Tuesday, August 9, 2011

Bethune Cookman and Albany State Lead Off In HSRN’s 2011 Pre-Season Polls

Hartly, DE – Bethune Cookman and Albany State will open their 2011 football season on top in HSRN’s Pre-Season Division I FCS and Division II Top-10 polls. Each week during the 2011 season HSRN staff and writers, along with selected media representatives and SIDs, will rank Historical Black Colleges Division I FCS and NCAA Division II teams.

Division I FCS voting have the defending MEAC Co-Champions each receiving first place votes, but it was Bethune Cookman getting the top spot with 10. Albany State got all but three first place votes to beat out Shaw, who picked up three, for the top spot in Division II.


Division I-FCS Top-10 Pre-Season
#
Schools (1st Place Votes)
2011
Record
Total Points
Final
2010
Ranking (Record)
 1.
Bethune Cookman (10)
0-0
174
1 (10-2)
 2.
S.C. State (5)
0-0
171
3 (9-3)
 3.
Florida A&M (3)
0-0
152
5 (8-3)
 4.
Jackson St. (2)
0-0
138
6 (8-3)
 5.
Grambling St  
0-0
127
4 (9-2)
 6.
Texas Southern 
0-0
110
2 (9-3)
 7.
Hampton  
0-0 
69
9 (6-5)
 8.
Alabama St.  
0-0
55
7 (7-5)
 9.
Prairie View     
0-0
38
8 (7-4)
 10.
Norfolk St.
0-0
24
10 (6-5)

 Others Receiving votes: Alcorn St. 20, N.C. Central 10, AL A&M 5, TN St. 4, Morgan St. 2,ARK PB 1



Division II Pre-Season
#
Schools (1st Place Votes)
2011
Record
Total Points
Final
2010
Ranking
(Record)
 1.
Albany St.  (17)
0-0
195
1 (11-1)
 2.
Shaw  (3)
0-0
179
2 (9-3)
 3.
Tuskegee
0-0
160
3 (9-2)
 4.
St. Augustine’s
0-0
123
4 (9-2)
 5.
Ft. Valley St.
0-0
108
5 (8-3)
 6.
Winston Salem St.
0-0
105
6 (8-2)
 7.
Morehouse
0-0
78
8 (8-3)
 8.
Virginia St.
0-0
54
7 (8-3)
 9.
Elizabeth City St.
0-0
49
10 (6-4)
10.
Bowie St.
0-0
34
9 (6-4)

 Others Receiving votes: Fayetteville St. 11, Miles 2, Langston 2





VISIT: HSRN.com

Monday, August 8, 2011

2011 New York Urban League Football Classic




Howard University and Morgan State University will faceoff once again in the New York Urban League Classic at the New Meadowlands Stadium on Saturday, Sept. 24, 2011.

In 2010, NYUL had the first college football game ever played at New Meadowlands Stadium and we are excited about returning for the second year.

Last year, after two field goals and three interceptions, the Morgan State Bears defeated Howard University’s Bison 20-3 in front of nearly 35,000 football fans. The tension between the college rivals has had nearly a year to brew and it will be an all out battle on the field to see which team will march out of New Meadowlands Stadium victorious. The competition doesn’t miss a beat as the ultimate Battle of the Bands takes the field during the Halftime Show. The New York Urban League Football Classic steeped in tradition, reunions, and football fun.

For more information and to purchase tickets, visit: New York Urban League Football Classic

VISIT: HOWARD UNIVERSITY BISON ATHLETICS
VISIT: MORGAN STATE BEARS ATHLETICS

JSU Opens Fall Practice with a Bang

Coach Rick Comegy
Jackson, MS - A chance for the SWAC title might not be in play for Jackson State this season, but that's not slowing down the Tigers at all. JSU holding its first practice of the fall earlier today and from the start you could see plenty of excitement and energy from the group.

The Tigers are building off of last season's 8-3 performance and will be riding the arm of preseason Walter Payton Award watch list candidate Casey Therriault.

Head coach Rick Comegy says he expects an improved special teams unit and defense this season. He says this team is unified and doesn't have just one key player.

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FAMU eager to begin practice, ready to prove naysayers wrong

Coach Joe Taylor
Tallahassee, FL - Some players are so vexed by the preseason prediction that Florida A&M will finish third in the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference that they could hardly wait to get onto the practice field. They will have to hold their anxiety a few more days, though.

"We have been working for about 12 weeks and we are ready to play," said senior safety Anthony Shutt. "We are tired of seeing each other."

Well, it will be like that for another four weeks. But at least the Rattlers will get a chance to do a little hitting in a few days after they spend the next two days going through orientation and other formalities. They'll also spend their afternoons participating walk-through drills all of this week.

The team will begin to get a little more physical on Aug. 15. Two-a-days will be held...

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Davenport: I voted SSU No. 1 in the MEAC

Savannah, GA - Watch out, Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference. Steve Davenport has come out swinging.

Savannah State University has not produced a winning football season since 1998, but that did not stop the Tigers’ first-year head coach from picking SSU to win the MEAC during its inaugural season as a conference member.



Davenport revealed Sunday during SSU’s Media Day at Tiger Arena that he voted SSU No. 1 in the MEAC’s preseason poll, which was announced July 29 during the conference’s preseason luncheon in Norfolk, Va.

In a secret ballot, the MEAC’s football coaches and sports information directors picked SSU to finish last among the conference’s 11 schools that play football. The MEAC has 13 schools, but Coppin State and Maryland Eastern Shore do not have football programs.

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David Climer: Richard Dent serves as emblem of TSU's past glory

Nashville, TN - Portions of the Pro Football Hall of Fame induction ceremonies this weekend will morph into an infomercial for historically black college football in general and Tennessee State in particular.

Former TSU and Chicago Bears star Richard Dent is a member of the seven-man Class of 2011. Joe Gilliam Sr., defensive coordinator at TSU during Dent’s college career, will introduce him. TSU’s marching band will participate in the parade that precedes the induction ceremony.

Dent hasn’t forgotten his roots. He said his speech on Saturday will include recollections of his days at TSU and the impact that Big Blue football had on him from 1979-82. The fact that he asked Gilliam to introduce him speaks volumes.

“I wouldn’t be going into the Hall of Fame if it weren’t for Coach Gilliam,” Dent said.



Hard to believe, but Dent is the first TSU product selected to the Pro Football Hall of Fame — and it took eight years after he became eligible to make it. Claude Humphrey has been overlooked much too long, as has Ed “Too Tall” Jones. Others merit consideration.

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Scott Ferrell: LSU needs to keep the money in state

Baton Rouge, LA - LSU completed its 2012 non-conference football schedule this week with the addition of Towson University. Towson University? Really?

Southeastern Conference schools have historically lined up punching bags for games outside of the conference. The thought process being the eight SEC games are difficult enough. SEC schools have little desire to add four more tough ones.

That thought process is debatable. What shouldn't be debatable is that Towson has no business taking one of LSU's four out-of-conference dates in 2012.

In the past, LSU has done an admirable job of playing in-state competition. After years of only playing Tulane in state, LSU has opened up its stadium and coffers to Louisiana Tech, UL-Lafayette and UL-Monroe. Last year, LSU dropped down to play Football Championship Subdivision member McNeese State. The Tigers will play FCS member Northwestern State this year.

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NOTE: We agree with Scott Ferrell... We have nothing against Towson University, which was 1-10 last season, but why pay $510,000 to an out-of-state program when you can create a great payday for FCS programs Grambling State or Southern University that the Tigers have never played in football? Why should Southern have to travel to New Mexico or Georgia to get a "money game" when LSU sits right across Baton Rouge with a fat checkbook ready to pay other perennial doormats a half-million dollars for a guaranteed blowout?  From any angle, Grambling State vs. LSU or Southern vs. LSU is much more entertaining than a Towson vs. LSU game.

beepbeep

Southern University WR Green has ball, will travel

Baton Rouge, LA - Jared Green spent four years at the University of Virginia, earning his bachelor’s degree in anthropology. To him, it was the only major that made perfect sense. “I just added two things together, really,” Green said.

“Anthropology is the study of people and culture, and how they interact,” he said. “My favorite thing to do is travel, and my second-favorite thing to do is write. I figured I’d put them both together.”

The writing part may come in time. Green has already proven he knows how to travel. With one year left to play college football, Green, a senior wide receiver, decided this summer to transfer from Virginia to Southern. With the Jaguars, he said he believes he can play more often, maybe draw the attention of a few NFL scouts.

“He’s got speed. He’s got size,” SU coach Stump Mitchell said. “He wasn’t the primary receiver at Virginia, but he caught some balls, and we’re a passing offense. That was the main thing he wanted to be involved with, because he has aspirations of playing at the next level.”

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Alabama A&M: Bulldogs bigger, stronger, faster

HUNTSVILLE, Alabama - One of the biggest reasons for Alabama A&M's success over the years has been the work of James Hester, the Bulldogs' strength and conditioning coach.

Hester, who has served in that role since Anthony Jones became head coach in 2002, helped A&M rattle off six straight winning seasons, win three Southwestern Athletic Conference East Division titles and the 2006 SWAC championship.

The Bulldogs haven't been nearly as successful the last three years, having had two losing seasons during that span, but A&M did reach the SWAC championship game in 2009.

Even so, following last year's 3-8 season, A&M's worst during Jones' tenure, Hester made some changes and he says after the first week of practice...

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Sunday, August 7, 2011

Milan Clayton commits to FAMU basketball

Tallahassee, FL - Point guard Milan Clayton's decision about her college basketball career was pretty straightforward – go where she wanted and not where her talent was wanted. With that, she verbally committed to Florida A&M as the school where she will takes the next step in her basketball career.

"I always liked FAMU," Clayton said. "I mean, it's in the family and I like the coach (LeDawn Gibson). I like the way she runs things and I think I will be a good addition to her program. I like the whole system and the style of play."

Clayton's father, Mickey, said she's also decided to transfer from North Florida Christian to FAMU High for her senior year. The move will put her closer to advanced classes that she plans to take at the university, he said.



"I really didn't really want to go through my whole (senior) year wonder where I'm going to go," she said. "I knew I wanted to go to FAMU and since I knew that, I felt I should make that decision now and just enjoy my senior year and not have that on my mind."

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2011 Pro Football Hall Of Fame Inductee Richard Dent gives thanks for what he became

CANTON, Ohio — During his Pro Football Hall of Fame induction speech Saturday, Richard Dent said he “wanted to be someone special my mother and father and brothers could look up to.

” Dent accomplished that and so much more during a 15-year career mostly spent with the Bears where he wowed fans on the lakefront and wreaked havoc in opposing backfields.

Dent finished his career with 137½ sacks, third all-time when he retired behind Reggie White and Bruce Smith, and was the MVP of the 1986 Super Bowl. Those Bears epitomized the Monsters of the Midway.


He had 10 or more sacks in eight seasons, and was also a strong defender of the run, which impressed teammates like offensive guard Tom Thayer, who always appreciated the fact that Dent was a three-down player.

“Buddy Ryan challenged Richard Dent,” Thayer said. “Buddy said, ‘Make sure that you can stop the run, or else you’re not going to play in my defense,’ and then Richard Dent lived up to everything that was required of him on the field.”

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RICHARD DENT: His ‘wildest dream’

CANTON, OH — Dreaming big came naturally to Richard Dent.

“I grew up in a town where a man always said, ‘I have a dream,’ and that man was Martin Luther King,” Dent said. “And as a kid growing up at that time, listening to him, all I could do is dream. I wanted to be someone special that my mother and my father and my family looked up to.”

That kid from Atlanta exceeded his dreams.

Saturday night, he stood as a man inside Fawcett Stadium and was enshrined into the Pro Football Hall of Fame.

“Not in my wildest dream did I think I’d be here,” the 50-year-old Dent said as he looked back on his unlikely path, first to college and then to becoming an NFL superstar with the powerful Chicago Bears of the mid-1980s.

“None of us get anywhere by ourselves,” Dent said, as he thanked dozens of family, friends, teammates and coaches for helping him along his journey. Men such as high school coach, William Lester, and his Tennessee State defensive coordinator, Joe Gilliam, played a huge part in him becoming an NFL player.

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