Showing posts with label Black College Football. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Black College Football. Show all posts

Jackson State: 2024 Celebration Bowl Champions






 

A game that some predicted to be close was never in doubt as SWAC champion Jackson State handled MEAC winner South Carolina State 28-7 to win the 2024 edition of the Celebration Bowl and its first HBCU national championship since 1996.


The Tigers led wire-to-wire and never were seriously challenged in spite of having to go straight from the SWAC title game the previous week to Atlanta to play a South Carolina State team that had not played a game in over two weeks.


That level of dedication, preparedness, and desire to stay on top of one’s game comes from the top, so there is no surprise that this Jackson State team is molded by a program legend, current head coach T.C. Taylor.


Taylor, a highly regarded quarterback coming out of high school, accepted a switch to receiver his junior year at J-State. By his senior year of 2001, he was one of the top pass catchers in the country (84 receptions, 1,234 yards, and 11 touchdowns). He earned training camp deals with the New England Patriots and Detroit Lions before turning his attention to coaching.


Taylor worked his way up those ranks as well, serving as a quarterbacks and receivers coach and offensive coordinator at schools from Coahoma Community College in Mississippi to North Carolina Central before returning to Jackson State five years ago. 


He served as a coordinator under John Hendrick and Deion Sanders before being named head coach in December 2022 following Sanders’ move to Colorado. Taylor set about building a roster ready to climb the Celebration Bowl mountain and represent a proud tradition of JSU football.


All T.C.’s Tigers have done in his first two seasons on the job is compile a 19-6 overall record, 13-3 in SWAC play, and topped the 2024 season off with a measure of revenge in dominating South Carolina State Saturday. 


This was Taylor’s fourth Celebration Bowl appearance (he was the offensive coordinator in NCCU’s 10-9 loss to Grambling in 2016), and it turned out to be the charm as he and his players, who shared an unwavering belief in each other, shared in one of the great victories in JSU history.


“They believed in me,” Taylor said of his players. “I said we’re going to work our butts off because we were going to get to this moment.”


If you don’t believe in storybook endings, you may find it hard to believe that a proud son of an HBCU powerhouse returned home to lead his football team to the Promised Land.


But it actually happened.


And Taylor and the Jackson State football team wrote an ending to the 2024 HBCU football season that few will forget.

Florida A&M: 2023 Celebration Bowl Champions





Florida A&M (12-1, 8-0 SWAC) defeated Howard (6-6, 4-1 MEAC), 30-26, to win the 2023 Celebration Bowl. It is the first Celebration Bowl win and the first postseason bowl win in school history for the Rattlers. 


The Rattlers trailed 16-10 at halftime after a slow start but scored 20 points in the fourth quarter to storm back for the win. All-American linebacker Isaiah Major sealed the game with an interception on Howard's final drive with less than two minutes remaining. Major was selected as the Defensive MVP after recording six total tackles, one tackle for loss, and one interception. 


It was a dominant defensive performance for the Rattlers as Howard finished the game with only 187 total yards and less than 3.5 yards per play. The Bison capitalized on great field position to take an early 14-0 lead but failed to establish any offensive consistency throughout the game. 


Running back Kelvin Dean was named the Offensive MVP after leading the Rattlers with 87 receiving yards and two receiving touchdowns. Quarterback Jeremy Moussa completed 19-of-32 attempts for 289 passing yards, three passing touchdowns, and two interceptions. All three of Moussa's touchdowns came in the fourth quarter, including the game-winner to Jah'Marae Sheread with five minutes remaining.


Florida A&M becomes only the second SWAC program to win the Celebration Bowl, joining Grambling State (2016). The Rattlers also extended their winning streak to 11 games, which is the second-longest streak in the nation. 


North Carolina Central: 2022 Celebration Bowl Champions



North Carolina Central saw victory erased as time elapsed at the end of regulation in the Celebration Bowl Saturday.


The Eagles remained calm, driving for a touchdown in overtime to ruin the end of the Deion Sanders era at Jackson State, 41-34.


The Tigers, who came in undefeated, had forced overtime on the final play of regulation when Shedeur Sanders threw a TD pass to Travis Hunter. They went for the PAT to send the game to the extra session rather than try to win it with a 2-point conversion.


In the extra period, Davius Richard scored on a 1-yard run and the Eagles kicked the PAT.


The Tigers’ drive ended with a pair of incompletions, one that saw sophomore tight end Hayden Hagler drop a potential TD pass in the end zone. The second pass from Shedeur Sanders was errant and North Carolina Central was the HBCU champs.


The Tigers named T.C. Taylor to replace Deion Sanders as head coach. Deion Sanders is taking over as head coach at the University of Colorado and bringing many Jackson State players with him to Boulder.

Jackson State: 2022 SWAC Football Champions



JACKSON, Miss.- The Jackson State University football team defeated Southern 43-24 Saturday in the Cricket SWAC Championship game.

 

Jackson State (12-0) won its 18th SWAC Championship and clinched a berth in the Cricket Celebration Bowl set for Saturday, December 17 in Atlanta versus North Carolina Central. It is the first back-to-back SWAC titles for JSU since 1995-96.

 

Quarterback Shedeur Sanders was named Offensive MVP after passing for 320 yards and four touchdowns. Linebacker Aubrey Miller Jr. was named Defensive MVP after making five tackles, one sack, and three tackles for loss.

 

The opening 11 minutes set the tone for the game. The nation's top ranked defense forced three turnovers (two fumbles, one interception), and made two sacks.

 

Following a three-and-out forced by the JSU defense, the Tigers' offense drove 61 yards in nine plays as Alejandro Mata's 22-yard field goal gave Jackson State a 3-0 lead.

 

On the ensuing possession, Herman Smith III intercepted a Southern pass and returned it 37 yards to the Jaguar one-yard line. Sy'Veon Wilkerson's one-yard TD run two plays later and PAT kick gave Jackson State a 10-0 lead with 8:26 to play in the first quarter.

 

On the ensuing possession, Miller Jr.'s sack and forced fumble was recovered by Antonio Doyle Jr. at the SU 14. On the next play, Sanders fired a 14-yard touchdown pass to Shane Hooks, and Kevin Coleman's two-point conversion pass gave JSU an 18-0 lead with 6:35 to play in the first quarter.

 

Jackson State made its third takeaway in as many possessions on the next Southern drive as Baron Hopson's sack and forced fumble was recovered by Justin Ragin at the JSU 42-yard line. The Tigers found the end zone again only four plays later as Sanders and Hooks connected on a 40-yard scoring pass. A Sanders-to-Coleman two-point conversion pass gave JSU a 26-0 lead with 3:51 to play in the opening period.

 

After Southern scored early in the second quarter, JSU scored on its fifth straight possession. A seven-play, 85-yard Jackson State drive ended with a 14-yard scoring pass from Sanders to Coleman, with Mata's PAT giving the Tigers a 33-7 lead with 11:25 to play in the first half.

 

After Southern closed the gap in the third quarter, JSU put the game away for good. Sanders threw his fourth TD pass of the game, a nine-yard strike to Rico Powers late in the period for the final margin.


About the SWAC

The Southwestern Athletic Conference (SWAC) is considered one of the premier HBCU conferences in the country and currently ranks among the elite in the nation in terms of HBCU alumni playing with professional sports teams.

 

Current championship competition offered by the league includes competition for men in Baseball, Basketball, Cross Country, Football, Golf, Indoor Track and Field, Outdoor Track and Field, and Tennis.


Women’s competition is offered in the sports of Basketball, Bowling, Cross Country, Golf, Indoor Track and Field, Outdoor Track and Field, Soccer, Softball, Tennis, and Volleyball.

 

Follow the SWAC

For complete coverage of the Southwestern Athletic Conference, please follow the SWAC on social media at @TheSWAC (Twitter), @TheSWAC (Facebook), and @TheSWAC (Instagram) or visit the official home of the Southwestern Athletic Conference at www.swac.org.

South Carolina State: 2021 Celebration Bowl Champions



Coach Buddy Pough's South Carolina State Bulldogs' Celebration Bowl upset ended the magical season of head coach Deion Sanders and the Jackson State Tigers.


Coach Deion Sanders preached to his team before the Celebration Bowl that they should be focused on finishing in Atlanta. It seemed as though the South Carolina State Bulldogs players received his message instead.


The Bulldogs defense dominated and the offensive was opportunistic to end the Tigers' magical run by a final score, 31-10.Jackson State's offense hasn't been sharp since the win over Alcorn. The Tigers' lackadaisical first-half action and poor execution caught up with them in the Celebration Bowl.


Shedeur Sanders marched the Tigers offense in nine plays on its second possession score an early touchdown with 7:24 on the clock in the first quarter.  


Jackson State took an early 7-0 lead in the first quarter and had an opportunity to extend its lead by 10. However, the Bulldogs defense stuffed Sanders and forced JSU to turn over the football on downs.


Bulldogs' quarterback Corey Fields and the offense were inept in the first quarter and relied on Buddy Pough's defense, a problem for Sanders the entire afternoon.


The Bulldogs' offense received instant life when Shedeur Sanders coughed up the football on a strip-sack inside the SCSU ten-yard line. 


Fields connected with Shaquan Davis for a six-yard touchdown pass to tie the Tigers at 7-7 with 2:06 in the second quarter.  


After that series, Corey Fields settled into the game, caught fire, and never looked back in the contest.  The Bulldogs quarterback finished the day completing 12-of-31 passes for four touchdowns, one interception, and a 119.8 QBR.  


Jackson State's defensive backs had no answer for Celebration Bowl MVP wide receiver Shaquan Davis who scored three touchdowns. 


Shedeur Sanders had one of the worst days of his young collegiate career.  


The Jerry Rice Award winner had three turnovers (1 fumble, two interceptions) that aided the South Carolina Bulldogs' upset bid.   


His numbers were pedestrian by going 16-of-26, 175 yards, one touchdown, and two interceptions in the losing effort.


The Bulldogs are owed all of the credit to the outstanding play of their offensive and defensive lines.  They were more physical and over-matched the Tigers' throughout the game.


Jackson State's vaunted defense could only sack and hit Fields twice - Tigers' linebacker James Houston had both sacks. 


The pressure was sent from all directions to harass Shedeur Sanders for three sacks, and eight quarterback hits in the tilt.    


Jackson State lost to a well-coached and more determined team.   The Tigers may be "Kings of the SWAC," but the Bulldogs and MEAC proved once again they are just as talented with another Celebration Bowl victory.


Kudos to Coach Pough and the South Carolina State Bulldogs for playing an outstanding game and hoisting the 2021 Celebration Bowl Trophy.


Key Stats of the Game

Offense: SCS - 268 yds; JSU - 194 yds

Time of Possession: SCS - 31:37; JSU - 28:33

Rushing Plays: SCS - 37; JSU - 31

First Downs: SCS - 15; JSU - 15

3rd Downs: SCS - 3 of 16; JSU - 3 of 15 

4th Downs: SCS - 2 of 2; JSU - 0 of 2

Penalties: SCS - 10 for 117 yds; JSU - 8 for 80 yards

North Carolina A&T: 2019 Black College Football National Champions



The North Carolina A&T Aggies extended their run of postseason success Saturday with a 64-44 victory over the Alcorn State Braves in the 2019 Celebration Bowl at Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta.

N.C. A&T has now won the Celebration Bowl four times in the past five years, including three consecutive triumphs in the game featuring top teams from the FCS' MEAC and SWAC. The Aggies have defeated the Braves to take home the title in 2015, 2018 and now 2019.

Alcorn State overcame a sluggish 1-2 start to the season by winning eight of its next nine games, including a win over the Southern Jaguars in the SWAC Championship Game, to earn a berth in the Celebration Bowl.

           

Notable Game Stats

QB Kylil Carter (A&T): 18-of-30 passing, 364 yards, 6 TD, 0 INT; 96 rushing yards

QB Felix Harper (ASU): 25-of-42 passing, 341 yards, 3 TD, 1 INT; 2 rushing TD

RB Jah-Maine Martin (A&T): 110 rushing yards, 2 TD

RB De'Shawn Waller (ASU): 59 rushing yards, 1 TD

WR Korey Banks (A&T): 122 receiving yards, 2 TD

WR Elijah Bell (A&T): 73 receiving yards, 2 TD

WR Zachary Leslie (A&T): 81 receiving yards, 1 TD

WR Ron Hunt (A&T): 43 receiving yards, 1 TD

WR Chris Blair (ASU): 135 receiving yards, 1 TD

WR Raidarious Anderson (ASU): 85 receiving yards, 1 TD

TE Nigel Wood (ASU): 13 receiving yards, 1 TD

               

Big Plays, Atmosphere Making Celebration Bowl An Annual Must-See Event

Bowl fatigue is real. There are 41 games played in just over three weeks, and it can be difficult for even the most diehard of college football fans to remain engaged all the way from Friday's Bahamas Bowl to the College Football Playoff National Championship Game on Jan. 13.

That's why it's important for each bowl to stand out from the crowd.

The Celebration Bowl has done that since its debut in 2015. Although it doesn't have the history of its counterparts and features FCS schools rather than FBS, the atmosphere created by fans is on par with any game outside of the CFP contests.

A battle of the bands at halftime added to that ambiance Saturday with the N.C. A&T band, which The Undefeated ranked as the No. 1 band from historically black colleges and universities this season, stealing the show with a terrific performance.

Meanwhile, the level of play remains high with top teams from a pair of FCS conferences. It's a better storyline than a couple of middling 6-6 squads from the FBS.

Each of the first four Celebration Bowl games were decided by a single score, and while the Aggies' margin of victory was a little bigger Saturday, there were still plenty of highlights for both sides.

The game featured 1,034 combined yards, 108 points and 45 first downs. There were seven touchdowns of at least 35 yards, including a 75-yard scoring dash by Jah-Maine Martin to open the third quarter for A&T.

Things really popped off in the third quarter, when the first seven drives of the second half went for touchdowns.

Perhaps the Celebration Bowl isn't for those fixated on low-scoring defensive battles, though the Grambling State Tigers did beat the North Carolina Central Eagles 10-9 in the 2016 edition of the game. But everything about the game, both on the field and off, screams fun.

And there's no doubt bowl season needs more of that.

North Carolina A&T: 2017 Celebration Bowl Champions



The 2017 Celebration Bowl must have felt like deja vu all over again for North Carolina A&T quarterback Lamar Raynard and running back Marquell Cartwright. Four years ago, when Cartwright and Raynard were at High Point Andrews, this same situation played out.

Raynard, who threw a 38-yard touchdown pass with 1:02 remaining for his high school’s North Carolina High School Athletic Association 2-AA title game, ran the ball in from 1 yard out to give the Aggies a 21-14 win over Grambling State on Saturday.

While Cartwright, who was awarded MVP honors in that state title game, won the Celebration Bowl’s Offensive Player of the Game award thanks to one rushing touchdown, one passing touchdown and 110 yards on the ground.

“We started together playing together in ninth grade,” Raynard said. “We decided to come to college together because we thought that we could do really great together. I just want to tip my hat to this guy, because they really tried to take the game away from my boy, and he came back and fought even harder. People who doubted him they said after Tariq left, we weren’t going to have a running game. … This guy right here, that’s my brother. We stay right down the street from each other. It’s a lot I could say. I’m going to keep it short, but I love him.”

It’s official. North Carolina A&T is no longer up-and-coming. The Aggies are a certified college football name brand. And they’re not taking a back seat to anybody. Anymore. Ever.

They came into Atlanta’s Mercedes-Benz Stadium looking for respect as they prepared to battle the perennial historically black college football powerhouse Grambling. Now N.C. A&T will be heading back to Greensboro, North Carolina, as the Celebration Bowl champion for the second time in three years.

Raynard, the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference (MEAC) Offensive Player of the Year, was responsible for two more touchdowns in the Celebration Bowl, bringing his season total to 31 with multiple touchdowns in 10 of 12 games this season.

In winning the third annual Celebration Bowl and historically black college and university (HBCU) national championship, the Aggies also became the first MEAC football team to finish its season undefeated at 12-0. N.C. A&T did it twice before, but that was before the creation of the MEAC.

While Raynard scored the points that would ultimately put the team over the hump in a game they led from start to finish, it was Cartwright who carried N.C. A&T for much of the game. His receiving touchdown opened up the scoring and his touchdown on the ground were the only two scores the team had until 38 seconds remained in the game and Raynard found the end zone.

Grambling coach Broderick Fobbs must not have known how wise and insightful his answer was when he explained that the Tigers and N.C. A&T are essentially mirrors of each other’s program.

“I really didn’t [have any doubts.] I didn’t get very nervous today,” N.C. A&T coach Rod Broadway said. “I knew we was playing an outstanding football team, but I also knew we had an outstanding football team. We could’ve separated a little bit, if we had been a little bit better in the kicking game.”

Anything the Aggies did, Grambling State did almost the same thing and vice versa. The Tigers bench erupted when N.C. A&T’s Raynard threw an interception to Grambling’s De’Andre Hogues as the Aggies began to sniff Grambling’s red zone.

That euphoria lasted maybe a minute at most, as Tigers running back Martez Carter coughed up the ball following an eight-yard reception and N.C. A&T went right back into business from the Grambling 25. Five plays later and with 4:58 left in the half, fans at the Mercedes-Benz Stadium finally saw their first score of the game.

Three minutes and 15 seconds later, Fobbs’ team finally got itself on the board thanks to Kincade finding Jordan Jones for a two-yard touchdown pass to tie it up just before the half.

The Aggies worked themselves down the field with 2 seconds to spare for a field goal attempt, but the Grambling front blocked the kick. Similarly, the Tigers made their way into the Aggies red zone on their first drive of the second half, but a poorly placed Kincade pass was intercepted by Franklin McCain III in spectacular, one-hand, one-toe inbounds fashion.

The one thing both teams stressed was that the team who made the fewest mistakes was going to win the game. While Grambling finished with three turnovers, N.C. A&T ended the game with two, and a pair of missed field goals.

What this game truly came down to was who was going to make the most of the opportunities afforded to them, and without question that was the Aggies. One doesn’t have to love the Aggies. They don’t even care if y’all like them.

However, after this Celebration Bowl victory, y’all will respect them.

N.C. A&T had more success running between the tackles Saturday, averaging 2.3 yards before contact per rush. The Aggies’ Cartwright had more yards between the tackles (57) than Grambling had as a team.

Designed rushes inside tackles

GRAMBLING … N.C. A&T

Rushes 13 … 25

Yards 44 … 87

YBC per rush 0.9 … 2.3

Touchdowns 0 … 2

Grambling committed three turnovers Saturday, allowing 14 points off those turnovers. The Tigers entered the game having committed 10 turnovers all season, tied for third-fewest in the FCS.
Turnover comparison

GRAMBLING N.C. A&T

Turnovers 3 … 2

Opp Pts off TOs 14 … 0

N.C. A&T averages 10.6 points a game off turnovers

Grambling State: 2016 Celebration Bowl Champions



ATLANTA -- Grambling State seized the opportunity when North Carolina Central's Quentin Atkinson celebrated too much in the Celebration Bowl.

Grambling State blocked an extra-point kick set back 15 yards by Atkinson's excessive celebration with just over two minutes left, holding off North Carolina Central 10-9 on Saturday in the bowl that decides bragging rights for historically black colleges and universities.

Joseph McWilliams surged in and swatted Brandon McLaren's 35-yard try with 2:14 remaining to preserve the Tigers' edge.

Down 10-3, the Eagles had a chance to pull even after Atkinson shook loose and caught a 39-yard touchdown pass from scrambling Malcolm Bell. But Atkinson took off his helmet while reveling with the crowd, drawing a personal foul penalty.

"I kind of felt fault for that," Atkinson said. "I do want to apologize to my team for that because that was a selfish act. I'm not selfish, but it was the heat of the moment and I was excited to bring the team back with an outstanding play."

Bell called Atkinson's mistake "kind of a bonehead play" but said the team also was hurt by other mistakes in the game.

North Carolina Central coach Jerry Mack said the longer extra point still should have been made if not for a missed block on McWilliams.

Martez Carter's 32-yard touchdown run to open the second half gave Grambling State (11-1) its first lead. The Tigers earned the bowl bid by winning the Southwestern Athletic Conference championship.

The Eagles (9-3) won the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference in Mack's third year.

Trailing 3-0 at halftime, Grambling State opened the third quarter with a run-first plan. Following five power runs by 240-pound running back Jestin Kelly, the 175-pound Carter looked extra-quick on his sharp cuts through the line on his touchdown run.

"Jestin Kelly, he's a ground-and-pound type guy," Carter said. "He wore those guys down. I'm just a home-run hitter, man. He wore them down and then they put me in. What else are you going to do? You take those blows from him and then try to take me."

Carter had 109 yards rushing, two catches for 23 yards and a combined 71 yards on four punt and kickoff returns. He was named offensive MVP. Kelly added 65 yards rushing.

The Tigers threw only one play-action pass for a short gain on the touchdown drive.

Grambling State's defense later set up more points. Arkez Cooper sacked Bell, forcing a fumble recovered by Malcolm Williams at the Eagles 25. The turnover set up a 26-yard field goal by Jonathan Wallace.

McLaren's 23-yard field goal provided the only points of the first half.

THE TAKEAWAY

Grambling State: The Tigers placed a cap on their continued strong progress made in three years under coach Broderick Fobbs, who won seven and nine games, respectively, in his first two years. Fobbs, who played for former coach Eddie Robinson, showed on the national stage the program has returned to prominence as a force among historically black colleges.

North Carolina Central: Despite being a two-touchdown underdog, the Eagles played even with Grambling State, posting a shutout in the first half.

QB NUMBERS

Bell completed 18 of 32 passes for 240 yards with one touchdown and two interceptions. He had several passes dropped, including a would-be touchdown catch by Atkinson in the first half. Devante Kincade completed 15 of 31 passes for 149 yards with an interception for Grambling State.

HERE TO STAY


Both coaches praised the second-year Celebration Bowl as the more attractive alternative to a possible spot in the FCS playoffs.

"It exceeded all expectations," Fobbs said. "This deal is here to stay."

Added Mack: "The way we've been treated ... I would rather come back to this game next year."

UP NEXT

Grambling State: The Tigers will return a good talent base, including Kincade, as they try to defend their SWAC championship. They'll need to replace six starters on offense and 10 overall. Key losses from the defense include noseguard Blain Winston and leading tacklers Guy Stallworth and Cooper.

North Carolina Central: The Eagles must replace nine senior starters, including six on offense, as they look to defend their MEAC championship. Freshman Naiil Ramadan was listed as the top backup to Bell at quarterback. The Eagles also lose four of their five starting offensive linemen, with only left tackle Nick Leverett returning. The Eagles have not released their 2017 schedule.

North Carolina A&T: 2015 Celebration Bowl/HBCU National Champions



North Carolina A&T defeated Alcorn State 41-34 in a wild debut for the Celebration Bowl.
Wait.
If you're wondering what exactly the Celebration Bowl is, you're not alone. Rather than participate in the FCS Playoffs, the SWAC and MEAC champions are meeting in the Celebration Bowl, with the winner claiming the crown of historically black college and university (HBCU) national champion. It's the first matchup of this type for HBCUs since 1999, which the Heritage Bowl ceased operations. The Heritage Bowl ran from 1991-1999, and previously, the Pelican Bowl was held in 1972, 1974, and 1975.
Aside from the fun plays on the field, there's lots of reasons this game is a good thing.

It's great exposure.

And with the national TV coverage and early time slot, it's great exposure for schools and conferences that don't normally get much. The FCS Playoffs have gotten more coverage in recent years, but those games don't start appearing on cable until fairly late in the tournament. The Celebration Bowl kicks off on the first Saturday of bowl season on a major network, before any other bowls are there to soak up the attention.

The schools make more money.

Each conference will bank a $1 million payout, which means this game is much more lucrative than a Playoff appearance. That's $100,000 for each SWAC team, and nearly $91,000 for each MEAC team. If a team wants to host a first round FCS Playoff game, they need to submit a minimum bid to the NCAA of at least $30,000.

It's a competitive matchup.

Unlike most HBCU's past forays into the FCS Playoffs, this game should actually be pretty close. The last HBCU team to win the FCS title was in 1978, and they haven't gotten particularly close since. To play in this game, the MEAC gave up its automatic bid just to play in this game, and the SWAC didn't have an automatic bid into the Playoffs anyway.
And this year's game was great from the first whistle. There were four touchdowns in the first eight minutes of the game, and the shortest of them was 74 yards. Each team had a long punt return for a touchdown in the first half. North Carolina A&T running back Tarik Cohen ran for 171 yards and two touchdowns in the first half alone. And then there was the case of Alcorn State's Marquis Watford, who took out some frustrations by punching clean through a dang whiteboard.
The second half wasn't quite so explosive, but Alcorn State made up a two touchdown deficit to tie the game in the fourth quarter, with the game-tying touchdown pass coming from wide receiver Tollette George to quarterback Lenorris Footman. They would tie the game again later in the quarter on a fake field goal that went for a touchdown.

But despite all that craziness, it wasn't enough. Tarik Cohen scored the game-clinching touchdown on a 73-yard run right up the gut that was only his third-longest run of the game. Alcorn State drove all the way to the A&T nine yard line with 13 seconds left, but their final chance to tie the game fell incomplete in the end zone.
Cohen was absolutely sensational for the Aggies, and finished with 295 yards and three touchdowns on only 22 carries. Before this game, Cohen was probably best known for catching footballs while doing backflips. He was also their leading receiver in the game with 53 yards. A&T more than doubled Alcorn State's total yardage figure, 544 to 260, and it was the repeated big plays that made the difference for the Aggies.

2011 Rose Bowl: Texas Christian 21, Wisconsin 19

January 1, 2011

Unbeaten and Unable to Do Anything More

PASADENA, Calif. — In the shadows of the San Gabriel Mountains, change can come slowly. At the Rose Bowl, where college football clings to tradition with white-knuckle fervor, fullbacks can still be in vogue, tight ends act as primary pass catchers and the punter can be valued as a skill position player.
With Texas Christian facing Wisconsin in this year’s game, college football’s most historic backdrop also proved a fitting one. The Horned Frogs of the Mountain West Conference are considered interlopers; the traditionalists, commissioners and bowl executives certainly would have preferred Stanford of the Pacific-10 playing in the Rose Bowl.
But with a 21-19 victory over No. 4 Wisconsin of the Big Ten, No. 3 T.C.U. solidified its standing as one of college football’s elite programs and made observers wonder how it would have stacked up against No. 1 Auburn or No. 2 Oregon. The victory capped a 13-0 season for the Horned Frogs and a train wreck of a day for the Big Ten. The league lost its five bowl games on Saturday by a combined score of 204-102 and left the Ohio State president E. Gordon Gee open for mockery.
Gee chided T.C.U. and Boise State, who play outside college football’s six power conferences, for competing against teams like the “Little Sisters of the Poor.”
“I’m going to New Orleans tomorrow, and Antoine’s is a great restaurant,” Gee said when reached on his cellphone Saturday night. “I think they serve crow, and I’ll be eating my portion of that. T.C.U. played a great game and they deserved to be recognized for that. Obviously T.C.U. is a great ball team.”
T.C.U. Coach Gary Patterson resisted the opportunity to retaliate against Gee, saying: “I don’t have any messages for him. I make mistakes every day.”
His Horned Frogs did not make many Saturday, as the team with the country’s top-ranked defense showed it could equalize Wisconsin’s size with speed and versatility. T.C.U. became the third program from outside the six power conferences to win a B.C.S. game, joining Utah and Boise State. It is also the first team from outside the power leagues to win the Rose Bowl since Columbia beat Stanford, 7-0, in 1934.
“Today we played for us and everyone else out there who wanted a chance,” Patterson said.
And the Horned Frogs sealed the victory, fittingly, with one last defensive stand by a player who epitomizes their program. After Wisconsin pulled within 2 points with two minutes remaining on a 4-yard touchdown run by Montee Ball, T.C.U.’s Tank Carder made the game’s defining play.
The Badgers inexplicably went to a shotgun formation for the 2-point conversion, and quarterback Scott Tolzien had tight end Jacob Pedersen wide open one step over the goal line. But Carder, who was stymied on his blitz attempt, leapt up and knocked down the ball to seal the victory for T.C.U.
“I just jumped up and swatted it away,” he said. “I can’t even explain it. It feels so good.”
The play left the Wisconsin coaching staff open to second guessing. After a dominating drive in which the Badgers used their superior size to run the ball on 9 of 10 plays, Wisconsin went away from its strength, and its roots, by lining up in the shotgun and passing the ball.
“That was something we saw on film,” Bielema said, defending the call. “And obviously the guy was open, but you’ve got to get the defender’s hands down in that situation. Hindsight is 20/20.”
It was easy to see that T.C.U. belonged on this stage, with no player showing that more than the senior quarterback Andy Dalton, who played almost flawlessly as he ran for a touchdown and threw for another. The Horned Frogs will join the Big East in 2012, and they may have planted seeds for future B.C.S. bowl wins on the Rose Bowl’s hallowed turf. Their recruiting profile will only increase, as will their access to B.C.S. bowl games.
“The truth will come out when they enter into a B.C.S. conference and play someone of those caliber of those conferences week in and week out,” Wisconsin Coach Bret Bielema said. “I don’t think they’re a Cinderella story.”
Before college football had a national title game, there would have been heavy lobbying for first-place votes in the aftermath of a marquee bowl victory. While Patterson complimented his team, he resisted the urge to make any grandiose statements.
Patterson said he looked forward to watching the national title game on his couch without worrying about what blitz to dial up. He appeared more appreciative of the opportunity to play in the Rose Bowl than concerned with college football’s method of determining a national champion.
“It’s like anything else in college football or anything else you have in life,” he said. “There is a set of rules of how it is, and right now this is the way that it is. I’ve never been a whiner, I’ve never been somebody that’s been out there griping about how it is, and I’m not going to start now.”
Instead, by the time the sun set on college football’s most historic backdrop, the Rose Bowl had played host to something very untraditional — a showcase of just how parity-laden college football has become.
For all of the Big 10’s history, cable money and pride, the interlopers from the Mountain West stole the show beneath the Hollywood sign. An in this modern era of college football, few could really be surprised that T.C.U., which entered the game as a favorite, thumbed their nose at tradition.

2010 Kanto League

Kantō League Division I 2010
The Kantō League is the major college football league in East-Japan. The two conference champions advance to the semifinals of the East-Japan championship. The winner of the East-Japan championship plays against the winner of the West-Japan championship in the Koshien Bowl in December.
The college champion then plays against the champion of the X League for the national championship in the Rice Bowl on January 3.

Conference A

Week 1
9/4Keiō University UnicornsTōkai University Tritons30-13
9/4Nihon University PhoenixSenshū University Green Machine49-14
9/4Hōsei University TomahawksKanagawa University Atoms46-14
9/5Kokushikan University RhinocerosNippon University Triumphant Lion24-21
Week 2
9/11Nihon University PhoenixKanagawa University Atoms62-28
9/12Kokushikan University RhinocerosTōkai University Tritons41-16
9/12Keiō University UnicornsNippon University Triumphant Lion49-7
9/12Hōsei University TomahawksSenshū University Green Machine67-13
Week 3
9/25Keiō University UnicornsKanagawa University Atoms27-7
9/25Nihon University PhoenixNippon University Triumphant Lion67-0
9/25Hōsei University TomahawksTōkai University Tritons52-0
9/26Kokushikan University RhinocerosSenshū University Green Machine21-28
Week 4
10/2Nihon University PhoenixTōkai University Tritons75-7
10/3Kokushikan University RhinocerosKanagawa University Atoms23-21
10/3Hōsei University TomahawksNippon University Triumphant Lion52-14
10/3Keiō University UnicornsSenshū University Green Machine42-14
Week 5
10/16Tōkai University TritonsSenshū University Green Machine17-14
10/16Nippon University Triumphant LionKanagawa University Atoms7-31
10/17Hōsei University TomahawksKokushikan University Rhinoceros46-0
10/17Nihon University PhoenixKeiō University Unicorns20-0
Week 6
10/23Nippon University Triumphant LionSenshū University Green Machine6-13
10/23Tōkai University TritonsKanagawa University Atoms14-22
10/24Hōsei University TomahawksKeiō University Unicorns27-10
10/24Nihon University PhoenixKokushikan University Rhinoceros41-7
Week 7
11/6Senshū University Green MachineKanagawa University Atoms12-17
11/7Nippon University Triumphant LionTōkai University Tritons10-7
11/7Keiō University UnicornsKokushikan University Rhinoceros35-10
11/7Hōsei University TomahawksNihon University Phoenix19-13
TeamWLTPFPAPts
Hōsei University Tomahawks7003096421
Nihon University Phoenix6103277518
Keiō University Unicorns5201939815
Kokushikan University Rhinoceros3401262089
Kanagawa University Atoms3401401919
Senshū University Green Machine2501082196
Nippon Sports Science Uni. Triumphant Lion160652333
Tōkai University Tritons160742443

Conference B

Week 1
9/5Tōkyō University WarriorsRikkyō University Rushers10-30
9/5Chūō University RacoonsKantō Gakuin University Hurricanes41-22
9/5Meiji University GriffinsHitotsubashi University Crimson49-20
9/5Waseda University Big BearsKomazawa University Blue Tide52-14
Week 2
9/18Tōkyō University WarriorsKantō Gakuin University Hurricanes42-32
9/18Chūō University RacoonsRikkyō University Rushers41-21
9/19Meiji University GriffinsKomazawa University Blue Tide49-0
9/19Waseda University Big BearsHitotsubashi University Crimson50-3
Week 3
9/26Chūō University RacoonsKomazawa University Blue Tide80-10
9/26Meiji University GriffinsRikkyō University Rushers28-14
9/26Waseda University Big BearsKantō Gakuin University Hurricanes42-14
9/26Tōkyō University WarriorsHitotsubashi University Crimson35-21
Week 4
10/9Tōkyō University WarriorsKomazawa University Blue Tide44-3
10/9Meiji University GriffinsKantō Gakuin University Hurricanes50-13
10/9Chūō University RacoonsHitotsubashi University Crimson6-0
10/10Waseda University Big BearsRikkyō University Rushers31-0
Week 5
10/16Kantō Gakuin University HurricanesHitotsubashi University Crimsonot 24-21
10/17Rikkyō University RushersKomazawa University Blue Tide35-12
10/17Waseda University Big BearsTōkyō University Warriors45-7
10/17Meiji University GriffinsChūō University Racoons28-32
Week 6
10/30Kantō Gakuin University HurricanesKomazawa University Blue Tide31-6
10/30Rikkyō University RushersHitotsubashi University Crimson7-10
10/31Waseda University Big BearsChūō University Racoons41-13
10/31Meiji University GriffinsTōkyō University Warriors28-17
Week 7
11/13Hitotsubashi University CrimsonKomazawa University Blue Tide52-3
11/13Rikkyō University RushersKantō Gakuin University Hurricanes14-17
11/14Chūō University RacoonsTōkyō University Warriors24-27
11/14Waseda University Big BearsMeiji University Griffins38-22
TeamWLTPFPAPts
Waseda University Big Bears7002997321
Chūō University Racoons52023714915
Meiji University Griffins52025413415
Tōkyō University Warriors43018217312
Kantō Gakuin University Hurricanes3401532169
Hitotsubashi University Crimson2501271746
Rikkyō University Rushers2501211496
Komazawa University Blue Tide070483430

Clash Bowl Series Semifinals

11/21Hōsei University TomahawksTōhoku University Hornets51-16
11/21Waseda University Big BearsOtaru Uni. of Commerce Tomahawks56-13

Clash Bowl

12/5Hōsei University TomahawksWaseda University Big Bears28-38

Koshien Bowl

12/19Waseda University Big BearsRitsumeikan University Panthers21-48

Relegation

12/11Nippon University Triumphant LionTōkyō University of Agriculture Aggies31-6
12/11Tōkai University TritonsTeikyō University Assassins17-13
12/12Rikkyō University RushersGakushūin University Generals35-10
12/12Komazawa University Blue TideTakushoku University Rattlesnakes8-38
Hometowns:
Chūō, Hitotsubashi, Hōsei, Kokushikan, Komazawa, Meiji, Nihon, Nippon Sports Science, Rikkyō, Senshū, Tōkai, Tōkyō, Waseda (all Tōkyō), Kanagawa, Kantō Gakuin, Keiō (all Yokohama)
Standings:
In the Kantō League the winner gets three points.

150th post...a moment of silence


As I create this 150th post on BoBA, I would like to ask that you hold a moment of silence for someone special. Weeks after lead singer for Boston Brad Delp passed away, and a few days after the Virginia Beach Mariners folded, the winningest coach in NCAA Division I FCS football history, Eddie Robinson, died at the age of 88 due to Alzheimer's Disease.

He was perhaps one of the greatest coaches, if not the best ever, in Black College Football. Grambling State University won many National Championships under Coach Robinson, and he was a proud supporter of the game after he finished his coaching days with 408 wins to his credit, a record that stoood until Coach John Gagliardi eclipsed it years later with the Johnnies of St. John's in Division III.

He lived a long, proud, rich, accomplished life, and BoBA, along with its sister blogs Love and Liberty II on SeiyaUsagi.net, Love and Liberty Lite on TagWorld, and Bedlam on MySpace Boulevard on MySpace, saluted Coach Robinson for his contributions to the game of American Football...and to life.

Rest in peace.