Friday, August 28, 2015

FAMU’s defensive line coming together before season opener

TALLAHASSEE, Florida -- All of Florida A&M’s defenders are getting used to a new scheme, but some players are working on getting used to entirely new positions.

Junior Calvin Darville will put his hand in the dirt as a defensive end for the first time this season, after playing outside linebacker to start his career at FAMU. Darville rounds out a starting defensive line of himself, sophomore Daikwon Fuse, senior Michael Lovejoy and redshirt sophomore Danzell Williams.

Darville said he’s looking forward to shining in his role in defensive coordinator Theo Lemon’s new 4-3 scheme.

“We’ve got what it takes up front,” he said. “It’s a different feeling (playing defensive end), but I’m getting used to it. Getting that pass rush is definitely important. It helps the linebackers, safeties and defensive backs out.”

CONTINUE READING

Preview: Alcorn State at Georgia Tech

LORMAN, Mississippi --  After winning the Southwestern Athletic Conference (SWAC) for the first time in over two decades, the Braves’ contest versus Tech will mark the beginning of their title defense. All three of the team’s 2014 losses were one-possession games, including a 20-26 defeat at the hands of FBS opponent Southern Miss. Since the SWAC chooses not to compete in the FCS playoffs, Tech’s Week 1 opponent capped off its season by defeating reigning champion Southern University 38-24 in the conference championship. With the Jackets as Alcorn State’s only FBS opponent this year, the latter will look to make a statement that it can compete with a nationally recognized program.

Alcorn State was an offensive juggernaut in 2014, finishing second in the FCS in points per game and tying for first with an incredible 6.91 yards per play. At its helm this season will be senior quarterback John Gibbs, Jr., the reigning SWAC Co-Offensive Player of the Year. Ted Roof and the Tech defense will be forced to respect the Houston native; he not only passed for 21 touchdowns to the tune of 8.77 yards per attempt but also rushed for more yards than anyone else on the team.

CONTINUE READING

Auntwan Riggins hired as Prairie View A&M's baseball coach

AUNTWAN RIGGINS
HEAD BASEBALL COACH
COURTESY PVAMU ATHLETICS
PRAIRIE VIEW, Texas – The Prairie View A&M baseball team began its latest chapter Friday when the school announced it hired Auntwan Riggins as its head baseball coach.

Riggins comes to Prairie View A&M from the Warriors Baseball Academy in Houston, Texas. Prior to that, he spent 13 years with Houston's Proway Baseball Academy as one of its premier instructors and coaches. Both academies train baseball players ages 7 through 18 years old, and can claim numerous players who went on to play NCAA Division I baseball among its alumni.

"I'm very excited to join the Prairie View A&M family," Riggins said. "It's almost like the day of the draft for me. You wait and you know they are going to announce at some point; it's a feeling that you can't really describe."

Riggins has provided individual instruction to numerous players who have gone on to successful NCAA Division I careers, some of whom were also drafted professionally. His most recent alumnus to be drafted was Kyle Survance, who played collegiately at the University of Houston; Survance was drafted by the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim in the eighth round of the 2015 Major League Baseball June Amateur Draft.

"I'm very happy to bring him on as our head coach, and am excited about his vision for the baseball program," Prairie View A&M Director of Athletics Ashley Robinson said. "He brings a wealth of experience, has a great knowledge of baseball, and can teach the game and its fundamentals."

Another player Riggins trained was Spencer Dennis, whom Prairie View A&M fans may remember as a key player on the Panthers' 2007 SWAC championship team that advanced to the NCAA Tournament for the second consecutive season.

Riggins is no stranger to the Southwestern Athletic Conference, having played collegiately at Texas Southern, concluding his career at the close of the 1998 season. In two seasons with the Tigers, he hit .364, and knocked 19 doubles, 11 triples, and six home runs. In 1997, he was named the SWAC's Newcomer of the Year after hitting .341 with five home runs.

At the conclusion of his junior season in 1998, Riggins was drafted by the Toronto Blue Jays in the 20th round of the Major League Baseball Draft. He reached the AAA level in 2001 while playing with the Portland Beavers in the San Diego Padres organization.

After he retired from professional baseball, Riggins eventually returned to Texas Southern to receive his degree, graduating from the school in 2011.

A native of east Texas and a graduate of Houston's Madison High School, Riggins looks forward to being part of the Prairie View A&M community.

"I don't think I've ever encountered people who have so much love and passion for their university and alma mater as a whole, than I have seen with the Prairie View A&M community. I was drawn to that," Riggins said.

The Panthers qualified for the 2015 SWAC Baseball Tournament. Prairie View A&M has won three SWAC championships in the last 10 years, winning the tournament in 2006, 2007, and 2012.

Riggins will be the seventh head coach in Prairie View A&M's baseball history – which dates back to the 1925 season – and will be the Panthers' fourth coach since 1970. He and his wife, Deveka, have been married eight years, and they have a 5-year-old daughter, Masyn.

COURTESY PRAIRIE VIEW A&M UNIVERSITY SPORTS INFORMATION

New Atlanta bowl game names executive director



ATLANTA, Georgia -- The Celebration Bowl, Atlanta’s new college football postseason game, Friday announced local businessman John Grant as its executive director.

The game will match the champions of the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference and the Southwestern Athletic Conference, two Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCU) leagues. The inaugural game is scheduled for noon Dec. 19, live on ABC.

Grant has been CEO of the 100 Black Men of Atlanta organization for 14 years.

The MEAC and SWAC announced in March a six-year agreement to play the Celebration Bowl here: the first two years in the Georgia Dome and the next four in the new Falcons stadium, which opens in 2017 and this week was officially named Mercedes-Benz Stadium.



CONTINUE READING

Tennessee State University Mourns Death of Former President James A. Hefner

Dr. James A. Hefner
Sixth president of TSU
 
“We have lost a visionary and one of the best leaders to serve this great institution.” – President Glenda Glover

NASHVILLE, Tennessee  --  The Tennessee State University family is saddened to announce the death of Dr. James A. Hefner, the sixth president of the University. He died early Thursday morning surrounded by family in his Brentwood home following a long illness. Dr. Hefner was 76. Hefner served TSU as president from 1991-2005.

In a statement on the passing of Dr. Hefner, Tennessee State University President Glenda Glover said:  “The Tennessee State University family sends its deepest condolences to the Hefner family. Dr. Hefner devoted his entire adult life to serving others and expanding educational opportunities to all. As educators, we have lost a visionary and one of the best leaders to ever serve this great institution. He loved inspiring students and challenging them.”

The university’s progress during Dr. Hefner’s tenure was unprecedented. While President of Tennessee State University, Dr. Hefner transformed TSU into a top-tier research university. He was deeply committed to TSU’s land-grant mission. He pursued programs and efforts that aligned the resources of the university with the needs of students. His legacy will serve the university, the nation and the world.

Under his leadership, Tennessee State University saw marked physical, infrastructural and academic improvement, including the implementation of a $112 million capital improvement plan. The improvement was part of the Geier agreement that attempted to end race-based disparity in higher education funding in Tennessee. Several new buildings were constructed, including the Floyd-Payne Student Campus Center, the Ned McWherter Administration Building and the Performing Arts Center.

He was viewed as the students’ president and enrollment reached an all-time high of 9,100 students, an achievement that has only been recently achieved during the 2014-2015 academic school year. The TSU endowment also experienced remarkable growth from $500,000 to more than $25 million (through fund-raising and settling a Federal Consent Decree). He positioned Tennessee State University as a premier institution of higher learning.  TSU was listed in U.S. News & Worlds Report’s “Guide to America’s Best Colleges” for 11 consecutive years (1994-2005).

Dr. Hefner occupied the Thomas and Patricia Frisk Chair of excellence in entrepreneurship, a $2.3 million endowed chair at Tennessee State University.  He also established two other endowed chairs of excellence at Tennessee State. An advocate and proponent of African American intellectual achievement throughout his career, Dr. Hefner established two of the nation’s top honor societies, Phi Eta Sigma and Phi Kappa Phi, at Tennessee State University and Clark Atlanta University.

After retiring as president of Tennessee State University in 2005, Dr. Hefner was a non-resident fellow at Harvard University in the W.E.B. DuBois Institute for African and African American Research; Visiting Distinguished Professor of Economics and Presidential Leadership at Texas Southern University; and most recently as Provost and Vice President for Academic Affairs at Clark Atlanta University, where he worked diligently as he fought cancer up until the very end.

When recently asked how he wanted to be remembers, Dr. Hefner said: “As an educator who cared about black higher education and the welfare of students.”

He earned his undergraduate degree from North Carolina A&T University, his master’s degree in economics from Atlanta University, and his doctorate in economics from the University of Colorado at Boulder.

“My father lived a life of service to historically black colleges and universities and the students who attend them,” said Dr. David Hefner, the youngest son of Dr. Hefner and a 1993 graduate of Morehouse College. “He was an intellectual disciple of W.E.B. DuBois – a Fisk University graduate – in that he believed in the liberation that academic excellence promised to those who lived a life of service to the African American community, to truth and to humanity. So his legacy is a living one because there is still much work to do. And my father serves as an example of what service to HBCUs looks like, and we celebrate his life and legacy.”

TSU will be the site of a memorial service on Wednesday, September 2, beginning at 6:30 p.m. in Poag Auditorium of the Davis Humanities Building. A reception will follow immediately afterwards in the Ferrell-Westbrook Building (the Barn). The funeral service will take place on Thursday, September 3, at 1 p.m. at Christ Church Cathedral, 900 Broadway, downtown Nashville.

In lieu of flowers, the family is requesting memorial gifts be made to the Dr. James A. Hefner Scholarship Foundation in his honor to the Tennessee State University or Morehouse College Development Offices. You may reach the TSU Foundation at 615-963-5481, for Morehouse 404-215-2660.

About Tennessee State University

With more than 9,000 students, Tennessee State University is Nashville’s only public university, and is a comprehensive, urban, co-educational, land-grant university offering 38 undergraduate, 22 graduate and seven doctoral programs. TSU has earned a top 20 ranking for Historically Black Colleges and Universities according to U.S. News and World Report, and rated as one of the top universities in the country by Washington Monthly for social mobility, research and community service. Founded in 1912, Tennessee State University celebrated 100 years in Nashville during 2012. Visit the University online at tnstate.edu.

COURTESY TENNESSEE STATE UNIVERSITY MEDIA RELATIONS

2015 North Carolina A&T State University Blue and Gold Marching Machine






ALWAYS WATCH AGGIE VIDEOS IN 4K HD, WIDE SCREEN

COURTESY:  Thomas L. Jones, Jr.

Tuskegee Golden Tigers preparing for Clark Atlanta September 5

COURTESY TUSKEGEE UNIVERSITY ATHLETICS

TUSKEGEE, Alabama  -- After an early morning practice, Tuskegee University head coach Willie Slater spoke to the media in the first weekly press conference of the season.

Slater begins his 10th year at the helm of the Golden Tigers and currently stands nine victories shy of becoming the second-winningest coach in school history.

"This has been the fastest 10 years of my life," Slater said. "It seems like everything is a blur since the last game we played, that's how fast it has gone by. It is a privilege for me to be here, this is a great institution for young men and young women."

With just nine days before the opening game against Clark Atlanta, the focus was on the offensive line and replacing the starters from last year.

"With the offensive line and tight end we are going to be brand new all the way through," Slater said. "It will be interesting to see how it unfolds. But at the same time, we have talent there we just don't have much experience. We are trying to make sure we take care of our guys, we are going to make sure we don't make our line do something they are not comfortable doing and go from there"

Although the Golden Tigers are young up front, the first three weeks of practices have been a learning experience and a chance to teach the new guys coming in. At the same time, the last week has been a week of preparation of the season opener.

"Practices are going good," Slater said. "Our guys are working hard, they are giving us good effort, and we are getting better. I can see us getting better each day, so hopefully we will be where we want to be when the time gets here. We are trying to get ready for Clark Atlanta. We don't worry about the next game, we worry about this one and we have to find a way to get through it. Our guys understand and are coming along accordingly."

The Golden Tigers were picked to win the SIAC West Division by the coaches in the preseason poll, and although Clark Atlanta is not a conference game it still a big one for Tuskegee.

"We know every time we play we are going to get the other team's best," Slater said. "We have to be ready to play. I wouldn't have it any other way to be honest. If you can win the conference with everyone putting the target on your back, then you know you deserve to win it. That is our goal every year."

Although the focus of the day was offense, Slater spoke highly about the defense and special teams before the end of the day.

"I am excited about our defense," Slater said. "We have improved ourselves on that side of the ball, particularly up front and in the secondary. We lost our two interior linemen, and we replaced those guys with two impact players. We have a lot of guys coming back on defense, including our two ends and two of our linebackers. We have had to replace some guys on defense, but the guys we have had stepped in. I am excited on seeing them play.

"At the same time I am excited about our special teams," Slater said. "We have a few guys returning the ball that will be exciting to watch, as well as our kicker."

Tickets are still available for the season opener and can be purchased by calling 334-727.8594 or 334-724-4385. Tickets are also on sale for the Whitewater Classic (September 12) in Phenix City, and the Tuskegee-Morehouse Classic (October 10) in Columbus.

Tuskegee Ranked in SBN Preseason Poll

The Sheridan Broadcasting Network released their preseason poll Tuesday morning with Tuskegee appearing in the top 10.

The Golden Tigers, coming off a 9-3 record and the SIAC championship in 2014, are the highest ranked NCAA Division II school in the poll as they are ranked seventh in the preseason. They are joined in the rankings by a pair of Division II schools, Virginia State (eighth) and Winston-Salem State (10th). The Golden Tigers are the only ranked SIAC member school in the poll.

Follow us on Twitter @MyTUAthletics and like us on Facebook for up to the minute information on Tuskegee University athletics.

ALWAYS WATCH IN 1080p HD, WIDE SCREEN

COURTESY TUSKEGEE UNIVERSITY SPORTS INFORMATION