Tuesday, November 11, 2008

DSU bowlers off to hot start in MEAC

WASHINGTON -- The Delaware State University bowling team went 9-1 in the opening Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference Northern Division competition of the season, tops among all teams. Delaware State was 5-0 in regular team play on Saturday, posting victories over Howard, Hampton, Morgan State, Coppin State and reigning NCAA and MEAC champ Maryland-Eastern Shore.

Sophomore Angela Reynolds recorded four 200-plus games, including a 243 against Coppin State. Junior Samantha Noviscky rolled 245 against Morgan State, and freshman Jazmyne Hefflefinger had a 226 against Howard. The Hornets were 4-1 in Baker competition on Sunday, with wins over Hampton, Howard, Coppin State and UMES before falling to Morgan State.

CONTINUE READING, CLICK BLOG TITLE.

ASU's Barlow fires 2 assistants

A day after his team's worst offensive performance of the season, Alabama State head coach Reggie Barlow has fired offensive coordinator Ben Noonan and offensive line coach Eric Schnupp, leaving the second-year coach searching for his third offensive coordinator. Barlow confirmed the firings late Sunday evening.

Noonan and Schnupp were hired last January, a few weeks after Barlow fired offensive coordinator Maurice Harris and offensive line coach Jack Peavey -- both of whom also worked under Barlow for just one season. The Hornets currently rank ninth in the 10-team SWAC in both scoring offense and total offense

CONTINUE READING, CLICK BLOG TITLE.

READ RELATED ARTICLES:
Barlow picks Moncrief to lead Hornets' offense
2 coaches axed at Alabama St.
Barlow explains firing assistants

Class Of Six Elected To SWAC Hall Of Fame

By SWAC






The Southwestern Athletic Conference is pleased to announce its 2008 Hall of Fame Class:

· Jimmie Giles, Alcorn State
· Lindsey Hunter, Jackson State
· Sam Jefferson, Jackson State
· Frank Lewis, Grambling State
· Doug Porter, Mississippi Valley State
· Carl Williams, Southern

Jimmie Giles of Alcorn State was a third-round pick in the 1977 NFL Draft. The Natchez, MS native played 13 professional seasons (1977-89) with four different teams. Drafted by the Houston Oilers, he moved on to the Tampa Bay Buccaneers one year later, where he played for nearly nine seasons (1978-86). During that time, Giles was a four-time Pro Bowl player and helped the Bucs reach the NFC Championship Game during the 1979 season. His best season came in 1981 when he caught 45 passes for 786 yards and six touchdowns. He went on to play with the Detroit Lions (1986-87) and Philadelphia Eagles (1987-89). For his career, Giles caught 350 passes for 5,084 yards and 41 touchdowns.

Lindsey Hunter was one of the most prolific scorers in SWAC history. The Jackson native earned SWAC Freshman of the Year Honors at Alcorn State in 1989 before transferring to Jackson State. In his three seasons with the Tigers, Hunter averaged more than 24 points per game. He was a SWAC All-Tournament selection in 1992 and 1993, and as a senior led J-State to the SWAC regular season title in 1993 and an NIT berth, where Jackson State defeated Connecticut and another future NBA player Ray Allen. Hunter was a lottery pick (10th overall) by the NBA’s Detroit Pistons in 1993. He played 14 seasons in the league with the Pistons (1993-2000, 2003-08), Milwaukee Bucks (2000-01), Los Angeles Lakers (2001-02), and Toronto Raptors (2002-03). He had his best season in 1996-97, when he averaged 14.2 points per game for the Pistons. Hunter, who has averaged nearly 9 points per game in nearly 900 career games, won an NBA title with the Lakers in 2002.

Sam Jefferson was the first Sports Information Director in Jackson State history, serving from 1973-2002. During his tenure, Jefferson promoted more than 50 All-America athletes that wore the blue and white, including future NFL Hall of Famers Walter Payton and Jackie Slater. While updating and researching historical and statistical records for the Jackson State athletic department, he served as host for JSU’s football television highlight show for 12 years, hosted the award winning “Tiger Rap” radio show, and served as color analyst for basketball broadcasts and play-by-play for radio broadcasts. He was selected conference SID of the Year eight times.

Grambling State product Frank Lewis led the SWAC in scoring three consecutive seasons from 1968-70. The Houma, LA native then went on to a 13-year NFL career, playing seven years with the Pittsburgh Steelers and six years with the Buffalo Bills. During his years with the Steelers (1971-77), he played on back-to-back Super Bowl champion teams in 1975 and 1976. Lewis scored had arguably his best season with the Steelers in 1974, catching 30 passes for 365 yards and four touchdowns. In 1981, Lewis had a career year with the Bills, catching 70 passes for 1,244 yards with four touchdowns. For his career, he caught 397 passes for 6,724 yards and 40 touchdowns.

Doug Porter was the head coach of Mississippi Valley State from 1961-65, and in his third season, led the Delta Devils to their first winning season in five years. He was an assistant coach at Grambling State and Coach Eddie Robinson for nine seasons before becoming the head coach at Howard from 1974-78. He then took over Fort Valley State in 1979, and led them to the conference title that same season. He posted a 166-105 record as head coach, with just five losing seasons in 26 years. As an administrator, he was actively involved in creating the framework of the rules and regulations that still govern Mississippi Valley State and the Southwestern Athletic Conference to this day.

Carl Williams was the Director of Sports Medicine/Head Athletic Trainer at Southern University from 40 years (1963-2003). “Doc” began his career in 1953 as a student trainer for the National Industrial Basketball League. The Houston native and Texas Southern graduate worked was a trainer at Houston-area high schools and for the Houston Independent School District prior to be hired at Southern. Williams also was the Assistant Athletic Trainer for the Dallas Cowboys from 1973-91.

These legends will be officially inducted into the SWAC Hall of Fame on Thursday, December 11, at the Sheraton Hotel in Birmingham. The SWAC Hall of Fame Gala begins at 6 p.m. with a reception, with dinner to follow at 7 p.m. Tickets are $50 to the general public and may be purchased by calling 205/241-3474.

Pirates' slide continues

HAMPTON, VA - Hampton University got inside the Bethune-Cookman 4-yard line on three series Saturday, inside the 20 another time and inside the 25 another. The Pirates netted only two field goals. The wasted scoring opportunities were decisive in the Pirates' 17-6 Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference loss to the visiting Wildcats. And a 2008 season that looked so promising three games ago, when the Pirates were 5-1 and ranked No. 22 in the nation, is sliding precariously toward the program's first losing season in more than a decade.

The Pirates (5-4 overall, 4-2 MEAC) can secure their 12th consecutive winning season by winning on the road at Florida A&M or Morgan State. But the freefall will continue if the Pirates continue to squander their scoring chances. "We've lost three in a row and the same thing happened over and over," Pirates coach Jerry Holmes said. "It was 0-0 against South Carolina State at halftime and we had missed a bunch of scoring opportunities, and it was the same last week against Winston-Salem State.

CONTINUE READING, CLICK BLOG TITLE.

Milestone for BCU Wildcats coach

Alvin Wyatt became the winningest coach in Bethune-Cookman University history Saturday, when his Wildcats beat Hampton University 17-6 at Armstrong Stadium. Wyatt, 84-47 at B-CU, is in his 12th season as head coach, but he's been a coach of some kind at the school for 32 years.

He served as an assistant football coach for 20 years under five head coaches before becoming the head man after the 1996 season. Wyatt guided the Wildcats to the 2002 MEAC football title, and to a second consecutive Football Championship Subdivision (formerly Division I-AA) playoff appearance a year later.

CONTINUE READING, CLICK BLOG TITLE.

READ RELATED ARTICLES:
QB Souverain has Wildcats 'excited'
Sumlar leads Bethune-Cookman past Hampton
Wildcats get Wyatt milestone win No. 84
NCAAF: BCC 17 Hampton 6
Sumlar rushes for 110 yards, TD to spark Bethune-Cookman to 17-6 ...

2nd Annual Glenn Wilkes Classic

Daytona Ocean Center, Daytona Beach

The second annual Glenn Wilkes Classic will kick off the 2008/2009 NCAA Men's Basketball season at the Ocean Center, Friday through Sunday, November 21st through 23rd. Teams from Marshall University, Morgan State University, University of Wisconsin-Green Bay, University of Utah, University of Mississippi and Rollins College will compete in the three-day event.

Friday, Nov. 21
2:00pm: Marshall University vs. Morgan State University
4:15pm: University of Wisconsin-Green Bay vs. Rollins College
6:30pm: University of Utah vs. University of Mississippi

Saturday, Nov. 22
2:00pm: University of Wisconsin-Green Bay vs. Marshall University
4:15pm: Morgan State University vs. University of Utah

Sunday, Nov. 23
11:00am: University of Wisconsin-Green Bay vs. Morgan State University
4:00pm: Marshall University vs. University of Mississippi

Tickets are on sale at the Ocean Center Box Office from 10:00am until 5:00pm. Monday through Friday, all Ticketmaster outlets, online at www.TicketMaster.com, or by phone at (407) 839-3900. One-day tickets are $10.00 for adults and $5.00 for children 12 and under accompanied by an adult. Three-day tickets are $25.00 for adults, and $10.00 for children 12 and under accompanied by an adult. Applicable service charges will be applied to all tickets.

Price Info:
1-Day - $10.00 (general), $5.00 (ages 12 & under w/adult); 3-Day - $25.00 (general), $10.00 (ages 12 & under w/adult)

Date & Time Info:
Friday through Sunday, November 21st through 23rd, 2008
See Description for Game Times

Contact Info:
407-839-3900

Location:
Daytona Beach Ocean Center
101 N. Atlantic Ave.
Daytona Beach, FL 32118

For more information about the basketball classic, go to http://www.glennwilkes.classic.com/

Pough approaching Morgan State with ‘the fierce urgency of now’

Video Highlights: Howard Bison at SCSU Bulldogs



From the moment head coach Oliver “Buddy” Pough arrived at South Carolina State seven years ago, reaching the Football Championship Subdivision playoffs was his primary goal. With two games left for the Bulldogs (8-2, 6-0) to earn a win to clinch the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference title and first automatic playoff berth since 1982, Pough is approaching Saturday’s game at Morgan State (6-4, 4-2) with “rce urgency of now.”

“We’d like to get it over with,” Pough said at Monday’s press conference. “The very last thing we need to be is going to Greensboro (North Carolina) the last week of the season (Nov. 22 against North Carolina A&T) trying to eek out a win to try to win the conference. We need to clean this thing up right now and we’re all about this week. I’m not thinking about down the road. We want to win this weekend. We want to keep our (six-game winning) streak going. So I think we’ve got to do all we can to get this thing to come together now.”

CONTINUE READING, CLICK BLOG TITLE.

Attendance: Howard at SCSU - 11,239 (51%) at Oliver C. Dawson Stadium, Orangeburg, S.C. (Capacity: 22,000).

READ RELATED ARTICLES:
S.C. State remains in driver’s seat in MEAC race
No Place Like Home
T&D Sports: Quick Hits
Bye, Bye Bison: SCSU whips Howard 56-0
Cleve’s Back: Former SCSU star quarterback in town to cover the Bulldogs
DeWain’s Day: SCSU’s Clark to get first start with Long out
Ray Ray returns to South Carolina with new team