Monday, September 7, 2009

Alabama State 38, Concordia 33

ALABAMA STATE 38, CONCORDIA 33: Hornets hold off Concordia

Alabama State got more than it bargained for Saturday night. What some thought would be a routine season opener turned into a fight for survival. Concordia College of Selma rallied from an early deficit and pulled within one score of upsetting ASU in the final minutes at Cramton Bowl. ASU's defense made a final stand at its 26 to seal a 38-33 win. "We weren't overlooking them. That wasn't the problem," ASU linebacker Adrian Hardy said. "We knew they would be ready to play and we expected it to be a fight. It was."

ASU head coach Reggie Barlow said the game was a starting point. "This game served its purpose," Barlow said. "We got to see our team under the lights and we got a look at how we would perform. We've got a long way to go." The game may have served its purpose, but not without leaving Barlow and his Hornets sweating the finals minutes. After watching a 38-14 lead disappear in the final 17 minutes, ASU needed its defense to step up.

Photo Galleries: ASU plays Concordia College

Hornets' comeback falls short

Concordia College football coach Shepherd Skanes felt the pain Saturday night. Not the pain of losing 38-33 to Alabama State University in the Cramton Bowl. The pain of not winning, however, cut to the quick. “As hard as we played tonight, it hurts,” said Skanes, whose Hornets dropped to 1-1 with the narrow defeat. “We were supposed to win.” Skanes had problems with the amount of penalties and the officiating difficulties the Hornets suffered during the game.

After having to deal with nine penalties for 74 yards in the first half, Concordia had to call attention to the time clock, which was running after an incomplete pass. “I know (the officials) did what they had to do, what they were supposed to do,” he said. “But it's not supposed to be that way.” Concordia pulled within three scores to open the fourth quarter when quarterback T'Chelpio Woods hit Calvin Cornish for a 19-yard TD pass with 9:22 to play. ASU led 38-27.

ASU Hornets Jermaine Peryear fights for yardage against Concordia defense.

Maturity RB Traylor's top trait

Rahmod Traylor is mature. To Alabama State head coach Reggie Barlow, that's the most obvious character trait in his senior running back. No matter the situation, no matter the circumstances, Barlow and the rest of the ASU coaches know that Traylor will do what's expected and what's right. Every time. "He's a guy that's just always there, always steady," Barlow said. "That maturity is so important to have around a team. Having that guy you can count on to be accountable and be where he's supposed to be is a great lesson for the other players." Being where he's supposed to be has been a bit difficult for Traylor the last couple of seasons.

Woods takes Hornets to ASU

Concordia College junior quarterback T’Chelpio Woods played two years at Alabama State, but his return to Montgomery to face his former team Saturday will not be a homecoming. “I’m from Selma,” Woods said Thursday on the Hornets’ practice field. “Whether we win or lose, it’s a milestone for us, showing how far we’ve gone. They’ve got everything to lose. We’ve got nothing to lose and everything to gain.”

Woods played two years at Selma High before completing his high school football at Central Christian Academy. The Hornets (1-0) of Dallas County have the momentum from last week’s season opener, when they shellacked Texas College 68-0. They will be the opponent in the season opener for the Hornets of Montgomery County. Alabama State is a larger school than Concordia, but that doesn’t concern Woods.

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MEAC/SWAC: HBCUs' real challenge is survival

SWAC Commissioner Duer Sharp, "Disney and the City of Orlando have done an excellent job, but I want to bring it [MEAC/SWAC Challenge] back to Birmingham," Sharp said.

The lousy economy has long tentacles. It's all about survival, whether it's a distressed auto industry or banks trying to regain their footing. No different whether the business model involves Manolo Blahniks or football cleats. There are 105 historically black colleges and universities (HBCUs) in this nation. Two of them gathered their football teams, fans and alumni in Central Florida this weekend for a smorgasbord of events meant to pump up not only interest but financial stability.

MEAC Commissioner Dr. Dennis E. Thomas, "The landscape is tough but it's nothing that we haven't experienced over an extended period of time."

South Carolina State University and Grambling State University put on an entertaining show during the Fifth Annual MEAC/SWAC Challenge at the Florida Citrus Bowl Sunday afternoon. South Carolina State won, 34-31, on a defensive stop in the final minutes when cornerback Semaj Moody intercepted a pass by Greg Dillon. It was a pleasant way to spend three-plus hours despite the occasional drop of rain. But when everybody packs up and goes home, it's time to put away the party favors and deal with the economic realities: Many non-state-supported HBCUs are trying to stay solvent, given increased educational costs, and drops in endowments and financial aid for students.

2009 MEAC/SWAC Challenge Attendance: 21,367.

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Shooting sidelines FAMU's Running Back Page for season

"The involved parties had no affiliation with FAMU except for the victims."

Running back Lonvontae Page had mixed emotions Sunday afternoon while sitting in FAMU's locker room. He was glad to be alive after being shot in his left forearm Saturday night. Some anger was in his voice as he talked about the incident that ruined what was the best start to his college football career. He will miss the remaining games this season and will request a medical red shirt, coach Joe Taylor said.
























Sophomore RB Lonvontae Page plows 6 yards for Rattler TD, gaining 61 yards on 20 carries in FAMU 21-12 win over Delaware State Hornets.

Page was the victim of a stray bullet about two hours after he'd rushed for 61 yards on 20 carries to help the Rattlers beat Delaware State 21-12 in their season opener. His 14-year old cousin, Quinterrius Page, also was struck in the jaw by the same bullet that wounded the sophomore running back. A third victim was identified as a 17-year-old. FAMU police arrested a 17-year old boy Sunday morning on three counts each of felony battery using a deadly weapon, firing a weapon in public and crimes against persons, said FAMU Police Chief Calvin Ross.

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VIDEO: http://www.wctv.tv/news/headlines/57613372.html

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Arkansas State 61, Mississippi Valley 0

MVSU Delta Devils head coach Willie Totten

Red Wolves Roll Past Mississippi Valley State in Season Opener

Senior tailback Reggie Arnold rushed for 126 yards and four touchdowns and senior quarterback Corey Leonard became the Arkansas State all-time yardage leader as the Red Wolves rolled to 61-0 victory over the Mississippi Valley State Delta Devils in the season opener Saturday night at ASU Stadium. Leonard passed for 129 yards and a touchdown and rushed for seven more to finish the night with 7,433 career yards, surpassing Cleo Lemon's mark of 7,309 set from 1997-2000.

Arkansas State piled up 496 yards on the night while holding the Delta Devils to 69 yards of total offense. The shutout was the Red Wolves' first since a 3-0 overtime victory over Florida Atlantic during the 2005 season. "We did what we needed to do, we came out and got a victory," said ASU head coach Steve Roberts. "I was very proud of the preparation of our young men, coming out and taking care of business. We got to play a lot of people tonight and got sloppy towards the end on special teams, but I thought our offense and defense continued to play well. We got a lot of guys on scout team who never get an opportunity to play, and we rewarded them by letting them play in the 3rd and 4th quarters."

Next up for Arkansas St.: Nebraska

Arkansas State won't have long to savor its 61-0 victory over Mississippi Valley State. Next up for the Red Wolves is a trip Saturday to Nebraska, which opened its season with a 49-3 victory over Florida Atlantic. Like ASU, Florida Atlantic is a member of the Sun Belt Conference. Against Mississippi Valley, Reggie Arnold scored four touchdowns for the Red Wolves and rushed for 126 yards on 12 carries. Corey Leonard completed 8 of 13 passes for 129 yards and a touchdown, and he rushed for another 10 yards. Leonard became ASU's leader in career total offense, with 7,433 yards. ASU's defense held the Delta Devils to 69 total yards.

Delta Devils Armon Williams goes in for the tackle.

Valley braced for brutal first game

Mississippi Valley State's first game will be its toughest. Trying to rebound from back-to-back 3-9 seasons, the Delta Devils kick off the 2009 season Saturday at Arkansas State - a Football Bowl Subdivision team (formerly known as Division I-A) that returns 17 starters from last year's team that went 6-6 and defeated Texas A&M."No doubt this will be a challenge for us," Valley coach Willie Totten said. "They play a lot of tough competition in Division I-A in the Sun Belt conference."The good news is that we will know exactly where we are with this team, and with an open date coming up, we will have two weeks to get it right before we open conference play.

"The Red Wolves are 4-0 against Southwestern Athletic Conference teams, with the last two wins coming in major blowouts (55-3 over MVSU in 1995 and 83-10 over Texas Southern in 2008). This is obviously not the way Totten would have preferred to open the season, but this game gives Valley's strapped athletic budget a boost because Arkansas State will pay MVSU $200,000 to play Saturday. Totten says the program should net at least $185,000 once all the travel expenses are paid.

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Sunday, September 6, 2009

Southern Mississippi 52, Alcorn State Braves 0

Davis fuels rout

HATTIESBURG, MS - Austin Davis directed the Southern Miss offense with efficiency Saturday night against Alcorn State, finding everyone of his playmakers with ease in the first game of the season. With his biggest target, DeAndre Brown, standing on the sideline in jeans, Davis picked apart the Alcorn State defense as every key player on the Golden Eagles offense had several opportunities with the ball in their hands.

"What Austin has done is he's doing a better job of managing the offense," coach Larry Fedora said. "He's got a fresh understanding of what we want him to accomplish. He's going to take the open receiver because he's reading the coverage to see where it should go." Southern Miss cruised to a 52-0 victory over the SWAC team from Lorman before a record crowd of 36,232 at M.M. Roberts Stadium.

Collins: character will show on film

First-year Alcorn State head football coach Earnest Collins Jr. has much better memories from his first visit to Roberts Stadium than the ones he and his Braves carried back to Lorman on Saturday night. In 2007, Collins was defensive backs coach for Central Florida when the Knights left Hattiesburg with a Conference USA victory over Southern Miss. Saturday night was a completely different story, as the Golden Eagles struck early and often, handing the Braves a 52-0 thumping before the largest crowd in stadium history - 36,232 - in the season opener for both teams.

"I'm a realist," said Collins, who was associate head coach/defensive coordinator for the Braves last season. "The first part is, we didn't execute like we should have. The second part is, to put it bluntly, we were outmanned." Collins paused, offering a possible third part.

Photo Gallery: USM-Alcorn

Schools, fans honor McNair

Roars reverberated at Roberts Stadium Saturday well before the University of Southern Mississippi and Alcorn State University lined up in the historic first meeting between the intrastate rivals. Damion Fletcher’s picture, looming from the big board over the south end of the stadium, revved up the Black and Gold faithful every time. The U.S. Army’s parachutist team turned the crowd into children, with eyes turned to the sky and fingers pointing at the smoky, red swirls following the Black Daggers descent into the stadium.

But the most poignant applause came during a video tribute to the late Steve McNair, the Mount Olive native who rose to national prominence while quarterbacking the Braves and whose summer football camp was an annual fixture on the USM campus. McNair, who went on to become a standout in the National Football League with the Tennessee Titans and Baltimore Ravens during a 13-year career, was shot and killed on July 4 in Nashville. Thousands attended a memorial service a week later at USM’s basketball arena, Green Coliseum.


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Mississippi State 45, Jackson State 7

Dogs deliver

Hungry Mississippi State fans waited nine long months for Dan Mullen's coaching debut. Then, they had to wait about 30 extra minutes because of lightning that accompanied a pre-game rainstorm. That's not all. They then had to wait another two sluggish quarters before Mullen's Bulldogs carried through on his preseason vow: "THIS is going to be exciting." Finally, it was. Here's some of what we can take from State's 45-7 victory over Jackson State in the first-ever meeting between a Southeastern Conference team and one from the Southwestern Athletic Conference.

Great idea. All tickets were sold. Tail-gating fans jammed this lovely, old campus. State got what it wanted, a capacity crowd and a relatively easy victory. Jackson State earned the biggest payday in school history. This was a no-brainer. Let's do it again. Next time, JSU, bring a long snapper.

JSU was over-matched with SEC foe Mississippi State Bulldogs. Coach Comegy had no answers for Bulldog attack before full house of 54,232 fans.

QB Rutland struggles but keeps job

The saga surrounding Tray Rutland continued Saturday as Jackson State lost 45-7 to Mississippi State at Scott Field. The JSU quarterback was named the starter last week despite coach Rick Comegy having named redshirt freshman Dedric McDonald the No. 1 the previous two weeks. Rutland's performance was fairly consistent with what fans have seen over the past few years. There were flashes of brilliance, like his 52-yard pass to Keenan Tillman and a 32-yarder to Carlos Everett. Then there was the interception to Corey Broomfield, who returned it 43 yards for a touchdown. Rutland threw a touch pass down the middle of the field when he should have put more arm into the pass.

He completed 8 of 19 passes for 132 yards with two interceptions and zero touchdowns. Rutland led JSU with 46 rushing yards on 14 carries. "I thought (he) was spotty," JSU coach Rick Comegy said. "He made some good calls and some good checks ... but I know Tray Rutland has a better football game in him than what he displayed today. There's a lot we got to talk about from an offensive point of view."

Kareem Copeland's Talking Points

Special teams meltdown. There's a sure-fire way to take yourself out of a game when playing up a division - poor special teams play. That's exactly what Jackson State put on the field on Saturday. JSU found out only this week that long snapper LaDarius Kimp, who was a late addition to camp, was not eligible. So, receiver Cedric Dixon was forced into action with just two days practice, coach Rick Comegy said.

Dixon, who just returned from an injury to practice this week, had three snaps on punts that never got six inches off the ground. Punter Brett Bennett had to dive on two, giving MSU the ball inside JSU's 25-yard line both times. Fortunately for JSU, the Bulldogs only came away with seven points after missing a field goal on the second miscue. The question is: Why hadn't another long snapper been prepared if Kimp's paperwork wasn't submitted and his status was in doubt?What happened to the GP?

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I-40 Show Down: NCAT Aggies vs WSSU Rams








North Carolina A&T 19, Winston Salem State 10

Aggies start Lee era with statement win

Alonzo Lee built a reputation as an aggressive defensive coordinator in 12 seasons coaching in the MEAC. Turns out Alonzo Lee the head coach is even more aggressive. Senior quarterback Carlton Fears passed for 131 yards and ran for 78 and a touchdown to lead N.C. A&T's offense during a 19-10 victory over Winston-Salem State in Lee's debut as the Aggies' head coach Saturday night at Bowman Gray Stadium. It wasn't that close.

The Aggies' offense left some scoring chances on the field. They missed a field-goal attempt, saw another field-goal try blocked, got stopped on a fourth-and-3 gamble at the 8 and let the first-half clock run out 2 yards short of the end zone. "I thought we moved the ball well, but we've got to get better in the red zone," Lee said. "We were in the red zone too many times where we did not come up with points. We've got to work on it. We're going to go back to the drawing board and find our best red-zone plays and get better." On this night, the Aggies didn't need those points because their defense was flat-out dominant. A&T grudgingly surrendered just 90 total yards, had four sacks and recovered two fumbles.

Photo Gallery: N.C. A&T 19, Winston-Salem State 10

Aggies beat Rams 19-10

N.C. A&T won the backyard battle with Winston-Salem State, mainly because it had fewer mistakes. The Aggies won 19-10 in front of a sellout crowd of 22,000 at Bowman Gray Stadium. Coach Alonzo Lee of the Aggies, making his debut, built his reputation on defense as an assistant coach. That trait has carried over because the Aggies held the offensive-stagnant Rams to just 90 yards. The Rams' defense, spending way too much time on the field, tired in the fourth quarter and the Aggies took advantage. Coach Kermit Blount of the Rams summed it up best: "The bottom line is we can't turn the ball over and we can't keep our defense out there as long as we did."

The game was tied at 10 going into the fourth quarter, but the momentum swung toward the Aggies after a bad snap on a punt by long-snapper Rodney Taylor of the Rams. Pinned deep in their own territory punter Landon Thayer had to fall on a bad snap that nearly sailed all the way over his head. The Aggies took over on the Rams' 10 and after the defense held again; freshman place-kicker Patrick Courtney made a 25-yard field goal for a 13-10 lead with 7:54 left. The way the Rams' offense was going, the field goal was enough.

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Arkansas-Monticello 27, Arkansas-Pine Bluff 3

Arkansas-Pine Bluff had put together a couple of lengthy drives. Mickey Dean was finding small holes to dart through. And, most importantly, it was keeping ultra-dangerous Scott Buisson from finding creases to run or pass through. No, the first half of Saturday’s season-opener against Arkansas-Monticello didn’t go exactly as planned for the Golden Lions. But there were enough positives to go into halftime with upbeat spirits and a three-point lead. But that’s when time seemed to travel back to last year’s loss to the Boll Weevils, when UAPB lost its starting quarterback and a series of turnovers led to Buisson making big plays that eventually buried the Golden Lions.

Three touchdowns scored off UAPB mistakes — a roughing-the-punter penalty that continued a drive and two fumbles — led to 20 UAM points in the third quarter of an eventual 27-3 win for the Boll Weevils at Golden Lion Stadium. For UAPB coach Monte Coleman, it was proof that all the plays that turned games into disaster for his team last season are not yet out of their system. “What caused it to happen? I have no idea,” Coleman said. “That’s the most disappointing thing about it, because I know for a fact we’re a better football team than what we played tonight.”



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Q&A with Morgan State coach Todd Bozeman

There will be a mix of new and old on the roster of the defending MEAC champions this season. Nine players return from Morgan State’s NCAA tournament team, but Bears head coach Todd Bozeman is adding five new faces to the mix. Point guard Danny Smith (5-11, 190 pounds), combo guard Joe Davis (6-0, 180), shooting guard Jarrod Denard (6-2, 185), power forward DeWayne Jackson (6-8, 210) and center Anthony Anderson (6-10, 235) will all suit up for Morgan State this season.

Morgan State University Bears Coach Todd Bozeman has a new contract and a top-notch incoming class of multidimensional players.

Smith, a Randallstown native and Woodlawn graduate, will have two years of eligibility remaining after playing at Western Nebraska Community College the past two seasons. Davis, a junior from Warrensville, Ohio, sat out last year as a transfer from Cleveland State, where he averaged 8.8 points per game in his first two seasons. Denard was a highly touted shooting guard from Philadelphia’s Freire Charter School. Jackson, a Bowie High graduate, and Anderson, a LaPlata alumnus, both enrolled at Morgan one year ago and sat out as non-qualifiers. They will each have four years of eligibility remaining. Bozeman spoke with Recruiting Report recently about Morgan State’s incoming class.

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Prairie View A&M 17, Texas Southern 7

PVAMU extends reign over TSU at Labor Day Classic

It wasn’t exactly a classic way to open the season. Not for either school. Nonetheless, Prairie View A&M will savor a 17-7 season-opening victory over Texas Southern on Saturday night in the State Farm Labor Day Classic at Reliant Stadium. The Panthers have won the last three Labor Day Classic games. Prairie View escaped with a win in this Southwestern Athletic Conference game, despite producing just 176 yards of offense and committing 13 penalties. TSU had 204 yards of offense and was penalized 20 times.

On their first possession of the fourth quarter, the Tigers were forced to punt from their goal line, giving the Panthers excellent field position. Anthony Weeden returned the punt to the TSU 15 to set up quarterback Jay Bluford’s touchdown pass to Brandon Bell to push the Panthers ahead by 10 points with 12:02 to go. “We went into the game blind,” Bluford said. “We had absolutely nothing to go off. We had to make adjustments on the fly. We had no film. (Offensive coordinator Michael) Bryant did a wonderful job today, especially not knowing what they were going to throw at us.

Photo Gallery:
Photos: Football and music at Labor Day Classic

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Shaw University 20, Bethune-Cookman 6

Bethune Cookman Wildcat twins Antonio and Antwane Cox.

B-CU commits 7 turnovers in loss to Shaw

Bethune-Cookman knew it would be playing a formidable foe Saturday. But the Wildcats had no idea they would be playing against two of them -- Division II power Shaw and themselves. The Wildcats turned the ball over seven times, including four inside the Bears 12-yard line, as Shaw upset B-CU 20-6 in the 'Cats' season-opener Saturday at Municipal Stadium. "(Saturday) the people that beat us have Wildcats on their jerseys," said B-CU quarterback Matt Johnson, who provided a spark off the bench with 126 total yards, but, like starter Maurice Francois, had trouble getting his team into the end zone.

The Wildcats fumbled six times, five times inside Shaw territory. Running back Brian Sumlar, who rushed for 67 yards and a 12-yard touchdown run early in the fourth quarter for the Wildcats' lone score, fumbled at the Bears 10 and 6. Francois fumbled at the 5 in the fourth quarter. And Johnson threw an interception at Shaw's 11 on B-CU's first possession of the second half. "What else can you do? We had opportunities to score touchdowns," B-CU coach Alvin Wyatt said. "Fumbles killed us; they were our worst nightmare."

Big Cash Schools in B-CU's future

Shaw University backup quarterback Brandon Landers strutted off the field Saturday after the Bears upset Bethune-Cookman 20-6 before 4,137 stunned fans at Daytona Beach Municipal Stadium. "We don't have to jump around," Landers exclaimed. "We're supposed to win." A few years down the road, it's possible that a similar scene could unfold in a much larger stadium. And the underdog winner could be wearing Bethune-Cookman's Maroon and Gold instead of Shaw's Maroon and White.

While Division II Shaw played a Division I Football Championship Subdivision opponent for the competition, B-CU could follow a growing trend and play at a Bowl Championship Series team mainly for the guaranteed money. "For me," B-CU athletics director Lynn Thompson said, "BCS means Big Cash Schools." The Wildcats always turned away guaranteed games in the past because B-CU coach Alvin Wyatt was afraid his squad would get badly beaten up -- physically and mentally by the bigger and deeper D-I powerhouses. But due to the downward spiraling economy, the 'Cats have been listening to offers in recent years. And what started as a trickle has become a raging river of offers.

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Louisiana-Lafayette 42, Southern Jaguars 19

Southern University Jaguars Coach Pete Richards begins 17th season on the Bluff with expectations of winning the 2009 SWAC Championship after blowing a 12-7 lead at ULL.

Missed opportunities

Jaguars lead early, but fall to Cajuns...
Wherever and whenever this season ends, the Southern football team probably won’t remember the final score of Saturday’s season opener — a 42-19 runaway for Louisiana-Lafayette, a game that started with a bevy of big plays and ended as a snoozer. The Jaguars might remember the record crowd of 41,357 at Cajun Field and how lively it seemed for the first two quarters. They’ll remember other things, too.

As they walked off the field, outmatched against a Football Bowl Subdivision opponent that controlled the line of scrimmage and cashed in on their mistakes, the Jaguars were left to lament the opportunities they missed, the mistakes they made and the potential for a strong season that might still lie ahead. “Our goal is to get to the (Southwestern Athletic Conference) championship game,” 17th-year coach Pete Richardson said. “Now, we’ve just got to get back home and try to get some of our guys back together. “Every time we play up, it’s such a physical type game — and it’s a numbers game.

SU shakes off bumps, bruises

Southern coach Pete Richardson said his No. 1 priority in Saturday’s season opener at Louisiana-Lafayette — aside from winning, of course — was escaping Cajun Field with relatively few injuries. At the end of the Jaguars’ 42-19 loss, they appeared to get lucky. With 8:54 left in the first quarter, freshman cornerback Pierre Warford and senior free safety Anthony Wells collided while trying to make an interception near the Southern 10-yard line. Warford suffered a rib injury and did not return. Jeremy Ivory came off the bench to play corner, while House replaced Wells at free safety. Wells returned to the field later, but junior Jason House played much of the rest of the game.



Stewart keeps SU close

Jaguars leave opportunities on the field... For all of the success that Louisiana-Lafayette had operating against Southern’s defense, the Cajuns were in a tight battle for most of the first half of Saturday’s season-opening game. With wideout Juamorris Stewart threatening all of his single-game best numbers, Southern came away from a 42-19 loss at Cajun Field feeling like it left too many opportunities on the field. “We know, as an offense, we left a lot of points out there,” Stewart said. “We’re just going to have to get in the film room and work it out.”

Game Statistics: SU-ULL

Photo Gallery
Photos: ULL 42, Southern 19

Florida A&M 21, Delaware State 12

Hornets drop gridiron opener at FAMU

He might be the preseason all-conference quarterback, but it was the legs of Florida A&M quarterback Curtis Pulley that did the most damage In a 21-12 Rattlers win over Delaware State in both teams’ football opener Saturday in Tallahassee. Riley led the way with 196 yards rushing and a 47-yard touchdown scamper to lead Florida A&M to the win, snapping a four-game losing streak to the Hornets in the process.

FAMU dominated the time of possession, 35:28 to 24:32, rushing for 328 yards overall and putting up 485 total yards to Delaware State’s 274. Anthony Glaud was 17 of 32 for 188 yards and a 31-yard touchdown pass in his first start at QB for the Hornets. Jason Randall led the team in rushing with 54 yards and scored his first career TD on a 4-yard run with 12 minutes to play. Darius Jackson, playing in front of dozens of relatives in his home state, caught seven passes for 67 yards.



Notable items from FAMU's win

Saturday's attendance for the opening game of the 2009 season was 17,209, which was impressive considering Florida A&M had sold less than 200 walk-up tickets as of Wednesday evening. Bryan Parker was the leading tackler for Florida A&M and his fumble recovery with 4:04 remaining sealed the game. The senior from Randlestown, Maryland had 11 tackles.

Rattlers snag win in opener

Curtis Pulley didn't run for a single yard until late in the first quarter, but when his night was done it was just a typical performance by the senior quarterback that led FAMU's rushing attack to a 21-12 victory over Delaware State. Pulley rushed for 196 yards, accounting for more than half of the Rattlers yards on the ground, in front an opening-night crowd of 17,209 at Bragg Stadium. The victory snapped a four-game losing skid against the Hornets that dates back to the 2003 season.

Rally comes too late for DSU

15-point deficit too much to overcome in second half...Delaware State's football team had not trailed Florida A&M since 2003, but played catch-up to the Rattlers all Saturday night. The Hornets' four-game winning streak over FAMU ended in a 21-12 loss at Bragg Memorial Stadium, thanks to a costly late fumble and 328 Rattlers rushing yards, including 196 from quarterback Curtis Pulley. "We got ourselves behind the 8-ball early," Delaware State coach Al Lavan said. "Even in the third and fourth quarters, we managed to get some stops on defense, but we gave up too many big running plays to [Pulley]."

DSU quarterback Anthony Glaud tried to erase a 15-point second-half deficit and came close. He led the Hornets (0-1, 0-1 MEAC) on a seven-play, 54-yard scoring drive that ended with Jason Randall's four-yard touchdown run and cut FAMU's lead to nine. "We sat down and talked at halftime and kind of slowed things down so we could execute better," Glaud said. "We had guys dropping the ball a little bit and guys started catching the ball and making plays. We all picked it up."

For DSU, Michigan game good for money, visibility

The coaches and players at 3,534-student Delaware State know their chances of winning at mighty Michigan later this season are slim at best. But they also understand why their program will make the trip: a $550,000 pay day. At Delaware State, that's equivalent to the revenue from at least two years of home games. "From a competitive standpoint, it's not an ideal situation," says Delaware State football coach Al Lavan. But, "you always have hope." The Hornets aren't alone. Throughout the football season that begins this weekend, so-called guarantee games -- where lesser programs are paid lots of money in exchange for a presumed loss -- are common. The larger, better-funded programs in effect have an easy home game with more players seeing action.

Hornets lose football opener at Florida A&M

Delaware State’s football team had not trailed Florida A&M since 2003, but played catch-up to the Rattlers all night. The Hornets’ four-game winning streak over FAMU ended tonight in a 21-12 loss at Bragg Memorial Stadium, thanks to a costly late fumble and 246 Rattlers rushing yards. “We got ourselves behind the 8-ball early,” Delaware State coach Al Lavan said. “Even in the third and fourth quarters, we managed to get some stops on defense, but we gave up too many big running plays to (FAMU quarterback Curtis Pulley). “Essentially, that’s what happened last year, though we won,” Lavan added. “The pattern just continued.”

Photo Galleries
FAMU vs. Delaware State pregame
FAMU Pregame
FAN CAM - FAMU vs. Delaware State
FAMU vs. Delaware State first half
FAMU 21 Delaware State 12


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FAMU player shot by gunshot; suspect arrested

Sunday morning update - 6:15 a.m.

Florida A&M Police Department informed students by text alert that a suspect has been arrested in Saturday night’s shooting. The text alert was sent to students at 3:59 a.m. Sunday. It says, “All clear/arrest made. An arrest has been made in the shooting incident on FAMU campus.” No other details were given about the arrest. The shooting occurred Saturday around 10:10 p.m. after FAMU’s football opener. FAMU athletics officials confirmed late Saturday that running back Lonvontae Page was "grazed" in the arm by the ricochet bullet.



As many as two other people also were hurt in the campus shooting incident, said Lt. Norman Rollins of the FAMU Police Department. Two groups of people were arguing on the steps of Gibbs Hall near the stadium, Rollins said.

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There should be zero tolerance of guns and other weapons on any college campus. The penalty, in addition to locking their butts up and melting the key, should be automatic expulsion and a lifetime band from attending any State University in the U.S. Let'em attend some private thug college with high tuition and no federal dollars assistance. This type of foolishness may have an adverse impact on FAMU home game attendance as folks will be more concerned for their safety than being entertained by a great Marching 100 band and a superb Rattler football team. Time to bring out the metal detectors and guards--just like at the airports and get these armed fools off the FAMU campus.

-beepbeep

Friday, September 4, 2009

MEAC Game Day '09: FAMU Rattlers vs. Delaware State Hornets

Keys to the Game: Florida A&M vs. Delaware State

Time: Today at 6 p.m.
Site: Bragg Memorial Stadium, Tallahassee, FL
Live Game Streaming Video/Audio (FamCast):
http://www.famu.edu/famcast/
Radio: 96.1 FM.
Series: FAMU leads 18-8.
Forecast: Sunny with 10 percent chance of rain.

Joe Taylor has built a reputation throughout his coaching career for a stable of running backs, and the 2009 Rattlers should not be an exception. Junior Philip Sylvester has returned from injury, but sophomore Lonvontae Page, senior Mykel Benson and freshman Eddie Rocker will also get carries in an offense that led the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference in scoring in 2008.
FAMU quarterback Curtis Pulley said a big key will be putting the ball in the hands of the Rattlers' talented skill-position players and letting them make plays.


Jerome Strums, who intercepted Pulley last year to seal the Hornets' victory, said the defensive unit plans to pressure the Rattlers' offense "out of their environment" so Pulley will not be able to sit in the pocket and find receivers Isaac West or Kevin Elliott or one of the Rattlers' other running backs.

DSU sees only wide-open potential

The Delaware State University and Florida A&M football teams are a contrast in preseason expectations. After all, the Hornets were picked to finish seventh in the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference while FAMU was chosen to finish second behind South Carolina State. The good news for Delaware State is that none of that matters once kickoff time arrives for its season opener at 6 tonight inside Florida A&M's Bragg Memorial Stadium in Tallahassee, Fla. Several Hornets admit they hear the whispers that they are about to run into a brick wall since they have already suffered a conference loss due to a forfeit and have treacherous games at Delaware (Sept. 19) and Michigan (Oct. 17) looming.


They just choose to ignore it. "I don't see any brick wall," said Nick Richmond, DSU's senior center. "I'm excited. I think this is one of the best teams that we've had while I've been here. "We're flying a little under the radar with how people picked us in the [preseason] standings but as far as I can speak, offensively, we have more weapons than we've ever had."

Anthony Glaud, a redshirt junior, will be making his first start at quarterback for the Hornets tonight. The Sicklerville, N.J., native completed 47 of 75 pass attempts for 523 yards and two touchdowns in a backup role behind four-year starter Vashon Winton last season. Glaud has three returning receivers with whom to work in Larrone Moore, Erick Jones and Zach Charles.

For small schools, there's a big payoff to road trips

DOVER, Del. — The coaches and players at 3,534-student Delaware State know their chances of winning at mighty Michigan later this season are slim at best. But they also understand why their program, which plays a level of NCAA football below that of the Wolverines, will make the trip: a $550,000 payday. At Delaware State, that's equivalent to the revenue from at least two years of home games. "From a competitive standpoint, it's not an ideal situation," says Delaware State football coach Al Lavan, whose team plays in a 7,000-seat stadium, compared with the 106,000-seat Michigan Stadium. "(But) you always have hope."

FAMU's opponent Delaware State forced to play catchup early

Long before today's kickoff against FAMU, Al Lavan knew his Delaware State football team had a lot of catching up to do — on the field and in the win-loss column. The Hornets had to forfeit their Oct. 17 MEAC games against North Carolina A&T State because of a scheduling conflict with getting Michigan on their schedule for the same date. Now it's about making up ground, and Lavan will have to count on a young team to do so. The Hornets return just 12 starters from last year's team, which struggled down the stretch and fell short of preseason predictions that they would take at least second place in the league.

DSU was picked to finished seventh this year. "They must grow up fast by (today)," Lavan said earlier this week during the MEAC coaches conference call. "We've got to take that quick step forward and play well to win," he said. "I don't think it's a make-or-break situation for us but we must step forward and meet the challenge that I'm sure the Rattlers will present."

Taylor's young guns providing FAMU guidance

There was no shortage of candidates when Joe Taylor was filling his staff 21 months ago as FAMU's new head football coach. The list included three graduate assistants from the staff of Taylor's predecessor. Olympics sports strength and conditioning coach Antonio Wallace, who was caught in the crossfire of the termination of former coach Rubin Carter and his assistants, also was looking to join Taylor. Taylor hired Wallace. He kept Juan Vasquez as kicking coach, before his first spring practice. The other two — Jimmie Tyson and Edwin Pata — were left to prove themselves.

Taylor resorted to the same approach he has for walk-ons, allowing them to decide their fate by proving their abilities. "When I see you taking up more responsibility, it's easy for me," Taylor said. "All I have to do is evaluate and believe what I see." He saw enough during his first spring practice to keep them as graduate assistants. Both Pata and Tyson started this season football payroll. Together the four assistants join a growing list of youthful college assistant coaches who are less than 10 years older than the players they coach. Pata, Tyson and Vasquez have at least two years before their 30th birthday, while Wallace is a year away.

Rattlers take their place in the Hall

Jacquay Nunnally has come full circle to the point that he finds himself telling young football players some of the same things he heard before he became a record-setting receiver at FAMU almost a decade ago. He also can now tell his proteges that he is coaching at Miami South Ridge about the result of hard work. Nunnally was inducted Friday night into the FAMU Hall of Fame along with three other athletes and two supporters at the school's new arena.

"It's a huge honor because the institution recognizes you as one of the best that ever came through; With names like (NFL Hall of Famer) Bob Hayes," Nunnally said. "That's incredible. It's a huge honor. Huge." Some players who had come after him had gotten a place in FAMU's Hall of Fame years ago, but waiting his turn is something that the record-setting receiver is used to. Nunnally, 30, redshirted a year before he got quality playing time. He was highly recruited by FSU and UCF, but that didn't mean much to coach Billy Joe. His team was loaded with receivers who were getting the job done.

FAMU: Taylor Keeps Loaded Rattlers Humble

Joe Taylor brought success back to Florida A&M in a hurry. The longtime head coach with 200-plus wins led the Rattlers to a 9-3 finish in his first season at the school in 2008. FAMU went 3-8 the year before. "Hopefully, we didn't screw up by winning too many. Now they probably expect for you to win them all," Taylor joked. Expectations will surely be for this group to produce. The Rattlers are predicted by many to compete for the MEAC title, and Taylor is warning his troops about staying grounded and keeping up a high work ethic.

"Now that you're coming from maybe hunting to being hunted, you have to really work even harder," he said. Experience will help. FAMU has 18 starters returning, and the team's mind-set has evolved with the experience of its players. "Last year, they kind of stepped out on faith, they didn't really know," Taylor said. "But this year, it looks to me (like) they're stepping out on belief. They are working hard and no matter what happened in the past you just can't forget what got you there." The Rattlers have two key playmakers back on offense - quarterback Curtis Pulley and running back Philip Sylvester.

FAMU Rattlers back on track

It's not that the win total is important to Florida A&M coach Joe Taylor. It's just that he wants it reported right. One of the headlines on the Rattlers' homepage is a homage to Taylor, a graphic congratulating the second-year FAMU coach on his 205 career victories -- the bulk coming while at Hampton University. "Actually, I think it's 206,'' Taylor said. "I hope they do [get it right]. For that one win I probably aged five years.''

This year's FAMU football team could rejuvenate Taylor. The Rattlers team that he took over ended a 3-8 campaign in 2007 with a 34-7 loss to Bethune-Cookman. In its first year under Taylor, FAMU was 9-3 -- this time beating rival Bethune-Cookman in a 58-35 shootout and finishing second in the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference.

Opener could define the season for FAMU

Curtis Pulley probably wouldn't recognize Delaware State free safety Jerome Strums, other than being a stranger, if they were to cross paths in the hallway at Galimore Fieldhouse. But Pulley hasn't forgotten how Strums upended his debut at quarterback for FAMU a year ago in Dover, Del. Pulley had engineered a FAMU comeback that fell short in overtime, when Strums intercepted a pass from Pulley on the Rattlers' first possession in the overtime to give FAMU its first of three losses.

All-American KR LeRoy Vann

Being thrust into an overtime game wasn't the ideal situation for Pulley, who was still learning coach Joe Taylor's offense. "I wasn't nervous," Pulley said. "It was just trying to do too much." Pulley redeemed himself with a remarkable season, but Saturday he could get a bit of revenge when FAMU meets the Hornets in a game that carries a lot of weight by the way Taylor puts it. He went as far as to say that the outcome could define the Rattlers' season. Taylor used a baseball analogy to make his point during his weekly news conference Tuesday.

FAMU eyes MEAC title in Taylor's second year

Joe Taylor needed just one season to take Florida A&M from turmoil to respectability. Now he has the Rattlers believing they can return to the NCAA Football Championship Subdivision playoffs. Belief, Taylor said, is the key word. "Last year, they kind of stepped out on what I call faith," Taylor said. "This year, you can see they're stepping out on belief. That's the big difference."

A 3-8 record in 2007 cost former FAMU coach Rubin Carter his job and Taylor, who had spent 16 years at Hampton, stepped in. He led the Rattlers to a 9-3 season, punctuated with a 58-35 win over rival Bethune-Cookman in the Florida Classic. By that time, Taylor said, the players knew the program was back on track. "They felt like it could happen, but they really weren't sure," Taylor said. "But now they see hard work pays off." So does a high-scoring offense and a turnover-happy defense. The Rattlers used both to key the turnaround.

Rattlers' defense performs at goal

At the sound of the horn, FAMU coach Joe Taylor dashed from his position near in the practice squad area to where the first team was lining up for the usual finale to practice — the goal-line drill. It's where the offense and defense mercilessly test each other in the red zone."This is my favorite part of practice," Taylor said, jogging to a better vantage point.

On the first play, quarterback Curtis Pulley gave the ball to running back Lavonte Paige. Nothing doing. Another give to Paige. Loss of 1 yard.On the fourth play, Pulley threw an incomplete pass to tight end Max Purcell. Score that series for the defense. A few special teams plays were sandwiched between another series of downs. The defense was stubborn again until fullback Mykel Benson came out of the backfield to catch a pass in the end zone. "We all just went hard," said nose tackle Cameron Houston. "They are going to get some and we're going to get some. We have one of the best offenses in the nation and one of the best defenses in the nation. We just try to come out and compete."

FAMU's O-line set to protect Pulley

No matter how many new wrinkles quarterback Curtis Pulley may have introduced with his habit of salvaging busted plays, the players on FAMU offensive line have a one-track mind when it comes to protecting their quarterback. They are zealous with it, too. "We take pride in what we are doing," said center Steve Brazzle. "We are the protectors (and) we have to look out for whoever has the ball." Four of the linemen doing the job are seniors, with Chris Sands out of Leon High School as the lone junior. For most of the five of them, this is their fourth quarterback they're working with in the last three seasons.

Pulley, who rotated last season with Eddie Battle, brings versatility that the offensive line hasn't had to deal with. His penchant to take off running when a play breaks down seemingly not only brought a different dimension to how the line does its job, it has brought more of a swagger to the line. "He gives us confidence because he is so versatile and he makes the defense play differently," said left guard Anthony Collins. "That makes it easier, actually."

Buzz builds for start of football

The car flags are starting to come out, even if they're not the harbinger they once were. Ticket sales are booming. Both schools drew packed houses for kickoff luncheons. So if the buzz has seemed muted to the casual observer, know that Florida State and Florida A&M fans are pumped for the start of football season. "Over the summer, with the students gone, there may have been a lull," said FSU senior Alex Mookas on Thursday as he walked by Doak Campbell Stadium. "But with the students back, it's started building. The excitement, especially with (first opponent) Miami is definitely there."

FAMU and FSU open their 2009 football seasons with home games this weekend. Saturday evening, FAMU hosts Delaware State. Monday night, FSU hosts rival Miami. With FAMU (9-3) and FSU (9-4) coming off their best seasons since the first half of the decade, anticipation for 2009 is high among officials and fans of both teams. FAMU officials have seen similar enthusiasm, tempered by the economy. FAMU booster contributions are running $30,000 ahead of last year at this time, when the boosters contributed about $150,000 to athletics. Saturday's crowd is unlikely to match last year's opener, when a season-high 18,088 attended the first game of the Coach Joe Taylor era. But it could climb above 15,000.

FAMU to induct 7 into Hall of Fame

All summer, Leon Collier excitedly awaited his induction into the Florida A&M University Sports Hall of Fame. The former two-sport athlete for the Rattlers during the late 1950s prepared a speech to celebrate his unanticipated inclusion among the pantheon of athletic legends at his alma mater. But "Tex" Collier will only be there in spirit. He died Aug. 14 while visiting family in Atlanta. In his place will be a collection of family and friends who look forward to celebrating the love Collier had for his alma mater.

"He was really excited about it and I talked to him on several occasions," said Dr. Joseph Ramsey, who is organizing Friday's banquet. "We're pretty down about that." Ramsey added that Friday's ceremony, held at the FAMU Multi-purpose Teaching Gymnasium, will be more poignant than usual because of Collier's recent passing. The late football and basketball star will be accompanied by six others including another offensive tackle in Terry Beauford, quarterback Tony Ezell, wide receiver Jacquay Nunnally, basketball player Aldwin Ware, and supporters Dr. Edward Scott and Keith Miles.

FAMU football a family affair for Wilson, Brazzle

Every time Evander Wilson walked by the trophy case at Coatesville (Pa.) High School, he'd see a photo of his brother, Steve Brazzle. It served as a reminder how good an athlete Brazzle was and gave his younger brother something to aspire to. "When he is three years gone and everybody in the town is still talking about how good he is," Wilson said, "I just wanted to follow in those footsteps." To do that, Wilson scoffed at offers from South Carolina State and Hampton University. Both were offering scholarships, but he opted to accept preferred walk-on status at FAMU.

Emulating an older sibling is a bit of tradition that started with Brazzle, who said his 32-year-old brother was his influence for him and Charles Brazzle, a defensive lineman at Cheney State. While growing up in Pennsylvannia, all four brothers played football, baseball and were on the Coatesville track team. Brazzle said his oldest brother, who played at North Carolina State, remains his biggest influence. The No. 64 that he wears on his jersey is the same number that his brother wore for the Wolfpack. No two of the brothers had ever played together on the same team, though, until Wilson came to FAMU during the summer. He is a fullback and Brazzle plays center on the offensive line.

FAMU receives $79000 in royalties after counterfeit crack down

More than a year has passed since Florida A&M began an intensive crackdown on counterfeit paraphernalia, as staffers received help from university and city police officers to arrest those selling contraband T-shirts, hats and other gear displaying the Rattler brand. By all accounts, the university’s effort has been a success, and Sabrina Thompson and other staff members are reaping the rewards for their hard work.

FAMU ranked No. 1 among Historically Black Colleges and Universities in selling licensed merchandise by generating $79,007 in royalties during the 2008-2009 fiscal year, according to Collegiate Licensing Company (CLC). “We are really, really excited,” Thompson, FAMU’s coordinator for licensing, said. “We knew that the revenue was going back for a worthy cause — scholarships for athletic students.” Thompson said more than $3,000 in materials has been confiscated. “Every home football game, I go out on Fridays and visit different More than a year has passed since Florida A&M began an intensive crackdown on counterfeit paraphernalia, as staffers received help from university and city police officers to arrest those selling contraband T-shirts, hats and other gear displaying the Rattler brand.

Walter McCoy resigns as FAMU's head track coach

Florida A&M University President James Ammons accepted the resignation of Walter McCoy on Thursday as men's track and field coach, the university announced Thursday night. The resignation is effective immediately. It came a week after Ammons proudly introduced McCoy as the new men's track coach and Darlene Moore as the head women's track and field coach. McCoy's resignation comes four days after he was booked and released from the Leon County Jail on an unemployment compensation fraud charge from Jefferson County, according to jail records.

According to Leon County Sheriff's Office booking records, McCoy was arrested by the Tallahassee Police Department and registered at the county jail at 5:57 p.m. Monday and was released at 9:08 that night. FAMU spokeswoman Sharon Saunders said she was unable to say if the resignation was related to the legal case. McCoy declined to speak when called at his Monticello home.

College football reinvigorates local economy

The general idea for businesses during football season in Tallahassee is to "step it up, get ready and hold on," says Chris Dodge, manager of the Mellow Mushroom restaurant on Pensacola Street. Florida A&M University is also expecting a high attendance at its first home game of the season today. "Everyone benefits from a Rattler football game," said Carla Willis, FAMU University Relations vice president. There is some concern, however, that this year's football turnout from traveling fans may not meet the turnout from previous years. The weak economy plays a role in that.

"This is a real tough time economically," said Mickey Clayton, Rattler Boosters executive director. "People are being more cautious with the way they are spending. That may mean they are not going to be traveling to the games as they have in the past." Emily Johnson-Truitt, director of sales at the recently opened Aloft Tallahassee Downtown Hotel, is excited to get in on this year's football season action. "We haven't been open a full week yet," she said. "There's an energy that the staff has with this first big weekend approaching. We are definitely amped and ready."

Other hotels like the Ramada Conference Center on North Monroe Street are accustomed to the football season rush. This weekend it will house both traveling teams (Delaware State and Miami), bringing $50,000 in revenue.

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