Thursday, August 23, 2012

Living the college life, FAMU football players enjoy off-campus option

TALLAHASSEE, Florida - Tight end Michael Ethridge is finally at a point in his life that he’s always dreamed of since the day he left Godby High School with a scholarship to play football at FAMU.

As soon as his scholarship funds come through this semester, he will move into an apartment where he will get to experience living on his own.

“I know I can do it on my own,” he said. “It’s not rejecting my family but I want to see how I would do while I’m in college. I’ve always told myself that when I go to college I’d want to be on my own. This is my time now to get ready for the future.”

Ethridge, a junior, spent his first two years as a college athlete living on campus. He’s in transition now, living with his family until his money is cleared. Most other players have been enjoying their new digs for a week now.



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West Virginia State University, 11 other schools forming NCAA Division II Mountain East Conference

BLUEFIELD, West Virginia — The colleges and universities that are leaving the West Virginia Intercollegiate Athletic Conference at the end of June now have a new home — sort of.

At least they have a name for their new league, and some new partners.

Twelve schools, including Concord University, announced on Monday they are forming the Mountain East Conference (MEC), to begin play about a year from now.

“The big picture now is coming into focus,” said Concord Director of Athletics Kevin Garrett.

Concord will be joined by 11 fellow WVIAC schools — Fairmont State University, Glenville State College, Shepherd University, the University of Charleston, West Liberty University, West Virginia State University, West Virginia Wesleyan College and Wheeling Jesuit University

In addition, the Mountain East will include the University of Virginia’s College at Wise, and two Ohio institutions, Urbana University and Notre Dame College headquartered in the Cleveland suburb of Euclid.

The departures would leave the WVIAC with just three members — Bluefield State College, Davis & Elkins College and Ohio Valley University.

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New Mexico to present challenge for Southern

BATON ROUGE, Louisiana  - When Southern travels to New Mexico for its first game of the season on Sept.1, the Lobos will be an unfamiliar sight for more reasons than geography and culture.

With a new staff led by former Notre Dame coach Bob Davie, UNM is experiencing a bit of a rebirth. That’s difficult to study, since any game film of the Lobos from 2011 is essentially useless.

That hasn’t had a major effect on the Jaguars offense, which will look to force its hand, but the defense has had to study film of Sam Houston State instead, where Lobos offensive coordinator Bob DeBesse spent the past two seasons.

“We’ve been preparing from Day 1,” coach Stump Mitchell said. “Defensively, obviously that revolves around what (the Lobos) do, and hopefully we’ve practiced the majority of what they will do, but the defense just has to be able to fly around and make some plays.”

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JSU Gooden eyes 1,000-yard mark

JACKSON, Mississippi - Tommy Gooden didn't need long to realize band wasn't for him.

He was a ninth grader at Frederick Douglas High School in Atlanta at the time. A defensive end on the junior varsity football team, a young Gooden found himself sitting in the back of a crowded band room struggling to do much of anything under the weight of what felt like the largest tuba in the Peach State.

"I was like, 'I can't even do it.' So I went out on the football field," Gooden said. "I dropped band the first week or two, I think it might have been the first day.  "I was good, but I couldn't do it," he said, referring to the weight of the tuba.

He stuck with football. Gooden was called up to the varsity as a kick returner his sophomore year after one coach saw his speed during a track meet. By the time he was a senior, he was the team's starting running back. READ MORE

Edward Waters College Tigers ready to roar

Jacksonville team starts football season on Aug. 25 against Point University

JACKSONVILLE, Florida - The Edward Waters College Tigers are excited about the upcoming football season. The Tigers compete in the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA) as an independent. Last season, they made vast strides of improvement on the field and looks to do more in 2012. Here is a look at the 2012 Edward Waters Tigers.

2011: 5-5 overall

Head Coach: Brad Bernard, second season, 5-5 overall.



Gone: Wide receiver Samuel Charles, A-Back Antonio Bellamy, defensive end Randy Wilson and offensive lineman Willie Hubbard.

Back: Quarterback Brandon Turman (953 pass yards, 12 TDs; 740 rushing yards, four TDs); B-Back Phillip Teamer (780 rush yards, two TDs); safety Tony Goodman (66 total tackles, four interceptions, 391 return yards); defensive back/linebacker Kamron Mitchell (59 total tackles, one interception); A-Back Anthony Wallace (115 reception yards, one TD; linebacker Bernard Dawson (56 total tackles, 11 tackles for loss, DL Richard Copeland (43 total tackles, two sacks); LB Jufferson Joseph (43 total tackles); OL Nathaniel Branford; OL Chris Hawkins; and OL Christopher Pettaway.

New: WR Jamiel McCloud (Bethune-Cookman transfer); A-Back Ray Dukes; WR Keith Patrick; DL Robert Huggins; OL Marcus Taylor; DB Derek Owens (transfer from Georgia); DB Demarko Huntley (transfer from Shorter University.

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S.C. State's Richard Cue will start season-opener, Phil Steele ranks Bulldogs' 22nd

ORANGEBURG, South Carolina - A summer away from Orangeburg apparently did not affect Richard Cue's chances of retaining the starting quarterback job for South Carolina State.

A day before the Bulldogs' final team scrimmage, head coach Buddy Pough all but confirmed the Florence native to start against Georgia State on Aug. 30.

"I think we’re pretty set on Cue and he’s starting to get a majority of the reps," Pough said. "And anytime you’ve got a guy who seems to just to have a little bit better feel for things...I think he’s got to be our guy."

Cue, who spent the summer at ...

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2012 Xavier University of Louisiana Women's Volleyball Preview


                          After tasting success, Gold Nuggets make Iowa their focus

NEW ORLEANS, Louisiana - A proper noun with four letters and three syllables dominates the thoughts of Christabell Hamilton, the second-year coach of women's volleyball at Xavier University of Louisiana.

"Iowa," Hamilton said. "That's where we want to go this season. That's what we're aiming for. We want to go one step further than last season."

Specifically, the Gold Nuggets want to be in Sioux City, Iowa, with 23 other schools for pool play in the NAIA National Championship the week after Thanksgiving. If Xavier makes it that far, it will be another positive step for a program which took what seemed like a zillion positive steps in 2011.

Xavier, with Hamilton in her first collegiate head-coaching position a year ago, performed a 180: first winning season, first conference championships — regular season (10-0), then tournament (4-0) — first berth in the NAIA National Championship and the fourth-best turnaround in the NAIA (from 11-26 to 23-7). Hamilton became the third coach — the second since the 1930s — to win a conference championship in a debut season at Xavier. Hamilton accomplished all that with little lead time; she joined the staff June 14.

"Christabell raised the bar for Xavier volleyball so high," XU athletics director Dennis Cousin said. "We've won a lot of championships at Xavier, but what Christabell did last year has got to be one of the best coaching jobs we've ever had."

Six letterwomen — including starters Taylor Reuther, Moira Kirk, Chinedu Echebelem, Kerris Crier and Jeanay Butler — return. The team has no seniors, and Crier is the lone junior.

About the Gold Nuggets

Head Coach:  Christabell Hamilton (Eastern New Mexico 2005), second season; 23-7 at Xavier in one season
Assistant Coach:  Hannah Lawing (South Carolina 2011), first season
2011 Record:  23-7 overall, 10-0 Gulf Coast Athletic Conference (first place)
2011 Postseason:  GCAC Tournament champion; first round of NAIA National Championship
Returning Players:  6
Newcomers:  8


Reuther, an outside hitter, led Xavier in kills (326), aces (55) and digs (329) in 2011. She was All-GCAC, GCAC Tournament Co-MVP, GCAC Player of the Week three times and second-team All-Louisiana. Reuther ranked 11th in the NAIA — third among freshmen — in aces per set. She produced a team-best 13 kill-dig double-doubles, 10 more than Xavier had in 2010. Reuther had 17 matches with 10 or more kills and 18 matches with 10 or more digs.

Hamilton considered Reuther the team's best player in 2011, but it was Kirk who was voted GCAC Freshman of the Year. Kirk, a middle blocker also chosen All-GCAC and All-GCAC Tournament, ranked second to Reuther with 306 kills and led the Gold Nuggets with a .365 hitting percentage and 92 blocks. She ranked 11th in the NAIA in hitting percentage and had 16 matches with 10 or more kills, including a team-best eight matches in a row during the season's final month.

Echebelem, an outside hitter, ranked third on the Nuggets with 187 kills, 181 digs and 35 blocks. She too was All-GCAC.

Crier, a middle blocker, missed the final nine matches because of illness but still ranked second on the team with a .275 hitting percentage — an improvement of more than 150 points from her freshman season — and 42 blocks. She had 93 kills. Because this is the fifth season of a program with a split existence — teams in 2003 and 2004, then a five-year suspension following Hurricane Katrina — Crier is the first to play three seasons.

Butler, an outside hitter and right-side hitter, recorded 90 kills and 90 blocks and was second on the Gold Nuggets with 34 aces. Xavier was 6-1 when Butler recorded five or more kills and 9-0 when she served two or more aces.

The other returning letterwoman is setter Alexandria Rencher, who had 199 assists, 47 digs and 17 assists in 19 matches, mostly in relief.

The 14-player roster will include eight freshmen: setters Jodi Chatters and Franziska Pirkl, liberos/defensive specialists Alexis Clay and Darian Harris, middle blockers Claudia Haywood and Jodi Hill, right-side hitter Patrice Smith and outside hitter CeCe Williams. Hamilton says her newcomers are capable of offsetting the loss of four seniors: setter Patrice Hightower (All-GCAC in 2011), hitter Iva Bobkova (All-GCAC in 2010) and defenders Celeste Poe and Joyy Joseph (a combined nearly 900 digs the past two seasons).

For the second straight season, there are no 6-footers on the roster. But that wasn't a major problem a year ago. Xavier found ways to win, particularly in extended matches. After losing their opener in five sets at Belhaven, the Gold Nuggets were 10-0 in matches which lasted longer than three sets. Xavier was 12-32 in such matches during its first three seasons.

"Last year we stressed fundamentals — serving, passing, conditioning, playing with passion and desire. That had a lot to do with our ability to hang around and win the longer matches," Hamilton said. "We'll be a little bit taller team this year, but we still won't be the tallest team around. But we will work as hard as any team and put ourselves in situations to be successful."

Xavier's 24-match regular-season schedule will open Aug. 24 with a pair of NAIA preseason top-25 opponents: 20th-ranked Lindsey Wilson and third-ranked Lee (Tenn.), both in the Lee Invitational. The following day the Gold Nuggets will play Union (Ky.), the defending Appalachian Athletic Conference regular-season champion.

"Those first three matches will be great tests for our team and a great measuring stick," Hamilton said.

There will be nine home matches, with the first Sept. 4 against city rival Loyola. Volleyball will be the first XU team to compete in the 4,500-seat Convocation Academic Center, which neared completion in late August. But the first match in the new facility may not be until Sept. 18 (Mobile) or Oct. 5 (Edward Waters).

The GCAC schedule again will consist of 10 matches, but this year there will be no neutral-site contests. Second-year member Philander Smith will play host to the conference tournament Nov. 8-10 in Little Rock, Ark., with the winner receiving the league's automatic bid to the NAIA National Championship.

Xavier will attempt to become the first HBCU (historically black college or university) to qualify for the NAIA National Championship in consecutive seasons. Xavier also aims for the first HBCU victory at the NAIA National Championship since Saint Augustine's in 1981. If the Gold Nuggets succeed in the latter — in a first-round match Nov. 17 at a campus site — they'll earn that much-desired trip to Iowa.

"I'm really excited about this season and working with a great group of young women," Hamilton said.

Also see:    Schedule      Roster      Quick Facts      Women's Volleyball Home Page


By Ed Cassiere, Sports Information Director