Wednesday, December 24, 2014

GSU Coach Broderick Fobbs get state honors

PHOTO COURTESY: GRAMBLING STATE ATHLETICS
BATON ROUGE, Louisiana -- Grambling State coach Broderick Fobbs and Louisiana Tech quarterback Cody Sokol are among the individual award winners on the 2014 All-Louisiana college football team announced by the Louisiana Sports Writers Association.

Fobbs was an easy choice of the voters for the state's coach of the year after taking Grambling from a last-place finish and one win a year ago to competing for a division title. Grambling won seven games against SWAC opponents. Fobbs was the Southwestern Athletic COY and also a finalist for the Eddie Robinson Award.

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SCSU: After years dancing for crowds, Eddie Moe ‘dancing for Jesus’

ORANGEBURG, South Carolina -- When South Carolina State University’s Marching 101 gets new uniforms, on each shoulder will be an insignia in remembrance of the life and legacy of “Eddie Moe.”

Mourners filled St. Paul Baptist Church Tuesday to pay their final respects to Eddie Moore Jr. one of Orangeburg’s most beloved sons.

Across the nation he was known as Eddie Moe, but to family he was “Junior,” said Moore’s sister, Minister Virginia Berry White.

“Whatever Eddie Moe was to you, he was to us,” she said.



“There was something special about Eddie beside his disabilities,” she said. “He began to take shape into God’s purpose right before our eyes. He changed from Junior to Eddie Moe the celebrity and became the one God would use for such a time as this.”

White said her brother’s life makes for the ultimate Christmas story.

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SCSU: Service for ‘Eddie Moe,’ a simple man, fit for a king

ORANGEBURG, South Carolina -- Upon leaving the homegoing service for Orangeburg’s Eddie “Eddie Moe” Moore Jr. Tuesday at St. Paul Baptist Church, a sobering thought came to mind. I had just witnessed a funeral for a simple man, but a service befitting a king.

“If we all could be so fortunate,” I thought. “What a way to be remembered?” Hundreds of people from near and far packed the sanctuary. A host of others viewed the service from an overflow location at the church.

Almost everyone who sang or spoke – including those who made reflections – remembered a simple man, who, although possessing no power, owning no college degrees, no great status in life, no riches, stood tall.


COURTESY: Donna Stevenson 

“He had personality,” said the Rev. Dr. Chauncey Priester during his eulogy. Indeed he had and so many of us benefited from that personality. Speaking from Luke Chapter 16, Priester recounted the parable of the rich man with power and a lavish lifestyle, and Lazarus, who had little or nothing but was favored by God. For you biblical scholars — and many of us — you know the story, and as Priester noted: “Will the Least Liked Become the Most Popular.”

Eddie Moe was extremely popular in his own quiet way. Whether standing near the corner of Magnolia and Chestnut streets daily waving to all that passed and displaying an infectious smile, or wowing the crowds at South Carolina State University sporting events, or leading the renown Marching 101 band in parades and on-field performances with his energetic dance routines, he demonstrated personality.

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PVAMU Knock Off C-USA North Texas 70-67 Behind Scott's 26-Point Effort


DENTON, Texas  --  Playing in his final regular season game in the Dallas area, senior Montrael Scott went out with a bang as he scored 26 points to lead Prairie View A&M to a 70-67 win over Conference USA's North Texas on Tuesday night.

Back-to-back treys by John Brisco early in the game turned a 7-6 PVAMU lead into a 13-6 lead and the Panthers remained ahead by seven (15-8) after Scott's jumper with 13:13 remaining. A 7-0 run by the Mean Green tied the game at 15-all until layups by Jaryn Johnson and Tre Hagood ended the run and gave PVAMU a 19-15 advantage.

North Texas, coming off a defeat over Creighton of the Big East this past weekend, turned the tables and went on a 15-4 surge over the next six-and-a-half minutes to move ahead 30-23 with 2:15 remaining. Junior guard Jacoby Green stopped the bleeding with a jumper at the 2:05 mark and the Panthers held ground as UNT claimed a 34-27 halftime advantage.

The Mean Green claimed their largest lead of the contest five minutes into the second half as they led PVAMU 44-33 after Deandre Harris' layup. A trey by Montrael Scott cut the deficit to single digits (44-36) but UNT went ahead by 11 once again after Harris' three-pointer.

Sensing the game slipping away, the Panthers turned up their intensity and Scott led the way as he scored 10 points during a seven-minute span which saw the Panthers reclaim the lead at the 7:05 mark after Karim York's jumper. UNT regained the lead but the Panthers kept on fighting as two free throws by York and a Scott layup swung the margin back in PVAMU's favor as they led 61-59 with 4:58 on the clock.

PVAMU's defense shut down the Mean Green from that point as they would only attempt seven shots over the final four minutes while the Panthers kept charging as they led 66-59 with three minutes remaining after York's trey and Tre Hagood's basket. The Mean Green closed to within 66-61 with 2:33 on the clock and a Panther turnover and missed layup led to a trey by UNT's Jordan Williams and PVAMU clinging to a 66-64 margin.

With the Mean Green on their heels, Scott missed a jumper but picked up a huge offensive rebound to eat more clock which led to a UNT foul and 1-of-2 free throws by Reggis Onwukamuche as PVAMU led 67-64 with 28 ticks left.

The Panther defense stepped up as Hagood logged a huge steal immediately following a UNT timeout which led to layup by York and a two-possession, 69-64 lead. However, UNT continued to be a thorn in the team's side as TJ Taylor's trey narrowed the deficit to 69-67 with eight seconds left. UNT fouled PVAMU's Jacoby Green with three seconds left but UNT still had a chance to tie as Green connected on 1-of-2 from the charity stripe.

UNT had one final chance to tie but Williams' three-pointer fell short as the Panthers picked up their first win over the Mean Green in series history.

Scott finished with 26 points and went 4-of-8 from the three-point line. Brisco followed with 11 points while Tre Hagood had another all-around performance with eight points, eight assists and seven rebounds.

The Panthers will enjoy their Christimas holiday and close out the year in style as their next game is scheduled for Tuesday, Dec. 30 in Hawai'i as they'll face Hawai'i.

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Tuesday, December 23, 2014

Howard University player one of two suspects killed during Denton robbery

Terrence Neal Tusan
Redshirt Junior RB
5' 6"/150 lbs.
Photo Courtesy: Howard U. Athletics
EULESS, Texas  --  A former Euless Trinity football star who was home from college for Christmas break was one of two suspects killed in a Denton home invasion robbery over the weekend, authorities said late Tuesday.

Terrence Neal Tusan, 22, who went on to play football for Howard University in Washington, D.C., and Jakobi Dmon Gipson, 18, both of Arlington, were fatally shot Sunday evening at the CastleRock at Denton apartment complex, according to the Tarrant County medical examiner’s office.

The medical examiner listed the men’s deaths as homicides due to gunshot wounds.

Earlier Tuesday, Tusan’s mother, who said she had not heard from her son in two days, had reported him missing to Arlington police.

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Gold Rush's Wright is GCAC Player of the Week again

MORRIS WRIGHT
NEW ORLEANS — For the second time this season, Xavier University of Louisiana's Morris Wright is the Gulf Coast Athletic Conference Player of the Week in men's basketball.

Wright — a 5-foot-10 junior guard from Zachary, La., and a former Zachary High School and Baton Rouge Community College standout — earned the honor for Dec. 15-21 after averaging 18.5 points, 4.0 rebounds, 4.0 assists and 2.5 steals during the Gold Rush's 2-0 week. Wright scored 15 points, made 6-of-6 free throws and grabbed five rebounds in a 72-63 hone victory against Faulkner, then he had 22 points, five assists and a career-high-tying steals in a 92-82 overtime victory at NAIA No. 5 William Carey which snapped the Crusaders' 29-game home winning atreak.

Wright scored six points during a 10-0 run to begin overtime and helped Xavier's record its first road victory against a top-10 opponent in nearly seven years.

Xavier, 11-4 and ranked 22nd in NAIA Division I, will play NAIA No. 9 Concordia (Calif.) at 7 p.m. next Tuesday at XU's Convocation Center.

Ed Cassiere, Sports Information Director

Echebelem is All-Louisiana, Player of Year runner-up

Chinedu Echebelem
NEW ORLEANS -- When Xavier University of Louisiana's 2014 women's volleyball season started, Chinedu Echebelem was a 3-year standout player transitioning to student manager. She was looking ahead to completing her academic obligations in December. But when the Gold Nuggets opened with two straight losses, she rethought her role.

"I decided I had much more that I could contribute to the team," Echebelem said.

Echebelem asked to rejoined the team, was accepted without hesitation, and she helped get the Gold Nuggets back on track. Xavier won its first 10 matches after Echebelem's return -- the second-longest streak in the program's history -- won its fourth consecutive regular-season and tournament championships in the Gulf Coast Athletic Conference and earned a fourth straight automatic bid to the NAIA National Championship.

Echebelem, a 5-foot-6 outside hitter from Dallas and a graduate of Duncanville High School, added to her 2014 honors late Saturday when she was named All-Louisiana first team by the Louisiana Sports Writers Association. She was runner-up for Player of the Year; Louisiana-Lafayette setter Andrea Hole edged Echebelem by one vote.

"Nay (Echebelem) picked up where she left off last year," XU coach Hannah Lawing said. "When she rejoined the team she was in shape and ready to go. She stepped in and gave us great senior leadership."

Echebelem recorded 205 kills, 264 digs, nine aces, 25 assists and 17 blocks in 22 matches and reached career highs for kills per set, digs per set and hitting percentage. She had eight kill-dig double-doubles, including 21 kills and 21 digs Oct. 1 in a five-set victory at SUNO.

Echebelem was selected GCAC Player of the Year and, for the third time, All-GCAC. She was CoSIDA Academic All-District and repeated as a Daktronics-NAIA Scholar-Athlete.

It's the fourth straight year that Xavier has All-Louisiana representation and the third straight year the Nuggets have a first-team selection.

Lawing, whose Nuggets finished 20-6 overall and 14-0 in the GCAC, was runner-up in voting for Louisiana Coach of the Year for the second consecutive season. Earning that honor was Northwestern State's Hugh and Stephanie Hernesman, who are co-coaches and married to each other.

An LSWA panel of sports publicists selected the All-Louisiana team, which consists of players from NCAA Division I and NAIA members.

2014 All-Louisiana Women's Volleyball team

FIRST TEAM
Chinedu Echebelem, senior, Xavier
Kaci Eaton, sophomore, Nicholls State
Andrea Hole, senior, Louisiana-Lafayette
Briana Holman, sophomore, LSU
Cati Leak, junior, LSU
Mackenzie Neely, senior, Northwestern State
Kalynn Egea, senior, Nicholls State

SECOND TEAM
Eva Allen, junior, Loyola
Rachel Cagnina, senior, McNeese State
Stacey DiFrancesco, senior, Northwestern State
Glynna Johnson, junior, Northwestern State
Tea Juric, sophomore, Tulane
Malorie Pardo, senior, LSU
Rebecca Redgen, senior, Louisiana Tech
Marcela Araya, senior, Louisiana-Monroe

PLAYER OF THE YEAR: Andrea Hole, Louisiana-Lafayette
Voting: Hole 4, Echebelem 3, Holman 2, Neely 2, Allen 1

LIBERO OF THE YEAR: Kalynn Egea, Nicholls State
Voting: Egea 7, Araya 2, Morgan Todd (Southeastern Louisiana) 2, Haley Smith (LSU) 1

NEWCOMER OF THE YEAR: Kaci Eaton, Nicholls State (only nominee)

FRESHMAN OF THE YEAR: Sarah Ray, Tulane
Voting: Ray 5, Bayleigh Hoffman (Louisiana-Monroe) 4, Gina Tillis (LSU) 3

COACH OF THE YEAR: Hugh and Stephanie Hernesman, Northwestern State
Voting: Hernesmans 6, Hannah Lawing (Xavier) 3, Fran Flory (LSU) 2, Heather Mazeitis-Fontenot (Louisiana-Lafayette) 1.

Ed Cassiere, Sports Information Director