IPWliilllPiliilililPI 4C SPORTS/tCte C^atlottt 9a«t Thursday, March 11,2004 For the Week of March 9 through March 15, 2004 LET'S GO D-2 DANCIN' Carroll Smith / All Pro Photo McLEESE: Former Floward coach and Elizabeth City State alum, leads UDC to NCAA Div. II playoffs for the first time since 1987. ▼ DOZEN TEAMS IN DIV. II TITLE CHASE; MEAC, SWAC TOURNEYS; BSU NAMES LYNN UNDER THE BANNER WHAT'S GOING ON IN AND AROUND BLACK COLLEGE SPORTS LYNN IN AT BOWIE STATE: The last black college football head coaching vacancy was filled last week when Bowie State named Michael J. Lynn Jr. as its new head man. Lynn comes to BSU from just up the road in Baltimore at Morgan State where he served as director of football operations and offensive line coach for the past two seasons. Lynn, 35, lettered four years as a guard on the Morgan State foot ball team before graduating in 1990 with a degree in political sci- MSU Sports Photo LYNN: Taking football reins at Bowie State. ence. He served as a high school assistant before returning to his alma mater as an assistant in 2000. He is replacing Henry Frazier who resigned in November to become head coach at Prairie View A&M of the Southwestern Athletic Conference. BASKETBALL HONORS: The Southwestern Athletic Conference. Mid Eastern Athletic Conference and Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Conference named their all-league basketball , players on the eve of their postseason tournaments. MEAC and SWAC honorees are listed in the top box. SIAC hon- orees are listed below. SWAC: SWAC coaches and sports information directors named 6-7 Mississippi Valley State senior forward Attarrius Norwood as the men's player of the year and Alabama State junior forward Crystal KItt as the women's top player. Norwood led the Delta Devils to the regular season title averaging 14.5 points and 5.1 rebounds. His teammate, junior guard Edward Mack (13.3 ppg., 3.2 apg., 2.4 spg.) was named defensive player of the year and to the second team. MVSU forward Solomon Forbes, who averaged 14.2 points per game, joined Norwood on the first team. Kitt edged Defensive Player of the Year, center Amie Williams of Jackson State, for the player of the year honor. Kitt led the SWAC in scoring at 20.9 points per game, in rebounding at 12 per game, and in field goal per centage (57.8%) while posting 18 double-doubles. Williams leads the nation in blocked shots (4.22 bpg.) while averaging 18.1 points and finishing just behind Kitt at 9.3 rebounds per game and shooting 49.6% from the field. MEAC: Individuals who led their teams to regular season women's and men's titles in the Mid Eastern Athletic Conference, guard Mandy Clark of the Delaware State Lady Hornets and forward Thurman Zimmerman of the South Carolina State Bulldogs, were named the top play ers in the league in voting by coaches and sports informa tion directors. Clark garnered all 60 first place votes to sweep to the women’s award. She averaged 15.3 points per game, seconcj best in the conference, while dishing out 3.1 assists and getting 3.0 steals per game. Teammate Terrelle Waller (12.9 ppg.) joins Clark on the first team. Hampton guard Sharema Dean, who led all freshman scorers at 12 points per game, was named the league’s top freshwoman. Zimmerman, a versatile 6-5 forward, averaged 18.8 points and led the MEAC with 8.4 rebounds per game to power the Bulldogs to a 14-4 regular season conference record. His teammate, freshman swingman Brian Mason, gar nered the lop rookie award by virtue of his 13.2 points and 5.0 rebounds per game. SIAC: Albany State guard Flem Tucker and Clark Atlanta's Jennifer Stegall won the SIAC player of the year awards. MEN FIRST TEAM Nick Wallery. Jr., C, Albany State Flem Tucker, Sr., G, Albany State Allen Early, Sr., G, Ft. Valley State Jason Williams, Jr, F, Lane Nate Lewis, Sr, F, Benedict Joshua Obajuriwa. Fr. C, Benedict SECOND TEAM Kenyon Gamble, Jr, C, Tuskegee Imbert Prosper, So., G/F, Tuskegee Roderick Thomas, Sr, G, Lane Andre Davis, So., C. LeM-Owen Benjy Mitchum, Jr., G, LeM-Owen Eugene Jackson, Sr, G. Benedict WOMEN FIRST TEAM Sherika Tarpkins, Jr, G, Ft. Val. St. Litreece Hum, Jr, G, Lane Kisha Lucette, So., F, Paine Kim Cue, Sr, F. Benedict Pamela Butler, Sr, G/F, Albany St. Jennifer Stegall, Sr, G, Cl.-Atlanta SECOND TEAM Temika Green, Jr, G, Tuskegee Nikisha Richards, Sr, F, LeM-Owen Felicia West, G, Kentucky State Jennifer King, Jr, C, Cl.-Atlanta Andriette Roberts, Jr, F, Ci.Atlanta Amanda Ray, Fr., F, Ft. Valley St. COACH OF THE YEAR Fred Watson, Benedict FRESMAN OF THE YEAR Joshua Obajuriwa, Fr. Benedict NEWCOMER OF THE YEAR Zachary Bright, Lane COACH OF THE YEAR Vanessa White-Moore, Cl.-Atlanta FRESMAN OF THE YEAR Amanda Ray, Fort Valley State NEWCOMER OF THE YEAR Jennifer King. Clark Atlanta OAZEEZ Communications. Inc. VOL, X, NO. 31 2003-04 BASKETBALL (SWAC and MEAC All-Conference and Season Honors) 2004 MEN'S BASKETBALL ALL-SWAC TEAM FIRST TEAM Obie Trotter, So., G, Alabama A&M Brion Rush, So., G, Grambling State Attarrius'Norwood, Sr, F, Miss. Valley State Paul Haynes, Sr, F, Grambling State Solomon Forbes, Sr. F, Miss. Valley State SECOND TEAM Ishmael Joyce, Sr, G/F, Jackson State Edward Mack, Sr, G, Miss. Valley State Terry Horton, Sr, F., Alabama A&M Tyrone Nelson, Fr, F, Prairie View A&M Lionel Willis, Sr, F, Texas Southern PLAYER OF THE YEAR Attarrius Norwood, Sr F, Miss. Valley State DEFENSIVE PLAYER OF THE YEAR Edward Mack, Sr, G, Miss. Valley State NEWCOMER OF THE YEAR Deon Saunders, Jr, F, Southern FRESHMAN OF THE YEAR Tyrone Nelson, Fr. F, Prairie View A&M COACH OF THE YEAR Lafayette Stribling, Miss. Valley State 2004 WOMEN'S BASKETBALL 2004 MEN’S ALL-SWAC TEAM ALL-MEAC BASKETBALL TEAM FIRST TEAM FIRST TEAM Scherwanda Boston, Sr, F, Grambling St. Thurman Zimmerman, Jr, F. S. C. State Rolanda Monroe, So., Southern- Jimmy Boykin. Sr, F, Coppin State Crystal Kitt., Jr, C, Alabama Stat Devin Green, Jr, G/F, Hampton Amie Williams, Sr, C, Jackson State Chakowby Hicks, Jr, G, Norfolk State LaShowann Smith, Fr, F, Alabama A&M Terrence Woods, Sr, G, Florida A&M SECOND TEAM Latesha Lee, Sr, Jackson State SECOND TEAM Latoya Johnson, Sr, Alcorn Slate Brian Mason, Fr, F, S. C. State Carolyn Hopkins, Sr, Prairie View A&M Tee Trotter, Sr, G, Maryland E. Shore Ashley Blake, So., Southern Jeff Granger, So., G, Hampton Crystal Robinson, Fr. Texas Southern • Terrence Hunter, Jr, F, Delaware State PLAYER OF THE YEAR James Wilkerson, Sr, F, Howard Crystal Kitt, Jr, C, Alabama State DEFENSIVE PLAYER OF THE YEAR PLAYER OF THE YEAR Amie Williams, Sr, Jackson State Thurman Zimmerman, Jr, F, S. C. State.- CO-NEWCOMER OF THE YEAR Latoya Johnson, Jr, G, Alabama State ROOKIE OF THE YEAR Ashley Blake, So., F, Southern Brian Mason, Fr, F, S. C, State FRESHMAN OF THE YEAR Fredreika Lewis, Fr, Southern COACH OF THE YEAR COACH OF THE YEAR Ron 'Fang' Mitchell, Coppin State Denise Taylor, Jackson State Butch Beard, Morgan State Freda Freeman-Jackson, Alabama St, 2004 WOMEN'S BASKETBALL ALL-MEAC TEAM FIRST TEAM Mandy Clark, Jr, G, Delaware State Terrelle Waller, Sr, F, Delaware State Yolanda Dixon, Sr, G, Florida A&M Leisel Harry, Sr, C, Coppin State Tiffany Wakefield, Sr, F, Maryland E. Shore Nicole Brathwaite, Sr, F/C, Hampton SECOND TEAM Katie Clark, So., G, Bethune-Cookman Antoinette Reese, Sr, G/F, Coppin State Elana Greene, Jr, F/C, Florida A&M Lynetta Sullivan, Sr, G, Hampton Yomika Corbitt, Jr, C, Norfolk State PLAYER OF THE YEAR Mandy Clark, Jr, G, Delaware State ROOKIE OF THE YEAR Sharema Dean, Fr, G, Hampton COACH OF THE YEAR Ed Davis, Delaware State MEAC, SWAC tournaments under way First-year men's head basketball coach Benjamin Betts has S. C. State right where former coach Cy Alexander left them - atop the Mid Eastern Athletic Conference as the league's postseason tournament began Monday in Richmond. Va. Betts's Bulldogs (17-10) clinched the regular season title with a season-ending win over N. C. A&T Saturday and entered this week’s tourney as the top seed. Alexander won the tourney title and automatic NCAA bid last year before moving on to Tennessee State. The Bulldogs' 14-4 conference record tied them with Ron "Fang" Mitchell's Coppin State Eagles (16-13) for the regular season title but SCSU got the top seed by sweeping the Eagles in their two meetings this season. BETTS For the first lime in his four-year tenure, head coach Ed Davis's Lady Hornets of Delaware State (19-8) are the women's top seed. ' Their 14-4 league mark was matched by Patricia Bibbs's Hampton Lady Pirates but DSU got the top seed by virtue of defeating Hampton by a larger margin (19 points, 66-47). Hampton defeated DSU, 56-40. The top five men's and women's teams received byes through play- ins held Monday and Tuesday at the Arthur Ashe Center. The Richmond Coliseum is the venue for the remainder of the tournament includ ing quarterfinal play Wednesday and Thursday and semifinals Friday. MBC will televise the semis. The men's final at 12 noon Saturday will be carried live on ESPN. The 4 p.m. women's final will be carried live by MBC. The men of Mississippi Valley State enter this week's Southwestern Athletic Conference Tournament in Birmingham as solid favorites after win ning the regular season title by a whopping five games. But that doesn't matter FREEMAN4ACKS0N ing a 13-game winning streak that has earned them the lop seed in the women’s tournament which opened with quar terfinal play Wednesday. The final win of the was Saturday over Jackson State giving Freda now as only a tournament champi onship will get head coach Lafayette Stribling's Delta Devils (22-6, 16-2) the conference's auto matic bid to the Big Dance, the NCAA Div. I Tournament. "We just have to remain focused to get through this tourna ment," said Stribling who last made the trip to the NCAA in 1997. The Delta Devils play Alcorn State (10- 17) Thursday at 7:30 p.m., in one of four quarterfinals at the Bill Harris Fair Park Arena, site of the men's and women's tournaments. Defending champion Lady Alabama State (19-8, 15-3) is rid- Freeman-Jackson’s squad a sweep of their head-to-head meetings this season. JSU (22-6, 15-3) is seeded second. ASU will meet eighth-seed ed Mississippi Valley State (4-14) in Wednesday's 7:30 p.m. contest. Both men’s and women's semi finals are Friday and will be tele vised on the MBC-TV network on a tape-delayed basis (Saturday 3/13). Saturday's play begins with the women’s championship game at 4 p.m., followed by the men’s cham pionship game at 7 p.m. Both games will be broadcast live-on MBC. 12 black college teams in Division n title hunt Seven black college men's teams in three regions, and five women’s teams in those same regions take to the court this week end with the goal of winning their respective NCAA Div. II national basketball championships. The expanded 64-team fields for the national tournaments were selected Sunday. Eight teams were selected from the nation's eight regions, up from six from each region and the 48-team field that had previously determined the champi ons. The Lady Bears of Shaw (28- 2), two-time CIAA tournament champions, are the only team of the 12 to get a top seed and will host the women's South Atlantic Regional at their on-campus facility, Spaulding Gymnasium. Friday through Monday (March 12-13, 15) in Raleigh, N.C. Head coach Jacques Curtis's troops, who made it to the regional finals last year before losing to North Florida, will open Friday at 6 p.m. against eighth-seeded Augusta State (21-7) of the Peach Belt Conference. They will be joined in Raleigh by the team they defeated for the CIAA title. Virginia Union (23-6), who will come in as the sixth-seeded team. Moses Golatt will lead the Lady Panthers against third-seeded Lander (24-5) in the 1 p.m. opener Friday. The men's and women's Elite Eights are scheduled for March 24, CURTIS D'ALESSIO WATSON BREWER HILL 25 and 27. The men's final three rounds will be held at Centennial Garden in Bakersfield, Ca., and be hosted by Cal State-Bakersfield. The women's Elite Eight will be hosted by Missouri Western Slate College in St. Joseph, Mo., and will be played at the St. Joseph Civic Arena. CIAA men's tournament cham pion. Virginia Union, will be joined by conference rival Bowie State in the men's South Atlantic Regional to be played on the campus of top- seeded Kennesaw (Ga.) State on March 14, 15, and 17. Dave Robbins's fourth-seeded VUU Panthers (25-4) will face fifth-seeded Columbus State (21-8) in an 8:30 p.m. quarterfinal game Saturday. Robbins won Div. II national titles with the Panthers in 1980 and 1992. CIAA tournament favorite Bowie State (22-5), seeded third, plays Lenoir-Rhyne (19-8) at 2:30 p.m. Luke D'Alessio's Bulldogs won last year’s South Atlantic Regional and advanced to the Elite Eight, where they lost in the nation al semifinals against Kentucky Wesleyan. The Bulldogs stumbled two weekends ago. losing in the quarterfinals of the CIAA tourna ment — an event they also won last year. Benedict's men and women were upset winners of their respec tive SIAC tournament titles to earn automatic bids to the South Regionals. The Lady Tigers (16-13), under Maurice Bailey, got an eighth seed and will face the top seed and host, Rollins (27-3), on its home floor in Winter Park, FI., Friday at 6 p.m. Fort Valley State received an at-large bid and is ranked third in the region. Lonnie Bartley will lead the Lady Wildcats (23-6) into the regional for the sixth straight time, and 12th overall, taking on sixth- seeded and defending regional champ, Central Arkansas (21-10) at 3 p.m. The men’s South Regional will be held at the home of Valdosta (Ga.) State (25-3), the region's top seed, beginning Saturday with the finals on Tuesday. Benedict (20-8) is seeded seventh and begins its quest for the title against Rollins (24-5), the second seed, in the 1:30 p.m. opener. Fred Watson leads the Tigers. SIAC tournament runner-up Morehouse (24-6), under head man Grady Brewer, is seeded fourth and faces fifth-seeded Henderson State (22-6) at 5 p.m. Saturday. Three black college men's teams are in the East Region men's field to be played on the campus of the top seed, Pfeiffer College in Misenheimer, N. C. The University of the District of Columbia returns to the tourna ment for the first time since 1987. UDC won the Div. II national title in 1982 with stars Earl Jones and Michael Britt and made a return trip to the finals in 1983. They were then coached by Wil Jones. The Firebirds, 18-9 this season under Mike McLeese, are seeded sixth and will face West Virginia Intercollegiate Athletic Conference runner-up, West Virginia State (24- 5), the third seed at 12 noon Saturday. Bryan Poore coaches the Yellow Jackets Cheyney (22-7) of the Pennsylvania Athletic Conference is seeded fifth and faces conference- rival California (Pa.) (23-6), the third seed at 6 p.m. Cheyney is coached by Cleo Hill, Jr. West Virginia State is the lone black college team in the women's East Regional hosted by California (Pa.). The Lady Yellow Jackets (22- 8) are seeded seventh and will face second seed Glenville State (27-3) at 3 p.m. WVSC is coached by Will Heasley. Benedict sweeps SIAC hoop titles Benedict, in just its second year in the Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Conferencce, swept both the men's and women's titles at the league's 2004 basketball tournament in Albany, Ga.. this past weekend. The third-seedefl Benedict men (19-8) needed overtime to subdue regular season winner and defending champion Morehouse, 89-86 in the men's final after the sixth-seeded Lady Tigers (16-13) held off Tuskegee in the women's final, 56-55. The wins vaulted both teams into the NCAA Div. II South Regional by virtue of automatic berths that come from winning their respective tournaments. In the women’s final, a 15-footer from Benedict guard Shaunna Armstrong with 7.5 seconds l^ft proved to be the game-winner. It was the final blow in a nip-and-tuck battle that saw Tuskegee come back from a seven-point deficit late to take the lead in the final two minutes. Kim Cue and center Christie Yusef led Benedict with 12 points apiece. Cue was named the tournament's most valuable player. Ashley Howard scored 15 for Tuskegee (20-10) while Nicole Dailey added 12. The Benedict men upset top-seeded Morehouse to win its first con ference title since 1961. Dazzling point guard Eugene Jackson threw in 30 points getting key baskets throughout the game but it was a three- pointer by guard Pete Asmond that allowed the Tigers to get to overtime. Jackson was chosen as the tournament's most valuable player. Morehouse (25-4) was led by 21 points from Brandon Childs and Ronald Thompson and 20 from Darius Wade. SIAC TOURNAMENT RESULTS MEN FIRST ROUND ALL TOURNAMENT Clark-Atlanta 70, LeMoyne-Owen 59 Jason Williams, Lane Fort Valley State 83, Tuskegee 71 Brandon Childs, Morehouse ■ Kentucky State 61 Paine 60 Eugene Jackson, Benedict QUARTERFINALS Darius Wade, Morehouse Miles 68, Albany State 63 Joel Brown, Benedict Morehouse 78, Clark-Atlanta 64 Ronald Thompson, Morehouse Benedict 60, Fort Valley State 42 HUSTLE AWARD Lane 95, Kentucky State 92. OT Pete Asmond, Benedict SEMIFINALS SPORTSMANSHIP AWARD Morehouse 76, Miles 68 Ronald Thompson, Morehouse Benedict 89, Lane 75 OUTSTANDING COACH FINALS Fred Watson, Benedict Benedict 89, Morehouse 86. OT MVP Eugene Jackson, Benedict WOMEN FIRST ROUND ALL TOURNAMENT LeMoyne-Owen 57, Miles 48 Kim Cue, Benedict Tuskegee 74, Paine 59 Sherika Tarpkins, Fort Valley State Lane 67, Kentucky State 59 Nicole Dailey, Tuskegee Benedict 52, Albany State 44 Ashley Howard. Tuskegee SECOND ROUND Christy Yusef, Benedict Fort Valley State 63, LeM.-Owen 38 Shaunna Armstrong, Benedict Clark-Atlanta 60, Lane 43 HUSTLE AWARD SEMIFINALS Tina Hayes, Benedict Tuskegee, Fort Valley State SPORTSMANSHIP AWARD Benedict, Clark-Atlanta Christy Yusef, Benedict FINALS OUTSTANDING COACH Benedict 56, Tuskegee 55 Maurice Bailey, Benedict MVP Kim Cue, Benedict