Monday, October 1, 2018

WEEK 5: SIAC Football Players of the Week

ATLANTA, Georgia --McKinley Habersham (Albany State) was named Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (SIAC) Football Offensive Player of the Week, while Davoris Thomas (Tuskegee) earned Defensive Player of the Week, released by the league office on Monday.
 
Jordy Andrade (Morehouse) was also tabbed Special Teams Player of the Week alongside Kelvin Murray (Morehouse) who earned Newcomer of the Week.
 
OFFENSIVE – McKinley Habersham, Albany State
Running Back  |  5’9  |  180  |  Savannah, Georgia
 
McKinley Habersham led the charge for the Golden Rams with a season high 140 yards on 15 touches. The first play of the second half came courtesy of Habersham, a 46-yard carry down to the Golden Bears' 26-yard line. After two called timeouts, Albany State sealed the win with a fourth down conversion on a one yard carry by Habersham.
 
DEFENSIVE – Davoris Thomas, Tuskegee
Linebacker  |  5’10  |  195  |  Mobile, Alabama
 
Thomas led Tuskegee's defense with 12 tackles, one tackle for a loss, a forced fumble and a game clinching fumble recovery that halted a late Lane drive in the 4th quarter with 1:07 left to play. The Mobile, Ala. native assisted the Golden Tigers in holding the Dragons scoreless for three quarters and only allowed 69 yards passing. TU's defense surrendered 183 yards of total offense.
 
SPECIAL TEAMS – Jordy Andrade, Morehouse
Punter  |  6’0  |  200  |  Union City, Georgia
 
The Morehouse freshman punter Jordy Andrade (Union City, Ga.) had an outstanding day in the Maroon Tigers come from behind victory over Kentucky State as he gave MHC the field position that they needed in the second half. Andrade finished the day with five punts for 184 yards an average of 36.8 yards per punt including three (3) punts inside the KSU 20 yard line and a long of 48 yards that pinned the Thorobreds deep in their own territory at the three yard line.
 
NEWCOMER – Kelvin Murray, Morehouse
Defensive Back  |  6’1  |  200  |  Orlando, Florida
 
The junior defensive back transfer led the defense in Saturdays come from behind victory over SIAC foe Kentucky State as he finished with three tackles and one key interception that he returned 14-yards to the KSU one yard line which set up the go ahead touchdown for the Maroon Tigers.
 
 OTHER PLAYERS NOMINATED
 

OFFENSIVE PLAYER OF THE WEEKSanto Dunn (Morehouse); Danye Washington (Benedict); Roger Thomas (Clark Atlanta)
DEFENSIVE PLAYER OF THE WEEKRobert Cummings (Benedict); Coemba Jones (Albany State); Brayce Mckinzie (Lane); Kirey Thompson (Clark Atlanta)
SPECIAL TEAMS PLAYER OF THE WEEKCarlos Saldana (Clark Atlanta); Gabriel Ballinas (Albany State)
NEWCOMER OF THE WEEKTyrone Mixon (Clark Atlanta); Kevin Greenhow (Central State)


SIAC STRATEGIC COMMUNICATIONS

Thomas Named SIAC Defensive Player Of The Week

ATLANTA, Georgia -- Tuskegee University linebacker Davoris Thomas has been tabbed as the Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (SIAC) Defensive Player of the Week. The league office made the announcement Monday morning from Atlanta. 



Tuskegee- Linebacker  |  5'10  |  195  |  Mobile, Alabama
Thomas led Tuskegee's defense with 12 tackles, one tackle for a loss, a forced fumble and a game clinching fumble recovery that halted a late Lane drive in the 4th quarter with 1:07 left to play. The Mobile, Ala. native assisted the Golden Tigers in holding the Dragons scoreless for three quarters and only allowed 69 yards passing. TU's defense surrendered 183 yards of total offense in the 17-8 win which gave the team its first conference win of the season.

Thomas is the fourth player in five weeks to be recognized by the league office. 

Saturday Tuskegee faces Morehouse College in the 83rd Annual Tuskegee/Morehouse Classic from Columbus, Ga.. Kickoff is set for 1 p.m. CST and the game can be seen live on ESPN3 with live audio coverage on the Tuskegee Digital Network


TUSKEGEE UNIVERSITY GOLDEN TIGERS ATHLETIC COMMUNICATIONS

FAMU Volleyball Takes First Place in MEAC Southern Division

MORE TO COME...

The Road to the Championship, HBCU Band Pageantry Week 5























Tennessee State Men's Basketball Holds First Official Practice of 2018-19 Season

NASHVILLE, Tennessee -- With the first exhibition game just over a month away, the Tennessee State men’s basketball team held its first official practice of the 2018-19 season on Sunday night at the Gentry Center.

First-year Head Coach Brian “Penny” Collins, donning a Robert Covington Philadelphia 76ers jersey, guided the squad through the first full team workout.

Coming off a 15-15 record in 2017-18, the Tigers open the year with an Oct. 31 home exhibition game versus Tennessee Wesleyan before the season opener on Nov. 10 at Lipscomb. TSU features six returning letterwinners including seniors Armani Chaney and Stokley Chaffee Jr.

PHOTO GALLERY

TSU HEAD COACH BRIAN “PENNY” COLLINS
(thoughts on the first official practice)
“I think our guys’ spirit and energy has been on a high level from the summer all the way through preseason workouts. Tonight’s practice was really no different. They have that same spirit and energy - It was really high. Tonight was different because it’s the first time we practiced over an hour. Now they just need to know how to sustain it and have that energy for an entire practice, which is very similar to how it’s going to be in the game as well.”

(on if he puts a lot of thought behind it being his first official practice as TSU’s head coach)
“I really haven’t because we’ve been together so much. We’ve had over 30 opportunities to be on the court together, so to me, it’s just another day. We did a lot of new stuff today with our guys trying to get game ready. Anytime you’re doing new things, it’s a lot more teaching than playing, so today’s practice was a little choppy because of that.”

(on the focus of practice)
“I think the focus of today was just being able to maintain energy and keep that same energy from the beginning of practice all the way to the end. We’re just getting our bodies and minds ready for the grind and making them understand that it’s not going to be easy this year. We’re not going to be able to just show up and beat people. We have to outwork them in every aspect of the game and overcome adversity.”

(on the area he’s most impressed with his team)
“I think the best thing is that our guys care about each other, and they really want to get better. They’re sponges right now. They want to win, and they want to do something special. They’re playing hard for me. I think that’s the most important thing right now for our guys. I know one thing for sure – when we play a game, they’re going to play extremely hard for me, for themselves and for each other.”

TENNESSEE STATE UNIVERSITY ATHLETIC COMMUNICATIONS

FAMU Homecoming Gospel Concert


Published on Sep 27, 2018


Join award-winning artists Fred Hammond, The Walls Group and the FAMU Gospel Choir this #FAMUHomecoming for #TheExperience you will never forget! Tickets available at the FAMU Box Office located at 1800 Wahnish Way, Tallahassee, Florida 32307 (General Admission $20.00, FAMU students $10.00, TCC and FSU students $15.00). General Admission tickets are also available at ticketmaster.com. Additional fees may apply. Tickets are going fast!

Beyond The Court: As Year 5 Approaches, GCAC Commissioner Steve Martin Stays 'Focus Forward'

GCAC Commissioner Steve Martin with GCAC Digital's Casey Ferrand
GCAC Commissioner Steve Martin with GCAC Digital's Casey Ferrand
NEW ORLEANS, Louisiana -- It's the final day of the 2018 Gulf Coast Athletic Conference Annual Meeting, the conference's yearly gathering of its coaches, faculty athletic reps and athletic directors. It's been a productive meeting in Little Rock--one of the best in many years, reminiscent of the "old GCAC," according to one athletic director--and now the final meeting of the conference's executive committee is set to begin.

GCAC Commissioner Steve Martin, a giant of a man standing six-foot-four with deep set eyes and a freshly shaved bald head, is restless.

The meeting was set to begin at 9:00 a.m. It's 9:05 a.m. One athletic director is late; others are still enjoying the continental breakfast. Martin, however, is ready for the day's business to commence.

"I didn't sleep well," he mumbles, opening his laptop to take notes. It's become a common theme for Martin--a growing urgency, a gnawing sense of unease.

Martin has enjoyed the camaraderie of being among his colleagues as he enters his 5th year as commissioner. But the pontification and lecturing have gotten trite--it's time for the work to begin.

That, too, has been a theme of Martin's life. The 56-year-old former NBA executive has always had an intolerance for minutiae. He is, as a 1991 Collegiate Collection trading card bearing his visage suggested, "at his best in big games."

Martin's instinctive ability to rise to the occasion is, perhaps, his biggest strength. And it's a characteristic that has suited him well as commissioner of the GCAC. Sure, the conference has experienced growth under his watch--a conference-wide deal with apparel brand adidas, sponsorship by the Wyndham Garden hotel--but Martin is unwilling to dwell on past successes.

To Martin, it's always a 7-game series. And whether he's up 3 games or down 2, he always approaches his work with the same sense of purpose. It's become his calling card, dating back to his days at Georgetown University. Whether it's a bad back, a dislocated shoulder, or a broken finger, you just couldn't keep him out of the game.



THE GAP

Martin's tireless work ethic was borne out of his parents' example. He grew up in an area of New Orleans unofficially called "The Gap," a predominately black, working class neighborhood in New Orleans East.

Martin is the youngest of 8 children born to George and Naomi Martin, who instilled in both he and his brothers and sisters a puritanical work ethic and sense of purpose.

"I did come from a two-family household, but my family worked, on average, 3 jobs. On average. He was never home because, you know, he had to support 8 kids. He wasn't home, but we always felt his presence."

Success runs in the Martin family. His eldest brother, George, Jr. is a decorated Vietnam War veteran who was awarded a Purple Heart for his service (Martin admires him the most). D'Artagnan was drafted in the fourth round of the 1971 NFL Draft, and played defensive back for the New Orleans Saints. Carvelle, too, was athletically inclined. He played basketball at Dillard University, and had a tryout with the Detroit Lions.

Those were tumultuous times in the city, and in the nation--a time of civil and social upheaval. The Martin family was, like most, divided by the means by which equality could be achieved.

"I grew up in the time of civil rights," recalls Martin. "My mother was a hardline believer in Martin Luther King. My brothers, which were teenagers and older, hardline believers in Malcolm X. So you come into a house where one faction has to do with Martin Luther King and one faction has to do with Malcolm X, you're going to learn something."

A native of New Orleans, Martin attended New Orleans' historic St. Augustine High School, one of the nation's first all-boy's private, predominately black Catholic schools in the nation, graduating in 1975.

At St. Augustine, Martin excelled as a member of the "Purple Knights" basketball team, where he was a two-year starter. As a senior, he was named All-District, All-City and All-State and served as captain of the varsity team. Martin also achieved in the classroom, earning academic honors each year at St. Augustine. He was also named New Orleans Player of the Year

To this day, Martin is still regarded as one of the 'Top 100 high school basketball players in New Orleans history" by SportsNOLA.com.

After graduating from St. Augustine in 1975, Martin attended Georgetown University in, where he continued his basketball career under legendary Hoyas Head Coach John Thompson. Martin was the first player from New Orleans recruited to the institution, which sparked a tradition that stands to this day of the Hoyas recruiting in the Crescent City.

Thompson was impressed by Martin's ability to adapt to the team's needs.

"The best thing about Steve is his flexibility," said Thompson. "He can play quick forward or either guard position. When you need scoring, he scores. And when you need rebounding, he rebounds."

After graduating with a degree in accounting in 1979, Martin was drafted in the 10th round by the Washington Bullets. Martin would later go on to work as an accountant with Ernest & Ernest before beginning his career in athletics as director of corporate affairs for the NBA, a role he served in for more than a decade.

In that role, Martin gained a keen appreciation for the multifaceted aspects of sports, and the hard work it takes to effectively run a sports organization. Martin was one of about 20 employees working at the league office at that time.

After leaving New York, Martin accepted a role as as senior vice-president of the New Orleans Hornets, working under then-owner George Shinn. Martin was directly responsible for a number of community outreach, development and beautification efforts for the team--a legacy that endures to this day on public basketball courts around the city such as Shakespeare Park (now A.L. Davis) and Digby Playground, which still bear the Hornets team logo, as well as libraries at Walter L. Cohen High School and John Dibert Elementary.

STOPPING THE BLEEDING

A respected figure in local and national sports, Martin joined the GCAC in 2014 following the retirement of Dr. Thomas Howell, who had served as the conference's commissioner since its inception in 1981.

What he found was a conference in disarray, struggling to adapt to a changing sports landscape and experiencing a mass exodus of member institutions, including the recently-departed Fisk (Tenn.) and Voorhees (S.C.) universities.

Belhaven, The University of Mobile, William Carey, LSU Shreveport and Loyola had all departed some years earlier, bolting for competing conferences.

"We did have some teams leave when I first took on the role,' Martin said. "We needed to stop the bleeding first, and then build to see how we could get other schools on board. We needed to hold the line and get schools on board and get them to stay with us. We started by making sure those who were with us stayed with us, and then I started asked the presidents to use their influence to bring on new members. So, that was a challenge. Finally, we were really able to stabilize, and now we're seeing the growth."

In order to make the conference attractive to new member institutions, the GCAC needed a facelift, and Martin was, in characteristic fashion, in big game form.

"When I first started in this position, I did a presentation to the Council of Presidents that consisted of a 5-year strategic plan, and then within that plan it consisted of marketing, branding, stability of the conference," said Martin. "It also consisted of growth of the conference, sponsorships--all of those elements that that time I thought would really project to make us a much better conference overall, and a more desirable conference."

Martin has accomplished much of what he laid out in that 5-year plan.

He began with a comprehensive rebranding effort, retooling the conference logo and Web site, introducing social media to the conference, and overseeing a process to streamline the conference's by-laws. He asked for, and was granted, greater autonomy over the conference's championships, focusing on improving the overall fan experience, as well as the venue quality.

Martin also entreated the Council of Presidents, the Gulf Coast Athletic Conference's governing body, to hire full-time athletic directors, as well as invest in their sports information, both through funding the sports information director position, and through modernizing their sports information by upgrading their Web sites, developing social media strategies, and live streaming their games and matches--an idea that's still central to his overall strategy as commissioner.

"When I first started, none of our schools were live streaming, and I thought that was an important element to give us extended exposure outside of our markets," said Martin. "So we started with no schools live streaming, and now we have just about everyone live streaming. Live streaming became extremely important. These elements gave us the ability to extend our brand outside of our gyms, arenas and outside of our markets."

Former Dillard University Head Volleyball Coach Yolanda Brown, who served under both Commissioners Howell and Martin, immediately saw the impact of Martin's changes.

"I see the stability in the conference," said Brown. "From conference wide partnerships, apparel and hotels. I appreciate the conference being more involved with championships and establishing a standard of excellence."

Tougaloo (Miss.) College Director of Athletics Dr. James C. Coleman also lauds Martin's work as commissioner.

"He has brought about transformative changes to the conference such as sponsorships, staffing, brand and marketing collaborations," said Coleman. "He has been a great asset to the GCAC and I honored to work with him."

Improving the quality of the conference's tournaments and championships was also key to Martin's retooling efforts. Martin sought to move the championships to what he terms "world class venues," including historic Tad Gormley Stadium and Mississippi's renowned Choctaw Trails.

FOCUS FORWARD

As Martin embarks on his 5th year as GCAC Commissioner, he remains as optimistic as ever about the direction of the conference, even as some criticize his leadership style.

Martin's work speaks for itself. There is a single item from his initial 5-year plan has eluded him: increasing the number of schools within the GCAC to an even 10.

"One thing that I didn't fully accomplish in 5 years, my goal was to have 10, maybe 12 schools within a 5-year period. Right now we're at 8, I feel confident we'll have 10. But it takes work. It takes work to expand."

Under Martin's leadership, the GCAC has grown to 8 members, with Rust (Miss.) College joining in 2018. Two other schools have recently expressed interest in joining the conference, as well.

Still, Martin drew heavy criticism in 2017 when Stillman (Ala.) College opted to join the Southern States Conference, despite having initially declared intent to join the GCAC. Some blamed Martin directly for the college's decision.

When asked how he responds to his critics, Martin keeps things in perspective.

"I try not to," laughs Martin. "But you have to look at who is being critical and for what reason they're being critical. When you take that into consideration, then you may not need to respond. It's the factor of who's being critical, and why they're being critical that factor, for the most part. That will dictate how and if I respond."

The role of a commissioner can be daunting, requiring the management of multiple interests and juggling competing personalities.

"The most difficult part is building consensus," said Martin. "Because you have to build consensus from the president's standpoint, and then you have to work it down to the athletic directors, and even to some extent down to the coaches. I can sit and I can have a vision of what I see, but I still have to sell that vision to our council of presidents, and they have to buy into it...building consensus, getting everyone on the same page.

GULF COAST ATHLETIC CONFERENCE MEDIA RELATIONS

MEAC Football: NCCU vs FAMU (Video Highlights)


Published on Sep 30, 2018

The Gulf Coast Offense is back at FAMU and they dropped a double nickel on the road against MEAC opponent NCCU.

Norfolk State Football: Top-5 Plays vs. Delaware State (Video)



NORFOLK STATE UNIVERSITY ATHLETIC COMMUNICATIONS

Texas Southern Basketball host first official practice of 2018-19 season

HOUSTON, Texas -- The Texas Southern Men's Basketball team officially began preparations for the 2018-19 campaign as they held their first practice this week under new Tigers head coach Johnny Jones.

"We're really excited to get out on the floor and start practicing," said Jones. "We've got a really good group of guys this season and we're excited to start forming those bonds and chemistry that we'll need to be a really good basketball team."
This years' team features several familiar faces along with the additions of talented transfers. Guard Derrick Bruce and center Trayvon Reed headline the Tigers' group of returning key contributors form last season along with guard Robert Lewis.

TSU also welcomed the addition of LSU transfers guard Jalyn Patterson and forward Jeremy Combs.

TSU 2018-19 MEN'S BASKETBALL ROSTER

"We plan on playing an exciting brand of basketball and we would love to encourage our fan base to support us at our two non-conference home games as well as our games in the state of Texas at Baylor, Texas A&M and Lamar," said Jones.

The Tigers are slated to open the season on Tuesday, Nov. 6 at Baylor.

TEXAS SOUTHERN UNIVERSITY ATHLETIC MEDIA COMMUNICATIONS

UDC Firebirds Soar Past LeMoyne, 5-2

Milic improved to 4-1 in singles play this season with her match-clinching victory today.
SYRACUSE, New York – The University of the District of Columbia women's tennis team claimed two of three doubles matches and four of six singles matches to earn a 5-2 road victory vs. LeMoyne College Sat. afternoon at Skytop Tennis Courts.

The Firebirds, winners of three straight dual matches, improved to 4-1 overall with today's win while the Dolphins fell to 5-2 overall.
The match began with doubles play, where the Firebirds have managed to secure the doubles point every match this season. UDC kept its streak alive today as its No. 1 and 2 doubles pairs both remained unbeaten in dual match play. Simoné Pärn and Marija Milic teamed up for a 6-0 win at No. 1, and Anastasiia Danylova and Joanna Skrzypczynska came through with a 6-4 victory at No. 2.
Pärn continued the Firebirds' momentum as she kicked off singles play with a 6-3, 6-2 victory over Tiffany Hamdan at No. 1. She is currently 5-0 this season in dual match singles play.
Danylova followed with a 6-3, 6-1 win vs. Camila Hamala at No. 5, moving UDC within a singles point of clinching the match.
The next two singles decisions at No. 4 and 6 went the Dolphins' way, but a resounding comeback win by Milic, after she had lost the first set, 6-1, clinched the victory for the Firebirds. She would defeat Birdem Oz, 1-6, 6-4, 6-3 at the No. 2 spot to earn the decisive 4th point.
Joanna Skrzypczynska then, for good measure, grinded out a hard-fought, 7-5, 1-6, 7-5 win vs. Caroline St. Antoine at No. 3, as she continued her stellar play in this her rookie season with UDC.
Next up, the Firebirds have another non-conference road match at Millersville University on Wed., Oct. 3 at 2 p.m.

UNIVERSITY OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA SPORTS INFORMATION

Wiley Lady Wildcats Dominate Texas College Steers

TYLER, Texas -- The Wiley College volleyball team kept Texas College winless in Red River Athletic Conference play with a sweep Saturday at Gus F. Taylor Gymnasium.

The win snaps a two-game losing streak. The Lady Wildcats improve to 5-1 on the road with their 23rd consecutive victory over the Lady Steers.
With 44 kills on 90 attempts, Wiley College's attack was far superior to Texas College – which recorded 19 kills in 75 attempts. The Lady Wildcats hit .389 to the Lady Steers' .027. Larissa Francisco (JR/Sao Paulo, Brazil) led all players with 10 kills. With a team-leading 10 digs, she recorded her third double-double. Saadia Sahadeo (SO/Washington D.C.) also had a strong game with nine kills in 13 attempts. She also led the team with a solo block and two block assists. Alexia Souza(JR/Taubate, Sao Paulo, Brazil) assisted on 31 of Wiley College's 44 kills. Alia Scott (FR/Houston, Texas) made her third start at libero –tallying eight digs.
Wiley College improves to 9-2 and 3-2 in Red River Athletic Conference play."Larissa and Alia are going to be keys to our team the rest of the season," head coach Mike MacNeill said. "We need to keep them involved and disciplined to continue to be successful."
The Lady Wildcats (9-2, 3-2 in RRAC) led nearly the entire match – only trailing briefly in the second set. This was the second victory – where Wiley College won all three sets by 10 or more points.
Wiley College will return home for a nonconference match against Texas Wesleyan University at 6 p.m. Tuesday. The Lady Wildcats are looking for their first win against the Lady Rams since 2012 when they were conference opponents.
"Texas Wesleyan is a quality team," MacNeill said. "I haven't seen much of them this year other than they have played tough schedule under a new coach. They have been successful through much of their year. We have to come out and play Wiley College volleyball and we will compete with anybody."
NOTABLES
  • Akyhya Hudson (FR/Atlanta, Georgia) and Denisse Pena (JR/Ciudad Juarez, Chihuahua) received their first action of the season
  • The Lady Wildcats sweep Texas College for the 22nd time in program history
  • Wiley College improves to 7-4 following a loss under Mike MacNeill
  • The Lady Wildcats move to 7-1 in three-set matches
  • Wiley College is 2-1 on Saturday
  • Alexia Souza moves into fourth on the all-time assist list.
WILEY COLLEGE WILDCATS SPORTS INFORMATION

Florida A&M University New Housing Plan Approved By the State University System of Florida

FAMU’s New Housing Plan Approved By the State University System of Florida

TALLAHASSEE, Florida -- Florida A&M University (FAMU) received a favorable vote that will allow the University to construct a new 700-bed residence hall with a dining facility. The residence hall will be located on the main campus and will consist of two (2) four-story “H-shaped” student residence buildings, each with an east and west wing, with 350 double-occupancy bedrooms (including shared bathrooms). The new housing facilities will include laundry facilities, vending areas, common student lounges, study rooms, recreation/TV/computer rooms, and administrative offices.

The State University System Board of Governors (BOG) approved a resolution that outlines how FAMU will finance the project, including participating in the U.S. Department of Education’s Historically Black College and University (HBCU) Capital Financing Program. The program will also provide funds to address the significant maintenance needs of older facilities. As a formality, the state’s Division of Bond Finance Board will need to adopt the resolution.

Earlier this year, the Florida Legislature amended legislation that paved the way for FAMU to participate in the federal program for the first time. The construction of the residence halls is estimated at a total cost of $60 million, which consists of $54.5 million for planning, equipment, soft costs, and building construction, $2.8 million for utility infrastructure and $2.7 million for a dining facility.

“Through the HBCU Capital Finance Program, we now have access to the lowest cost of funds available in the marketplace,” said FAMU President Larry Robinson, Ph.D. “The recent positive Board vote sends a strong message. By the fall of 2020, FAMU will be providing its students with additional 21st-century living and learning spaces that they so richly deserve.”
FAMU Athletics
On August 27 and 28, Governors Jay Patel and Tim Cerio spent a day touring FAMU’s residence halls along with historic facilities after meeting with President Robinson, students, senior leadership and faculty. Staff provided an overview of the University’s Master Plan and the need to replace aging buildings with new facilities to accommodate demands for on-campus housing.

FAMU’s enrollment has increased steadily since the fall of 2016, and the need for additional living space is on the rise. According to University Housing, FAMU’s residence halls have 2,543 beds and can accommodate approximately 26 percent of the enrollment. The University’s goal is to increase that capacity to 3,600 beds to accommodate 30 percent of the student body by 2022.

Patel serves on the BOG’s Facilities Committee and expressed an interest in helping the state’s only public historically Black university expand its global reach and capacity.

“I’ve reviewed the concept with FAMU and the Board of Governors’ staff, and the University is in a good position,” said Patel, during his visit. “You have a beautiful campus. You have plenty of room to grow. I see the student activities. You have a master plan, and there’s a dire need to look at the future.”

Cerio serves on the BOG’s Budget and Finance Committee.

“The tour provided me with great insight regarding the need to expand FAMU’s student housing and upgrade infrastructure,” said Cerio. “Furthermore, with our Board’s focus on student achievement, the new 700-bed facility will do a great deal to assist in that effort. This is a great project for FAMU, and I applaud the efforts of President Robinson and his leadership team.”

Residence halls such as Palmetto North, Truth Hall and Paddyfote will be decommissioned with the opening of the new student housing and dining facility.

FLORIDA A&M UNIVERSITY STRATEGIC COMMUNICATIONS

PVAMU Men's Golf Wins Black College HOF Tournament

NEWMAN, Georgia – The SWAC Champion Prairie View A&M men's golf team won the Black College Hall of Fame Tournament at Summer Grove Golf Course just outside of Atlanta.

Golf Win at BCHOFThe Panthers shot three-over par 579 to win by seven shots over Florida A&M and ahead of Alabama State, Savannah State, North Carolina A&T, Texas Southern, Maryland Eastern Shore, and North Carolina Central in the eight-team event.

Lorenzo Elbert Jr. earned low medalist honors, posting back-to-back rounds under par. He opened with a six-under par 66 and finished with a two-under par 70 in the final round in shooting eight-under 136.

John Jones Jr. also shot under par in the final round. Jones shot two-over 74 in the opening round before closing with a one-under 71 for a two-day total of 145.

Zane Brooks shot 149 (76-73), just ahead of teammates Laurence Crea (150; 75-75) and Jordan Stagg (152; 78-74).

The Panthers return to action Oct. 21 and 22 in the Gulf Shores Intercollegiate in Gulf Shores, Ala.

PRAIRIE VIEW A&M UNIVERSITY PANTHERS ATHLETIC COMMUNICATIONS

Arbaiza’s Late Double-Overtime Goal Sends UDC Firebirds to 2-1 Victory vs. Molloy

WASHINGTON, D.C. -- Elvin Arbaiza's goal with nine seconds remaining in double-overtime lifted the host University of the District of Columbia men's soccer team to a breathtaking, 2-1 East Coast Conference victory Sunday afternoon vs. Molloy College.


Elvin Arbaiza scored the game-winner with only nine seconds remaining in double overtime.
Elvin Arbaiza scored the game-winner with only nine seconds remaining in double overtime.
The clock was stopped with 21 seconds remaining to set up for a Firebirds free kick along the left sideline from just beyond midfield. Senior defender Thomas Alvarez dropped a beautiful free kick into the middle of the box, which was headed by sophomore defender Pablo Basarte to the left side of the box and a waiting Arbaiza, who booted the ball straight into the left corner of the net for the gamewinner.

The Firebirds improved to 3-5-1 overall and 1-2 in league play with today's win, while Molloy fell to 2-8 and 0-4 in the ECC.

 BOX SCORE

UDC, anxious to get back into the win column after three consecutive one-goal losses, out-shot Molloy, 27-9, including an 11-3 disparity in shots on goal. Still, the Firebirds were frustrated all day by the stellar goalkeeping of the Lions' Raul Bonilla, who stopped nine of 11 shots he faced in a complete game effort.

The hosts jumped out to a 1-0 lead nearly 20 minutes in when senior forward Raphael Pacano scored his first goal of the season on a well-placed cross by All-American midfielder Gabriel Torres. Although UDC out-shot its host, 10-5 in the first half, and the Firebirds had the majority of the quality scoring chances throughout the 45-minute span, Molloy managed to even the score just minutes before halftime, on its only shot on goal of the period – an unassisted goal by Angelo Bordenca.

UDC continued to be the way more productive team on the offensive end throughout the second half, out-shooting the Lions, 13-3, but neither team could manage the go-ahead goal before the end of regulation.

Neither team could even generate a shot attempt in the first overtime, but a maddening day for the Firebirds nearly ended in disaster on a breakaway attempt by the Lions with about 1:30 remaining. Molloy's Anthony Cestaro looked to have a clear path to the goal when he was upended by a cleanly-executed slide tackle to save the day by senior midfielder Kelvin Herrera.

The Firebirds nearly broke the tie just before the 108th minute in the 2nd overtime when Pacano, from about 18 yards out, had one of his six shots of the day clang off the crossbar. With only about two minutes remaining, and the Lions stampeding down the other end of the field, it looked as though the best UDC could hope for was to preserve a tie.

Molloy attempted just its 3rd shot on goal of the day with just over a minute left in the 2nd overtime period. UDC freshman goalkeeper easily stopped Nikola Aleksic's header shot for his 2nd save of the game, and he quickly threw the outlet pass out to Gabriel Torres so he could immediately start working the ball back up the field as the clock approached one minute.

Ultimately, Torres drew a foul right around midfield along the left sideline, which led the way for Alvarez's free-kick and Arbaiza's late-game heroics. The game-winning goal was the senior transfer's first of the year, and only his 4th shot this season.

Next up, UDC will host ECC foe University of Bridgeport on Wed., Oct. 3 at 3 p.m.

UNIVERSITY OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA SPORTS INFORMATION

Alabama A&M Football Review with " Coach Connell Maynor"




Published on Sep 30, 2018



Alabama A&M Bulldogs vs. Jackson State Tigers VETERANS MEMORIAL STADIUM September 29, 2018

Sunday, September 30, 2018

Alcorn’s Defense Shuts Down Southern for Fourth Consecutive Win

BATON ROUGE, Louisiana – Allowing just 139 yards of total offense, the defense of the Alcorn State University football program shined in a 20-3 victory over Southern on a rainy Saturday evening at A.W. Mumford Stadium.

It was the fourth win a row for Alcorn (4-1, 2-0 SWAC), which spoiled Southern's (2-3, 1-1 SWAC) Homecoming night.

The defense gave up just 76 passing yards and 63 rushing yards. SU's lone score came after a kick-off was returned to the red zone, but the Braves held the Jags to a field goal.

Alcorn also scored seven points defensively on a pick-six by sophomore Qwynnterrio Cole.

BOX SCORE

The Braves led 3-0 at half when the offense scored on their opening drive of the third quarter. The scoring play was a one-yard run by junior De'Shawn Waller. Cole's pick-six then made it 17-3 and gave Alcorn all of the momentum.

Junior Noah Johnson threw for 138 yards and rushed for a game-high 81 yards. The Braves ran for 243 yards as a team which included 57 yards by senior P.J. Simmons, 54 yards by Waller and 50 yards by freshman Marquise Forman. Junior Chris Blair led the receiving core with 79 yards.

Alcorn limited SU quarterback John Lampley to just 9-of-26 throwing with an interception.

To open the game, Southern had the ball first and was stopped, three-and-out, after a big tackle for a loss by junior Brelion Hollis on first down.

On Alcorn's first possession, the Braves moved the chains a couple times on runs by Simmons to cross midfield. Alcorn then faced 3rd-and-10 when Blair hauled in a 14-yard pass to move the ball to the SU 23. Though, the Braves got backed up by a chop block penalty and were sacked on third down which forced a punt.

Near the end of the first quarter, the Jags started with good field position after an interception by Demerio Houston on a deep route. SU moved the ball to the Alcorn 20 when the Braves got a stop, and a 37-yard field goal attempt sailed wide-right to keep the game scoreless.

A big play in the second quarter came after the Jags recovered a muffed punt at the Alcorn 46. Though, the Braves defense continued to hold strong and forced SU to punt after a rush for no gain, followed by two incomplete passes.

On the ensuing series, the Braves got it started by a 36-yard reception by Blair through the middle to move into SU territory. On the very next play, Simmons rushed up the middle for 13 yards to the SU 27. Alcorn got on the board with a 32-yard field goal by junior Corey McCullough to lead 3-0 with 50 seconds left in the half.

The Braves ran it all the way down the field on the first drive of the second half. It started with an 18-yard run to the right by Johnson after he kept it on a quarterback-option. On the next play, Johnson dashed through the center for a big 38-yard gain to setup first-and-goal. The Braves scored on a one-yard run by Waller as he went high and jumped through the defensive line to give Alcorn a 10-0 edge at the 12:58 mark.

Southern responded with a huge kick return by Christopher Chaney which put the Jags in the red zone at the Alcorn 18. However, the Braves defense stood tall again and held SU to a 28-yard field goal which cut the deficit to 10-3 with 11:11 remaining in the third. The series included a key tackle for a loss by Hollis on 3rd-and-1.

Alcorn had a promising drive going on its next series after Forman ran it to the SU 36 for a gain of 15. However, the drive ended after an interception by Chase Foster on a screen pass midway through the third.

After another defensive stop by the Braves, the Jags tried a fake punt but the pass fell incomplete, giving the ball back to Alcorn at the SU 40. The Braves were then looking at a 4th-and-4 when they decided to go for it, but the handoff through the middle was stopped short.

The Jags were faced with a 3rd-and-10 when Lampley tried to dump off a short pass to the right, but Cole cut in front of the route for an interception and returned it back untouched for a pick-six. It extended Alcorn's lead to 17-3 with 4:14 to go in the third.

The Braves upped their advantage to 20-3 with 8:28 left in the fourth after a 22-yard field goal by McCullough. It came after a 13-play, 54-yard drive which included a 12-yard rush by Forman.

SU had the opportunity to put points on the board after crossing midfield on the ensuing drive, but the Braves forced a turnover. Senior Sterling Shippy stripped the running back near the line of scrimmage and senior Brady Smith dove on it for the recovery.

Up next, the Braves will return to Jack Spinks-Marino Casem Stadium next Saturday when they host Alabama State at 2 p.m. on Homecoming. Alcorn is 23-18 all-time against the Hornets and have won four straight meetings between the two teams.

NOTES
- Saturday marked the 65th meeting between the Braves and the Jaguars. Alcorn now leads the all-time series 37-27-2 and beat SU for the second straight year.

- The three points was the fewest allowed by Alcorn against Southern since 1981 when the Braves won 18-0.

- The Braves are off to a 2-0 start in conference for the second year in a row.

- Alcorn improved to 10-0 when leading at halftime over the last two seasons.

- Alcorn's perfect streak in the red zone came to an end when the team elected to go for it instead of kicking a field goal at the very end of the game leading 20-3. The Braves were one of 15 teams in the FCS to score on 100 percent of their trips inside the 20.

- On the flip side, the Alcorn defense entered the game ranked eighth in the nation in red zone defense, limiting teams to score on just 60 percent of their trips inside the 20. Southern was 1-for-2 (.500) in the red zone.

- Waller's 54 rushing yards marked a career-high. It was his first career touchdown at Alcorn.

- The Braves, which entered the game leading the SWAC in time of possession, dominated the time of possession battle tonight 36:03 to 23:57.

- Alcorn improved to 4-0 this year when it posts over 350 total yards, and also when it has more total yards than the opposition. The Braves notched 381 yards tonight.

- The Braves entered the game ranked No. 4 in the HBCU Poll, while the Jags were No. 7.

- Alcorn's captains were McCullough, Shippy and junior Darius Davis. Southern won the coin toss and choose to receive.

Quoting Alcorn head coach Fred McNair
Opening Statement
"Our guys played really hard tonight and gave great effort. The defense played a heck of a ball game. The offense sputtered a little bit, but overall our guys are fighters. We go after it at practice every day and our guys took it in stride tonight. Southern is a real good football team and we did what we needed to do to get a victory tonight."

On whether he was surprised or not that the offense sputtered for so long
"Yeah, well I thought we had a great game plan coming into the game. We made some adjustments at halftime and were able to come out and score on our first drive which was big. We still need to quit shooting ourselves in the foot with penalties and we need to learn to play without backing ourselves up. We need to continue to get better."

On the defense being able to play the way it did in a hostile environment
"We talked about this type of environment all week. We knew obviously it was their Homecoming, and it was a game where we'd need to grow as a team; we did that and we showed we can play in a hostile environment and under tough conditions. Our defense played fast and got turnovers which was what we needed."

Quoting quarterback Noah Johnson
On being able to win despite the offense not clicking on all cylinders
"Big shout out to our defense tonight. They played lights out and it gave us momentum. The offense was struggling a little bit tonight but the defense picked us up. We'll go back into the film room and clean everything up."

On what Southern did to throw them off
"We just beat ourselves. We started behind the chains too many times and we can't do that. We turned the ball over, and that's on me, I have to minimize those mistakes. We'll be fine though, and we'll get back at it at practice and be clicking again next week. It's just a lot of little things that we need to correct, especially not starting behind the chains. Our defense played really well tonight, and it's a team sport and I'm happy we got the win."

On whether it was something that was said at halftime to get the team going in the third quarter
"Yeah, the coaches got into us a little bit, but there was no negativity. We knew we had to pick each other up and get it going. The offensive line blocked their tails off and we were able to do enough to get the 'W' and that was big for us."

Quoting defensive back Qwynnterrio Cole
On the pick six
"On the first drive of the game, we had run the same coverage and they had run that same play. So, I saw what was coming, the ball came and I took off with it. I have to give a shout out to Creo Argue for putting a lot of pressure on the quarterback on the play, and I just had to do my part."

On what was going through his head after he grabbed the interception
"I was determined to run it all the way back. Especially in a low scoring game where points were hard to come by, I wanted to make a play and create a spark. A pick six is rare, but it felt good and I felt it was a game changer."

On his thoughts on the team's defensive performance as a whole
"We just have to do our part. Our coaches had us well-prepared tonight. We were familiar with a lot of their plays and we just had to go out and execute. We know the offense is going to score, and as a team we just pick each other up. When the offense struggles, we try to pick them up, and when the defense struggles, we know they're going to pick us up. It's a team game and it was a team win."

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Langston Men's Basketball Adds Two For 2018-19 Season

News PhotoLANGSTON, Oklahoma -- Langston University head men's basketball coach Stan Holt announced the latest signings of two impact forwards in Kameron Mack and David Hunt for the upcoming 2018-19 season.

Mack, originally from Tallahassee, Fla, most recently competed at Coastal Alabama Monroeville and will have two years left to pay. Hunt, originally from Chicago, Ill., last played at Rend Lake College and joins Langston with three seasons left to play.

Holt is ecstatic about bring both players into the fold and described both student athletes at "6'5 forwards that each bring unique skill-sets to the position."

"I am very excited to welcome Kameron (Mack) to the Langston Lion family," Holt said. "He is a tremendously versatile player who can contribute and help our team win in so many ways. He brings a great deal of athleticism to the court, he finished around the rim very well and he can guard all five positions on the floor. He's the kind of guy every coach needs in his program. We are very lucky to have him."

Mack averaged 7.7 points and 2.6 rebounds on a 21-win team last year and ranked top 5 on the team in scoring and rebounding.

Holt was also excited to welcome Hunt to Langston University, saying that he will bring "toughness, strength, and a physical presence to the program."

At Rend Lake, Hunt posted 11 points, 6.2 rebounds and ranked in the top three on his team in scoring, rebounding, free-throw makes, attempts, and percentage.

"David (Hunt) is a fiery competitor and he'll be an excellent teammate," Holt noted. "His best basketball is still ahead of him. He'll continue to get better and better and I'm excited to see the role David will take year after year in our program. He's a great person off the court, and tremendous talent on the court, and I'm happy he's on our side."

Langston is coming off its third-straight National Tournament appearance in Kansas City, Mo. The Lions open the season on the road vs Jarvis Christian College at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, Nov. 2,

LANGSTON UNIVERSITY LIONS ATHLETIC COMMUNICATIONS

Journey To A Dream - TSU Men's Basketball Coach Brian 'Penny' Collins



TENNESSEE STATE UNIVERSITY ATHLETIC COMMUNICATIONS