Sunday, August 30, 2015

SCSU Hamilton ready to dazzle in final season

ORANGEBURG, South Carolina -- • ANTONIO HAMILTON (r-Sr., Defensive Back/PR, 6-0, 185, Johnston) – The top returner in the nation and Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference will suit up for his final season in the Bulldog uniform. A double threat as a defender and return specialist ranks among the top academic scholars in this year’s senior class.

• LAST SEASON: Earned Second-Team and Third-Team All-MEAC honors while playing in 12 games. Led the nation (FCS I-AA) and MEAC with 15 punt returns for 384 yards (25.6 yards per return) and two touchdowns. Returned a 91-yard and 51-yard punt return for touchdown in back-to-back MEAC contests. On defense finished with 36 tackles (34 solo); 4.5 tackles for loss (18 yards); one sack, three interceptions; six pass deflects, and one fumble recovery.

CONTINUE READING

Tuskegee preview

FOUR-DOWN TERRITORY

1: Lacey’s time: Former Wetumpka star Kevin Lacey went into last season as the unproved backup, but he knows 2015 is his year. The 6-foot-6 quarterback took over as the starter midseason last year, but is coming into this year with the same attitude. Lacey completed 54 percent of his passes for 1,287 yards, seven touchdowns and seven interceptions last season. He also ran for 220 yards and a touchdown. “Last year, coming in as a backup, you kind of want to work harder and practice like the starter. Now I am the starter, but I still don’t want to get complacent,” Lacey said. “I work hard and try to get better each and every day.”

2: Questions along O-line: The thing that’s worried Tuskegee coach Willie Slater most this offseason is, who’s going to block? The Golden Tigers have to replace all five starters along the offensive line, including All-SIAC selections Matthew Reese, Jamil McKenzie and Darrius Moore. “We’re going to be new all away across the front on the offensive line, so there’s a big question mark there,” Slater said. “I don’t know how good we can be, I do think we have potential there though. But we don’t have experience there, that’s the scary part.”

CONTINUE READING

Saturday, August 29, 2015

Albany State Season Review: Season of Change

ALBANY, Georgia  — Dan Land still has his trademark smile.

He’s still the same approachable coach who is easy to talk to, and his players love him.
 
About the only thing different about Land this year is he’s the head football coach at Albany State instead of an assistant. Land took over, getting promoted to be the interim coach when longtime Albany State coach Mike White unexpectedly took the same job at SIAC rival Benedict at the end of the 2014 season.
 
Land vows that not much is going to change when the Rams open their 2015 season by playing host to Valdosta State Saturday night.
 
“We’re not trying to recreate the wheel here,” Land said. “All we did was took exactly what we had, that we know we’re good at, and just change some things that would best benefit us on defense and on offense. Normally on offense, we would do more offensive sets and on defense, what we’re doing now is more zone defense…making the quarterback read more.”
 

Fort Valley State shooting for conference championship

FORT VALLEY, Georgia -- With two games remaining last season, Fort Valley State had its sights set on an SIAC championship. In good shape at 6-2, the Wildcats traveled to Atlanta to face Morehouse, but despite a near-miracle comeback, FVSU fell 24-21 to the Maroon Tigers.

“That just put a damper on everything,” FVSU head coach Donald Pittman said. “We lost motivation. The next game against Albany State, we always get up for that game; if we would have won, we would have had something to play for. But we did not win against Morehouse, so we weren’t playing for the conference championship. Dropping those two really dampered the whole season, really.”



FVSU finished the season with a 6-4 record. Boasting five players who earned preseason All-SIAC honors, the Wildcats expect more this year. As voted on by the conference’s head coaches, the preseason All-conference team features wide receiver Drelon Freeman, defensive back Brian Walker and place-kicker/punter Juan Serna on the first team, along with quarterback Otis Brown, who earned the recognition as a running back, and offensive lineman Michael Brown on the second team.

CONTINUE READING 

Terry Sims takes over Bethune-Cookman, says program won’t miss a beat



DAYTONA BEACH, Florida -- The coach has changed but the philosophies and schemes remain the same at Bethune-Cookman.

Brian Jenkins went 46-14 in five seasons with the Wildcats, losing just six Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference games, before moving on to Alabama State. Bethune administrators selected one of Jenkins’ longtime assistants, Terry Sims, to take over the program.

The 43-year-old Sims is a head coach for the first time, but he has been the Wildcats’ assistant head coach, working with defensive backs and the special teams units since 2010.

“Everything is the same,” Sims said. “It was a group of men that got together and came up with a blueprint for this program. The majority of those men are still here. We’re still operating the program that has been in place.”

CONTINUE READING

Rutgers Week 1 opponent: Norfolk State at a glance

PISCATAWAY, New Jersey -- One week from today, Rutgers will open its 2015 campaign. For the first time in the Kyle Flood era, the Scarlet Knights have the luxury of beginning their season at home versus a team from the Division I-AA ranks.

With training camp coming to a close Friday, the Scarlet Knights will begin game-week preparations Monday. Kickoff for the opener next Saturday is slated for 12 noon at High Point Solutions Stadium.

Here are some things to know about the Norfolk State Spartans:



CONTINUE READING 

2015 preview: SWAC at a glance



Coach with the toughest job

Rick Comegy, Mississippi Valley State: No coach has really been able to figure out how to succeed consistently at Mississippi Valley State since Archie Cooley led the program to three consecutive winning seasons in the early-to-mid 1980s.

Newcomers to watch

Guy Stallworth, Grambling, DB: The 6-foot-3, 215-pound junior college transfer will aim to help a pass defense that ranked last in the 10-team SWAC last season.

Derrick Griffin, Texas Southern, WR: Griffin was one of the top receiver prospects in the country coming out of high school in 2013. He signed with Miami, but didn’t qualify. The 6-foot-7, 230-pound Griffin should be a matchup nightmare for the rest of the SWAC.

Toughest schedule

CONTINUE READING