Monday, October 28, 2013

Fort Valley State cruises to homecoming win

FORT VALLEY, Georgia - At this rate, referees might have elbow and shoulder pain after officiating Fort Valley State football games.

As it is, the Wildcats are certainly inducing headaches on their own sidelines.

Despite an inability to go more than handful of plays against lesser competition much of the day without drawing a broad variety flags, Fort Valley State rolled to a 52-19 win Saturday over Concordia-Selma on homecoming at Wildcat Stadium.

FVSU improved to 3-5 in breaking a three-game losing streak while Concordia fell to 1-6.

The Wildcats have their third and final home game in six days when Morehouse visits in SIAC play. And officials for that game might need to loosening up their arms in pregame, certainly based on nearly every other FVSU outing all season.

FVSU crammed a game's worth of penalties in the first half alone, racking up 16 flags for 122 yards. The Wildcats entered the game averaging 14 flags for 129 yards, so they were above/below average in both categories by early in the third quarter.


Sunday, October 27, 2013

AAMU Coach Anthony Jones after Magic City Classic


Magic City Classic Battle of the Bands: AAMU vs. ASU









Alabama State coach Reggie Barlow after second-straight Magic City Classic victory

BIRMINGHAM, Alabama---Alabama State collected its sixth-straight win this season to improve to 6-2 overall an 6-1 in the Southwestern Athletic Conference with a 31-7 win against arch-rival Alabama A&M in the 72nd Annual State Farm Magic City Classic presented by Coca-Cola at historic Legion Field Saturday

The win gave the Hornets their second-straight victory in the Classic, following last year's 31-13 win and third in the past four years.
 


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Alabama State defeats rival Alabama A&M 31-7 in sloppily-played Magic City Classic


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BIRMINGHAM, Alabama---Alabama State didn't play its best game by any standard Saturday.

The Hornets were penalized 16 times for 136 yards, lost the time of possession battle, missed a field goal and had another blocked.

But Alabama A&M played much worse, committing three turnovers, including an interception and two lost fumbles, one of which occurred on the 1-yard line, and ASU rolled to a 31-7 victory in the 72nd Annual State Farm Magic City Classic presented by Coca-Cola at the historic Legion Field.

It was the Hornets sixth-straight win after starting the season 0-2 and their second consecutive in the Classic, following last year's 31-13 triumph. A&M still owns the overall series 36-32-3.

"We were real sloppy today," ASU head coach Reggie Barlow said. "Defensively, we were jumping offside. Offensively, we were sputtering there but we found a way a day to make some plays."

After a scoreless first quarter, which included a missed field goal by kicker Alex Louthan, the Hornets took a double-digit lead on a pair of scores in the second.

First quarterback Daniel Duhart, returning to action after missing the Hornets' 48-42 overtime win against Prairie View A&M two weeks ago, connected with wide receiver Jarrett Neely on a 15-yard score with 11:30 to play in the second. Then he hit DeMario Bell on a fade route in 1-on-1 coverage in the corner of the end zone with 10 seconds to play before break.

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TSU Drops Homecoming Game to EIU, 34-16

NASHVILLE, Tennessee -- The Tennessee State football team dropped its first Ohio Valley Conference game of the season on Saturday night, falling to Eastern Illinois, 34-16, in front of a homecoming crowd of 22,157.

The Tigers were outgained 567 to 338 in total yardage and committed 13 penalties for 110 yards.
 
The offense was led by Ronald Butler who was 24-of-45 for 212 yards, two scores and zero interceptions. Lavatiae Kelly was Butler’s main target, setting new career highs with seven catches for 69 yards.



Antonio Harper paced the defense with seven stops (four solo), 2.5 tackles for loss and 1.5 sacks.
 
TSU moved the ball to the EIU 48-yard line to open the game, but was forced to punt after failing to convert a third-and-one. The Panthers took advantage on their turn by scoring a 61-yard passing touchdown from Jimmy Garoppolo to Keiondre Gober on their third offensive play.
 
The Big Blue offense rebounded on its next series with a 43-yard field goal by Jamin Godfrey. Tim Broughton set up the kick with runs of 27 and 11 yards. The field goal pulled TSU within four with eight minutes left in the first quarter.
 
Broughton finished the game with 93 yards on 16 carries for an average of 5.8 yards per touch.
 
After the quick strikes, neither side scored until the 11:08 mark of the second period. EIU’s Shepard Little took a delayed hand-off up the middle of the field for a 21-yard touchdown, making the score 14-3 with EIU on top.
 
Eastern Illinois struck again after a TSU three-and-out, marching 66 yards down the field in 2:18. Garoppolo found a wide-open Jeff LePak for the 34-yard scoring toss.
 
The Tigers had one more chance to put up some points before halftime as Butler completed five-of-nine passes for 53 yards on the Tigers’ final drive of the quarter. However, his last two attempts fell incomplete, and Godfrey’s 41-yard field goal attempt went wide right.
 
On the final play of the half, Garoppolo threw a Hail Mary that was caught by LePak at the one-yard line. LePak was brought down immediately by David Van Dyke, ending the last-ditch EIU effort and leaving the score 21-3 in favor of the Panthers.



The third quarter started with three-and-outs by both teams, but EIU found the end zone on its second possession of the half when Garoppolo hit Gober with a 29-yard streak. The toss put the Panthers up, 28-3, at the 11:30 mark.
 
Later in the period, TSU had a golden opportunity to score a touchdown at the EIU nine-yard line, but Butler mishandled the snap. EIU fell on the ball giving the Panthers the football with 2:47 left in the third quarter.
 
Eastern Illinois used short runs to drive to the TSU 43, but Bernell Brooks ended that possession with an interception at the Tiger 14-yard line.
 
Bernell’s second pick of the year kept TSU’s takeaway streak alive; the team has now forced a turnover in 22 straight contests.
 
This time, TSU found the end zone after Butler hit Weldon Garlington with an 11-yard pass-and-catch to make the score, 28-10. Butler had runs of six and 20 yards to key the drive.
 
The Panthers answered right back with a touchdown drive of their own. Little ran the ball six times for 38 yards on the series, but Garoppolo ended it with a 25-yard dart to LePak. The point after was no good, but EIU still claimed a commanding, 34-10, lead.
 
Garoppolo finished with 410 yards on 24-of-41 passing and four touchdowns.
 
Still, Tennessee State would not quit, as Butler threw passes of 17 and 25 yards before hitting Dantwaun O’Neal with a 25-yard touchdown. Godfrey could not add the point after, but the score cut the EIU lead to 18 with five minutes to go in the game.
 
The Tigers will try to regroup next Saturday when the squad travels to Eastern Kentucky for a noon kickoff.
 
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WSSU wakes up in time to beat Livingstone 40-0

SALISBURY, North Carolina — Coach Connell Maynor of Winston-Salem State was not in a good mood for somebody who just won a game 40-0.

Maynor’s Rams manhandled the Livingstone Blue Bears in front of nearly 4,000 on Saturday, but it was as ugly a win as they have had in the four seasons that Maynor has been around.

“ I’m disappointed,” Maynor said. “That was unacceptable the way we came out and played in the first half. And that’s my fault because I have to get these guys ready to perform in the first half — so I’ve got nobody to point the finger at but myself.”

WSSU won its seventh in a row to improve to 7-1 and 5-0 in the CIAA, but it wasn’t supposed to be that hard. The Blue Bears had other ideas.

The Rams had three turnovers in the first half and looked out of sorts on offense, but the aggressive WSSU defense bailed them out time and time again. The Blue Bears never got close to scoring, generating just 97 total yards for the game.

The Rams were up just 7-0 at halftime.

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