER NOTES
- Saturday's game marked the first-ever meeting in football between SDSU and Arkansas-Pine Bluff
- The Jackrabbits improved to 31-21 in Beef Bowl games
- Christion was named the Outstanding Player of the Beef Bowl
- SDSU's 49 first-half points were the most in any half during the Division I era (since 2004), surpassing the 45 points in the first half versus Valparaiso on Sept. 10, 2005
- The Jackrabbits did not attempt a punt in the game
- The SDSU defense did not allow a first down in the second half until UAPB's final drive
- The Jackrabbits forced four turnovers and extended their streak of forcing at least one turnover to 17 games
- SDSU was credited with 11 tackles for loss, their most in a game since collecting 13 in a 2013 Football Championship Subdivision playoff game at Northern Arizona
- Mosley became the first Jackrabbit with two interceptions in the same game since Je Ryan Butler in that same FCS playoff game at Northern Arizona on Nov. 30, 2013
- SDSU had two receivers go over 100 yards in the same game for the first time since Nov. 5, 2016, when Jake Wieneke (6-114) and Dallas Goedert (7-113) accomplished the feat against Missouri State
- Attendance was 14,526
SOUTH DAKOTA STATE UNIVERSITY ATHLETIC COMMUNICATIONS
South Dakota State Football vs Arkansas-Pine Bluff Highlights
SOUTH DAKOTA STATE UNIVERSITY JACKRABBITS COMMUNICATIONS
Late drive, defensive stand keeps West Virginia State Winless on Road
SOUTH EUCLID, Ohio – A three-yard touchdown rush from Jaleel McLaughlin put the Notre Dame College football team (3-0, 3-0 MEC) up 33-31 with just 60 seconds to play. The run, along with a defensive stand in the final minute, sealed a victory for the Falcons against West Virginia State University (1-2, 1-2 MEC).
NDC took a 20-10 lead into halftime as the team looked to have their opponents number after two long touchdown drives and a blocked punt in the first two quarters. But the visiting Yellow Jackets would climb back in the second half to gain a 31-27 lead before the Falcons recovered with a 12-play, 75-yard drive to score the go-ahead touchdown.
Notre Dame was the first team on the board with a six-yard touchdown pass from Chris Brimm to McLaughlin. The Falcons scored on their first possession after both teams took their turns marching down the field in opposite directions; but where NDC was able to score, WVSU missed a 44-yard field goal on the opening drive.
Kicker Aaron Ball did not let the miss affect him on his next attempt as he made a 42-yard kick in the second quarter to cut NDC's lead in half (6-3) with 11:54 to play in the second quarter
The teams traded a pair of touchdown passes in the next two-and-a-half minutes with Marvelle Ross scoring with a 22-yard reception and AJ Barrette reaching pay dirt on a 79-yard catch and run.
With the score sitting at 10-13 and less than two minutes to play before halftime, West Virginia State lined up to punt the ball away. Shortly after the snap, two of Notre Dame's players were in the punter's face. D'Niyae Morris blocked the kick and Zaire Mitchell recovered it at the eight-yard line for the scoop and score to put his team up by 10 before the break.
After the game, when head coach Mike Jacobs was asked about players who made big impacts, Morris and Mitchell were two he named.
"On the first two touchdowns there was a huge block by Zaire," Jacobs said. "He's quietly had a really nice season for us. We put a lot on his plate in terms of blocking, but he had a really nice catch to move the chains today too.
"D'Niyae blocked the punt, but he also had several other big plays on special teams where he was in the right spot and doing it with forcefulness and aggression. He was really a big part of our victory today."
In the third quarter, the teams once again traded scores with WVSU quarterback Faustino Saucedo scoring on a QB keeper and Marvelle Ross scoring his second touchdown with a big 79-yard catch.
Ross recorded 231 yards and two touchdowns on 13 receptions to become just the third Falcon to total over 200 receiving yards in a game. The junior wide out also added 33 return yards on the day.
"Marvelle is one of the most talented players I've ever been around," Jacobs said. "He's a special athlete. Where he's gotten better, and where I'm most proud of him, is how he's carried himself off the field. You see it in how he approaches every week in practice, and those good practice habits are starting to show up more in every game. I
'm really proud of him."
BOX SCORE
Jacobs isn't the only one to notice how much Ross does in practice. He's become one of Brimm's favorite targets this season, grabbing 25 catches so far this year from the redshirt-freshman quarterback. And their chemistry on weekdays have rolled over to Saturdays.
"I already know that no matter where I put it, Marvelle is going to go up and get it," Brimm said. "He's a good player and does it day in and day out during practice so I know in the games that he's going to be there."
Saucedo had a favorite target of his own in the game in Tyrell Henderson. Henderson tallied 173 yards and two touchdowns on 12 receptions to rival Ross's numbers.
Both of Henderson's touchdowns came in the fourth quarter as the Yellow Jackets scored the first 14 points in the final 15-minute block with 76- and 15-yard passes. The pair of receptions resulted in West Virginia State's first lead of the game, making it 31-27 with 5:15 left to play.
With the ball back, Notre Dame methodically charged down the field, running over four minutes off the clock before McLaughlin's three-yard go-ahead score.
After the kickoff return, WVSU had the ball at their own 26-yard line with 51 second to play. After two passes for 19 yards and an eight-yard rush by Saucedo, the Yellow Jackets found their way into Notre Dame territory. But on the first play inside NDC's half of the field, Derrick Brumfield sacked Saucedo for a seven-yard loss.
"The sack at the end of the game shows our depth on the defensive line," Jacobs said. "Those guys are fresh in the fourth quarter. It's shown up a couple different times this year."
The Yellow Jackets completed a final pass for 10 yards, but with a tackle from Cedric Lynch, they were unable to get out of bounds and time expired. Players in blue and white ran on to the field to celebrate as Notre Dame clinched its third victory of the season.
With a key offensive drive and a defensive stand to win the game, players on both sides of the ball came up big plays for NDC and neither of the units ever had uncertainty about their counterparts.
"Oh, for sure, we knew our offense would put together a big drive at the end of the game," defensive back Tre'von Slater said.
"The defense does a good job every time," Brimm said. "So we know they'll come up big for us."
Jacobs said seeing the support his team gives each other is something special.
"I've been around a lot of really good football teams and this team is one of the tighter teams I've been around," Jacobs said. "They care about one another; it's important to each of them that they do well for their teammates. It comes through in the way they play."
Like the players, Jacobs has complete faith in his team's ability on both sides of the ball, no matter the score.
"I would never doubt any of our players," the third-year head coach said. "I have an unshakeable confidence in them. People get all twisted up and concerned with yards, but at the end of the day, if we have one more point on the board than the other team, we've done our job."
McLaughlin was able to surpass the century mark for the third-straight week, averaging nearly five yards per carry, but there were times when the run game was not getting things done for NDC and for the first time this season, more pass plays were called than runs.
"In a perfect world, I'd love to go into every game and say we're going to be 50-50 run to pass," Jacobs said. "I always think it's important to establish the line of scrimmage, but today they were giving us some things in the pass game. I thought [Brimm] played really really well."
When asked about putting the ball in the young QB's hands, Jacobs revealed just how confident he was in throwing the football.
"Chris is just unwavering," Jacobs said. "He's consistent in how he practices every week and the game's not too big for him on game day. He doesn't get very easily rattled, and he goes out there and puts us in good positions while protecting the football. I'm happy to see him have a big day."
Brimm threw for 368 yards and three touchdowns to lead his team to a victory. This season, he has seven touchdowns and zero interceptions.
The Tallahassee, Fla. native said the team tightened up its passing game in practice in preparation for today's games. And when the game was on the line, he pointed to practice again saying the team practices every Wednesday for that exact situation. In a statement game, the freshman gave all credit to others.
"I know all my receivers were going to be there for me," Brimm said. "Our coaches were calling a good game and our offensive line was doing a great job up front, so I knew the pass game was going to be there."
With 10 tackles for a loss and two forced turnovers, the defensive unit had many athletes making plays for them.
Along with Brumfield, Sha'haun Williams and Vincent Ellis recorded sacks while Ellis led the team with 2.5 tackles for a loss. Joining Ellis with multiple stops in the backfield were Curtis Collins and RJ Goodwin who had 1.5 each.
Goodwin and Slater led the team with 12 tackles each while Jeffrey Thomas recorded 11. Collins and Brumfield both forced fumbles, with Collins recovering one and WVSU recovering the other.
One of the highlight plays of the game came in the NDC end zone as Guam Lee made a diving interception to stop a Yellow Jacket drive and get the ball back to his team. Lee now has three interceptions on the season. With the pick made inside the goal line and another red zone stop earlier in the game, the Falcons have now stopped teams from scoring on seven of 12 trips inside the 20-yard line.
Notre Dame heads back out on the road next week with a game at Concord on Saturday, September 22. The game is set to kickoff at 12 p.m.
NOTRE DAME COLLEGE FALCONS ATHLETIC COMMUNICATIONS
NDC took a 20-10 lead into halftime as the team looked to have their opponents number after two long touchdown drives and a blocked punt in the first two quarters. But the visiting Yellow Jackets would climb back in the second half to gain a 31-27 lead before the Falcons recovered with a 12-play, 75-yard drive to score the go-ahead touchdown.
Notre Dame was the first team on the board with a six-yard touchdown pass from Chris Brimm to McLaughlin. The Falcons scored on their first possession after both teams took their turns marching down the field in opposite directions; but where NDC was able to score, WVSU missed a 44-yard field goal on the opening drive.
Kicker Aaron Ball did not let the miss affect him on his next attempt as he made a 42-yard kick in the second quarter to cut NDC's lead in half (6-3) with 11:54 to play in the second quarter
The teams traded a pair of touchdown passes in the next two-and-a-half minutes with Marvelle Ross scoring with a 22-yard reception and AJ Barrette reaching pay dirt on a 79-yard catch and run.
With the score sitting at 10-13 and less than two minutes to play before halftime, West Virginia State lined up to punt the ball away. Shortly after the snap, two of Notre Dame's players were in the punter's face. D'Niyae Morris blocked the kick and Zaire Mitchell recovered it at the eight-yard line for the scoop and score to put his team up by 10 before the break.
After the game, when head coach Mike Jacobs was asked about players who made big impacts, Morris and Mitchell were two he named.
"On the first two touchdowns there was a huge block by Zaire," Jacobs said. "He's quietly had a really nice season for us. We put a lot on his plate in terms of blocking, but he had a really nice catch to move the chains today too.
"D'Niyae blocked the punt, but he also had several other big plays on special teams where he was in the right spot and doing it with forcefulness and aggression. He was really a big part of our victory today."
In the third quarter, the teams once again traded scores with WVSU quarterback Faustino Saucedo scoring on a QB keeper and Marvelle Ross scoring his second touchdown with a big 79-yard catch.
Ross recorded 231 yards and two touchdowns on 13 receptions to become just the third Falcon to total over 200 receiving yards in a game. The junior wide out also added 33 return yards on the day.
"Marvelle is one of the most talented players I've ever been around," Jacobs said. "He's a special athlete. Where he's gotten better, and where I'm most proud of him, is how he's carried himself off the field. You see it in how he approaches every week in practice, and those good practice habits are starting to show up more in every game. I
'm really proud of him."
BOX SCORE
Jacobs isn't the only one to notice how much Ross does in practice. He's become one of Brimm's favorite targets this season, grabbing 25 catches so far this year from the redshirt-freshman quarterback. And their chemistry on weekdays have rolled over to Saturdays.
"I already know that no matter where I put it, Marvelle is going to go up and get it," Brimm said. "He's a good player and does it day in and day out during practice so I know in the games that he's going to be there."
Saucedo had a favorite target of his own in the game in Tyrell Henderson. Henderson tallied 173 yards and two touchdowns on 12 receptions to rival Ross's numbers.
Both of Henderson's touchdowns came in the fourth quarter as the Yellow Jackets scored the first 14 points in the final 15-minute block with 76- and 15-yard passes. The pair of receptions resulted in West Virginia State's first lead of the game, making it 31-27 with 5:15 left to play.
With the ball back, Notre Dame methodically charged down the field, running over four minutes off the clock before McLaughlin's three-yard go-ahead score.
After the kickoff return, WVSU had the ball at their own 26-yard line with 51 second to play. After two passes for 19 yards and an eight-yard rush by Saucedo, the Yellow Jackets found their way into Notre Dame territory. But on the first play inside NDC's half of the field, Derrick Brumfield sacked Saucedo for a seven-yard loss.
"The sack at the end of the game shows our depth on the defensive line," Jacobs said. "Those guys are fresh in the fourth quarter. It's shown up a couple different times this year."
The Yellow Jackets completed a final pass for 10 yards, but with a tackle from Cedric Lynch, they were unable to get out of bounds and time expired. Players in blue and white ran on to the field to celebrate as Notre Dame clinched its third victory of the season.
With a key offensive drive and a defensive stand to win the game, players on both sides of the ball came up big plays for NDC and neither of the units ever had uncertainty about their counterparts.
"Oh, for sure, we knew our offense would put together a big drive at the end of the game," defensive back Tre'von Slater said.
"The defense does a good job every time," Brimm said. "So we know they'll come up big for us."
Jacobs said seeing the support his team gives each other is something special.
"I've been around a lot of really good football teams and this team is one of the tighter teams I've been around," Jacobs said. "They care about one another; it's important to each of them that they do well for their teammates. It comes through in the way they play."
Like the players, Jacobs has complete faith in his team's ability on both sides of the ball, no matter the score.
"I would never doubt any of our players," the third-year head coach said. "I have an unshakeable confidence in them. People get all twisted up and concerned with yards, but at the end of the day, if we have one more point on the board than the other team, we've done our job."
McLaughlin was able to surpass the century mark for the third-straight week, averaging nearly five yards per carry, but there were times when the run game was not getting things done for NDC and for the first time this season, more pass plays were called than runs.
"In a perfect world, I'd love to go into every game and say we're going to be 50-50 run to pass," Jacobs said. "I always think it's important to establish the line of scrimmage, but today they were giving us some things in the pass game. I thought [Brimm] played really really well."
When asked about putting the ball in the young QB's hands, Jacobs revealed just how confident he was in throwing the football.
"Chris is just unwavering," Jacobs said. "He's consistent in how he practices every week and the game's not too big for him on game day. He doesn't get very easily rattled, and he goes out there and puts us in good positions while protecting the football. I'm happy to see him have a big day."
Brimm threw for 368 yards and three touchdowns to lead his team to a victory. This season, he has seven touchdowns and zero interceptions.
The Tallahassee, Fla. native said the team tightened up its passing game in practice in preparation for today's games. And when the game was on the line, he pointed to practice again saying the team practices every Wednesday for that exact situation. In a statement game, the freshman gave all credit to others.
"I know all my receivers were going to be there for me," Brimm said. "Our coaches were calling a good game and our offensive line was doing a great job up front, so I knew the pass game was going to be there."
With 10 tackles for a loss and two forced turnovers, the defensive unit had many athletes making plays for them.
Along with Brumfield, Sha'haun Williams and Vincent Ellis recorded sacks while Ellis led the team with 2.5 tackles for a loss. Joining Ellis with multiple stops in the backfield were Curtis Collins and RJ Goodwin who had 1.5 each.
Goodwin and Slater led the team with 12 tackles each while Jeffrey Thomas recorded 11. Collins and Brumfield both forced fumbles, with Collins recovering one and WVSU recovering the other.
One of the highlight plays of the game came in the NDC end zone as Guam Lee made a diving interception to stop a Yellow Jacket drive and get the ball back to his team. Lee now has three interceptions on the season. With the pick made inside the goal line and another red zone stop earlier in the game, the Falcons have now stopped teams from scoring on seven of 12 trips inside the 20-yard line.
Notre Dame heads back out on the road next week with a game at Concord on Saturday, September 22. The game is set to kickoff at 12 p.m.
NOTRE DAME COLLEGE FALCONS ATHLETIC COMMUNICATIONS
Kennesaw State Owls Break Scoring Record in 62-13 Win Over Alabama State
KENNESAW, Georgia – A nearly two-hour lightning delay turned out to be a spark for Kennesaw State as it amassed 563 yards of offense and broke the program scoring record in a 62-13 victory over Alabama State in its home opener Saturday at Fifth Third Bank Stadium.
After both teams waited out a one hour and 42-minute delay, lightning struck for the Owls (2-1) as they forced a quick turnover and scored on their second offensive play as Shaquil Terrycapped a 27-yard drive with a 17-yard run, igniting Kennesaw State to its most lopsided victory over an FCS opponent in program history. The score came 1:10 into the game.
The Owls gained 417 yards on the ground, received three rushing touchdowns from quarterback Chandler Burks and 136 yards on the three first-half carries by running back Darnell Holland.
Kennesaw State scored on two of its first four possessions, then reached the end zone on its next four drives, capping the second quarter with a 70-yard run by Holland that sent the Owls into the locker room with a 42-6 halftime lead.
Box Score (PDF) | Quotes (PDF) | Notes (PDF)
The fireworks continued in the third quarter as Isaac Foster returned the second half kickoff a Kennesaw State-record 100 yards for a 49-6 lead. Two Nathan Robertson field goals and a 6-yard touchdown run by quarterback Daniel David concluded a stretch in which the Owls scored on eight straight possessions to lead 62-13 heading into the fourth quarter.
The Kennesaw State defense limited Alabama State (1-2) to 314 total yards, forced three turnovers and was led by Courtney Mills, Bryson Armstrong and Le'Vonte Larry, who had six tackles apiece. Mills had 1.5 tackles for loss, including half a sack, while Travis Bell had a forced fumble and recovery, Desmond Johnson, Jr. forced a fumble, Andrew Butcherrecovered a fumble and Demetrius Pettway returned his first career interception 34 yards.
Kennesaw State continues its four-game home stand on Saturday (Sept. 22) when it hosts Clark Atlanta at 6 p.m.
POSTGAME NOTES
Team
KENNESAW STATE UNIVERSITY OWLS ATHLETIC COMMUNICATIONS
After both teams waited out a one hour and 42-minute delay, lightning struck for the Owls (2-1) as they forced a quick turnover and scored on their second offensive play as Shaquil Terrycapped a 27-yard drive with a 17-yard run, igniting Kennesaw State to its most lopsided victory over an FCS opponent in program history. The score came 1:10 into the game.
The Owls gained 417 yards on the ground, received three rushing touchdowns from quarterback Chandler Burks and 136 yards on the three first-half carries by running back Darnell Holland.
Kennesaw State scored on two of its first four possessions, then reached the end zone on its next four drives, capping the second quarter with a 70-yard run by Holland that sent the Owls into the locker room with a 42-6 halftime lead.
Box Score (PDF) | Quotes (PDF) | Notes (PDF)
The fireworks continued in the third quarter as Isaac Foster returned the second half kickoff a Kennesaw State-record 100 yards for a 49-6 lead. Two Nathan Robertson field goals and a 6-yard touchdown run by quarterback Daniel David concluded a stretch in which the Owls scored on eight straight possessions to lead 62-13 heading into the fourth quarter.
The Kennesaw State defense limited Alabama State (1-2) to 314 total yards, forced three turnovers and was led by Courtney Mills, Bryson Armstrong and Le'Vonte Larry, who had six tackles apiece. Mills had 1.5 tackles for loss, including half a sack, while Travis Bell had a forced fumble and recovery, Desmond Johnson, Jr. forced a fumble, Andrew Butcherrecovered a fumble and Demetrius Pettway returned his first career interception 34 yards.
Kennesaw State continues its four-game home stand on Saturday (Sept. 22) when it hosts Clark Atlanta at 6 p.m.
POSTGAME NOTES
Team
- The game began late after experiencing officially a one and 42-minute weather delay.
- Kennesaw State improves to 2-1 on the season and 1-0 at home. It also improves to 2-0 all-time against Alabama State.
- The win extends KSU's home-winning streak to 10 games. The Owls have not lost at Fifth Third Bank Stadium since Oct. 15, 2016 (700 days).
- The Owls have now won 14 of their last 16 games dating back to 2017.
- The Owls improve to 4-1 all-time against opponents hailing from the state of Alabama.
- Kennesaw State's 62 points is the most points scored in a game for KSU. The previous record was 58 scored against Edwards on Sept. 12, 2015.
- KSU extending its takeaway streak to 17 games with two fumble recoveries and an interception
- Kennesaw State has recorded a fumble recovery in all three games this season.
- KSU had three one-play scoring drives against ASU, the fifth one-play drive of the season and 13th in the last two years.
- The Owls had four scoring drives of less than a minute, increasing its season total to seven.
- KSU's 42 points in the first half marks the most points scored in the opening half since Oct. 10, 2016 against Furman (49).
- KSU recorded 563 yards of total offense, the second straight game with 500 or more yards.
- KSU's 14 tackles for loss is the most in program history.
- Chandler Burks recorded three rushing touchdowns for the second straight game, his seventh career game with three or more rushing touchdowns.
- Burks moves into fifth place in Big South Conference history with 33 career rushing touchdowns.
- With his three touchdowns today, Burks recorded his seventh career game to move into a tie for first place in Big South history.
- Justin Sumpter scored his second touchdown of the season, moving him into fourth place on Kennesaw State's all-time scoring list with 115 career points.
- Sumpter has the Owls' only two receiving touchdowns this season.
- Darnell Holland led the team with a career-high 136 rushing yards on three first-half carries.
- Holland's 70-yard rushing TD is the sixth-longest rushing attempt in KSU history.
- QB Daniel David's 65-yard rush in the third quarter established a career-long.
- Freshman Isaac Foster's 100-yard kickoff return was the first of his career and established a KSU record.
- Justin Thompson extended his consecutive PATs made streak to 92.
KENNESAW STATE UNIVERSITY OWLS ATHLETIC COMMUNICATIONS
UAlbany Outlasts Morgan State Bears in the End, 30-27
VIDEO HIGHLIGHTS |
The Great Danes were trailing 27-23 with about eight minutes to play when quarterback Vincent Testaverde, facing a second and 23 from his own 12-yard line, rifled a pass over the middle to a wide open Holmes, who ran untouched to the end zone in front of 6,501 fans.
Morgan State head coach Ernest T. Jones spoke about the play.
"It's tough. Those guys fought out there for us for four quarters, and they were doing everything that we asked them to do. We just didn't finish."
Postgame Stats (PDF) | Postgame Notes (PDF)
"With taking the type of chances that we take on offense and defense – you can get burned. And we got burned late in the game. It was an aggressive [play] call and I felt good about the call. We had our best player versus their best player and I was willing to live with the consequences and unfortunately their best player won."
Holmes finished 13 yards receiving shy of the school's single-game record and his touchdown was the third longest pass play in program history. He has 21 receptions for 449 yards and two TDs this season.
Ethan Stark made field goals of 27, 32 and a career-long 51 yards and Testaverde had 310 yards passing and two touchdowns for UAlbany (1-2). Testaverde, whose father Vinny played 21 seasons in the NFL, completed just 15 of 43 passes and threw four interceptions..
Sophomore cornerback Donte Small returned an interception 45-yards for a score to give Morgan State (0-3) a 27-23 lead with 7:55 to play. It marked Small's third pick of the night -- just one shy of the school record held by Craig Spencer who had 4 interceptions in a game vs. Virginia State in 1977.
Testaverde was sacked on the next play from scrimmage but then, on second-and-23, connected with Holmes for what would prove to be the winning touchdown.
The Bears lost two fumbles in the final seven minutes, including a strip-sack by Dean Grogg that was recovered by Eli Spencer with 1:49 to play.
Morgan State's junior wideout Manasseh Bailey had two receptions, a 90-yard score in the second quarter and a 19-yard touchdown in the third.
Junior DeAndre Harris had his most productive outing of the season. He connected on 7 of 18 passes for 193 yards, including a pair of TD passes to Bailey. He also led the Bears on the ground with 99 yards on 19 carries.
"I thought DeAndre played well," Jones said about his starting quarterback. "He was trying to execute the calls that we put in front of him. Again, we want to run the football and we want to run the quarterback. DeAndre was making the right reads on when to pull it and when to run it, and then he also made some big throws out there."
The Bears offense rolled up 422 yards and was effective on ground where they gashed UAlbany for 229 yards.
UP NEXT
Morgan State will travel to face North Carolina A&T (3-0) next Saturday (Sept. 22) in Greensboro, N.C.
MORGAN STATE UNIVERSITY ATHLETIC MEDIA COMMUNICATIONS
Clarion Golden Eagles Hand Lincoln Lions their Third Loss of the Season
CLARION, Pennsylvania -- Vincent Espinoza (Madera, Calif /Madera (West Hills)) tossed his first touchdown pass of the season as the Lincoln University football team lost to Clarion University 44-7 at Memorial Stadium in Clarion, Pennsylvania on Saturday.
The Lions fall to 0-3 with the loss in what is their final non-conference game. Clarion improves to 2-1 with the win.
Espinoza connected with Dashawn Brice (Brooklyn, N.Y. /Boys and Girls (Virginia State)) with six minutes left in the third quarter for the Lions only score of the game. Kendall Brooks (Washington, DC /Bell ) recovered a Golden Eagles fumble to give Lincoln possession inside Golden Eagle Territory. After a couple of incomplete passes Espinoza connected with Brice for a 42-yard touchdown pass. Cole Klubek (Biloxi, Miss.) added the extra point which made the score 27-7 at the time.
BOX SCORE
All of Lincoln's offense came through the air as the Lions finished with 123 total yards on the day Espinoza completed four passes for 75 yards and a touchodwn while Zach Green (Chesapeake, Va. /Grassfield) had one completion for 53 yards. Reginald Mays Jr. (Reisterstown, Md./Franklin (Frostburg)) had four receptions for 86 yards
Tayonte McKenzie gained 179 all-purpose yards, all of kickoff returns. Mays added a 21 yard punt return to go along with his receiving yards to finish the game with 107 all-purpose yards.
Dominique Rogers (Danbury, Conn /Henry Abbott Tech (Monroe College)) led the Lions on defense, recording 12 tackles, a sack and a forced fumble. Four of his 12 tackles were for losses totaling 23 yards.
Jovante Seard led the Golden Eagle offense, with 12 pass completions for 169 yards and three touchdowns. Jeff Clemons added 74 yards passing with eight completions and a touchdown.
The Golden Eagles struck first late in the first quarter and added two more touchdowns in the second quarter to lead 20-0 at halftime. Clemons' touchdown pass midway through the third quarter made the score 27-0 before the Lions got on the board. Clarion added two more touchdowns and a field goal to round out the scoring.
Lincoln opens conference play next week with a game at Livingstone College.
THE LINCOLN UNIVERSITY LIONS ATHLETIC COMMUNICATIONS
The Lions fall to 0-3 with the loss in what is their final non-conference game. Clarion improves to 2-1 with the win.
Espinoza connected with Dashawn Brice (Brooklyn, N.Y. /Boys and Girls (Virginia State)) with six minutes left in the third quarter for the Lions only score of the game. Kendall Brooks (Washington, DC /Bell ) recovered a Golden Eagles fumble to give Lincoln possession inside Golden Eagle Territory. After a couple of incomplete passes Espinoza connected with Brice for a 42-yard touchdown pass. Cole Klubek (Biloxi, Miss.) added the extra point which made the score 27-7 at the time.
BOX SCORE
All of Lincoln's offense came through the air as the Lions finished with 123 total yards on the day Espinoza completed four passes for 75 yards and a touchodwn while Zach Green (Chesapeake, Va. /Grassfield) had one completion for 53 yards. Reginald Mays Jr. (Reisterstown, Md./Franklin (Frostburg)) had four receptions for 86 yards
Tayonte McKenzie gained 179 all-purpose yards, all of kickoff returns. Mays added a 21 yard punt return to go along with his receiving yards to finish the game with 107 all-purpose yards.
Dominique Rogers (Danbury, Conn /Henry Abbott Tech (Monroe College)) led the Lions on defense, recording 12 tackles, a sack and a forced fumble. Four of his 12 tackles were for losses totaling 23 yards.
Jovante Seard led the Golden Eagle offense, with 12 pass completions for 169 yards and three touchdowns. Jeff Clemons added 74 yards passing with eight completions and a touchdown.
The Golden Eagles struck first late in the first quarter and added two more touchdowns in the second quarter to lead 20-0 at halftime. Clemons' touchdown pass midway through the third quarter made the score 27-0 before the Lions got on the board. Clarion added two more touchdowns and a field goal to round out the scoring.
Lincoln opens conference play next week with a game at Livingstone College.
THE LINCOLN UNIVERSITY LIONS ATHLETIC COMMUNICATIONS
Bowie State Bulldogs Take Down McKendree Bearcats 47-41 in Non-Conference Play
LEBANON, Illinois -- Bowie State University controlled the game from beginning to end and earned a 47-41 non-conference road victory at McKendree University on Saturday afternoon. The win improves the Bulldogs' record to 2-1 while the Bearcats drop to 2-1.
Bowie State racked up 570 yards of total offense with senior quarterback Amir Hall leading the attack with 352 passing yards (2 TD's) and 95 rushing yards (1 TD). Hall completed a school record 41 passes surpassing his own school tying record (34) set last season against Delta State (11/18/17) and that of Matthew Goggins (9/19/15) at Central Connecticut State. Redshirt junior Brandon Abrams (Baltimore, Md.) accounted for 91 rushing yards and two scores. Redshirt senior Lansana Sesay (Bowie, Md.) led all receivers with 114 reception yards on 11 catches. Seniors Taylor Johnson (Washington, D.C.) and Derrick Tate along with redshirt junior Oluwaleke Ajenifuja (Beltsville, Md.) led the Bulldogs defense with six tackles each.
Bowie State took opening possession 86 yards capped off by a 6-yard touchdown pass from Hall to redshirt sophomore Montez Clay (Baltimore, Md.) for the early 7-0 lead at 9:24 mark of first quarter.
McKendree counters with a 6-play, 88-yard drive, capped off by a 62-yard touchdown pass from Reece Metcalf to Matt Cole to set the score at 7-6 with 7:15 to go in opening quarter.
BOX SCORE
The Bulldogs defense holds on the next Bearcats possession and Bowie State capitalized on McKendree penalties to account for Bowie State's scoring opportunity. Hall scored on a 6-yard run and freshman Cooper McGeehanadded the extra point to give the Bulldogs a 14-6 lead with 51 seconds left in the first quarter.
With 12:29 to go in the second quarter Bowie State's Abrams busted around the left side for a 10-yard touchdown run to give the Bulldogs some breathing room at 21-6.
McKendree's Metcalf completed a 9-yard touchdown pass to Jalyn Williams at 7:41 mark of the second quarter to cut the Bowie State lead to 21-13.
BSU's Abrams scored his second rushing touchdown of the afternoon, this time from five yards out and McGeehan's PAT pushed the Bulldogs lead to 28-13 with 4:14 remaining before halftime.
Senior Maurice Williams (Baltimore, Md.) pounded in for a 1-yard touchdown to extend the Bowie State Bulldogs' lead to 35-13 at halftime.
With 8:30 on the third quarter clock, Hall connects with redshirt senior Daryl Jasper (Capital Heights, Md.) for 6-yard score, giving Bowie State a 41-13 cushion, capping off a 12-play, 60-yard drive.
Metcalf threw a 26-yard touchdown pass to Preston Thompson at the 7:05 mark of the third quarter but the McKendree Bearcats trailed 41-20.
The Bulldogs respond on its next possession with a 65-yard touchdown run by Hall to give Bowie State a 47-20 advantage with 5:40 left in the third quarter. The 65-yarder by Hall was the longest of his career.
The Bearcats were able to get six points back on their next possession via a Metcalf pass to Zach Bobos for 10-yard touchdown. Josh Lazaro's point after attempt was good, setting the score at 47-27.
McKendree trims Bowie State lead to 47-34 with 10:12 left in the contest after Metcalf pass to Josh Revay for 10-yard touchdown.
The Bearcats scored as time expired when Metcalf tossed a 9-yard touchdown pass Revay as time expired to account for the final tally of 47-41.
Metcalf threw a school record six touchdown passes (354 yards) for McKendree, completing 25-of-44 passes. His primary target was Revay with a team-high eight receptions for 68 yards and two touchdowns.
Bowie State will closeout its four-game, season opening road trek on Saturday (September 22) at Saint Augustine's University (Raleigh, N.C.). Kickoff is set for 1 p.m. in the George Williams Athletic Complex on the Falcons campus.
BOWIE STATE UNIVERSITY ATHLETICS MEDIA COMMUNICATIONS
Bowie State racked up 570 yards of total offense with senior quarterback Amir Hall leading the attack with 352 passing yards (2 TD's) and 95 rushing yards (1 TD). Hall completed a school record 41 passes surpassing his own school tying record (34) set last season against Delta State (11/18/17) and that of Matthew Goggins (9/19/15) at Central Connecticut State. Redshirt junior Brandon Abrams (Baltimore, Md.) accounted for 91 rushing yards and two scores. Redshirt senior Lansana Sesay (Bowie, Md.) led all receivers with 114 reception yards on 11 catches. Seniors Taylor Johnson (Washington, D.C.) and Derrick Tate along with redshirt junior Oluwaleke Ajenifuja (Beltsville, Md.) led the Bulldogs defense with six tackles each.
Bowie State took opening possession 86 yards capped off by a 6-yard touchdown pass from Hall to redshirt sophomore Montez Clay (Baltimore, Md.) for the early 7-0 lead at 9:24 mark of first quarter.
McKendree counters with a 6-play, 88-yard drive, capped off by a 62-yard touchdown pass from Reece Metcalf to Matt Cole to set the score at 7-6 with 7:15 to go in opening quarter.
BOX SCORE
The Bulldogs defense holds on the next Bearcats possession and Bowie State capitalized on McKendree penalties to account for Bowie State's scoring opportunity. Hall scored on a 6-yard run and freshman Cooper McGeehanadded the extra point to give the Bulldogs a 14-6 lead with 51 seconds left in the first quarter.
With 12:29 to go in the second quarter Bowie State's Abrams busted around the left side for a 10-yard touchdown run to give the Bulldogs some breathing room at 21-6.
McKendree's Metcalf completed a 9-yard touchdown pass to Jalyn Williams at 7:41 mark of the second quarter to cut the Bowie State lead to 21-13.
BSU's Abrams scored his second rushing touchdown of the afternoon, this time from five yards out and McGeehan's PAT pushed the Bulldogs lead to 28-13 with 4:14 remaining before halftime.
Senior Maurice Williams (Baltimore, Md.) pounded in for a 1-yard touchdown to extend the Bowie State Bulldogs' lead to 35-13 at halftime.
With 8:30 on the third quarter clock, Hall connects with redshirt senior Daryl Jasper (Capital Heights, Md.) for 6-yard score, giving Bowie State a 41-13 cushion, capping off a 12-play, 60-yard drive.
Metcalf threw a 26-yard touchdown pass to Preston Thompson at the 7:05 mark of the third quarter but the McKendree Bearcats trailed 41-20.
The Bulldogs respond on its next possession with a 65-yard touchdown run by Hall to give Bowie State a 47-20 advantage with 5:40 left in the third quarter. The 65-yarder by Hall was the longest of his career.
The Bearcats were able to get six points back on their next possession via a Metcalf pass to Zach Bobos for 10-yard touchdown. Josh Lazaro's point after attempt was good, setting the score at 47-27.
McKendree trims Bowie State lead to 47-34 with 10:12 left in the contest after Metcalf pass to Josh Revay for 10-yard touchdown.
The Bearcats scored as time expired when Metcalf tossed a 9-yard touchdown pass Revay as time expired to account for the final tally of 47-41.
Metcalf threw a school record six touchdown passes (354 yards) for McKendree, completing 25-of-44 passes. His primary target was Revay with a team-high eight receptions for 68 yards and two touchdowns.
Bowie State will closeout its four-game, season opening road trek on Saturday (September 22) at Saint Augustine's University (Raleigh, N.C.). Kickoff is set for 1 p.m. in the George Williams Athletic Complex on the Falcons campus.
BOWIE STATE UNIVERSITY ATHLETICS MEDIA COMMUNICATIONS
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