Friday, October 13, 2017

FAMU homecoming game brings pageantry to Bragg



TALLAHASSEE, Florida -- A week-long celebration reaches its climax Saturday.

Florida A&M’s football team will battle conference titan North Carolina A&T at 3 p.m. in Bragg Memorial Stadium for its annual homecoming game in front of what should be a sold-out crowd.

The game will be a challenge, for sure, but FAMU’s homecoming kicked off earlier this week – the Rattlers have been in celebration mode much longer than the lead-up to the game.

Still, it’s not homecoming without a football game at the end of the week, and this season’s contest promises to be as packed as it has been in recent years.

Chris Asa, associate athletic director for tickets and corporate sales at FAMU, said the turnout for the game should rival the 26,044 who came out to watch the Rattlers’ 2016 homecoming win over Hampton. Attendance for last season’s homecoming was the highest since 2010.

“We’ve got our hands full here for homecoming,” said football head coach Alex Wood.



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Unbeaten A&T heads to Florida A&M for another homecoming



Who: No. 11/15 N.C. A&T (6-0, 3-0 MEAC) at Florida A&M (2-4, 1-2)

When: 3 p.m. Saturday

Where: Bragg Memorial Stadium (25,500), Tallahassee, Fla.

Radio: WCOG-93.7; WCOG-1320

At stake: The Aggies are chasing history. Since joining the MEAC as a founding member in 1971, A&T has never started a season 7-0. The only 7-0 starts in A&T’s 93-year history came in 1927 when the Aggies finished 8-0, and in 1943 when they finished 7-0. … For the Rattlers, it’s homecoming week at Florida A&M, which guarantees a sellout crowd. The program is in the third year of coach Alex Woods’ rebuilding project, but this is a fanbase that expects to win.

Quarterbacks: A&T junior Lamar Raynard is the league’s top passer, averaging 272 yards per game with a 69.7 completion percentage. He’s thrown for 17 touchdowns and just 1 interception. Last week, he became the first Aggies QB with two 300-yard passing games in a single season. … FAMU sophomore Ryan Stanley ranks second to Raynard in yardage, completion percentage and TDs among MEAC quarterbacks, and he’s an elusive and quick scrambler. Stanley leads a potent offense. The Rattlers rolled up 485 yards at Norfolk State last week, but lost because of five turnovers.

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Former NSU walk-on Anthony Smith leads stout Norfolk State defense against Hampton

NORFOLK, Virginia -- No scholarship offers, one opportunity.

Coming out of Maury, Anthony Smith talked to one school to pursue football: Norfolk State.

The Spartans offered him a spot as a preferred walk-on, he took it, and now Smith is a redshirt senior linebacker, a scholarship athlete and the leading tackler for Norfolk State (2-3 overall, 2-0 MEAC).

The Spartans host Hampton (3-2, 2-0) at 2 p.m. Saturday in the Battle of the Bay.

"I'm a fighter," said Smith, who has 51 tackles, including 2.5 for loss. "I just can't quit no matter what."

Before he learned that, Smith spent his first two years on the bench or on special teams. Smith spoke with former NSU standout Keenan Lambert about whether or not to continue playing.

"I knew him from when I was growing up," Smith said. Lambert also played at Maury, graduated from NSU in 2015 and played five games for the Oakland Raiders.

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Georgia Tech Basketball Preview: Florida A&M

HEAD COACH ROBERT McCULLUM
FLORIDA A&M MEN'S BASKETBALL
ATLANTA, Georgia -- Georgia Tech and Florida A&M will meet for the seventh time on Dec. 17, the first game for the Yellow Jackets coming out of fall semester final exams. All of the prior meetings have occurred in Atlanta (Tech is 6-0), but this will be the first one in McCamish Pavilion. The Rattlers are under new leadership this season, with former Tech assistant Robert McCullum at the helm. This is the 10th in a series of previews of the Yellow Jackets' non-conference opponents.

Location: Tallahassee, Fla.
Conference: Mid-Eastern Atlantic (MEAC)
Home arena: Alfred Lawson, Jr. Multipurpose Center (9,639)
2016-17 Record: 7-23, 2-12 in the MEAC (10th)
Post-Season: Lost to Savannah State in the First Round of MEAC Tournament, 82-78
NCAA Postseason Appearances (Last): Three (2007)
All-time series record: 6-0, Georgia Tech (last meeting in 2011)
Head coach: Robert McCullum (first season)
Starters returning/lost: 4/1
Top scorer returning: Desmond Williams (16.2)
Top rebounder returning: Desmond Williams (6.1)
Quick preview for 2017-18
First-year head coach Robert McCullum, a former assistant coach at Georgia Tech, was brought in to lead Florida A&M into a new era. Luckily for McCullum, all but one starter from last season has eligibility left and will help lead a young squad forward. Playing 14 of their first 17 games on the road, the Rattlers will need to have a road warrior mentality for the majority of the season. With tough non-conference games against Stephen F. Austin, Mercer, Georgia Tech and Texas, FAMU will be battle-tested when MEAC play begins. 
Desmond Williams, Marcus Barham, Nicholas Severado and Derrick Dandridge all return from last season’s lineup and will look to be the mainstay upperclassmen as the team rebuilds.
Quick recap of 2016-17
It was a disappointing year for Florida A&M (7-23 overall and 2-12 in conference), which started from the get-go when it fell into a 2-11 hole, and the Rattlers lost 10 straight games heading into the new year. Although it seemed that A&M was able to right the ship, beginning MEAC action 3-0, a 2-5 stretch toward the middle of conference slate and a heartbreaking 77-65 double-overtime loss to Norfolk State would derail the team’s momentum.
Leading the Rattlers’ offense was Desmond Williams and Marcus Barham, who finished as the lone players in double digits with 16.2 and 12.6 points per game, respectively. Williams also led the team on the glass, grabbing 6.1 rebounds per game, and at the charity stripe, attempting a team-best 172 free throws.
Greatest Program Accomplishment
After starting off the year 1-10 in 2003-04, Florida A&M went on an impressive run late in the season finish 15-17 (10-8 MEAC) and make only its second berth in the NCAA Tournament and its first since 1999. Led by Terrence Woods, who averaged 20.3 points per game that season off 40.3 percent shooting from three-point range, the Rattlers would face Lehigh in the opening game.
Thanks to 21 points from Woods and a double-double from Michael Harper (11 points, 12 rebounds), A&M overcame Lehigh 72-57 to get its first NCAA Division I Tournament victory in front of nearly 8,000 fans at the University of Dayton. Unfortunately for the Rattlers, they would have to face No. 1-seeded Kentucky, which ended A&M’s run with a 96-76 defeat.
Greatest player in program history
Hailing from Tampa, Fla., Jerome James played for Florida A&M from 1995-98. The 7-foot-1 center played 81 games for the Rattlers, averaging 16.0 points, 9.2 rebounds and 4.5 blocks for his career while shooting 49.5 percent from the field. En route to back-to-back all-MEAC honors, James solidified himself as the greatest rim-protector in A&M history, leading Division I with 4.6 blocks per game in 1997-98.
James declared for the 1998 NBA draft after that season and was selected in the second round (36th overall) by the Sacramento Kings. He appeared in 16 games (partially due to that year’s NBA lockout) before playing overseas.
Place to visit on campus or in the city
Right on the campus of Florida A&M is the Southeastern Regional Black Archives Research Center and Museum, housed within Carnegie Library. The center contains regalia and printed material that focuses on information “significant to African Americans and their experiences and contributions in Florida and the Southeastern United States.” One of only 10 such archives in the U.S. and one of the largest repositories of African-American history in the southeast, the center offers students and tourists a unique education in the region’s history.
GEORGIA TECH ATHLETICS MEDIA COMMUNICATIONS

Motivated Mullins: How fatherhood, fresh start at Grambling State inspires Mullins

GRAMBLING, Louisiana –Anfernee Mullins thought how he worked would take him straight to his ultimate goal.

What he found out in three short years was everyone is susceptible to unforeseeable curves in the road, despite believing he controlled his life and what he would get out of it through his physical ability and work ethic.

Life comes at you fast. And it’s humbling. And in the darkest days, the strongest inspiration can come out of the most unpredictable of circumstances.

Taking the field at the Cotton Bowl wearing the all-white road uniforms of Grambling State and the black helmet with the gold “G” last Saturday, Mullins never saw that coming for himself out of high school, the last time he played in a football game. He couldn’t have been happier the curve came.

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from THE EDITOR: FAMU Rattlers versus N.C. A&T Aggies Pregame Analysis

DWIGHT FLOYD
GAME REPORT
TALLAHASSEE, Florida -- Okay, here’s my bet. If the Rattlers win, I’ll shave my head!

The Aggies are undefeated at 6-0. The Rattlers are 2-5 having defeated 2 winless teams in Savannah State and Texas Southern. Texas Southern was hit by a hurricane and has not recovered. Savannah State simply doesn’t have enough talent, but has been competitive in the MEAC. Given the circumstances most will assume that the Aggies will trounce on the Rattlers early and often.

For the last two years the Aggies have dominated the Rattlers. In fact, the last time the Aggies visited Tallahassee they left some of their starters home. In this Saturday’s game don’t expect the Aggies to be so kind. They will show their intent from the very beginning, which is to out strike the Rattlers in the first half and put this game away by halftime.

Interestingly, the Aggies strong suit is ...

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Nuggets gain first-ever season sweep of Spring Hill

XAVIER UNIVERSITY VOLLEYBALL ROSTER

MOBILE, Alabama — Kayla Black had 10 kills and 12 digs, and Xavier University of Louisiana outhit Spring Hill by nearly 200 points in a 25-19, 25-20, 25-17 volleyball victory Thursday.
     

The Gold Nuggets (14-2) snapped the 15-match win streak of the Badgers (16-3) and swept the regular-season series for the first time. XULA, which won in four sets at home Sept. 7, was 0-19 against Spring Hill entering the season.
     

"We served tough, and I thought we did a great job blocking," XULA coach Pat Kendrick said. "We gathered ourselves and refocused quickly after making mistakes."
     

Black, a freshman, hit .296 in 27 attacks and produced her fifth double-double of the season.
     

Six Gold Nuggets had five-or-more kills. Jaida Dowd and Juliana Tomasoni had eight apiece, Lauryn Taylor and Adili Rikondja had six apiece, and Vivica Price-Spraggins had five. Dowd (.462 in 13 attacks) and Rikondja (.357 in 15 attacks) were the most efficient.
     

All 45 of XULA's kills were assisted. Tiffany Phillips had 17 assists, and Eva Le Guillou had 16. Le Guillou, Tomasoni and Anna Dalla Vecchia served two aces apiece. Dalla Vecchia had 23 digs — her most this season in a three-set match — Tomasoni had 11, and Le Guillou had nine. Price-Spraggins had three blocks.
     

Payton Gidney, Allison Weimer and Emily Greim had five kills apiece for Spring Hill. Emmarose Neibert and Cassidi Sterrett had nine digs apiece.
     

XULA limited Spring Hill to season lows of 26 kills and a .117 hitting percentage. The Gold Nuggets hit .297, their second-highest performance on the road this season.B

BOX SCORE
     

It was matchup of conference leaders — XULA in the NAIA's Gulf Coast Athletic and Spring Hill in NCAA Division II's Southern Intercollegiate Athletic. The Gold Nuggets will stay on the road and play a conference match at 1 p.m. EDT Saturday against Edward Waters at Jacksonville, Fla.

Ed Cassiere, Assistant Athletic Director for Communications
XULAgold.com
XAVIER UNIVERSITY OF LOUISIANA 
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