Sunday, September 2, 2007

DSU Hornets open with a bang

Photo: RB Kareem Jones 74 yard kickoff return

By KRISTIAN POPE, The News Journal

New running back Jones dominates in close win

DOVER -- Sure, there are lots of new faces wanting to make their case for stardom on the Delaware State football team.

But on a warm Saturday night, under the glow of Alumni Stadium's lights, the familiar faces also had their say in the team's season opener.

Syracuse transfer Kareem Jones made a splash as DSU's new headline running back. And quarterback Vashon Winton and receiver Shaheer McBride picked up right where they left off as the Hornets earned one of their biggest wins in more than two decades.

Avenging a loss two seasons ago on the road, Delaware State looked like a potential NCAA Division I-AA playoff contender in a 23-18 win over No. 23 Coastal Carolina before a packed house.

"It was all of them," a hoarse DSU coach Al Lavan said. "Vashon managed the game. McBride, he was himself. And Kareem, he surprised me."

The Hornets hadn't opened the season with a win over a Division I-AA nonconference opponent since 1986 against Southern University. And this one came against a team that earned a playoff berth last year.

Jones rushed for 171 yards and a touchdown on 24 carries. He also returned a kickoff 74 yards.

"I was really surprised by his stamina," Lavan said. "His endurance is what set him apart. I didn't really expect to play him all the way to the end."

Winton and McBride connected for two third-quarter touchdowns as the Hornets took control.

Photo: DSU FB Adam Shrewsbury looks for yardage as Coastal Carolina's D.J. Rice (55) and Anthony Steele give chase Saturday night
















McBride finished with four catches for 81 yards. He broke the school's career record for receiving yards with 2,501, surpassing the 2,491 yards gained by Albert Horsey from 1997 to 2000. McBride has 155 career receptions, five shy of Horsey's record of 160.

DSU led 20-6 before CCU scored two fourth-quarter touchdowns.

All-American receiver Jerome Simpson played for Coastal Carolina despite being charged with simple assault and battery Thursday after he allegedly struck his girlfriend. Simpson caught a 33-yard touchdown pass from Will Richardson to cut the lead to 20-12 with 11:04 left.

Peter Gaertner's field goal gave DSU a 23-12 lead before Coastal Carolina's Tommy Fraser broke through for a 5-yard TD run with 3:58 left. The Chanticleers failed on a two-point conversion attempt.

Coastal Carolina battled to the DSU 22-yard line on its final drive as time expired.

"We had burned one timeout accidentally, so we didn't have any left on that last drive," Chanticleers coach David Bennett said. "All we wanted to do was get out of bounds, and we couldn't do it.

"I said I thought [DSU] would compete for a MEAC [Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference] championship."

Simpson had three catches for 68 yards.

DSU put together 351 yards of offense against a highly touted CCU team that lost 36 seniors, but still is expected to challenge for a fourth straight Big South Conference championship.

Jones' 63-yard run in the first quarter gave DSU a 7-3 lead. The Hornets never trailed again.

Photo: DSU defender Brandon Hudson closes in on Coastal Carolina quarterback Ren McKinnon behind the line of scrimmage in second quarter.

If there was one criticism for the Hornets, it was that they didn't give Jones the ball often enough.

On one drive, with DSU moving on Jones' repeated gains, CCU recovered a fumble by backup Lennox Norville, who was in the game to give Jones a rest. On another drive where Jones was having his way against the CCU defense, the Hornets called for a pass. Eddie Brown dropped the ball in the end zone, and the drive fizzled.

The DSU defense came up with three big stops in the red zone.

On CCU's second possession, after a 51-yard punt return by Marrio Norman, the Chants were stopped on third-and-goal and settled for a field goal and a 3-0 lead.

DSU cornerback Akeem Green intercepted Ren McKinnon's pass in the end zone on another third-down attempt.

A third third-and-goal stop resulted in the Chants' second field goal.

DSU senior linebacker Russell Reeves played a big part in those stops, finishing with a team-high 12 tackles and a sack.

Winton, playing his first game since sustaining two broken bones in his left leg late last season, completed 7-of-12 passes for 84 yards and the two touchdowns to McBride.

The Hornets begin MEAC play at Florida A&M next Saturday.

Alcorn falls in season opener at home to Grambling State

By Matt Burrowes, Natchez Democrat

Lorman — Plagued by miscues on offense, penalties and the inability to stop the surging Grambling State offense, Alcorn State had little chance of turning things around Saturday night.

The Braves fell behind early, losing their home opener 31-10.

“Grambling came in here to play and they beat us up and down the field,” Alcorn head coach Johnny Thomas. “They pretty much handed us our lunch.”

Photo by Marcus Frazier

Grambling State University's Kenneth Wilborn, Jr. moves in for the kill as Alcorn State University's Vernadus Cooper attempts to move the ball down the field Saturday evening. The tigers were victorious over the Braves with a win of 31-10.

Thomas said Grambling is a very talented team and sound in every aspect of the game.

The Braves couldn’t maintain a drive the first half due to the aggressiveness of Grambling’s defense.

“The game plan was there,” Alcorn starting quarterback Chris Walker said. “We just couldn’t execute it.”

Grambling’s first down touchdown came from a 44-yard pass from Brandon Landers to wide receiver Reginald Jackson.

Jackson outran two Alcorn defenders for the score.

“Brandon has gotten a lot better,” Grambling head coach Rod Broadway said. “He has improved all around, especially in the way he manages the game.”

Photo: Alcorn's Roderick Williams and Grambling's Stephen Polk battle for the ball as they leap into the air.

Landers went on to throw for 303 yards and four touchdowns.

The Tiger offense totaled 479 yards on offense. They rushed for 176 yards.

“This was a nice win for us,” Broadway said. “We started to get sloppy at the end, allowing penalties. But we should have put at least 17 more points on the scoreboard.”

Broadway said the way Alcorn was playing on defense dangerous.

“Their defense told us what we wanted to do,” Broadway said. “They would crowd the line, knowing we have great receivers. We just blew by them.”

Walker took a vicious hit by Grambling defensive back Zaire Wilborn in the second quarter that sidelined him for the rest of the game.

“I hate he got hurt,” Thomas said. “Bringing in (backup quarterback Tony Hobson Jr.) didn’t change much. It wasn’t like we were doing much before Chris got hurt.”

Walker said it looked like it was a deep thigh bruise and he would probably be out for a couple of weeks.

The Braves have a short week before they go up against University of Arkansas Pine Bluff Thursday night on national television aired on ESPN.

“This is going to be a very short week,” Thomas said. “We will start (Sunday) and work all week. We have to forget about this one and prepare for UAPB. They are going to be tough and ready to win.”

How They Scored: SU-FAMU

First quarter
SOUTHERN: Tailback Darren Coates takes a handoff out of shotgun formation, runs off right tackle and sprints down the sideline for a 90-yard touchdown on the Jaguars first play from scrimmage with 12:15 remaining. Josh Duran’s extra point attempt is blocked. DRIVE: 90 yards on 1 play. TIME OF POSSESSION: 0:21. Southern 6, Florida A&M 0.

FLORIDA A&M: Quarterback Leon Camel keeps around right end on a 9-yard touchdown run with 4:47 remaining on FAMU’s first play from scrimmage (Wesley Taylor kick). The score is set up when Southern’s Chad Harris muffs a Taylor punt, the ball recovered by FAMU’s LeRoy Vann. DRIVE: 9 yards on 1 play. TIME OF POSSESSION: 0:08. Florida A&M 7, Southern 6.


Second quarter
FLORIDA A&M: Tailback Phillip Sylvester slips through a seam at left tackle and runs 45 yards for a touchdown with 6:05 remaining (Taylor kick). DRIVE: 74 yards on 7 plays. TIME OF POSSESSION: 2:41. KEY PLAYS: Southern quarterback Bryant Lee’s throw to Coates appears to be incomplete but is ruled a fumble, recovered by FAMU at its 26. Three plays later on third-and-4 from the FAMU 32, the Rattlers keep the drive alive when Camel hits wide receiver Willie Hayward for a 5-yard gain. Florida A&M 14, Southern 6.

SOUTHERN: Lee goes over the middle for wide receiver Gerard Landry, who bounces off two defensive backs en route to the end zone on a 46-yard touchdown pass with 4:26 remaining. Lee’s two-point conversion pass for wide receiver Del Roberts is incomplete. DRIVE: 63 yards on 4 plays. TIME OF POSSESSION: 1:39. Florida A&M 14, Southern 12.

FLORIDA A&M: Camel goes deep in the end zone over two Southern defenders to complete a 40-yard touchdown pass to Javares Knight with 2:19 remaining (Taylor kick wide right). DRIVE: 78 yards in 6 plays. TIME OF POSSESSION: 2:07. KEY PLAY: On first-and-10 from the FAMU 33, Camel hits Hayward along the left sideline for a 26-yard gain. Florida A&M 20, Southern 12.


Third quarter
SOUTHERN: Fullback Brian Threat takes a handoff from Lee and cuts left up the middle to score on a 15-yard touchdown run with 12:46 remaining (Duran kick). DRIVE: 68 yards on 5 plays. TIME OF POSSESSION: 2:14. KEY PLAYS: The Jaguars open the first drive of the second half with a pair of 22-yard gains — a keeper around right end by Lee and a pitch right by Coates. Florida A&M 20, Southern 19.

SOUTHERN: Running out of the shotgun, Lee runs off right end for a 3-yard touchdown with 8:03 remaining (Duran kick). Injured on the play, Lee is then carried back to the sideline by his teammates. DRIVE: 24 yards on 3 plays. TIME OF POSSESSION: 0:55. KEY PLAYS: The score is set up when Southern free safety Jarmaul George goes high at the FAMU 48 to pick off a pass from Camel, who is injured on the play. George returns the ball 24 yards to the FAMU 24, where Lee hits Landry with a 17-yard gain to the 7. Southern 26, Florida A&M 20.


Fourth quarter
SOUTHERN: Coates smashes in from the 1 on third-and-goal with 14:11 remaining (Duran kick), the Jaguars third touchdown in its first four second-half possessions. DRIVE: 74 yards on 14 plays. TIME OF POSSESSION: 5:55. KEY PLAYS: The Jaguars convert a pair of third downs on the drive — an 11-yard pass from Lee to Coates on third-and-3 at the SU 45 and a 19-yard pass from Lee to RaShon Jacobs on third-and-16 at the 50. Southern 33, Florida A&M 20.

FLORIDA A&M: Sylvester scores on a 4-yard run with 0:16 remaining. Taylor’s extra point kick hits the left upright but goes through. DRIVE: 80 yards on 14 plays. TIME OF POSSESSION: 3:15. KEY PLAY: The Rattlers convert a pair of fourth downs on the drive, including a 7-yard pass from Albert Chester to Jarvis Funderburk on fourth-and-3 to set up the score. Southern 33, Florida A&M 27.

FINAL SCORE: Southern 33, FAMU 27

RECORDS: SU 1-0, FAMU 0-1
NEXT: Southern plays Mississippi Valley State at 4 p.m. Saturday in the Chicago Football Classic at Soldier Field. Florida A&M hosts Delaware State on Saturday in Tallahassee.

Attendance: 30,016


NCAA Football Boxscore - Florida A&M at Southern U
Final 1 2 3 4 Score
Florida A&M 7 13 0 7 27
Southern U « 6 6 14 7 33

1st Quarter
Southern U Touchdown - 90-yard run by Darren Coates. (kick failed). 12:15 Remaining.
Florida A&M Touchdown - 9-yard run by Leon Camel. (Wesley Taylor kick). 4:47 Remaining.
2nd Quarter
Florida A&M Touchdown - 45-yard run by PhillipSylvester. (Wesley Taylor kick). 6:05 Remaining.
Southern U Touchdown - 46-yard pass from Bryant Lee to Gerard Landry. (pass failed). 4:26 Remaining.
Florida A&M Touchdown - 40-yard pass from Leon Camel to Javares Knight. (kick failed). 2:14 Remaining.
3rd Quarter
Southern U Touchdown - 14-yard run by Brian Threat. (Josh Duran kick). 12:46 Remaining.
Southern U Touchdown - 3-yard run by Bryant Lee (Josh Duran kick). 8:03 Remaining.
4th Quarter
Southern U Touchdown - 1-yard run by Darren Coates. (Josh Duran kick). 14:11 Remaining.
Florida A&M Touchdown - 4-yard run by Phillip Sylvester. (Wesley taylor kick). 0:16 Remaining.


Final Team Statistics

Florida A&M Southern U
First Downs 20 21
Rushes - Yards 43-238 33-194
Passing Yards 215 244
Return Yards 36 19
Passing (Att-Comp-Int) 30-22-0 44-21-2
Punts - Average 6-42.3 6-41.7
Fumbles - Lost 5-3 4-2
Penalties - Yards 5-53 13-95
Time of Possession 30:44 29:16

Individual Statistics
Passing
Florida A&M Att Comp Yards Int TD
Albert Chester II 23 14 150 1 0
Leon Camel 21 7 94 1 1

Southern U Att Comp Yards Int TD
Bryant Lee 29 22 215 0 1
Team 1 0 0 0 0

Rushing
Florida A&M Att Yards Average TD
Philip Sylvester 14 101 7.2 2
Greg Arline 7 36 5.1 0
Albert Chester II 5 27 5.4 0
Adrian Smith 2 18 9.0 0
Leon Camel 5 12 2.4 1

Southern U Att Yards Average TD
Darren Coates 10 142 14.2 2
Bryant Lee 18 50 2.8 1
Warren Matthews 7 23 3.3 0
Brian Threat 4 16 4.0 1
Marquarius 'Del' Roberts 1 4 4.0 0
Kendrick Smith 2 3 1.5 0
Team 1 0 0.0 0

Receiving
Florida A&M Rec Yards Average TD
Philip Sylvester 5 40 8.0 0
Jarvis Funderburk 5 58 11.6 0
Willie Hayward 3 31 10.3 0
Taj Jenkines 3 13 4.3 0
Javares Knight 3 81 27.0 1
Isaac West 1 3 3.0 0
Adrian Smith 1 18 18.0 0

Southern U Rec Yards Average TD
Gerard Landry 7 81 11.6 1
Marquarius 'Del' Roberts 3 25 8.3 0
Darren Coates 3 22 7.3 0
Clevon White 3 23 7.7 0
Juamorris Stewart 2 20 10.0 0
RaShon Jacobs 2 34 17.0 0
Evan Alexander 1 5 5.0 0
Kendrick Smith 1 5 5.0 0

Kicking
Florida A&M FGMade FGAtt Long EPMade EPAtt
Wesley Taylor 0 0 0 3 4

Southern U FGMade FGAtt Long EPMade EPAtt
Josh Duran 0 0 0 3 4

Rattlers left snakebit


By SCOTT RABALAIS, Advocate sportswriter

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — Just as Florida A&M quarterback Leon Camel went back to throw, he could feel the cramp that started in his arm and would eventually put him on his back in full body agony.

He said the cramp took something off his deep pass over the middle, a pass that wound up in the hands of Southern free safety Jarmaul George. He returned the interception 24 yards to the FAMU 24, setting up the score that would permanently put the Jaguars ahead in Saturday’s MEAC/SWAC Challenge III.

The play typified a frustrating afternoon for the Rattlers. Afterward, Camel had to grudgingly admit the Legion Field scoreboards that read — Southern 33, FAMU 27 — didn’t lie.

But he contended the loss had as much to do with what the Rattlers did to themselves instead of what the Jaguars were able to do to them.

“We beat ourselves,” said Camel, who threw for a touchdown and ran for another in relief of starting quarterback Albert Chester. “Everything coach talked to us about in practice, we did.

“They beat us on the scoreboard, but the score doesn’t tell it all.’

Four turnovers, 13 penalties, numerous missed tackles. They all conspired to send the Rattlers down to their third season-opening defeat in as many years under coach Rubin Carter.

“A lot of it was our own fault,” Carter said. “Penalties. Turnovers. We didn’t take advantage of the situation before us.”

A defensive tackle who played in two Super Bowls during his 12 years with the Denver Broncos, Carter was especially critical of his team’s tackling.

The Jaguars rolled through the Rattlers for 453 yards of total offense, including 238 on the ground. Southern’s rush to victory was keyed by Darren Coates’ 90-yard touchdown sprint on the Jaguars’ first offensive snap.

“We’re going to have to evaluate every play and scheme,” Carter said. “I thought it (FAMU’s tackling) was horrendous. Awful. We didn’t wrap up very well and that led to a lot of missed tackles and yards after contact. That we can fix.”

Chester outperformed Camel, completing 14 of 23 passes for 150 yards to Camel’s 7 of 21 for 94 yards. Still, Carter said he made the switch because Camel was better at dealing with his team’s no huddle offense and the quick trigger officials put on the 25-second play clock.

After Camel’s interception led to Southern’s go-ahead touchdown, Chester returned. But he was unable to push the Rattlers into the end zone after they looked so impressive in taking a 20-12 lead at intermission. Meanwhile, Southern plowed through FAMU’s defense to score on three of their first four second-half possessions.

The Rattlers didn’t score again until there were 16 seconds remaining. An onside kick snared by SU’s Juamorris Stewart snuffed out FAMU’s last fleeting hope.

“It’s not a good feeling,” Camel said. “We have to build from this. This game is said and done.”

Southern defense makes stand


By JOSEPH SCHIEFELBEIN, Advocate sportswriter

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — The Southern defense has made a living out of big stands in its last two games.

Saturday, the Jaguars stuffed Florida A&M for a 1-yard loss on a fourth-and-1 at the Southern 25-yard line with five minutes left in the third quarter to propel SU to a 33-27 victory in the MEAC/SWAC Challenge at Legion Field.

The stop was reminiscent, though less dramatic, than the fourth-and-inches stop made at the SU 2 with 1:43 left in the game to preserve the Jaguars’ 21-17 Bayou Classic win in November.

Still, Southern was supposed to be vulnerable to this kind of play. The Jaguars had lost five defensive linemen since the spring and were especially thin inside at tackle. They were supposed to wear down this late in a game, right?

Instead, they proved themselves. Twice, really, because Sylvester was held to 1 yard while going inside on the previous play, a third-and-2.

“We stood up to the challenge,” defensive tackle Dwayne Charles said.

Charles led the surge inside, as Florida A&M running back Phillip Sylvester went to his right. Meanwhile, defensive end Vince Lands, who was in on the Grambling stop (holding up Grambling’s Ab Kuuan until free safety Jarmaul George could apply the boom), grabbed Sylvester from behind.

“The tackle blocked down and I fought over it,” Lands said. “He (Sylvester) tried to cut it back and I made sure he couldn’t get the first down.”

The other similarity to the Bayou Classic stop besides Lands being in on the play was that SU’s defense showed one look to coax the opponent into going a certain way.

This time, in fact, SU’s staff called for the Jaguars to line up where they were at the snap, only the players took it on themselves to run the ruse, at first lining up in their base defense another way.

“They thought we were out-flanked, and they checked into it,” Graves said. “And right before the snap, the defense shifted to that side. That was a testament to (the defense).

“We called it, but instead of the defense just lining up, the guys showed one thing and then slanted to what was called.”


Trick or not, SU then still had to make the play.
“We read the flow,” Charles said. “We fired off the ball, going hard and made the play, got our offense back on the field.”

The stop preserved a 26-20 lead with 5:06 left in the third quarter. Southern’s offense then put together its longest and best sustained drive, 76 yards in 14 plays. Darren Coates’ 1-yard plunge gave SU a 33-20 lead with 14:11 left.

Graves and George, a team captain, went into halftime upset after the defense gave up two big plays, a 45-yard Sylvester TD run (on second-and-10) and a 40-yard Leon Camel TD pass (on a third-and-9) in the second quarter as the Rattlers took a 20-12 lead.

“I told those guys, we knew we had let them in the ballgame,” Graves said. “I challenged those guys, and those guys stepped up and answered.”

How well did the Jaguars answer the challenge? Southern came up with that big stop and made two big interceptions on three consecutive series.

First, George’s interception set up the Jaguars at the FAMU 24. SU got the go-ahead score, at 26-20, three plays later. Then there was the stop. Glenn Bell’s interception in the end zone (on an underthrown pass from the SU 39) kept the Rattlers from getting back in the game.

“Now we now we can close out games and get the victory,” George said.

With limited depth up front and no seniors among its linebackers or line, Southern’s defense relied on mixing schemes — from heavy fronts to three-man fronts — and using speed from all 11.

FAMU was 2-of-14, including 0-for-7 in the second half, in converting third downs.

“That was the game plan,” Graves said. “Our intent was to come out and give them a lot of different looks. We have some athletes on this team. We said coming in, we didn’t want to make any excuses. We were going to deal with the personnel we had.”

Challenge moving to MEAC site

By JOSEPH SCHIEFELBEIN, Advocate sportswriter

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — Saturday’s MEAC/SWAC Challenge was the last of three straight at Legion Field, with the event moving to Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference territory next season.

Though Birmingham will be considered again for future challenges, a year and a rotation basis is not established. The next site will not necessarily host the Challenge for a three-year run like Birmingham did.

“The original idea was to rotate each year,” said ESPN spokesperson Tilea Coleman, who said with Birmingham being such a strong host that the city would certainly be considered again in the future.

Neither Coleman nor SWAC Interim Commissioner Duer Sharp could say what cities are being considered next season.

The Southwestern Athletic Conference’s offices are located in Birmingham; SWAC members Alabama A&M (in Huntsville) and Alabama State (in Montgomery) meet here in the Magic City Classic; and the SWAC Championship Game is played here as well.

Heritage Bowl return?
Meanwhile, the two conferences might renew their postseason meeting, the Heritage Bowl, a 1990s phenomenon, with Sharp confirming there were “preliminary talks.”

“We would love to do it. I think it would be great,” Sharp said.

“The talk is of trying to restart the Heritage Bowl,” SU Athletic Director Greg LaFleur said. “If we can get the MEAC to send its best, ESPN is considering Orlando (Fla.).”

Previously, the games were in Atlanta. One big holdup is the MEAC champion has an automatic bid to the football championship subdivision playoffs. The last time the game was played, in Dec. 1999, the third-place MEAC team, Hampton, played SWAC champion Southern, fresh off its win in the first SWAC Championship Game.

“It will only work if it’s a one versus a one,” Sharp said. “To be a true Heritage Bowl, it has to be a one versus a one.”

Sharp said the SWAC could do away with its championship game in order to make a Heritage Bowl work.

Game ball
To Southern. A team with depth concerns going in got stronger as the game progressed, scoring an impressive season-opening 33-27 win over Florida A&M in the process.

Play of the game
With the Jaguars holding a 26-20 lead and FAMU facing a fourth-and-1 at the Southern 25-yard line, SU end Vince Lands shot through to snare FAMU runner Phillip Sylvester from behind, with tackle Dwayne Charles riding the surge to force Sylvester to a 1-yard loss with 5:06 left in the third quarter. The SU offense then drove 74 yards in 14 plays to take a 13-point lead.

Crunching the numbers
Last year, SU had 1 rushing yard (on 20 attempts) in a 30-29 win over Bethune-Cookman. This time, SU broke a 90-yard TD run by Darren Coates on its first play and finished with 238 total. That bettered last season’s best of 236 in a win over Texas Southern.

Did you notice?
Southern wore all-white uniforms, with gold piping on the pants, for the first time since the 2005 Bayou Classic in Houston, a 50-35 loss to Grambling. “I decided to do something a little different,” said SU equipment manager Derek Price, who said the Jaguars may wear the getup at least one more time this season — as long as there’s an artificial surface. Carl “Doc” Williams, Southern’s longtime director of sports medicine, worked the sideline for the first time since the Bayou Classic 2002. SU junior Frank Harry, who had been training as an offensive guard lately, played exclusively as a tackle on defense.

SU Jaguars show heart, character

Photo: SU Head Coach Pete Richardson

By SCOTT RABALAIS, Advocate sportswriter

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — Jarmaul George stood on Legion Field’s legendary turf, dancing and swaying in time to the boisterous tune being belted out by the Southern University band.

Victory was Southern’s once again, by a 33-27 count Saturday over occasional MEAC rival Florida A&M. It was sweet music to George and his Jaguars teammates. Made sweeter still because it was dearly bought and even a tad unexpected.

An offseason of tumult and uncertainty — “distractions” as Southern coach Pete Richardson described with his low-key spin — left even him wondering how his team would perform in its maiden voyage without 15 players lost since spring practice.

“There were a whole lot of distractions to this point,” said Richardson, whose tenure at SU has moved into the embattled category after two straight losing seasons. “We didn’t really know how we would stand against a good FAMU team. We feel fortunate to come out on top.”

Fortune seemed to smile on the Jaguars from the start. Florida A&M looked like the more dangerous team starting out. But after allowing a first down, Southern forced a punt, taking over deep in a hole at their own 10. It was a hole tailback Darren Coates quickly sprinted out of, breaking through a big hole and tightroping up the FAMU sideline en route to the opposite end zone 90 yards away.

Southern missed the extra point and spent the rest of the first half playing catch up with the Rattlers. It didn’t help the Jaguars’ cause when, driving inside FAMU’s 30 down 7-6, Southern was victimized by another one of those classically dreadful officials’ calls.

Coates, taking a pass in the left flat from SU MVP Bryant Lee, bobbled the ball through his hands and replays clearly showed he didn’t have possession. But the play was ruled a fumble, the Rattlers took over at their 26 and marched for a touchdown and a 14-6 lead.

It was a ridiculously bad break. But what do you expect from an officiating crew that didn’t know enough to let FAMU run an untimed play at the end of the first quarter following a defensive penalty on Southern? If I were the SWAC or MEAC commissioner, my first priority would be improving officiating.

Southern’s season outlook can only be improving after taking the measure of a FAMU team that, while not great or predicted to win its conference, was supposed to be superior to the Jaguars.

Then again, the Jaguars have been here before. A 2-0 start last season dissolved into losses in five of the next six games leading to a 5-6 record.

“We’ll see what we’re made of,” George said philosophically. “We had a couple of games we didn’t close out last year when we should have. We closed one out here today.”

One. Just one. It’s first down and a long season to go. But the Jaguars showed a lot of heart and character to win this one. The kind of win you can build on. The kind of win that leaves you dancing for joy.

Nice start, better finish for Southern


By JOSEPH SCHIEFELBEIN, Advocate sportswriter

Jaguars open season with ‘gut check’ win over FAMU

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — Southern started nicely enough, with Darren Coates bolting for a 90-yard touchdown run on the offense’s first play. But the Jaguars finished even better, overcoming an eight-point halftime deficit to score a 33-27 victory over Florida A&M in the MEAC/SWAC Challenge on Saturday in Legion Field.

After an offseason in which SU lost at least 15 players since the spring, an attrition that thinned the offensive and defensive lines, the Jaguars were supposed to be the team that wore down. Instead, the opposite proved true.

“It comes a point in a game like this of who’s going to survive,” Southern coach Pete Richardson said. “Now it’s a gut-check time. That’s what we had to do at halftime.”

First, Southern’s offense drove 68 yards for a touchdown on the opening possession of the second half. Then the defense made three big plays: a Jarmaul George interception that turned into the go-ahead TD, a fourth-and-1 stop at the Southern 25-yard line with five minutes left in the third quarter, which turned into a long touchdown drive for Southern, and then a Glenn Bell interception in the end zone three minutes into the fourth quarter.

“They only thing (the attrition) did with our football team was bring out the character,” Richardson said.

“They did an excellent job of pressing through. They kept playing hard, with a lot of perseverance,” FAMU coach Rubin Carter said.
Southern quarterback Bryant Lee was 22 of 29 for 215 yards and one touchdown and ran for 50 yards and another score. He was named Southern’s MVP of the game, echoing his finish last season as the school’s Bayou Classic MVP.

Plus, Coates ran for a career-high 142 yards and two touchdowns, with the senior, starting for the first time, outdistancing his career totals of 119 yards and one TD set last season. And wide receiver Gerard Landry had seven catches for 81 yards, including a 46-yard, second-quarter touchdown in which he blasted through two defensive backs and sprinted away.

In front of 30,106, Southern (1-0) became the first Southwestern Athletic Conference team to win a MEAC/SWAC Challenge, now in its third year.

Photo: Southern’s Darren Coates (43) is inches from being out of bounds, but tightropes his way down the sideline on a 90-yard TD run as a diving Dannel Shepard (27) and Jason Beach (28) can’t catch him on SU’s first play on offense. Photo by TRAVIS SPRADLING

“(Defensive coordinator Terrence) Graves challenged us to search our souls,” Bell said. “He knew we were a better team than the way we were playing. Coach Graves got on us a little bit. But that’s what we needed to get rid of those butterflies.”

Though both teams had plenty of mistakes in the first half, from Southern’s muffed punts to FAMU’s false starts, the Rattlers turned in more big plays to go ahead 20-12 at halftime.

Particularly troubling to SU, after taking a 6-0 lead on Coates’ burst two minutes into the game, was Chad Harris muffing a punt return at the SU 9 to serve up a Leon Camel 9-yard TD run on the next play. Southern then gave up a 45-yard Phillip Sylvester TD run on a second-and-10 and allowed a 40-yard TD pass from Camel to Javares Knight. That left the Jaguars down 20-12 with 2:19 before halftime.

“A large part of it came at halftime, with senior leadership stepping up in the locker room and calling some individuals out,” Richardson said. “We gave up a few cheap touchdowns in the second quarter that almost cost us the game.”

The next 18 minutes were telling, beginning with a steady, five-play, 68-yard scoring drive, capped by sophomore Brian Threat’s 14-yard touchdown run to get SU within 20-19 with 12:46 left in the third quarter.

“Coach Pete and (offensive coordinator Mark) Orlando told us we were still in the game; that execution was the main thing,” Lee said of the halftime message to the offense. “If we go out and execute, the game will come to us and we’ll win.”

George’s interception and 24-yard return set up the go-ahead score, with the Jaguars taking over at the FAMU 24. Three plays later, Lee scored from 3 yards out, giving SU a 26-20 lead with 8:03 left in the third quarter.

Lee cramped up after with a calf muscle tightening that delivering shooting pain. Tellingly, a host of teammates grabbed him by his limbs and carried him off the field.

“We’re a team, so they helped me out,” said Lee, who returned after getting treatment on the sideline.

SU’s defense turned in a huge stop of Sylvester, with defensive end Vince Lands snagging Sylvester for a 1-yard loss on a fourth-and-1 at the SU 25 with five minutes left in the third quarter. With Lee back, the SU offense then uncorked a 14-play, 74-yard masterpiece with Coates plunging in for a 1-yard TD and a 33-20 lead with 14:11 left in the game.

Bell then intercepted starter Albert Chester II on a 39-yard heave to the end zone.

The surge was important, because fatigue and cramps started to hamper both teams, with the game taking 3 hours and 45 minutes to play.

“Everybody was going down and we were able to hang on and survive,” Richardson said. “It almost became a mystery there at the end, who would be on the defensive line, because they were going down also.”

FAMU got within 33-27 on Sylvester’s 4-yard run with 16 seconds to play, but Southern wide receiver Juamorris Stewart recovered the onside kick to effectively end the game.

“Don’t give up on Southern,” Southern defensive tackle Dwayne Charles said. “We’re here to stay.”

Lagniappe
All SWAC teams will wear stickers honoring Grambling great Eddie Robinson. The stickers have Robinson’s initials, EGR, over 408, Robinson’s win total. There was a moment of silence before the game for Robinson. Wide receivers Del Roberts and Nick Benjamin sported Mohawk haircuts. SU and FAMU, longtime rivals who last met in 2001, meet again Sept. 20, 2008, in Baton Rouge to start a four-game series. SU junior RB Kendrick Smith, who was cleared to play Friday, drove up that night to meet with the team. Sophomore C Ramon Chinyoung also made the trip up, but is not cleared. Senior C Demarcus Stewart started in his place. In the booth for SU: offensive coordinator Mark Orlando, first-year RB coach Elvis Joseph, DL coach David Geralds and first-year LB coach Todd Middleton.

Saturday, September 1, 2007

WSSU Rams 28, NCA&T Aggies 7


WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. Monte Purvis threw for two touchdowns and ran for a third, leading Winston-Salem to a smooth 28-7 win over North Carolina A&T on Saturday.

Purvis earned his fifth career rushing touchdown nine minutes into the game, capping a five-play, 23-yard drive for a 7-0 lead for the Rams (1-0). Five minutes later, he found Bryant Bayne in the end zone from 19 yards out to push the lead to 14-0.

He capped the score at 12:19 of the fourth quarter with a 16-yard pass to Brent Thomas. Brandon McRae rounded out the Rams' scoring with a 30-yard TD run in the third.

The Aggies' (0-1) sole score came on a 21-yard pass by Herbert Miller to Curtis Walls at 7:46 of the third.

Purvis completed 9 of 15 passes for 96 yards out of the Rams' total 382 offensive yards.


Rams 28, Aggies 7
Team Stat Comparison

1st Downs 11 20
Total Yards 216 382
Passing 73 96
Rushing 143 286
Penalties 6-56 6-66
3rd Down Conversions 4-15 3-11
4th Down Conversions 2-3 1-1
Turnovers 3 1
Possession 28:54 31:06

Individual Leaders
North Carolina A&T Passing
C/ATT YDS TD INT
Miller 10/21 73 1 3
Winston-Salem Passing
C/ATT YDS TD INT
Purvis 9/15 96 2 0

North Carolina A&T Rushing
CAR YDS TD LG
Ferguson 16 64 0 17
Robinson 10 33 0 9
Miller 7 28 0 10
Winston-Salem Rushing
CAR YDS TD LG
Bines 16 125 0 55
McRae 15 85 1 30
Purvis 15 63 1 32

North Carolina A&T Receiving
REC YDS TD LG
Walls 3 31 1 21
Robinson 2 -5 0 5
Dawson 1 21 0 21
Caldwell 1 15 0 15
Winston-Salem Receiving
REC YDS TD LG
Bayne 3 23 1 19
Thomas 1 16 1 16
Scarborough 1 15 0 15
Reaves 1 15 0 15


Scoring Summary
FIRST QUARTER NCAT --
TD 6:02 MONTE PURVIS 1 YD RUN (MATT MITCHELL KICK)
Drive info: 5 plays, 23 yards. 0 7
SECOND QUARTER NCAT --
TD 13:16 BRYANT BAYNE 19 YD PASS FROM MONTE PURVIS (MATT MITCHELL KICK)
Drive info: 8 plays, 92 yards. 0 14
THIRD QUARTER NCAT --
TD 10:53 BRANDON MCRAE 30 YD RUN (MATT MITCHELL KICK)
Drive info: 6 plays, 60 yards. 0 21
TD 7:46 CURTIS WALLS 21 YD PASS FROM HERBERT MILLER (ERIC HOUSTON KICK)
Drive info: 3 plays, 26 yards. 7 21
FOURTH QUARTER NCAT --
TD 12:19 BRENT THOMAS 16 YD PASS FROM MONTE PURVIS (MATT MITCHELL KICK)
Drive info: 5 plays, 80 yards. 7 28

Rams 28, Aggies 7
Team Stat Comparison

1st Downs 11 20
Total Yards 216 382
Passing 73 96
Rushing 143 286
Penalties 6-56 6-66
3rd Down Conversions 4-15 3-11
4th Down Conversions 2-3 1-1
Turnovers 3 1
Possession 28:54 31:06

Individual Leaders
North Carolina A&T Passing
C/ATT YDS TD INT
Miller 10/21 73 1 3
Winston-Salem Passing
C/ATT YDS TD INT
Purvis 9/15 96 2 0

North Carolina A&T Rushing
CAR YDS TD LG
Ferguson 16 64 0 17
Robinson 10 33 0 9
Miller 7 28 0 10
Winston-Salem Rushing
CAR YDS TD LG
Bines 16 125 0 55
McRae 15 85 1 30
Purvis 15 63 1 32

North Carolina A&T Receiving
REC YDS TD LG
Walls 3 31 1 21
Robinson 2 -5 0 5
Dawson 1 21 0 21
Caldwell 1 15 0 15
Winston-Salem Receiving
REC YDS TD LG
Bayne 3 23 1 19
Thomas 1 16 1 16
Scarborough 1 15 0 15
Reaves 1 15 0 15


Scoring Summary
FIRST QUARTER NCAT --
TD 6:02 MONTE PURVIS 1 YD RUN (MATT MITCHELL KICK)
Drive info: 5 plays, 23 yards. 0 7
SECOND QUARTER NCAT --
TD 13:16 BRYANT BAYNE 19 YD PASS FROM MONTE PURVIS (MATT MITCHELL KICK)
Drive info: 8 plays, 92 yards. 0 14
THIRD QUARTER NCAT --
TD 10:53 BRANDON MCRAE 30 YD RUN (MATT MITCHELL KICK)
Drive info: 6 plays, 60 yards. 0 21
TD 7:46 CURTIS WALLS 21 YD PASS FROM HERBERT MILLER (ERIC HOUSTON KICK)
Drive info: 3 plays, 26 yards. 7 21
FOURTH QUARTER NCAT --
TD 12:19 BRENT THOMAS 16 YD PASS FROM MONTE PURVIS (MATT MITCHELL KICK)
Drive info: 5 plays, 80 yards. 7 28

NSU 33, Virginia State U 7


Spartans 33, Trojans 7

NORFOLK, Va. --Daryl Jones had two touchdown runs and Justin Castellat kicked four field goals to lead Norfolk State to a 33-7 win over Division II Virginia State on Saturday night.

The Spartans (1-0) trailed 7-6 at the end of the first quarter after Virginia State's Devon Wiggins intercepted a pass from Casey Hansen that resulted in a 34-yard interception return.

Jones put Norfolk State ahead for good at the end of the second. Jones rushed for 125 yards for the Spartans, but both touchdowns came on one-yard runs.

Vince Hicks had a 4-yard run in the third quarter and Castellat padded the Spartan's lead.

Hansen was 22-of-42 for 245 yards for the Spartans.

Norfolk State, who lost 27 seniors from last season's team, kept the Trojans (0-2) to 92 yards passing. The Spartans rushed for a total of 232 yards.

BCU Wildcats 31, Jacksonville U Dolphins 17

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla.-- Quarterback Jimmie Russell rushed for 114 yards on 16 carries and scored three touchdowns to lead Bethune-Cookman to a 31-17 win over Jacksonville on Saturday.

Russell completed 7 of 19 passes for 103 yards and running back Justin Brannon added 103 rushing yards on 16 carries, as the Wildcats amassed 398 yards of offense.

Jacksonville quarterback Chris Horton threw for 177 yards, completing 15 of 39 attempts, but Bethune-Cookman defenders intercepted three of his passes -- including one for a touchdown and one in the end zone.

Horton connected on a 28-yard pass to receiver Tommie Rogers in the first quarter to put Jacksonville on the board first.

Russell scored Bethune-Cookman's two first-half touchdowns, including one that tied the scored at 7-all.

Michael Zacco kicked a 30-yard field goal at 12:09 of the second quarter to give the Dolphins a 10-7 lead.

Russell's second touchdown -- a 33-yard run -- came at the end of a 74-yard drive and pushed the Wildcats to a 14-10 advantage with 3:32 remaining in the half. Bethune-Cookman's Lucas Esquivel added a 33-yard field goal on the last play of the first half for a 17-10 edge.

The only points in the third quarter came on a 15-yard interception return by Bethune-Cookman linebacker Dennis King.

Russell's final touchdown came on an eight-yard run with 4:25 remaining in the game. It culminated an 80-yard, seven-play drive.

Jacksonville also scored on a one-yard dive by Jeremy Brown.

Wildcats 31, Dolphins 17
Team Stat Comparison

1st Downs 16 23
Total Yards 264 398
Passing 195 115
Rushing 69 283
Penalties 8-77 4-42
3rd Down Conversions 4-16 4-14
4th Down Conversions 1-2 1-1
Turnovers 3 1
Possession 26:58 33:02

Individual Leaders
Jacksonville Passing
C/ATT YDS TD INT
Horton 15/39 177 1 3
Jenner 1/1 18 0 0
Bethune-Cookman Passing
C/ATT YDS TD INT
Russell 7/19 103 0 0
Souverai... 1/2 12 0 0

Jacksonville Rushing
CAR YDS TD LG
Coltrane 14 53 0 12
Horton 6 9 0 4
Rogers 1 5 0 5
Bethune-Cookman Rushing
CAR YDS TD LG
Russell 16 114 3 33
Brannon 16 103 0 38
Kirkland 4 38 0 16

Jacksonville Receiving
REC YDS TD LG
Jenner 4 26 0 10
Rogers 2 60 1 32
Nelson 2 37 0 22
Brown 2 24 0 18
Bethune-Cookman Receiving
REC YDS TD LG
Neufville 4 37 0 15
Pope 1 48 0 48
Singleton 1 12 0 12
Kirkland 1 10 0 10


Scoring Summary
FIRST QUARTER JAC BCC
TD 6:28 TOMMIE ROGERS 28 YD PASS FROM CHRIS HORTON (MICHAEL ZACCO KICK)
Drive info: 9 plays, 76 yards. 7 0
TD 0:39 JIMMIE RUSSELL 13 YD RUN (LUCAS ESQUIVEL KICK)
Drive info: 7 plays, 47 yards. 7 7
SECOND QUARTER JAC BCC
FG 12:09 MICHAEL ZACCO 30 YD FG
Drive info: 7 plays, 33 yards. 10 7
TD 3:32 JIMMIE RUSSELL 33 YD RUN (ADAM WARD KICK)
Drive info: 7 plays, 74 yards. 10 14
FG 0:00 LUCAS ESQUIVEL 33 YD FG
Drive info: 8 plays, 82 yards. 10 17
THIRD QUARTER JAC BCC
TD 1:58 DENNIS KING 15 YD INTERCEPTION RETURN (LUCAS ESQUIVEL KICK) 10 24
FOURTH QUARTER JAC BCC
TD 4:25 JIMMIE RUSSELL 8 YD RUN (LUCAS ESQUIVEL KICK)
Drive info: 7 plays, 80 yards. 10 31
TD 2:10 JEREMY BROWN 1 YD RUN (MICHAEL ZACCO KICK)
Drive info: 6 plays, 67 yards. 17 31

Air Force Academy Falcons 34, SCSU Bulldogs 3

AIR FORCE ACADEMY, Colo.-- So much for the question of whether Air Force could successfully implement its new offense.

Shaun Carney passed for 176 yards and a touchdown, and Kip McCarthy ran for 129 yards to lead Air Force past South Carolina State 34-3 Saturday.

"After the game I feel 100 percent," Carney said about the new offense. "Before, I felt about 85 percent. Were we going to be able to do this? The way we moved the ball gave us some confidence, and it's going to give us some confidence over the next couple of weeks."

New coach Troy Calhoun brought with him a book of new plays for the Falcons' attack, and many of them worked against the Bulldogs. At one point, Air Force (1-0) lined up with five wide receivers and only Carney in the backfield. The next play, three running backs lined up directly behind the Falcons' quarterback.

It all seemed to confuse the Bulldogs (0-1), who play in the Football Championship Subdivision, formerly Division I-AA. South Carolina State forced Air Force to punt only once with it's first-team offense on the field.

The triple-option attack so famous under former coach Fisher DeBerry wasn't entirely scrapped, but the Falcons relied more on their passing game than the grind-it-out style from the DeBerry era. All four of the Air Force touchdowns were scored on drives 70 yards or more.

"They made an adjustment or two and kind of put a little pressure on us," South Carolina State coach Oliver Pough said. "We just kind of just stumbled around for the rest of the day."

The senior quarterback Carney led the Falcons 79 yards on 13 plays for a touchdown on the team's first drive, going 3-for-4 for 49 yards. McCarthy capped the drive with a 1-yard touchdown run, the first of his career.

"We were all nervous just to see what was going to happen with this offense," Carney said. "That first touchdown was a huge monkey off our back."

Tight end Travis Dekker, who had only four receptions and no touchdowns last year, was Carney's primary target in the first half. The senior had three catches for 64 yards and a touchdown.

Calhoun dialed back the passing attempts in the second half with a big lead, but he felt the Falcons did exactly what he wanted them to offensively.

"By and large, we did some good things," Calhoun said. "When you are effective running the ball, then bootlegs and play-action passes, you can go after some big plays."

Chad Hall, the Falcons' leading rusher last season who was moved to wide receiver in the spring, took a reverse for an 8-yard touchdown in the second quarter.

South Carolina State led the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference in rushing last year, but was held to just 70 yards on 34 carries. Air Force pressured quarterback Cleveland McCoy all afternoon, collecting six sacks and forcing two turnovers. Cornerback Carson Bird was in on both with a fumble recovery and an interception.

The Bulldogs' brightest spot of the afternoon was the kicking game. Punter Aaron Haire had a 61-yard punt, and kicker Stephen Grantham tied a school-record with a 51-yard field goal.

Air Force snapped a four-game losing streak dating back to last year.

"The past couple years it seemed like such a one-dimensional offense," McCarthy said. "To have Shaun go out there and throw the ball like he did...that balance of pass and run is really going to throw opponents off this year."

Falcons 34, Bulldogs 3
Team Stat Comparison

1st Downs 14 27
Total Yards 160 455
Passing 90 176
Rushing 70 279
Penalties 9-56 7-54
3rd Down Conversions 6-15 9-16
4th Down Conversions 0-0 1-2
Turnovers 2 1
Possession 26:03 33:57

Individual Leaders
South Carolina State Passing
C/ATT YDS TD INT
McCoy 10/22 84 0 1
Long 1/5 6 0 0
Air Force Passing
C/ATT YDS TD INT
Carney 11/18 176 1 1

South Carolina State Rushing
CAR YDS TD LG
Ford 12 73 0 18
Woods 8 22 0 10
McFadden 3 5 0 5
Air Force Rushing
CAR YDS TD LG
McCarthy 22 129 1 50
Carney 11 50 0 10
Stephens 7 29 1 13

South Carolina State Receiving
REC YDS TD LG
Smith 5 45 0 13
Ford 2 18 0 10
Dubose 1 15 0 15
Washington 1 6 0 6
Air Force Receiving
REC YDS TD LG
Dekker 3 64 1 31
Root 2 38 0 21
Hall 2 31 0 23
Madsen 1 15 0 15


Scoring Summary
FIRST QUARTER SCSU AFA
TD 8:28 KIP MCCARTHY 1 YD RUN (RYAN HARRISON KICK)
Drive info: 13 plays, 79 yards. 0 7
SECOND QUARTER SCSU AFA
TD 10:03 TRAVIS DEKKER 10 YD PASS FROM SHAUN CARNEY (RYAN HARRISON KICK)
Drive info: 11 plays, 70 yards. 0 14
FG 7:13 RYAN HARRISON 48 YD FG
Drive info: 4 plays, 1 yards. 0 17
TD 2:03 CHAD HALL 4 YD RUN (RYAN HARRISON KICK)
Drive info: 12 plays, 76 yards. 0 24
FG 0:00 STEPHEN GRANTHAM 51 YD FG
Drive info: 7 plays, 26 yards. 3 24
THIRD QUARTER SCSU AFA
TD 12:57 SAVIER STEPHENS 1 YD RUN (RYAN HARRISON KICK)
Drive info: 5 plays, 80 yards. 3 31
FOURTH QUARTER SCSU AFA
FG 14:08 RYAN HARRISON 22 YD FG
Drive info: 10 plays, 40 yards. 3 34

SU Jaguars 33, FAMU Rattlers 27


SU Jaguars 33, FAMU Rattlers 27

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. -- Bryant Lee completed 22 of 29 passes for 215 yards and a touchdown and Darren Coates rushed for 142 yards and two scores to lead Southern University to a 33-27 victory over Florida A&M in the third annual MEAC/SWAC Challenge on Saturday.

The Jaguars (1-0) trailed 20-12 at halftime, but scored three touchdowns on their first four possessions of the second half to jump to a 33-20 lead. Lee put Southern in front 26-20 with a 3-yard touchdown run midway through the third quarter and then Coates' 1-yard plunge early in the fourth made the score 33-20.

The Rattlers (0-1) were unable to overcome injuries to their top two quarterbacks. Backup Leon Camel played most of the first half because of a shoulder injury to starter Albert Chester. Camel then left the game with a foot injury in the third quarter, forcing Chester to return.

The Jaguars took the lead on their first offensive play of the game as Coates broke loose for a 90-yard touchdown run. FAMU answered with a 9-yard touchdown run from Camel and a 45-yard scoring run by Phillip Sylvester, giving the Rattlers a 14-6 lead with 6:05 left in the first half.

Southern cut the lead to 14-12 less than two minutes later on a 46-yard touchdown pass from Lee to Gerard Landry. Camel then connected with Javares Knight for a 40-yard touchdown pass to make the score 20-12 at the half.

Attendance: 30,106

MVSU Delta Devils 16, UAPB Golden Lions 9


ITTA BENA, Miss. -- Abner Brown caught a game-clinching 15-yard touchdown pass and Mississippi Valley State upset Arkansas-Pine Bluff 16-9 on Saturday.

Brown caught eight passes -- five more than any other player in the game -- for 87 yards and put the Delta Devils (1-0) up 16-3 on a pass from Paul Roberts with 3 seconds left in the first half.

The Golden Lions (0-1), the Southwestern Athletic Conference runner-up last year, gained more yards than the Delta Devils and held the ball for 5 minutes longer.

But MVSU jumped out to a 10-0 lead in the first quarter on Ronald Brewer's 2-yard touchdown run and Zack Gilarski's 42-yard field goal, and Arkansas-Pine Bluff couldn't rally.

The Golden Lions' John Heflin hit a 22-yard field goal in the second quarter, but missed an extra point after Kenneth Esaw's 3-yard touchdown in the fourth quarter.

Delta Devils 16, Golden Lions 9
Team Stat Comparison

1st Downs 16 14
Total Yards 224 183
Passing 154 153
Rushing 70 30
Penalties 9-66 9-102
3rd Down Conversions 6-15 6-15
4th Down Conversions 0-3 0-1
Turnovers 2 1
Possession 32:27 27:33

Individual Leaders
Arkansas-Pine Bluff Passing
C/ATT YDS TD INT
Wallace 14/27 154 0 0
Mississippi Valley State Passing
C/ATT YDS TD INT
Roberts 15/27 153 1 0

Arkansas-Pine Bluff Rushing
CAR YDS TD LG
Mallett 5 23 0 8
Dean 9 19 0 8
Esaw 8 17 1 10
Mississippi Valley State Rushing
CAR YDS TD LG
Brewer 11 19 1 10
Hargrett 7 17 0 8
Gilarski 1 4 0 5

Arkansas-Pine Bluff Receiving
REC YDS TD LG
Jones 3 29 0 12
Beverly 2 34 0 25
Webber 2 21 0 14
Gay 1 25 0 25
Mississippi Valley State Receiving
REC YDS TD LG
Brown 8 87 1 26
Stargell 3 40 0 16
Cotton 2 8 0 8
Fox 1 11 0 11


Scoring Summary
FIRST QUARTER APB MVSU
TD 12:31 RONALD BREWER 2 YD RUN (ZACK GILARSKI KICK)
Drive info: 7 plays, 36 yards. 0 7
FG 7:50 ZACK GILARSKI 42 YD FG
Drive info: 10 plays, 25 yards. 0 10
SECOND QUARTER APB MVSU
FG 2:11 JOHN HEFLIN 22 YD FG
Drive info: 17 plays, 74 yards. 3 10
TD 0:03 ABNER BROWN 15 YD PASS FROM PAUL ROBERTS (BLOCKED XP)
Drive info: 8 plays, 44 yards. 3 16
FOURTH QUARTER APB MVSU
TD 9:35 KENNETH ESAW 3 YD RUN (MISSED KICK)
Drive info: 6 plays, 37 yards. 9 16

MEAC/SWAC Scoreboard September 1st


MEAC Scoreboard - Week 2

Savannah State (7)
@ Morgan State (47) Final
7:00 PM Thu Aug 30

South Carolina State (3)
@ Air Force (34) Final
2:00 PM Sat Sep 1

Southern University (33) Final
@ Florida A&M (27)
Birmingham, AL
3:00 PM Sat Sep 1
ESPN Classic & ESPN 360

Jacksonville (17)
@ Bethune-Cookman (31) Final
4:00 PM Sat Sep 1

Virginia State (7)
@ Norfolk State (33) Final
6:00 PM Sat Sep 1

North Carolina A&T (7)
@ Winston-Salem (28) Final
6:00 PM Sat Sep 1

Coastal Carolina (18)
@ Delaware State (23) Final
7:00 PM Sat Sep 1

SWAC Scoreboard - Week 1

Arkansas-Pine Bluff (9)
@ Mississippi Valley State (16) Final
2:00 PM Sat Sep 1
CSTV live

Southern University (33)
@ Florida A&M (27) Final
Birmingham, AL
3:00 PM Sat Sep 1
ESPN Classic & ESPN 360

Grambling State (31)
@ Alcorn State (10) Final
7:00 PM Sat Sep 1

Delta State (27)
@ Jackson State (15) Final
7:00 PM Sat Sep 1

Alabama A&M (49)
@ Tennessee State (23) Final
7:00 PM Sat Sep 1

Jacksonville State (19)
@ Alabama State (24) Final
8:00 PM Sat Sep 1

Prairie View A&M (34)
@ Texas Southern (14) Final
8:00 PM Sat Sep 1
ESPNU

Division I Independent - Scoreboard Week 1

August 23
North Carolina Central--(10)
at Albany State U (16) Final

Savannah State (7)
@ Morgan State (47) Final
7:00 PM Thu Aug 30

Fayetteville State (0)
@North Carolina Central (17)
4:00 p.m., Sunday Sept 2


FCS UPSET OF THE YEAR: Appalachian State University (34) @
#5 University of Michigan (32) Final

NSU Spartan Men Win Opening Cross Country Meet at UMES


PRINCESS ANNE, Md. – The Norfolk State men’s cross country team opened its 2007 season by winning the Maryland Eastern Shore Lid-Lifter Invitational on Saturday morning. The Spartans tallied 29 points as each of their five runners finished in the top nine.

NSU finished ahead of second-place UMES (38 points), Delaware State (68) and University of the District of Columbia (96).

Junior Hillary Cheruiyot (Eldoret, Kenya) led the way for NSU with a second-place finish, completing the 5k course in 25:44.56. Sophomore Jonathan Soimo (Kapsabet, Kenya) was fourth overall in 26:11.71, and senior Dominic Luka (Marietta, N.Y.) was sixth in 26:48.69.

Rounding out NSU’s top five were junior Keenan Harris (Norfolk, Va.), who finished eighth overall in 28:08.84, and sophomore Liam Arocho (Virginia Beach, Va.), who was ninth overall in 28:25.25.

The Spartan men are back in action next Saturday, Sept. 8, at the Lou Onesty Invitational at the University of Virginia.

NSU Spartans know first foe's no pushover


By VICKI L. FRIEDMAN, The Virginian-Pilot

Pete Adrian calls it the Super Bowl
.

Sounds a little over the top, even for pregame hype, doesn't it, considering it's only Division I-AA Norfolk State taking on Division II Virginia State? Today's Labor Day Classic kicks off the Spartans' season at 6 p.m., at Dick Price Stadium.

Yet, consider this. In 10 years as a Division I-AA team, the Spartans are 5-5 against the Trojans. Adrian is 1-1, with last year's 29-14 victory breaking a three-game losing streak to Virginia State.

Jason Kressen, a redshirt senior looks almost pained when he says, "I don't know what it feels like to walk off the field having beaten Virginia State." Kressen was sidelined last year when NSU recorded the victory.

"This year is about vindication for me," he said.

"We showed them the film from two years ago," Adrian said. "It was ugly."

The Spartans have stressed all preseason that they want this year to be about making a statement in the MEAC, so is this non-league game a must-win? Hardly. But anything less than a manhandling of Virginia State from a team that appears ready to have a breakthrough season would be disappointing.

A year ago, the Spartans led the Trojans 22-0, earning two touchdowns via special teams before the opponent made the final score respectable.

"I've been on our offense because we won last year, but we had 190 yards and we ran 39 plays," Adrian said. "We've got to come out and dominate."

These Spartans, who say they formed a unique bond by lifting each other during the wicked heat that made two-a-days more difficult than normal, say they are stronger than in years past. Adrian says they are deeper at every position, too, but also younger. Twenty-seven seniors are gone from last year's team, and 50 of the 89 players on the roster are either freshmen or sophomores.

If Virginia State has any advantage, it is that the Trojans have already played a game. They fell 52-21 last week to Carson-Newman, a I-AA team ranked 22nd in the preseason Sports Network Poll.

A history-making game awaits in two weeks when NSU travels to Rutgers to takes on its first Division I-A opponent, but for now it's Virginia State, and Adrian promises no Spartan is looking ahead.

Virginia State, he said, "is all we've talked about."

Now it's time to play.

Scouting N.C. A&T football team


SCOUTING THE AGGIES

Coach: Lee Fobbs (0-11 overall and in one season at N.C. A&T)

2006 record: 0-11 overall, 0-8 MEAC

Home field: Aggie Stadium (21,500), Greensboro

KEY QUESTIONS FOR N.C. A&T

Will the Aggies be any better this year?

Yes. Coach Lee Fobbs is a bright guy who has addressed personnel needs by different means. The influx of several transfers -- from Division I-A schools and junior colleges -- should make A&T more competitive. The Aggies' losing streak, currently at 16 games, is the longest by six in the NCAA division formerly called I-AA.

What's the biggest offensive concern?

Four true freshmen dot the two-deep on the line. At least early, that puts a premium on the health of veteran C Tim Bess and RG Andrew Sagote. Fobbs likes his young guys -- Enoch Cohen, Adrian Carter, Jason Valmont and Alex Harper should have a chance to play -- but he knows they're a year away from being major contributors. The Aggies have RB Michael Ferguson healthy again, and Demerick Chancellor is a Clemson transfer who did well when he got to play for the Tigers.

And the chief issue on defense?

When you were next to last in the country in stopping the run and scoring defense and 114th out of 116 in total defense, there's no isolated issue to tackle. You just have to tackle anything you can. It's safe to say that rushing defense must come first in the MEAC, in which five of last year's nine teams finished 99th or lower nationally in passing yards per game. Sophomore DE Andre Thornton led the team in tackles as a rookie. Junior college transfers Ihsan Shaheed and Michael Pace are expected to start in the secondary. In light of the way things worked out last year, that can't be bad.

How long will the rebuilding take?

Don't expect it to be quick. Of the 18 players signed in 2006, only 10 are still on the roster. The departed include QB Wayne Campbell, CB J.J. Yates and K Ross Vosburg, all of whom played in every game; and TE Spenser Spane, who caught one of the team's nine TD passes.

2006 results

Winston-Salem State L 41-14

at Hampton L 48-14

at Louisiana-Lafayette L 48-7

at Norfolk State L 42-20

Morgan State L 32-0

at Delaware State L 37-21

Howard L 26-0

at Bethune-Cookman L 70-7

Florida A&M L 45-12

Elon L 45-0

vs. S.C. State (Charlotte) L 41-19

Schedule
Saturday at Winston-Salem State 6

Sept. 8 vs. Prairie View A&M-a 5:30

Sept. 15 Hampton 6 (ESPNU-b)

Sept. 22 N.C. Central 6:30

Sept. 27 Norfolk State 7:30 (ESPNU)

Oct. 6 at Morgan State 4

Oct. 13 Delaware State 1:30

Oct. 20 at Howard 1

Oct. 27 Bethune-Cookman 1:30 (HC)

Nov. 3 at Florida A&M 3

Nov. 17 vs. S.C. State (Charleston) 1

a-Angel City Classic (Los Angeles) b-tape-delayed telecast, 10 p.m.

N.C. A&T INFO

Tickets: Home games vs. Hampton, N.C. Central, Norfolk State, Delaware State, $20; Bethune-Cookman (homecoming), $35. Call 334-7749 or go to www.ncataggies.com.

Official Web site: www.ncataggies.com

Local radio affiliate: WNAA-90.1


Offense

POS. NO. PLAYER HT. WT. YR.

WR 15 Giorgio Lowrance 6-4 200 So.

85 Terrence Whitaker 6-2 170 Fr.

LT 73 Chad Wiley 6-4 280 Jr.

74 Enoch Cohen 6-4 285 Fr.

LG 61 Jonathan Carter 6-4 305 Jr.

78 Adrian Carter 6-2 295 Fr.

C 75 Tim Bess 6-2 330 So.

74 Enoch Cohen 6-4 285 Fr.

RG 57 Andrew Sagote 6-1 320 Jr.

70 Jason Valmont 6-3 305 Fr.

RT 67 Juan Williams 6-3 315 Jr.

77 Alex Harper 6-5 280 Fr.

TE 84 Brett Fisher 6-1 225 So.

24 Michael Christen 6-2 275 Jr.

WR 1 Curtis Walls 5-10 170 Sr.

87 Mike Caldwell 5-9 165 Sr.

QB 18 Herbert Miller 6-2 180 So.

19 Shelton Morgan 6-1 200 Fr.

FB 44 Ortiz Green 5-11 240 Sr.

32 Eugene Parnell 5-10 245 So.

TB 28 Michael Ferguson 5-11 185 Jr.

8 Demerick Chancellor 6-1 205 Jr.

K 37 Elliott Simmonds 6-5 210 Fr.

Defense
POS. NO. PLAYER HT. WT. YR.

LE 52 Joe Taylor 6-2 230 Jr.

93 Tyre Glasper 6-2 300 Jr.

DT 71 Kelvin Jackson 6-4 340 Fr.

98 LaShawn McLean 6-3 285 Sr.

RE 51 Antonio Johnson 6-3 230 Sr.

90 Phillip Sumlin 6-2 240 Jr.

OLB 33 Tim Shropshire 6-1 230 Jr.

46 Andre Thornton 6-3 230 So.

MLB 59 Robert Russell 6-0 240 Jr.

34 Davion Hemphill 6-1 215 Jr.

OLB 16 Brandon Long 6-1 225 Jr.

53 Jamison Hedgepeth 6-2 213 Jr.

SS 21 Nick Clement 6-0 190 So.

10 Brandon Jackson 5-11 200 So.

CB 7 Ihsan Shaheed 5-10 175 Jr.

4 Deshaun Graham 5-11 170 So.

CB 26 Michael Pace 5-11 175 Jr.

20 Simeon Platt 5-10 185 So.

CB 2 Donald Dorsey 6-2 180 So.

9 Brandon Croley 5-11 200 Jr.

WS 25 Marques Ruffin 6-2 190 Jr.

35 Quentin Caple 6-0 185 Fr.

P 43 Lee Woodson 6-0 215 Jr.

-- Compiled by Rob Daniels

NCAT Aggies quarterback comes back fast


By Rob Daniels, Greensboro News & Record

Photo: N.C. A&T quarterback Herb Miller


GREENSBORO -- Herb Miller didn't want to do anything halfway, which is why he got everything done in half the time.

"The trainer told me it was unheard of," said N.C. A&T's starting quarterback.

Miller was talking about his recovery from two torn knee ligaments and one ripped biceps tendon in four months instead of the projected eight. The comeback allowed Miller to play unabated throughout spring practice and be fully ready for Saturday's opener at Winston-Salem State, and the Aggies would like it to be a metaphor for their renaissance. There were no shortcuts for the quarterback, and there won't be any for a team that was winless in 2006. But A&T won't rule out an accelerated timetable for respectability, either.

"Sometimes you have to get pinned in a hole," linebacker Tim Shropshire said. "And then you rocket out."

With nobody else on the team to give him a legitimate fight for the job, Miller had the starting gig locked up even if he didn't take a snap until August. What was the rush? And why work like crazy to direct what was the worst offense in NCAA Division I-AA last season?

"Why? Because he wanted to," quarterbacks coach Dwike Wilson said. "It's attitude. Going 0-11 on his watch, he couldn't let his team down. That's all it was."

The debacle of last season can't fall entirely on Miller's shoulders. Wayne Campbell started at quarterback part of the season, and Miller missed the final four games after somebody backed into him in the Howard game. He had surgery the day after the Aggies lost 70-7 at Bethune-Cookman, which he watched on TV from his dorm room.

"I'm sitting there, and I can't believe what's going on," said Miller, who threw for 236 yards and ran for 138 before his injury.

Two or three sessions a day with trainer Rob Woodall brought Miller's strength up quickly. The original prognosis of an eight-month recovery was shaved to six. And then six became four.

"I knew I was going to make it in four," Miller said, "when I went into the training room and instead of going through the normal regimen, (Woodall) told me, 'We're going to go outside and run today. The way you run today is going to tell when you're going to come back.' He had me running full sprints, cutting drills and everything."

It wasn't all for show and inspiration. And the time off, Miller said, made him wiser. Now he thinks it's OK to slide or hop out of bounds as defenders are giving chase.

"In the spring game, for the first time in my career of playing quarterback, I slid," said Miller, a 6-foot-2, 180-pound sophomore from Carver. "That wowed myself. I went home, and that's all my mom and dad could talk about: getting down and getting out of bounds."

The seemingly contradictory corollary is Miller's newfound willingness to stand in the pocket and perhaps take a hit.

"He understands his value to the team is on the field and not on the sideline next to me," coach Lee Fobbs said.

Which is not to say the intensity is gone. While coaching receivers in the spring, Wilson pointed to Miller as an example of intelligent aggression.

"He's a small quarterback who understands the game," senior wideout Curtis Walls said. "He's not just an athlete. I'm exceptionally happy with how far Herb has come."

The tenor Miller established last winter helps explain why the coaches think offseason workouts have been more productive this year. If they hadn't been, you could reasonably expect pulled hamstrings or other nagging things to be accumulating about now. They're not.

It would be foolish to decree that all is well with this team. But the safe arrival of the only experienced guy at the most important position is a start.

WSSU's first 'official' MEAC game is a big one


By John Dell, JOURNAL REPORTER

Any Winston-Salem State fans wondering why the school would jump from the comfortable world of the CIAA and Division II to the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference might find their answer today at Bowman Gray Stadium.

WSSU will take on rival N.C. A&T at 6 p.m. in front of what is expected to be one of the largest non-homecoming crowds in school history. Bowman Gray’s capacity is about 18,000, and WSSU officials are hoping for a sellout.

The Aggies last played in Winston-Salem in 1999 and defeated the Rams 20-7 in front of 17,500. WSSU won the last game 41-14 in Greensboro last season.

Coach Kermit Blount of WSSU said that keeping his team from getting too excited about the game - the season opener for both schools - was a priority this week.

“It’s a huge game for us,” Blount said. “This is kind of our first official MEAC game, even though we don’t count in the standings yet. We want to come away with the win, not only because it’s A&T but because a win would get our season started in the right way.”

One of the byproducts of the Rams joining the MEAC is the renewed rivalry. The two schools are a little more than 30 miles apart, and they have one of the state’s longest rivalries. The series started in 1944, and the teams met regularly until 1999.

“We try to not listen to all the pregame talk and the hype,” Blount said. “There’s all that talk coming from both sides, but we don’t want to talk, we want to play. We are going to keep our kids settled down and keep them as focused as we can.”

Last season, Blount sold his team on the fact that he had never coached in a victory against A&T, and the Rams responded. Blount, now 1-7 against A&T, said he used other means to motivate his veteran team this time.

“What we are selling them now is we are building a program in this conference,” Blount said. “In order to build, we have to win games against MEAC teams. I think these kids have bought into that.”

Coach Lee Fobbs didn’t know much about the rivalry last year, his first season at A&T. He does now.

“We will tell our guys not to get caught up in the trash talking,” Fobbs said. “We’ll tell them to keep their heads during the game, but the back and forth (talk) is going to happen. There is nothing you can do about that.

“But I’ve discovered the person who says less is usually ready to play, and the one who talks the most really isn’t ready at all. We want our guys to be excited, but we want them to be smart, too.”

The Aggies lead the series with the Rams 35-10, but they have a 16-game losing streak that dates to the 2005 season, and they’ll be facing a deep and experienced Rams’ defense.

WSSU lost just one starter from last season’s defense - end Jason Holman - and coordinator Mike Ketchum says that the defense is “further advanced than we’ve ever been.”

Ketchum said it’s likely that all 11 of his starters today will have made at least one college start, a luxury he has never had before.

“I think the biggest thing now that we didn’t have when I first got here (three years ago) is we can replace guys and not lose much,” Ketchum said. “That overall depth really comes in handy.”

Senior Nate Biggs, who has roamed the WSSU defensive backfield for three years, started his career at Appalachian State. He smiles when he is reminded that he could have been on two national-championship teams had he stayed in Boone.

“I still keep in touch with some of those guys,” Biggs said. “But I made a good choice to come here.

“I’m really excited about this season because we’ve got most everybody back among the starters on defense. We are hoping to have a great year.”

Biggs said that the biggest change he has seen since arriving at WSSU has been an increase in team speed.

“Speed is our best friend, and we just try to get to the ball,” Biggs said. “We attack, and Coach Ketchum likes to blitz a lot, but that’s because of our speed.”

Blount said: “Our defense will be as good as William Hayes and Thad Griffin and some other veterans can be. With guys like Nate Biggs and DeRon Middleton and Dimetrius Rivers, they are going to have to anchor the defense.”

Hampton, S.C. State to jockey for MEAC


By KRISTIAN POPE, The News Journal

Hampton trying for fourth championship

VIRGINIA BEACH, Va. -- Their feeling of abandonment was palpable at July's preseason meeting of Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference football coaches.

And little old Winston-Salem State didn't even have a home to be abandoned from. Technically.

But there sat the school's football contingent, led by head coach Kermit Blount, ready to answer questions about his program's first year as a "member" of the conference. WSSU is now considered a provisional Division I program until 2010-2011.

Which means, according to a MEAC spokesperson, WSSU's football games against league opponents won't be counted toward the final standings for three more seasons. Nor will the team be eligible for the league's weekly awards and postseason honors.

For WSSU it all means one thing: forget about having to compete with South Carolina State and Hampton for the league championship and Division I-AA playoff berth.

Once again, the MEAC will mainly be a two-team race between defending champion Hampton and South Carolina State.

Hampton loses 13 starters but has more than enough talent -- like defensive player of the year junior end Kendall Langford -- to compete for a fourth-straight regular-season championship. Receiver Jeremy Gilchrist (Virginia Tech) and quarterback TJ Mitchell (West Virginia) will be a powerful tandem for coach Joe Taylor.

"That's what I respect about this conference," Taylor said. "It's gotten better and better. If we can lose that many starters and still be considered for a championship, that shows a lot of respect for our program."

South Carolina State, the preseason pick among coaches and school sports information directors, is a team that needs to win the championship outright. It hasn't done so since 1994 and coach Buddy Pough is feeling the pressure to deliver and get his team to the postseason under his leadership.

"We're at the point where we need to make the playoffs," Pough said. "It appears we have the staff to do it. This is a business of nerves."

Here are a few items to keep an eye on as the season begins:

Coach(es) on the run: Look out Pough and Alvin Wyatt. Pough's 40-17 record at SCSU won't help him if he misses the playoffs. Wyatt, who claims to be college football's best-dressed coach, might be shopping at the Goodwill store if his Wildcats finish in sixth place.

You'll hear from him again: Howard senior defensive lineman Rudy Hardy. With new defensive coordinator Andre Creamer (discarded from DSU's staff), the 6-1, 270-pounder should land an invite to the NFL combine.

Make the trip: South Carolina State comes to Hampton on Oct. 20, and at least one of these teams will be vying for a championship.

DSU Hornets QB never doubted comeback from leg surgery



By KRISTIAN POPE, The News Journal

After injury, Winton set to return for season opener

DOVER -- Hobbling off the artificial turf last November at Dick Price Stadium in Norfolk, Va., Vashon Winton never doubted himself.

When he heard the extent of his injury, Winton stayed strong.

In the operating room, before he was put to sleep and the surgeon carved into his left leg, Winton still exuded confidence.

Almost a year after season-ending surgery to repair a broken fibula, a fractured tibia and a torn ligament, Winton, a junior quarterback at Delaware State, says the only thing he wants to remember about his injury last November is his confidence to return just as he departed: as the most important player to the Hornets' success.

"Sometimes," Winton said, "I even forget which leg I hurt."

Winton, a 6-foot-2, 195-pounder from Chicago's Simeon High, holds a lot in his hands. With him, the Hornets -- who open the season tonight against nonconference Coastal Carolina -- could be among the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference teams vying for the regular-season championship.

Without Winton, the 2005 MEAC rookie of the year, DSU's season could be in doubt. But he had no doubts he would be on the Alumni Stadium field tonight.

For Winton, that realization was built one month at a time.

Nov. 11, 2006

"All I saw was the end zone. I just wanted to reach the end zone."

It was the Hornets' 10th game of the season. Two weeks prior, they celebrated one of the program's biggest wins under coach Al Lavan, a 10-9 victory over MEAC title contender South Carolina State.

Facing Norfolk State, DSU was closing in on a share of the school's first MEAC title since 1991. Winton had a lot to do with it.

"I've always been very pleased with Vashon," Lavan said. "One thing about him, he's always understood the game. He can absorb the game mentally very well."

On the Hornets' second possession, a play called for Winton to run the ball. As he broke for the sideline, Winton saw the end zone. He suddenly was met by Spartans freshman defensive back Terrell Whitehead.

Winton, a shifty runner, went right. Whitehead, Winton remembers, went left.

As the two crumpled to the ground, Whitehead rolled on top of Winton, forcing his ankle to twist awkwardly.

"I didn't think it was broken," Winton said. "It felt like a sprain."

As it turned out, DSU didn't need Winton against a young Norfolk State team and won, 33-10. But Winton's status, and perhaps his career, remained in question.

DSU quarterback Vashon Winton (with ball) runs through drills with his offensive teammates in Friday's practice. Winton has recovered from a serious leg injury last November to start tonight's season opener














Nov. 13, 2006

"I don't think there was any doubt I'd come back normal."

Two breaks. Both clean. Couldn't hope for anything better, Winton was told.

Fibula, broken. Tibia, fractured. One ligament, torn.

Winton points to just above his left ankle. He said the X-ray displayed a quarter-inch gap on his fibula where the actual break took place.

DSU's coaching staff initially believed Winton would be out a year. They said that if he stayed to his regimen of therapy, he might return sooner.

Winton said he instinctively knew he'd need surgery. But he had never had an injury that required an operation.

"I was nervous," he said. "It was just something I knew I had to do."

Lavan, whose NFL career ended due to an injury, understood.

"It's the unknown that can be very scary," Lavan said. "His was a leg injury. Those are your wheels, you know? Every step he takes is critical."

Winton said he constantly secured help from his teammates. Lineman Addison Wright, whom he knew from Chicago, would bus food to Winton from the school cafeteria.

Returning to the field was going to take time, however. With his focus squarely on playing again, Winton remained positive.

"Yeah, that's me," Winton said. "Everyone knows it's me. That's my confidence."






















January 2007

"I wanted to come back sooner. If the bone healed better, I would have."

By January, Winton was back at DSU, off crutches, for winter classes. Trainers let him lift weights and take part in a water therapy program.

Lavan believes DSU's success depends on Winton's recovery.

"The process of his rehab, its cumulative effects, it has all pleased me," Lavan said.

Last season, Winton completed 99-of-167 passes for 1,171 yards. He threw two interceptions. Most importantly, he rushed for 234 yards and seven touchdowns.

The play on which he was injured -- a basic quarterback keeper -- is something the Hornets need him to execute successfully if they are to compete for the MEAC title.

Spring practice, in April, is a crucial time for developing players or athletes recovering from injury. However, Winton was not allowed to participate in full-speed plays.

Sitting out led to something Winton didn't expect. He became more enlightened.

Ideas bounced in his head. He saw mistakes he was making. And he found solutions.

Just watching, Winton said, will make a noticeable difference this season. And it all started, he said, in November.

"I never doubted myself," he said. "I knew it was a season-ending injury, but luckily that only meant one game for me. I just kept believing."