Newspapers / Winston-Salem Chronicle (Winston-Salem, N.C.) / Nov. 10, 1994, edition 1 / Page 21
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SECOND SON coMm SMITH: Albany St. coach? hopes to land second con secutive Div. II playoff berth. T TEAMS POSITION THEMSELVES FOR NCAA, NAIA AND POSTSEASON BERTHS BLACK COLLEGE FOOTBALL (Results, Standings and Weekly Honors) LAST WEEK Ala. AAM 24, Miles 6 Albany St. 40. Morns Bfown 13 Ark. -Pine Bluff 62. Ky St 8 Beth. -Ck man 3t, Knoxville 24 Dataware St. 31. NCAAT 10 Biz Cty. St 16. Livingstone 14 Ftor ida AAM 16. Southern 14 _ Gramtoling St 51. Ala St 24 Hampton 85, C W Post 7 Jackson St 47, Texas Southern 41 Langston 17, E Central Okla St 16 Millersville 56, Cheyney 1 2 NC Central 22, J. C. Smith 21 New Haven 35. Bowie St 5 Norfolk St. 28. Lane 26 j_ S. C State 40. Howard 14 Samford 40. Morgan St 34 Sav. St 27. Ft. Vail St. 21 (OT) Shepherd 62. w Varit. 14 Tartton State 70. Prairie View 20 Tenn. Tech 28. Tenn. St. 20 Tuskegee 26. Clark- Atlanta 14 ? W-Salem St 56. Va Union 14 CIAA COWF ALL W L T W L T Hampton 7 0 0/9 1 0 Va State 5 2 0 6 3 0 W-Salem St 5 2 0 6 4 0 Norfolk St 5 3 0 6 3 0 Livingstone 5 3 0 5 4 0 Fayettev I St 4 3 0 4 4 1 NC Central 4 3 0 5 5 0 Eliz City St 2 5 0 4 6 0 i Bowie St 2 6 0 2 7 0 r Va Union 16 0 18 0 JC Smith 0 7 0 0 9 0 CIAA PLAYERS OF THE WEEK Richard Huntlfy, Ji .RB. W-S State Rushed tor 361 yds and 4 TDs to break CIAA and WSSU smgle game and career rushing reccxds nwin over Va Union. DEFENSE Gfeg Wm$- Evans, Sr DB, NCCU ' Two nterceptions. 2 pass b/u and four tackles n win over JC Smith i - " MEAC i CO NF ALL W _L_T WIT SC State 5 0 0 8 2 0 NCA&T 3 2 0 6 4 0 Del State 3 2 0 5 4 0 FAMU - 2 3 0 5 4 0 Beth-Ckmn 2 3 0 4 6 0 Howard 1 3 0 4 5 0 Morgan St 1 4 0 2 7 0 MEAC PLAYERS OF THE WEEK OFFENSE * , Dennis Jones. Jr , OB Del St Tossed 16 of 23 passes tor26l yds and 2 TDs DEFENSE Jemel Biagmotr. (seven solos), one pass breakup and an interception in win over NC A&T \ ; SIAC CONF ALL W L T W L T Albany St 7 0 0 9 1 0 Ft. Valley 5 2 0 5 4 0 Tusk eg ee 6 1 0 6 3 0 Savannah St ' 4 3 0 7 3 0 Miles 2 4 0 2 5 1 Ala A&M 3 4 0 3 7 0 Morehouse 2 5 0 3-6 0 Clark Atlanta 1 5 0 2 6 0 Moris Brown 1 7 0 2 7 0 SIAC PLAYERS OF THE WEEK OFFENSE J Mfisiah Port*. $o;, RB. Ft Valley St season high 225 yards in overtime loss to Savannah St DEFENSE Jimmie Reed, Sr.. DB, Ft Valley St Had 1 2 tackles (7 solo), 2 tackles for loss, one OB sack . one caused fumble and one fumble recovery return for a TO m loss to Savannah St. SWAC CONF ALL WIT y L T GramWing 6 0 0 9 0 0 Alcorn St 5 1 0 6 2 1 Jackson St 3 2 0 6 3 0 Southern 3 2 0 4 6 0 Ala State 2 4 0 ? 4 5 0 Miss Vail 2 4 0 3 6 0 TX Southern 2 4 0 3 6 0 Prairie Vw 0 6 0 0 9 0 SWAC PLAYERS OF THE WEEK OFFENSE Dane* Asberry, Sr., QB, Jackson St. Had 346 yds of total oftense, threw , 3 ID paoeoo and ran tor 2TPa in j_ win over Texas Southern DEFENSE Valmond Brown. Jr. LB. _ Nine tackles (3 tor loss) recoveries one mten one QB sack m win State ' INDEPENDENTS W L . T Cent State 7 1 0 _ UQQSton 8 2 0 Univ. Artt-Pfi S 3 0~ W VA Stat* 4 5 0 Term Stat* A J 5 0 KnoxviHa 1 7 1 Kentucky Si 18 1 Lan* 1.7 0 Cheyney 0 10 0 rBCSPPUYB*0f7WWrai J Chris Robinson, Sr, 06, Arit-PB Tossed 12paaa*s tor 161 yards snd 3 touchdowns in wta over Kentucky State. Darron Daws, SrrRBr Uofi. St Had 6th 100 yard rushing game picking up 1 12 yds. Caught first career TD pass in loss to Tennessee Tech. UNPfeR THE BANNER WHATS GOING ON IN AND AROUND BLACK COLLEGE SPORTS CELBfcRATE cm imuc: This is the Heritage Bowl logo unveiled this week. The game is scheduled for Dec. 30 in Atlanta's Georgia Dome aF 4 pm and ^ill be carried live by ESPN. Right now it .looks like a Grambling vs. S. C. State matchup. NO MORE INTERIM 1 Norfolk State Univer sity interim football coach Darnell Moore has been.named head coach for the Spartans. Moore took over as interim coach at the beginning of the season following the resig nation of Archie Cooley . NEW PANTHER: South Carolina State graduate and MEAC Hall of Famer Donnie Shell Jias been named director of community and player relations for the NFL's Carolina Panthers. In addition to handling the team's participation in condu ctivities, Shell will, serve as co-coordinator of NFL Player Pro grams, a league wide program that assists players and their families in continuing education, job training and financial! planning. Shell in the front office and earned a master's dcgree from * v ? ? the school a year later. IN MEMORY: (Jramblings womens basketball team has been picked to repeat as champions of the Southwestern Athletic Conference. The Lady Tigers were the first SWAC team to receive a bid to the NCAA women's tournament last year. Coach Patricia Bibbs has announced that the team wil I dedicate their season to guard Lisa Bruins, who was killed in an auto accident during the off-season. ~ ? ...o i OPEN THE FLOODGATES: i? ?em, that Black Entertainment Television's exit from black college football has opened up some other opportunities. Thanks, in part, to the interest in Steve McNair, black colleges have appeared nationally on SportSouth *and ESPN2 with regional coverage provided by ABC ( 1 game) and a syndicated three-game CI AA football network. Still j to come, NBCs telecast of the Bayou Classic on Novem ber 28. As they say, check your local listings for time and station. THE STAT CORNER WHO ARE THE BEST PERFORMERS AMONGST. BLACK COLLEGES Top Ten Black Colleges In Total Offense (Yards per game) 1 . Alcorn State 581 .8 2. Grambling State, 516.9 3. Hampton University 498.4 4. South Carolina State 437.1 5. Delaware State 407.1 6. Southern University 397.6 7. Albany State 392.4 8. Winston-Salem State 390.2 9. Norfolk State 367.0 10. Savannah State 344.3 SOUKt L C .inference *?kJ tc*m AZf K /. CMnRiNak-itioav !'??'. VOL. I. NO. 12 Playoff possibilities spice up weekend Eric Moore j BCSP Assistant Editor The football regular season is * coming to an end but some teanis are hoping that their seasons aren't com pletely finished this weekend. It's normally the time of the year when the NAIA and Division 11 schools get ready to hang up the cleats while the NCAA Division l-AA schools play for one more week. NCAA Divisiqn II and NAIA playoff bids will be announced next week and several lack college foot !. ball teams are in the hunt for postseason play. The major non-participant in this year's playoffs is Hampton (9-1-0, 7-0-0UThePiraiescaptured their third straight CIAA title two weeks ago but because of their move to Division l-AA next year, Hampton cannot par ; ticipate in the Division II playoffs this year. The Pirates will i,-nivh their SULTAN COOPER: Albany State QB has thrown for 1 7 ttfuchdowns and only four Interceptions in 9-1 season. ! v-? 'i ' : ' final season in Division II on the i v > road against Fayetteville State (4i4-l, 4-3-0). Hampton wants to finish on a w inning note and FSjJ is in jeopardy of experience ing its first losing season under I head coach Jerome Harper. That leaves Albany State (9-1-0, 7-0-0) as the only Divi-' sion II school with a legitimate shot at making the playoffs. The Golden Rams have clinched at. least a tic for the SIACchampion ship and could win the title out- - right with a win over Fort Valley State (5-4-0, 2-8) in this weekend's Fountain City Classic game in Columbus. GA. In* the past this ,gamc has decidedUhe confcrence champi onship as well as who continues in the playoffs. As with most classic games, won- loss rccords go by Ihe wayside as Albany State puts its Top .15 ranking on the line against a Fort Valley team jthat has lost two straight games. Black college postseason prospects arc a bit brighter, in the , NAlA where three teams arc still in the hunt. Central State (7-1-0) which has remained #1 in spite of its only loss two weeks ago, re turns to action against Jackson ville (Ala.) State, another team making the transition to Division 1-AA. Langs ton (8-2-0)tontinues to impress as they work tuwatd their second straight Oklahoma Intercollegiate Athletic Confer ence Championship. The Lions close out their season at home against Southwest Oklahoma State this weekend. . , Arkansas-Pine Bluff (6-3 0) haf a more difficult task.. Since only eight teams qualify for the NAI A playoffs, the Golden Lions arc "on the bubble" and their fate fnay rest in the hands of others. Meanwhile APB cl ?ses out its season in Atlanta against the Wolverines of Morris Brown (2 7-0). NCAA Division l-AA pity off bids are still a week away. Alcorn State (6-2-1) may have an outside chance to qualify if they show well against nationally ranked Troy State (7-2-0). Six ' teen teams will qualify and with the Bayou Classic rather than compete in the playoffs and the Ivy League representative also electing not to participate, the Braves could get consideration. v The two winningest active coaches in black college football will meet in Miami when Grambling State (9-0-0) faces , Florida A&M (5-4-0). Coach [ Eddie Robinson has 397 career victories followed by FAMU's Billy Joe with 171 career wins. The big question? Can coachRobinson stay on schedule for win #400 at the Heritage Bowl. BCSP TOP TEN 1. GRAM BUNG: (9-0-0) - Clinched SWAC tie, Heritage Bowl berth and continued roil toward Eddie's 400th . Finish with two big hurdles. NEXT: vs. FAMU at Joe Robbie (Miami) 2. HAMPTON (9-1*0) - Whipped Post and now seeks to finish off second straight unbeaten conference tatty* NEXT; at Fayettevffle St 3. ALCORN STATE (6-2-1) - "Air" should be v rested. This one vs. nationally ranked (1-AA) opponent may determine where he'll be in two weeks. NEXT: vs. Troy St 4. SC STATE (8-2-0) - MEAC champs ran away from Howard. Heritage Bowl or NCAA playoffs may hinge on Nov 19 battle at>JC A&T. NEXT: Idle ~ ? -5. "ALBANY STATE fr-l -O) ?' "THex* rolled. Only arch rival stands in way of NCAA playoff trip. NEXT: vs. Ft Valley in Columbus. OA 6. CENTRAL STATE (7-1-0) - Returns to action against strong Div. II squad. Win or lose, playoffs' await. NEXT! at Jacksonville St. 7. DELAWARE STATE (6-4-0) - Hornets shored up second place spot in MEAC. NEXT : at Rhode Island * ? 8. LANGSTON (8-2-0) ? Escaped with narrow win to retain conference lead. Win here should put . Lions in NAIA playoffs. NEXT: vs. SW Okla. Si. 9. JACKSON ST (6-3-0) - Outshot Tex. South ern and now gets, to feast early. NEXT: vs. Prairie View 10. VIRGINIA ST (6-3-0) - Fish Bowl matchup should determine whether they belong in Top Ten. NEXT: vs W-S State in Norfolk. Otfwr* rftvtng vckm Wtraton-Satom St . Savanna* St . Tuskegee and Ari?ansa#-Pirt? Bluff. GAMES THIS WEEK (All times local) Ala St vs Miss Vail in Mont'gmry AL 1 OOp r Alcorn St. vs Troy St in Lorman. MS 1 00 p Bowie St vs W Liberty iri Bowie. MD . 1 OOp Cheyney vs Bloomsburg in Cheyney, PA 1 OOp r E Cty St vs J C Smith in E Cty. NC 1 30 p~ Fayv St vs Hampton m Faytvl. NC ?? 1 30 p Florida A&M vs Grambling in Miami FL { 1 00 p Howard vs Morgan St" in Wash . DC "? . 1 00 p Jackson St vs Pr View m Jackson MS 7 00 p J'ksnvl St ,vs Central St in J'ksnvi, AL 2:00 p Lane vs Clark-Atl in Jackson. TN 2 00 p Langston vs S W Okl in Langston, OK 2 00 p ? Miles vs Qav Ot in Biimingfiam. AL 1 30 p Mor Br vs Ark -Pine Bl in Atlanta, GA v 2 00 p Murray St vs Tenn St in.Murray, KY 1 30 p NC Central vs' Va Union in Durham. NC 1 00 p Nnrf Ky m Mnrfrtlk, VA 1 30 p Rhode Island vs Del St in Kingston. R I 1 00 p S'thrn vs Tx Slhrn in Bat. Rouge LA 7 00 p W Va St vs Concord in Institute. WV 1 00 p HOMECOMINGS - Livingstone vs Knoxville in Salisbury. NC 1 30 p Tuskegee vs Ala A&M in Tuskegee. AL 1 00 p CLASSICS ? - FOUNTAIN CITY CLASSIC Ft Vail St. vs Alb St in Columbus. GA 1 30 p FISH BOWl Va St vs W-Salem St. in Norfolk, VA 1 30 p KEEP 'EM OFF: The Nightmare - starting team didnl even have room for All-World players like Tennessee State's Richard Dent and Ed "Too Tall" Jones, GrambHng's Everson Walls or FAMU's Ken Riley. Next Week: COACHING A NIGHTMARE ? NIGHTMARE" EXTRAS Defensive Lint - John' Baker. NC CENTRAL LA Rams. Elvin Bethea, NC AS.T, Houston Oilers Richard Dent, TENN ST . Chicago Bears, Ed 'Too Tall' Joaes, TENN ST , Dallas Cowboys. Claude Huwprey. TENN ST . Atlanta Fal cons, Ernie Lndd. GRAMBLING, KC Chiefs, Carl Hairston, MD STATE Phila Eagles Linebackers ? Al Beauchamp SOUTHERN, Houston Oilers, Tho mas " Holiywoood ' Henderson , LANGSTON. Dallas Cowboys, Mike Hegman, TENN ST . Dallas Cow boys, Harold McUnton, SOUTHERN. . Washington Redskins, Defensive Backs ? Jim Kearney , PRAIRIE VIEW. KC Chiefs. Mel Phillips, NIC A4T, San Francisco 49ers Johnnie Samples, MD STATE, Bait /NY Jets, Donnie Shell, SC STATE, Pitts burgh Steelers; Billy Thompson, MD STATE. Denver Broncos. Everson Walls. GRAM8LING. Dallas Cowboys. Ken Riley, FLA A&M. Cinncinnati. Albert Leww^GRAMBLING, KC/LA Raiders, Ken Reaves, NORF ST . St Louis Cardials BLACK ART a?d GIFT SHOW Sat. Nov. 19, 10am-8pm ? Sun. Nov. 20, lpm-7pm Holiday Inn North ? Winston-Salem ? across from coliseum ART DOLLS BATIKS BOOKS POTTERY MASKS JEWELRY FLORAL DESIGNS FIGURINES ~ African Fabric and Clothing Christmas and Kwanzaa Gifts & much, much more!! "Meet outstanding artists and tradesmen** $2.5' Adults $1.00 12 18 FREE under 12 Bring this ad and get $.50 off Adult tickets Call 748-9775 for more information BCSP Notes Winston-Salem State RB Richard Huntley ran for 361 yards to Set a single game (T1 AA rushing record and that total helped the 6-1 215 lb. Jr., from Monroe, NC also set the C1AA career rushing record (4,159). Huntley becomes the second Ram of the year to Tncak a CfAA career recoui. ^WR Orondae Gadsden broke the career touchdown receiving record of 38 held by NC Central's Robert Clark, and now has 41 career receiving touchdowns. . Norfolk State WR James Roe needs only 101 yards to break the C1AA season receiv ing yardage record held by Clark. GADSDEN: 6-5, 195 with awesome leaping ability. 1000 YARD CLUB RUSHING C YDS YPC TD YPG Richard Huntley-WSSU 219 1577 7.2 * 15 175.9 Antonio Lero^ Albany Sl 198 1199 6 i 12 119 9 Michael Hicks - S.C. State 224 Bobby Phillips - Va. Union 212 Clifton Davis - Fay. St. 249 ^larvin Marshall - S.C. State 144 Lamontc Still - Hampton 144 Chris Cachere - Savannah St. 199 PASS RECEIVING C James Roe - Norfolk St. 65 Reggie Barlow - Ala. St. 49 Oronde Gadsden - WSSLU 50 1198 1174 1056 1020 1019 1016 5.3 5.5 4.2 7.1 7.1 5.1 17 7 7 9 10 9 119.8' 130.4 117.3 102.0 101.9 101.6 S^oftday Large selection of holiday dresses for your Thanksgiving and Christmas Parties , weddings, receptions , concerts, etc. This collection features tiny crystal pleats, damask print, lace , synthetic wool crepe, double georgette, crushed velvet, metallic, knits with jewel necklines... just so many beautiful styles, fabrics and colors. ' Little girls holiday dresses and Little Masters 3pc. velvet suits are in stock. - Your Account Is Welcome ? No Locally Owned and Operated Jeromes Dept. Store, Inc. 520 N. LIBERTY Sfflgg, wrIaaroy to 722-7474 ?Jour f amity cCotHier since 1932 ? Open 9:15am to 5:30pm - Monday- Saturday i i o vv i. i; \ i s We Put Our Cars Through The Wringer, Not You. Every Lexus Certified Pre-Oumed Car must pass more than 100 quality and maintenance checks and is backed by a Lexus Limited Warranty, ree Roadside Assistance, and a complimentary maintenance service. Here is a sample of our tremendous selection: '94 LEXUS ES 300 Red w/ivory leather. CD. 8500 miles '93 LEXUS ES 300 Emerald w/ivory leather, sunroof '92 LEXUS LS 400 Sandstone -w/ivory leather, sunroof. 32.000 miles '92 LEXUS SC 300 Blue w/fjray leather. CD. sunroof. 34.000 miles '93 LEXUS ES 300 White w/ivory leather. CD. 10. miles, sunroof FLOW LEXUS Conveniently located 1-40 Business at Highway 66 ? Kernersville '92 LEXUS ES 300 Red w/black leather, sunroof *91 LEXUS LS 400 White w/bhie leather. CD. Lexus phone, sunroof ?92 LEXUS ES 300 Garnet w/ivory leather, local trade, sunroof '92 LEXUS SC 400 Blue w/gray leather, CD. sunroof *91 LEXUS LS 400 Black w/gray leather. CD changer, sunroof i-8oo-7:{7-<>:*or>
Winston-Salem Chronicle (Winston-Salem, N.C.)
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Nov. 10, 1994, edition 1
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