Wednesday, January 30, 2013

Gold XU Rush preseason rank is 12th straight in NAIA top 10

NEW ORLEANS — Xavier University of Louisiana was in a familiar spot in the 2013 NAIA Men's Tennis Coaches' Preseason Poll announced Tuesday.
    

The Gold Rush, 18-8 this past season, are No. 8 in the first of nine team polls this year. It's the 12th consecutive top-10 appearance for the XU men dating to May 2011 and their 42nd consecutive top-25 ranking dating to April 2007.
    

It's also Xavier's highest preseason ranking in this sport. Xavier was ninth in the 2012 preseason and finished the year No. 7 after becoming the first from Xavier in any sport to reach the national quarterfinals since men's basketball in 1973.
    

Xavier opened its spring season this past weekend with a 6-1 loss to Tulane. The Gold Rush and Gold Nuggets will travel to Houma, La., to play Nicholls State at 4 p.m. Saturday. The next Gold Rush home match will start at 2 p.m. on Feb. 8 against NAIA No. 6 William Carey at the new XU Tennis Center.
    

The next two top 25s will be announced Feb. 19 and March 5.

NAIA Men's Tennis Coaches' Preseason Top 25 Poll
(first-place votes in parentheses — records are from 2012 season)
Rank
Team
Record
Points
Last
1
Embry-Riddle (Fla.) (8)
20-4
279
3
2
Auburn Montgomery (2)
17-8
271
5
3
Vanguard (1)
15-11
265
6
4
Lindsey Wilson
19-6
245
10
5
Concordia (Calif.)
9-13
243
12
6
William Carey
17-5
235
9
7
Westmont
12-10
230
8
8
Xavier
18-8
223
7
9
Aquinas
26-3
212
13
10
Bethany (Kan.)
22-4
205
14
11
Cumberland
18-3
179
16
12
Belhaven
16-4
174
15
13
Olivet Nazarene
15-5
168
20
14
Campbellsville
19-7
166
17
15
Warner
13-5
160
18
16
Graceland
9-7
143
RV
17
McPherson
15-4
137
RV
18
Pikeville
12-6
126
RV
19
Northwestern Ohio
18-7
119
21
20
Webber International
15-7
116
23
21
Spring Arbor
10-2
100
24
22
Georgetown (Ky.)
12-11
90
RV
23
Coastal Georgia
6-7
89
NR
24
Biola
5-14
73
RV
25
Lee (Tenn.)
9-8
67
RV

Others receiving votes: Indiana Wesleyan 55; Davenport 49, Missouri Valley 41, SCAD Savannah 23, St. Francis (Ill.) 14, Martin Methodist 13, Tennessee Wesleyan 6, Asbury 4, Hastings 3.


By Ed Cassiere, Sports Information Director
XULAATHLETICS
XAVIER UNIVERSITY OF LOUISIANA

WSSU looking for first win at J.C. Smith since 2006


RALEIGH, North Carolina  --  Winston-Salem State has won in men’s basketball nearly everywhere it has played since rejoining the CIAA before the 2010-11 season.

Johnson C. Smith’s Brayboy Gym — one of the CIAA’s smallest (capacity about 2,500) and toughest places to play — has been the exception.

“We haven’t won there in my career,” said guard Marcus Wells, a senior who is 0-2 at Brayboy.

No. 16-ranked WSSU (15-3, 2-1 CIAA Southern Division) will try to reverse that tonight at Johnson C. Smith (13-6, 2-1) in a game between teams tied for second place in the division. Tipoff is set for 7:30.

A combination of things makes Brayboy a tough place to play, including how close the fans are to the court and Johnson C. Smith’s long tradition of success. For WSSU, which last won at Brayboy in 2006 but didn’t play there from 2007 to 2010, there’s also the rivalry.

XU Nuggets are 13th, matching their best preseason ranking

NEW ORLEANS — Xavier University of Louisiana was 13th — matching the program's highest preseason ranking — in the 2013 NAIA Women's Tennis Coaches' Preseason Poll announced Tuesday.

The Gold Nuggets, 7-22 this past season but a qualifier for the NAIA National Championship by virtue of winning an unaffiliated group tournament, matched the preseason rank of Xavier's 2007 team. This is the Nuggets' highest ranking at any point in a season since they were 13th in the final poll of 2008. Only three times have the XU women ranked higher than 13th; all three occurred in 2007.
    

Xavier began its spring season Friday with a 9-0 victory against city rival Loyola in the first intercollegiate dual at the new XU Tennis Center, which opened in October. The Gold Nuggets and Gold Rush will travel to Houma, La., to play Nicholls State at 4 p.m. Saturday. The Gold Nuggets' next home match will start at 2 p.m. on Feb. 23 against McNeese State at the XU Tennis Center.
    

The next two top 25s will be announced Feb. 19 and March 5.

NAIA Women's Tennis Coaches' Preseason Top 25 Poll
(first-place votes in parentheses — records are from 2012 season)
Rank
Team
Record
Points
Last
1
Auburn Montgomery (12)
26-2
312
1
2
Embry-Riddle (Fla.)
23-4
302
2
3
Brenau
14-6
292
6
4
Lindsey Wilson
17-4
276
8
5
Concordia (Calif.)
15-8
275
7
6
William Carey
15-10
264
9
7
Lewis-Clark State
8-15
243
14
8
Westmont
7-11
239
18
9
SCAD Savannah
9-4
233
13
10
Vanguard
7-11
226
15
11
Indiana Wesleyan
25-5
213
16
12
Campbellsville
14-8
205
17
13
Xavier
7-22
196
19
14
Olivet Nazarene
12-8-1
179
RV
15
Lee (Tenn.)
9-7
170
20
16
Robert Morris (Chicago)
19-3
168
21
17
St. Thomas (Fla.)
5-4
151
23
18
Oklahoma Baptist
10-8
142
24
19
Marian (Ind.)
21-6
129
25
20
Bethel (Kan.)
15-6
115
RV
21
Martin Methodist
11-4
106
22
22
Cumberland
6-10
90
NR
23
Belhaven
14-7
78
RV
24
Nebraska Wesleyan
12-9
70
RV
25
Davenport
21-6
65
RV

Others receiving votes: Webber International 61, Georgetown (Ky.) 59, Milligan 56, Northwestern Ohio 36, Graceland 30, SCAD Atlanta 17, Indiana Southeast 15, Hope International 11, Cumberlands 6, Missouri Valley 4.


By Ed Cassiere, Sports Information Director
XAVIER UNIVERSITY OF LOUISIANA
XULAATHLETICS

Paine baseball team expects to contend for conference title

AUGUSTA, Georgia  --  After losing the conference championship to a perennial power a year ago, Paine’s baseball team has unfinished business.

With coach Kerby Marshall entering his second year with the program, the team returns most of its bats from a solid offense a year ago, and additional pitching depth, Paine is coming together.

The Lions won 30 games and reached the Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Conference championship in 2012 before bowing out to Stillman, which won the championship for the fifth time in six years.

“It was a major process to go through without having a team of kids that I recruited,” Marshall said. “We had to learn how to work together to become a good team. I think it was a pretty good season, but it could have been a lot better. This year, we’re definitely going to make another run for it.”

Entering a new season, Paine is returning ...

READ MORE

Searching for the next Kaepernick, Flacco

NEW ORLEANS -- Call this year's Super Bowl the battle of the QB Davids.

Delaware alum Joe Flacco and Nevada alum Colin Kaepernick were, in college, about as far removed from the glitz and glamour of big-time football as you can imagine.

Which could bode well for the following five quarterback prospects, who all hail from non-traditional football schools.

So, if one of these 2013 NFL draft candidates start in the Super Bowl one day, remember where you heard about them first.



4. James Stallons Specs: 6-6, 210 pounds
School: Shaw University (enrollment: 2,265)


Stats: Stallons' 3,101 passing yards last year shattered the Shaw record by nearly 1,000 yards. He also led the conference with 310.1 yards per game.

Fake scout says: Stallons is a big-armed pocket passer who will have to get rid of the ball quicker if he wants to sniff any playing time at the next level.

Potential Super Bowl puff piece: Stallons is the first white quarterback in Shaw history. A transfer who started his college career at Wisconsin, Stallons says he chose the small North Carolina school because it had won four CIAA championships since 2003.

Odds of playing in a Super Bowl: Slim. Sure, he's big, but unless Stallons develops a Marino-like release or goes to a team with a stellar O-line, he's toast.

READ MORE

FAMU Alumnus Travis Williams to be featured in HBO Documentary ‘Gideon's Army'

Travis Williams, Esq.
TALLAHASSEE, Florida –  For Florida A&M University (FAMU) alumnus Travis Williams, growing up in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., and seeing how the poor were “abused by the criminal justice system” inspired the public defender to want to work to prevent injustices from occurring.

“I see this job as the best way to prevent (these injustices) even though it's only one case at a time in my small section of the world,” said Williams, a senior attorney at the Hall County Public Defender's Office in Gainesville, Ga.

Williams’ passion was recently noted in a documentary called Gideon's Army, which will appear on the cable network HBO later this year. A segment of the piece was featured on the New York Times website as part of an op-doc ‘True Believers in Justice’ (Video & NY Times Article)

Williams was approached after a few short interviews to be a part of the documentary, to which he admits he reluctantly said yes.

“I was a little nervous at first to have a camera crew invade my personal and professional life but then I reconsidered,” he said. “I wanted to make sure there was an enthusiastic voice for justice portrayed in the film.”
   
The documentary follows Williams and two other public defenders based in the South. The film focuses on the struggles of working as a public defender, and issues dealing with difficult cases, managing the workload and the act of balancing a personal life. Williams recently returned from the Sundance Film Festival in Park City, Utah, where the film premiered.

“I was blown away,” he said of viewing the documentary. “It is weird seeing yourself on the big screen but overall, I was satisfied with the way I was portrayed.”
   
Williams earned his bachelor’s degree from the FAMU School of Business and Industry in 2005, and his juris doctorate from the University of Georgia in Athens, Ga. While at FAMU, Williams was a freshman and sophomore senator and served as an escort for the Royal Court during his sophomore year. During his freshmen year, he was awarded the Freshman Senator of the Year Award. In 2011, the Georgia Association of Circuit Public Defenders recognized the young attorney as the inaugural Assistant Public Defender of the Year. In 2012, he was also honored as one of 14 “Rising Lawyers Under 40” in Georgia by the Daily Report, a newspaper for lawyers in Georgia.
   
“I will always owe FAMU everything,” said a humbled Williams. “FAMU taught me that if I work hard enough, anything is possible.”

COURTESY FLORIDA AGRICULTURAL AND MECHANICAL UNIVERSITY MEDIA RELATIONS