2011 NSU Football Media Guide

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2011 NORFOLK

Sept. 10

at West Virginia

Morgantown, W.Va.

TBA

Sept. 17

at Howard *

Washington, D.C.

1 p.m.

Sept. 24

at Charleston Southern

Charleston, S.C.

1:30 p.m.

Oct. 1

South Carolina State* (Fish Bowl Classic)

Norfolk, Va.

4 p.m.

Oct. 8

at Delaware State*

Dover, Del.

1 p.m.

Oct. 15

Hampton* (State Farm Battle of the Bay)

Norfolk, Va.

4 p.m.

Oct. 20

Bethune-Cookman* @

Norfolk, Va.

7:30 p.m.

Oct. 29

North Carolina A&T* (Homecoming presented by Smithfield)

Norfolk, Va.

2 p.m.

Nov. 5

at Savannah State*

Savannah, Ga.

5 p.m.

Nov. 12

at Morgan State*

Baltimore, Md.

1 p.m.

Home games in BOLD Subject to change

@ ESPNU televised game

* MEAC game

MEDIA GUIDE

Time 6 p.m.

FOOTB AL L

Site Norfolk, Va.

UNIVERSITY

Opponent Virginia State (Virginia Lottery Labor Day Classic)

STATE

Date Sept. 3



TABLE OF CONTENTS 2011 Norfolk State University Football Quick Facts University Information Location.................................................................................................Norfolk, Va. Founded..............................................................................................................1935 Enrollment............................................................................................Nearly 7,000 Mascot....................................................................................................... Spartans School Colors................................................................................... Green & Gold Affiliation............................................................................... NCAA Division I FCS Conference......................................Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference (MEAC) Stadium..................................................................William “Dick” Price Stadium Capacity...........................................................................................................30,000 Surface..............................................................................................Natural Grass President .....................................................................................Dr. Tony Atwater Athletics Director........................................................................... Marty L. Miller Athletics Phone................................................................................(757) 823-8152 Athletics Fax.................................................................................... (757) 823-2566 Ticket Office......................................................................................(757) 823-9009 Sports Information Asst. AD/Communications . ......................................................... Matt Michalec Office Phone ....................................................................................(757) 823-2628 Fax .....................................................................................................(757) 823-8218 Email . ................................................................................... mmichalec@nsu.edu Cell Phone ........................................................................................(757) 592-1245 Press Box Phone . ...........................................................................(757) 823-2628 Mailing Address ............................................NSU Office of Sports Information 700 Park Ave., Norfolk, VA 23504 Web site .......................................................................... www.nsuspartans.com Coaching Staff Head Coach ........................................................................................ Pete Adrian Alma Mater .................................................................................West Virginia ‘70 Record at NSU (Years) ..................................................................34-33 (6 years) Overall Record (Years) ............................................................ 70-70-1 (13 years) Administrative Assistant . ............................................................ Shirley Brooks Office Phone ....................................................................................(757) 823-8824 Office Fax .........................................................................................(757) 823-2503 Best Time/Day To Reach Coach ...................................................... Contact SID Assistant Coaches Rod Holder (7th year/Miami, Fla. ’90) . .......Asst. Head Coach/Offensive Line Mark DeBastiani (7th year/Shepherd ‘93) ................. Defensive Coordinator/ Outside Linebackers Joe Blackwell (2nd year/North Greenville)... Interim Offensive Coordinator/ Tight Ends Marco Butler (7th year/Western Carolina ‘00) . .................. Defensive Backs/ Special Teams Mark Thurston (7th year/West Virginia ‘03) ............................. Defensive Line Steve Canter (3rd year/Virginia Tech ’03) ................................... Quarterbacks Paul Macklin (2nd year/Virginia Union ’96) ..............................Running Backs Howard Feggins (1st year/North Carolina ’87)........................ Wide Receivers Team Information 2010 Overall Record . ......................................................................................... 6-5 2010 MEAC Record/Finish ......................................................................... 4-4/5th Starters Returning/Lost: . ................................................................................ 15/9 (Offense: 5/6; Defense: 8/3; Special Teams: 2/0) Letterwinners Returning/Lost: ..................................................................... 42/24 (Offense: 21/11; Defense: 19/11; Special Teams: 2/2) Basic Offense ..............................................................................................Spread Basic Defense .................................................................................................... 3-4

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE

Media Information................................................................................ 2 Media Outlets........................................................................................ 3 President................................................................................................ 4 Director of Athletics............................................................................. 5 Athletics Highlights............................................................................... 6 About Norfolk State University........................................................... 8 About Hampton Roads......................................................................... 9 Athletics Administration.................................................................... 10 NSU Athletics Foundation................................................................. 13 Athletics Directory.............................................................................. 14 Coaching Staff..................................................................................... 15 Head Coach Pete Adrian................................................................... 16 Assistant Coaches.............................................................................. 18 William “Dick” Price Stadium........................................................... 22 2011 Spartans...................................................................................... 23 Rosters.................................................................................................. 24 Geographic Distribution..................................................................... 27 Season Outlook................................................................................... 28 Two-Deep Chart.................................................................................. 31 Returning Player Profiles................................................................... 32 Newcomer Profiles............................................................................. 52 NSU 2010 In Review........................................................................... 55 2010 Results/Statistics....................................................................... 56 2010 Superlatives................................................................................ 58 2010 Season Notebook...................................................................... 59 2010 Starting Lineups......................................................................... 60 2010 Game Recaps............................................................................. 61 The Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference............................................ 73 History of the MEAC........................................................................... 74 2011 Preseason Predictions.............................................................. 75 2011 Composite Schedule................................................................. 76 2010 MEAC in Review/Statistics....................................................... 77 2010 MEAC Statistics......................................................................... 78 2011 Opponents................................................................................... 81 NSU Football Records....................................................................... 93 Team/Individual Records................................................................... 94 Career/Single-Season Leaders........................................................ 96 Season-By-Season Leaders............................................................. 97 Spartans in the Pros......................................................................... 100 NSU in the NFL Draft........................................................................ 101 All-Americans.................................................................................... 102 All Conference................................................................................... 103 Season-by-Season Results............................................................. 104 All-Time Records by Coaches......................................................... 110 NSU vs. Opponents........................................................................... 112 The 2011 NSU Football Media Guide was written, edited and produced by the NSU Sports Information Office, director Matt Michalec and assistant Mike Bello. Editorial assistance was provided by Craig Cotton, Jarell Crenshaw, Marty Miller and Omarr Wells. Photography was provided by Jerry Altares, Mark’s Digital Photography, the Jacksonville Jaguars, and the NSU Office of Communications and Marketing. Design and layout assistance were provided by S_Gray Design.

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MEDIA INFORMATION The following guidelines have been established to aid in the media’s coverage of Norfolk State University football. For further information, contact the NSU Sports Information Office. Thanks for your interest in Spartan athletics!

Credentials

Credentials are issued to working members of the media only. Because of limited space in the press box, requests by press members on assignment will be honored on a space-available basis. All requests should be made to the sports information director on or before the Wednesday prior to each home game. Requests will be screened to ensure good working conditions along press row. Present a valid I.D. at Will Call and admission will be granted upon acceptance the day of the game. Photographers and videographers should follow the same guidelines.

Post-Game Interviews

Sports information staff will ask media representatives for player and coach interview requests with approximately five minutes remaining in the game. After coach Adrian addresses the team following a cooling-off period at the conclusion of the game, players and coaches will be made available to the media at a location to be determined by the sports information staff.

Other Interviews

Parking is available upon request on a first-come, first-served basis. Lots 11, 12 and 13 adjacent to Joseph G. Echols Memorial Hall are the standard media parking lots for Dick Price Stadium, but that is subject to change due to space concerns. Contact the sports information office for more details.

Coach Adrian and other MEAC football coaches are. available on Tuesday mornings during the conference’s weekly teleconference. Contact the MEAC media. relations office for more details. Additional interviews with coach Adrian, assistant coaches and players can be scheduled during the week by contacting the sports information office. Media wishing to schedule interviews with players are asked to contact the sports information office at least 24 hours prior to the. preferred interview time. Media members are generally permitted to attend. practice, but any interview arrangement surrounding practice time should be arranged through the sports information office. Once practice begins, coaches and players are not available until the completion of practice.

The Press Box

Web Site

Media Parking

The Dick Price Stadium press box is located on the third floor of the south side of the stadium on the home side of the field. Gate 8 affords the most convenient access to the press box. Proper credentials must be presented in order to gain entry to the press box. The press box is for media on assignment, statistical crews, the public address announcers, and television and radio broadcast crews. Food and beverages will be provided. Please remember that the press box is a working press room, and our guidelines are set in accordance with the working press code of the Football Writers Association of America.

Media Services

Working members of the press will be provided with media guides, game programs, rosters and notes. Statistics will be available at the end of each quarter and following the game. Internal public address will be provided to update information, notes and elements of the play-by-play action throughout the game. Press box telephone lines, Ethernet internet cables, and electrical outlets are available when not in use. Facsimile and copying services are available on a first-come, first-served basis.

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Visit Norfolk State’s official athletics web site, . www.nsuspartans.com, for rosters, schedules, statistics, game previews and game recaps for Spartan football. The web site also contains the NSU football media guide in electronic format, links to audio and video coverage of NSU athletics, and archived information from past seasons.

Inside Spartan Sports

“Inside Spartan Sports,” a weekly one-hour radio show covering NSU athletics, airs weekly during the athletics season on WXTG 102.1 FM and 1490 AM in the Hampton Roads area. NSU athletes, coaches and administrators will be interviewed to discuss the latest happenings in Spartan athletics. Archives of the show will be made available through the podcasting link at www.nsuspartans.com. Matt Michalec Assistant AD for Communications (Primary Football Contact) Email: mmichalec@nsu.edu Office Phone: (757) 823-2628 Office Fax: (757) 823-8218 Cell Phone: (757) 592-1245

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE


MEDIA OUTLETS NEWSPAPERS The Virginian-Pilot 150 W. Brambleton Ave. Norfolk, VA 23510 Contact: Chris Carlson Email: chris.carlson@pilotonline.com Phone: (757) 446-2366 Fax: (757) 533-9004 The Daily Press 7505 Warwick Blvd. Newport News, VA 23607 Contact: Melinda Waldrop Email: mwaldrop@dailypress.com Phone: (757) 247-4630 Fax: (757) 247-9420 The New Journal & Guide P.O. Box 209 Norfolk, VA 23509 Contact: Leonard Colvin Email:njournalg@earthlink.net Phone: (757) 543-6531 Fax: (757) 543-7620

WIRE SERVICES

AREA RADIO

MEAC OFFICE

WXTG 102.1 FM The Game 232 Business Park Dr., Suite 120 Virginia Beach, VA 23462 Contact: Keith Bennett Email: bennettk@redskins.com Phone: (757) 490-2750 Fax: (757) 490-2755

. Associated Press (AP) 600 E. Main St., Suite 1250 Richmond VA 23219-2440 Phone: (804) 643-6646 Fax: (804) 643-6223 . 222 Central Park Avenue, Suite 1150 Virginia Beach, VA 23462 Contact: Patricia Porter Email: porterp@themeac.com Phone: (757) 416-7100 Fax: (757) 416-7109

CAMPUS MEDIA The Spartan Echo 700 Park Avenue Norfolk, VA 23504 Contact: Editor Email: TBD Phone: (757) 823-8562

Richmond Times-Dispatch 333 East Grace Street Richmond, VA 23293 Contact: John O’Connor Email: tdsports@timesdispatch.com Phone: (804) 649-6554 Fax: (804) 775-8085

WNSB Hot 91.1 FM 700 Park Avenue Norfolk, VA 23504 Contact: Edward Turner Email: edturner@nsu.edu Phone: (757) 823-9672 Fax: (757) 823-2385

Petersburg Progress Index 15 Franklin Street Petersburg, VA 23803 Contact: Tom Dozier Email: tdozier@progress-index.com Phone: (804) 732-3456 ext. 3251 Fax: (804) 732-8417

AREA TELEVISION

Richmond Free Press 422 East Franklin Street Richmond, VA 23219 Contact: Raymond Boone Phone: (804) 644-0496 Fax: (804) 643-7519 Suffolk News Herald P.O. Box 1220 Suffolk, VA 23439 Contact: Andrew Giermak Phone: (757) 943-9614 Fax: (757) 539-8804

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE

WAVY-TV (NBC) 300 Wavy Street Portsmouth, VA 23704 Contact: Bruce Rader Email: bruce.rader@wavy.com Phone: (757) 673-5440 Fax: (757) 397-8279 WVEC-TV (ABC) 613 Woodis Ave. Norfolk, VA 23510 Contact: Scott Cash Email: scash@wvec.com Phone: (757) 628-6215 Fax: (757) 628-5855

WVSP-ESPN Radio 94.1 FM 5589 Greenwich Road, Suite 200 Virginia Beach, VA 23462 Contact: Tony Mercurio Email: richies@maxmediava.com Phone: (757) 671-1000 ext. 252 Fax: (757) 671-1313

ELECTRONIC MEDIA Black College Sports Page 7 Belles Court Greensboro, NC 27401 Contact: Lut Williams Email: bcsp@triad.rr.com Phone: (336) 370-9752 Fax: (336) 691-0990 College Sporting News, Inc. P. O. Box 5101 Skokie, IL 60076 Contact: Ralph Wallace Email: csnweb@yahoo.com Phone: (847) 213-0999 Onnidan Group P.O. Box 19963 Raleigh, NC 27619 Contact: Eric Moore Email: staff@onnidan.com Phone: (919) 329-7036 Fax: (775) 249-6545 The Sports Network 2200 Byberry Road, Suite 200 Hatboro, PA 19040 Contact: Craig Haley Email: chaley@sportsnetwork.com Phone: (215) 441-8444 Fax: (800) 227-0803

WTKR-TV (CBS) 720 Boush Street Norfolk, VA 23510 Contact: TBD Email: TBD Phone: (757) 446-1361 Fax: (757) 446-1376

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NSU PRESIDENT largest university in Pennsylvania and the largest within the Pennsylvania State System of Higher Education. As president, he led a population of more than 14,600 students and nearly 1,700 employees; oversaw an annual university budget of $220 million; and supported six academic colleges and the School of Graduate Studies and Research. He also directed operations at three regional campuses.

Dr. Tony Atwater President Tony Atwater was appointed the fifth president of Norfolk State University on April 22, 2011. He previously served as a Senior Fellow of the American Association of State Colleges and Universities, a leadership association serving more than 400 public colleges and universities nationwide. Atwater served as president and chief executive officer at Indiana University of Pennsylvania (IUP), a comprehensive, doctoral/research university. It is the fifth

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Prior to serving as IUP president, he served as provost and vice president for academic affairs at Youngstown State University in Ohio. In this capacity, he oversaw academic programs, academic policy and academic assessment. He also provided leadership and strategic direction to approximately 750 faculty members, serving six academic colleges, the School of Graduate Studies and Research, and the library. Other administrative assignments have included serving as dean of the College of Professional Studies and Education at Northern Kentucky University; chairperson of the Rutgers University Department of Journalism and Mass Media; and special assistant to the provost at the University of Connecticut. He also served as associate vice president for academic affairs at the University of Toledo.

Throughout his career, Atwater has assumed significant community leadership roles. These efforts include serving on the Governor’s Task Force on Youth and Substance Abuse Prevention in Kentucky; the Board of Trustees of the Northwest Ohio Public Television Foundation; and the Indiana County Chamber of Commerce. He was also a member of the 2000-01 delegation of Leadership Cincinnati and the Advisory Board of KeyBank in the Northeast Ohio Region. Additionally, he was past president of the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication. A native of Nashville, Tenn., Atwater earned a Ph.D. in communication research from Michigan State University in 1983, where he was the recipient of a competitive doctoral fellowship. He completed post-doctoral studies in the Department of Communication at the University of Michigan in 1989. He also earned a bachelor’s degree in mass media arts from Hampton University in 1973. Additionally, he holds three graduate certificates in higher education administration from the Harvard Graduate School of Education. Atwater is a Ford Foundation Postdoctoral Fellow and is the author of approximately 30 refereed journal articles on news selection behavior in the mass media – the subject of his research interests.

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE


NSU ATHLETICS DIRECTOR

Marty Miller. Director of Athletics Marty Miller has been called many things during his tenure at Norfolk State University. Some have called him a rock. Others have referred to him as one of Norfolk State’s greatest ambassadors. Regardless of the label, what’s clear is that Miller has served his alma mater in various capacities for nearly 40 years, providing NSU with stability in times of need. His professional career at Norfolk State has included stints in the areas of financial aid, career services, student affairs and athletics. After winning more than 700 games as the school’s baseball coach, Miller was named NSU’s acting athletics director on December 16, 2004. He was appointed to the permanent athletics director post on March 18, 2005. Early in Miller’s tenure, he was confronted with many challenges, the biggest one being the hiring of a football coach. Miller and his search committee worked during the Christmas and New Year’s holidays to find a football coach. The hard work paid off when the decision was made to hire Pete Adrian from Bethune-Cookman. With approval of then-President Dr. Marie V. McDemmond, Adrian became the first white head coach in any major sport at NSU and the second in MEAC football history.

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE

Shortly thereafter, with help from alumni, fans, friends and the Department of Facilities Management, the athletics department was able to raise funds to renovate and purchase new equipment for the weight room. In 2007, the school completed a major renovation of the NSU Softball Field, which included the installation of new team dugouts and a press box. Bleacher renovations to Joseph Echols Hall were completed for the 2008-09 basketball season. A new track surface is scheduled to be completed in the summer of 2010. Another highlight of his tenure as athletics director includes NSU capturing the last seven Talmadge Layman Hill awards, given annually to the top men’s sports program in the conference. NSU has received a total of $165,000 for winning the awards. Miller was also presented in March 2006 with the Tom Fergusson Memorial Award, given annually to the area’s top sportsman by the Norfolk Sports Club. Miller is no stranger to winning. His career record as baseball coach was 718543-3. Miller first started making a name for himself as a player at NSU from 196568. He hit .380 as a sophomore; .438 with eight doubles, two triples, three homers and 27 RBI as a junior; and .406 as a senior, when he became the first Spartan player to be named an NCAA College Division AllAmerican. Miller was an All-CIAA baseball selection in 1967 and 1968, and led the nation in doubles in 1968. Miller graduated with a bachelor’s degree in mathematics in 1969. An ROTC member in college, Miller was commissioned a second lieutenant in the U.S. Army after he graduated. While on active duty, Miller was signed by the Minnesota Twins. Miller returned to his alma mater in 1972 as an assistant to baseball coach Bob Andrews. The next season, Miller inherited the head-coaching job, which he held until early in 2005.

Miller is the winningest baseball coach in CIAA history, having led the Spartans to a 584-374-3 record in their years in the league. Miller’s ledger in the CIAA includes 17 conference championships, including seven in a row from 1987-93; 12 post-season appearances; 15 CIAA Coach of the Year awards; six All-Americans and 22 players signed to pro contracts. He also won the 1980 NAIA District 19 Coach of the Year award after his team won the District 19 title. Between 1993-97, Miller won five consecutive Louisville Slugger Awards, given to championship coaches. He was one of a select few baseball coaches to receive the award for five consecutive years. In 1997, NSU honored Miller by building the Marty L. Miller Baseball Field. One year later, Miller led NSU to the MEAC Tournament championship round in the Spartans’ first year in the league. He was named the MEAC Coach of the Year in 2000, and NSU reached the championship round again in 2001. The year 2003 was also a special one for Miller. In February, Miller was inducted into the CIAA’s John B. McLendon Hall of Fame. In May, Miller earned his 700th career win with the Spartans when sixthseeded NSU upset No. 2 Delaware State in the MEAC tournament. In August, Miller the player was honored as one of eight inductees into the Norfolk State University Athletics Foundation Sports Hall of Fame. Miller was inducted into the Hampton Roads African American Sports Hall of Fame in 2010. He was also chosen to serve in March 2011 to serve on the Hampton Roads Sports Hall of Fame Committee and is also a member of the Virginia Sports Hall of Fame Honors Court. Miller, a native of Danville, Va., also serves as president of the Norfolk Sports Club. He and his wife Liz have one son, Marty Eric, a former NSU outfielder.

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ATHLETICS HIGHLIGHTS

Nor folk State University

Athletics Six-Year Highlights (2005-Present)

The Norfolk State University intercollegiate athletics program has experienced unprecedented success at the NCAA Division I level during the past six years (2005-11). This period of progress has been highlighted by improvements in virtually every area critical to transforming the NSU athletics program into a highly competitive program that will consistently challenge for Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference (MEAC) and NCAA Division I championships. The catalyst for these advancements has been Marty Miller, who was appointed athletics director at NSU in December 2004. Miller believes that the mission of the athletics program is an extension of the mission of Norfolk State University. He places an emphasis on areas that impact the welfare of student-athletes. Improving graduation rates, gender equity, and the retention of student-athletes are equally, if not more important, than winning conference and national championships. However, the initiatives designed to enhance the student-athlete experience and improve the overall administrative process have been successful due to the achievements of the teams and individual athletes. Perhaps the biggest achievement came in early 2009, when the athletics department was recertified to receive NCAA accreditation for the next 10 years. By achieving certification status, NSU is considered to be operating its athletics program in substantial conformity with operating principles adopted by the NCAA’s Division I membership. Numerous staff and coaching hires have been made to enhance the department’s efficacy. New personnel have been hired in the areas of academic support, compliance, business operations and development to meet the growing demand in those departments. A host of new head coaches joined the staff signaling new beginnings in several sports. They included Pete Adrian (Football), Claudell Clark (Baseball), Anthony Evans (Men’s Basketball), Debra Clark (Women’s Basketball), Heidi Cavallo (Softball), Brandon Duvall (Volleyball), and Wilhelmenia Harrison (Bowling). Kenneth Giles (Men’s Track) and Ronda Berard (Women’s Track) were promoted from interim to full-time head coaches in their respective sports. Giles’ cross country and track teams have dominated the MEAC. Adrian has orchestrated the steady progress of the football team, which came within a game of capturing its first MEAC title in 2007. Evans led the Spartans to the MEAC Tournament championship game in his second year, and Claudell Clark helped guide the baseball team to a runner-up finish at the MEAC Championships in 2008 and 2011. Harrison was named the MEAC Coach of the Year in 2010-11 after leading the bowling team to MEAC Southern Division regular-season for the second time in three years. Duvall was also named the MEAC Coach of the Year in 2010 after guiding NSU to its best overall and MEAC record in Division I, while Cavallo led the Spartans to a D-I best 13-game win streak in 2011. The accomplishments of NSU student-athletes in the classroom since 2005 have been equally impressive. The number of athletes annually named to the MEAC Commissioner’s All-Academic Team has steadily increased, and now numbers 40 or more each year.

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Football player Ryan Hathaway (right) and softball player Casey Pomeroy (left) were presented the 2010 Male and Female Scholar Athlete of the Year Awards, respectively, by current Faculty Athletics Representative Dr. Carray Banks.

Following is a list of accomplishments and improvements the department has experienced since 2005:

Academics

• Had 36 student-athletes (sophomores or higher) named to MEAC All-Academic team (min. GPA: 3.0) in 2005-06, 34 in 2006-07, 42 in 2007-08 and 2008-09, and 40 in 2009-10 • Had 54 student-athletes (sophomores or higher) named to MEAC All-Academic team (min. GPA: 3.0) in 2010-11 • Increased student-athlete graduation success rate from 40% to 61% • Won the inaugural Division I Football Championship Subdivision Academic Progress Rate Award for having the MEAC’s highest cumulative APR for the 2008-09 school year and then again for 2009-10 • David Kemboi was one of 50 student-athletes nationwide named to the 2006-07 Division I Men’s Cross Country All-Academic team as selected by the United States Track and Field and Cross Country Coaches Association (USTFCCCA) • Thea Aspiras named to the 2010-11 National Tenpin Coaches Association (NTCA) All-Academic First Team

Program Awards

• Won the last seven MEAC men’s all-sports awards (Talmadge Layman Hill Award) and earned the NSU Athletics Department $165,000 from 2005-11 (pictured at left) • Had the baseball, men’s basketball and football teams all post winning records in 2007-08 for the first time in the Division I era

Administrative

• Hired a full-time assistant sports information director (January 2007) • Hired a full-time athletics academic coordinator (March 2008) • Hired a full-time strength and conditioning coach (August 2008) • Hired an associate athletics director for development (August 2009) • Hired an assistant athletics director for academic services, an assistant compliance coordinator and an additional athletic trainer (August 2010) • Developed comprehensive gender-equity and catastrophic incident guideline plans

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE


ATHLETICS HIGHLIGHTS Football

• Had first back-to-back winning seasons in Division I in 2009 (7-4) and 2010 (6-5) • Matched 2005 and 2006 win total (8-14) in 2007 with a record of (8-3) • Record 10 NSU players named All-MEAC in 2007 • Pete Adrian named NSU’s first MEAC Football Coach of the Year in 2007 • Earned school’s first-ever national FCS national ranking in 2007, reaching as high as 23rd • Had its first NFL draftee since 1996 when Don Carey was selected by the Cleveland Browns in the sixth round of the 2009 draft • Had three members of the 2009 team sign professional contracts – Chris Bell (New Orleans Saints), Defensive back Don Carey (now with Terrell Whitehead (Jacksonville the Jaguars) became the first Spartan Jaguars) and Dennis Brown football player to be drafted in 13 years (CFL’s Calgary Stampeders)

when the Browns selected him in the 2009 draft.

Football Attendance

• Ranked 20th in Division I FCS (I-AA) in 2005 • Ranked 23rd in Division I FCS (I-AA) in 2006 • Ranked 7th in Division I FCS (I-AA) in 2007 • Had the 2nd and 3rd-largest crowds in Dick Price Stadium history in 2007: vs. Hampton (27,756) and vs. Virginia State (26,970) • Set a stadium record in average attendance in 2007 (17,220 average for 6 games)

Men’s Basketball

• Won 16 games in 2007-08, a five-win improvement over the previous year • Competed in the conference championship game in 2009 for the first time since joining the MEAC

Bowling

• Thea Aspiras named to NTCA All-America Second Team, All-MEAC First Team and tabbed the MEAC Rookie of the Year in 2011, each a first for NSU • Won a school-record 67 games in 2009-10 and matched that total in 2010-11 • Reached as high as No. 16 in the national rankings in 2010-11

Track & Field

NSU completed a $550,000 renovation and resurfacing of the Dick Price Stadium track in the summer of 2010. • Became first MEAC men’s track program to win both the indoor and outdoor conference championships for six consecutive academic years (2006-11) • Had two athletes (Marlon Woods, Corey Vinston) earn NCAA Division I AllAmerican status in the same championship meet for the first time in school history in 2009 • Won the school’s first MEAC women’s indoor championship in 10 years in 2010, and first outdoor title in 10 years in 2011

Cross Country

• Won 10 of the last 11 MEAC men’s titles, including a conference-record seven straight from 2000-06 • Sent a runner to the NCAA Division I National Cross Country Championship for the first time in school and MEAC history in 2006 (David Kemboi) • Won the school’s first-ever MEAC women’s title in 2009

Facilities

• Renovated weight room in Gill Gymnasium in 2005, increasing size of existing room and purchasing new equipment • Completed softball field renovations in 2007-08, including construction of a press box, dugouts and restrooms • Replaced the outfield wall at Marty L. Miller Baseball Field (summer 2007) • Completed refurbishing of women’s sports locker rooms in Gill Gymnasium (fall 2008) • Renovated the Joseph G. Echols Memorial Hall basketball arena to add new chair-back seating (August 2008 and 2009) • Renovated and resurfaced the Dick Price Stadium track (summer 2010)

Media Exposure

• Transitioned the department’s web site from the www.nsu.edu domain to a new and improved web site, www.nsuspartans.com, in the fall of 2007 • Hosted the school’s first two nationally-televised softball games in 2007 and 2008 • Had six sporting events televised on ESPN networks (thee football games, two men’s basketball, one softball) in 2007-08, most in school history • Had five sporting events televised on ESPN networks (three football games, two men’s basketball) in 2008-09 • Began airing a weekly radio show, Inside Spartan Sports, on Fox Sports affiliate WXTG 102.1 FM in January 2009 • Conducted live video streaming for the first time in 2009-10, broadcasting 16 athletic events on the department’s web site • Conducted live video streaming for all basketball, football, baseball and softball home games in 2010-11, including the first-ever baseball and softball webcasts in school history • Redesigned the school’s current web site again in the summer of 2010

NSU became the first MEAC school since 2003 to sweep the MEAC men’s and women’s indoor track and field titles when they accomplished the feat in 2010.

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ABOUT NSU Norfolk State University was founded in 1935 as a beacon of hope to the region’s youth—especially within the African American community. Brought to life in the midst of the Great Depression, the university was named the Norfolk Unit of Virginia Union University at its founding and was one of the last historically black institutions established in the Commonwealth of Virginia. By 1969, Norfolk State University began its transformation into a vibrant, independent college and was bestowed university status in 1979. More than 75 years later, the University remains a source of inspiration for those who aspire to fulfill their dreams. A four-year public institution, NSU is located in the dynamic Hampton Roads region of Virginia and is close to the Virginia Beach oceanfront and downtown Norfolk. Additionally, NSU is one of the nation’s largest HBCUs with an enrollment of nearly 7,000 students and a faculty of nearly 300, with more than half holding terminal degrees. The University offers a variety of academic programs within the following schools and colleges: College of Liberal Arts; the College of Science, Engineering and Technology; the Honors College; the School of Business; the School of Education; the Ethelyn R. Strong School of Social Work; the School of Extended Learning; and the Graduate School. NSU offers 32 undergraduate, 16 master’s and three doctoral degrees. Expanding Learning Capacity Norfolk State University has been recognized as one of the top 25 producers of cyber security professionals, according to US Black Engineer and Information Technology Magazine. Additionally, the University has also been named in recent years as one of the top 50 producers of African-American Ph.D. recipients, according to Inside Higher Ed. The finding, based on a National Science Foundation report, says that Historically Black Colleges and Universities are graduating a growing share of African Americans who go on to earn Ph.D.s in science and engineering. NSU’s Dozoretz National Institute for Mathematics and Applied Sciences (DNIMAS), established in 1985, is specifically geared toward increasing the number of Ph.D.s in science technology, engineering, and mathematics. More than 50 percent of DNIMAS scholars have earned advanced degrees. Norfolk State University also has been named a “military friendly school,” which means that the university is successful at offering the necessary financial benefits, flexibility in scheduling and support programs to service members. Most recently, the university entered into an agreement with the U.S. Navy to provide the bachelor’s degree in interdisciplinary studies through the Navy College Program Distance Learning Partnership coordinated through the School of Extended Learning. The Navy’s distance learning program is vital in providing sailors with the best possible options for obtaining higher educational degrees wherever they may be assigned. Now, sailors may apply to Norfolk State University to obtain a degree in interdisciplinary studies in an online environment. Our School of Extended Learning expertly places the convenience of the digital age at the fingertips of learners. The School works with the academic and administrative units of the University by serving as an extension of the NSU campus. It offers coursework through distance education, continuing education and certificate programs. Additional degree programs include Master of Arts degrees in Pre-Elementary Education, Elementary Education (Pre-K-6), Pre-Elementary Early Education with an emphasis on Childhood Special Education and Urban Education, as well as graduate certificates in Transition Special Education and Bilingual Special Education. Building for the Future The University is building for the future with the construction of a three-story, 132,000-square-foot library that will house library services, archives and a 24/7 Internet café, individual and group study rooms, a multimedia project room, virtual conference room, a 24-hour study area, exercise equipment, and an African art gallery. One of the new library’s distinguishing features is a 90-foot high glass atrium that will provide

areas to display current student and faculty artwork, and also serve as a gathering area for multi-purpose events. The new library will provide the latest technology and create an exciting study and research environment for students. Upon completion in December 2011, the library will also reshape the look of the campus. The old library will be razed and a beautiful quadrangular pedestrian mall between the new library and the New Student Center will be created. From the days of the Great Depression to the Digital Age, Norfolk State University continues to achieve. Today, NSU remains an active and vital component of the Hampton Roads region, the Commonwealth of Virginia and the nation. Our faculty researchers have forged partnerships that have created cutting-edge virtual learning environments and the world’s smallest laser - both of which will have an impact on our everyday lives. Our graduates establish and lead corporations, distinguish themselves in their industries and fields of study and provide humanitarian aid around the world. Norfolk State University has played a vital role in our community in the past, is serving in a critical role today, and will continue to be an academic leader in the future. Behold the Green and Gold!

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NORFOLK STATE UNIVERSITY

QUICK FACTS

Location: Historic Norfolk, Va.; 134-acre campus 2 miles from downtown Norfolk Extended Campus Center: Virginia Beach Higher Education Center History: • Founded in 1935 as the Norfolk Unit of Virginia Union University • Became the independent Norfolk Polytechnic College in 1942 • Became an independent institution in 1969 • Granted University status in 1979 Enrollment: Nearly 7,000 President: Tony Atwater, Ph.D. Faculty: 274 full-time equivalent Degree Offerings: 32 bachelor’s degrees; 16 master’s degrees; 3 doctoral degrees Athletics: 15 intercollegiate teams (Division I; competing in Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference – MEAC) Student Organizations: 125 Website: www.nsu.edu

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE


HAMPTON ROADS The vibrancy of city life, the charm of the seashore, the verdant countryside, the wild preserves and the historic landmarks are just a few of the features found in Hampton Roads. The area, which includes the cities of Norfolk, Virginia Beach, Chesapeake, Portsmouth, Newport News, Hampton and Suffolk, has a growing population of about 2 million. There are numerous attractions within each city. Norfolk has its Waterside, a festive marketplace similar to those in Baltimore, St. Louis and Boston. The financial and cultural hub of Virginia, Norfolk is the home of the world’s largest naval installation and serves as headquarters for the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO). As a cultural center, its features include the Chrysler Museum, the Douglas MacArthur Memorial, the Nauticus National Maritime Center, the Virginia Symphony and several theater companies, including Norfolk State University’s own NSU Players. Besides a long and beautiful coastline, Virginia Beach offers numerous landmarks, including the first landing cross (where the first settlers touched the shores of the New World in 1607, 13 years before the Pilgrims landed at Plymouth Rock); The Adam Thoroughgood House, probably the oldest brick house in America, dating back to 1636; and Mount Trashmore, a project that turned a mountain of solid waste into an innovative recreational compound with bicycle trails, picnic areas, and soapbox derby and cross-country courses around two lakes used for a myriad of recreational water sports. The unique 17mile Chesapeake Bay Bridge Tunnel links Virginia Beach with Virginia’s Eastern Shore and a national wildlife refuge. The Virginia Sports Hall of Fame and the Children’s Museum are located in Portsmouth. Newport News has the Mariners’ Museum, which houses one of the world’s most extensive nautical collections, while Hampton is home of the Air and Space Museum. NSU is just off Interstate 264 within walking distance of downtown and other major area attractions, such as the Scope, Chrysler Hall and MacArthur Center Mall. Hampton Roads has three daily newspapers, one AfricanAmerican weekly, three independent TV stations and more than 30 radio stations.

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE


ATHLETICS ADMINISTRATION SHERIE CORNISH GORDON Sherie Cornish Gordon is entering her sixth year in athletics administration at Norfolk State University, currently serving as the senior associate athletics director for administration. Gordon’s primary responsibilities are supervising five sports (bowling, volleyball, softball, men’s tennis and women’s tennis), managing the department’s budget, supervision of the equipment and facility operations, oversight of game-day management and providing strategic guidance for the department’s marketing, promotions and development initiatives, as well as serving as the department’s senior woman administrator. Gordon came to Norfolk State University in 2005 after serving as a senior administrative assistant at American University. She also served as an athletics department intern at the University of Maryland in 2004-2005 and as an assistant women’s basketball coach at her alma mater, Morgan State University, during the 2003-2004 school year. Gordon is currently a participant in the NCAA Pathways Program (formerly NCAA Fellows Program). She is a 2006 graduate of the National Association of Collegiate Women Athletics Administrators’ (NACWAA) Institute for Administrative Advancement, a 2009 graduate of the NCAA Leadership Institute for Ethnic Minority Males and Females and a 2010 and 2011 participant in the NACDA Mentoring Institute. In addition, Gordon is a member of NACWAA, the National Association of Collegiate Directors of Athletics (NACDA), the Collegiate Athletics Business Management Association (CABMA) and the Minority Opportunities Athletics Association (MOAA). She currently serves on the program committee for CABMA. Gordon was an accomplished basketball player at Morgan State, where she scored more than 1,000 career points. She was a four-year letter winner and was a team captain her final three seasons. Gordon, a native of Severna Park., Md., earned her bachelor’s degree in sports administration from Morgan State in 2002 and her master’s in sports management from Temple in 2004. Sherie currently resides in Suffolk, Va., with her husband, Ross, and son, Ethan. CRAIG COTTON Craig Cotton is in his 11th year as associate athletics director for external operations. He is also in his sixth year as executive director of the NSU Athletics Foundation. Cotton joined the NSU athletics staff after serving as marketing manager at Howard University. Cotton’s primary duties at NSU include developing and managing marketing and public relations projects with particular focus on the “Team Spartan Corporate Partners Program,” a comprehensive sports marketing initiative designed to attract corporate sponsorship and funding for the athletics program. Previously, Cotton worked for seven years in the Delaware State University Public Relations Office. He arrived at the Dover, Del.-based institution in 1992 and served as sports information director

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for two years before his appointment as the university’s director of public relations and marketing in 1994. From 1988-1992, Cotton was associate director of sports information at Temple University. He worked for seven years (1981-1988) as sports information director and administrative assistant to the director of intercollegiate athletics at the University of Maryland Eastern Shore. Cotton was also was a press operations manager for the United States Olympic Committee (USOC) at the 1996 Summer Games in Atlanta, Ga.; 1995 Pan American Games in Mar del Plata, Argentina; and the 1994 U.S. Olympic Festival in St. Louis, Mo. Cotton is a native of Greensboro, N.C., and a 1980 graduate of North Carolina A&T State University, where he earned a bachelor’s degree in English-mass communications. He received the M.Ed. degree at Temple University in 1995. Cotton and his wife, Cynthia, reside in Norfolk, Va. KAREN HOLMES Karen Holmes is in her third year on staff in the NSU athletics department. As the associate athletics director for marketing and corporate development, her primary responsibilities are to plan, coordinate and execute athletic fundraising and outreach events and to recruit corporate sponsors for the department. Prior to NSU, Holmes served as the foundation manager at the Norfolk Convention & Visitors Bureau. She was responsible for planning and directing the foundation’s operations to include fundraising, staffing, budgeting and research. Holmes has also held positions as a business account representative at Opportunity, Inc. in Norfolk and as a senior marketing consultant in television and radio. Holmes is a member of the National Association of Collegiate Women Athletics Administrators (NACWAA), National Association of Athletic Development Directors (NAADD), National Association of Collegiate Marketing Administrators (NACMA) Hampton Roads Chamber of Commerce and the Association of Fundraising Professionals (AFP). Holmes also serves as the MEAC’s NAADD representative. Holmes, a native of Philadelphia, Pa., graduated magna cum laude with a bachelor’s degree in interdisciplinary studies from NSU in 1998. She is also a 2010 graduate of the NACWAA’s Institute for Administrative Advancement. ALISHA TUCKER Alisha Tucker is entering her sixth year working in the Norfolk State University athletics department. She assumed the role of associate athletics director for student services for the 2010-11 academic year after serving as assistant athletic director for compliance for the previous four years. In her new role, she provides oversight for the compliance and athletics academic support offices. In addition to her duties at NSU, Tucker is involved in administrative activities on the national level. Tucker was appointed to the NCAA’s Amateur-

ism Fact-Finding Committee in 2010 and will serve on that committee until 2014. She also is a member of the NCAA Low Resource Institution working group and NCAA Academic Performance Program Users working group. In addition, Tucker serves as a peer reviewer for the NCAA’s Division I Athletics Certification program. She is also instrumental in working with the NCAA’s Supplemental Support Fund which provided monies to NSU in support of athletics academic initiatives. In 2011, Tucker was selected to participate in the NACWAA (National Association for Collegiate Women Athletics Administrators) Institute for Administrative Advancement (West Class) as well as the NCAA Regional Rules Seminar Advanced Tract. Before coming to Norfolk State, Tucker served as the athletics eligibility specialist and curriculum coordinator at Marshall University. She began her career as an intern at Michigan State University in 2001. She was promoted to assistant compliance coordinator , and then earned a promotion to compliance coordinator at MSU in 2003. Tucker has also worked in compliance offices at Villanova University and the University of Richmond. Tucker earned her bachelor’s degree in English literature and composition from the University of Virginia in 1996. She earned her master’s in sports management from Old Dominion University in 2001. A Hampton native, Tucker was a track and field athlete at Hampton High School. She was also a sprinter and hurdler on the U.Va. track team. Tucker was also the liaison between the studentgovernment and the athletics department serving on various committees. She is also a member of Zeta Phi Beta Sorority, Inc., and currently resides in Portsmouth, Va. JAMAR ROSS Jamar Ross is in his third year as NSU’s assistant athletics director for business operations. Ross served from July 2007 to April 2009 as associate sports information director at Old Dominion University. At ODU, he was the primary media contact for the Monarchs’ start-up football team. Previously, Ross was the sports information director at Hampton University from 2002-07. While at Hampton, Ross served on the Governance and Commitment to Rules Compliance Subcommittee for Hampton’s NCAA Recertification Self Study. Ross also served as Sports Information Director at Winston-Salem State University in 2001-02, was the assistant SID at Hampton 2000-01, and completed a post-graduate internship at Southern Illinois University in 2000. He also served as a press room attendant at NCAA men’s basketball tournaments in 1997 and 2000. Ross graduated cum laude from Winston-Salem State University with a bachelor’s degree in sports management in 1999. He received his master’s in sports management from ODU in 2008. Ross also completed the NCAA Leadership Institute for Ethnic Minority Males and Females in 2008.

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE


ATHLETICS ADMINISTRATION DR. CARRAY BANKS JR. Dr. Carray Banks Jr. is in his first year as NSU’s faculty athletic representative. In this capacity, he represents Norfolk State University and its faculty in relationships with the NCAA and MEAC. The faculty’s voice and influence regarding intercollegiate athletics are channeled primarily through the faculty athletic representative. Banks, who is also the head of the Department of Technology in the College of Science, Engineering and Technology at NSU, has lent his talents to many athletic endeavors at the University. He worked for six years as an academic enhancement counselor for the men’s basketball team. In addition, he has served on the NSU Athletics Foundation Sports Hall of Fame selection committee as well as the chairman of the steering committee for NSU’s NCAA recertification in 2008. He is also a staple at home athletic events, serving as member of the official game clock management team at Spartan basketball and football games. Banks also supervises the data generation and graphic media advertisements on the graphics display boards during football games at William “Dick” Price Stadium. Banks received his bachelor’s degree in industrial arts education from Elizabeth City State University, his master of arts degree from Ball State University, and his doctor of philosophy degree in vocational and industrial education from Penn State University. Banks resides in Virginia Beach with his wife, Alesia, and daughter, Aliyah. REESE BRIDGMAN Reese Bridgman is in his fourth year as the Spartans’ assistant athletics director for strength and conditioning. Bridgman oversees the strength and conditioning efforts for all 15 of NSU’s sports programs. Bridgman previously served as the strength and conditioning coach for the Newport News Apprentice School’s football program from 2005-07. He was also the Builders defensive coordinator in 2007 after coaching the defensive line in 2005 and 2006. Before moving to the Hampton Roads area, Bridgman was the head strength and conditioning coach for the University of Central Florida from 1997-2003. Bridgman helped train 20 UCF football players who went on to make active NFL rosters, including the likes of Daunte Culpepper, Asante Samuel, Travis Fisher, Atari Bigby, Steve Edwards, Brandon Marshall and Rashad Jeanty. Other topnotch athletes he helped tutor at UCF include Major League pitcher Mike Maroth. Along with his strength and conditioning expertise, Bridgman has an extensive background as a football coach at the high school, college and professional levels. Bridgman coached two seasons in the Arena Football League. He coached linemen and was the strength coach for the Orlando Predators in their ArenaBowl runner-up season of 1995. The following year, he worked in the same capacity for the Milwaukee Mustangs (now defunct). Bridgman’s one stint as a head football coach

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE

came at East Central Community College in his home state of Mississippi from 1992-94. He has also worked as an assistant football coach at NAIA Georgia Southwestern College and at a pair of Division II schools, Southeast Oklahoma State and East Texas State (now known as Texas A&M-Commerce). He also was men’s track coach during his tenure at Southeastern Oklahoma State. Bridgman, a native of Tylertown, Miss., got his football coaching start at Hattiesburg (Miss.) Prep in 1983. Bridgman, 47, received his bachelor’s degree in athletic administration and coaching from the University of Southern Mississippi in 1985. He earned his master’s in physical education with an emphasis in exercise physiology from East Texas State (Texas A&M-Commerce) in 1986. Bridgman is certified through the National Strength and Conditioning Association, the Collegiate Strength and Conditioning Coaches Association, and the National Association of Speed and Explosion. He and his wife, Kelly, reside in Chesapeake. JACQUELINE NICHOLSON Jacqueline Nicholson is in her fourth year working in the NSU athletics department. After serving as athletics academic coordinator the last two years, Nicholson was promoted to the position of assistant athletics director for academic support for the 2010-11 school year. Nicholson’s responsibilities include advising all NSU student-athletes on issues of NCAA eligibility requirements and monitoring progress toward their degrees. Nicholson is also in charge of coordinating the academic support efforts for each team along with the academic enhancement counselors. She also oversees the NCAA/CHAMPS Life Skills Program and serves as the advisor for the Student Athlete Advisory Committee (SAAC). Previously, Nicholson worked as an academic coordinator intern at Virginia Tech during the 200708 school year, assisting with the Hokies football team. She also served as a graduate assistant in the university academic advising center at Virginia Tech from 2005-07. Nicholson is a member of the National Association of Collegiate Women Athletics Administrators (NACWAA), the National Association of Academic Advisors for Athletics (N4A), and the National Academic Advising Association (NACADA). She serves on the awards committee for NACWAA and the membership committee for N4A. Nicholson is a 2011 graduate of NACWAA’s Institute for Administrative Advancement and 2011 and 2009 graduate of the N4A Professional Development Institute. A native of Clayton, N.J., Nicholson was a four-year letterwinner for the Hokies track and field team as a sprinter and hurdler. She was a member of the Virginia Tech all-academic team and athletics director’s honor roll. She earned her bachelor’s degree in human development in 2005 and her master’s in educational leadership and policy studies with a focus in higher education in 2007, both from Virginia Tech.

MEGHAN ANTINARELLI Meghan Antinarelli is in her second year as assistant athletics director for sports medicine at NSU. Previously, she served for eight years as an athletic trainer within the department. Antinarelli, who is originally from Wellesley, Mass., received her bachelor’s degree in health and physical education from the University of Massachusetts in 1998. She received her master’s degree in athletic training at Old Dominion University in 2001. She and her husband, Joseph, live in Suffolk and have one son, Nicholas. MATT MICHALEC Matt Michalec is in his ninth full year heading up the NSU sports information department. After serving as sports information director for eight years, Michalec was promoted to assistant athletics director for communications in the spring of 2011. Michalec is in charge of coordinating media relations efforts for all 15 of NSU’s athletics programs. His duties include the production of press guides, serving as the media liaison for the athletics department, keeping statistics at all home athletic contests, and maintaining the university athletics web site. In 2006, he was named the Black College Baseball SID of the Year. Previously, Michalec worked for two years as a part-time sports reporter and editorial assistant at the Daily Press newspaper in Newport News, Va. Michalec graduated magna cum laude with a bachelor’s degree in English and a minor in communications from Old Dominion University in 2002. He served as sports editor for ODU’s student newspaper during his time there. He got his professional start by working for two years as a sportswriter at the York Town Crier and Poquoson Post newspapers in York County, Va. Michalec is a member of the College Sports Information Directors of America (CoSIDA) and the Virginia Sports Information Directors (VaSID). Michalec and his wife, Annie, live in Newport News and have a son, Brandon, and daughter, Alexis. MIKE BELLO Mike Bello was hired as the assistant sports information director in August of 2010. He came to NSU after a pair of internships at Division I institutions. At NSU, Bello will be the main contact for volleyball, women’s basketball, softball, tennis and bowling. Prior to arriving at NSU, Bello spent the previous year at the University of South Florida as a full-time intern, where he was the main contact for track and field and cross country as well as the secondary contact for men’s basketball and football. While at USF, Bello was part of a new initiative there that did away with traditional printed media guides and went to a new, interactive and online format that featured videos, photos and text all intermixed on a web-based platform.

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ATHLETICS ADMINISTRATION Continued from page 11

During the 2008-09 athletics season, Bello worked as an intern in the sports information office at Harvard. He also spent the 2007-08 season volunteering with the sports information office at Kent State University as part of his graduate work there. He has also volunteered with the Cleveland Gladiators of the Arena Football League and the Boston Breakers of the Women’s Professional Soccer League. Bello earned a bachelor’s of arts degree from Penn State University in journalism in 2004, and a master of arts degree in recreation and sports management in 2009 from Kent State. JESSICA COLE Jessica Cole is in her third year as the head assistant athletic trainer at Norfolk State University. Previously, Cole served as the assistant athletic trainer at Virginia State University in Petersburg, Va., for two years (2007-09). She also worked for two and a half years as the athletic trainer at Chelsea Community Hospital Outpatient Physical Therapy in her native Chelsea, Mich. Cole earned her bachelor’s degree in athletic training from Florida Southern College in 2004. She completed her senior internship with the WNBA’s Detroit Shock in 2004, and earned her master’s degree in exercise physiology from Eastern Michigan in 2008. NICOLE DIETRICH Nicole Dietrich is in her second year as the assistant athletic trainer at Norfolk State University. Previously, Dietrich served as the assistant athletic trainer at Chestnut Hill College in Philadelphia, Pa., for the past two and half years. A native of Lykens, Pa., Dietrich received her bachelor’s degree in athletic training and minored in recreation fitness management from Lock Haven University in 2004. She earned her master’s degree in psychology at Shippensburg University in 2007. Dietrich currently resides in Norfolk, Va. She and her fiancée, Filiberto, will be married in May 2012.

DERRICK COLES Derrick Coles is in his second year as the compliance coordinator at Norfolk State University. His duties consist of handling many of the day-to-day operations of Norfolk State University’s compliance office, specifically: monitoring playing/practice seasons, monitoring recruiting contacts/calls, overseeing the National Letter of Intent program, NCAA Special Assistance Fund and MEAC reports. In addition, Coles assists the associate athletics director with rules education for coaches and student-athletes and serves as a member of the eligibility certification team. Before coming to Norfolk State, Coles was the assistant director of sports information at Hampton University. Derrick assisted with the day-to-day activities of the Office of Sports Information, as well as serving as the primary media contact for

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women’s basketball, volleyball, bowling and men’s and women’s tennis. He was also the secondary media contact for football. Before coming to Hampton, Coles spent six years as an assistant within the athletic department at Virginia Union University. His duties included assisting the sports information department with programs, media guides and game-day activities, as well as working with the compliance office in reviewing academic records, practice schedules and athlete eligibility matters. Coles received his bachelor’s degree in marketing from Virginia Union in 2007 and his master’s in sports management from Virginia State University in 2009. Coles is a native of Richmond, Va. and his volunteer work includes the Special Olympics, the Rudy Johnson Foundation, the James Farrior Foundation, Richmond Sports Backers and Upward Sports Academy. He is an active member of Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, Inc. and is also a member of the National Association for Athletics Compliance (NAAC). MICHELLE MacFARLANE Michelle MacFarlane is in her second year as an administrative specialist in the NSU athletics department. She comes to NSU after spending six years at Eastern Virginia Medical School as an administrative assistant. While there, MacFarlane’s duties included composing correspondence, recording and distributed minutes of faculty meetings, handling travel and catering arrangements, organizing and creating flyers, and filing and organizing grades. During her time at EVMS, she also worked for Jackson Hewitt Tax Service as a tax preparer and instructor of basic tax course. MacFarlane completed classes at Old Dominion and Kee Business College, where she received her medical assistant diploma prior to working at Eastern Virginia Medical School. SHIRLEY BROOKS Shirley Brooks is in her 12th year as the football administrative assistant for the NSU athletics department. Brooks oversees all administrative aspects of the program, including coordinating special events, team travel, player files and day-to-day operations. A native of Hertford, N.C., Brooks has three children: Derek, Dietrich and Verletita. She graduated cum laude with her bachelor’s degree in tourism and hospitality management from NSU in 2010.

Wright earned his bachelor’s degree in interdisciplinary studies and a minor in physical education in 1995. He is currently pursuing his master’s in administration. Wright has four daughters, Chiquita, Nikeya, Britney and Ashley; three granddaughters and one grandson. Brian Maurer Brian Maurer is in his third season as the assistant strength and conditioning coach at NSU. He is in charge of the strength and conditioning programs for the Spartan men’s and women’s basketball and track and field

teams. Previously, Maurer served as a senior sports performance coach at Velocity Sports Performance in Chesapeake. While on staff at Velocity, he helped develop many of the premier athletes in the area. He has extensive experience coaching athletes from grade school up to the professional ranks in numerous sports, including NFL, NBA, professional soccer and rugby, and mixed martial arts athletes. Maurer received his bachelor’s degree in exercise science from Old Dominion University in 2005. He is currently pursuing his master’s degree in human movement from A.T. Still University. Maurer is a certified health and fitness instructor (ACSM-HFI) through the American College of Sports Medicine, is a certified strength and conditioning specialists through the National Strength & Conditioning Association (NSCA), and holds a sports performance coach certification from USA Weightlifting. A native of Stafford, Va., Maurer competed in baseball, football, and track and field while attending North Stafford High School. NATE BELL Nate Bell is in his 15th year as assistant equipment manager for the Norfolk State University athletics department. A native of Norfolk, Va., Bell is a 1994 graduate of Maury High School, were he lettered in football, and wrestling. Bell resides in Norfolk.

WILLIAM WRIGHT William Wright is in his ninth year as the head equipment manager at NSU. Previously, Wright worked as a parking supervisor in NSU’s Office of Parking and Transportation. He has also served as a security of-

ficer at NSU. A native of Portsmouth, Wright lettered in football, basketball and track at NSU in the early 1980s. He was a member of the 1984 CIAA championship football team.

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE


ATHLETICS FOUNDATION Total Sports - 15 Women’s Sports Basketball Bowling Cross Country Indoor Track & Field Outdoor Track & Field Softball Tennis Volleyball

Men’s Sports

Baseball Basketball Cross Country Football Indoor Track & Field Outdoor Track & Field Tennis ...........................................................................

Norfolk State University Athletics Foundation Board of Directors

Fran Steward, President Merv Pitchford, Vice President Phillip Brooks, Treasurer Craig Cotton, Executive Director Marty Miller, Athletics Director Michael K. Brown A. Graige Johnson Curtis Maddox* Langston Powell Zackery Rodgers James Satterfield* Donna Sample Smith Joel Wagner John Warren

A BRIEF OVERVIEW Norfolk State University’s proud legacy of achievement in collegiate athletics began at the NCAA Division II level as a member of the Central Intercollegiate Athletic Association (CIAA). NSU was one of the league’s most dominant programs, winning championships in every sport the school offered. In 1997, NSU joined the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference (MEAC), one of only two NCAA Division I conferences comprised of historically black colleges and universities. Other conference members include: Bethune-Cookman University, Coppin State University, Delaware State University, Florida A&M University, Hampton University, Howard University, the University of Maryland Eastern Shore, Morgan State University, North Carolina A&T State University, North Carolina Central University, Savannah State University and South Carolina State University. NSU made an immediate impression in the conference in 2000-01, winning the Talmadge Hill Award – presented annually to the member whose men’s teams compile the most points based on team finishes in conference competition. The Spartans won the T almadge Hill Award again each year from 2005-11. In all, NSU has won conference titles in men’s and women’s track, men’s and women’s cross country, and women’s basketball during its brief tenure in the MEAC.

Why Support Norfolk State University Athletics?

• NSU competes at the nation’s highest level of intercollegiate athletics competition – National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I - and is a member of the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference (MEAC). • The need to increase funding for scholarships for deserving studentathletes motivated by achievement both in athletics and academics. • Improvements and maintenance of equipment and facilities enable NSU student-athletes to perform at their full potential. • A competitive athletics program contributes to the enjoyment of the student-athlete experience.

* - Emeritus

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ATHLETICS DIRECTORY ..................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................... (Area Code 757)

Administration and Support Staff

Director of Athletics: Marty L. Miller.........................................................................................................................................................................................................................823-8152 Faculty Athletics Representative: Dr. Carray Banks.............................................................................................................................................................................................823-2421 Senior Assoc. AD/SWA: Sherie Cornish Gordon....................................................................................................................................................................................................823-8404 Assoc. AD for External Operations/NSUAF Executive Director: Craig Cotton............................................................................................................................................823-2667 Assoc. AD for Marketing and Coporate Development: Karen Holmes........................................................................................................................................................823-8645 Assoc. AD for Student Services: Alisha Tucker......................................................................................................................................................................................................823-2337 Asst. AD for Sports Medicine: Meghan Antinarelli..................................................................................................................................................................................823-9547/8997 Asst. AD for Business Operations: Jamar Ross.......................................................................................................................................................................................................823-2105 Asst. AD for Strength and Conditioning: Reese Bridgman...............................................................................................................................................................................823-2187 Asst. AD for Academic Support: Jacqueline Nicholson.....................................................................................................................................................................................823-8751 Asst. AD for Communications: Matt Michalec.......................................................................................................................................................................................................823-2628 Asst. Sports Information Director: Mike Bello.......................................................................................................................................................................................................823-2628 Compliance Coordinator: Derrick Coles..................................................................................................................................................................................................................823-2337 Head Assistant Athletic Trainer: Jessica Cole.............................................................................................................................................................................................823-9547/8997 Asst. Athletic Trainer: Nicole Dietrich...........................................................................................................................................................................................................823-9547/8997 Asst. Strength and Conditioning Coach: Brian Maurer......................................................................................................................................................................................823-2187 Administrative Specialist: Michelle MacFarlane...................................................................................................................................................................................................823-8152 Equipment Manager: William Wright.......................................................................................................................................................................................................................823-2022 Asst. Equipment Manager: Nate Bell........................................................................................................................................................................................................................823-2022 Cheerleading Coach: Carmen Harris........................................................................................................................................................................................................................823-8200 Administrative Specialist/Football: Shirley Brooks..............................................................................................................................................................................................823-8824

Men’s Coaches

Baseball: Claudell Clark, Head Coach.......................................................................................................................................................................................................................823-8196 Asst. Coach: A.J. Corbin............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................823-9533 Basketball: Anthony Evans, Head Coach.................................................................................................................................................................................................................823-8934 Asst. Coaches: Robert Jones/Larry Vickers/Kelvin Hawkins............................................................................................................................................................823-9192/2840 Cross Country: Kenneth Giles, Head Coach...........................................................................................................................................................................................................823-8169 Asst. Coach: TBA..........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................823-8801 Football: Pete Adrian, Head Coach............................................................................................................................................................................................................................823-8824 Asst. Head Coach/Offensive Line: Rod Holder.................................................................................................................................................................................................823-8779 Asst. Coach/Defensive Coordinator: Mark DeBastiani..................................................................................................................................................................................823-2582 Asst. Coach/Interim Offensive Coordinator: Joe Blackwell.........................................................................................................................................................................823-8824 Asst. Coach/Defensive Line: Mark Thurston.....................................................................................................................................................................................................823-8758 Asst. Coach/Defensive Backs: Marco Butler......................................................................................................................................................................................................823-2495 Asst. Coach/Quarterbacks: Steve Canter...........................................................................................................................................................................................................823-2570 Asst. Coach/Running Backs: Paul Macklin.........................................................................................................................................................................................................823-8824 Asst. Coach/Wide Receivers: Howard Feggins.................................................................................................................................................................................................823-8824 Tennis: TBA, Head Coach...............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................823-8821 Asst. Coach: Torrie Browning..................................................................................................................................................................................................................................823-8821 Track and Field: Kenneth Giles, Head Coach..........................................................................................................................................................................................................823-8801 Asst. Coaches: Serge Bengono/Brandon Tynes...............................................................................................................................................................................................823-2104

Women’s Coaches

Basketball: Debra Clark, Head Coach.......................................................................................................................................................................................................................823-8441 Asst. Coaches: Lashondra Dixon-Gordon/Kenny Edwards..............................................................................................................................................................823-2132/8456 Bowling: Wilhelmenia Harrison, Head Coach........................................................................................................................................................................................................823-8152 Asst. Coach: Aundray Darden................................................................................................................................................................................................................................823-8152 Cross Country: Ronda Berard, Head Coach............................................................................................................................................................................................................823-2104 Asst. Coach: TBA..........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................823-2104 Softball: Heidi Cavallo, Interim Head Coach..........................................................................................................................................................................................................823-8194 Asst. Coach: Amanda Haverman...........................................................................................................................................................................................................................823-8343 Tennis: TBA, Head Coach...............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................823-8821 Asst. Coach: Torrie Browning..................................................................................................................................................................................................................................823-8821 Track and Field: Ronda Berard, Head Coach..........................................................................................................................................................................................................823-2104 Asst. Coaches: Serge Bengono/Jerry Price/Dwayne Miller.........................................................................................................................................................................823-2104 Volleyball: Brandon Duvall, Interim Head Coach.................................................................................................................................................................................................823-2804 Asst. Coach: Dave Albaugh.....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................823-2804

Miscellaneous

Football Press Box...........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................823-2628 Basketball Press Row......................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................823-8195 Softball Press Box............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................823-0056 Baseball Press Box...........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................823-8196 Ticket Office.......................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................823-9009

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2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE



HEAD COACH PETE ADRIAN 2008-09, the last year for which data was released, the Spartans ranked first in the nation among all Division I historically black colleges and universities.

Pete Adrian Head Football Coach When Pete Adrian was named the 16th head coach in Spartan football history on Jan. 19, 2005, he said that Norfolk State was a gold mine waiting to be discovered. After six seasons at the helm of the program, Adrian’s words are proving to be prophetic. After NSU won a total of two games in the two seasons prior to his arrival, the Spartans won eight games in Adrian’s first two seasons. They matched that eight-win total in 2007 alone and tallied a 7-4 record in 2009, giving the program its first two winning seasons as a Division I program. A 6-5 campaign in 2010 clinched the school’s first-ever back-to-back winning seasons in the school’s Division I era. Adrian’s fouryear record at NSU stands at 34-33. In the last four years under Adrian, the Spartans have posted a 26-19 mark, the most wins in any four-year stretch of Spartan football since 1982-85 (27-15). A total of 33 Spartans have earned All-MEAC honors in Adrian’s tenure, 28 of them coming in the last four years. That list includes five athletes who have earned various FCS or HBCU All-America honors. The Spartans have also been successful off the field under Adrian. NSU has ranked first in the MEAC each of the last two years in the NCAA’s Academic Progress Rate reports, which measure studentathlete graduation rates and retention. In

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Adrian became the first NSU football coach to earn MEAC Coach of the Year honors in 2007, when the Spartans posted the school’s first winning season in its Division I history. That team went 8-3 and came within an overtime loss to Delaware State from capturing the program’s first MEAC football championship. In addition to MEAC Coach of the Year honors, Adrian was also named the MEAC Coach of the Year by the 100% Wrong Club of Atlanta, Ga. He was also the recipient of the J. Roy Rodman Memorial Award as the Virginia Collegiate Coach of the Year by the Norfolk Sports Club, another first for an NSU football coach. A school-record 10 Spartans were named to the All-MEAC football team in 2007. Included among them was defensive back Terrell Whitehead, who became NSU’s first-ever three-time Division I FCS AllAmerican from 2007-09; and running back DeAngelo Branche, another three-time All-MEAC pick (2008-10) who became the school’s all-time leading rusher during the 2010 season. After being picked to finish seventh in the preseason MEAC poll, the Spartans won a school-record six MEAC games in 2007.

Along the way, the Spartans also garnered the school’s first-ever Division I Football Championship Subdivision (FCS, formerly I-AA) national ranking, reaching as high as No. 23. NSU also set a season attendance record for Dick Price Stadium, averaging 17,220 fans per game. That ranked seventh nationally and first among MEAC and state FCS schools. The Spartans have made steady strides under Adrian, who stresses a balanced offense and an attacking style of defense. In 2007, NSU ranked fifth nationally in pass defense (147.8 yards per game allowed) and 19th in total defense (319 ypg), up from 71st the year before. His 2009 defense was his best yet while directing the Spartans. NSU ranked sixth nationally in total defense (265.5 ypg), third in pass defense (141.1 ypg) and 19th in tackles for loss (7.3/game). The 2010 unit produced more of the same results, again earning the No. 6 national ranking in total defense (284.1 ypg). Adrian has also developed a reputation for being a good recruiter. In his first six full recruiting seasons at the helm of the program, Adrian signed 15 players from the Southeastern Virginia area who were named to The Virginian-Pilot’s All-Tidewater team.

Adrian’s Profile PERSONAL: • Born: • Hometown: • Alma Mater: • Family:

August 11, 1948 Brilliant, Ohio West Virginia ‘70 Wife Christine, Sons Rocco and Zach

EXPERIENCE: • West Virginia: • Rhode Island: • Idaho State: • Rhode Island: • Bloomsburg: • Deltona High: • Bethune-Cookman: • Chicago (XFL): • Norfolk State:

Freshman Football, 1969 Defensive Line, 1970; Receivers, 1971 Defensive Line, 1972-75 Assistant Head Coach/Defensive Coordinator, 1976-85 Head Coach, 1986-92 Head Football Coach/Athletic Director, 1993-96 Defensive Coordinator, 1997-2000, 2002-04 Defensive Coordinator, 2001 Head Coach, 2005-present

HEAD COACHING RECORD: • Bloomsburg: • Norfolk State: Totals:

36-37-1 (7 seasons) 34-33 (6 seasons) 70-70-1 (13 seasons)

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE


HEAD COACH PETE ADRIAN Adrian came to NSU after serving as defensive coordinator and linebackers coach for seven seasons at one of the Spartans’ MEAC rivals, Bethune-Cookman in Daytona Beach, Fla. Adrian joined the Wildcats’ staff in 1997 after serving as head coach and athletic director at Deltona High School in Deltona, Fla., from 1993-96. Adrian left Bethune-Cookman briefly to serve as defensive coordinator of the XFL’s Chicago Enforcers in 2001, and returned to his post at B-CU in 2002. During his tenure at Bethune-Cookman, Adrian helped the Wildcats to the most successful period in school history. In his seven seasons, the Wildcats went 54-25 and had winning records in each of his last six years there. B-CU made the first two Division I FCS playoff appearances in school history in 2002 and 2003 and won a MEAC title in 2002. The Wildcat defense was a big reason for that success, regularly ranking among the conference leaders in numerous categories. In 2004, Adrian’s last year with the Wildcats, B-CU finished second in the MEAC in scoring defense (20.9 ppg) and total defense (325.1 ypg). The 2004 unit also forced the second-most turnovers in the MEAC (35). Adrian has coached numerous players who have reached the professional ranks. Included among them is former NSU defensive back Don Carey, the first Spartan to be drafted in the school’s Division I era. Carey was a sixth-round choice of the Cleveland Browns in the 2009 NFL draft after a senior season which saw him become the first Spartan ever selected to

play in the East-West Shrine Game. Other pro players whom Adrian has coached include Pro Bowl defensive backs Nick Collins (Green Bay Packers) and Rashean Mathis (Jacksonville Jaguars). Both starred for Adrian’s defenses at Bethune-Cookman. Mathis was the second HBCU athlete to win the Buck Buchanan Award as the top defensive player in Division I FCS. He still holds FCS records for interceptions in a season (14, in 2002) and a career (31). Mathis was one of two MEAC Defensive Players of the Year that Adrian has coached, along with defensive end Steve Baggs in 2003. Carey and Whitehead (free-agent signee) are both currently on the Jacksonville Jaguars’ roster. Carey earned the starting free safety job early in the 2010 season and started the team’s final 10 games. Whitehead, meanwhile, was one of four Spartans from the 2009 team to sign a professional contract, along with receiver Chris Bell (free agent, New Orleans Saints), offensive lineman Calton Ford (free agent, Cleveland Browns) and quarterback Dennis Brown (Canadian Football League’s Calgary Stampeders). In all, six Spartans have signed NFL contracts in the last four years (Carey, Whitehead, Bell, Ford,

cornerback Dante Barnes and quarterback Casey Hansen). Adrian has 42 years of coaching experience, 37 at the collegiate level. He has held assistant coaching positions at West Virginia, Rhode Island and Idaho State. At Rhode Island, he was on staff for three Yankee Conference championships and NCAA playoff teams. He was also the head coach at Division II Bloomsburg (Pa.) University from 1986-92, compiling a 36-37-1 record. He has the third-most wins of any football coach in Bloomsburg history. A native of Brilliant, Ohio, Adrian lettered in five sports at Brilliant High School before attending West Virginia. At WVU, he played one year of freshman football (1966) before playing parts of three seasons on the varsity squad in 1967-69. An injury cut short his playing career in Morgantown, W.Va., but he coached the Mountaineers’ freshman football team as a senior in 1969. He earned his bachelor’s degree from WVU in 1970 and received his master’s from Rhode Island University in 1972. Adrian and his wife, Christine, have two sons, Rocco and Zach.

Adrian with former West Virginia and Florida State head coach Bobby Bowden.

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE

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COACHING STAFF

Rod Holder

Assistant Head Coach/Off. Line Coach

Rod Holder, who has been a part of three national championship teams as either a player or coach, is in his seventh season as assistant head coach at Norfolk State. He coaches the offensive line. Holder’s no-nonsense style transformed the NSU offense into one of the more productive, well-balanced units in the MEAC. Last season, the NSU offensive line allowed a MEAC-low 12 sacks, or just 1.09 per game. That figured ranked 18th in the Division I FCS in fewest sacks allowed. Two Spartans earned All-MEAC honors for the second year, as tackle Kendall Noble and center William Falakiseni were both voted to the second team. Falakiseni and Noble led a veteran line that paved the way for running back DeAngelo Branche to

Mark DeBastiani

Defensive Coordinator/Outside Linebackers Coach Mark DeBastiani is in his seventh season as the defensive coordinator/outside linebackers coach for Norfolk State University. In the last six years, the NSU defense has evolved from one of the more porous in the MEAC to one of the stronger units not only in the conference, but in the nation. In each of the last two seasons, the Spartans have ranked sixth in the nation in total defense. The 2010 unit yielded just 284.1 yards per

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become NSU’s all-time leading rusher. Branche ran for a MEAC-leading 1,330 yards in 2010, the secondmost for a single season in NSU history. As a team, NSU averaged 174.6 rushing yards per game, No. 3 in the MEAC and NSU’s highest tally since 2005. In 2009, an NSU-record three Spartan offensive linemen earned All-MEAC honors: Falakiseni, Noble and tackle Calton Ford. Falakiseni was also named to the SBN Black College All-American team. That trio of linemen helped NSU finish the 2009 campaign ranked third in the MEAC in both scoring offense (26.6 ppg) and total offense (348.4 ypg). Holder had an immediate impact on the NSU front line. In Holder’s first year with the program (2005), the offensive line helped the Spartans finish fourth in the conference in total offense with just one senior starter. NSU ranked third in the MEAC in passing yards per game in 2006 and third in scoring offense in 2007. To date, Holder has helped tutor six Spartans who have earned All-MEAC recognition. In addition to Falakiseni, Ford and Noble, guard Tyrus Lassiter was a second-team pick in 2005, tackle Emanuel Swindell was a second-team selection in 2006 and Black College All-American guard Jason Kressen was named to the first team in 2007. Holder came to NSU after serving as offensive line coach at Rutgers University in 2004. That season, Rutgers led the Big East in passing offense (310.5 yards per game) and was third in total offense (394 ypg). The Scarlet Knights also allowed the secondfewest sacks in the conference (20 in 11 games). Prior to working at Rutgers, Holder coached the offensive line at Western Illinois University from 2002-03. The Leathernecks’ offense averaged over 36 points per game in each of his two seasons there, and finished in the top two of the Gateway Conference in total offense both seasons. In that time, Western Illinois compiled a 20-6 record and finished

No. 5 in the ESPN/USA Today Division I-AA Coaches Poll in both 2002 and 2003. Holder also helped coach All-American lineman Fred Layne in 2003. Holder served as assistant offensive line coach at Miami (Fla.) in 2002 when the Hurricanes won the Rose Bowl and the national title. As a player at Miami from 1986-89, he earned over 20 starts on the offensive line and helped the Hurricanes to national titles in 1987 and 1989 under legendary coach Jimmy Johnson. In his four years as a letterwinner there, Holder helped the ‘Canes compile a 45-3 record and three bowl wins, two in the Orange Bowl and one in the Sugar Bowl. He graduated in 1990 with a bachelor’s degree in business. Holder played for one season in the World League of American Football with the New York/New Jersey Knights in 1991. Holder began his coaching career as an offensive line coach for three Miami, Fla., area high schools from 1992-97. He then served as the graduate assistant offensive line coach at the University of Illinois in 1997-98, while earning his master’s degree in educational policy studies. Holder then coached at Northeastern in 1999 and at Bentley in 2000. He joined the XFL as offensive line coach of the Chicago Enforcers in 2001, before returning to Miami later that year. While in the XFL, he worked alongside Spartans’ head coach Pete Adrian, who was the defensive coordinator.

game, while the 2009 team allowed just 265.5 yards per game. The growth has been gradual. In 2006, NSU ranked fifth in the nation in tackles for losses and 19th in sacks per game. In 2007, the Spartans ranked fifth in pass defense and 19th in total defense. Twin linebackers Maguell and Marquez Davis earned AllMEAC recognition in 2007, with Marquez also earning honorable mention All-American accolades. In 2008, the Spartans ranked eighth in the nation in turnover margin (+14), and sixth in turnovers forced (34). The Spartans’ continued building on that success in 2009. The 2009 unit ranked third in the MEAC in scoring defense (19.2 points per game) along with their top-10 national ranking in total yards allowed (265.5). Both marks are the best that an NSU defense has recorded under the current staff. DeBastiani has won a conference championship at each of his previous coaching stops. He was the defensive line coach and video coordinator at Bethune-Cookman University for eight seasons prior to coming to NSU. There, DeBastiani worked alongside NSU head coach Pete Adrian, then the Wildcats’ defensive coordinator, in turning the Bethune-Cookman defense into a force. The Wildcats’ 3-4 ball-hawking defense was a key to the team’s ascent to the top of the MEAC. The Wildcats ranked 13th and eighth, respectively, in Division I-AA total defense in their two national playoff seasons, 2002 and 2003. B-CU ranked second in the conference in 2004 in scoring defense and total defense. He also helped tutor one All-American, defensive lineman Damion Cook, from 1997-2000.

Prior to joining the B-CU staff, DeBastiani coached the defensive tackles at Appalachian State University from 1995-96. In 1995, Appalachian State went undefeated in the regular season, won the Southern Conference championship, and advanced to the Division I-AA quarterfinals. DeBastiani also coached the offensive and defensive lines at his alma mater, Division II Shepherd (W.Va.) College, in 1993 and 1994, helping the Rams to the 1994 West Virginia Intercollegiate Athletic Conference championship. DeBastiani earned his bachelor’s degree in health from Shepherd in 1993. He lettered three years for the Shepherd football team and started two years at center. During his career there, he was a member of back-to-back WVIAC championship teams (1991-92). The 1991 team advanced to the NAIA quarterfinals and the 1992 team made it to the NAIA semifinals. A native of Arthurdale, W.Va., DeBastiani was a football and basketball letterwinner in high school. He is married to wife Christine, and the couple has two children, Benjamin and Maria. The family currently resides in Chesapeake.

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE


COACHING STAFF

Joe Blackwell

Interim Offensive Coordinator/Tight Ends Coach Joe Blackwell enters his second season on the football staff at NSU. Blackwell, who was hired as tight ends coach prior to the 2010 season, was named interim offensive coordinator after handling play-calling duties for the final four games of the year. In the four games in which Blackwell served as the primary play-caller last year, the Spartans averaged 30 points and 436.3 yards per game en route to a 4-0 record. The Spartans’ late-sea-

Marco Butler

Defensive Backs Coach/Special Teams Coordinator Marco Butler is in his seventh year on the Norfolk State coaching staff. He tutors the defensive backs and also serves as the special teams coordinator. After showing steady improvement under Butler during 2005 and 2006, the past four seasons have been stellar for the Spartans’ secondary. NSU ranked second in the nation in pass efficiency defense and fifth in total pass defense (147.8 ypg allowed) in 2007. Two of Butler’s defensive backs, Terrell Whitehead and Don Carey, earned AllMEAC honors.

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE

son charge also helped running back DeAngelo Branche became the school’s all-time leading rusher after recording 1,330 yards in 2010, secondmost for a single season in school history. Branche ran for 631 yards in the last four games to surge into the record books. Blackwell spent six seasons at South Carolina State, one of NSU’s MEAC rivals, from 2004-09. He assisted in the Bulldogs’ back-to-back MEAC championship seasons in 2008 and 2009, and was also on staff as the Bulldogs shared the 2004 MEAC crown with Hampton. After serving as tight ends coach his first two seasons in Orangeburg, Blackwell assumed the role of offensive line coach and offensive coordinator for his last four seasons there. Blackwell directed one of the conference’s most potent units. Under his tutelage, SCSU players have won the last four MEAC Offensive Lineman of the Year awards. Since 2006, the Bulldogs finished no worse than second in the conference in total offense, including three straight years (2006-08) where they finished first. The Bulldogs also paced the conference in rushing offense in 2006 and 2007. In 2008 and 2005, the SCSU offensive line topped the MEAC in fewest sacks allowed. Blackwell coach nine first-team All-MEAC offensive linemen the last four seasons who helped pave the way for running back William Ford to become the MEAC’s all-time leading rusher. Ford (’08) and DeShawn Baker (’06) earned MEAC Offensive Player of the Year honors while running behind the Bulldogs’ line.

Prior to joining the Bulldogs coaching staff, Blackwell spent a year at Newberry College in Newberry, S.C., and one season at Pikeville College in Pikeville, Ky. At Newberry, Blackwell served as the team’s offensive coordinator and offensive line coach. During his stint at Pikeville, Blackwell was linebackers coach and recruiting coordinator. He also spent a decade in the high school coaching ranks, where he assisted some of the top programs in the state of South Carolina. Blackwell was an assistant on Camden High School’s 2001 Class AAA state championship team. He spent four years at Camden High and served six seasons as the offensive line coach at Berea High School. A native of Greenville, S.C., Blackwell was a two-year letterwinner at linebacker while attending North Greenville College. He and his wife, Jami, are the parents of three children – son Chanston and two daughters, Maggie and Mackinley Jane.

Whitehead and Carey repeated those honors in 2008, leading NSU to a No. 15 national ranking in pass defense (160.3 ypg). Carey topped off his career by becoming the first Spartan player in the Division I era to be selected in the NFL Draft. He was a sixth-round choice of the Cleveland Browns and is started 10 games with the Jacksonville Jaguars in 2010. Joining Carey on the Jacksonville roster is Whitehead, who signed as a free agent with the team prior to the 2010 season, but spent the year on injured reserve. Whitehead capped his NSU career by becoming NSU’s first-ever three-time Division I All-American after leading the Spartans to a No. 3 national ranking in pass defense in 2009 (141. ypg). Despite two new starters in the secondary last year, NSU again cracked the FCS top 10 in pass defense, ranking eighth (153.6 ypg allowed). One of the leaders of that group, cornerback Dante Barnes, signed as an undrafted free agent with the Washington Redskins. Prior to joining the coaching staff at NSU, Butler spent four seasons as an assistant coach at Fayetteville State University. He worked with the safeties for FSU, and was also video coordinator and academic coordinator. At Fayetteville State, Butler coached for two CIAA championship teams, in 2002 and 2003, and one CIAA runner-up team, in 2004. The Broncos made NCAA Division II playoff appearances in two of his last three seasons there. Butler also has coaching experience beyond the gridiron. He was the head men’s and women’s track coach at Fayetteville State from the fall of

2004 before coming to NSU, and was the head women’s track coach and an assistant for the men’s team in 2002-03. Butler was a four-year player for Western Carolina University (1995-99), where he played receiver and defensive back for the Catamounts. He earned his bachelor’s degree in sport management with a minor in marketing in May of 2000. Butler was selected for an internship with the Dallas Cowboys in 2010 as part of the NFL Minority Coaching Fellowship. He worked with the team during its training camp. Butler was also one of 60 applicants nationwide selected to attend 2011 NCAA-NFL Football Coaching Academy in Orlando, Fla. Butler is a native of Ware Shoals, S.C. He and his wife, LaShauna, have one daughter, Eva Marissa, and a son, Marco Deuce.

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COACHING STAFF

Mark Thurston Defensive Line Coach Mark Thurston is in his seventh year as an assistant coach at NSU. He coaches the defensive line. Thurston has coached an All-MEAC performer each of the last four years at NSU.

Paul Macklin

Running Backs Coach Hampton Roads native Paul Macklin is in his second season on the NSU football coaching staff and his first full year as the team’s running backs coach. After initially serving as receivers coach last year, he took over as running backs coach for the final four games of the year. Last season, Macklin helped coach AllMEAC performer DeAngelo Branche, who became the school’s all-time leading rusher in the season’s finale game. Branche also led the MEAC in rushing last season (1,330 yards, 120.9 ypg).

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Tackle Dennis Marsh garnered second-team honors in 2007 and first-team accolades in 2008, and current Spartan nose tackle Josh Turner was a first-team selection in 2009 and a second-team honoree in 2010. Thurston has also been instrumental in recruiting the talent-rich area of Miami, Fla., for the Spartans. Thurston was a three-year letterwinner at West Virginia University from 1997-99. He played rush linebacker and started his first two years for the Mountaineers. He earned his liberal arts degree in 2003. Thurston coached one year of semi-pro football with the West Virginia Wham! of the Mid-Ohio Valley League. He directed the defensive line and special teams. Thurston then went to Miami Norland High School, where he coached the defensive line and special teams from 2003-04. There, he coached four defensive ends who earned Division I scholarships, including former Spartan Jason Dent. The others played at Miami (Fla.), Rutgers and North Carolina. Thurston is a native of Miami, Fla. He was an all-county and all-state defensive end at Miami Senior High in the mid-1990s. He was a

USA Today Honorable Mention All-American as a senior before attending West Virginia. Thurston has one daughter, Jada, and one son, Major.

Previously, Macklin served as the offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach at Division II Cheyney University in 2008 and 2009. Macklin is quite familiar with the MEAC. He spent two seasons on staff at Delaware State (2006-07), where he coached the running backs. Macklin helped lead the Hornets to an undefeated conference record and the MEAC championship in 2007. In his first year at DSU, Macklin helped guide Hornet halfback Emmanuel Marc to 1,230 yards rushing and 12 touchdowns in 2006. Marc was second in the league rushing, and earned All-MEAC firstteam honors. Macklin also served for two seasons as the running backs coach at Indiana State (2004-05). In 2005, Andre Forte was the team leader with 802 rushing yards (4.6 ypc) and four touchdowns. Macklin had three ISU runners average 3.5 yards per carry during the 2004 season, with Jake Shields leading the way at 5.3 yards per carry and 825 yards rushing. Shields was second in Division I-AA in rushing before being felled by an injury. From 2001-03, Macklin was a volunteer receivers coach at Division III Christopher Newport University in his hometown of Newport News, Va. Macklin has also taught biology and coached football at two Newport News, Va. high schools. In 2000, he was wide receivers and defensive backs coach at Heritage High School, which finished 14-0 en route to the state Group AAA championship. A 1996 graduate of Virginia Union Univer-

sity in Richmond, Va., Macklin was a four-year starter at wide receiver for the Panthers. He was a member of the Central Intercollegiate Athletic Association (CIAA) all-academic team as a freshman. While at Virginia Union, Macklin was tutored by former Philadelphia Eagles great Harold Jackson, a receivers coach for the team. As a senior, Macklin played for Panthers head coach Willard Bailey, himself a former NSU football coach. Macklin received his bachelor’s degree in biology from Virginia Union in 1996.

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE


COACHING STAFF

Steve Canter

Quarterbacks Coach Steve Canter is in his second year of his second stint as a member of the Spartans’ coaching staff. Canter serves as NSU’s quarterbacks coach and recruiting coordinator. In Canter’s first season as quarterbacks coach in 2010, he helped Spartan signal-caller Chris Walley set a new single-season school record for completion percentage, at 61.4 percent. The Spartans ranked third in the conference in passing yardage last season, averaging

Howard Feggins

Wide Receivers Coach Howard Feggins joins the NSU football coaching staff this year as wide receivers coach. Previously, Feggins spent three seasons serving as receivers coach and passing game coordinator at South Carolina State, where he helped the Bulldogs capture at least a share of three consecutive MEAC championships. In addition to helping the Bulldogs win three conference championships, Feggins

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE

169 yards per contest. Canter served as a part-time assistant coach with NSU in 2008, when he coached the tight ends. In 2009, Canter left NSU to become the graduate assistant for defense at his alma mater, Virginia Tech. He coached the Hokies rovers and WHIP linebackers, including All-American Cody Grimm, a 2010 Tampa Bay Buccaneers draft choice. Canter worked with a Hokies squad that finished 10-3 and won the Chick-fil-A Bowl. Prior to joining the college coaching ranks, Canter was the head coach at Landstown High School in Virginia Beach for two seasons (2006-07). His teams there went 13-7. Nine of his players earned Division I scholarships, including former NSU All-MEAC linebacker Anthony Taylor. Canter was an assistant coach at Landstown in 2005 when the Eagles went 13-1 and advanced to the state Group AAA Division 6 championship game. That team featured current Minnesota Vikings Pro Bowler Percy Harvin. Canter lettered one year as a fullback at Virginia Tech, in 2003. That season, he received the Frederick Cobb Award, which is presented to the Hokies’ most spirited and enthusiastic player. After earning his bachelor’s degree in interdisciplinary studies in 2003, Canter was a

graduate assistant for the Hokies during their 2004 ACC championship season that culminated in a Sugar Bowl berth. During that season, he worked closely with tight end Jeff King, now of the Carolina Panthers. Canter, a Virginia Beach native, received his master’s in health promotion from Virginia Tech in 2004. Canter and his wife, the former Stephanie Rogers, reside in Virginia Beach.

helped coach three wideouts who signed NFL contracts in Tre Young (Carolina Panthers), Terrance Smith (Green Bay Packers) and Phillip Morris (Tennessee Titans). Feggins also helped tutor All-MEAC first-team pick Lennel Elmore last season. Prior to coaching at SCSU, Feggins spent four seasons (2004-07) as offensive coordinator at Eastern Michigan University. Feggins’ 2004 unit ranked 21st in the nation in total offense (427.9 yards per game). One of his pupils, Eric Deslauriers, was named to the watch list for the Biletnikoff Award, given annually to the top receiver in the nation. Deslauriers tallied over 1,200 receiving yards that season and was a first-round pick of the Montreal Alouettes in the Canadian Football League Draft. Feggins also had a successful stint as receivers coach at Northwestern from 19992004. He helped the Wildcats capture a share of the 2000 Big Ten title and berth in the Alamo Bowl. He tutored three All-Big Ten picks at Northwestern, including Kunle Patrick, who tied the NCAA record of 47 straight games with a reception. Another of Feggins’ all-conference players at Northwestern, Sam Simmons, was a fifth-round draft choice of the Miami Dolphins in 2002. Prior to his tenure at Northwestern, Feggins spent two seasons as a receivers coach

at Miami of Ohio. While with the Redhawks, Feggins coached Trevor Gaylor, who went on to become a third-round draft choice of the San Diego Chargers in the 2000 NFL Draft. Feggins got his coaching start as defensive backs and kick returners coach at Wingate University in N.C. from 1995-96. While at Wingate, Feggins mentored Dorian Lake, who became the school’s first-ever All-American on defense. A 1987 graduate of the University of North Carolina, Feggins was a four-year letterwinner for the Tar Heels. A cornerback and strong safety, Feggins totaled 169 tackles during his career. As a sophomore, he ranked sixth on the team with 83 tackles. During Feggins’ junior year, the Tar Heels posted a 7-4-1 record and played in the Aloha Bowl. He earned his bachelor’s degree in education. Feggins played briefly in the NFL with the New England Patriots and New York Giants. He also spent two seasons with the London Monarchs of the now-defunct World League of American Football. Feggins and his wife, Renee, have two sons – Kevin (18) and Jensen (14). The family resides in Fort Thomas, Ky.

21


DICK PRICE STADIUM

Norfolk State University plays its home football contests in the spacious William “Dick” Price Stadium, named for former NSU athletics director and head football and track coach Dick Price. Built in 1997, Dick Price Stadium has a seating capacity of 30,000, and is recognized as one of the largest sports and entertainment venues in Hampton Roads. It is also one of the largest Division I Football Championship Subdivision (formerly I-AA) oncampus football stadiums in terms of capacity. The stadium was constructed at a cost of $12.2 million. Located on the southeast end of campus, the stadium has a brick facade, a natural grass surface, an all-weather, eight-lane rubberized track, a two-story press box and concession areas located throughout the stadium’s ground level. In 2003, Viacom Outdoor Sports Marketing constructed a $400,000 Opto Tech LED video display board at the east end of the stadium to show crowd and field action shots, pre-recorded messages, live satellite feeds for NSU’s televised games, and more. The track at Dick Price Stadium was renovated to include a world-class new surface during the summer of 2010. The first contest played in Dick Price Stadium drew a record 33,872 fans, as NSU hosted Virginia State in 1997 in the annual Labor Day Classic. For the fifth time in the stadium’s short history, Norfolk State ranked in the top 20 in Division FCS in attendance per game in 2007. NSU averaged a Price Stadium record 17,220 fans for its six home games, seventh in the nation and first among both MEAC and state FCS programs. NSU also drew two of the three-largest crowds in Dick Price Stadium history that season. The crowd of

27,756 that saw NSU beat Hampton on Oct. 13 was the secondlargest in stadium history, trailing only the sellout crowd of 34,000 that saw the inaugural game between NSU and Virginia State in 1997. In addition, the crowd of 26,970 that saw the Spartans top Virginia State on Sept. 1 this season was the third-largest attendance figure in stadium history. NSU also ranked 20th in FCS in attendance in 2005, 15th in 2003, 19th in 2001 and 17th in 1998. In addition to Spartan home football games, the stadium has also hosted numerous other events and athletic competitions, including the AAU Junior Olympics track and field meets in 1998, 2001, 2006 and 2010.

TOP 10 LARGEST CROWDS DICK PRICE STADIUM HISTORY Attendance 1. 33,872 2. 27,756 3. 26,970 4. 24,325 5. 24,041 6. 21,151 7. 21,119 8. 21,118 9. 20,562 10. 20,185

Opponent Virginia State Hampton Virginia State Virginia State Virginia State Hampton Howard Florida A&M Virginia State Virginia State

Date 8-30-97 10-13-07 9-1-07 9-5-09 9-5-98 10-15-05 10-27-01 10-23-10 9-1-01 9-2-06

Result L 7-36 W 20-19 W 33-7 W 28-10 L 22-30 L 14-55 W 7-0 (OT) L 13-17 W 13-0 W 29-14

ABOUT DICK PRICE Dick Price is the winningest football coach in NSU history. He compiled a 62-41-4 record over 10 seasons (1974-83), which included three of NSU’s four CIAA championships. His teams finished .500 or better in eight of his 10 years at the helm of the program. Fifty-three of his players went into the ranks of professional football. Price put his stamp on Norfolk State in more ways than one. He also coached the men’s track team to NCAA Division II national championships in 1973 and 1974, and was twice named the NCAA Division II Track Coach of the Year. He later served as the Spartans’ athletics director from 1989-99. He was inducted into the Hampton Roads African American Sports Hall of Fame in 1997, and the NSU Athletics Foundation Sports Hall of Fame in 2003. Price passed away at age 75 in February of 2009.

22

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE



2011 ROSTERS Numerical

alphabetical

No.

Name

Pos. Ht.

Wt.

Yr.

Hometown/Previous School

No.

Name

Pos. Yr.

1

Everett Goldberg

K

6-4

210

Jr.

Mesa Ridge, Colo./College of the Canyons

39

Josh Alford

RB R-Sr.

2

Takeem Hedgeman

RB

5-10

195

R-Jr.

Charlottesville, Va./Monticello HS

28

Onyemechi Anyaugo

LB R-Sr.

4

Dexter Merritt

QB

6-2

195

R-Sr.

Chesapeake, Va./Oscar Smith HS

49

Bryant Bailey

RB Jr.

5

Chris Walley

QB

6-2

200

R-Sr.

Tallahassee, Fla./Joliet JC (Ill.)

17

Shaquan Bailey

DB Fr.

6

Nico Flores

QB

6-2

210

R-So. Miami, Fla./UCF

82

Holden Bass

WR Fr.

7

Wilonte’ Roscoe

QB

5-11

175

Fr.

90

Chad Battles

LB Gr.

8

Natturner Harris

DB

6-0

195

R-So. Miami, Fla./Booker T. Washington HS

69

Steven Beard

OL R-So.

9

Jamal Giddens

LB

6-2

225

R-Jr.

Norfolk, Va./Liberty University

27

Jarell Boyd-Ross

WR So.

10

Brendon Riddick

QB

5-11

210

Fr.

Richmond, Va./Hermitage HS

54

Ramon Bragg

DL R-Jr.

12

Keith Johnson

WR 5-11

175

Fr.

Petersburg, Va./Petersburg HS

55

Tremondae Branch

DL R-Fr.

13

Marcus Center

DB

5-9

180

R-So. Richmond, Va./Deep Run HS

29

Markeith Brisco

RB R-Jr.

15

Ryan Estep

K

5-10

165

R-Sr.

Chesapeake, Va./Hickory HS

97

Steven Bunce

DL Sr.

16

Shaun Corbett

WR 5-11

165

Fr.

Miami, Fla./Varela HS

13

Marcus Center

DB R-So.

17

Shaquan Bailey

DB

6-1

200

Fr.

Halifax, Va./Hargrave Military Academy

59

Joey Christine

DL Sr.

18

Reggie Garrett

WR 6-3

195

R-Jr.

Chesapeake, Va./Indian River HS

57

Marcell Coke

LB Fr.

19

Darrin Marrow

DB

6-1

180

R-Fr.

Virginia Beach, Va./Cox HS

24

Denzel Coleman

LB R-So.

20

Eric Hitch

LB

6-2

230

R-Jr.

Virginia Beach, Va./First Colonial HS

43

Marcus Cooperwood

DB R-Jr.

21

Nick Taylor

DB

5-9

170

So.

Richmond, Va./Varina HS

16

Shaun Corbett

WR Fr.

22

Randy Maynes

RB

5-9

170

Jr.

Miami, Fla./West Hills College (Calif.)

58

Hasan Craig

LB R-Sr.

23

Victor Hairston

WR 5-10

185

R-Sr.

Martinsville, Va./Martinsville HS

36

Marquis Cuffee

DB Sr.

24

Denzel Coleman

LB

6-2

195

R-So. Atlanta, Ga./Mays HS

83

Derrick Demps

WR R-So.

25

Keenan Lambert

DB

6-0

190

R-Fr.

Norfolk, Va./Maury HS

70

Theo Duncan

OL R-Jr.

26

Ricardo Volcin

DB

6-2

210

Sr.

North Miami Beach, Fla./North Miami Beach HS

62

Joshua El

DL So.

27

Jarell Boyd-Ross

WR 6-3

200

So.

Pittsburgh, Pa./Dickinson HS

15

Ryan Estep

K

R-Sr.

28

Onyemechi Anyaugo

LB

6-1

225

R-Sr.

Sterling, Va./Park View HS

64

Rickey Foreman

LS

Fr.

29

Markeith Brisco

RB

6-0

205

R-Jr.

Stephens City, Va./Sherando HS

6

Nico Flores

QB R-So.

30

DeVonte Reynolds

DB

6-3

200

R-Sr.

Warsaw, Va./Rappahannock HS

18

Reggie Garrett

WR R-Jr.

31

Dallas Simmons

RB

5-9

185

Fr.

Richmond, Va./Deep Run HS

9

Jamal Giddens

LB R-Jr.

32

Dionte Sullivan

DB

5-9

170

R-Fr.

O’Fallon, Ill./O’Fallon Township HS

1

Everett Goldberg

K

33

Dre’Quez Lambert

RB

5-9

180

Fr.

Virginia Beach, Va./Green Run HS

89

Matthew Grant

DL So.

34

Corwin Hammond

LB

6-1

220

R-Sr.

Louisville, Ky./St. Xavier HS

23

Victor Hairston

WR R-Sr.

35

Troy Muenzer

P

6-1

185

R-Sr.

Long Beach, Calif./Grossmont College

46

A.J. Hamilton

LB R-So.

36

Marquis Cuffee

DB

5-11

190

Sr.

Virginia Beach, Va./Kellam HS

34

Corwin Hammond

LB R-Sr.

37

Eric Turner

DB

5-11

190

So.

Philadelphia, Pa./West Catholic HS

8

Natturner Harris

DB R-So.

38

Ryan Lee

K

5-8

170

So.

Norfolk, Va./Maury HS

80

Joe Hawkins

TE

39

Josh Alford

RB

5-10

250

R-Sr.

Chesterfield, Va./Manchester HS

2

Takeem Hedgeman

RB R-Jr.

40

Joey Wood

TE

6-1

210

Fr.

Chesapeake, Va./Great Bridge HS

74

Ramsey Henderson

OL Fr.

41

James Lynch

TE

6-3

215

Fr.

Darby, Pa./West Catholic HS

20

Eric Hitch

LB R-Jr.

43

Marcus Cooperwood

DB

5-10

175

R-Jr.

Hampton, Va./Bethel HS

87

Joseph Holbrook

TE

44

Devonte Norman

LB

6-0

230

R-Fr.

Virginia Beach, Va./Landstown HS

45

DeMarta’ Johnson

DB So.

45

DeMarta’ Johnson

DB

5-11

180

So.

Chesapeake, Va./Western Branch HS

50

Justin Johnson

LB So.

46

A.J. Hamilton

LB

6-1

230

R-So. Brooklyn, N.Y./Xaverian HS

12

Keith Johnson

WR Fr.

47

Tyrece Shepherd

WR 6-1

185

Jr.

Suffolk, Va./Lakeland HS

61

Kenneth Johnson

OL R-Jr.

48

Calvin Roberts

RB

5-9

190

Jr.

Hampton, Va./Hampton HS

92

Cameron Jude

DL R-Jr.

49

Bryant Bailey

RB

5-10

215

Jr.

Suffolk, Va./King’s Fork HS

52

Michael Kay

OL R-Jr.

50

Justin Johnson

LB

5-11

225

So.

Hampton, Va./Bethel HS

65

Alex Killam

LS

51

George Riddick

OL

6-2

290

Fr.

Suffolk, Va./King’s Fork HS

33

Dre’Quez Lambert

RB Fr.

24

Portsmouth, Va./Churchland HS

Jr.

Jr.

R-Sr.

Fr.

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE


2011 ROSTERS alphabetical (cont.)

numerical (cont.) 52

Michael Kay

OL

6-2

310

R-Jr.

Capitol Heights, Md./Syracuse University

25

Keenan Lambert

DB R-Fr.

53

Trent Porter

LB

6-2

225

Sr.

Dendron, Va./Surry County HS

38

Ryan Lee

K/P So.

54

Ramon Bragg

DL

6-3

240

R-Jr.

Richmond, Va./John Marshall HS

81

Kelvin Lewis

WR R-So.

55

Tremondae Branch

DL

6-1

285

R-Fr.

Flint, Mich./Carman-Ainsworth HS

41

James Lynch

TE

56

Terrence Pugh

LB

6-4

230

R-Jr.

Chesapeake, Va./Indian River HS

19

Darrin Marrow

DB R-Fr.

57

Marcell Coke

LB

6-2

215

Fr.

Orlando, Fla./Wekiva HS

77

Blake Matthews

OL R-Jr.

58

Hasan Craig

LB

6-3

245

R-Sr.

Rocky Mountain, Va./Franklin County HS

22

Randy Maynes

RB Jr.

59

Joey Christine

DL

6-3

300

Sr.

Stephens City, Va./Sherando HS

63

Derron McDuffie

OL Sr.

60

E.J. Rogers

OL

6-3

325

R-Fr.

Alexandria, Va./Edison HS

4

Dexter Merritt

QB R-Sr.

61

Kenneth Johnson

OL

6-3

275

R-Jr.

Montross, Va./Washington & Lee HS

35

Troy Muenzer

K/P R-Sr.

62

Joshua El

DL

5-11

220

So.

Richmond, Va./Hermitage HS

71

Justin Myler

OL So.

63

Derron McDuffie

OL

6-2

270

Sr.

Paterson, N.J./Passaic Tech

78

Kendall Noble

OL R-Sr.

64

Rickey Foreman

LS

6-1

200

Fr.

Chesapeake, Va./Oscar Smith HS

44

Devonte Norman

LB R-Fr.

65

Alex Killam

LS

6-1

200

Fr.

Newport News, Va./Denbigh HS

53

Trent Porter

LB Sr.

66

Carnell Williams

OL

6-0

330

Jr.

Birdsrest, Va./Northampton HS

56

Terrence Pugh

LB R-Jr.

69

Steven Beard

OL

6-6

320

R-So. Suffolk, Va./Liberty University

88

Josh Reamon

WR R-Sr.

70

Theo Duncan

OL

6-4

285

R-Jr.

Ashland, Va./Patrick Henry HS

30

DeVonte Reynolds

DB R-Sr.

71

Justin Myler

OL

6-4

310

So.

Woodbridge, Va./Freedom HS

10

Brendon Riddick

QB Fr.

73

Julius Wormley

OL

6-5

285

R-Fr.

Hampton, Va./Tabb HS

51

George Riddick

OL Fr.

74

Ramsey Henderson

OL

6-4

305

Fr.

Washington, D.C./H.D. Woodson HS

48

Calvin Roberts

RB Jr.

76

Cameron Williams

OL

6-4

310

R-So. Burke, Va./St. Stephen’s & St. Agnes HS

60

E.J. Rogers

OL R-Fr.

77

Blake Matthews

OL

6-4

315

R-Jr.

Manassas, Va./Osbourn HS

7

Wilonte’ Roscoe

QB Fr.

78

Kendall Noble

OL

6-4

290

R-Sr.

Rocky Mount, N.C./Rocky Mount HS

85

DeAndre Sangster

WR Fr.

80

Joe Hawkins

TE

6-3

225

Jr.

Chicago, Ill./Eisenhower HS

47

Tyrece Shepherd

WR Jr.

81

Kelvin Lewis

WR 5-9

175

R-So. Woodbridge, Va./Woodbridge HS

31

Dallas Simmons

RB Fr.

82

Holden Bass

WR 6-2

210

Fr.

32

Dionte Sullivan

DB R-Fr.

83

Derrick Demps

WR 5-11

180

R-So. Tallahassee, Fla./Florida HS

21

Nick Taylor

DB So.

84

Seth Travers

WR 6-0

175

Sr.

Gainesville, Va./Calvert HS (Md.)

84

Seth Travers

WR Sr.

85

DeAndre Sangster

WR 6-2

180

Fr.

Woodbridge, Va./C.D. Hylton HS

37

Eric Turner

DB So.

86

Tevin White

TE

6-3

215

Fr.

Chesapeake, Va./Great Bridge HS

99

Josh Turner

DL R-Sr.

87

Joseph Holbrook

TE

6-2

240

R-Sr.

Washington, D.C./Ballou HS

26

Ricardo Volcin

DB Sr.

88

Josh Reamon

WR 5-11

170

R-Sr.

Newport News, Va./Gloucester HS

5

Chris Walley

QB R-Sr.

89

Matthew Grant

DL

6-3

245

So.

Sunrise, Fla./Boyd Anderson HS

96

Nico Washington

DL So.

90

Chad Battles

LB

6-2

230

Gr.

Newport News, Va./Syracuse University

86

Tevin White

TE

91

Tory Williams

DL

6-4

290

R-Jr.

Virginia Beach, Va./Bayside HS

76

Cameron Williams

OL R-So.

92

Cameron Jude

DL

6-4

290

R-Jr.

Richmond, Va./Michigan State

66

Carnell Williams

OL Jr.

93

De’Ante Williams

DL

6-2

280

Fr.

Washington, D.C./St. John’s College HS

93

De’Ante Williams

DL Fr.

96

Nico Washington

DL

6-4

310

So.

Waldorf, Md./North Point HS

91

Tory Williams

DL R-Jr.

97

Steven Bunce

DL

6-3

290

Sr.

Richmond, Va./Henrico HS

40

Joey Wood

TE

99

Josh Turner

DL

6-0

315

R-Sr.

Chesterfield, Va./Manchester HS

73

Julius Wormley

OL R-Fr.

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE

Glen Allen, Va./Hargrave Military Academy

Fr.

Fr.

Fr.

25


POSITION BREAKDOWN Offense

defense

Defensive Line

Quarterback 4 5 6 7 10

Dexter Merritt Chris Walley Nico Flores Wilonte’ Roscoe Brendon Riddick

6-2 6-2 6-2 5-11 5-11

195 200 210 175 210

R-Sr. R-Sr. R-So. Fr. Fr.

5-10 5-9 6-0 5-9 5-9 5-10 5-9 5-10

195 170 205 185 180 250 190 215

R-Jr. Jr. R-Jr. Fr. Fr. R-Sr. Jr. Jr.

5-11 5-11 6-3 5-10 6-3 6-1 5-9 6-2 5-11 6-0 6-2 5-11

175 165 195 185 200 185 175 210 180 175 180 170

Fr. Fr. R-Jr. R-Sr. So. Jr. R-So. Fr. R-So. Sr. Fr. R-Sr.

6-1 6-3 6-3 6-3 6-2

210 215 225 215 240

Fr. Fr. Jr. Fr. R-Sr.

6-2 6-2 6-3 6-3 6-2 6-0 6-6 6-4 6-4 6-5 6-4 6-4 6-4 6-4

290 310 325 275 270 330 320 285 310 285 305 310 315 290

Fr. R-Jr. R-Fr. R-Jr. Sr. Jr. R-So. R-Jr. So. R-Fr. Fr. R-So. R-Jr. R-Sr.

Running Back 2 22 29 31 33 39 48 49

Takeem Hedgeman Randy Maynes Markeith Brisco Dallas Simmons Dre’Quez Lambert Josh Alford Calvin Roberts Bryant Bailey

Wide Receiver 12 16 18 23 27 47 81 82 83 84 85 88

Keith Johnson Shaun Corbett Reggie Garrett Victor Hairston Jarell Boyd-Ross Tyrece Shepherd Kelvin Lewis Holden Bass Derrick Demps Seth Travers DeAndre Sangster Josh Reamon

Tight End 40 41 80 86 87

Joey Wood James Lynch Joe Hawkins Tevin White Joseph Holbrook

Offensive Line 51 52 60 61 63 66 69 70 71 73 74 76 77 78

26

George Riddick Michael Kay E.J. Rogers Kenneth Johnson Derron McDuffie Carnell Williams Steven Beard Theo Duncan Justin Myler Julius Wormley Ramsey Henderson Cameron Williams Blake Matthews Kendall Noble

54 55 59 62 89 91 92 93 96 97 99

Ramon Bragg Tremondae Branch Joey Christine Joshua El Matthew Grant Tory Williams Cameron Jude De’Ante Williams Nico Washington Steven Bunce Josh Turner

6-3 6-1 6-3 5-11 6-3 6-4 6-4 6-2 6-4 6-3 6-0

240 285 300 220 245 290 290 280 310 290 315

R-Jr. R-Fr. Sr. So. So. R-Jr. R-Jr. Fr. So. Sr. R-Sr.

6-2 6-2 6-2 6-1 6-1 6-0 6-1 5-11 6-2 6-4 6-2 6-3 6-2

225 230 195 225 220 215 230 225 225 230 215 245 230

R-Jr. R-Jr. R-So. R-Sr. R-Sr. R-Fr. R-So. So. Sr. R-Jr. Fr. R-Sr. Gr.

6-0 5-9 6-1 6-1 5-9 6-0 6-2 6-3 5-9 5-11 5-11 5-10 5-11

195 180 200 180 170 190 210 200 170 190 190 175 180

R-So. R-So. Fr. R-Fr. So. R-Fr. Sr. R-Sr. R-Fr. Sr. So. R-Jr. So.

6-4 5-10 5-8

210 165 170

Jr. R-Sr. So.

6-1

185

R-Sr.

6-1 6-1

200 200

Fr. Fr.

Linebacker 9 20 24 28 34 44 46 50 53 56 57 58 90

Jamal Giddens Eric Hitch Denzel Coleman Onyemechi Anyaugo Corwin Hammond Devonte Norman A.J. Hamilton Justin Johnson Trent Porter Terrence Pugh Marcell Coke Hasan Craig Chad Battles

Defensive Back 8 13 17 19 21 25 26 30 32 36 37 43 45

Natturner Harris Marcus Center Shaquan Bailey Darrin Marrow Nick Taylor Keenan Lambert Ricardo Volcin DeVonte Reynolds Dionte Sullivan Marquis Cuffee Eric Turner Marcus Cooperwood DeMarta’ Johnson

SPECIAL TEAMS Kicker 1 15 38

Everett Goldberg Ryan Estep Ryan Lee

Punter 35

Troy Muenzer

Long Snapper 64 65

Rickey Foreman Alex Killam

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE


GEOGRAPHIC DISTRIBUTION

California (1)

New Jersey (1)

Manassas (1) – Blake Matthews

Long Beach – Troy Muenzer

Paterson – Derron McDuffie.

Martinsville (1) – Victor Hairston

.

Montross (1) – Kenneth Johnson

Colorado (1)

New York (1)

Mesa Ridge – Everett Goldberg

Brooklyn – A.J. Hamilton

Florida (9)

North Carolina (1)

Miami (4) – Shaun Corbett, Nico Flores,

Rocky Mount – Kendall Noble

Natturner Harris, Randy Maynes

North Miami Beach (1) – Ricardo Volcin Orlando (1) – Marcell Coke

Sunrise (1) – Matthew Grant Tallahassee (2) – Derrick Demps, Chris Walley

Georgia (1)

Newport News (3) – Chad Battles, Alex Killam, Josh Reamon Norfolk (3) – Jamal Giddens, Keenan Lambert, Ryan Lee Petersburg (1) – Keith Johnson Portsmouth (1) – Wilonte’ Roscoe Richmond (8) – Ramon Bragg, Steven Bunce,

Pennsylvania (3)

Marcus Center, Joshua El, Cameron Jude,

Darby (1) – James Lynch

Brendon Riddick, Dallas Simmons, Nick Taylor

Philadelphia (1) - Eric Turner

Rocky Mountain (1) – Hasan Craig

Pittsburgh (1) – Jarell Boyd-Ross

Stephens City (2) – Markeith Brisco, Joey Christine

Virginia (60)

Sterling (1) – Onyemechi Anyaugo Suffolk (4) – Bryant Bailey, Steven Beard, George Riddick,

Alexandria (1) – E.J. Rogers

Ashland (1) – Theo Duncan

Illinois (2)

Virginia Beach (6) – Marquis Cuffee, Eric Hitch,

Birdsrest (1) – Carnell Williams

Dre’Quez Lambert, Darrin Marrow, Devonte Norman,

Chicago (1) – Joe Hawkins

Burke (1) – Cameron Williams

Tory Williams

O’Fallon (1) – Dionte Sullivan

Charlottesville (1) – Takeem Hedgeman

Warsaw (1) – DeVonte Reynolds

Chesapeake (8) – Ryan Estep, Rickey Foreman,

Woodbridge (3) – Kelvin Lewis, Justin Myler,

Reggie Garrett, DeMarta’ Johnson, Dexter Merritt,

Terrence Pugh, Tevin White, Joey Wood

Atlanta – Denzel Coleman

Kentucky (1) Louisville – Corwin Hammond

Maryland (2) Capitol Heights (1) – Michael Kay Waldorf (1) – Nico Washington

DeAndre Sangster

Chesterfield (2) – Josh Alford, Josh Turner

Washington, D.C. (3)

Dendron (1) – Trent Porter

Ramsey Henderson, Joseph Holbrook, De’Ante Williams

Gainesville (1) – Seth Travers Glen Allen (1) – Holden Bass

Michigan (1)

Halifax (1) – Shaquan Bailey

Flint – Tremondae Branch

Hampton (4) – Marcus Cooperwood, Justin Johnson,

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE

Tyrece Shepherd

Calvin Roberts, Julius Wormley

27


SEASON OUTLOOK Stout Defense, Retooled Offense Lead NSU in 2011

Fifteen returning starters and more than 40 returning letterwinners will look to continue the recent upward trend for the Spartan football team in 2011. NSU has notched three winning seasons in the last four years, including the school’s first back-to-back winning records (7-4 in 2009, 6-5 in 2010) since moving to the Division I level over a decade ago. Led by a sturdy defense and a new-look offense, seventh-year NSU head coach Pete Adrian hopes the squad he has assembled is capable of challenging for the MEAC crown. Following is a position-by-position glance at the 2011 Spartans heading into preseason practice.

Quarterback

The Spartans should have excellent depth under center with the return of a pair of redshirt seniors, a Division I FBS transfer, and two promising freshmen in the fold. Senior Chris Walley headlines the returnees after starting all 11 games in 2010. Walley passed for 1,859 yards and 10 touchdowns last season while completing a single-season school record 61.4 percent of his passes. Walley finished the season ranked second in the conference in completion percentage and third in passing yards. “We look for Chris to pick up where he left off,” Adrian said. “He’s got a good game presence about him in that he never changes his demeanor.” Walley will be pushed for time, however, by Central Florida transfer Nico Flores. The redshirt sophomore from Miami, Fla., is an athletic signal-caller who complements Walley well. Flores was rated one of the nation’s top 35 quarterback prospects coming out of North Miami Beach High, but was eventually moved to receiver at UCF. “Nico is extremely athletic and has a very strong arm,” Adrian said. “He and Chris have gotten along great. They are competing with each other, but both know they will have the chance to play.” Redshirt senior Dexter Merritt also returns for NSU after serving as Walley’s backup last season. Injuries have hampered Merritt over the course of his career, but he provides a smart, poised presence off the NSU bench. Adrian also brings in two athletic high school quarterback recruits in Brendon Riddick (Richmond, Va.) and Wilonte’ Roscoe (Portsmouth, Va.). Riddick accounted for more than 2,500 yards of total offense and 36 touchdowns en route to All-Metro Player of the Year honors at Hermitage High School in Richmond. Roscoe is a dual-threat player from Churchland High School who could play a variety of positions in college thanks to his athleticism.

this season. “Hedgeman had a great spring,” Adrian said. “I think he’ll show a big improvement because his playing time will increase. He can expect to get 12-18 touches per game, sometimes more, whereas before he may have gotten 4-8.” Joining Hedgeman and Brisco in the backfield will be West Hills College (Calif.) transfer Randy Maynes (Miami, Fla.). Maynes (5-9, 170) is a quick runner with good speed who played prep football with Flores and NSU safety Ricardo Volcin at North Miami Beach High School. He ran for 1,500 yards and 16 touchdowns in his two years at West Hills. Also in the mix are three walk-ons: junior Calvin Roberts and freshmen Dre’Quez Lambert (Virginia Beach, Va.) and Dallas Simmons (Richmond, Va.). The Spartans also have the services of redshirt senior fullback Josh Alford at their disposal. Alford has been a valuable blocker, short-yardage runner and receiver out of the NSU backfield over the last three years and will be counted upon for more of the same in 2011.

Receiver

Heading into the 2010 season, NSU was relatively inexperienced at the receiver positions. The opposite is true this year, as the Spartans return their top two pass-catchers and have several other players who gained the first significant playing time of their careers last year. Leading the way are redshirt senior Victor Hairston and redshirt junior Reggie Garrett. Both have switched positions since coming to NSU, and both are now thriving in their new roles. Hairston, a former running back, led the Spartans and ranked second in the conference with 52 receptions last year. He also led the team with 580 receiving yards, and he hauled in two touchdown catches. Garrett began his career at NSU as a walk-on quarterback, only to make the move to wideout last year. He worked his way up the depth chart last year before bursting onto the scene with 30 catches, 436 yards and a team-high three TDs – all coming in the final five games of the year. Despite not catching a pass until the

Running Back

NSU must replace its all-time leading rusher in DeAngelo Branche, the conference’s leading rusher with 1,330 yards last season. The Spartans may not have one player who will replace all of Branche’s production, but NSU has several options with different styles and abilities. The most experienced options are redshirt juniors Takeem Hedgeman and Markeith Brisco. Hedgeman was Branche’s backup for the majority of 2010. Hedgeman finished second on the team with 220 rushing yards and a pair of touchdowns. Brisco had 141 rushing yards and one score in limited touches. Both will have the chance to carry a heavier load

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Reggie Garrett caught 30 passes for 436 yards for NSU last year - all in the final five games of the season.

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE


SEASON OUTLOOK seventh game of 2010, Garrett finished the season ranked 10th in the conference in receiving yards. “We look for more of the same from Victor and Reggie,” Adrian said. “They both were very consistent last season and we’ll need that from them again this year.” NSU often starts three or more wide receivers in its spread offense, so the Spartans will be searching to build depth at those positions. Sophomore speedster Kelvin Lewis returns after catching four passes for 78 yards (19.5 average) as a freshman last season. Sophomore Derrick Demps and junior Tyrece Shepherd both caught just one pass each last season, but saw increased playing time as the year progressed. Seniors Seth Travers and Josh Reamon will also be given the chance to earn more prominent roles. Adrian also brings in three new wideouts to add depth. Freshmen DeAndre Sangster, Holden Bass and Keith Johnson all possess good speed and will have the chance to see the field immediately. “At this point, we aren’t looking to redshirt any of the freshman receivers,” Adrian said. “All of them will be given the chance to earn playing time right away.” The Spartans only got 11 total receptions from their tight end position last year, but coaches expect that number to increase in 2011. Three-year starter Sherron Childress is gone, but NSU returns fifth-year senior Joseph Holbrook, who had two catches last year in limited action. The Spartans also moved Joe Hawkins, who played receiver most of last year, to tight end. Hawkins had nine catches last year, and coaches think his combination of size and speed will translate to the game better at tight end. The Spartans also welcome in freshmen James Lynch (Darby, Pa.), Tevin White (Chesapeake, Va.) and Joey Wood (Chesapeake, Va.) to that position and think they could also factor in.

Offensive Line

The Spartans must replace four players who accounted for 41 starts last year along their offensive line in guards Calton Ford and Markeece Preston, center William Falakiseni and tackle Ryan Hathaway. They helped NSU lead the MEAC in fewest sacks allowed last season (12) and rank third in the conference in total offense each of the last two years. “Offensive line is probably the biggest question mark we have going into preseason camp,” Adrian said. “But we had several players step up this spring, and with (offensive line coach Rod) Holder, I know we’ll have a solid group.” The Spartans do return two key holdovers from last year’s line, led by two-time All-MEAC left tackle Kendall Noble. Now a redshirt senior, Noble has started 32 consecutive games and was a second-team all-conference pick last year. Junior Michael Kay is NSU’s most experienced returning lineman outside of Noble. Kay started the final three games of the year at left guard, but has earned the starting center spot heading into the 2011 season. Redshirt juniors Blake Matthews, Theo Duncan and Kenneth Johnson have served as reserves throughout their careers at NSU, but all will be given the chance to earn starting spots this season – Johnson at right tackle, and Duncan and Matthews at the guard positions. All three worked with the first-team line during spring practice and drew praise from the coaching staff for

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE

Michael Kay started three games last year at left guard and is the Spartans’ projected starter at center this year.

their improvement. Julius Wormley, E.J. Rogers and Justin Myler all sat out the 2010 season but will be given the chance to crack the two-deep along the line this fall. Coaches are also excited about the potential of freshman recruits George Riddick (Suffolk, Va.) and Ramsey Henderson (Washington, D.C.).

Defensive Line

NSU is well-stocked with experienced defensive linemen. It all starts with redshirt senior nose guard Josh Turner, a two-time All-MEAC selection who tied for the team-lead with 12.0 tackles for loss last season. Turner’s strength and quickness in the middle of the line are a key factor in the success of the Spartans’ 3-4 scheme. Senior Joey Christine flanks Turner at one of the two defensive tackle spots. Christine started all 11 games last season and was in on 21 tackles, 2.5 for loss. NSU lost its other starting tackle, Ray Jennings (12.0 TFL, team-high 5.0 sacks), but the Spartans have no shortage of bodies to man his position and add quality depth. Senior Steven Bunce has played in 25 games in his first three years. He appeared in just five games last season due to a nagging knee injury. Sophomore Matthew Grant played in six games as a true freshman last season and flashed good athleticism. Also back in the mix is redshirt junior Tory Williams. The 6-4, 290-pound Williams missed last season due to surgery to correct a medical problem, but should also be at full strength for the 2011 season. Williams made 17 tackles, 4.0 for loss, as a backup during his redshirt freshman season of 2009. Turner will be backed up by sophomore Nico Washington, who played in all 11 games last year as a true freshman. Redshirt freshman Tremondae Branch is also in the mix. The Spartans are also looking for big things from Michigan State transfer Cameron Jude (Richmond, Va.). A former high school teammate of Turner, Jude sat out last season after transferring and will have two years of eligibility remaining. Continued on page 30

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SEASON OUTLOOK Continued from page 29 The Spartans also welcome freshman De’Ante Williams (Washington, D.C.), who played both sides of the line at St. Johns College High School. “We feel like we have nine linemen who can all contribute, and that is key in the defensive schemes we run,” Adrian said.

Linebacker

Seven of last season’s top nine linebackers return to the Spartan defense in 2011, including all four starters from the end of the 2010 campaign. The lengthy list of returnees includes the team’s leading tackler in redshirt senior Corwin Hammond. Hammond registered 76 total tackles, 11.0 for loss and 4.5 sacks in 2010. That was enough to earn him 2011 preseason recognition for the FCS Linebacker of the Year Award. His partner at the inside linebacker positions is also back in the form of redshirt senior Onyemechi Anyaugo. Anyaugo started the final five games of 2010 after a season-ending knee injury to All-MEAC linebacker Anthony Taylor. Anyaugo performed admirably, finishing third on the squad with 47 tackles, 3.5 for loss. Hammond and Anyaugo will be backed up by junior Eric Hitch and senior Trent Porter, who both saw increased playing time as the season progressed. “I think both Corwin and “Amechi” will have a chance to earn All-MEAC honors this season,” Adrian said. “I thought both were very solid last year and had great spring practices.” The Spartans’ top three outside linebackers all return: senior Hasan Craig and juniors Terrence Pugh and Jamal Giddens. Craig and Pugh both started all 11 games last season, with Craig making 29 tackles and Pugh 27 (including 6.5 TFL). Giddens, who came off the bench in 2010 in his first year after transferring from Liberty, will also push for a starting position after a standout spring. He made 17 tackles (2.5 TFL) last year. Also adding depth to the outside linebacker position this season is Syracuse transfer Chad Battles. Battles, a Newport News native, will be playing this season as a graduate student at NSU. He had one year of eligibility remaining at the time of his graduation from Syracuse in the spring, opening the door for his transfer.

Junior Jamal Giddens is part of a deep linebacking corps for the Spar tans this season.

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“We’ll go two-deep with very good players at the outside linebacker positions,” Adrian said. “In all, our front seven on defense is shaping up to be very good and very deep.”

Defensive Back

The Spartan secondary will be anchored by its two returning senior starters at the safety positions, free safety DeVonte Reynolds and strong safety Ricardo Volcin. Both started all 11 games at their respective positions last year. Reynolds was second on the team with 60 total tackles, while Volcin was fifth on the team with 43 stops, including 4.0 for loss and one interception. Reynolds and Volcin will also help mentor redshirt freshmen Darrin Marrow and Keenan Lambert, the heirs apparent to the safety positions. Adrian says that both have the ability to play either safety position. Both possess ideal athleticism at safety. NSU will debut two new starting cornerbacks in 2011 after the departure of Jamie Short and Dante Barnes. Short started 38 games in his four-year career, while Barnes started 14 times in his two years at NSU. The Spartans should have six players jockey for time at cornerback: senior Marquis Cuffee, redshirt junior Marcus Cooperwood, sophomores Marcus Center, Natturner Harris and Nick Taylor, and redshirt freshman Dionte Sullivan. Cuffee has mostly been a special teams player and reserve during his career. Cooperwood was a second-string corner in 2009 before missing last year with a knee injury. Harris, meanwhile, made one start in place of Barnes last year. Both he and Center had 13 tackles and two pass breakups, Taylor had an interception off the bench, and Sullivan impressed on the scout team. “We lose both starters at corner, but Center and Harris played a good deal last season off the bench. Cooperwood did the same in 2009,” Adrian said. “So inexperience isn’t much of an excuse. As usual, we look to rotate a number of players at those spots.”

Special Teams

The Spartans will feature a pair of seniors in their kicking game in punter Troy Muenzer and placekicker Ryan Estep. Muenzer punted 48 times for a 36.6-yard average in 2010, while Estep made 11 field goals and converted on 26 of 29 extra points. Muenzer will be backed up by quarterback Chris Walley. Walley also served as the second-team punter last season, though he never attempted a punt in a game. Estep will have competition from junior college transfer Everett Goldberg (Mesa Ridge, Colo.) and sophomore Ryan Lee. Estep attempted every field goal and extra point last season, while Lee was the primary kickoff man. Goldberg, who is transferring from the College of the Canyons in California, could challenge for time in both areas this year. “I thought (Estep) was very consistent, especially later in the year last season,” Adrian says. “Adding Goldberg will give us more depth and competition there.” The Spartans must find a new long snapper and return specialists this season. NSU lost three-year return man Dwight Fluker-Berry and long snappers Stephen Coffin, Marcus Dodson and Aaron Palmer from last year’s team. Adrian will fill those spots after competition during preseason camp. A number of players could compete for the return specialist positions, while the long snapper duties figure to fall to two freshmen, Ricky Foreman (Chesapeake, Va.) and Alex Killam (Newport News, Va.).

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE


TWO-DEEP CHART Offense WR 18 81

Reggie Garrett (6-3, 195, R-Jr.) Kelvin Lewis (5-9, 175, R-So.)

Defense LT 59 89

Joey Christine (6-3, 300, Sr.) Matthew Grant (6-3, 245, So.)

LT

78 73

Kendall Noble (6-4, 290, R-Sr.) Julius Wormley (6-5, 285, R-Fr.)

NG 99 96

Josh Turner (6-0, 315, R-Sr.) Nico Washington (6-4, 310, So.)

LG

70 71

Theo Duncan (6-4, 285, R-Jr.) Justin Myler (6-4, 310, So.)

RT

91 92

Tory Williams (6-4, 290, R-Jr.) Cameron Jude (6-4, 290, R-Jr.)

C

52 51

Michael Kay (6-2, 310, R-Jr.) George Riddick (6-2, 290, Fr.)

58 90

Hasan Craig (6-2, 245, R-Sr.) Chad Battles (6-3, 240, Gr.).

28 20

Onyemechi Anyaugo (6-1, 225, R-Sr.) Eric Hitch (6-2, 230, R-Jr.)

34 53

Corwin Hammond (6-1, 220, R-Sr.) Trent Porter (6-3, 225, Sr.)

RG 77 60

Blake Matthews (6-4, 315, R-Jr.) E.J. Rogers (6-3, 325, R-Fr.)

OLB ILB

RT

61 73

Kenneth Johnson (6-3, 275, R-Jr.) Julius Wormley (6-5, 285, R-Fr.)

ILB

TE

87 80

Joseph Holbrook (6-2, 240, R-Sr.) Joe Hawkins (6-3, 225, Jr.)

OLB 9 56

Jamal Giddens (6-2, 225, R-Jr.) Terrence Pugh (6-4, 230, R-Jr.)

WR 23 84

Victor Hairston (5-10, 185, R-Sr.) Seth Travers (6-0, 175, Sr.)

CB 8 43

Natturner Harris (6-0, 195, R-So.) Marcus Cooperwood (5-10, 175, R-Jr.)

WR QB

83 47

Derrick Demps (5-11, 180, R-So.) Tyrece Shepherd (6-1, 185, Jr.)

SS

26 25

Ricardo Volcin (6-2, 210, Sr.) Keenan Lambert (6-0, 190, R-Fr.)

5 6

Chris Walley (6-2, 200, R-Sr.) Nico Flores (6-2, 210, R-So.)

FS

30 19

DeVonte Reynolds (6-3, 200, R-Sr.) Darrin Marrow (6-1, 180, R-Fr.)

RB 2 29

Takeem Hedgeman (5-10, 195, R-Jr.) Markeith Brisco (6-0, 205, R-Jr.)

CB

37 36

Marcus Center (5-9, 180, R-So.) Marquis Cuffee (5-11, 190, Sr.)

FB/H 39

Josh Alford (5-10, 250, R-Jr.)

PK

SPECIAL TEAMS 15 Ryan Estep (5-10, 165, R-Sr.) 1 Everett Goldberg (6-4, 210, Jr.)

KO

1 38

P

35 Troy Muenzer (6-1, 185, R-Sr.) 5 Chris Walley (6-2, 200, R-Sr.)

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE

Everett Goldberg (6-4, 210, Jr.) Ryan Lee (5-8, 170, So.)

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RETURNING PLAYERS JOSH ALFORD

Onyemechi Anyaugo

RS-SEnior | rB 5-10 | 250 Chesterfield, Va./Manchester HS

RS-SEnior | LB 6-1 | 225 Sterling, Va./Park View HS

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2010 (Junior): Appeared in all 11 games…ran one time for three years during the season, vs. Morgan State…made three catches for 18 yards with a long of 15 against Florida A&M. 2009 (Sophomore): Appeared in all 11 games as the Spartans’ primary fullback…ran six times for 11 yards on the year with a pair of 1-yard rushing touchdowns…scored his first career TD at Florida A&M, then had another 1-yard TD run a week later against Howard… also caught two passes for 18 yards and returned two kickoffs for 19 yards during the season. 2008 (Freshman): Played in all 12 games…saw time as a backup fullback and on special teams… gained six yards on his first career carry, against Winston-Salem State, in the final game of the year. 2007 (Redshirt): Redshirted. High School: A three-year letterman…first-team All-Dominion District as a senior on offense and defense… honorable mention All-Central Region and All-Metro…rushed for nearly 700 yards as a senior…was an honorable mention all-district selection at defensive end as a junior…high school teammates with current Spartan Josh Turner. Personal: Joshua Logan Alford was born on June 27, 1989…son of Gary and Tammy Alford…majoring in exercise science. Alford’s Career Rushing Statistics Year 2008 2009 2010 Totals

GP 12 11 11 34

Att 1 6 1 8

Yds 6 11 3 20

Avg 6.0 1.8 3.0 2.5

Alford’s Career RECEIVING Statistics Year 2008 2009 2010 Totals

GP 12 11 11 34

Rec 0 2 3 5

Yds 0 18 18 36

Alford’s Career Highs

Rushes: 2 (vs. Howard, 10-31-09) Yards: 6 (vs. WSSU, 11-22-08) TD: 1 (2x, last vs. Howard, 10-31-09) Long Rush: 6 (vs. WSSU, 11-22-08) Rec.: 1 (many times) Long Rec.: 15 (vs. FAMU, 10-23-10)

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Avg 0.0 9.0 6.0 7.2

TD Lg 0 6 2 5 0 3 2 6

Avg/G 0.5 1.0 0.3 0.6

TD Lg 0 0 0 9 0 15 0 15

Avg/G 0.0 1.6 1.6 1.1

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2010 (Junior): Played in all 11 games and started the last five at inside linebacker…was the team’s third-leading tackler with 47 total stops…recorded 1.5 tackles for loss and two quarterback pressures in the win over Virginia State…had seven tackles in games against Hampton and Florida A&M…added three QB hurries against Hampton… made a career-high eight tackles, seven of the solo variety, in the win over Morgan State…forced a fumble which led to an Delaware State turnover in the Spartans’ win over the Hornets. 2009 (Sophomore): Emerged as one of NSU’s key defenders off the bench…played in all 11 contests and started twice, against Hampton and Howard…credited with 35 tackles, 2.5 for loss, including one sack…forced two fumbles and deflected one pass…totaled five QB hurries…forced a fumble which led to a Virginia State turnover in the season opener…had five tackles, one QB pressure and one pass breakup in his first career start, against Hampton…posted a season-high seven tackles vs. Howard…forced another fumble at Morgan State…recorded his first career sack the following week at Delaware State. 2008 (Freshman): Appeared in six games, mostly on special teams…had one solo tackle in the opener against Virginia State. 2007 (Redshirt): Redshirted. High School: First-team All-Dulles District and All-Region II linebacker as a senior…an honorable mention Virginia High School Coaches Association (VHSCA) allstate Group AA pick…also made first-team all-district at receiver…accounted for at least one TD passing, rushing, receiving and on special teams as a senior…lettered three years in football and basketball. Personal: Onyemechi Obinna Anyaugo was born on January 16, 1989…son of Georgeritz and Juliana Anyaugo…majoring in health fitness. Anyaugo’s Career Defensive Statistics Year GP 2008 6 2009 11 2010 11 Totals 28

UT 1 19 27 47

AT 0 16 20 36

TT TFL-Yds Sck-Yds Int-Yds PD FF FR-Yds 1 0.0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0-0 35 2.5-15 1.0-10 0-0 1 2 0-0 47 3.5-10 1.5-6 0-0 3 1 0-0 83 6.0-25 2.5-16 0-0 4 3 0-0

Anyaugo’s Career Highs

Tackles: 8 (vs. Morgan State, 11-6-10) TFL: 1.5 (vs. Virginia State, 9-18-10) Sacks: 1.0 (2x, last vs. Howard, 10-30-10) FF: 1 (3x, last vs. Delaware State, 11-13-10)

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE


RETURNING PLAYERS Brisco’s Career Receiving Statistics

TREMONDAE BRANCH RS-FRESHMAN | DL 6-1 | 285 Flint, Mich./Carman-Ainsworth HS

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2010 (Redshirt): Redshirted. High School: A first-team All-Big 9 selection as a senior…also selected to the all-state Division 2 team, the second-largest in Michigan…lettered four years in football and track and two in basketball…was an all-state performer throwing the shot put and discus his junior year. Personal: Tremondae A. Branch was born on Dec. 27, 1991…son of Anthony and Tawana Branch…plans to major in kinesiology.

Year 2009 2010 Totals

GP 11 9 20

Rec 0 4 4

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2010 (Sophomore): Appeared in nine games…finished fourth on the team in rushing with 141 yards on just 24 carries (5.9 average)…had three rushes for 38 yards against N.C. A&T, including a career-long 23-yard run…posted career highs with 14 carries for 86 yards and his first career TD against Virginia State…also had two catches for 18 yards to finish that game with a careerbest 104 all-purpose yards. 2009 (Freshman): Saw time in all 11 games…was a key special teams player and reserve running back…ran eight times for 40 yards on the season (5.0 average)… rushed three times for a season-best 21 yards in the opener against Virginia State…had three carries for seven yards against Hampton and two for 12 yards vs. Howard. 2008 (Redshirt): Redshirted the season. High School: A three-year varsity letterwinner at Sherando…a first-team All-Northwestern District, All-Region II and second-team all-state Group AA running back as a senior… rushed 221 times for 1,726 yards and 26 touchdowns, averaging 7.8 yards per carry…led Sherando to the state Division 4 title game…also all-district as a kick returner and intercepted four passes on defense…high school teammates with fellow Spartan Joey Christine. Personal: Markeith Dabney Brisco was born on January 17, 1990…son of Merwyn and Deborah Brisco…majoring in health fitness. Brisco’s Career Rushing Statistics Year 2009 2010 Totals

GP 11 9 20

Att 8 24 32

Yds 40 141 181

Avg 5.0 5.9 5.7

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE

TD Lg 0 9 1 23 1 23

Avg 0.0 6.0 6.0

TD Lg 0 0 0 14 0 14

Avg/G 0.0 2.7 1.2

Brisco’s Career Highs

Rushes: 14 (2x, last vs. Hampton, 10-17-09) Yards: 86 (vs. Virginia State, 9-5-09) Long Rush: 23 (vs. N.C. A&T, 9-11-10) TD: 1 (vs. Virginia State, 9-18-10) Rec.: 2 (vs. Virginia State, 9-18-10) Rec. Yards: 18 (vs. Virginia State, 9-18-10) Long Rec.: 14 (vs. Virginia State, 9-18-10)

STEVEN BUNCE Senior | DL 6-3 | 290 Richmond, Va./Henrico HS

MARKEITH BRISCO RS-JUnior | RB 6-0 | 205 Stephens City, Va./Sherando HS

Yds 0 24 24

97

2010 (Junior): Played in five games…made three tackles on the season…did not play the final six games due to a knee injury. 2009 (Sophomore): Saw action in nine games and made six tackles…had two tackles in a game twice, against N.C. A&T and against Morgan State…posted half a tackle for loss at MSU…deflected a pass against VSU. 2008 (Freshman): Played in 11 games…had two tackles on the season…had one solo stop at William & Mary and one assist at Hampton. High School: Lettered three years in football and track… a three-year starter and team captain…was an honorable mention All-Capital District pick in football as a senior…posted 38 tackles and 12 sacks… was second-team all-district as a junior after recording another 12 sacks…placed second in the district in the shot put as a senior. Personal: Steven Bunce was born on December 4, 1990…son of Felita Hines-Coles…majoring in sociology. Bunce’s Career Defensive Statistics

Year GP UT AT TT TFL-Yds Sck-Yds Int-Yds PD FF FR-Yds

2008 11 2009 9 2010 5 Totals 25

1 3 1 5

1 2 3 6 2 3 6 11

0.0-0 0.5-1 0.0-0 0.5-1

0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0

0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0

0 1 0 1

0 0 0 0

0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0

Bunce’s Career Highs

Tackles: 2 (2x, last vs. Morgan State, 11-7-09) TFL: 0.5 (vs. Morgan State, 11-7-09) PD: 1 (vs. Virginia State, 9-5-09)

Avg/G 3.7 15.7 9.1

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RETURNING PLAYERS marcus center RS-Sophomore | DB 5-9 | 180 Richmond, Va./Deep Run HS

13

2010 (Freshman): Played in all 11 games…saw time as a backup cornerback and on special teams coverage units…made 13 tackles for the year and broke up two passes…both pass breakups came in the Virginia State win…had a career-high three tackles in wins over Morgan State and Delaware State. 2009 (Redshirt): Redshirted the season. High School: A two-year letterwinner…tallied 50 tackles and 12 pass breakups as a senior, when he was an honorable mention All-Metro selection by the Touchdown Club of Richmond and the Richmond Times Dispatch…also a Colonial District All-Academic Team member. Personal: Marcus Alexander Center was born on Aug. 13, 1991…son of Robert and Wanda Center…majoring in business management. CENTER’s Career Defensive Statistics

Year GP UT AT TT TFL-Yds Sck-Yds Int-Yds PD FF FR-Yds 2010 11 7 6 13 0.0-0 0-0 0-0 2 0 0-0 Totals 11 7 6 13 0.0-0 0-0 0-0 2 0 0-0

half for a loss, at Hampton…had two tackles, one for a loss, at Howard…recorded a season-high three stops against Delaware State…was credited with one quarterback hurry at WSSU. High School: A three-year letterwinner at Sherando…a first team all-state selection by the Virginia High School Coaches Association (VHSCA) on the offensive line and second team at defensive line… also first-team all-state (OL) by The Associated Press and Virginiapreps.com… also a two-way first-team All-Northwestern District pick and first-team All-Met by The Washington Post… rated the No. 53 recruit in the state according to The Roanoke Times…recorded 70 tackles, 13 tackles for loss, and 4.5 sacks on defense as a senior. Personal: Joseph Michael Christine was born on February 25, 1989…son of Michael Christine and Kathleen Walker…majoring in architectural drafting. CHRISTINE’s Career Defensive Statistics Year GP 2008 7 2009 11 2010 11 Totals 29

UT 2 7 11 20

AT 6 12 10 28

TT TFL-Yds Sck-Yds Int-Yds PD FF FR-Yds 8 1.5-2 0.0-0 0-0 0 0 0-0 19 2.0-4 0.0-0 0-0 0 0 0-0 21 2.5-11 1.0-7 0-0 0 0 0-0 48 6.0-17 1.0-7 0-0 0 0 0-0

CHRISTINE’s Career Highs

Tackles: 4 (2x, last vs. Bethune-Cookman, 9-25-10) TFL: 1.5 (vs. Florida A&M, 10-24-09) Sacks: 1.0 (vs. Bethune-Cookman, 9-25-10)

Denzel Coleman

CENTER’s Career Highs

RS-Sophomore | LB 6-2 | 195 Atlanta, Ga./Mays HS

Tackles: 3 (2x, last vs. Delaware State, 11-13-10) PD: 2 (vs. Virginia State, 9-18-10)

24

JOEY CHRISTINE SEnior | DL 6-3 | 300 Stephens City, Va./Sherando HS

59

2010 (Junior): Started all 11 games at defensive tackle…was credited with 21 tackles, 2.5 for lost yardage…made a season-best four tackles and registered his first collegiate sack at Bethune Cookman…the four tackles matched a career high for Christine…made three tackles against South Carolina State, Morgan State and Delaware State…recorded two QB hurries in the DSU victory. 2009 (Sophomore): Participated in every game, usually as the Spartans’ first defensive line reserve…was in on 19 tackles, two for a loss…registered a career-best four stops, 1.5 for loss, at Florida A&M…had three tackles against BethuneCookman, William & Mary and Morgan State. 2008 (Freshman): Appeared in seven games…got his first career start in the finale against Winston-Salem State…finished the year with eight tackles (two solo), including 1.5 for loss…posted two tackles,

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2010 (Freshman): Played in all 11 contests…made eight tackles on the season, including a career-high five in the season-opener at Rutgers…also returned a kickoff 16 yards vs. Rutgers…played special teams and also saw some time as a reserve safety. 2009 (Redshirt): Redshirted the season. High School: A four-year letterwinner…tallied 71 tackles, two interceptions, four pass breakups, three fumble recoveries, two forced fumbles and two sacks as a senior…was an all-city selection and an honorable mention all-region pick as a senior…also lettered two years as a sprinter on the track team. Personal: Denzel Ja’Vaughn Coleman was born on July 19, 1991…son of Duane Coleman and Jacqueline Hopkins…majoring in marketing. COLEMAN’s Career Defensive Statistics

Year GP UT AT TT TFL-Yds Sck-Yds Int-Yds PD FF FR-Yds 2010 11 6 2 8 0.0-0 0.0-0 0-0 0 0 0-0 Totals 11 6 2 8 0.0-0 0.0-0 0-0 0 0 0-0

COLEMAN’s Career Highs Tackles: 5 (vs. Rutgers, 9-2-11)

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE


RETURNING PLAYERS marcus cooperwood RS-JUNIOR | DB 5-10 | 175 Hampton, Va./Bethel HS

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2010 (Redshirt): Redshirted the year while recovering from knee surgery. 2009 (Sophomore): Played in four games off the bench and on special teams… snared his first career interception in the opener against Virginia State…had two tackles against both Bethune-Cookman and William & Mary…deflected two passes for the year, one vs. N.C. A&T and one vs. B-CU… suffered a season-ending knee injury in practice prior to the S.C. State game. 2008 (Freshman): Played in every game as a true freshman…was used on special teams and as a reserve cornerback…ended the year with nine total tackles, seven of them solo…had two solo tackles and his first career pass breakup at Howard…also had two tackles the next week, vs. Morgan State. High School: Lettered two years in football and one in basketball…first-team All-Peninsula District at defensive back and wide receiver as a senior…also first-team Daily Press All-Star and second-team all-state Group AAA on defense…intercepted 11 passes as a senior, returning five for touchdowns…also caught 21 passes for 510 yards and four scores…helped Bethel to a 10-2 record and a berth in the Eastern Region Division 6 semifinals. Personal: Marcus A. Cooperwood was born on May 30, 1990…son of Don and Katrina Cooperwood…majoring in sociology. COOPERWOOD’s Career Defensive Statistics Year GP 2008 12 2009 4 Totals 16

UT AT TT TFL-Yds Sck-Yds Int-Yds PD FF FR-Yds 7 2 9 0.0-0 0.0-0 0-0 1 0 0-0 3 2 5 0.0-0 0.0-0 1-3 2 0 0-0 10 4 14 0.0-0 0.0-0 1-3 3 0 0-0

COOPERWOOD’s Career Highs

Tackles: 2 (4x, last vs. Bethune-Cookman, 9-26-09) INT: 1 (vs. Virginia State, 9-5-09) PD: 1 (3x, last vs. Bethune-Cookman, 9-26-09)

deflected one pass…tied for second in the MEAC with three fumble recoveries…made six tackles – five solo – and recovered a fumble at South Carolina State…also recovered a fumble against both Hampton and Florida A&M…had his best statistical performance of the year at Howard, making a career-high eight tackles…also had 1.5 tackles for loss and a pass breakup in the win against the Bison…also credited with four QB pressures, with one in each of the last three games of the year...named to the NSU and MEAC Commissioner’s All-Academic Teams. 2009 (Redshirt): Played in three games before tearing his ACL during the William & Mary game…started the season-opener…made one tackle in each game he played in…assisted on a sack at N.C. A&T. 2008 (Sophomore): Appeared in all 12 games and started six at outside linebacker…made 24 tackles, 18 solo…tied for second on the squad with 8.5 tackles for loss…tied for first on the team with two forced fumbles, and led the team with six quarterback hurries…also posted 2.5 sacks and had a fumble return for a touchdown…was credited with three quarterback hurries in the opening win over Virginia State…tallied his first sack of the season at William & Mary…had two tackles for loss and a forced fumble in his first career start, at S.C. State…posted one tackle for loss and a QB hurry at Howard…scored his first career touchdown the next week against Morgan State, returning a fumble 34 yards…enjoyed the best game of his career in the finale at Winston-Salem State…had a season-high seven tackles, six solo, and 4.5 for loss against the Rams…had 1.5 sacks and also forced a fumble in that game…named to the NSU and MEAC Commissioner’s All-Academic Teams. 2007 (Freshman): Played in nine games and made nine tackles…a good edge pass rusher, Craig made two tackles for loss, including 1.5 sacks, in his limited playing time…had half a sack against Bethune-Cookman, North Carolina A&T and Hampton…had a season-high three tackles, one for loss, against B-CU…also credited with one quarterback hurry against Virginia State. High School: A first-team All-Western Valley District and Roanoke Times All-Timesland defensive end as a senior…recorded 50 solo tackles, 14 tackles for loss, 12 sacks, four forced fumbles, three fumble recoveries and one interception in his final prep year…also scored one defensive TD…tallied six sacks and was a second-team all-district selection as a junior. Personal: Hasan Dominique Craig was born on Nov. 19, 1988…son of Michael Trotter and Sandra Craig…majoring in electronic technology. CRAIG’s Career Defensive Statistics

hasan craig RS-SENIOR | LB 6-3 | 245 Rocky Mountain, Va./ Franklin County HS

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2010 (Junior): Started all 11 games at outside linebacker…made 29 total tackles, 3.0 coming behind the line of scrimmage…

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE

Year GP 2007 9 2008 12 2009 3 2010 11 Totals 35

UT 3 18 1 11 33

AT 6 6 2 18 32

TT TFL-Yds Sck-Yds Int-Yds PD FF FR-Yds 9 2.0-12 1.5-11 0-0 0 0 0-0 24 8.5-30 2.5-7 0-0 0 2 1-34 3 0.5-4 0.5-4 0-0 0 0 0-0 29 3.0-13 0.5-9 0-0 1 0 3-0 65 14.0-59 5.0-31 0-0 1 2 4-34

CRAIG’s Career Highs

Tackles: 8 (vs. Howard, 10-30-10) TFL: 4.5 (vs. WSSU, 11-22-08) Sacks: 1.5 (vs. WSSU, 11-22-08) FF: 1 (2x, last vs. WSSU, 11-22-08) FR: 1 (4x, last vs. Florida A&M, 10-23-10) PD: 1 (vs. Howard, 10-30-10)

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RETURNING PLAYERS marQUIS CUFFEE SENIOR | DB 5-11 | 190 Virginia Beach, Va./Kellam HS

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2010 (Junior): Another of NSU’s key special teams contributors, Cuffee played in every game…made nine tackles on the year, with two each coming against Rutgers, Morgan State and Savannah State…also saw some action as a backup cornerback. 2009 (Sophomore): Appeared in four games, on both special teams and at cornerback…was in on four tackles for the year, two against Virginia State… suffered a season-ending elbow injury in practice prior to the S.C. State game. 2008 (Freshman): Saw action in eight games…played on special teams coverage units and some as a reserve defensive back…had five total tackles, three solo, on the year…forced a fumble on special teams at Bethune-Cookman…caught a 29-yard pass for a first down on a fake punt against Delaware State. High School: Named secondteam All-Beach District as a senior…posted approximately 60 tackles to go with two interceptions as a senior…also played some quarterback and running back on offense, averaging 12 yards per carry. Personal: Marquis Tyre Cuffee…born February 28, 1990…son of Shawn Cuffee…majoring in biology. CUFFEE’s Career Defensive Statistics Year GP 2008 8 2009 4 2010 11 Totals 23

UT 3 3 5 11

AT TT TFL-Yds Sck-Yds Int-Yds PD FF FR-Yds 2 5 0.0-0 0.0-0 0-0 0 1 0-0 1 4 0.0-0 0.0-0 0-0 0 0 0-0 4 9 0.0-0 0.0-0 0-0 0 0 0-0 7 18 0.0-0 0.0-0 0-0 0 1 0-0

CUFFEE’s Career Highs

Tackles: 2 (5x, last vs. Savannah State, 11-20-10) FF: 1 (vs. Bethune-Cookman, 9-27-08)

derrick demps RS-SOPHOMORE | WR 5-11 | 180 Tallahassee, Fla./Florida HS

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All-Big Bend selection…also selected to play in the North/South Florida-Georgia Border War all-star game… helped his team advance to the state playoff semifinals each of his final two years…also was an all-state selection in track (4x400 and 4x800 relay teams). Personal: Derrick J. Demps was born on Aug. 16, 1991…son of Angelia and Darryl Demps Sr…majoring in business management with a minor in building construction. DEMPS’ Career Receiving Statistics Year 2010 Totals

GP 9 9

Rec 1 1

Yds -3 -3

Avg -3.0 -3.0

TD Lg 0 0 0 0

Avg/G -0.3 -0.3

Demps’ Career Highs

Rec.: 1 (vs. Bethune-Cookman, 9-25-10) Rec. Yards: -3 (vs. Bethune-Cookman, 9-25-10) Long Rec.: -3 (vs. Bethune-Cookman, 9-25-10)

theo duncan RS-JUNIOR | OL 6-4 | 285 Ashland, Va./Patrick Henry HS

70

2010 (Sophomore): Played in three games off the bench as reserve lineman (Virginia State, Hampton, Howard)…played a season-high six snaps against Howard…placed third in the shot put at the MEAC Indoor Championship while competing for the NSU men’s track team...finished fourth in the shot put at the MEAC Outdoor Championship with a personal-best throw of 51 feet. 2009 (Freshman): Appeared in five games as a reserve lineman…played a season-high six snaps against Howard…competed for the NSU track & field team for the second straight year during the spring 2010 semester…placed sixth in the shot put at the 2010 MEAC Indoor Championship. 2008 (Redshirt): Redshirted the football season…threw the shot put for the men’s track team…placed seventh at the conference indoor track meet and eighth at the outdoor meet. High School: A three-year starter along the offensive line…named to the All-Colonial District team as a junior and senior…also all-district, all-region and all-state in the shot put. Personal: Theophilus Simeon Duncan was born on May 16, 1989…son of Ronnie and Pamela Duncan…majoring in marketing.

2010 (Freshman): Appeared in nine games off the NSU bench… added depth at wide receiver…made his first career catch at Bethune-Cookman, which lost three yards. 2009 (Redshirt): Redshirted the season. High School: Honorable mention all-state Class 2B as a senior…caught 39 passes for 698 yards and eight touchdowns…also was a first-team all-district and second-team

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2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE


RETURNING PLAYERS ESTEP’S Career KICKING Statistics

JOSHUA EL RS-SOPHOMORE | DL 5-11 | 220 Richmond, Va./Hermitage HS

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Year 2008 2009 2010 Totals

GP 11 11 11 33

FG Lg 0-0 0 0-0 0 11-16 45 11-16 45

RS-SENIOR | K 5-10 | 165 Chesapeake, Va./Hickory HS

15

2010 (Junior): Ranked second on the team and seventh in the MEAC in scoring, with 59 points…was third among MEAC kickers in both scoring and field goals made (11)…was 11-of-16 on field goal attempts and 26-of-29 on extra points…made three field goals of over 40 yards in length, with a collegiate-long of 45 yards twice (vs. both South Carolina State and Morgan State)…made both of his field goal tries against Florida A&M, including a 41-yarder…hit a career-high three field goals against Morgan State…hit all of his career-high six extra point tries at Savannah State…made nine of his last 11 field goal attempts for the season…connected on his final 16 extra points of the season. 2009 (Sophomore): Served as NSU’s holder for extra points and field goals and was secondstring kicker…shared kickoff duties with Justin Castellat during the Florida A&M and Morgan State games…kicked off three times in both games. 2008 (Freshman): Served as the holder for extra points and field goals for the final 10 games of the year…was successful on all three of his extra point attempts for the year, going 2-for-2 vs. Virginia State and 1-for-1 vs. Florida A&M. 2007 (Redshirt): Redshirted. High School: Named first-team All-Southeastern District, All-Eastern Region and All-Tidewater as a junior and a senior…made nine field goals as a senior and eight as a junior… scored 59 points and had eight touchbacks as a senior…career totals were 21 field goals and 145 points. Personal: Ryan Cutler Estep…born July 18, 1988…son of Neale and Kathy Estep…majoring in physical education.

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE

PTS 3 0 59 62

ESTEP’s Career Highs

Field Goals: 3 (vs. Morgan State, 11-6-10) XP: 6 (vs. Savannah State, 11-20-10) Long FG: 45 (2x, last vs. Morgan State, 11-6-10)

2010 (Freshman): Played in five games, seeing most of his time on special teams. 2009 (Redshirt): Walked onto the team during the 2009-10 school year. High School: Lettered two years in football, wrestling and track…a second-team all-district pick in football as a senior after tallying nine sacks…regional wrestling champion for his weight class…named the wrestling team’s MVP and given the Coach’s Award…an honor-roll student. Personal: Joshua A. El was born on July 28, 1991…son of James and Roberta El…majoring in kinesiotherapy.

Ryan Estep

PAT 3-3 0-0 26-29 29-32

Reggie garrett RS-JUNIOR | WR 6-3 | 195 Chesapeake, Va./Indian River HS

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2010 (Sophomore): Played in all 11 games…started off the season as a backup receiver while holding for extra points and field goals…emerged in the second half of the year as one of NSU’s top receiving threats…finished second on the team with 30 catches for 436 yards, all coming in the final five games…his three TD receptions led the squad…Garrett ranked second in the MEAC in both receiving yards and receptions over the final five weeks of the regular season…finished the year ranked 10th in the MEAC in total receiving yards (436, 39.6 per game)…had the first four catches of his career for 65 yards vs. Florida A&M…had seven catches for 87 yards the following week at Howard…caught three passes for 44 yards and his first collegiate TD, a 10-yarder, in the win over Morgan State…caught a career-high eight passes for 67 yards against Delaware State…matched those eight receptions the following week at Savannah State…tallied 173 receiving yards and two scores, covering 4 and 76 yards, against SSU…the 76-yard play was NSU’s longest offensive play of the season…the 173 receiving yards were the second-most for any MEAC receiver in 2010. 2009 (Freshman): Practiced as a scout-team quarterback…did not get into any contests…converted to wideout during spring ball. 2008 (Redshirt): Enrolled in the fall of 2008, but did not play…joined the team as a walk-on during spring practice. High School: Started at quarterback as a senior…led Indian River to the Eastern Region semifinals. Personal: Reginald Bernard Garrett was born on March 17, 1990…son of Reginald Garrett and Patricia Easley…majoring in building construction...both parents attended NSU…father played football and basketball and mother was a cheerleader at NSU.

GARRETT’s Career RECEIVING Statistics Year 2010 Totals

GP 11 11

Rec 30 30

Yds 436 436

Avg 14.5 14.5

TD Lg 3 76 3 76

Avg/G 39.6 39.6

Garrett’s Career Highs

Rec.: 8 (2x, last vs. Savannah State, 11-20-10) Rec. Yards: 173 (vs. Savannah State, 11-20-10) Long Rec.: 76 (vs. Savannah State, 11-20-10) TD: 2 (vs. Savannah State, 11-20-10)

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RETURNING PLAYERS JAMAL GIDDENS RS-JUNIOR | LB 6-2 | 225 Norfolk, Va./Liberty/Maury HS

9

2010 (Sophomore): Saw game action in all 11 contests…made 17 total tackles, including 2.5 behind the line of scrimmage…also deflected one pass…had a season-high four tackles and one QB hurry in the opener at Rutgers…had one tackle for loss against both Virginia State and Savannah State…had a half tackle for loss and broke up one pass at Howard. At Liberty (Freshman): Played in 11 games as a true freshman at Liberty in 2008…earned his first career start against VMI…finished the year with 29 tackles, three tackles for loss, and 1.5 sacks…also credited with one forced fumble and one pass breakup…tallied a season-high eight tackles, including one for a loss and half a sack, against Glenville State. High School: Two-year letterwinner in football at Maury…first-team all-district pick as a senior…rated the No. 58 recruit in the state according to the Roanoke Times…also played basketball and ran track for the Commodores. Personal: Jamal Kirhy Giddens was born on April 23, 1990…son of Michael Eley and Wynette Giddens…majoring in health fitness…father is an NSU alumnus. GIDDENS’ Career Defensive Statistics Year GP 2008* 11 2010 11 Totals 22

UT 15 8 23

AT 14 9 23

TT TFL-Yds Sck-Yds Int-Yds PD FF FR-Yds 29 3.0-17 1.5-14 0-0 1 1 0-0 17 2.5-6 0.0-0 0-0 1 0 0-0 46 5.5-23 1.5-14 0-0 2 1 0-0

GIDDENS’ Career Highs

Tackles: 8 (vs. Glenville State, 9-6-08)* TFL: 1.0 (several times, last vs. Savannah State, 11-20-10) Sacks: 1.0 (vs. Youngstown State, 9-28-08)* * - Stats from Giddens’ freshman year at Liberty

MATTHEW GRANT SOPHOMORE | DL 6-3 | 245 Sunrise, Fla./Boyd Anderson HS

89

2010 (Freshman): Appeared in six games as a reserve defensive tackle…made four tackles, three of them assisted…credited with a half tackle for loss against both Florida A&M and Delaware State. High School: Four-year letterwinner in football… played defensive end and tackle…helped Boyd Anderson reach

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the state Class 5A regional semifinals…also lettered three years on the track team and one year on the wrestling team. Personal: Matthew Grant was born on Sept. 12, 1991…son of Michelle Grant…majoring in building construction. GRANT’S Career Defensive Statistics

Year GP UT AT TT TFL-Yds Sck-Yds Int-Yds PD FF FR-Yds 2010 6 1 3 4 1.0-2 0.0-0 0-0 0 0 0-0 Totals 6 1 3 4 1.0-2 0.0-0 0-0 0 0 0-0

GRANT’S Career Highs

Tackles: 1 (several times, last vs. Savannah State, 11-20-10) TFL: 0.5 (twice, last vs. Delaware State, 11-13-10)

VICTOR HAIRSTON RS-SENIOR | WR 5-10 | 185 Martinsville, Va./Martinsville HS

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2010 (Junior): Played in all 11 games and started nine in his first season as a wideout…led NSU and ranked second in the MEAC in receptions, with 52 (4.7 per game)…also led NSU and ranked sixth in the MEAC with 580 receiving yards (52.7 per game)…had seven games with at least five catches…opened the season with five catches for 82 yards, including a season-long catch of 48 yards, at Rutgers…caught his first career TD pass, covering 27 yards, the following week against N.C. A&T…caught six passes for a career-high 96 yards and a 17-yard touchdown vs. Virginia State…snagged a career-best eight passes, covering 83 yards, the following week at Bethune-Cookman…had seven receptions for 92 yards against Morgan State. 2009 (Sophomore): Played in five games, mostly on special teams…moved to wideout during spring practice. 2008 (Redshirt): Redshirted the season. 2007 (Freshman): Played in four games…had one carry for no gain against South Carolina State on his first career rushing attempt. High School: Lettered three years in football and basketball…a three-time first-team all-district selection…rushed for 1,350 yards and 23 touchdowns as a senior, when he was also firstteam all-district and all-region as well as an honorable mention all-state selection…ran for 1,200 yards as junior. Personal: Victor Hairston was born on Aug. 15, 1989…son of Victor Hairston Jr. and Lori Hairston…academic major is interdisciplinary studies. HAIRSTON’s Career RECEIVING Statistics Year 2007 2009 2010 Totals

GP 4 5 11 20

Rec 0 0 52 52

Yds 0 0 580 580

Avg 0.0 0.0 11.2 11.2

TD Lg 0 0 0 0 2 48 2 48

Avg/G 0.0 0.0 52.7 29.0

HAIRSTON’s Career Highs

Rec.: 8 (vs. Bethune-Cookman, 9-25-10) Rec. Yards: 96 (vs. Virginia State, 9-11-10) Long Rec.: 48 (vs. Rutgers, 9-2-10) TD: 1 (2x, last vs. Virginia State, 9-11-10)

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE


RETURNING PLAYERS A.J. HAMILTON RS-SOPHOMORE | LB 6-1 | 230 Brooklyn, N.Y./Xaverian HS

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2010 (Freshman): Practiced with the scout team, but did not see any game action. 2009 (Redshirt): Redshirted the season. High School: A four-year varsity player in football at Xaverian…also lettered one year in track and played JV baseball as a freshman. Personal: Arnold T. Hamilton was born on January 27, 1991…goes by A.J…son of Ardie and Tira Hamilton…majoring in business.

CORWIN HAMMOND RS-SENIOR | LB 6-1 | 220 Louisville, Ky./St. Xavier HS

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2010 (Junior): Started all 11 games at one of NSU’s two inside linebacker positions…led the Spartans with 76 total tackles, good for 14th in the conference…was second on the team with 4.5 sacks (tied for 11th in the MEAC) and third in tackles for loss with 11.0 (tied for 15th in the MEAC…forced a pair of fumbles, tying for fourth in the conference…was named MEAC Defensive Player of the Week after the season-opener at Rutgers, where he recorded 12 tackles, two for loss, and one sack…had five tackles, a half sack, and forced a fumble against N.C. A&T…recorded another sack and forced fumble the following week against Virginia State…had five stops and one pass breakup at Bethune-Cookman…recorded eight tackles and a sack at S.C. State…also made eight stops, including two for loss, and notched one QB hurry against Florida A&M…made a career-high 13 tackles, one for a loss, in the win over Morgan State…had seven stops and one sack in the win against Delaware State... had four solo stops in the victory over Savannah State to close the season. 2009 (Sophomore): Started six times in 11 games, four of them at inside linebacker opposite Anthony Taylor…three of his starts came in the final four games of the year (Howard, Morgan State, Delaware State)…ranked third on the team with 67 total tackles, second with 8.5 tackles for loss, and third with 3.5 sacks…ranked among the MEAC’s top 15 in all three categories…also forced two fumbles (tied for sixth-most in MEAC and first on team) and recovered two (tied for seventh in MEAC and tops on team)… tallied career highs of three tackles for loss and two sacks in the win over Bethune-Cookman…intercepted a

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE

pass against Hampton…had his best all-around game at Morgan State, registering a season-high 11 tackles, two for loss, 1.5 sacks and three QB hurries…recorded seven tackles, one for loss, forced a fumble and recovered a fumble in the comeback win at Delaware State…finished off the year with 10 tackles, one for loss, and forced a fumble against WSSU. 2008 (Freshman): Saw action in every game…started the final eight games of the season next to Mike Alphonse at inside linebacker…was sixth on the team in total tackles (47)…had 30 solo tackles, 5.0 for loss…also intercepted two passes, broke up two more and was credited with three quarterback hurries…had seven tackles, one for a loss, and one safety against William & Mary…matched his season high with seven stops in two other games (S.C. State, Florida A&M)…had 1.5 tackles for loss against both SCSU and Hampton…had three tackles, two interceptions, one QB pressure and one pass breakup at Howard…was named MEAC Rookie of the Week for his effort against the Bison…returned his first career interception 62 yards for his first career TD at Howard…also had six tackles (five solo) and a deflection against Delaware State. 2007 (Redshirt): Redshirted. High School: A first-team All-7th District selection as a senior…posted 78 tackles, 18 for a loss, seven sacks and blocked four kicks…voted to the Class 4-A East/West All-Star game, where he won East Defensive MVP honors…helped St. Xavier to the state 4-A semifinals. Personal: Corwin Rodney Hammond was born on May 5, 1989…son of Corwin Hammond and Robin Britt…majoring in business management…father is a housing manager at NSU. HAMMONDs Career Defensive Statistics Year GP UT 2008 12 30 2009 11 34 2010 11 38 Totals 34 102

AT 17 33 38 88

TT TFL-Yds Sck-Yds Int-Yds PD FF FR-Yds 47 5.0-11 0.0-0 2-80 2 0 0-0 67 8.5-46 3.5-30 1-9 1 2 2-0 76 11.0-36 4.5-26 0-0 1 2 0-0 190 24.5-93 8.0-56 3-89 4 4 2-0

HAMMOND’s Career Highs

Tackles: 13 (vs. Morgan State, 11-6-10) TFL: 3.0 (vs. Bethune-Cookman, 9-26-09) Sacks: 2.0 (vs. Bethune-Cookman, 9-26-09) INT: 2 (vs. Howard, 11-1-08) FF: 1 (4 times, last vs. Virginia State, 9-18-10) FR: 1 (2 times, last vs. Delaware State, 11-14-09)

Corwin Hammond

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RETURNING PLAYERS elementary education.

natturner harris RS-sophomore | DB 6-0 | 195 Miami, Fla./Booker T. Washington HS

8

2010 (Freshman): Saw action in all 11 games…played with the second unit for most of the season…finished the year with 13 tackles, 10 of them solos…got his first career start against Virginia State, notching career highs with four tackles and two pass breakups. 2009 (Redshirt): Redshirted. High School: First-team All-Dade County and second-team all-state 4A as a senior…tallied 60 tackles, seven interceptions and two forced fumbles… rated Miami’s No. 22 recruit in the 2009 high school senior class by The Miami Herald…selected to play in the Dade-Broward all-star game…led Booker T. to an 11-2 mark as a senior…helped the Tornadoes go 14-0, win the 4A state title, and achieve the No. 8 ranking in the final USA Today national poll his junior season. Personal: Natturner Harris was born on Dec. 17, 1990…son of Tanya Dingle…majoring in business management. HARRIS’ Career Defensive Statistics

Year GP UT AT TT TFL-Yds Sck-Yds Int-Yds PD FF FR-Yds 2010 11 10 3 13 0.0-0 0.0-0 0-0 2 0 0-0 Totals 11 10 3 13 0.0-0 0.0-0 0-0 2 0 0-0

HARRIS’ Career Highs

Tackles: 4 (vs. Virginia State, 9-18-10) PD: 2 (vs. Virginia State, 9-18-10)

JOE HAWKINS JUNIOR | TE 6-3 | 225 Chicago, Ill./Eisenhower HS

80

2010 (Sophomore): Played in every game and started three times in his debut season…started against Virginia State, BethuneCookman and South Carolina State… made nine catches for 107 yards on the year…caught his first career pass against Rutgers, covering 16 yards…had career highs of five catches and 54 receiving yards against Bethune-Cookman. 2009: Sat out the 2009 season as a non-qualifier. High School: Played football, basketball and track at Eisenhower…helped team advance to the 6A playoffs his junior and senior seasons…all-area and all-conference selection as a junior, when he caught 10 touchdown passes…scored three TDs as a senior. Personal: Joseph C. Hawkins was born on July 19, 1991…son of Sandra Hawkins…majoring in

40

HAWKINS’ Career RECEIVING Statistics Year 2010 Totals

GP 11 11

Rec 9 9

Yds 107 107

Avg 11.9 11.9

TD Lg 0 22 0 22

Avg/G 9.7 9.7

HAWKINS’ Career Highs

Rec.: 5 (vs. Bethune-Cookman, 9-25-10) Rec. Yards: 54 (vs. Bethune-Cookman, 9-25-10) Long Rec.: 22 (vs. Virginia State, 9-18-10)

takeem hedgeman RS-JUNIOR | RB 5-10 | 195 Charlottesville, Va./Monticello HS

2

2010 (Sophomore): Played in 10 games...served as the second-string tailback behind DeAngelo Branche for most of the year…was second on the team with 220 rushing yards and two touchdowns on 59 carries (3.9 average)…carried seven times for 14 yards and scored on a 1-yard TD run at Bethune-Cookman…also caught two passes for 26 yards in that game…had season highs of nine rushes for 56 yards at Hampton…the 56 yards were also a career high…ran eight times for 36 yards against Florida A&M and carried eight times for 30 yards against Morgan State…ended the season with a seven-carry, 44-yard day at Savannah State…also scored his second TD of the season at SSU on a 4-yard scamper. 2009 (Redshirt): Redshirted the season. 2008 (Freshman): Played in every game…served as NSU’s backup tailback…finished the year third on the team in rushes (62), yards (206) and rushing touchdowns (two)…had 31 yards rushing and his first career touchdown, a 6-yarder, against North Carolina A&T…also had 31 yards rushing on a career-high 10 carries at William & Mary…had a season-high 37 yards on just three attempts at S.C. State…had a season-long rush of 23 yards against the Bulldogs…had 23 yards rushing and his second TD of the year, a 1-yarder, against Florida A&M…also caught two passes for eight yards on the year. High School: Rushed for a Virginia High School League (VHSL) state record 51 touchdowns as a senior, leading Monticello to its first-ever state Group AA Division 3 title…ran for 2,891 yards in 14 games, the fourth-highest single-season mark in VHSL history…first-team All-Jefferson District, All-Region and all-state…Virginiapreps.com Group AA state Player of the Year…ran for a school-record 6,383 career yards, the 12th-most in state history at the time…accounted for 88 career touchdowns…rushed for 2,104 yards and 20 touchdowns as a junior, and added 1,054 yards and 12 scores as a sophomore. Personal: Takeem Shabazz Hedgeman was born on January 30, 1990…son of James Stinnie and Tanya HedgemanAyres…majoring in interdisciplinary studies with concentrations in physical education and psychology.

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE


RETURNING PLAYERS HEDGEMAN’s Career RUSHING Statistics Year 2008 2010 Totals

GP 12 10 22

Att 62 57 119

Yds 206 220 426

Avg 3.3 3.9 3.6

TD Lg 2 23 2 19 4 23

HEDGEMAN’s Career RUSHING Statistics Year 2008 2010 Totals

GP 12 10 22

Rec 2 4 6

Yds 8 33 41

Avg 4.0 8.2 6.8

TD Lg 0 6 0 15 0 15

Avg/G 17.2 22.0 19.4

joseph Holbrook

Avg/G 0.7 3.3 1.9

87

HEDGEMAN’s Career Highs

Rushes: 10 (vs. William & Mary, 9-20-08) Yards: 56 (vs. Hampton, 10-16-10) TD: 1 (4x, last vs. Savannah State, 11-20-10) Long Rush: 23 (vs. S.C. State, 10-11-08)

ERIC HITCH RS-JUNIOR | LB 6-2 | 230 Virginia Beach, Va./First Colonial HS

20

2010 (Sophomore): Appeared in all 11 games…a valuable special teams performer who also worked with the second team at inside linebacker…made 17 total tackles on the year, 10 of them solos…made three stops against Florida A&M…had one tackle for loss against Morgan State…posted four tackles in the win over Delaware State, a career high. 2009 (Redshirt): Redshirted the season. 2008 (Freshman): Played in all 12 games, primarily on special teams…also got some time as a backup inside linebacker…made three total tackles (one solo, two assisted) on the year…two of the three tackles came at S.C. State. High School: Lettered four years in football, two in wrestling and two in track and field…played fullback and linebacker for the Patriots…honorable mention All-Beach District at running back his senior and junior seasons…rushed for 315 yards on 50 carries (6.3 average) as a senior…scored five touchdowns (four rushing) and blocked for 1,000-yard rusher Tony Gregory, a Virginia Tech signee…placed second in the district and Eastern Region and sixth at the state wrestling championships in the heavyweight division as a senior. Personal: Eric Douglas Hitch II was born on March 23, 1990…son of Eric Hitch Sr. and Kesha Hitch…majoring in social science/history. HITCH’S Career Defensive Statistics Year GP 2008 12 2010 11 Totals 23

UT 1 10 11

AT TT TFL-Yds Sck-Yds Int-Yds PD FF FR-Yds 2 3 0.0-0 0.0-0 0-0 0 0 0-0 7 17 1.0-2 0.0-0 0-0 0 0 0-0 9 20 1.0-2 0.0-0 0-0 0 0 0-0

HITCH’S Career Highs

Tackles: 4 (vs. Delaware State, 11-13-10) TFL: 1.0 (vs. Morgan State, 11-6-10)

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE

RS-SENIOR | TE 6-2 | 240 Washington, D.C./Ballou HS

2010 (Junior): Played in every game…second-string tight end also played special teams…started twice, vs. Virginia State and Delaware State…made two catches for 15 yards on the year…caught a 5-yard pass for his first career reception against VSU…made one catch for 10 yards against Morgan State. 2009 (Sophomore): Moved from defense to tight end…did not catch a pass, but played in every game. 2008 (Freshman): Played in seven games…moved to outside linebacker for the final four games… also played special teams. 2007 (Redshirt): Sat out the season after tearing his ACL during the preseason. High School: Four-year letterwinner in football and track…first-team All-DCIAA East as a senior…finished his senior year with 64 tackles, two sacks and one interception…led Ballou to its first-ever city title…made 18 catches for 292 yards and one TD. Personal: Joseph M. Holbrook was born on Oct. 23, 1988…son of Joseph Bowman and Brenda Holbrook…physical education major. HOLBROOK’S Career RECEIVING Statistics Year 2008 2009 2010 Totals

GP 7 11 11 29

Rec 0 0 2 2

Yds 0 0 15 15

Avg 0.0 0.0 7.5 7.5

TD Lg 0 0 0 0 0 10 0 10

Avg/G 0.0 0.0 1.4 0.5

HOLBROOK’S Career Highs

Rec.: 1 (2x, last vs. Morgan State, 11-16-10) Yards: 10 (vs. Morgan State, 11-16-10) Long Rec.: 10 (vs. Morgan State, 11-16-10)

kenneth johnson RS-junior | OL 6-3 | 275 Montross, Va./Washington & Lee HS

61

2010 (Sophomore): Saw time in one game off the bench at offensive tackle (Rutgers). 2009 (Freshman): Played in four games off the NSU bench (VSU, Bethune-Cookman, Hampton, Howard). 2008 (Redshirt): Redshirted the season. High School: Three-year letterwinner in football and basketbal…was first-team All-Northern Neck District as a junior and senior…also an honorable mention All-Region A pick his final two years. Personal: Kenneth Jerome Johnson Jr. was born on Nov. 16, 1989…son of Christine and Kenneth Johnson Sr.…majoring in business management.

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RETURNING PLAYERS MICHAEL KAY

RYAN LEE

RS-JUNIOR | OL 6-2 | 310 Capitol Heights, Md./Syracuse/ C.H. Flowers HS

SOPHOMORE | K 5-8 | 170 Norfolk, Va./Maury HS

38

52

2010 (Sophomore): Played in all 11 contests and started the final three games of the season at left guard…team went 3-0 in games he started down the stretch…helped pave the way for running back DeAngelo Branche to set the school’s all-time rushing record in the season finale at Savannah State…played 58 snaps and graded out at 86 percent at Virginia State…played 30 snaps at Howard. 2009 (Freshman): Saw action in the final eight games of the season off the bench…played at both guard and center…played a season-high 31 snaps in the come-from-behind win at Delaware State…missed the first three games of the year due to an ankle injury. At Syracuse (Redshirt): Redshirted the 2008 season. High School: Named to the 2008 Prep Star All-Atlantic Region team…named the 25th-best prospect in the Mid-Atlantic Region by Scout.Com…named to the All-Prince George’s 4A first team and the Gazette Star all-county team as a senior…also a 2007 SuperPrep All-Mid-Atlantic Team pick. Personal: Michael Deonta Kay was born on Sept. 24, 1990…son of Donald and LaBianca Kay…majoring in criminal justice.

KEENAN LAMBERT RS-FRESHMAN | DB 6-0 | 190 Norfolk, Va./Maury HS

25

2010 (Redshirt): Redshirted. High School: Was a first-team AllEastern District and second-team All-Tidewater defensive back as a senior….finished the season with 89 tackles, 15 pass breakups, four interceptions and two forced fumbles…also saw time on special teams and at quarterback and receiver on offense… passed for 427 yards and five touchdowns at QB…hauled in 17 receptions for 381 yards and five more scores at receiver…also ran for 221 yards and three touchdowns…credited with seven blocked kicks on special teams…three-year letterwinner. Personal: Keenan Daniel Lambert was born on Feb. 28, 1992… son of Karen Lambert…majoring in business management.

2010 (Freshman): Was the Spartans’ primary kickoff man…kicked off 38 times, averaging nearly 50 yards per attempt. High School: Played four years of soccer, two of football and one of basketball…first-team All-Eastern District kicker as a senior…selected to the all-district second team as a junior…also a standout soccer player, Lee helped the Commodores reach the regional playoffs as a senior en route to all-district and all-region honors. Personal: Ryan L. Lee was born on July 13, 1992…son of Joan Lee…business management.

Kelvin Lewis rs-SOPHOMORE | WR 5-9 | 175 Woodbridge, Va./Woodbridge HS

81

2010 (Freshman): Played in all 11 games and started five times (BCU, SCSU, Hampton, FAMU, Howard)…made four catches for 78 yards on the year…averaged 19.5 yards per reception…his first career catch was a 46-yarder against Virginia State that set NSU up with a 1st-and-goal at the Trojans’ 1-yard line…had one catch for eight yards at Bethune-Cookman and one for seven yards at S.C. State…also caught one pass for 17 yards against Florida A&M. 2009 (Redshirt): Redshirted the season. High School: Played four years of football and lettered two years on the track team…a first-team All-Cardinal District and all-area defensive back and second-team all-district receiver as a senior…made 23 catches for 377 yards and two touchdowns…on defense, tallied 49 tackles, two interceptions and 15 pass deflections…also qualified for the state track meet in the 100 and 200 meters as a senior. Personal: Kelvin Dean Lewis was born on Nov. 12, 1990…son of Kelvin and Diane Lewis…majoring in computer science. LEWIS’ Career RECEIVING Statistics Year 2010 Totals

GP 11 11

Rec 4 4

Yds 78 78

Avg 19.5 19.5

TD Lg 0 46 0 46

Avg/G 7.1 7.1

LEWIS’ Career Highs

Rec.: 1 (4x, last vs. FAMU, 10-23-10) Yards: 46 (vs. Virginia State, 9-18-10) Long Rec.: 46 (vs. Virginia State, 9-18-10)

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2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE


RETURNING PLAYERS DARRIN MARROW rs-freshman | DB 6-1 | 180 Virginia Beach, Va./Cox HS

Sat out the season. High School: Lettered four years in football. Personal: Derron I. McDuffie was born on Nov. 10, 1990…son of James Marche and Audrey McDuffie…majoring in electronic technology.

19

2010 (Redshirt): Redshirted the season. High School: Recorded 30 tackles, six pass deflections, two interceptions and two forced fumbles as a senior…had four interceptions as a junior, when he helped Cox reach the playoffs for the first time in its 48-year history…100-meter runner and high jumper on the track team…lettered two years in football and four in track. Personal: Darrin Jamal Marrow was born on October 15, 1992…son of Deon and Jacqueline Marrow…majoring in sociology.

BLAKE MATTHEWS RS-JUNIOR | OL 6-4 | 315 Manassas, Va./Osbourn HS

77

2010 (Sophomore): Played in four games, against Rutgers, North Carolina A&T, Virginia State and Florida A&M…played a seasonhigh 11 snaps against VSU…worked with the first unit during spring practice following the season. 2009 (Freshman): Saw his first collegiate action against Virginia State…also played in reserve duty against Bethune-Cookman. 2008 (Redshirt): Redshirted the season. High School: A three-year letterwinner…secondteam All-Cedar Run District on the offensive line and honorable mention all-district on the defensive line as a senior…had 68 tackles on defense with nine tackles for loss and five sacks… helped Osbourn to the Group AAA Division 6 state title as a junior, when he was a second-team all-district defensive lineman. Personal: William Blake Matthews was born on March 8, 1990… goes by Blake…son of Scott and Stephanie Matthews…majoring in physical education.

DeXTER MERRITT RS-SENIOR | QB 6-2 | 195 Chesapeake, Va./Oscar Smith HS

4

2010 (Junior): Served as NSU’s backup quarterback…saw time in one game, the season-opener at Rutgers…was 0-for-1 passing and ran once for a two-yard loss against the Scarlet Knights. 2009 (Sophomore): Played in the closing minutes of the season-opening win against Virginia State, but did not attempt a pass…missed the rest of the season due to a knee injury. 2008 (Freshman): Appeared in seven games off the NSU bench…was No. 2 on the Spartans’ depth chart for the entire season…complete 5-of-9 passes for 34 yards on the year…threw one touchdown…ran twice for seven yards and was 2-of-2 for 18 yards in his first career action, against Virginia State…tossed his first career TD, a 7-yarder to Jamar Johnson, in the second quarter at Bethune-Cookman. 2007 (Redshirt): Redshirted. High School: Only played in three games as a senior before suffering a knee injury…led South Hampton Roads in passing with 533 yards and 10 touchdowns after three games…second-team All-Southeastern District pick as a junior, when he passed for 1,800 yards and 19 TDs…led the Tigers to the district championship and to the regional championship game as a junior…also played one year of varsity baseball. Personal: Dexter Jamal Merritt was born on April 7, 1989…son of Dwayne and Patricia Merritt…majoring in management information systems. MERRITT’S CAREER PASSING Statistics Year 2008 2009 2010 Totals

GP 7 1 1 9

Comp-Att-Int 5-9-1 0-0-0 0-1-0 5-10-1

Pct 55.6 0.0 0.0 50.0

Yds 34 0 0 34

MERRITT’s Career RUSHING Statistics

Derron mcduffie SENIOR | OL 6-2 | 270 Paterson, N.J./Passaic Tech

63

2010 (Junior): Did not see any game action…worked with the scout team in practice. 2009 (Sophomore): Saw his first career action against Howard, playing five total snaps. 2008 (Freshman):

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE

Year 2008 2009 2010 Totals

GP 7 1 1 9

Att 3 0 1 4

Yds 8 0 -2 6

Avg 2.7 0.0 -2.0 1.5

TD Lg 1 17 0 0 0 0 1 17

TD Lg 0 12 0 0 0 -2 0 12

Avg/G 4.9 0.0 0.0 1.9 Avg/G 1.1 0.0 -2.0 0.7

MERRITT’S Career Highs

Passing Att.: 4 (vs. William & Mary, 9-20-08) Comp.: 2 (vs. Virginia State, 8-30-08) Yards: 18 (vs. Virginia State, 8-30-08) TD: 1 (vs. Bethune-Cookman, 9-27-08) INT: 1 (vs. William & Mary, 9-20-08) Long Pass: 17 (vs. Virginia State, 8-30-08)

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RETURNING PLAYERS Troy Muenzer RS-SENIOR | P 6-1 | 185 Long Beach, Calif./Grossmont College/Wilson HS

35

2010 (Junior): Attempted every punt for the Spartans…averaged 36.6 yard per punt, seventh-best in the MEAC…17 of his 48 punts landed inside the opponent’s 20-yard line…had five punts of over 50 yards with a long punt of 61 yards (at Rutgers)…had his best day statistically against Florida A&M…punt four times for a 44.2-yard average with three punts landing inside the Rattler 20…boomed a 59-yarder against FAMU…punted five times for a 42-yard average against Morgan State with a long of 59 yards…had one solo tackle on a punt return at Rutgers. At Grossmont (Freshman/Sophomore): Handled placekicking and punting duties at Grossmont…led the team in scoring with 60 points…was 8-of-12 on field-goal attempts and 36-of-41 on extra points…averaged 36 yards per punt and had 11 downed inside the opponents’ 20-yard line…helped Grossmont finish 8-3 and win the Beach Bowl championship his sophomore year…a two-time Scholar Athlete and President’s Honor Roll member. High School: Lettered four years in football and soccer and one each in volleyball, cross country and track at Wilson HS…named to the Long Beach Press-Telegram’s Dream Team first team after averaging 38 yards per punt…had a long field goal of 43 yards, which he did several times, and averaged 60 yards per kickoff…also a first-team all-league selection and named Wilson’s Special Teams Player of the Year…helped the soccer team to four straight Moore League titles, including an appearance in the state semifinals as a senior…selected as one of the top eight punters at the 2009 Chris Sailer National Kicking Competition. Personal: Troy Muenzer was born on Nov. 18, 1988…son of Robert and Lynda Muenzer…majoring in interdisciplinary studies.

MUENZER’S Career PUNTING Statistics Year 2010 Totals

GP No. 10 48 10 48

Yds 1757 1757

Avg Lg 36.6 61 36.6 61

MUENZER’s Career Highs

Punts: 9 (vs. Rutgers, 9-2-10) Yards Per Punt: 44.2 (vs. FAMU, 10-23-10) Total Yards (Game): 336 (vs. Rutgers, 9-2-10) Long Punt: 61 (vs. Rutgers, 9-2-10) Inside 20: 3 (2x, last vs. FAMU, 10-23-10)

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TB 6 6

FC 6 6

I20 17 17

Blkd 3 3

kendall noble RS-SENIOR | OL 6-4 | 290 Rocky Mount, N.C./Rocky Mount HS

78

2010 (Junior): Started all 11 games at left tackle…a preseason All-MEAC first-team selection who was named to the All-MEAC second team following the season…a key cog in a line which allowed the fewest sacks in the MEAC (12) during the regular season while paving the way for DeAngelo Branche to become NSU’s all-time leading rusher… a two-time MEAC Offensive Lineman of the Week honoree following Spartan wins over North Carolina A&T and Morgan State…graded out at 90 percent while helping NSU amass 195 rushing yards and 356 total yards in the win over N.C. A&T…also graded out at 90 percent in the win over Morgan State, when NSU tallied 37 points and 453 yards of total offense…graded at over 80 percent on his assignments against N.C. A&T, Hampton, Florida A&M, Morgan State, Delaware State and Savannah State…ended the year having started 32 straight games at left tackle. 2009 (Sophomore): Started all 11 games at left tackle…named to the All-MEAC second team…named the MEAC Offensive Lineman of the Week following the 41-6 win over Howard, when he helped the Spartans gain season highs in rushing yards (294) and total yards (520)…recorded the highest line grade for NSU in games against Hampton (82 percent) and Morgan State (season-high 86 percent)…also graded over 80 percent in three other Spartan games. 2008 (Freshman): Played in all 12 games…started the final 10 contests of the season at left tackle…named MEAC Offensive Lineman of the Week after the Howard game…blocked on a line which allowed just one sack in the final five games. 2007 (Redshirt): Redshirted. High School: Lettered and started for three years…a first-team all-conference and all-county selection as a junior and senior…helped team win the North Carolina 4A regional championship as a junior…named team’s top offensive lineman as a senior…selected to play in the North Carolina East-West All-Star game his senior year…also threw the shot put and discus for the Rocky Mount track team for four seasons. Personal: Kendall Andre Noble was born on March 16, 1989…son of Kendra and Wayne Noble Sr…majoring in kinesiotherapy.

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE


RETURNING PLAYERS Devonte norman

terrence pugh

RS-FRESHMAN | LB 6-0 | 230 Virginia Beach, Va./Landstown HS

RS-JUNIOR | LB 6-4 | 230 Chesapeake, Va./Indian River HS

44

2010 (Redshirt): Redshirted the season. High School: First-team All-Beach District and second-team All-Tidewater and AllEastern Region…tallied 110 tackles and 18 sacks as a senior. Personal: Devonte D. Norman was born on April 30, 1992…son of Dexter Norman and Sandra Blackman…majoring in biology.

trent porter SENIOR | LB 6-2 | 225 Dendron, Va./Surry County HS

53

2010 (Junior): Played in 10 games…a special teams staple, Porter also received additional playing time at inside linebacker as the season progressed…finished the season with eight total tackles (four solos and four assists)…had one tackle for loss on the year, at Savannah State in the season finale…had two solo tackles in that contest. 2009 (Sophomore): Appeared in six contests, mostly on special teams…also saw some backup duty at linebacker… made his first career tackle and sack against Hampton. 2008: Sat out the season as a non-qualifier. High School: First-team all-district, All-Region A and Group A all-state as a senior…tallied 115 tackles, recovered five fumbles and intercepted seven passes, three of which he returned for touchdowns. Personal: Trenton Porter was born on Jan. 18, 1989…goes by Trent…son of William and Sandra Porter…majoring in interdisciplinary studies. PORTER’S Career Defensive Statistics Year GP 2009 6 2010 10 Totals 16

UT 1 4 5

AT TT TFL-Yds Sck-Yds Int-Yds PD FF FR-Yds 0 1 1.0-1 1.0-1 0-0 0 0 0-0 4 8 1.0-3 0.0-0 0-0 0 0 0-0 4 9 2.0-4 1.0-1 0-0 0 0 0-0

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2010 (Sophomore): Started all 11 games at one outside linebacker position…credited with 27 tackles, 13 solos…his 6.5 tackles for loss were second among NSU’s linebackers in 2010…had three solo tackles, including two tackles for loss and one sack, in the win over Virginia State…had a season-high five tackles, two for loss, at Hampton…matched his season high with five tackles at Howard…had a career-best 2.5 tackles for loss in the victory over Howard, including one sack…named to the NSU and MEAC Commissioner’s all-academic teams. 2009 (Freshman): Played in all 11 games during his rookie season…made his first collegiate start against William & Mary, registering a career-high six tackles, one for a loss…had his first career sack the week before, at N.C. A&T…was in on three tackles against both Bethune-Cookman and Delaware State…had two of his three QB pressures for the year at Morgan State… named to the NSU and MEAC Commissioner’s all-academic teams. 2008 (Redshirt): Redshirted the season. High School: A two-year letterwinner at Indian River…first team All-Southeastern District and All-Tidewater by The Virginian-Pilot on defense…also second-team all-district at offensive tackle…had 34 tackles for loss, 13 sacks and six forced fumbles as a senior…led Indian River to the Eastern Region Division 5 championship game…a second-team all-district pick on both sides of the ball as a junior. Personal: Terrence Lamar Pugh…born on April 17, 1990…son of Randy and Janet Pugh… majoring in computer science…both parents are NSU alumni. Pugh’S Career Defensive Statistics Year GP 2009 11 2010 11 Totals 22

UT 7 13 20

AT 9 14 23

TT TFL-Yds Sck-Yds Int-Yds PD FF FR-Yds 16 2.5-9 1.0-5 0-0 0 0 0-0 27 6.5-16 2.0-6 0-0 0 0 0-0 43 9.0-25 3.0-11 0-0 0 0 0-0

Pugh’S Career Highs

Tackles: 6 (vs. William & Mary, 9-19-09) TFL: 2.5 (vs. Howard, 10-30-10) Sacks: 1.0 (3x, last vs. Howard, 10-30-10)

PORTER’S Career Highs

Tackles: 2 (2x, last vs. Savannah State, 11-20-10) TFL: 1.0 (2x, last vs. Savannah State, 11-20-10) Sacks: 1.0 (vs. Hampton, 10-17-09)

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE

45


RETURNING PLAYERS josh reamon RS-SENIOR | WR 5-11 | 170 Newport News, Va./Gloucester HS

DeVonte Reynolds

88

2010 (Junior): Appeared in two games (Rutgers, North Carolina A&T)…did not accumulate any statistics. 2009 (Sophomore): Saw action in 10 games off the NSU bench…used as a reserve receiver. 2008 (Freshman): Saw action in four games (Virginia State, Howard, Morgan State, Winston-Salem State)…did not catch a pass. 2007 (Redshirt): Redshirted. High School: Named to the AllPeninsula District first team at defensive back and to the second team at wideout as a senior…made 48 receptions for 680 yards and four touchdowns as a senior…rated the No. 52 recruit in Virginia by the Roanoke Times…had seven interceptions and 32 solo tackles as a senior. Personal: Joshua W. Reamon was born on Dec. 25, 1988…son of Charles and Priscilla Reamon…majoring in kinesiotherapy…brother Charles Reamon Jr. ran track at NSU in the 1990s.

Devonte Reynolds RS-SENIOR | DB 6-3 | 200 Warsaw, Va./Rappahannock HS

30

2010 (Junior): Started all 11 games as NSU’s free safety…finished second on the team with 60 total tackles, ranking 23rd in the MEAC…had 37 solo stops and 23 assisted tackles…had 3.5 tackles for loss, recovered one fumble and broke up four passes…had a career-high 12 tackles, including 1.5 for loss, at S.C. State…followed that up with seven tackles, one tackle for loss, one QB hurry and one pass breakup at Hampton…also had seven tackles against Rutgers and Delaware State…also recovered a fumble in the win over DSU…made six tackles, one for loss, and deflected a pass in the season finale at Savannah State. 2009 (Sophomore): Played in all 11 games…one of the team’s top special teams players, Reynolds also served as a backup safety…made 14 tackles for the year, nine of them solo…had a season-high four tackles at Morgan State in his most extensive action on defense. 2008 (Freshman): Played in 11 games, mostly on special teams…had six tackles for the season, three solo and three assisted…had two tackles at William & Mary…returned one kickoff on the year, netting three yards against Delaware State. 2007 (Redshirt): Redshirted. High School: Played parts of four seasons on the varsity team…was an honorable mention

46

all-district selection as a senior in football and basketball…was first-team all-district and all-region as a junior in football…tallied more than 1,300 all-purpose yards and 14 touchdowns as a running back and receiver his junior season…also played basketball and soccer and ran track during his high school career. Personal: Germiah DeVonte Reynolds was born on Oct. 21, 1988…goes by DeVonte…son of Troy Newton and Tammy Reynolds…majoring in health fitness. reynolds’ Career Defensive Statistics Year GP 2008 11 2009 11 2010 11 Totals 33

UT 3 9 37 49

AT 3 5 23 31

TT TFL-Yds Sck-Yds Int-Yds PD FF FR-Yds 6 0.0-0 0.0-0 0-0 0 0 0-0 14 0.0-0 0.0-0 0-0 0 0 0-0 60 3.5-16 0.0-0 0-0 4 0 1-0 80 3.5-16 0.0-0 0-0 4 0 1-0

reynolds’ Career Highs

Tackles: 12 (vs. S.C. State, 10-9-10) TFL: 1.5 (vs. S.C. State, 10-9-10) PD: 1 (4x, last vs. Savannah State, 11-20-10) FR: 1 (vs. Delaware State, 11-13-10)

E.J. Rogers RS-FRESHMAN | OL 6-3 | 325 Alexandria, Va./Edison HS

60

2010 (Redshirt): Redshirted the season. High School: First-team All-National District and honorable mention All-Northern Region offensive lineman…helped team to a 7-4 mark and a berth in the Northern Region playoffs…blocked for unit which ran for over 2,000 yards and averaged 330 total yards per game…allacademic team member...named team’s top offensive lineman. Personal: Edwin Glenn Rogers Jr. was born on Oct. 24, 1991…son of Edwin Sr. and Valerie Rogers…goes by E.J...majoring in mass communication.

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE


RETURNING PLAYERS tyrece shepherd

Nick Taylor

JUNIOR | WR 6-1 | 185 Suffolk, Va./Lakeland HS

SOPHOMORE | DB 5-9 | 170 Richmond, Va./Varina HS

21

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2010 (Sophomore): Appeared in six games as a backup wide receiver…had his first career reception, covering three yards, at South Carolina State...also saw action against N.C. A&T, Virginia State, Hampton, FAMU and Savannah State. 2009: Sat out the season as a non-qualifier. High School: Four-year letterwinner in football and track…a two-way player on the football team and a hurdler and sprinter for the track team. Personal: Tyrece Suave Shepherd was born on July 20, 1990…son of Tym and Hope Shepherd…majoring in business management. shepherd’s Career RECEIVING Statistics Year 2010 Totals

GP 6 6

Rec 1 1

Yds 3 3

Avg 3.0 3.0

TD Lg 0 3 0 3

Avg/G 0.5 0.5

shepherd’s career Highs

Rec.: 1 (vs. S.C. State, 10-9-10) Yards: 3 (vs. S.C. State, 10-9-10) Long Rec.: 3 (vs. S.C. State, 10-9-10)

2010 (Freshman): Played in all 11 games…saw regular time on NSU’s special teams coverage units…also played sparingly as a reserve cornerback, making his first career interception in the fourth quarter against Virginia State…credited with four tackles on the year, all on kickoff or punt coverage…had two tackles against both S.C. State and Delaware State. High School: A firstteam all-district and second-team All-Metro and All-Central Region pick as a senior…had 65 tackles, eight pass deflections and one interception as a senior...started 44 games in his four-year career for Varina, one of the top teams in the state…four-time all-district and academic all-district selection. Personal: Nicholas Alexander Taylor was born on March 9, 1992…son of Calvin and Judy Taylor…majoring in accounting. taylor’S Career Defensive Statistics

Year GP UT AT TT TFL-Yds Sck-Yds Int-Yds PD FF FR-Yds 2010 11 1 3 4 0.0-0 0.0-0 1-0 0 0 0-0 Totals 11 1 3 4 0.0-0 0.0-0 1-0 0 0 0-0

taylor’S Career Highs

dionte sullivan

Tackles: 2 (2x, last vs. Delaware State, 11-13-10) Int: 1 (vs. Virginia State, 9-18-10)

RS-FRESHMAN | DB 5-9 | 170 O’Fallon, Ill./O’Fallon Township HS

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2010 (Redshirt): Redshirted the season. High School: Three-year letterwinner in football and track…a first-team all-conference and all-area football player as a junior and senior… tallied 55 tackles, five interceptions and 16 pass deflections as a senior… also played receiver, catching 28 passes for 465 yards and four touchdowns in his final season…second-team all-conference selection as a junior. Personal: Dionte Mychael Javarez Sullivan was born on Dec. 1, 1991…son of Troy and Teralissa Sullivan… majoring in psychology.

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE

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RETURNING PLAYERS seth travers SENIOR | WR 6-0 | 175 Gainesville, Va./Calvert HS (Md.)

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2010 (Junior): Appeared in one game, against Delaware State… practiced with the scout team. 2009 (Sophomore): Appeared in four games as a reserve wideout (VSU, Bethune-Cookman, Hampton, Howard). 2008 (Freshman): Joined the team as a walkon during the 2008-09 school year…caught a TD pass in the final spring football scrimmage. High School: Lettered three years in football and three in track…all-county at wide receiver as a senior, when he scored eight touchdowns and had 700 receiving yards…also intercepted seven passes on defense…scored in double figures as a junior and senior on the Calvert basketball team. Personal: Timothy Seth Travers was born on May 25, 1988…goes by Seth…son of Wakefield and Paula Travers…majoring in journalism and political science.

Josh Turner RS-SENIOR | Dl 6-0 | 315 Chesterfield, Va./Manchester HS

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2010 (Junior): Started all 11 games at nose guard…a preseason All-MEAC first-team selection, Turner was voted to the AllMEAC second team following the year…was given the Walter M. Kindred Award as the team’s best defensive lineman for the second straight year...ranked fourth on the team in total tackles, with 46…paced the Spartans with 12.0 tackles for loss, which tied him for 11th-most in the MEAC…ranked sixth among MEAC defensive linemen in total tackles…added a team-high seven QB hurries and recorded 2.5 sacks…posted five tackles, 1.5 for loss, and a BQ hurry in the win over N.C. A&T…had four tackles, two for loss, in the loss to Bethune-Cookman…made seven stops, half for loss, against S.C. State…tied his career high with 10 tackles at Howard…added two tackles for loss and one sack in that contest, in which NSU yielded just 1.1 yards per rush…added five tackles, 1.5 for loss, and a half sack the next week in the win over Morgan State…tallied two QB hurries in that game…had four tackles and a sack in the victory over Savannah State. 2009 (Sophomore): All-MEAC first-team selection who started all 11 games at nose tackle…given the Walter M. Kindred Award as the team’s best defensive lineman…led all NSU defensive linemen with 46 tackles and eight stops behind

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the line of scrimmage…made four tackles, 1.5 for loss, and one sack in the win over BCU…was in on a career-high 2.5 tackles for loss, including half a sack, in the win over Howard…made a career-high 10 tackles in the win at DSU. 2008 (Freshman): Played in 11 games along the defensive line…started three times at nose guard (S.C. State, Howard, DSU)…missed the last game due to a knee injury suffered against DSU…had 21 tackles, four for loss, and two sacks…had three solo tackles and his first career sack at William & Mary…had a season-high four stops in a game twice, at Bethune-Cookman and vs. Morgan State…recovered his only fumble of the year at S.C. State…blocked a field goal against Hampton…had his second sack of the year at Howard. 2007 (Redshirt): Redshirted. High School: Played four years of football at Manchester…a first-team All-Dominion District and All-Metro selection by the Richmond Times Dispatch his senior year…named Dominion District Defensive Player of the Year after recording 87 tackles, nine sacks, five forced fumbles and two fumble recoveries…first-team All-Central Region and honorable mention all-state group AAA. Personal: Joshual Andrew Turner…born April 20, 1989…goes by Josh…son of Jay Turner and Phyllis Smith…majoring in business. turner’S Career Defensive Statistics Year GP 2008 11 2009 11 2010 11 Totals 33

UT 9 14 21 44

AT 12 32 25 69

TT TFL-Yds Sck-Yds Int-Yds PD FF FR-Yds 21 4.0-16 2.0-12 0-0 0 0 1-0 46 8.0-19 2.0-7 0-0 0 0 0-0 46 12.0-40 2.5-18 0-0 0 0 0-0 113 24.0-75 6.5-37 0-0 0 0 1-0

turner’S Career Highs

Tackles: 10 (2x, last vs. Howard, 10-30-10) TFL: 2.5 (vs. Howard, 10-31-09) Sacks: 1.0 (5x, last vs. Savannah State, 11-20-10)

ricardo volcin SENIOR | DB 6-2 | 210 North Miami Beach, Fla./ North Miami Beach HS

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2010 (Junior): Started all 11 games as NSU’s strong safety… ranked fifth on the team with 43 total tackles…added 4.0 tackles for loss, one forced fumble, one interception and two pass deflections…had four tackles, half a tackle for loss and a pass breakup in the win over Virginia State…had six tackles, one for loss, at Bethune-Cookman…made his first career interception at S.C. State, which he returned 39 yards for the Spartans’ only touchdown of the game…also made four assisted tackles at S.C. State…matched his season high with six tackles, one for a loss, against Morgan State…had a season-high five solo tackles, one for loss, and forced a fumble in the win at Savannah State. 2009 (Sophomore): Again served as a key special teams player and also as a reserve safety…played in 10 games,

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE


RETURNING PLAYERS missing the Morgan State game due to injury…had 11 total tackles for the year…posted his season high with four tackles at FAMU…also broke up a pass in that game… named to the NSU and MEAC Commissioner’s all-academic teams. 2008 (Freshman): One of NSU’s top special teams players, Volcin played in all 11 games…also saw some time as a backup safety…made 17 tackles (13 solo) on the year…had a season-high five tackles, including a sack, in the opener against Virginia State…scored his first collegiate touchdown by recovering an errant punt snap in the end zone against N.C. A&T…made four tackles at Howard…had three tackles and deflected one pass vs. Morgan State. High School: Lettered four years in football, three in track and one in wrestling…a first-team All-Dade County and secondteam all-state pick by the Florida Sports Writers Association as a senior …recorded 75 tackles, 11 sacks, two forced fumbles and one interception from his linebacker position…also caught 16 passes for 307 yards and four TDs on offense…named the team’s best two-way player…also posted seven sacks and more than 70 tackles as a junior. Personal: Ricardo Volcin was born on Oct. 24, 1989…son of Benita Jeudy…majoring in sociology. VOLCIN’S Career Defensive Statistics Year GP 2008 11 2009 10 2010 11 Totals 32

UT 13 6 26 45

AT 4 5 17 26

TT TFL-Yds Sck-Yds Int-Yds PD FF FR-Yds 17 1.0-2 1.0-2 0-0 1 0 1-0 11 0.0-0 0.0-0 0-0 1 0 0-0 43 4.0-16 0.0-0 1-39 2 1 0-0 71 5.0-18 1.0-2 1-39 4 1 1-0

VOLCIN’S Career Highs

Tackles: 6 (2x, last vs. Morgan State, 11-6-10) TFL: 1.0 (4x, last vs. Savannah State, 11-20-10) Sacks: 1.0 (vs. Virginia State, 8-30-08) PD: 1 (2x, last vs. FAMU, 10-24-09) INT: 1 (vs. S.C. State, 10-9-10) FF: 1 (vs. Savannah State, 11-20-10) FR: 1 (vs. N.C. A&T, 9-13-08)

chris walley RS-SENIOR | QB 6-2 | 200 Tallahassee, Fla./Joliet JC (Ill.)/ North Florida Christian

5

State…completed a season-high 22 passes for 196 yards at Bethune-Cookman…ran for a season-high 62 yards on 11 carries in addition to completing 11-of-16 for 140 yards through the air in the loss to Florida A&M…set a new NSU single-game record by completing 90.9 percent of his passes (20-of-22) in the win over Morgan State…also posted season highs of 305 passing yards, four TD tosses, and 328 yards of total offense in that one…named the MEAC Offensive Player of the Week for his performance in that game…connected on 17-of-26 passing for 149 yards and one score in the win over Delaware State…capped off his year by hitting on 19-of-23 (82.6 percent) of his throws for 270 yards and two touchdowns in the win at Savannah State. At Joliet (Freshman/Sophomore): Passed for a school-record 2,656 yards and 18 touchdowns as a sophomore at Joliet…named to the all-conference and all-region second teams…two-year team captain. High School: A three-year letterwinner and two-year starter for coach Casey Weldon, a former Florida State quarterback…first-team all-state 1A-1B and All-Big Bend as a senior at North Florida Christian School in Tallahassee…set school records with 2,764 yards and 34 touchdowns as a senior…second-team All-Big Bend pick as a junior, when he passed for 21 touchdowns and 1,983 yards. Personal: Christopher Eugene Walley was born on June 14, 1988…son of Wes Walley and Angela Day…majoring in interdisciplinary studies with a concentration in business. WALLEY’S CAREER PASSING Statistics (at NSU) Year 2010 Totals

GP 11 11

Comp-Att-Int Pct Yds 167-272-8 61.4 1,859 167-272-8 61.4 1,859

walley’s Career RUSHING Statistics Year 2010 Totals

GP 11 11

Att 61 61

Yds 190 190

Avg 3.1 3.1

TD Lg 10 76 10 76

TD Lg 0 27 0 27

Avg/G 169.0 169.0

Avg/G 17.3 17.3

WALLEY’S Career Highs

Passing Att.: 42 (vs. Bethune-Cookman, 9-25-10) Comp.: 22 (vs. Bethune-Cookman, 9-25-10) Yards: 305 (vs. Morgan State, 11-6-10) TD: 4 vs. Morgan State, 11-6-10) INT: 2 (vs. Bethune-Cookman, 9-25-10) Long Pass: 76 (vs. Savannah State, 11-20-10) Rushing Rushes: 11 (vs. FAMU, 10-23-10) Yards: 62 (vs. FAMU, 10-23-10) Long Rush: 27 (vs. Bethune-Cookman, 9-25-10)

2010 (Junior): Started all 11 games under center for the Spartans…completed 167 of 272 passes for 1,859 yards and 10 touchdowns…set the new school record for completion percentage in a season, connecting on 61.4 percent of his passes…ranked second in the conference in completion percentage and third in passing yards per game (169.0)…also rushed 61 times for 190 yards…ranked third in the conference in total offense with 2,049 yards (186.3 per game)…threw his first TD pass of the season against N.C. A&T, part of a 17-for-26 day…connected on 17-of22 throws for 237 yards and two scores in the win over Virginia

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RETURNING PLAYERS nico washington

carnell williams

Sophomore | DL 6-4 | 310 Waldorf, Md./North Point HS

Junior | OL 6-0 | 330 Birdsrest, Va./Northampton HS

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2010 (Freshman): Played in all 11 games…served as the backup nose guard…credited with four assisted tackles…had two of those at South Carolina State…deflected one pass at Howard. High School: First team All-Southern Maryland Athletic Conference at both OL and DL…first-team all-county and second-team All-Met by the Washington Post at OL…honorable mention Big School All-State team selection at DL. Personal: Nico Earl Washington was born on July 29, 1992…son of Tonique Myers…majoring in sociology.

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2010 (Sophomore): Practiced with the scout team, but did not see any game action...named to the MEAC and NSU all-academic teams. At NSU: Enrolled at NSU in 2008…joined the team as a walk-on during the 2009-10 academic year. High School: Lettered three years in football and track and one in wrestling…named the team’s top offensive lineman as a senior…helped the football and track teams to three district titles each. Personal: Carnell Christopher Williams Jr. was born on Aug. 3, 1990…son of Carnell Williams Sr. and Cora Staten…majoring in elementary education.

washington’S Career Defensive Statistics

Year GP UT AT TT TFL-Yds Sck-Yds Int-Yds PD FF FR-Yds 2010 11 0 4 4 0.0-0 0.0-0 0-0 1 0 0-0 Totals 11 0 4 4 0.0-0 0.0-0 0-0 1 0 0-0

washington’S Career Highs Tackles: 2 (vs. S.C. State, 10-9-10) PD: 1 (vs. Howard, 10-30-10)

cameron williams RS-SOPHOMORE | OL 6-4 | 310 Burke, Va./St. Stephen’s & St. Agnes HS

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2010 (Freshman): Worked with the second-string offensive line…did not see any game action…named to the MEAC and NSU all-academic teams. 2009 (Redshirt): Redshirted the season. High School: A four-year letterwinner in football…also played one year of varsity basketball and threw the shot put for one season on the track team…a second-team all-state (VISAA) offensive lineman and first-team all-conference pick as a senior…helped the football team reach the state playoff semifinals his junior season. Personal: Cameron Ellsworth Williams was born on Feb. 25, 1991…son of Kim Williams…majoring in political science.

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2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE


RETURNING PLAYERS TORY WILLIAMS

Julius Wormley

RS-JUNIOR | DL 6-4 | 290 Virginia Beach, Va./Bayside HS

RS-FRESHMAN | OL 6-5 | 285 Hampton, Va./Tabb HS

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2010 (Sophomore): Sat out the year due to preseason surgery. 2009 (Freshman): Played in all 11 contests during his debut season, all as a reserve defensive tackle…was in on 17 tackles, four for a loss, and was credited with half a sack…broke up two passes, one each against Bethune-Cookman and Hampton…made a career-high five tackles, including one for loss and half a sack, at FAMU…made three stops in the season finale versus WSSU…had one tackle for loss and forced a fumble leading to a Rams’ turnover in NSU territory during the second half of that contest. 2008 (Redshirt): Redshirted the season. High School: A two-way starter on the offensive and defensive lines at Bayside…finished his senior season with 34 total tackles, 10 sacks and two forced fumbles…graded out at 89 percent on his assignments on the offensive line. Personal: Tory J. Williams was born on January 29, 1990…son of Glynis Daniels…majoring in electronic technology.

2010 (Redshirt): Redshirted the season. High School: A firstteam All-Bay Rivers and second-team All-Region I selection on defense...had 39 tackles, six for loss, despite missing a game due to injury…started on both sides of the line for the Tigers…helped pave the way for Tabb to average 370 total yards of offense per game…was an honorable mention all-conference pick as a junior while attending the Christchurch School. Personal: Julius Ashton Wormley was born on Sept. 25, 1991…son of Earl and Angel Wormley…majoring in kinesiotherapy.

WILLIAMS’ Career Defensive Statistics

Year GP UT AT TT TFL-Yds Sck-Yds Int-Yds PD FF FR-Yds 2009 11 9 8 17 4.0-8 0.5-1 0-0 2 1 0-0 Totals 11 9 8 17 4.0-8 0.5-1 0-0 2 1 0-0

WILLIAMS’ Career Highs

Tackles: 5 (vs. FAMU, 10-24-09) TFL: 1 (3x, last vs. WSSU, 11-21-09) Sacks: 0.5 (vs. FAMU, 10-24-09) PD: 1 (2x, last vs. Hampton, 10-17-09) FF: 1 (vs. WSSU, 11-21-09)

Tory Williams

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE

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NEWCOMERS #49 BRYANT BAILEY

RB | 5-10 | 215 | Junior Suffolk, Va./King’s Fork HS At NSU: Enrolled in the fall of 2009… walked onto the team during spring practice following the 2010 season. High School: Lettered in football, wrestling and track & field as a senior at King’s Fork…earned the King’s Fork Sportsmanship Award.

#27 SHAQUAN BAILEY

Akron and one vs. Louisville…did not see any game action in 2010. High School: Ranked the 49th-best outside linebacker in the nation by ESPN.com…named to the All-Peninsula District first team after recording 58 tackles and five sacks in limited action due to injury as a senior…as a junior, posted 75 tackles, 12 sacks and two interceptions, which were both returned for touchdowns, and earned second-team all-district accolades…also played basketball and ran track for Heritage.

DB | 6-1 | 200 | Freshman Halifax, Va./Hargrave Military Academy/ Halifax County HS

#69 STEVEN BEARD

At Hargrave: Played one year on the postgraduate team at Hargrave Military. High School: Lettered two years for Halifax County…first-team All-Western Valley District pick as a senior…led the team with 133 total tackles…also lettered two years in basketball…graduate with an advanced diploma.

At Liberty: Redshirted the 2009 season… did not appear in any games in 2010. High School: Played two years at Nansemond River…two-year starter on both sides of the line for the Warriors…helped pave the way for a 1,000-yard rusher his senior year.

#82 Holden Bass

WR | 6-2 | 210 | Freshman Glen Allen, Va./Hargrave Military Academy/ Deep Run HS

OL | 6-6 | 320 | RS-Sophomore Suffolk, Va./Liberty/Nansemond River HS

#27 Jarell Boyd-ROSS

WR | 6-3 | 200 | Sophomore Pittsburgh, Pa./Dickinson HS (N.J.)

At Hargrave: Spent one prep year at Hargrave Military Academy. High School: Was a first-team All-Colonial District pick as a senior at receiver, defensive back, kick returner, punt returner and utility…named to the All-Central Region first team at punt returner and second team at receiver and defensive back…earned honorable mention Virginia High School Coaches Association (VHSCA) all-state honors as a punt returner.

At NSU: Enrolled in the fall of 2010… walked on to the team, but sat out the season as a non-qualifier. High School: Lettered all four years on the football squad at Dickinson…served as team captain his junior and senior seasons…started at quarterback and safety as a senior… named All-Hudson County honorable mention at QB as a senior, when he threw for over 700 yards and seven touchdowns… second-team all-county at receiver as a junior…also ran track for three years and lettered one year in basketball.

#90 Chad Battles

#54 ramon Bragg

LB | 6-2 | 230 | Graduate Student Newport News, Va./Syracuse/Heritage HS At Syracuse: Earned two letters at SU… redshirted in 2007…played in the final two games of the 2008 season after returning from injury…had one assisted tackle at Notre Dame and one solo stop at Cincinnati…played in seven games at defensive end in 2009…had one assisted tackle vs.

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DL | 6-3 | 240 | RS-Freshman Richmond, Va./John Marshall HS At NSU: Enrolled at NSU in the fall of 2010…joined the team for spring practice. High School: Lettered three years in football…was a second-team all-district pick along the offensive and defensive lines as a junior and senior…also a two-time academic all-district selection.

#57 Marcell Coke

LB | 6-2 | 215 | Freshman Apopka, Fla./Wekiva HS High School: Lettered four years in football and three in track…attended Wekiva High School his final three years and attended Lake Howell High School as a freshman…was a three-year starter at Wekiva…named to the All-Orange County and All-Metro Conference second teams as a senior after compiling 89 tackles and three sacks…also forced three fumbles, deflected three passes and recovered one fumble…helped Wekiva to its first winning season in school history (6-5) during his final year…was also a hurdler for the track team.

#16 Shaun Corbett

WR | 5-11 | 165 | Freshman Miami, Fla./Varela HS High School: A first-team All-Dade County 6A selection as a senior…caught 42 passes for 754 yards and 13 touchdowns as a senior…averaged 18 yards per catch… played in the Dade vs. Broward and the Miami North/South all-star game…one of six finalists for city Player of the Year.

#6 Nico Flores

QB | 6-2 | 210 | RS-Sophomore Miami, Fla./UCF/North Miamia Beach HS At UCF: Redshirted the 2009 season at UCF before playing primarily as the Knights’ “wildcat” quarterback in 2010, rushing six times for 48 yards. High School: Was a two-time All-Dade County pick for North Miami Beach and was an all-state selection as a junior…rated a three-star recruit by both Rivals.Com and Scout.Com…rated the No. 31 high school QB in the country according to Rivals…completed 135-of210 passes (64 percent) for 1,517 yards and 17 touchdowns as a senior en route to first-team All-Dade County honors…also had 60 tackles and three interceptions that season…honorable mention All-Dade as a junior.

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE


NEWCOMERS #64 Rickey foreman

LS | 6-1 | 200 | Freshman Chesapeake, Va./Oscar Smith HS High School: First-team All-Southeastern District and second-team All-Eastern Region as a senior at Oscar Smith...helped the Tigers win the district title each of the last two years and reach the state semifinals in 2009...was also an all-region and all-state wrestler for OSHS.

#1 Everett Goldberg

K | 6-4 | 210 | Junior Mesa Ridge, Colo./College of the Canyons At COC: Played two years at the College of the Canyons in Santa Clarita, Calif…was 7-for-14 on field goals and 27-of-31 on extra points as a sophomore….made three field goals over 40 yards, including a long of 49 yards…a Chancellor’s List student at COC. High School: Lettered four years in baseball, three in football, and one each in soccer and basketball…also played one year on the club volleyball team…a twotime first-team All-Foothill Conference pick and two-time conference Special Teams Player of the Year in football…as a senior, 97 percent of his kickoffs went for touchbacks…was also a two-time all-conference pick in baseball…four-time academic all-state honoree in high school.

#74 Ramsey Henderson

OL | 6-4 | 305 | Freshman Washington, D.C./H.D. Woodson HS High School: Named to the All-Metro team by the Washington Pigskin Club…rated a two-star prospect according to Rivals. Com…also had offers from Delaware State and Howard and interest from Morgan State.

#45 DeMarta’ Johnson

DB | 5-11 | 180 | Sophomore Chesapeake, Va./Western Branch HS At NSU: Enrolled in the fall of 2010, but did not play. High School: A two-year letterwinner in both football and track & field…as a senior, threw for over 700 yards and ran for more than 500.

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE

#50 Justin Johnson

LB | 5-11 | 225 | Sophomore Hampton, Va./Bethel HS At NSU: Enrolled in the fall of 2010 but did not play…joined the team during spring practice. High School: Played football all four years…made 32 tackles and recorded a pair of sacks as a senior.

#12 keith johnson

WR | 5-11 | 175 | Freshman Petersburg, Va./Petersburg HS High School: First-team All-Central District at receiver and defensive back…also firstteam All-Central Region and All-Metro at wideout after catching 28 passes for 561 yards and four touchdowns…made 38 tackles and broke up 13 passes on defense…academic all-district selection…caught a school-record 12 touchdown passes as a junior…selected to play in the Virginia High School Coaches Association (VHSCA) All-Star Game following his senior year…also a standout sprinter, Johnson was third in the state Group AAA track meet in the 100 meters with a time of 10.87 seconds his senior year…ran PR of 10.82 seconds in the prelims…was Central Region 100-meter champion.

#92 Cameron Jude

DL | 6-4 | 290 | RS-Junior Richmond, Va./Michigan State/ Manchester HS At NSU: Sat out the 2010 season after transfering from Michigan State. At Michigan State: Redshirted the 2008 season… did not see any game action as a freshman in 2009…named the Scout Team Defensive Player of the Week prior to the Michigan game. High School: A three-year starter at Manchester… selected Dominion District Defensive Player of the Year as a senior in 2007 after recording 89 tackles, including 41 for lost yardage…produced 10.5 sacks, forced two fumbles and recovered one fumble…earned first-team All-Dominion District and first-team all-metro honors as a senior from the Richmond Times-Dispatch…selected to the All-Central Region second team…had 22 receptions for 181

yards (8.2 avg.) and four touchdowns while playing tight end as a senior.

#65 Alex killam

LS | 6-1 | 200 | Freshman Newport News, Va./Denbigh HS High School: Honorable mention All-Peninsula District linebacker as a senior...also played baseball for the Patriots.

#33 Dre’Quez Lambert

RB | 5-9 | 180 | Freshman Virginia Beach, Va./Green Run HS High School: Beach District Offensive Player of the Year as a senior...voted to the All-Beach District and All-Tidewater first teaams...second-team All-Eastern Region and all-state Group AAA...rushed for 1,698 yards and 17 touchdowns as a senior... the 1,698 yards are the fifth-most in South Hampton Roads history...accounted for 2,196 all-purpose yards and 22 TDs.

#41 James Lynch

TE | 6-3 | 215 | Freshman Darby, Pa./West Catholic HS High School: First-team Pennsylvania Sportswriters Class AA all-state selection…also first-team all-city and All-Catholic League…helped the Burrs to a 13-2 record and the state AA title…played both tight end and defensive end for West Catholic…defensively, recorded 90 tackles, 29 for loss, and 9.5 sacks as a senior…also forced and recovered two fumbles.

#22 Randy Maynes

RB | 5-9 | 170 | Junior Miami, Fla./West Hills College (Calif.)/ North Miami Beach HS At West Hills (Freshman & Sophomore): Ran 143 times for 750 yards and nine touchdowns as a sophomore at West Hills…rushed for 747 yards and seven TDs as a freshman, earning All-Valley Conference honors. High School: Was an honorable mention All-Dade County pick as a senior...played with current Spartans Ricardo Volcin and Nico Flores.

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NEWCOMERS #71 Justin Myler

#7 Wilonte’ Roscoe

in double overtime…also an All-Catholic League selection in indoor track as a junior as part of the 4x200 meter relay team.

At NSU: Sat out the 2010 season as a nonqualifier. High School: A two-way starter on the lines for Freedom…lettered all four years in both football and basketball… named team MVP as a senior.

High School: Honorable mention All-Eastern District pick…passed for 1,700 yards and 20 touchdowns while rushing for 600 yards and six scores…threw just two interceptions all season…team MVP.

#86 Tevin White

#10 Brendon Riddick

#85 DeAndrE Sangster

OL | 6-4 | 310 | Sophomore Woodbridge, Va./Freedom HS

QB | 5-11 | 210 | Freshman Richmond, Va./Hermitage HS High School: Two-time Colonial District Offensive Player of the Year…also named the Central Region and Richmond TimesDispatch Metro Player of the Year as a senior…rushed for 1,281 yards and 15 touchdowns as a senior while passing for 1,446 yards and 21 scores…led Hermitage to a 13-1 record, the district and regional titles, and a berth in the state Group AAA championship game…first-team all-district, all-region and All-Metro…secondteam all-state Group AAA…grandfather Cladwell was an NSU alum and long-time University employee.

QB | 5-11 | 175 | Freshman Portsmouth, Va./Churchland HS

WR | 6-2 | 180 | Freshman Dumfries, Va./CD Hylton HS

High School: Caught 35 passes for 720 yards and nine touchdowns…also returned a kickoff for touchdown…first-team All-Cardinal District and News & Messenger all-area pick…second-team AllNorthwest Region and honorable mention Washington Post All-Met.

#31 Dallas Simmons RB | 5-9 | 185 | Freshman Richmond, Va./Deep Run HS

High School: Second-team All-Southeastern District selection as a senior…also had an offer from Morgan State and interest from Towson, Richmond and Old Dominion.

High School: A three-year letterwinner in football and basketball…earned two letters in track & field…missed most of his senior season after tearing his ACL in the second game of the year…named to the All-Colonial District second team as a sophomore and junior…ran for 900 yards and 10 touchdowns during his junior season…also played defensive back and returned kickoffs and punts…also a twotime academic all-district selection.

#48 Calvin Roberts

#37 Eric Turner

RB | 5-9 | 190 | Junior Hampton, Va./Hampton HS

DB | 5-11 | 190 | Sophomore Philadelphia, Pa./West Catholic HS

At NSU: Enrolled at NSU in the fall of 2008…has not seen any game action for the Spartans. High School: A three-year letterwinner in both track and football…... was All-Peninsula District in the 100, 200, 300 and on the 4x200 and 4x400 relay teams as a senior…was a national qualifier for the Nike Indoor Nationals in the 200… played on Hampton’s Group AAA Division 5 state football championship team as a sophomore…rushed for five touchdowns as a senior.

At NSU: Enrolled in the fall of 2009…joined the team as a walk-on in the spring of 2011. High School: Lettered two years for West Catholic…named to the All-Catholic League second team at wideout as a senior after tallying 586 receiving yards and nine touchdown receptions…also earned honorable mention All-City recognition…helped WCHS win Catholic League, city, district and regional titles as a senior…WCHS advanced all the way to the state title game, losing by one point

#51 George Riddick

DL | 6-2 | 290 | Freshman Suffolk, Va./King’s Fork HS

54

TE | 6-3 | 215 | Freshman Chesapeake, Va./Great Bridge HS High School: Caught a pair of touchdowns as a senior…helped Great Bridge finish 10-2 and advance to the semifinals of the Eastern Region playoffs.

#93 De’ANTE WILLIAMS

DL | 6-2 | 280 | Freshman Washington, D.C./St. John’s College HS High School: High School: Honorable mention all-conference selection as a senior…two-way starter on both sides of the line during his junior and senior seasons…credited with 18 tackles for loss and 4.5 sacks as a senior…played in the D.C. Private vs. Public All-Star Game following his senior season…a four-year letterwinner.

#40 Joey Wood

TE | 6-1 | 210 | Freshman Chesapeake, Va./Great Bridge HS High School: Played offensive line and linebacker for Great Bridge…teamed with fellow NSU walk-on Tevin White… helped Great Bridge finish 10-2 and advance to the semifinals of the Eastern Region playoffs.

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE



2010 RESULTS/STATISTICS Date Opponent Score OVERALL Sept. 2 at Rutgers L 0-31 0-1-0 Sept. 11* North Carolina A&T W 23-14 1-1-0 Sept. 18 Virginia State W 51-28 2-1-0 Sept. 25* at Bethune-Cookman L 7-21 2-2-0 Oct. 9* at #9 South Carolina State L 13-34 2-3-0 Oct. 16* at Hampton L 6-7 2-4-0 Oct. 23* Florida A&M L 13-17 2-5-0 Oct. 30* at Howard W 10-9 3-5-0 Nov. 6* Morgan State W 37-25 4-5-0 Nov. 13* Delaware State W 31-21 5-5-0 Nov. 20 at Savannah State W 42-6 6-5-0 Home games in bold * indicates conference game Rushing Branche, DeAngelo Hedgeman, Takeem Walley, Chris Brisco, Markeith Cotton, Donovan Alford, Josh Hairston, Victor Merritt, Dexter Team Total Opponents

GP 11 10 11 9 11 11 11 1 10 11 11

Att Gain Loss 272 1385 55 57 245 25 61 262 72 24 143 2 29 125 16 1 3 0 1 0 2 1 0 2 14 0 68 460 2163 242 393 1750 315

All-Purpose G Rush Branche, DeAngelo 11 1330 Fluker-Berry, Dwight 11 0 Hairston, Victor 11 -2 Garrett, Reggie 11 0 Cotton, Donovan 11 109 Wicker, Jeremy 11 0 Hedgeman, Takeem 10 220 Walley, Chris 11 190 Brisco, Markeith 9 141 Hawkins, Joe 11 0 Childress, Sherron 11 0 Lewis, Kelvin 11 0 Barnes, Dante 10 0 Alford, Josh 11 3 9 0 Avg/G McCowan, Nigel 2 0 120.9 Fiano, Tanner 11 0 22.0 Volcin, Ricardo 1 0 17.3 Mills, Patrick 11 0 15.7 Coleman, Denzel 11 0 9.9 Holbrook, Joseph 6 0 0.3 Shepherd, Tyrece 1 -2 -0.2 Merritt, Dexter 9 0 -2.0 Demps, Derrick 10 -68 -6.8 Team 11 1921 174.6 Total 11 1435 130.5 Opponents

MEAC Time Attend 0-0-0 3:06 46,311 1-0-0 2:43 14,550 1-0-0 2:57 11,789 1-1-0 2:58 5,371 1-2-0 2:57 21,971 1-3-0 2:41 11,916 1-4-0 2:41 21,118 2-4-0 2:50 7,086 3-4-0 2:44 5,755 4-4-0 2:43 6,181 4-4-0 2:58 4,967

Net Avg 1330 4.9 220 3.9 190 3.1 141 5.9 109 3.8 3 3.0 -2 -2.0 -2 -2.0 -68 -4.9 1921 4.2 1435 3.7

TD Long 13 40 2 19 0 27 1 23 0 18 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 16 40 11 49

Rec 56 0 580 436 266 107 33 0 24 107 94 78 0 18 45 0 0 0 0 15 3 0 -3 0 1859 1690

PR 0 205 0 0 0 108 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 313 171

KOR IR 0 0 401 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 133 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 69 34 0 0 0 41 0 0 39 34 0 16 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 659 110 764 74

Tot Avg/G 1386 126.0 608 55.3 578 52.5 436 39.6 375 34.1 348 31.6 253 25.3 190 17.3 165 18.3 107 9.7 94 8.5 78 7.1 69 6.9 55 5.0 45 5.0 41 20.5 39 3.5 34 34.0 16 1.5 15 1.4 3 0.5 -2 - 2.0 -3 -0.3 -68 -6.8 4862 442.0 4134 375.8

No. Yds Avg TD Long TD Lng Avg/G Punt Returns 11 108 9.8 0 24 10 76 169.0 Wicker, Jeremy 10 205 20.5 0 66 0 0 0.0 Fluker-Berry, Dwight 21 313 14.9 0 66 0 0 0.0 Total 14 171 12.2 2 47 0 0 0.0 Opponents 10 76 169.0 No. Yds Avg TD Long 10 56 153.6 Kick Returns Fluker-Berry, Dwight 22 401 18.2 0 37 Wicker, Jeremy 9 133 14.8 0 36 Receiving GP No. Yds Avg TD Long Avg/G 2 41 20.5 0 22 Hairston, Victor 11 52 580 11.2 2 48 52.7 Fiano, Tanner 2 34 17.0 0 20 Garrett, Reggie 11 30 436 14.5 3 76 39.6 Mills, Patrick Alford, Josh 2 34 17.0 0 20 Cotton, Donovan 11 24 266 11.1 2 64 24.2 1 16 16.0 0 16 Branche, DeAngelo 11 13 56 4.3 0 17 5.1 Coleman, Denzel Total 38 659 17.3 0 37 Wicker, Jeremy 11 10 107 10.7 1 21 9.7 Opponents 47 764 16.3 1 78 Hawkins, Joe 11 9 107 11.9 0 22 9.7 Childress, Sherron 11 9 94 10.4 1 19 8.5 Field Goals FGM-FGA Pct 01-19 20-29 30-39 40-49 50-99 Lg Blk Lewis, Kelvin 11 4 78 19.5 0 46 7.1 Estep, Ryan 11-16 68.8 0-0 5-5 3-4 3-7 0-0 45 1. Hedgeman, Takeem 10 4 33 8.2 0 15 3.3 Brisco, Markeith 9 4 24 6.0 0 14 2.7 FG Sequence Norfolk State Opponents Alford, Josh 11 3 18 6.0 0 15 1.6 39 (31), 40, 47,(20),(27) Holbrook, Joseph 11 2 15 7.5 0 10 1.4 Rutgers North Carolina A&T (27), 41 - McCowan, Nigel 9 1 45 45.0 1 45 5.0 Virginia State (22) - Shepherd, Tyrece 6 1 3 3.0 0 3 0.5 Bethune-Cookman 41 30, 22, 24 Demps, Derrick 9 1 -3 -3.0 0 0 -0.3 South Carolina State (45), (26) (39), (22) Total 11 167 1859 11.1 10 76 169.0 Hampton - 40 Opponents 11 139 1690 12.2 10 56 153.6 Florida A&M (41), (26) (28) Howard 42, (31) 43 |------------ PATs ------------| (43),(24),28,(47),(39) Scoring TD FGs Kick Rush Rcv Pass DXP Saf Pts Morgan State (45), (37), (33) 40, (22) Branche, DeAngelo 13 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 78 Delaware State - (47), (35) Estep, Ryan 0 11-16 26-29 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 59 Savannah State Garrett, Reggie 3 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 18 Cotton, Donovan 2 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 12 Numbers in (parentheses) indicate field goal was made. Hairston, Victor 2 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 12 No. Yds Avg Long TB FC I20 Blkd Hedgeman, Takeem 2 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 12 Punting 48 1757 36.6 61 6 6 17 3 Wicker, Jeremy 1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 6 Muenzer, Troy 4 -11 -2.8 0 0 0 0 0 Brisco, Markeith 1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 6 Team 52 1746 33.6 61 6 6 17 3 Volcin, Ricardo 1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 6 Total 59 2158 36.6 57 1 6 17 0 Fluker-Berry, Dwight 1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 6 Opponents McCowan, Nigel 1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 6 Childress, S. 1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 6 No. Yds Avg TB OB Retn Net YdLn Barnes, Dante 1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 6 Kickoffs 38 1808 47.6 0 2 Total 29 11-16 26-29 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 233 Lee, Ryan 13 609 46.8 0 0 Opponents 25 12-20 23-23 1-2 0 0-0 0 1 213 Estep, Ryan Total 51 2417 47.4 0 2 764 32.4 37 Opponents 44 2504 56.9 4 2 659 40.1 29 Total Offense G Plays Rush Pass Total Avg/G Walley, Chris 11 333 190 1859 2049 186.3 Interceptions No. Yds Avg TD Long Branche, DeAngelo 11 272 1330 0 1330 120.9 Barnes, Dante 2 69 34.5 1 68 Hedgeman, Takeem 10 57 220 0 220 22.0 Short, Jamie 1 0 0.0 0 0 Brisco, Markeith 9 24 141 0 141 15.7 Volcin, Ricardo 1 39 39.0 1 39 Cotton, Donovan 11 29 109 0 109 9.9 Taylor, Nick 1 0 0.0 0 0 Alford, Josh 11 1 3 0 3 0.3 Fluker-Berry, Dwight 1 2 2.0 0 2 Merritt, Dexter 1 2 -2 0 -2 -2.0 Total 6 110 18.3 2 68 Hairston, Victor 11 1 -2 0 -2 -0.2 Opponents 8 74 9.2 0 30 Team 10 18 -68 0 -68 -6.8 Total 11 738 1921 1859 3780 343.6 Fumble Returns No. Yds Avg TD Long Opponents 11 672 1435 1690 3125 284.1 Fluker-Berry, Dwight 1 50 50.0 1 50 Total 1 50 50.0 1 50 Opponents 1 9 9.0 1 9 Passing Walley, Chris Merritt, Dexter Strickler, Jake Team Total Opponents

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GP 11 1 1 10 11 11

Effic Cmp-Att-Int Pct 125.06 167-272-8 61.4 0.00 0-1-0 0.0 0.00 0-1-0 0.0 0.00 0-4-0 0.0 122.36 167-278-8 60.1 108.23 139-279-6 49.8

Yds 1859 0 0 0 1859 1690

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE


2010 STATISTICS Norfolk State Overall 2010 Defensive Statistics |------Tackles------| |-Sacks-| DEFENSIVE LEADERS GP Solo Ast Total TFL/Yds No-Yds 34 Hammond,Corwin 11 38 38 76 11.0-36 4.5-26 30 Reynolds, DeVonte 11 37 23 60 3.5-16 . 28 Anyaugo, Onyemechi 11 27 20 47 3.5-10 1.5-6 99 Turner, Josh 11 21 25 46 12.0-40 2.5-18 26 Volcin, Ricardo 11 26 17 43 4.0-16 . 1 Fluker-Berry, Dwight 11 32 9 41 2.5-8 . 31 Taylor, Anthony 6 21 19 40 4.5-16 2.0-10 95 Jennings, Ray 11 24 15 39 12.0-49 5.0-27 18 Barnes, Dante 10 22 9 31 1.0-1 . 58 Craig, Hasan 11 11 18 29 3.0-13 0.5-9 56 Pugh, Terrence 11 13 14 27 6.5-16 2.0-6 8 Short, Jamie 11 18 8 26 1.5-6 . 59 Christine, Joey 11 11 10 21 2.5-11 1.0-7 20 Hitch, Eric 11 10 7 17 1.0-2 . 9 Giddens, Jamal 11 8 9 17 2.5-6 . 57 Clemmons, Frank 9 7 9 16 1.0-12 1.0-12 37 Center, Marcus 11 7 6 13 . . 27 Harris, Natturner 11 10 3 13 . . 90 Thorpe, Lamont 11 5 5 10 1.0-5 1.0-5 36 Cuffee, Marquis 11 5 4 9 . . 24 Coleman, Denzel 11 6 2 8 . . 53 Porter, Trent 10 4 4 8 1.0-3 . 21 Taylor, Nick 11 1 3 4 . . 96 Washington, Nico 11 . 4 4 . . 10 Sanderlin, Naron 11 2 2 4 . . 89 Grant, Matthew 6 1 3 4 1.0-2 . 16 Hosten, Victor 10 . 4 4 . . 54 Dodson, Marcus 11 2 1 3 1.0-1 . 97 Bunce, Steven 5 1 2 3 . . 23 Hairston, Victor 11 2 . 2 . . 93 Ford-Toomer, Thor 7 2 . 2 . . 51 Cameron, Jermaine 10 . 2 2 . . 80 Hawkins, Joe 11 1 . 1 . . 3 Branche, DeAngelo 11 1 . 1 . . 38 Lee, Ryan 10 . 1 1 . . 35 Muenzer, Troy 10 1 . 1 . . 2 Hedgeman, Takeem 10 1 . 1 . . Totals 11 378 296 674 76-269 21-126 Opponents 11 429 375 804 56-187 12-68

|----Pass Def----| |-Fumbles-| Blkd Int-Yds BrUp QBH Rcv-Yds FF Kick . 1 5 . 2 . . 4 1 1-0 . . . 3 6 . 1 . . . 7 . . . 1-39 2 . . 1 . 1-2 3 . 1-50 . . . . 2 1-0 . . . . 5 . . . 2-69 5 . . . . . 1 4 3-0 . . . . 1 . . . 1-0 8 . . . . . . 6 . . . . . . . . . . 1 1 . . . . . 1 . 1 . . 2 . . . . . 2 . . . . . 1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1-0 . . . . . . 1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1-0 . . . . . 1-0 . . . . 1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6-110 34 40 8-50 5 . 8-74 29 21 6-9 2 7

Saf . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1

TEAM STATISTICs NSU OPP SCORING 233 213 Points Per Game 21.2 19.4 FIRST DOWNS 208 171 Rushing 111 76 Passing 83 74 Penalty 14 21 RUSHING YARDAGE 1921 1435 Yards gained rushing 2163 1750 Yards lost rushing 242 315 Rushing Attempts 460 393 Average Per Rush 4.2 3.7 Average Per Game 174.6 130.5 TDs Rushing 16 11 PASSING YARDAGE 1859 1690 Comp-Att-Int 167-278-8 139-279-6 Average Per Pass 67 61 Average Per Catch 11.1 12.2 Average Per Game 169.0 153.6

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE

TDs Passing 10 10 TOTAL OFFENSE 3780 3125 Total Plays 738 672 Average Per Play 51 47 Average Per Game 343.6 284.1 KICK RETURNS: #-Yards 38-659 47-764 PUNT RETURNS: #-Yards 21-313 14-171 INT RETURNS: #-Yards 6-110 8-74 KICK RETURN AVERAGE 17.3 16.3 PUNT RETURN AVERAGE 14.9 12.2 INT RETURN AVERAGE 18.3 9.2 FUMBLES-LOST 8-6 17-8 PENALTIES-Yards 82-762 72-612 Average Per Game 69.3 55.6 PUNTS-Yards 52-1746 59-2158 Average Per Punt 33.6 36.6 Net punt average 28.0 30.9 TIME OF POSSESSION/Game 31:21 28:39

3RD-DOWN Conversions 54/147 48/147 3rd-Down Pct 37% 33% 4TH-DOWN Conversions 4/19 7/16 4th-Down Pct 21% 44% SACKS BY-Yards 21-126 12-68 MISC YARDS 0 1 TOUCHDOWNS SCORED 29 25 FIELD GOALS-ATTEMPTS 11-16 12-20 ON-SIDE KICKS 1-1 1-3 RED-ZONE SCORES (27-33) 82% (29-39) 74% RED-ZONE TD (19-33) 58% (18-39) 46% PAT-ATTEMPTS (26-29) 90% (23-23) 100% ATTENDANCE 59393 97622 Games/Avg Per Game 5/11879 6/16270 SCORE BY QUARTERS 1st 2nd 3rd 4th Total Norfolk State 73 63 46 51 - 233 Opponents 40 68 49 56 - 213

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2010 SUPERLATIVES INDIVIDUAL GAME HIGHS

Rushes........................................... 41 Branche, DeAngelo at Savannah State (Nov 20, 2010) Yards Rushing............................... 233 Branche, DeAngelo at Savannah State (Nov 20, 2010) Td Rushes..................................... 4 Branche, DeAngelo vs Virginia State (Sep 18, 2010) Long Rush..................................... 40 Branche, DeAngelo vs Delaware State (Nov 13, 2010) Pass Attempts.............................. 42 Walley, Chris at Bethune-Cookman (Sep 25, 2010) Pass Completions........................ 22 Walley, Chris at Bethune-Cookman (Sep 25, 2010) Yards Passing............................... 305 Walley, Chris vs Morgan State (Nov 06, 2010) Td Passes...................................... 4 Walley, Chris vs Morgan State (Nov 06, 2010) Long Pass...................................... 76 Walley, Chris at Savannah State (Nov 20, 2010) Receptions.................................... 8 Hairston,Victor at Bethune-Cookman (Sep 25, 2010) .............................. Garrett, Reggie vs Delaware State (Nov 13, 2010) .............................. Garrett, Reggie at Savannah State (Nov 20, 2010) Yards Receiving........................... 173 Garrett, Reggie at Savannah State (Nov 20, 2010) Td Receptions............................. 2 Garrett, Reggie at Savannah State (Nov 20, 2010) Long Reception............................ 76 Garrett, Reggie at Savannah State (Nov 20, 2010) Field Goals.................................... 3 Estep, Ryan vs Morgan State (Nov 06, 2010) Long Field Goal............................. 45 Estep, Ryan at South Carolina State (Oct 09, 2010) ............................ Estep, Ryan vs Morgan State (Nov 06, 2010) Punts.............................................. 9 Muenzer, Troy at Rutgers (Sept 2, 2010) Punting Avg................................... 44.2 Muenzer, Troy vs Florida A&M (Oct 23, 2010) Long Punt...................................... 61 Muenzer, Troy at Rutgers (Sept 2, 2010) Long Punt Return......................... 66 Fluker-Berry, Dwight vs Virginia State (Sep 18, 2010) Long Kickoff Return..................... 37 Fluker-Berry, Dwight at South Carolina State (Oct 09, 2010) Tackles ....................................... 13 Hammond,Corwin vs Morgan State (Nov 06, 2010) Sacks .......................................... 1.0 Taylor, Anthony at Rutgers (Sept 2, 2010) .............................. Hammond, Corwin at Rutgers (Sept 2, 2010) .............................. Jennings, Ray at Rutgers (Sept 2, 2010) .............................. Jennings, Ray vs North Carolina A&T (Sep 11, 2010) .............................. Hammond, Corwin vs Virginia State (Sep 18, 2010) .............................. Pugh, Terrence vs Virginia State (Sep 18, 2010) .............................. Taylor, Anthony at Bethune-Cookman (Sep 25, 2010) .............................. Christine, Joey at Bethune-Cookman (Sep 25, 2010) .............................. Hammond, Corwin at South Carolina State (Oct 09, 2010) ............................... Jennings, Ray vs Florida A&M (Oct 23, 2010) .............................. Anyaugo, Onyemechi at Howard (Oct 30, 2010) .............................. Pugh, Terrence at Howard (Oct 30, 2010) .............................. Turner, Josh at Howard (Oct 30, 2010) .............................. Hammond, Corwin vs Delaware State (Nov 13, 2010) .............................. Jennings, Ray vs Delaware State (Nov 13, 2010) .............................. Jennings, Ray at Savannah State (Nov 20, 2010) .............................. Turner, Josh at Savannah State (Nov 20, 2010) Tackles For Loss........................... 3.0 Jennings, Ray at Bethune-Cookman (Sep 25, 2010) Interceptions................................ 1 Taylor, Nick vs Virginia State (Sep 18, 2010) ............................... Volcin, Ricardo at South Carolina State (Oct 09, 2010) ............................... Barnes, Dante vs Florida A&M (Oct 23, 2010) ............................... Barnes, Dante vs Morgan State (Nov 06, 2010) ............................... Short, Jamie vs Delaware State (Nov 13, 2010) ............................... Fluker-Berry, Dwight at Savannah State (Nov 20, 2010)

TEAM GAME HIGHS

Rushes.......................59 vs Delaware State (Nov 13, 2010) Yards Rushing...........310 vs Delaware State (Nov 13, 2010) Yards Per Rush.........5.6 at Savannah State (Nov 20, 2010) TD Rushes.................5 vs Virginia State (Sep 18, 2010) Pass Attempts..........42 at Bethune-Cookman (Sep 25, 2010) Pass Completions....22 at Bethune-Cookman (Sep 25, 2010) Yards Passing...........305 vs Morgan State (Nov 06, 2010) Yards Per Pass.........13.9 vs Morgan State (Nov 06, 2010) TD Passes.................4 vs Morgan State (Nov 06, 2010) Total Plays.................85 vs Delaware State (Nov 13, 2010) Total Offense............579 at Savannah State (Nov 20, 2010) Yards Per Play..........7.4 at Savannah State (Nov 20, 2010) Points . ......................51 vs Virginia State (Sep 18, 2010)

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Sacks By..............................3 at Rutgers (Sept 2, 2010) ..................at Howard (Oct 30, 2010) ..................vs Delaware State (Nov 13, 2010) ..................at Savannah State (Nov 20, 2010) First Downs........................28 at Savannah State (Nov 20, 2010) Penalties.............................12 at Savannah State (Nov 20, 2010) Penalty Yards.....................107 at Savannah State (Nov 20, 2010) Turnovers............................2 vs North Carolina A&T (Sep 11, 2010) ................at Bethune-Cookman (Sep 25, 2010) ................at Howard (Oct 30, 2010) ................vs Morgan State (Nov 06, 2010) Interceptions By................1 (6 times)

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE


2010 NOTEBOOK Branche Sets NSU Career Rushing Mark Senior running back DeAngelo Branche became the school’s all-time leading rusher by tallying 1,330 yards on the ground in his final season, bringing his four-year total to 3,678. Branche surpassed LaRue Harrington’s previous mark of 3,659 with career highs of 41 rushes for 233 yards in the season finale at Savannah State. The 233-yard effort surpassed his previous career high of 212 yards that he set the week prior against Delaware State. Branche’s 1,330-yard senior year is the second-best season for a running back in Spartan annals, trailing only Angelo Todd’s record 1,467-yard performance in 1998.

Senior running back DeAngelo Branche (#3) poses with his blockers after becoming NSU’s all-time leading rusher with a 233-yard performance in the season finale against Savannah State.

4 Spartans Named to All-MEAC Teams Branche was the lone Spartan to earn first-team AllMEAC honors, but three of his teammates earned secondteam accolades. Offensive linemen Kendall Noble and William Falakiseni were named to the All-MEAC second team after blocking for a unit which allowed a MEAC-low 12 sacks. In addition, nose guard Josh Turner was named to the all-conference second team after tallying a team-best 12 tackles for losses. Branche was also named to the Sheridan Broadcast Network Black College All-America team and to Phil Steele’s FCS All-America third team. Branche also became the first Spartan offensive player to be named All-MEAC three times. Walley Gets in on Record Breaking Act Branche wasn’t the only Spartan to break a record in 2010. Quarterback Chris Walley finished the season with a 61.4 percent completion percentage (167-of-272). That broke the previous single-season school record held by Aaron Sparrow, who completed 59.8 percent in 1994.

and ranked second in the MEAC with 52 catches, or 4.7 per game. He was moved from running back to receiver in the 2010 spring practice. Former scout team quarterback Reggie Garrett was moved to wideout prior to the season. After starting off the year down the depth chart, he was given a chance as the season progressed. He made the most of it by catching 30 passes for 436 yards and a team-high three touchdowns, all coming in the season’s final five games. That included a 176-yard day in the finale at Savannah State, the most for an NSU receiver and second-most for a MEAC player in 2010. Defense Stands Tall Once More For the second straight year, the NSU defense ranked sixth in the nation in fewest yards allowed, at 284.1 per game. Only South Carolina State (209) and Hampton (271.5) ranked ahead of the Spartans among MEAC teams. The 2009 defense also ranked sixth nationally in yards allowed, at 265.5. Last year’s unit also ranked highly in the national statistics in pass defense Senior defensive lineman Ray Jennings was part of a stingy defense which (eighth, 153.6 yards per ranked sixth in the nation in fewest game allowed) and tackles yards allowed. for loss (31st, 6.9 per game). Going Out with a Bang The Spartans won their final four games of 2010, giving the NSU senior class 26 wins over its four years. That group is the winningest senior class since the 1985 group had 25. It also marked the first time in the Division I era that the Spartans notched winning records in back-to-back years. Offense Comes to Life as Spartans End Year Hot Awas thanks in part to a revamped offense, which moved to a more up-tempo style of spread offense in the final four games. Under the direction of interim offensive coordinator Joe Blackwell, the Spartans averaged 30 points and 436.3 yards per game en route to a perfect record over the season’s final four games.

Hairston, Garrett Emerge at Wideout NSU entered the 2010 season inexperienced at the wide receiver positions, but two players who began their NSU careers at other positions emerged to lead the receiver corps. Former running back Victor Hairston led the team 2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE

59


2010 STARTING LINEUPS Offense

Offensive Line LT LG Rutgers Noble Ford North Carolina A&T Noble Ford Virginia State Noble Ford Bethune-Cookman Noble Ford South Carolina State Noble Ford Hampton Noble Ford Florida A&M Noble Ford Howard Noble Ford Morgan State Noble Kay Delaware State Noble Kay Savannah State Noble Kay

C Falakiseni Falakiseni Falakiseni Falakiseni Falakiseni Falakiseni Falakiseni Falakiseni Falakiseni Falakiseni Falakiseni

RG Preston Preston Preston Preston Preston Preston Preston Preston Preston Preston Preston

RT Hathaway Hathaway Hathaway Hathaway Hathaway Hathaway Hathaway Hathaway Ford Ford Ford

Backs/Receivers Rutgers North Carolina A&T Virginia State Bethune-Cookman South Carolina State Hampton Florida A&M Howard Morgan State Delaware State Savannah State

WR Hairston Hairston Hawkins Hairston Hairston Wicker Hairston Hairston Hairston Hairston Hairston

QB Walley Walley Walley Walley Walley Walley Walley Walley Walley Walley Walley

FB/WR McCowan* McCowan* Alford Cotton# Lewis* Lewis* Lewis* Lewis* Alford Holbrook^ Wicker*

TE Childress Childress Childress Lewis# Childress Childress Childress Childress Childress Childress Childress

* - Started in a three-receiver set

WR Wicker Wicker Holbrook^ Hawkins Hawkins Shepherd Garrett Garrett Garrett Garrett Garrett

RB Branche Branche Branche Branche Branche Branche Branche Branche Branche Branche Branche

# - Started in a four-receiver set

^ - Started in a two tight end set

Front Seven LT Rutgers Jennings North Carolina A&T Jennings Virginia State Jennings Bethune-Cookman Jennings South Carolina State Jennings Hampton Jennings Florida A&M Jennings Howard Jennings Morgan State Jennings Delaware State Jennings Savannah State Jennings

NG Turner Turner Turner Turner Turner Turner Turner Turner Turner Turner Turner

RT Christine Christine Christine Christine Christine Christine Christine Christine Christine Christine Christine

OLB Craig Craig Craig Craig Craig Craig Craig Craig Craig Craig Craig

ILB Taylor Taylor Taylor Taylor Taylor Taylor Anyaugo Anyaugo Anyaugo Anyaugo Anyaugo

Secondary Rutgers North Carolina A&T Virginia State Bethune-Cookman South Carolina State Hampton Florida A&M Howard Morgan State Delaware State Savannah State

SS Volcin Volcin Volcin Volcin Volcin Volcin Volcin Volcin Volcin Volcin Volcin

FS Reynolds Reynolds Reynolds Reynolds Reynolds Reynolds Fluker-Berry Reynolds Reynolds Reynolds Reynolds

CB Barnes Barnes Barnes Barnes Barnes Barnes Barnes Barnes Barnes Barnes Barnes

Defense

CB Short Short Short Short Short Short Short Short Short Short Short

Offense

Name 2010 Starts Career Josh Alford, FB 2 2 DeAngelo Branche, RB 11 30 Sherron Childress, TE 10 24 Donovan Cotton, RB 1 1 William Falakiseni, C 11 22 Calton Ford, OL 11 43 Reggie Garrett, WR 5 5 Victor Hairston, WR 9 9 Ryan Hathaway, OL 8 8 Joe Hawkins, WR 3 3 Joseph Holbrook, TE 2 2 Michael Kay, OL 3 3 Kelvin Lewis, WR 5 5 Nigel McCowan, WR 2 5

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Streak -23 7 -22 30 5 5 --1 3 --

Offense (cont’d)

Name 2010 Starts Career Kendall Noble, OL 11 32 Markeece Preston, OL 11 29 Tyrece Shepherd, WR 1 1 Jeremy Wicker, WR 3 18 Chris Walley, QB 11 11

Streak 32 22 --11

ILB Hammond Hammond Hammond Hammond Hammond Hammond Hammond Hammond Hammond Hammond Hammond

OLB Pugh Pugh Pugh Pugh Pugh Pugh Pugh Pugh Pugh Pugh Pugh

DEFense

Name 2010 Starts Career Onyemechi Anyaugo, ILB 5 7 Dante Barnes, CB 11 14 Joey Christine, DT 11 12 Hasan Craig, OLB 11 18 Dwight Fluker-Berry, FS 1 1 Corwin Hammond, ILB 11 25 Ray Jennings, DL 11 29 Natturner Harris, CB 1 1 Terrence Pugh, OLB 11 12 DeVonte Reynolds, FS 10 10 Jamie Short, DB 11 38 Anthony Taylor, ILB 6 19 Lamont Thorpe, OLB -- 6 Josh Turner, DL 11 25 Ricardo Volcin, SS 11 11

Streak 5 8 11 11 -15 22 -11 4 34 --22 11

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE


2010 GAME RECAPS Game 1 • Sept. 2, 2010 • Rutgers Stadium • Piscataway, N.J.

Rutgers 31 NSU 0 For 30 minutes, the Norfolk State football team stood toe-to-toe with Rutgers of the Big East. But two Scarlet Knights’ touchdowns in a span of 2 minutes, 10 seconds in the third quarter proved to be too much for the Spartans to overcome as Rutgers took a 31-0 win in the season-opener for both teams in front of 46,311 fans at Rutgers Stadium. Led by a spirited defensive effort, NSU (0-1) trailed just 6-0 at the half. But a short touchdown run by Joe Martinek, followed shortly thereafter by a blocked punt returned for another score, spurred the Scarlet Knights onto victory. The game started inauspiciously for NSU, which was held threeand-out on its first drive. Rutgers then marched 45 yards in 11 plays and settled for a 31-yard San San Te field goal for the game’s first points with 7:30 left in the first quarter. NSU picked up a pair of first downs to start its next possession as Chris Walley connected with Victor Hairston for 18 yards and Jeremy Wicker for 21 yards on consecutive plays. A pass interference penalty on the Scarlet Knights helped NSU get a third first down, this one inside the RU 20. But the drive stalled at the Rutgers 13 as Walley fumbled a second-down snap which was recovered by RU’s Eric LeGrand at the 17-yard line. Walley hooked up with Hairston again on a 48-yard pass play on the first play of NSU’s next drive, but Ryan Estep missed a 39-yard field goal on the second play of the second quarter as RU held onto the lead. The Spartans’ defense remained up to the challenge in the second quarter, allowing just a controversial last-second field goal at the firsthalf buzzer. The first-half clock appeared to run out after a 29-yard pass from Tom Savage to Mohamed Sanu down to the NSU 2-yard line. But the referees allowed Rutgers to snap the ball on a 20-yard field goal try by Te, which he nailed through the uprights for a 6-0 Scarlet Knights lead going into the half. Rutgers’ offense finally picked up some momentum midway through the third quarter as the Spartans started feeling the effects of the humid conditions, with the pregame temperature hovering close to 90 degrees. On a drive in which six Spartans went down due to cramps, the Scarlet Knights moved 75 yards in seven plays, capped by a 6-yard touchdown run by Martinek, to extend their lead. Sanu ran in the two-point conversion to make it 14-0 with 7:55 left in the period. NSU was held three-and-out on its next possession when Rutgers added to its momentum. Brandon Bing blocked a Troy Muenzer punt and Joe Lefeged scooped it up and ran it in for a 3-yard touchdown that gave the Scarlet Knights a 21-0 lead with 5:45 remaining in the third quarter. Savage hit Sanu on a 10-yard TD pass with 8:27 left in the game to extend the lead to 28-0. Te split the uprights for a 27-yard field goal with 4:40 to go for the final scoring margin. NSU’s offense was led by Hairston, a junior wideout and converted running back making his first career start. He led all players with five catches for 82 yards. Walley was 11-of-23 passing for 131 yards. Defensively, NSU’s inside linebacker tandem of Corwin Hammond and Anthony Taylor (combined for 22 tackles. Hammond had a game-high 12 stops, two for a loss, and one sack. Taylor had 10 tackles and one sack.

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE

Score by Quarters Norfolk State Rutgers

1 0 3

2 0 3

3 0 15

4 0 - 10 -

Score 0 31

Scoring Summary 1st 07:30 Rutgers – San San Te 31 yd field goal, 11-45 5:44 2nd 00:00 Rutgers – San San Te 20 yd field goal, 5-49 0:52 3rd 07:55 Rutgers – Joe Martinek 6 yd run (Sanu rush), 7-75 3:54 05:45 Rutgers – Lefeged 3 yd blocked punt return (Te kick) 4th 08:27 Rutgers – Sanu 10 yd pass from Savage (Te kick), 11-70 6:24 04:40 Rutgers – Te 27 yd field goal, 5-35 2:42 Team Statistics First Downs Rushes-Yards (Net) Passing Yds (Net) Passes Att-Comp-Int Total Offense Plays-Yards Fumble Returns-Yards Punt Returns-Yards Kickoff Returns-Yards Interception Returns-Yards Punts (Number-Avg) Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Possession Time Third-Down Conversions Fourth-Down Conversions Red-Zone Scores-Chances Sacks By: Number-Yards

NSU 7 24-25 131 24-11-0 48-156 0-0 0-0 5-92 0-0 10-33.6 1-1 7-85 22:19 0 of 12 0 of 1 0-2 3-12

RU 20 50-268 154 21-11-0 71-422 0-0 3-60 1-18 0-0 4-36.8 0-0 8-62 37:41 6 of 14 0 of 1 5-5 2-4

Individual Stats Rushing: NSU – Branche 13-23, Hedgeman 3-3, Brisco 2-3, Cotton 2-2, Walley 2-0, Merritt 1-Minus 2, Team 1-minus 4. Rutgers – Martinek 20109, Williams, De’Antwan 6-69, Thomas 13-47, Sanu 4-19, Savage 6-18, Putman 1-6. Passing: NSU – Walley 11-23-0-131, Merritt 0-1-0-0. Rutgers – Savage 10-19-0-148, Team 0-1-0-0, Dodd, Chas 1-1-0-6. Receiving: NSU – Hairston 5-82, Branche 2-7, Cotton 2-5, Wicker 1-21, Hawkins 1-16. Rutgers – Sanu 3-65, Stroud 2-28, Thomas 2-19, Jefferson 1-25, Carrezola 1-6, Martinek 1-6, Harrison 1-5.

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2010 GAME RECAPS Game 2 • Sept. 11, 2010 • Norfolk, Va. • Dick Price Stadium

NSU 23 North Carolina A&T 14 Senior running back DeAngelo Branche rushed a career-high 38 times for 170 yards and a touchdown to earn Norfolk State MVP honors, and the Spartans’ defense held the North Carolina A&T defense to 156 total yards in a 23-14 NSU victory in the 63rd annual Fish Bowl Classic. Branche was the workhorse for the Spartans, besting his career high in carries by eight and missing the school record by five. He missed his career high in yardage by just 11 yards. But it was quarterback Chris Walley who got NSU off to a quick start. After the Spartan defense held A&T three-and-out on the game’s first possession, Walley engineered a six-play, 80-yard drive on NSU’s first possession. Walley completed all four of his passes for 69 yards on the opening march, hitting junior Victor Hairston for a 27-yard touchdown pass with 11:16 left in the first quarter. It was Walley’s first career TD pass at NSU and Hairston’s first receiving score as a Spartan. Branche capped a 10-play, 68-yard drive with a 2-yard TD run on the first play of the second quarter to give the Spartans a 13-0 edge. The extra point attempt by Ryan Estep missed wide left. The Spartan defense continued to stifle the Aggies, but an NSU miscue got A&T on the board. On the Spartans’ next possession, a high snap from center resulted in a fumble, which A&T’s Brandon Hover returned 9 yards for a touchdown to cut the Spartans’ lead to 13-7 with 11:29 left in the half. A&T had momentum to start the third quarter before the Spartans’ defense struck for a big play. Aggie quarterback Shelton Morgan appeared to run for a first down at midfield, but NSU linebacker Corwin Hammond jarred the ball loose at the end of the play. Spartan safety Dwight FlukerBerry scooped up the fumble and ran it back 50 yards for a touchdown and a 20-7 NSU lead with 8:12 remaining in the third quarter. Branche carried five times on NSU’s next drive, which ended in a 27yard Estep field goal with 1:52 left in the third quarter. The Aggies made it interesting when their game MVP, Torrian Warren, returned the ensuing kickoff 78 yards for a touchdown, cutting their deficit to 23-14. But the Spartan defense held A&T to just one first down in the final quarter to preserve the victory. NSU held a 356-156 edge in total offense, and held the ball for 37 minutes, 33 seconds. Branche tallied 188 all-purpose yards – 170 rushing and 18 receiving. Walley had an efficient game under center, completing 17 of 26 passes for 161 yards. Hairston led NSU with 58 receiving yards, while running back Donovan Cotton had a career-best five receptions. No Spartan defender had more than six tackles, but the Spartans had several standouts. Lineman Ray Jennings had five tackles, 2.5 for loss, including one sack. Hammond and Josh Turner also had five tackles apiece, with Turner tallying 1.5 tackles for loss and Hammond combining on a sack with Lamont Thorpe.

62

Score by Quarters North Carolina A&T Norfolk State

1 0 7

2 7 6

3 7 10

4 0 - 0 -

Score 14 23

Scoring Summary 1st 11:16 NSU – Hairston 27 yd pass from Walley (Estep kick), 6-80 2:56 2nd 14:55 NSU – Branche 2 yd run (Estep kick failed), 10-68 4:46 11:29 NCAT – Hover 9 yd fumble recovery (Shidler kick) 3rd 08:12 NSU – Fluker-Berry 50 yd fumble recovery (Estep kick) 01:52 NSU – Estep 27 yd field goal, 9-49 5:09 01:36 NCAT – Warren 78 yd kickoff return (Shidler kick) Team Statistics First Downs Rushes-Yards (Net) Passing Yds (Net) Passes Att-Comp-Int Total Offense Plays-Yards Fumble Returns-Yards Punt Returns-Yards Kickoff Returns-Yards Interception Returns-Yards Punts (Number-Avg) Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Possession Time Third-Down Conversions Fourth-Down Conversions Red-Zone Scores-Chances Sacks By: Number-Yards

NCAT 6 19-31 125 28-15-0 47-156 1-9 2--3 5-153 1-0 6-35.0 1-1 6-54 22:27 1 of 12 1 of 3 0-0 2-9

NSU 21 48-195 161 26-17-1 74-356 1-50 2-7 4-55 0-0 3-38.0 1-1 2-20 37:33 4 of 13 0 of 3 2-2 2-16

Individual Statistics Rushing: NCAT – Mayhew 11-21, Morgan 8-10. NSU – Branche 38-170, Brisco 3-38, Walley 4-3, Cotton 1-3, Team 2-minus 19. Passing: NCAT – Morgan 15-28-0-125. NSU – Walley 17-26-1-161. Receiving: NCAT – Miles 6-86, Mayhew 3-6, Cooper 2-15, Warren 2-2, Stewart1-8, Gould 1-8. NSU – Cotton 5-44, Hairston 4-58, Branche 3-18, Childress 2-17, Wicker 1-17, Hawkins 1-9, Brisco 1-minus 2.

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE


2010 GAME RECAPS Game 3 • Sept. 18, 2010 • Norfolk, Va. • Dick Price Stadium

NSU 51 Virginia State 28 Senior running back DeAngelo Branche rushed for 167 yards and a career-high four touchdowns to lead Norfolk State to its most points in five years in a 51-28 rout of Virginia State. Quarterback Chris Walley completed 17-of-22 passes for 237 yards and two scores for the Spartans (2-1), who piled up 505 yards of total offense en route to their fifth straight win over the Trojans (2-1). The fivegame winning streak is NSU’s longest in the series, which dates to 1963. The 51 points recorded by NSU is the team’s most since a 58-29 win at Savannah State on Oct. 1, 2005. NSU jumped out to a 21-0 lead after the first quarter and led 34-7 at the half. Special teams played a big key in the Spartans’ early success. After forcing a VSU punt after the first drive of the game, NSU senior Dwight Fluker-Berry returned the ensuing punt 66 yards to the Trojans’ 2. That set up Branche’s first score of the night, a 2-yard run. After the Trojans went three-and-out on their next possession, Fluker-Berry’s 17-yard punt return set NSU up at the VSU 47. Walley then hit Kelvin Lewis on a 46-yard bomb on the next play, setting up Branche’s 1-yard TD run with 9:27 left in the first quarter. That made it 14-0 in favor of the Spartans. Next, it was Jeremy Wicker’s turn to set NSU up with good field position. He returned a Trojan punt 21 yards to the Spartans’ 49. Nine plays later, Walley hooked up with running back Donovan Cotton for a 26-yard scoring pass and a 21-0 NSU lead with 4:01 left in the quarter. The Spartans’ first drive of the second quarter went 80 yards in eight plays, with Branche plunging in from 2 yards out to give NSU the 28-0 lead with 7:58 left in the half. VSU got on the board on Antwain Lyde’s 6-yard run with 2:59 left in the half. The score was set up by a 56-yard completion from Jarred Battle to Corey Young. It was Battle’s first completion of the night after 11 straight incompletions to begin the game. Wicker kept up the theme of long kick returns for the Spartans, running the ensuing kickoff back 36 yards. A 15-yard penalty on the Trojans moved the ball into VSU territory. Six plays later, NSU was in the end zone again as Walley hit Victor Hairston for a 17-yard touchdown pass, their second scoring hookup in as many weeks. The extra point failed, but NSU led 34-7 at halftime. The Spartans kept the momentum going into the second half, taking the third-quarter kickoff and driving 73 yards in 11 plays. Branche scored his fourth and final touchdown of the night on a 1-yard run to finish off the march with 10:10 remaining in the quarter. The Trojans would find life later, scoring on three straight possessions. Battle found Timothy Paulk for a 32-yard scoring pass to cut NSU’s lead to 41-14. Ryan Estep extended NSU’s lead back to 30, 44-14, with a 22-yard field goal on the Spartans’ next possession. But VSU kept coming, drawing within 44-28 with two more scoring drives. Brian Berry took an end-around and scored on a 9-yard run to make it 44-21. After a Spartan fumble, the Trojans marched 40 yards in eight plays, with Rahoo Walker scoring on a 1-yard run to bring VSU within 44-28 with 12:25 remaining in the game. NSU put the game out of reach once and for all. The Spartans drove 80 yards in 11 plays, 10 of them runs. Markeith Brisco scored his first collegiate touchdown on a 1-yard run with 3:21 left.

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE

Score by Quarters 1 Virginia State 0 Norfolk State 21

2 7 13

3 14 10

4 7 - 7 -

Score 28 51

Scoring Summary 1st 12:01 NSU – Branche 2 yd run (Estep kick), 1-2 0:05 09:27 NSU – Branche 1 yd run (Estep kick), 2-47 0:34 04:01 NSU – Cotton 26 yd pass from Walley (Estep kick) 2nd 07:58 NSU – Branche 2 yd run (Estep kick), 8-80 4:25 02:59 VSU – Lyde 6 yd run (Parker kick), 3-65 1:10 00:26 NSU – Hairston 17 yd pass from Walley (kick failed), 6-61 2:24 3rd 10:10 NSU – Branche 1 yd run (Estep kick), 11-73 4:41 08:47 VSU – Paulk 32 yd pass from Battle (Parker kick), 5-43 1:13 03:53 NSU – Estep 22 yd field goal, 9-64 4:48 01:36 VSU – Berry 9 yd run (Parker kick), 6-67 2:08 4th 12:25 VSU – Walker 1 yd run (Parker kick), 8-40 3:19 03:21 NSU – Brisco 1 yd run (Estep kick), 11-80 6:34 Team Statistics First Downs Rushes-Yards (Net) Passing Yds (Net) Passes Att-Comp-Int Total Offense Plays-Yards Fumble Returns-Yards Punt Returns-Yards Kickoff Returns-Yards Interception Returns-Yards Punts (Number-Avg) Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Possession Time Third-Down Conversions Fourth-Down Conversions Red-Zone Scores-Chances Sacks By: Number-Yards

VSU 17 25-67 200 33-11-1 58-267 0-0 0-0 8-106 0-0 7-42.7 1-0 5-44 23:08 4 of 11 0 of 0 3-3 2-6

NSU 26 48-268 237 23-17-0 71-505 0-0 5-144 4-93 1-0 3-35.7 1-1 9-84 36:52 4 of 9 0 of 0 7-7 2-11

Individual Statistics Rushing: Virginia State – Lyde 12-52, Berry 2-12, Walker 4-4, Hawks 2-1, Battle 5-Minus 2. NSU – Branche 26-167, Brisco 14-86, Walley 4-12, Cotton 2-7, Team 2-Minus 4. Passing: Virginia State – Battle 11-33-1-200. NSU – Walley 17-22-0-237, Strickler 0-1-0-0. Receiving: Virginia State – Young 3-103, Paulk 3-54, Berry 2-23, Hawks 2-13, Sims 1-7. NSU – Hairston 6-96, Cotton 3-40, Brisco 2-18, Branche 2-3, Lewis 1-46, Hawkins 1-22, Wicker 1-7, Holbrook 1-5.

63


2010 GAME RECAPS Game 4 • Sept. 25, 2010 • Daytona Beach, Fla. • Municipal Stadium

Bethune-Cookman 21 NSU 7 Bethune-Cookman quarterback Matthew Johnson completed 17 of 27 passes for 225 yards and three scores to help the Wildcats to a 21-7 victory over Norfolk State. All of Johnson’s TD throws came in the first half, and the Spartans (2-2, 1-1 MEAC) were unable to mount a rally in the second half despite a number of good opportunities. Johnson helped the Wildcats (3-0, 1-0) drive 69 yards in eight plays on the first drive of the game. He tossed a 16-yard pass to Tony Wilson to open the scoring with 12:15 left. The teams traded punts, and then Johnson went to work again. He completed a short screen pass to Eddie Poole, who took it 42 yards for a Wildcats’ touchdown with 3:16 left in the first quarter. The Wildcats resorted to some trickery on their next possession. On 4th-and-5 from the NSU 11, B-CU lined up for a field goal, but NSU called timeout. After the timeout, B-CU ran its offense back out on the field and quickly snapped the ball. Johnson hit Randy James for an 11-yard TD pass with 14:51 left in the second quarter. All seven of the Spartans’ second-half drives entered Wildcats’ territory, buy only one resulted in points. In the third quarter, Ryan Estep had a 41-yard field goal hit the upright to thwart one drive. Later, an Anthony Taylor fumble recovery set up NSU at the BCU 29. But the Spartans were stopped on 4th-and-2 from the Wildcat 21. NSU finally got on the board on a 1-yard touchdown run by Takeem Hedgeman with 13:46 left in the game. The sophomore’s first score of the year capped an eight-play, 52-yard drive that lasted 4:10. The Spartans continued their momentum when Jamie Short recovered Estep’s onside kick. The Spartans then drove to the Wildcat 19. But Chris Walley’s fourth-down pass hit off the outstretched fingers of Joe Hawkins in the end zone and fell incomplete. The Spartans’ last-gasp drive ended when Walley’s 4th-and-3 pass from the B-CU 12 hit off the hands of Jeremy Wicker near the goal line and was picked off by Arkee Smith with 2:10 left. B-CU outgained NSU 392-318. The Spartans held B-CU to just 94 yards of offense in the second half. Walley completed 22 of 42 passes for 196 yards. He was intercepted twice. Victor Hairston and Hawkins notched career highs in receptions with eight and five, respectively. Hairston led all players with 83 receiving yards.

64

Score by Quarters Norfolk State Bethune-Cookman

1 0 14

2 0 7

3 0 0

4 7 - 0 -

Score 7 21

Scoring Summary 1st 12:15 BCU – Wilson 6 yd pass from Johnson (Hurd kick), 8-69 2:45 03:16 BCU – Poole 42 yd pass from Johnson (Hurd kick), 4-88 1:27 2nd 14:51 BCU - James 11 yd pass from Johnson (Hurd kick), 7-16 1:27 4th 13:46 NSU – Hedgeman 1 yd run (Estep kick), 8-52 4:10, NSU 7 Team Statistics First Downs Rushes-Yards (Net) Passing Yds (Net) Passes Att-Comp-Int Total Offense Plays-Yards Fumble Returns-Yards Punt Returns-Yards Kickoff Returns-Yards Interception Returns-Yards Punts (Number-Avg) Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Possession Time Third-Down Conversions Fourth-Down Conversions Red-Zone Scores-Chances Sacks By: Number-Yards

NSU BCU 21 20 30-122 41-167 196 225 42-22-2 27-17-0 72-318 68-392 0-0 0-0 1-7 2-39 3-46 1-15 0-0 2-22 6-29.8 5-36.8 0-0 2-1 7-56 9-88 34:15 25:45 5 of 16 6 of 16 0 of 3 1 of 1 1-3 2-5 2-16 2-18

Individual Statistics Rushing: NSU – Branche 10-65, Walley 8-29, Brisco 5-14, Hedgeman 7-14. Bethune-Cookman – Bell 14-71, Johnson 18-56, Moment 4-29, Jackson 3-7, Lovette 2-4. Passing: NSU – Walley 22-42-2-196. Bethune-Cookman – Johnson 17-270-225. Receiving: NSU – Hairston 8-83, Hawkins 5-54, Hedgeman 2-26, Cotton 2-8, Branche 2-3, Childress 1-17, Lewis 1-8, Demps 1-minus 3. BethuneCookman – Francois 3-43, Reams 3-34, Brown 3-21, Poole 2-46, Wilson T. 2-41, Moment 1-13, Harris 1-11, James 1-11, Bell 1-5.

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE


2010 GAME RECAPS Game 5 • Oct. 9, 2010 • Orangeburg, S.C. • Oliver C. Dawson Bulldog Stadium

South Carolina State 34 NSU 13 The South Carolina State defense limited visiting Norfolk State to 96 yards of total offense, and Bulldog running back Chris Massey scored a touchdown rushing and receiving as the ninth-ranked Bulldogs beat the Spartans 34-13. The win was the 21st straight in MEAC play for the two-time defending conference champion Bulldogs (4-1, 2-0 MEAC). NSU (2-3, 1-2), meanwhile, has now lost two straight. The Spartans started fast thanks to a big play from their defense. Junior safety Ricardo Volcin intercepted a Malcolm Long sideline pass on the second play from scrimmage and returned it 39 yards for an NSU touchdown. The extra point by Ryan Estep gave the Spartans a 7-0 lead just 59 seconds into the game. But NSU’s special teams problems surfaced later in the quarter. A low punt snap went past Spartan punter Troy Muenzer. His last-ditch effort to punt the ball off the ground did not reach the line of scrimmage, and Bulldog Troy McFadden caught the low kick and ran it back 47 yards for the tying touchdown with 10:25 left in the first quarter. After forcing NSU to punt on the ensuing drive, the Bulldogs drove 64 yards in 10 plays for the go-ahead score. Long hit Massey on a 9-yard TD pass to make it 14-7 with 3:32 remaining in the first quarter. The Spartans would get as close as 14-10 on Estep’s career-long 42-yard field goal with 13:37 left in the second quarter. The kick capped a 13-play, 47-yard drive. SCSU pushed its lead to 21-10 on Long’s 1-yard QB sneak on its next possession, finishing off a nine-play, 60-yard drive. Blake Erickson then helped SCSU take a 24-10 advantage into the half thanks to a 39-yard field goal just 1:12 before the break. After forcing NSU to punt after the first possession of the second half, Erickson pushed the Bulldogs’ edge to 27-10 with a 22-yard field goal. Estep hit his second field goal of the day with 10:43 left in the game to bring NSU within two touchdowns, at 27-13. The score was set up after the Spartans got excellent field position when Victor Hosten recovered a fumbled SCSU punt at the Bulldog 9. But NSU could only manage one more first down the rest of the way, and Massey capped the scoring with a 4-yard TD run with 2:29 left in the game. Massey had 23 carries for 82 yards for SCSU, which was held to 297 yards of offense by the Spartan defense. Long was 12-of-20 through the air for 125 yards with one score and one interception. DeAngelo Branche led the NSU offense with 17 rushes for 53 yards. Branche, who entered the day as the fourth-leading rusher in NSU history, moved past Orlando Goodhope and Terrell Johnson into second on the all-time rushing list with 2,828 yards. NSU, however, managed just 55 yards passing. Quarterback Chris Walley was harassed into 10-of-24 passing and was sacked three times. Spartan free safety DeVonte Reynolds had a career-high 12 tackles, 1.5 for loss, to lead the NSU defense.

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE

Score by Quarters Norfolk State South Carolina State

1 7 14

2 3 10

3 0 3

4 3 - 7 -

Score 13 34

Scoring Summary 1st 14:01 NSU – Volcin 39 yd interception return (Estep kick) 10:25 SCSU – McFadden 47 yd punt return (Erickson kick) 03:32 SCSU – Massey 9 yd pass from Long (Erickson kick) 2nd 13:37 NSU – Estep 45 yd field goal, 13-47 4:49, NSU 10 - SCSU 14 08:38 SCSU – Long 1 yd run (Erickson kick), 9-60 4:50 01:12 SCSU – Erickson 39 yd field goal, 11-30 6:07 3rd 05:30 SCSU – Erickson 22 yd field goal, 13-66 7:06 4th 10:43 NSU – Estep 26 yd field goal, 4-0 0:17 02:29 SCSU – Massey 4 yd run (Erickson kick), 9-44 4:11 Team Statistics First Downs Rushes-Yards (Net) Passing Yds (Net) Passes Att-Comp-Int Total Offense Plays-Yards Fumble Returns-Yards Punt Returns-Yards Kickoff Returns-Yards Interception Returns-Yards Punts (Number-Avg) Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Possession Time Third-Down Conversions Fourth-Down Conversions Red-Zone Scores-Chances Sacks By: Number-Yards

NSU 6 28-41 55 24-10-0 52-96 0-0 0-0 6-129 1-39 7-30.6 2-0 9-79 25:13 3 of 14 1 of 2 1-1 1-3

SCSU 19 47-172 125 20-12-1 67-297 0-0 3-47 4-66 0-0 3-33.0 2-2 10-86 34:47 7 of 13 0 of 0 5-5 3-22

Individual Statistics Rushing: NSU – Branche 17-53, Hedgeman 4-12, Cotton 1-minus 2, Hairston 1-minus 2, Walley 5-minus 20. SCSU – Massey 23-82, Elmore 4-38, Wherry 7-33, Merrill 7-21, Long, 6-minus 2. Passing: NSU – Walley 10-24-0-55. SCSU – Long 12-20-1-125. Receiving: NSU – Hairston 5-16, Cotton 1-20, Brisco 1-8, Lewis 1-7, Shepherd 1-3, Branche 1-1. SCSU – Kerr 3-46, Elmore 2-31, Massey 2-14, McDonald 1-11, Merrill 1-9, Christie 1-7, Norwood 1-5, Wherry 1-2.

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2010 GAME RECAPS Game 6 • Oct. 16, 2010 • Hampton, Va. • Armstrong Stadium

Hampton 7 NSU 6 Antwon Chisholm scored on a 7-yard touchdown run in the second quarter, and Hampton made it stand for a 7-6 win over Norfolk State in the 48th annual Battle of the Bay. On a cool, windy afternoon, the game was dominated by the two teams’ rushing attacks and defenses. Spartan senior DeAngelo Branche led all players with 132 rushing yards and sophomore Takeem Hedgeman added a career-high 56 yards, but it wasn’t enough to prevent the Spartans (2-4, 1-3 MEAC) from dropping their third straight. Hampton (5-1, 4-0) got on the board first on Chisholm’s 7-yard touchdown run with 2:07 left in the first half. It capped a seven-play, 75-yard drive. NSU drew within 7-6 on a 1-yard run by Branche with 9:35 remaining in the third quarter, but Ryan Estep missed the extra point wide to the right. The drive took eight plays and 77 yards, all on the ground. But neither team scored again. The Spartans had the ball twice more in Pirate territory, but could not convert. NSU drove 42 yards to the Hampton 37 late in the third quarter, but Chris Walley’s deep pass for Kelvin Lewis was intercepted by Ricardo Silva at the Hampton 5. The Spartan defense kept the team in it with two key stops. After the interception, Hampton drove 65 yards in 14 plays to the Spartans 30. But the center of the NSU defense, aided by linebacker Onyemechi Anyaugo, stuffed quarterback David Legree shy of a first down on a QB sneak, giving the Spartan offense the ball back. The teams traded punts, and HU tried to put the game away. But the NSU defense held again, and Pirate kicker Rodrigo Hernandez missed a 40-yard field goal with 1:07 left in the game. Without a timeout, the Spartans got three consecutive first downs on their final drive as Walley hit Victor Hairston for two completions of 12 yards apiece, and Jeremy Wicker once for 15 yards to reach the Pirates’ 37. After spiking the ball to stop the clock, Walley threw incomplete on second and third down. On 4th-and-10, Hampton’s Matt Davis and Brandon Peguese tackled Walley after a 2-yard gain to thwart the Spartans’ final chance. Hampton outgained NSU 282-258 in total offense. The Spartans grounded out 207 rushing yards, their second-best effort of the year, but only completed 7 of 22 passes for 51 yards. Branche was named NSU’s Battle of the Bay MVP. This marked the third time in four games against the Pirates that Branche has topped the 100-yard mark. It was also the senior’s third 100-yard game of the season. Chisholm had 98 yards on 17 rushes to lead the Pirates. Senior linebacker Anthony Taylor paced the Spartan defense with nine tackles before leaving the game in the fourth quarter with an apparent knee injury. Hasan Craig recovered a fumble to end one Hampton drive inside the red zone in the first half. Darius Johnson had 10 tackles for Hampton to earn the Pirates’ MVP award.

66

Score by Quarters 1 Norfolk State 0 Hampton 0

2 0 7

3 6 0

4 0 - 0 -

Score 6 7

Scoring Summary 2nd 01:12 HAM – Chisholm 7 yd run (Hernandez kick), 7-75 2:07 3rd 09:35 NSU – Branche 1 yd run (Estep kick failed), 8-77 3:53 Team Statistics First Downs Rushes-Yards (Net) Passing Yds (Net) Passes Att-Comp-Int Total Offense Plays-Yards Fumble Returns-Yards Punt Returns-Yards Kickoff Returns-Yards Interception Returns-Yards Punts (Number-Avg) Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Possession Time Third-Down Conversions Fourth-Down Conversions Red-Zone Scores-Chances Sacks By: Number-Yards

NSU 18 40-207 51 22-7-1 62-258 0-0 2-27 1-13 0-0 6-31.8 0-0 7-56 28:43 4 of 12 0 of 2 1-1 0-0

HAM 17 45-153 129 19-8-0 64-282 0-0 0-0 2-43 1-0 6-33.5 2-1 7-64 31:17 3 of 14 1 of 2 1-2 0-0

Individual Statistics Rushing: NSU – Branche 25-132, Hedgeman 9-56, Walley 6-19. Hampton – Chisholm 17-98, Legree 11-43, Robinson 10-23, McCloude 2-8; Team 2-minus 7, Thomas 3-minus 12. Passing: NSU – Walley 7-20-1-51, Team 0-2-0-0. Hampton – Legree 8-190-129. Receiving: NSU – Hairston 2-24, Branche 2-7, Wicker 1-15, Hawkins 1-6, Cotton 1-minus 1. Hampton – Thomas 3-39, Davis 2-25, Brown 1-30, Robinson 1-22, McCain 1-13.

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE


2010 GAME RECAPS Game 7 • Oct. 23, 2010 • Norfolk, Va. • Bragg Memorial Stadium

Florida A&M 17 NSU 13 DeAngelo BrAnche

Philip Sylvester ran 23 times for 130 yards and scored the winning touchdown on a 10-yard run with 6:21 left in the game to lift Florida A&M to a 17-13 victory over Norfolk State on NSU’s homecoming. Sylvester’s TD capped a 13-play, 98-yard drive that proved to be the difference, sending the Spartans (2-5, 1-4 MEAC) to their fourth straight loss in front of a homecoming crowd of 21,118, a season high. Turnovers played a key role in the first half, which ended in a 10-10 deadlock. NSU kick returner Dwight Fluker-Berry fumbled the opening kickoff, and FAMU’s DeAndre Mitchell recovered at the Spartan 11. The Spartan defense stood tall, with FAMU settling for a 28-yard Trevor Scott field goal to take a 3-0 lead just 1:51 into the contest. After an NSU punt, the Rattlers drove into Spartan territory trying to add to their lead. But Martin Ukpai’s pass was intercepted by Dante Barnes, who returned it 68 yards for an NSU touchdown with 5:54 remaining in the first quarter. The Spartan defense came up with another takeaway on their half of the field in the second quarter. Ukpai fumbled a handoff attempt, and Spartan linebacker Hasan Craig recovered at the NSU 38. Ten plays later, Ryan Estep drilled a 41-yard field goal with 7:07 left in the second quarter, stretching NSU’s lead to 10-3. But FAMU tied the score just before half. Ukpai helped engineer a seven-play, 85-yard drive, which he capped with a 1-yard TD run just 17 seconds before halftime. Scott’s extra point tied the game at 10-all. The scoring march was aided by a 39-yard reverse pass from Antonio Lawrence to Kevin Elliott. The Spartans regained the lead on their second possession of the second half. Estep kicked a 26-yard field goal to cap an 11-play, 31-yard drive. With its defense playing stout, NSU pinned FAMU at the 2-yard line after a 39-yard Troy Muenzer punt early in the fourth. But the Rattlers marched 98 yards in 13 plays for what proved to be the winning score. Sylvester ripped off a 36-yard run on the first play of the possession, and Ukpai completed 4 of 6 passes on the drive, all for first downs. That included a key 8-yard pass to Patrick Davis on 4th-and-3 from the Spartan 33 to keep the drive alive. The Spartans moved the ball 60 yards in 14 plays on their final drive. But with all his receivers covered, NSU quarterback Chris Walley was stopped after a 2-yard scramble on 4th-and-6, wrapping up the win for the Rattlers. The Spartans outgained FAMU 346-307, but couldn’t find the end zone on offense. Walley completed 11 of 16 passes for 140 yards and ran for a season-high 62 on 11 carries. DeAngelo Branche led NSU with 89 yards on 26 carries, and in the process became just the second player in NSU history to top the 3,000-yard mark for his career. He now has 3,047 career yards. Sophomore receiver Reggie Garrett, making his first career start, had a game-high four receptions for 65 yards.

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE

Score by Quarters 1 Florida A&M 3 Norfolk State 7

2 7 3

3 0 3

4 7 - 0 -

Score 17 13

Scoring Summary 1st 13:09 FAMU – Scott 28 yd field goal, 4-0 1:40 05:54 NSU – Barnes 68 yd interception return (Estep kick) 2nd 07:07 NSU – Estep 41 yd field goal, 10-39 5:35 00:17 FAMU – Ukpai 1 yd run (Scott kick), 7-85 1:35 3rd 00:43 NSU – Estep 26 yd field goal, 11-31 6:19 4th 06:21 FAMU – Sylvester 10 yd run (Scott kick), 13-98 5:20 Team Statistics First Downs Rushes-Yards (Net) Passing Yds (Net) Passes Att-Comp-Int Total Offense Plays-Yards Fumble Returns-Yards Punt Returns-Yards Kickoff Returns-Yards Interception Returns-Yards Punts (Number-Avg) Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Possession Time Third-Down Conversions Fourth-Down Conversions Red-Zone Scores-Chances Sacks By: Number-Yards

FAMU 13 34-165 142 16-9-1 50-307 0-0 0-0 4-75 0-0 5-36.0 2-1 6-38 23:57 2 of 9 1 of 1 3-3 1-9

NSU 17 49-206 140 16-11-0 65-346 0-0 3-10 4-45 1-68 4-44.2 1-1 9-84 36:03 7 of 15 0 of 2 1-1 1-2

Individual Statistics Rushing: Florida A&M – Sylvester 23-130, Ukpai 8-27, Lawrence 1-14, Team 1-minus 2, Page 1-minus 4. NSU – Branche 26-89, Walley 11-62, Hedgeman 8-36, Cotton 3-21, Team 1-minus 2. Passing: Florida A&M – Ukpai 8-15-1-103, Lawrence 1-1-0-39. NSU – Walley 11-16-0-140. Receiving: Florida A&M – Elliott 3-84, Lawrence 2-25, West 2-13, Tookes 1-12, Davis 1-8. NSU – Garrett 4-65, Hairston 3-30, Cotton 2-13, Lewis 1-17, Alford 1-15.

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2010 GAME RECAPS Game 8 • Oct. 30, 2010 • Washington, D.C. • Greene Stadium

NSU 10 Howard 9 The Norfolk State football team survived a late scare and got back into the win column with a 10-9 victory over Howard in the Bison’s homecoming. The win broke the Spartans’ four-game losing streak and improved their record to 3-5 overall, 2-4 in the MEAC. Howard fell to 1-7, 0-5. The NSU defense held the Bison offense in check all day, limiting Howard to 78 total yards of offense, a season low for an NSU opponent. It almost went for naught, though, had it not been for a lucky break with less than four minutes remaining in the game. With NSU leading 10-7 and trying to run out the clock with 5:15 to go in the fourth quarter, running back DeAngelo Branche was stuffed on three straight plays that moved NSU back from its 21 to the 10-yard line. Howard came right up the middle on the ensuing punt, as DeAngelo Moody blocked the attempt by Troy Muenzer. Unfortunately for the Bison, the ball rolled out of the end zone for a safety, keeping NSU ahead 10-9. The Bison received the free kick and began their next drive at their own 45. But NSU held Howard without a first down, with linebacker Terrence Pugh stuffing quarterback Terry Bradden for a 2-yard loss on 4th-and-11. The Spartans ran out the clock, securing the win. Howard took a 7-0 lead at 10:38 of the second quarter on Brandon Drayton’s 1-yard TD run on 4th-and-goal. The score was set up by Lanny Kelly’s interception of Chris Walley, which Kelly returned to the NSU 20. The Spartans tied the game at 7-all after DeAngelo Branche, in the Wildcat formation, faked a handoff to Donovan Cotton and bolted up the middle for an 18-yard score with 4:35 remaining in the half. The Spartans held Howard to just 33 yards of total offense on 29 first-half plays. Dwight Fluker-Berry got NSU into Bison territory with a 44-yard punt return down to the Howard 31 with a little under three minutes remaining in the third quarter. Five plays later, NSU took a 10-7 lead with 22 seconds left on a 31-yard Ryan Estep field goal. Casey Council returned the ensuing kickoff to the Spartan 47 to give Howard life. But on 2nd-and-11, Howard fumbled a handoff exchange, and NSU lineman Marcus Dodson recovered at the NSU 49. NSU took the ball downfield, and on 3rd-and-9 from the Howard 10, Walley was stopped just short of the first-down marker at the 2-yard line. Electing to go for it to force a two-possession game, the Spartans were again stopped as Branche was unable to convert on 4th-and-1. Nose tackle Josh Turner led the defense with a season-high 10 tackles, two for a loss, and one sack. Pugh and Onyemechi Anyaugo (Sterling, Va.) also registered sacks. They helped limit the Bison’ option running attack to 44 yards on 40 carries. Branche had 23 carries for 77 yards and one TD for the Spartans. Sophomore receiver Reggie Garrett had a career game for a second straight week, grabbing seven passes for 87 yards.

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Score by Quarters 1 Norfolk State 0 Howard 0

2 7 7

3 3 0

4 0 - 2 -

Score 10 9

Scoring Summary 2nd 10:38 HOW – Drayton 1 yd run (Munoz kick), 6-20 3:13 04:38 NSU – Branche 18 yd run (Estep kick), 7-41 2:53 3rd 00:22 NSU – Estep 31 yd field goal, 5-17 2:22 4th 03:14 HOW – Team safety Team Statistics First Downs Rushes-Yards (Net) Passing Yds (Net) Passes Att-Comp-Int Total Offense Plays-Yards Fumble Returns-Yards Punt Returns-Yards Kickoff Returns-Yards Interception Returns-Yards Punts (Number-Avg) Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Possession Time Third-Down Conversions Fourth-Down Conversions Red-Zone Scores-Chances Sacks By: Number-Yards

NSU 15 39-90 164 30-16-1 69-254 0-0 2-41 0-0 0-0 6-35.0 1-1 8-76 28:52 4 of 17 1 of 2 2-3 3-19

HOW 7 40-44 34 14-5-0 54-78 0-0 1-10 4-83 1-30 9-38.0 1-1 5-49 31:08 2 of 14 1 of 2 1-2 0-0

Individual Statistics Rushing: NSU – Branche 23-77, Walley 6-12, Cotton 3-1, Hedgeman 4-0, Team 3-0. Howard – Drayton 8-28, Brice 11-8, Duncan 5-5, Brown 2-4, Liggins 11-2, Christy 1-0, Team 1-minus 1, Bradden 1-minus 2. Passing: NSU – Walley 16-28-1-164, Team 0-2-0-0. Howard – Liggins 4-13-0-25, Bradden 1-1-0-9. Receiving: NSU – Garrett 7-87, Hairston 5-44, Cotton 2-17, Wicker 2-16. Howard – Gunter 2-18, Drayton 1-9, Hayes 1-6, Brice 1-1.

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE


2010 GAME RECAPS Game 9 • Nov. 6, 2010 • Norfolk, Va. • Dick Price Stadium

NSU 37 Morgan State 25 Anthony tAylor

Chris Walley passed for season highs of 305 yards and four touchdowns and set a single-game school record for completion percentage in the process, helping the Spartans win their second straight game and fourth in a row over Morgan State. NSU improved to 4-5 overall, 3-4 in the MEAC on the year. The Bears dropped to 4-5, 3-3. Walley completed 20 of 22 passes, a 90.9 percent completion rate. That snapped the single-game NSU record of 85.7 percent set last year by Dennis Brown against Hampton. Walley completed passes to a season-high nine different receivers, and four different Spartans caught touchdown passes. Both teams moved the ball at will early, but the teams traded field goals as MSU’s Kemar Scarlett hit two in the first quarter and Ryan Estep one as MSU took a 6-3 lead. After Scarlett’s second field goal gave the Bears the lead, Walley capped a 10-play, 74-yard drive with a 10-yard TD pass to sophomore Reggie Garrett with 4 seconds left in the first quarter. Garrett’s first career TD reception gave NSU a 10-6 lead. The Spartans scored the only touchdown of the second quarter when Walley hit Nigel McCowan on a 45-yard TD pass – the first of the senior McCowan’s career – with 3:47 left before the half. Scarlett would add another field goal, his fourth of the half, on the last play of the quarter to bring MSU within 20-12. Walley, who completed his first 12 passes, stayed hot with a 3-yard TD pass to tight end Sherron Childress to cap NSU’s first possession of the second half. The Bears had the answer, though, when Delonte Williams found Winfred Diggs on a 7-yard scoring strike with 6:25 left in the third quarter to bring MSU within 27-19. Estep connected from 33 yards out – his career-high third field goal of the game – to stretch NSU’s lead to 30-19 midway through the fourth quarter, but the Bears closed the gap to 30-25 on a 1-yard TD run by Jephte Cherenfant with 5:13 left in the game. On the ensuing possession, the Spartans were faced with a 3rdand-8 from their own 36. But Walley hit Donovan Cotton in the flat, and Cotton zig-zagged through the MSU defense for a 64-yard touchdown play. The play – the Spartans’ longest from scrimmage this season – put the game out of reach for the Bears. NSU totaled 453 yards of offense, their second-highest tally of the season and most since gaining 505 on Virginia State on Sept. 18. NSU did not punt in the game, scoring on seven of its nine possessions and turning the ball over twice en route to their fourth consecutive win over MSU. Victor Hairston caught seven passes for a career-high 92 yards, while Cotton had three receptions for 89 yards. Garrett had three receptions for 44 yards. DeAngelo Branche led NSU’s ground game with 23 carries for 109 yards. It was his fourth 100-yard game of the season. For Morgan State, David Brown had 16 carries for 128 yards. Diggs caught eight passes for 103 yards. Defensively, linebacker Corwin Hammond had a career-high 13 tackles for the Spartans. Onyemechi Anyaugo had eight tackles and two pass breakups.

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE

Score by Quarters 1 Morgan State 6 Norfolk State 10

2 6 10

3 7 7

4 6 - 10 -

Score 25 37

Scoring Summary 1st 11:02 NSU – Estep 45 yd field goal, 6-26 2:44 07:04 MSU – Scarlett 43 yd field goal, 7-29 3:51 05:01 MSU – Scarlett 24 yd field goal, 4-0 1:48 00:04 NSU – Garrett 10 yd pass from Walley (Estep kick), 10-74 4:51 2nd 07:55 NSU – Estep 37 yd field goal, 7-60 3:26, MSU 6 - NSU 13 05:34 MSU – Scarlett 47 yd field goal, 5-34 2:16, MSU 9 - NSU 13 03:47 NSU – McCowan 45 yd pass from Walley (Estep kick), 4-68 1:39 00:00 MSU – Scarlett 39 yd field goal, 10-24 3:41, MSU 12 - NSU 20 3rd 10:44 NSU – Childress 3 yd pass from Walley (Estep kick), 11-66 4:10 06:25 MSU – Diggs 7 yd pass from Williams (Scarlett kick), 9-40 4:09 4th 08:33 NSU – Estep 33 yd field goal, 15-78 6:55 05:13 MSU – Cherenfant 1 yd run (Williams rush fumbled), 9-66 3:15 03:23 NSU – Cotton 64 yd pass from Walley (Estep kick), 3-66 1:44 Team Statistics First Downs Rushes-Yards (Net) Passing Yds (Net) Passes Att-Comp-Int Total Offense Plays-Yards Fumble Returns-Yards Punt Returns-Yards Kickoff Returns-Yards Interception Returns-Yards Punts (Number-Avg) Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Possession Time Third-Down Conversions Fourth-Down Conversions Red-Zone Scores-Chances Sacks By: Number-Yards

MSU 19 38-192 142 29-14-1 67-334 0-0 0-0 8-128 1--1 2-42.0 1-0 8-51 29:57 6 of 15 2 of 3 5-7 0-0

NSU 22 40-148 305 22-20-1 62-453 0-0 1-21 6-107 1-1 0-0.0 1-1 6-50 30:03 6 of 9 0 of 0 4-4 1-6

Individual Statistics Rushing: Morgan State – Brown 16-128, Williams 14-30, Mann 4-29, Lee 1-4, Cherenfant 1-1, Brooks 2-0. NSU – Branche 23-109, Hedgeman 8-30, Walley 4-23, Alford 1-3, Cotton 2-3, Team 2-minus 20. Passing: Morgan State – Williams 14-29-1-142. NSU – Walley 20-22-1305. Receiving: Morgan State – Diggs 8-103, Brooks 2-12, Okakpu 1-20, Lee 1-6, Bryant 1-5, Mann 1-Minus 4. NSU – Hairston 7-92, Cotton 3-89, Garrett 3-44, Hedgeman 2-7, McCowan 1-45, Wicker 1-14, Holbrook 1-10, Childress 1-3, Alford 1-1.

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2010 GAME RECAPS Game 10 • Nov. 13, 2010 • Norfolk, Va. • Dick Price Stadium

NSU 31 Delaware State 21 Norfolk State senior running back DeAngelo Branche made his final home game in a Spartan uniform a memorable one, running for a careerhigh 212 yards and three touchdowns to lead NSU to its third straight win, 31-21, over Delaware State. The win improves NSU to 5-5 overall, 4-4 in the MEAC and gives the Spartans their first-ever two-game win streak over DSU. The Hornets fall to 2-8, 1-6. Branche – who surpassed the 1,000-yard mark for the season in the second half – scored on runs of 11 and 15 yards in the first half to help stake NSU to a 21-7 halftime lead. His 40-yard scoring run – the longest TD jaunt of his career – put the game out of reach late in the fourth quarter. Branche’s 11-yard run finished off a six-play, 35-yard scoring drive which was set up by a 24-yard punt return by another senior, Jeremy Wicker. Branche’s 15-yard TD run early in the second quarter finished off a 13-play, 87-yard drive. Branche ran for 48 yards on that possession on five carries. The Hornets cut the lead in half with 7:50 left in the second quarter as Anthony Glaud hit Justin Wilson for a 25-yard touchdown pass, culminating a 10-play, 68-yard drive. But NSU stretched its lead back to two scores at 21-7 when Chris Walley found Wicker on a 4-yard TD pass with 25 seconds left before the half. It was Wicker’s first TD since his freshman year of 2007. Neither team scored in the third quarter, but Ryan Estep kicked a key 22-yard field goal with 4:54 remaining in the game to push the Spartans’ lead to 24-7. DSU answered quickly, though, as Glaud marched his team 51 yards in five plays. He capped the drive with a 3-yard TD pass to Charednick Williams with 3:00 left in the game. But Branche put the game out of the Hornets’ grasp when he took a 3rd-and-9 snap in Wildcat formation and dashed 40 yards untouched down the right sideline for his 10th score of the season, making it 31-14. Glaud capped the scoring by finding Wilson on a 16-yard TD pass with 37 seconds left. NSU ran the ball for a season-high 310 yards on 59 carries. NSU gained 459 total yards, its second straight game over the 450-yard mark. Besides Branche, key contributions were made by a number of NSU’s 19 seniors. Donovan Cotton rushed for a season-high 72 yards on 13 carries. Jamie Short intercepted his first pass of the season to thwart one fourth-quarter drive in Spartan territory. Ray Jennings matched his career high with seven tackles, tying for team-high honors on the day. Two of Jennings’ tackles went for loss, including one sack. Sherron Childress had a season-high three receptions, though sophomore Reggie Garrett led with a game-high eight catches.

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Score by Quarters Delaware State Norfolk State

1 0 7

2 7 14

3 0 0

4 14 - 10 -

Score 21 31

Scoring Summary 1st 07:39 NSU – Branche 1 yd run (Estep kick), 6-35 1:39 2nd 11:38 NSU – Branche 15 yd run (Estep kick), 13-87 4:45 07:50 DSU – Wilson 25 yd pass from Glaud (D.-Aviles kick), 10-68 3:41 00:25 NSU – Wicker 4 yd pass from Walley (Estep kick), 11-55 3:03 4th 04:54 NSU – Estep 22 yd field goal, 11-56 4:40 03:00 DSU – Williams 3 yd pass from Glaud (D.-Aviles kick), 5-51 1:48 01:54 NSU – Branche 40 yd run (Estep kick), 3-41 1:01 00:37 DSU – Wilson 16 yd pass from Glaud (D.-Aviles kick), 5-75 1:04 Team Statistics First Downs Rushes-Yards (Net) Passing Yds (Net) Passes Att-Comp-Int Total Offense Plays-Yards Fumble Returns-Yards Punt Returns-Yards Kickoff Returns-Yards Interception Returns-Yards Punts (Number-Avg) Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Possession Time Third-Down Conversions Fourth-Down Conversions Red-Zone Scores-Chances Sacks By: Number-Yards

DSU 21 23-54 312 42-23-1 65-366 0-0 2-16 5-45 1-8 5-34.0 2-1 4-45 26:41 8 of 15 0 of 1 2-3 0-0

NSU 27 59-310 149 26-17-1 85-459 0-0 1-24 2-25 1-0 4-29.5 0-0 6-65 33:19 12 of 19 1 of 1 4-5 3-13

Individual Statistics Rushing: DSU – Jones 8-31, Elko 1-8, Rosseau 5-7, Jackson 2-7, Williams 1-1, Glaud 6-0. NSU – Branche 30-212, Cotton 13-72, Hedgeman 7-25, Walley 6-20, Team 3-minus 19. Passing: DSU – Glaud 20-36-0-289, Elko 3-6-1-23. NSU – Walley 17-26-1149. Receiving: DSU – Wilson 7-92, Dixon 6-97, Langdon 4-26, Jackson 3-65, Williams 2-16, Tarpley 1-16. NSU – Garrett 8-67, Childress 3-29, Hairston 2-20, Wicker 2-10, Cotton 1-21, Alford 1-2.

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE


2010 GAME RECAPS Game 11 • Nov. 20, 2010 • Savannah, Ga. • Memorial Stadium

NSU 42 Savannah State 6 Needing a career game to become Norfolk State’s all-time leading rusher, DeAngelo Branche delivered the game of his life. The senior running back broke LaRue Harrington’s career rushing record by logging a career-high 41 carries for a personal-best 233 yards and scoring three touchdowns to lead the Spartans (6-5) to their fourth straight win, 42-6 over Savannah State in the season finale for both teams. Branche ends his career with 3,678 yards after running for 1,330 this year, the second-most in a season in school history behind Angelo Todd’s 1,467-yard year in 1998. Branche came in needing 215 yards to surpass all-time leading rusher LaRue Harrington’s 3,659 yards. Branche appeared in good shape to reach the record, needing only 28 yards entering the final quarter. But he was almost a victim of his own team’s high-powered offense, which gained a season-high 579 yards of total offense. Chris Walley threw a screen pass to Reggie Garrett, who broke a tackle and streaked up the sideline for a 76-yard touchdown pass to put NSU ahead 42-3 with 9:32 left. It was the longest play of the year for the Spartans. After a 35-yard Derek Williams field goal brought SSU within 42-6, the Spartans got the ball back and Branche gained nine yards on four carries, but was stopped just shy of a first down on a 4th-and-1 at the Spartans’ 36 with 5:05 left. He was nine yards short of the record. SSU got the ball back and used up much of the clock, attempting to run the game out. But NSU linebacker Trent Porter stuffed Antonio Proctor for a loss of three yards on 4th-and-1 from the NSU 17 with 2:36 left, turning the ball back over to NSU and giving Branche one more shot. Branche burst around left end for a seven-yard gain on first down, then got the record in typical Branche fashion. He took the handoff from Walley and pushed forward behind the left side of his line for a four-yard gain and a first down. He went on to carry three more times for 16 yards, running out the clock. Branche ran 18 times for 100 yards and two scores in the first half. He scored on a 1-yard run to cap the Spartans’ first drive of the game. NSU cashed in on its second possession as well, as Walley hit Garrett for a 4-yard TD pass and a 14-0 NSU lead with 6:39 left in the first quarter. Branche’s 4-yard TD run with 3:41 left in first half was the only scoring of the second quarter, and sent NSU into the half leading 21-0. Branche’s 34-yard TD run – his second-longest of the season – capped NSU’s first drive of the second half, extending the lead to 28-0. With Branche taking a well-deserved rest, Takeem Hedgeman plunged into the end zone on a 4-yard run to finish a seven-play, 55-yard drive on the second play of the fourth quarter. Garrett had a career-high 173 yards receiving – NSU’s first receiver to surpass 100 yards in a game this season – and tied his career best with eight catches. Branche wasn’t the only Spartan to set a record Saturday. Walley completed 19 of 23 passes for 270 yards Saturday and finished the season with a 61.4 percent completion percentage. That broke the previous record held by Aaron Sparrow, who completed 58.2 percent in 1995. The win gives the Spartans their first back-to-back winning seasons in the Division I era. It also gives the NSU senior class 26 wins in the last four years, making them the winningest class since 1985 (25).

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE

Score by Quarters Norfolk State Savannah State

1 14 0

2 7 0

3 7 3

4 14 - 3 -

Score 42 6

Scoring Summary 1st 11:24 NSU – Branche 1 yd run (Estep kick), 7-62 2:19 06:39 NSU – Garrett 4 yd pass from Walley (Estep kick), 8-59 3:16 2nd 03:41 NSU – Branche 4 yd run (Estep kick), 13-94 5:08 3rd 12:36 NSU – Branche 34 yd run (Estep kick), 6-53 2:15 05:07 SSU – Williams 47 yd field goal, 9-54 3:21 4th 14:47 NSU – Hedgeman 4 yd run (Estep kick), 7-55 1:48 09:32 NSU – Garrett 76 yd pass from Walley (Estep kick), 5-93 2:05 07:01 SSU – Williams 35 yd field goal, 7-38 2:23 Team Statistics First Downs Rushes-Yards (Net) Passing Yds (Net) Passes Att-Comp-Int Total Offense Plays-Yards Fumble Returns-Yards Punt Returns-Yards Kickoff Returns-Yards Interception Returns-Yards Punts (Number-Avg) Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Possession Time Third-Down Conversions Fourth-Down Conversions Red-Zone Scores-Chances Sacks By: Number-Yards

NSU 28 55-309 270 23-19-1 78-579 0-0 4-32 3-54 1-2 3-33.3 0-0 12-107 31:42 5 of 11 1 of 3 4-4 3-28

SSU 12 31-122 102 30-14-1 61-224 0-0 1-2 5-32 1-15 7-34.6 3-0 4-31 28:18 3 of 14 0 of 2 2-4 0-0

Individual Statistics Rushing: NSU – Branche 41-233, Hedgeman, Walley 5-30, Cotton 2-2. Savannah State – Proctor 13-68, Bostick 11-59, Barnes 2-3, Heyward 5-Minus 8. Passing: NSU – Walley 19-23-1-270. Savannah State – Bostick 9-19-1-54, Defilippis 5-11-0-48. Receiving: NSU – Garrett 8-173, Hairston 5-35, Childress 2-28, Cotton 2-10, Branche 1-17, Wicker 1-7. Savannah State – Heyward 7-37, Cook 3-12, Bostick 2-15, Proctor 1-22, Barnes 1-16.

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2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE


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MEAC HISTORY The Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference The Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference (MEAC) begins its 42nd year of intercollegiate competition heading into the 2011-12 academic school year. Located in Norfolk, Va., the MEAC is made up of 13 outstanding historically black institutions across the Atlantic coastline: Bethune-Cookman University, Coppin State University, Delaware State University, Florida A&M University, Hampton University, Howard University, University of Maryland Eastern Shore, Morgan State University, Norfolk State University, North Carolina A&T State University, North Carolina Central University, Savannah State University and South Carolina State University. The MEAC sponsors 15 Division I (FCS) sports with automatic qualifying bids for NCAA postseason competition in baseball, bowling, men’s and women’s basketball, men’s and women’s cross country, football, men’s and women’s tennis, men’s and women’s track and field, softball and volleyball. MEAC student-athletes excel on and off the field and several have been recognized on ESPN The Magazine/CoSIDA Academic All-America and All-District teams. The MEAC awards two post-graduate scholarships of $5,000 each annually to one male and one female student-athlete who have excelled academically and athletically and are in their final season of intercollegiate athletics eligibility and competition under MEAC and NCAA regulations.

HISTORY

In 1969, a bold ad hoc group of innovators long associated with intercollegiate athletics met in Durham, N.C., to discuss the feasibility of organizing a new conference. From these discussions, they formed a steering and planning committee to fully investigate the idea, present a detailed report with recommendations to interested collegiate institutions and construct a workshop to outline proposals. After selecting a proposal and adopting a program, seven institutions (Delaware State College, Howard University, University of Maryland Eastern Shore, Morgan State University, North Carolina A&T State University, North Carolina Central University and South Carolina State College) agreed to become the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference. Their major objective was to establish, organize and supervise an intercollegiate athletic program among a compact group of educational institutions of high academic standards with a sound philosophy of cocurricular activities. The conference agreed to seek Division I status for its sports. The conference was confirmed in 1970, kicking off its first season of competition in football in 1971. In 1978, the MEAC reached a milestone when it selected Kenneth A. Free to be its first full-time commissioner. Free served the conference for 18 years before stepping down in May of 1996. In July 1996, Charles S. Harris was named commissioner and served in the capacity until April 2002. On September 1, 2002, Dr. Dennis E. Thomas was named commissioner and has served in the position for nine years. The conference’s first expansion occurred in October 1979 when Bethune-Cookman College and Florida A&M University were voted into the MEAC as new members. Original members Morgan State, North Carolina Central and Maryland Eastern Shore withdrew from the conference at the end of the 1979-80 fiscal year. Maryland Eastern Shore was readmitted in 1981 and Morgan State returned in 1984. Florida A&M opted to resign in 1984 but rejoined the conference in 1986. Coppin State College was granted admittance in 1985, becoming the ninth member institution. The MEAC expanded again in the 1990s with the inclusion of Hampton University (1995) and Norfolk State University (1997). The conference expanded once again in 2007, adding Winston-Salem State University. Following the 2009-10 academic/athletic season, however, Winston-Salem State withdrew from the conference and returned to Division II. On July 1, 2010, the MEAC made its most recent expansion with the admittance of North Carolina Central and Savannah State University. On June 8, 1980, the MEAC was classified as a Division I conference by the NCAA. Prior to that year, the conference operated as a Division II conference. The month after it achieved Division I status, the MEAC received an automatic qualification to the NCAA Division I Men’s Basketball Championship. Currently, the conference has automatic qualifying bids for NCAA postseason play in baseball (since 1994), men’s basketball (since 1981), women’s basketball (since 1982), football (since 1996), softball (since 1995), men’s and women’s tennis (since 1998), and volleyball (since 1994). The MEAC initiated cross country in 1980, and North Carolina A&T earned the inaugural men’s crown. The first women’s cross country championship took place a year later, with Howard winning the first of its seven titles. Indoor Track and Field was also added in 1981, with South Carolina State capturing the men’s title and Howard winning the women’s crown. Tennis and golf returned as MEAC-governed sports in 1981 after a five-year hiatus. South Carolina State won all seven of the conference’s golf championships from 19721983 before the sport was discontinued after the 1983 championship. Baseball, which began in 1972, was discontinued following the 1977 season. It was brought back as a MEAC-governed sport along with women’s volleyball in 1983. Women’s softball became a MEAC-sanctioned sport in 1992. Bowling was officially sanctioned as a MEAC sport in 1999. The MEAC was the first conference to secure NCAA sanctioning for women’s bowling by adopting the club sport prior to the 1996-97 school year.

SPORTS HIGHLIGHTS

The MEAC has enjoyed tremendous athletic success over the years. In 2008, Maryland Eastern Shore (UMES) defeated Arkansas State 4-2 to win the NCAA Women’s Bowling National Championship, a first for the conference and institution. The Lady Hawks repeated the feat in 2011 to win the team’s second NCAA title. During the same season, UMES won the United States Bowling Congress (USBC) Intercollegiate Team Championships (ITC), becoming the first team to win two national championships during the same season. In men’s basketball, UMES became the first historically black college/university (HBCU) to participate in the National Invitational Tournament (NIT) in 1974. The Hawks defeated Manhattan, 84-81, in the first round before falling to Jacksonville by two points in the second round. Before the Jacksonville loss, UMES had the best record in the nation at 27-1. That same

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year, Morgan State won the NCAA College Division II National Championship and junior center Marvin “The Human Eraser” Webster was named the Division II Player of the Year. The 1981 tournament champion Howard Bison became the first MEAC team to play in the NCAA Division I Basketball Championship. Coppin State and Hampton made history in the NCAA Division I Men’s Basketball Tournament with first-round victories. The No. 15 seeded Coppin State Eagles defeated No. 2 South Carolina in 1997, and No. 15 seeded Hampton defeated No. 2 Iowa State in 2001. ESPN Sports Center ranked both victories ranked among the Top 10 greatest tournament upsets of all time In women’s basketball, South Carolina State won the Association for Intercollegiate Athletics for Women (AIAW) Division II National Championship in 1979. In 1982, Howard became the first MEAC women’s team to participate in the NCAA Division I Women’s Basketball Championship. SCSU earned the conference’s bid in 1983 and became the first MEAC team, men or women, to win an opening-round game in the NCAA Division I Basketball Tournament. In 2010, The North Carolina A&T Lady Aggies defeated Wake Forest and Charlotte before falling to Miami in the third round of the Women’s National Invitation Tournament (WNIT). North Carolina A&T became the first MEAC team and historically black college/university to win two consecutive basketball games in a national postseason tournament. The No. 13 Hampton Lady Pirates faced No. 4 Kentucky in the 2011 NCAA Division I Women’s Basketball Tournament. The 13th seed was the highest seed earned by a MEAC women’s basketball program since the inception of the 64-team bracket in 1994. In football, the MEAC was instrumental in constructing the Freedom Bowl All-Star Classic, the Heritage Bowl and the Gold Bowl. Prior to Division I competition, the MEAC competed in the Gold Bowl, held in Richmond, Va., which matched the MEAC champion against the champion of the Central Intercollegiate Athletic Association (CIAA). South Carolina State represented the MEAC in 1976 and 1979, winning both outings over Winston-Salem State and Norfolk State respectively. In addition to the 1976 and 1979 crowns, South Carolina State won MEAC football titles in 1974-78, 1980-83, 1994, 2004, 2008 and 2009. The Bulldogs were also named co-champions along with Bethune-Cookman and Florida A&M in 2010. On the track, Hampton’s Francena McCorory set an American record in the 400m dash with a time of 50.54 and defended her national indoor title at the 2010 NCAA Indoor Championships. McCorory, a two-time All-American and three-time MEAC indoor champion in the 400m dash, became the first back-to-back NCAA indoor 400m champion since Suziann Reid of Texas (1998 and 1999). McCorory was named the U.S. Track & Field and Cross Country Coaches Association (USTFCCCA) Division I National Athlete of the Year for the 2010 Indoor Track and Field season. In outdoor track and field, North Carolina Central won the first three MEAC titles. The quartet of Melvin Bassett, Robert Ouko, Julius Sang and Larry Black set the world record in the sprint medley relay with a time of 38.19 in the 1972 Olympics. MEAC women began outdoor track and field conference competition in 1980. In 1982, South Carolina State won the AIAW Division II Outdoor Track and Field National Championship. The MEAC has showcased more than 27 athletes in the Olympics. Among them, 11 have earned medals during the Summer Games. In 2003, Florida A&M became the first MEAC school to win a volleyball match in the NCAA Championship, with a first-round win over Winthrop. In 2004, the Lady Rattlers became the first historically black college/university to rank in the Top 25 of the American Volleyball Coaches Association (AVCA) national poll. South Carolina State’s women’s tennis team earned the conference’s first Intercollegiate Tennis Association (ITA) ranking in a 2005 poll, reaching No. 72. In softball, Bethune-Cookman earned the conference’s first-ever at-large bid to the NCAA Softball Championship in 2005. The Lady Wildcats defeated Florida, Central Florida and South Florida in the Florida Regional to become the first MEAC school to win an NCAA Division I Softball Regional. Bethune-Cookman ended the 2005 season with the conference’s first-ever rankings in the final softball polls, reaching No. 18 in the NFCA/USA Today Coaches poll and No. 23 in the USA Softball/ESPN.com Poll. Florida A&M was the first MEAC baseball team to advance to NCAA postseason play in 1994. The Rattlers took on Southeastern Louisiana in a best of three play-in series, falling after two games, 11-10 and 8-7. During the 2002 campaign, Bethune-Cookman advanced to the Gainesville Regional and became the first MEAC team to win in the NCAA Tournament with a 7-4 victory over Florida International.

MEAC Football Champions 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994 1993 1992 1991

S.C. State/FAMU/Bethune-Cookman South Carolina State South Carolina State Delaware State Hampton Hampton Hampton/South Carolina State North Carolina A&T Bethune-Cookman Florida A&M Florida A&M North Carolina A&T Hampton Hampton Florida A&M Florida A&M South Carolina State Howard North Carolina A&T N.C. A&T/Delaware State

1990 1989 1988 1987 1986 1985 1984 1983 1982 1981 1980 1979 1978 1977 1976 1975 1974 1973 1972 1971

Florida A&M Delaware State Bethune-Cook./FAMU/DSU Delaware State North Carolina A&T Delaware State Bethune-Cookman South Carolina State South Carolina State South Carolina State South Carolina State Morgan State South Carolina State South Carolina State S.C. State/Morgan State S.C. State/N.C. A&T South Carolina State North Carolina Central North Carolina Central Morgan State

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE


2011 PRESEASON PREDICTIONS 2011 MEAC Preseason Predicted Order of Finish As voted on by the MEAC head football coaches and sports information directors (first-place votes in parentheses).

1. South Carolina State (6)......................................................................................................................................................................468 2. Bethune-Cookman (8).........................................................................................................................................................................454 3. Florida A&M (5)....................................................................................................................................................................................420 4. Hampton (1)...........................................................................................................................................................................................321 5. Norfolk State (1)...................................................................................................................................................................................274 6. Morgan State........................................................................................................................................................................................250 7. North Carolina Central........................................................................................................................................................................162 8. Delaware State ...................................................................................................................................................................................158 9. North Carolina A&T.............................................................................................................................................................................128 10. Howard....................................................................................................................................................................................................96 11. Savannah State (1)................................................................................................................................................................................63

2011 PRESEASON ALL-MEAC TEAMS Offensive Player of the Year: Justin Wilson, Delaware State Defensive Player of the Year: Ryan Lewis, Bethune-Cookman

First Team

Second Team

Offense

Offense

QB – Chris Walley, r-Sr., Norfolk State, Tallahassee, Fla.

QB – David Legree, Sr., Hampton, Brooklyn, N.Y.

RB – Mike Mayhew, Sr., North Carolina A&T, Charlotte, N.C.

RB – Isidore Jackson, So., Bethune-Cookman, Mossy Head, Fla.

RB* – Antwon Chisholm, So., Hampton, Belle Glade, Fla.

RB – Asheton Jordan, Sr., South Carolina State, Summerville, S.C.

RB* – Jaashawn Jones, r-Sr., Delaware State, Asbury Park, N.J.

TE – Ryan Langdon, Jr., Delaware State, Philadelphia, Pa.

TE – Antuanne Kerr, r-Sr., South Carolina State, Augusta, Ga.

WR – Javaris Brown, Jr., Hampton, Macon, Ga.

WR – Willie Carter, Sr., Howard, Denmark, S.C.

WR – Eddie Poole, r-So., Bethune-Cookman, Belle Glade, Fla.

WR – Justin Wilson, r-Jr., Delaware State, Windsor, Conn.

OL – Brandon Curry, r-Sr., Florida A&M, Hollywood, Fla.

OL – Alex Monroe, So., Bethune-Cookman, Jacksonville, Fla.

OL – David Luckett, Jr., Hampton, Pomfret, Md.

OL – Juavahr Nathan, r-Sr., South Carolina State, Goose Neck, S.C.

OL – Brenton Walker, Sr., North Carolina A&T, Durham, N.C.

OL – Kendall Noble, r-Sr., Norfolk State, Rocky Mount, N.C.

OL – Marquell Rozier, So., Bethune-Cookman, St. Paul’s, N.C.

OL* – Lawrence Brewer, Sr., Morgan State, Fort Washington, Md.

C – Shelley Anthony, r-Jr., Florida A&M, Atlanta, Ga.

OL* – Robert Hartley, r-Jr., Florida A&M, Lake City, Fla.

K – Trevor Scott, r-Sr., Florida A&M, Jacksonville, Fla.

C – Natiel Curry, Sr., Bethune-Cookman, Miami, Fla.

Defense

K – Blake Erickson, Sr., South Carolina State, Pensacola, Fla. Defense

DL – Ronnell Ferguson, Sr., South Carolina State, Lincolnton, Ga. DL – Zary Stewart, Sr., Morgan State, Upper Marlboro, Md.

DL – Ryan Davis, Jr., Bethune-Cookman, Tampa, Fla.

DL – Roger Stewart, Sr., North Carolina Central, Charlotte, N.C.

DL – Sackie Kerkulah, r-Sr., Howard, Willingboro, N.J.

DL – Jerry Willis, Sr., Florida A&M, Sebastion River, Fla.

DL – Josh Turner, r-Sr., Norfolk State, Chesterfield, Va.

LB – Corwin Hammond, r-Sr., Norfolk State, Louisville, Ky.

DL – Pat Washington, r-Sr., South Carolina State, Charleston, S.C.

LB – Donovan Richard, r-Sr., South Carolina State, Georgetown, S.C.

LB – Ryan Lewis, Jr., Bethune-Cookman, Pompano Beach, Fla.

LB – Allen Stephens, Jr., Morgan State, Halifax, Va

LB – Keith Pough, r-Jr., Howard, Orangeburg, S.C.

DB – Justin Ferrell, Sr., North Carolina A&T, Danville, Va.

LB – Reginald Sandilands, Sr., Bethune-Cookman, Miami, Fla.

DB – Darren Hunter, Sr., Savannah State, Atlanta, Ga.

DB – Michael Williams, Sr., Bethune-Cookman, Miami, Fla.

DB – Reshaude Miller, Sr., Morgan State, Florence, S.C.

DB – Micah Pellerin, Sr., Hampton, New Orleans, La.

DB – John Ojo, r-Jr., Florida A&M, Tallahassee, Fla.

DB – D’Vonte Graham, Jr., North Carolina A&T, Tallahassee, Fla.

P – Nicholas Adams, Jr., Morgan State, Fayetteville, N.C.

DB – Dominique Ellis, r-Sr., South Carolina State, Wendell, N.C.

Ret. – Arthur Goforth, Jr., North Carolina Central, Columbia, S.C.

P – Brandon Holdren, Jr., Florida A&M, Jacksonville, Fla.

Ret. – Justin Ferrell, Sr., North Carolina A&T, Danville, Va.

* Indicates tie

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE

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2011 COMPOSITE SCHEDULE Thursday, September 1 South Carolina State at Central Michigan North Carolina Central at Rutgers

7 p.m. 7:30 p.m.

Saturday, September 3 Delaware State at VMI Virginia University of Lynchburg at North Carolina A&T Alabama A&M vs. Hampton % Virginia State at Norfolk State Fort Valley State at Florida Morgan State at Towson Howard at Eastern Michigan Albany State vs. Savannah State

1:30 p.m. 4 p.m. 5 p.m. 6 p.m. 6 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. TBA

Sunday, September 4 Prairie View A&M vs. Bethune-Cookman !

TBA

Thursday, September 8 Florida A&M at Hampton *

7:30 p.m.

Saturday, September 10 North Carolina Central vs. Central State # Howard vs. Morehouse $ South Carolina State at Bethune-Cookman * Savannah State at Southeastern Louisiana Shaw at Delaware State Morgan State at Bowling Green Norfolk State at West Virginia North Carolina A&T at Appalachian State

Noon 3:30 p.m. 4 p.m. 6 p.m. 6 p.m. 7 p.m. TBA TBA

Saturday, September 17 Norfolk State at Howard * Robert Morris at Morgan State South Carolina State at Indiana Hampton at Old Dominion Elon at North Carolina Central Delaware State at Delaware Savannah State at Appalachian State Florida A&M at South Florida

1 p.m. 1 p.m. 3:30 p.m. 6 p.m. 6 p.m. 6 p.m. 6 p.m. TBA

Saturday, September 24 Norfolk State at Charleston Southern Morgan State vs. Howard *+ Delaware State at South Carolina State * Florida A&M vs. Southern ++ Hampton at Bethune-Cookman * Coastal Carolina at North Carolina A&T Savannah State at North Carolina Central *

1:30 p.m. 2 p.m. 2 p.m. 3:30 p.m. 4 p.m. 4 p.m. 6 p.m.

Saturday, October 1 North Carolina A&T at Morgan State * South Carolina State at Norfolk State * Delaware State at Florida A&M * Howard at Savannah State * Bethune-Cookman at Miami

1 p.m. 4 p.m. 6 p.m. 7 p.m. TBA

Saturday, October 8 Norfolk State at Delaware State * Savannah State at Morgan State (HC) * Princeton at Hampton

1 p.m. 1 p.m. 1 p.m.

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North Carolina Central at South Carolina State (HC) * Bethune-Cookman at North Carolina A&T * Howard at Florida A&M *

1:30 p.m. 1:30 p.m. 3 p.m.

Saturday, October 15 Georgeotwn at Howard Georgia State at South Carolina State Delaware State at North Carolina A&T (HC) * Hampton at Norfolk State * Morgan State at North Carolina Central * Fort Valley State at Bethune-Cookman Florida A&M at Savannah State *

1 p.m. 1:30 p.m. 1:30 p.m. 4 p.m. 4 p.m. 4 p.m. 7 p.m.

THURSDAY, Oct. 20 Bethune-Cookman at Norfolk State *

7:30 p.m.

Saturday, October 22 North Carolina A&T at Howard (HC) * Florida A&M at South Carolina State * North Carolina Central at Hampton (HC) *

1 p.m. 1:30 p.m. 2 p.m.

Saturday, October 29 Morgan State at Delaware State (HC) * South Carolina State at Howard * North Carolina A&T at Norfolk State (HC) * Hampton at Savannah State (HC) * Bethune-Cookman at North Carolina Central (HC) *

1 p.m. 1 p.m. 2 p.m. 2 p.m. 2 p.m.

Saturday, November 5 Howard at Hampton * North Carolina Central at Delaware State * North Carolina A&T at Florida A&M * Morgan State at Bethune-Cookman (HC) * Norfolk State at Savannah State *

1 p.m. 1 p.m. 3 p.m. 4 p.m. 5 p.m.

Saturday, November 12 Norfolk State at Morgan State * Delaware State at Hampton * North Carolina A&T at South Carolina State * Florida A&M at North Carolina Central * Savannah State at Bethune-Cookman *

1 p.m. 1 p.m. 1:30 p.m. 2 p.m. 3 p.m.

Saturday, November 19 Morgan State at Hampton * Howard at Delaware State * North Carolina Central at North Carolina A&T * South Carolina State at Savannah State * Florida A&M vs. Bethune-Cookman +++*

1 p.m. 1 p.m. 1:30 p.m. 2 p.m. 2:30 p.m.

All dates and times are subject to change *Denotes MEAC Conference Game (%) Chicago Football Classic – Chicago, Ill. (!) MEAC/SWAC Challenge - Orlando, Fla. (#) Cleveland Classic – Browns Stadium, Cleveland, Ohio ($) Nation’s Football Classic - RFK Stadium, Washington D.C. (+) NY Urban League Classic - New Giants Stadium, E. Rutherford, N.J. (++) Bank of America Atlanta Football Classic - Atlanta, Ga. (+++) Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Florida Classic – Orlando, Fla. (HC) Homecoming

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE


2010 MEAC IN REVIEW/STATISTICS 2010 MEAC FINAL STANDINGS Team Bethune-Cookman* South Carolina State@ Florida A&M Hampton Norfolk State Morgan State Delaware State North Carolina A&T Howard

MEAC W-L 7-1 7-1 7-1 5-3 4-4 3-5 2-6 1-7 0-8

Overall W-L 10-1 9-2 8-3 6-5 6-5 4-7 3-8 1-10 1-10

* Earned MEAC’s automatic FCS playoff berth @ Awarded an FCS playoff at-large bid 2010 ALL-MEAC FOOTBALL TEAMS Offensive Player of the Year....................................Matt Johnson, Bethune-Cookman Defensive Player of the Year..................................... David Erby, South Carolina State Rookie of the Year................................................................Antwon Chisholm, Hampton Offensive Lineman of the Year............................ Josh Harrison, South Carolina State Coach of the Year...................................................... Brian Jenkins, Bethune-Cookman

First Team

Offense Pos. Name QB Matt Johnson RB DeAngelo Branche RB Mike Mayhew TE Antwanne Kerr WR Justin Wilson WR Lennel Elmore OL Johnny Culbreath OL Natiel Curry OL Josh Harrison OL Jamal Lewis C Natiel Curry K Blake Erickson

Cl. Sr. r-Sr. Jr. r-Jr r-So. r-So. Sr. Jr. Jr. r-Sr. Jr. Jr.

School Bethune-Cookman Norfolk State North Carolina A&T South Carolina State Delaware State South Carolina State South Carolina State Bethune-Cookman South Carolina State Hampton Bethune-Cookman South Carolina State

Hometown Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. Norfolk, Va. Charlotte, N.C. Augusta, Ga. Windsor, Conn. Allendale, S.C. Monroe, Ga. Miami, Fla. Miami, Fla. Uniontown, Ala. Miami, Fla. Cantonment, Fla.

Defense Pos. Name DL Andre Carroll DL Ryan Davis DL Kenrick Ellis DL Brandon Peguese LB David Erby LB Ryan Lewis LB Keith Pough DB Qier Hall DB Arkee Smith DB Michael Williams DB Ricardo Silva, Jr. P Brandon Holdren Ret. Justin Ferrell

Cl. r-Jr. Jr. Sr. r-Sr. Sr. Jr. r-So. Sr. Sr. Sr. r-Sr. So. Jr.

School Delaware State Bethune-Cookman Hampton Hampton South Carolina State Bethune-Cookman Howard Florida A&M Bethune-Cookman Bethune-Cookman Hampton Florida A&M North Carolina A&T

Hometown Neptune, N.J. Tampa. Fla. West Palm Beach, Fla Greensboro, N.C. Rock Hill, S.C. Pompano Beach, Fla. Orangeburg, S.C. Cocoa, Fla Jacksonville, Fla. Miami, Fla. Baltimore, Md. Jacksonville, Fla Danville, Va.

Offense Pos. Name QB Malcolm Long RB Antwon Chisholm RB Philip Sylvester TE Jephte Cherenfant WR JeVaughn Reams WR Willie Carter OL Kendall Noble OL Lawrence Brewer OL Christopher Sands OL Alex Monroe C William Falakiseni K Kemar Scarlett

Cl. Sr. Fr. Sr. Sr. Sr. Jr. r-Jr. Sr. r-Sr. So. Sr. Sr.

School South Carolina State Hampton Florida A&M Morgan State Bethune-Cookman Howard Norfolk State Morgan State Florida A&M Bethune-Cookman Norfolk State Morgan State

Hometown Gaffney, S.C. Belle Glade, Fla. Marianna, Fla. Miami, Fla. Miami, Fla. Denmark, S.C. Rocky Mount, N.C. Fort Washington, Md. Tallahassee Fla. Jacksonville, Fla. Tonga Temple Hills, Md.

Defense Pos. Name DL Jayson Ayers DL Sackie Kerkulah DL Pat Washington DL Josh Turner

Cl. r-Sr. r-Jr. Jr. r-Jr.

School South Carolina State Howard South Carolina State Norfolk State

Hometown Clio, S.C. Willingboro, NJ Charleston, S.C. Chesterfield, Va.

Second Team

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE

LB LB LB DB DB DB DB P Ret.

Darius Johnson Donovan Richard Reggie Sandilands Dominique Ellis Justin Ferrell Curtis Holcomb Semaj Moody Alex Grubb Larrone Moore

TEAm Statistics

Sr. r-Jr. Jr. r-Jr. Jr. Sr. Sr. So. Sr.

Scoring Offense 1. Bethune-Cookman 2. South Carolina State 3. Delaware State 4. Florida A&M 5. Norfolk State 6. Morgan State 7. North Carolina A&T 8. Howard 9. Hampton

G 12 12 11 11 11 11 11 11 11

Scoring Defense 1. South Carolina State 2. Florida A&M Hampton 4. Bethune-Cookman 5. Norfolk State 6. Delaware State 7. Morgan State 8. North Carolina A&T 9. Howard

G 12 11 11 12 11 11 11 11 11

TD 23 23 27 29 25 46 42 51 55

Total Offense 1. Bethune-Cookman 2. South Carolina State 3. Norfolk State 4. Delaware State 5. Hampton 6. Florida A&M 7. North Carolina A&T 8. Howard 9. Morgan State

G 12 12 11 11 11 11 11 11 11

Rush 2553 2211 1921 1027 1602 1678 1503 1356 1154

Total Defense G 1. South Carolina State 12 2. Hampton 11 3. Norfolk State 11 4. Florida A&M 11 5. Howard 11 6. Bethune-Cookman 12 7. Morgan State 11 8. North Carolina A&T 11 9. Delaware State 11

Hampton South Carolina State Bethune-Cookman South Carolina State North Carolina A&T Florida A&M South Carolina State North Carolina A&T Delaware State

TD 66 45 38 31 29 22 27 28 25

FG 2 18 4 10 11 18 6 2 6

Sussex, Va. Georgetown, S.C. Miami, Fla. Wendell, N.C. Danville, Va. Miami, Fla. Denmark, S.C. Lexington, N.C. Hyattsville, Md.

XPT 2XP DXP Saf 52 2 0 0 40 0 0 1 22 4 1 0 25 0 0 0 26 0 0 0 13 3 0 1 23 0 0 0 18 2 0 1 18 1 1 1

FG XPT 7 21 15 15 5 23 7 21 12 23 6 32 13 40 9 33 11 50

2XP DXP Saf 0 0 2 2 0 0 0 0 1 4 2 0 1 0 1 3 1 0 0 0 2 2 0 0 0 0 0

Pts 458 366 272 241 233 207 203 198 192

Avg/G 38.2 30.5 24.7 21.9 21.2 18.8 18.5 18.0 17.5

Pts Avg/G 184 15.3 202 18.4 202 18.4 228 19.0 213 19.4 334 30.4 335 30.5 370 33.6 413 37.5

Pass Plays Yards Avg/P TD 2554 886 5107 5.8 60 1978 807 4189 5.2 37 1859 738 3780 5.1 26 2738 704 3765 5.3 33 1717 728 3319 4.6 23 1563 661 3241 4.9 28 1470 700 2973 4.2 19 1535 716 2891 4.0 25 1227 667 2381 3.6 16

Rush 1097 1428 1435 1672 1292 1765 1714 2570 2160

Pass 1411 1558 1690 1817 2219 2099 1971 1632 2069

Plays 760 750 672 727 659 819 702 756 761

Yards 2508 2986 3125 3489 3511 3864 3685 4202 4229

Avg/P 3.3 4.0 4.7 4.8 5.3 4.7 5.2 5.6 5.6

TD 19 23 21 20 43 27 36 48 38

Rushing Offense 1. Bethune-Cookman 2. South Carolina State 3. Norfolk State 4. Florida A&M 5. Hampton 6. North Carolina A&T 7. Howard 8. Morgan State 9. Delaware State

G 12 12 11 11 11 11 11 11 11

Att Yards 581 2553 483 2211 460 1921 393 1678 428 1602 413 1503 488 1356 400 1154 339 1027

Avg. 4.4 4.6 4.2 4.3 3.7 3.6 2.8 2.9 3.0

TD Yards/G 39 212.8 27 184.2 16 174.6 21 152.5 13 145.6 11 136.6 17 123.3 10 104.9 10 93.4

Rushing Defense 1. South Carolina State 2. Howard 3. Hampton 4. Norfolk State 5. Bethune-Cookman 6. Florida A&M 7. Morgan State 8. Delaware State 9. North Carolina A&T

G 12 11 11 11 12 11 11 11 11

Att Yards 470 1097 363 1292 438 1428 393 1435 429 1765 450 1672 434 1714 478 2160 524 2570

Avg. 2.3 3.6 3.3 3.7 4.1 3.7 3.9 4.5 4.9

TD Yards/G 14 91.4 20 117.5 16 129.8 11 130.5 16 147.1 12 152.0 18 155.8 22 196.4 31 233.6

Avg/G 425.6 349.1 343.6 342.3 301.7 294.6 270.3 262.8 216.5 Avg/G 209.0 271.5 284.1 317.2 319.2 322.0 335.0 382.0 384.5

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2010 MEAC STATISTICS Pass Offense 1. Delaware State 2. Bethune-Cookman 3. Norfolk State 4. South Carolina State 5. Hampton 6. Florida A&M 7. Howard 8. North Carolina A&T 9. Morgan State

G 11 12 11 12 11 11 11 11 11

Comp Att 210 365 189 305 167 278 187 324 142 300 124 268 104 228 131 287 115 267

Int 12 7 8 12 9 13 19 11 17

Pct. 57.5 62.0 60.1 57.7 47.3 46.3 45.6 45.6 43.1

Yards 2738 2554 1859 1978 1717 1563 1535 1470 1227

Avg. 7.5 8.4 6.7 6.1 5.7 5.8 6.7 5.1 4.6

Avg/G 248.9 212.8 169.0 164.8 156.1 142.1 139.5 133.6 111.5

Punting 1. Bethune-Cookman 2. Florida A&M 3. North Carolina A&T 4. South Carolina State 5. Hampton 6. Delaware State 7. Howard 8. Morgan State 9. Norfolk State

G No. 12 50 11 68 11 63 12 54 11 77 11 57 11 64 11 68 11 52

Pass Defense 1. South Carolina State 2. Hampton 3. North Carolina A&T 4. Norfolk State 5. Florida A&M 6. Bethune-Cookman 7. Morgan State 8. Delaware State 9. Howard

G 12 11 11 11 11 12 11 11 11

Comp 141 155 131 139 133 192 142 157 173

Int 17 10 12 6 11 19 14 10 9

Pct. 48.6 49.7 56.5 49.8 48.0 49.2 53.0 55.5 58.4

Yards 1411 1558 1632 1690 1817 2099 1971 2069 2219

Avg. TD Avg/G 4.9 5 117.6 5.0 7 141.6 7.0 17 148.4 6.1 10 153.6 6.6 8 165.2 5.4 11 174.9 7.4 18 179.2 7.3 16 188.1 7.5 23 201.7

Kickoff Coverage 1. Florida A&M 2. South Carolina State 3. Bethune-Cookman 4. Morgan State 5. North Carolina A&T 6. Norfolk State 7. Hampton 8. Delaware State 9. Howard

G 11 12 12 11 11 11 11 11 11

Pass Efficiency 1. Bethune-Cookman 2. Delaware State 3. Norfolk State 4. South Carolina State 5. Hampton 6. Howard 7. Florida A&M 8. North Carolina A&T 9. Morgan State

G Comp Att 12 189 305 11 210 365 11 167 278 12 187 324 11 142 300 11 104 228 11 124 268 11 131 287 11 115 267

Int 7 12 8 12 9 19 13 11 17

Pct. 62.0 57.5 60.1 57.7 47.3 45.6 46.3 45.6 43.1

Yards 2554 2738 1859 1978 1717 1535 1563 1470 1227

TD 21 23 10 10 10 8 7 8 6

Effic. 150.4 134.8 122.4 111.8 100.4 97.1 94.2 90.2 76.4

Field Goals 1. South Carolina State 2. Morgan State 3. Florida A&M 4. Norfolk State 5. Delaware State 6. Hampton 7. North Carolina A&T 8. Howard 9. Bethune-Cookman

G 12 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 12

Pass Defense Efficiency G Comp Att 1. South Carolina State 12 141 290 2. Hampton 11 155 312 3. Bethune-Cookman 12 192 390 4. Florida A&M 11 133 277 5. Norfolk State 11 139 279 6. Morgan State 11 142 268 7. Delaware State 11 157 283 8. North Carolina A&T 11 131 232 9. Howard 11 173 296

Int 17 10 19 11 6 14 10 12 9

Pct. 48.6 49.7 49.2 48.0 49.8 53.0 55.5 56.5 58.4

Yards 1411 1558 2099 1817 1690 1971 2069 1632 2219

TD 5 7 11 8 10 18 16 17 23

Effic. 83.5 92.6 94.0 104.7 108.2 126.5 128.5 129.4 141.0

PAT Kicking 1. Morgan State 2. North Carolina A&T 3. Norfolk State 4. Florida A&M 5. South Carolina State 6. Bethune-Cookman 7. Howard Hampton 9. Delaware State

G 11 11 11 11 12 12 11 11 11

Made-Att 13-14 23-25 26-29 25-28 40-45 52-62 18-22 18-22 22-28

Pct. .929 .920 .897 .893 .889 .839 .818 .818 .786

Att 290 312 232 279 277 390 268 283 296

TD 23 21 10 10 10 7 8 8 6

Yards 1796 2724 2286 1836 2846 2082 2263 2619 1746

No. 49 76 79 49 41 51 43 48 36

Avg/P 35.9 40.1 36.3 34.0 37.0 36.5 35.4 38.5 33.6

Yards 3140 4302 4320 2728 2156 2417 2401 2279 1690

Ret. 39 284 148 76 358 233 302 631 171

Avg. TB 0.8 0 4.2 5 2.3 4 1.4 3 4.6 7 4.1 6 4.7 3 9.3 2 3.3 6

Avg. Return 64.1 776 56.6 1192 54.7 1421 55.7 996 52.6 735 47.4 764 55.8 991 47.5 772 46.9 767

Made-Att 18-21 18-24 10-14 11-16 4-7 6-11 6-13 2-6 2-10

TB Net Avg. 5 46.2 3 40.1 5 35.4 1 34.9 1 34.2 0 32.4 1 32.3 0 31.4 0 25.6 Pct. .857 .750 .714 .688 .571 .545 .462 .333 .200

Kickoff Returns 1. Florida A&M 2. Delaware State 3. Morgan State 4. North Carolina A&T 5. Bethune-Cookman 6. Hampton 7. Howard 8. South Carolina State 9. Norfolk State

G 11 11 11 11 12 11 11 12 11

No. 41 50 61 62 44 34 66 37 38

Yards 951 1116 1345 1332 892 628 1165 652 659

TD 0 2 2 4 1 0 0 1 0

Avg. 23.2 22.3 22.0 21.5 20.3 18.5 17.7 17.6 17.3

Sacks By 1. South Carolina State 2. Florida A&M 3. Bethune-Cookman 4. North Carolina A&T Howard 6. Norfolk State 7. Morgan State 8. Hampton 9. Delaware State

G 12 11 12 11 11 11 11 11 11

No. 40 27 26 23 23 21 19 17 15

Yards 296 174 148 150 180 126 144 118 105

Punt Return Avg 1. Norfolk State 2. South Carolina State 3. Bethune-Cookman 4. Morgan State 5. Florida A&M 6. Delaware State 7. Hampton 8. North Carolina A&T 9. Howard

G 11 12 12 11 11 11 11 11 11

No. 21 32 24 22 33 17 23 19 16

Yards 313 470 325 277 292 146 160 122 96

TD 0 4 0 1 1 0 0 0 0

Avg. 14.9 14.7 13.5 12.6 8.8 8.6 7.0 6.4 6.0

Sacks Against 1. Norfolk State 2. South Carolina State 3. Hampton 4. North Carolina A&T 5. Morgan State 6. Florida A&M Delaware State 8. Bethune-Cookman Howard

G 11 12 11 11 11 11 11 12 11

No. 12 14 23 25 26 28 28 29 29

Yards 68 111 166 159 184 184 167 182 179

Interceptions 1. Bethune-Cookman 2. South Carolina State 3. Morgan State 4. North Carolina A&T 5. Florida A&M 6. Delaware State 7. Hampton 8. Howard 9. Norfolk State

G 12 12 11 11 11 11 11 11 11

No. 19 17 14 12 11 10 10 9 6

Yards 342 260 258 193 140 61 184 173 110

TD 2 2 2 1 1 2 2 1 2

Avg. 18.0 15.3 18.4 16.1 12.7 6.1 18.4 19.2 18.3

First Downs 1. Bethune-Cookman 2. South Carolina State 3. Norfolk State 4. Delaware State 5. Hampton 6. Howard 7. North Carolina A&T 8. Florida A&M 9. Morgan State

78

G Rush 12 138 12 124 11 111 11 58 11 90 11 86 11 91 11 81 11 70

Pass 102 89 83 126 78 60 68 63 56

Pen Total 26 266 13 226 14 208 22 206 15 183 24 170 8 167 19 163 32 158

Net/P 35.1 34.4 32.7 31.5 30.5 30.3 29.7 28.6 28.0

Avg/G 22.2 18.8 18.9 18.7 16.6 15.5 15.2 14.8 14.4

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE


2010 MEAC STATISTICS Opponent First Downs 1. South Carolina State 2. Norfolk State 3. Hampton Howard 5. Florida A&M 6. Morgan State 7. Bethune-Cookman 8. Delaware State 9. North Carolina A&T

G Rush Pass 12 73 68 11 76 74 11 89 72 11 74 94 11 90 78 11 92 87 12 100 88 11 119 98 11 127 80

Pen 20 21 24 17 20 14 31 14 25

Total 11 171 185 185 188 193 219 231 232

3rd-Down Conversions 1. Bethune-Cookman 2. South Carolina State 3. Delaware State 4. Norfolk State 5. Hampton 6. Florida A&M 7. North Carolina A&T 8. Howard 9. Morgan State Opponent 3rd-Down Conversions 1. South Carolina State 2. Morgan State 3. Bethune-Cookman 4. Hampton 5. Florida A&M 6. Norfolk State 7. Howard 8. Delaware State 9. North Carolina A&T 4th-Down Conversions 1. North Carolina A&T Florida A&M 3. Morgan State 4. Howard 5. South Carolina State 6. Bethune-Cookman 7. Delaware State 8. Hampton 9. Norfolk State Opponent 4th-Down Conversions 1. Hampton 2. Bethune-Cookman 3. Florida A&M 4. Howard 5. North Carolina A&T 6. Norfolk State 7. Morgan State 8. South Carolina State 9. Delaware State Penalties 1. Delaware State 2. Morgan State 3. Norfolk State 4. Florida A&M 5. South Carolina State 6. North Carolina A&T 7. Hampton 8. Howard 9. Bethune-Cookman

G 12 12 11 11 11 11 11 11 11

Conv. 68 62 54 54 57 51 46 46 37

Att. 161 158 144 147 165 154 154 156 149

Pct. 42.2 39.2 37.5 36.7 34.5 33.1 29.9 29.5 24.8

G 12 11 12 11 11 11 11 11 11

Conv. 51 42 55 53 50 48 50 67 66

Att. 174 138 175 166 155 147 138 153 146

Pct. 29.3 30.4 31.4 31.9 32.3 32.7 36.2 43.8 45.2

G 11 11 11 11 12 12 11 11 11

Conv. 11 7 7 11 5 12 7 4 4

Att. 22 14 15 24 12 30 23 14 19

Pct. 50.0 50.0 46.7 45.8 41.7 40.0 30.4 28.6 21.1

G 11 12 11 11 11 11 11 12 11

Conv. 6 8 6 8 7 7 7 11 9

Att. 24 27 19 21 17 16 15 20 13

Pct. 25.0 29.6 31.6 38.1 41.2 43.8 46.7 55.0 69.2

G 11 11 11 11 12 11 11 11 12

No. 73 95 82 101 97 92 111 95 121

Yards 551 731 762 800 877 858 899 977 1090

Avg/G 50.1 66.5 69.3 72.7 73.1 78.0 81.7 88.8 90.8

Time of Possession 1. Howard 2. Norfolk State 3. Morgan State 4. Bethune-Cookman 5. Florida A&M 6. Hampton 7. Delaware State 8. South Carolina State 9. North Carolina A&T

G 11 11 11 12 11 11 11 12 11

Poss.Time 361:58 344:54 342:32 364:47 327:13 323:24 323:18 347:26 301:35

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE

Avg/G 32:54 31:21 31:08 30:23 29:44 29:24 29:23 28:57 27:25

Avg/G 13.4 15.5 16.8 16.8 17.1 17.5 18.2 21.0 21.1

|--Gained--| |---Lost---| Turnover Margin G Fum Int Total Fum Int Total Margin Per/G 1. Bethune-Cookman 12 22 19 41 7 7 14 +27 2.25 2. Delaware State 11 15 10 25 10 12 22 +3 0.27 3. South Carolina State 12 12 17 29 16 12 28 +1 0.08 4. Norfolk State 11 8 6 14 6 8 14 +0 0.00 Morgan State 11 13 14 27 10 17 27 +0 0.00 6. Florida A&M 11 6 11 17 5 13 18 -1 -0.09 7. Hampton 11 8 10 18 13 9 22 -4 -0.36 8. North Carolina A&T 11 11 12 23 19 11 30 -7 -0.64 9. Howard 11 7 9 16 18 19 37 -21 -1.91 Red Zone Touchdowns FG Lost Poss. Red Zone Offense G Scores- Pct. TD Rush- Made-Att Fumb-Int Chances Pass Dwns-Other 1. South Carolina State 12 43-50 86.0 29 25-4 14-15 2-3- 0-1 2. Norfolk State 11 27-33 81.8 19 14-5 8-9 1-2- 2- 0 3. Bethune-Cookman 12 50-64 78.1 48 36-12 2-10 0-0- 6- 0 4. Florida A&M 11 28-36 77.8 19 16-3 9-11 2-3 -1- 0 5. Hampton 11 21-29 72.4 15 10-5 6-8 2-2 -1-1 6. Howard 11 17-24 70.8 15 15-0 2-6 1-1 -1-0 7. Morgan State 11 24-34 70.6 14 9-5 10-14 2-2 -2-0 8. North Carolina A&T 11 23-33 69.7 18 11-7 5-9 2-1 -3-0 9. Delaware State 11 19-38 50.0 15 8-7 4-7 4-1-10-1 Red Zone Touchdowns FG Lost Poss. Red Zone Defense G Scores- Pct. TD Rush- Made-Att Fumb-Int Chances Pass Dwns-Other 1. Hampton 11 23-38 60.5 19 15-4 4-11 2-1-5-0 2. Bethune-Cookman 12 22-34 64.7 17 13-4 5-5 3-3-6-0 3. Delaware State 11 30-42 71.4 26 18-8 4-10 3-1-2-0 4. Florida A&M 11 25-34 73.5 15 11-4 10-13 1-3-2-0 5. Norfolk State 11 29-39 74.4 18 11-7 11-16 1-2-2-0 6. Morgan State 11 33-44 75.0 23 15-8 10-13 1-2-5-0 7. South Carolina State 12 20-25 80.0 15 13-2 5-7 0-0-2-1 8. Howard 11 39-47 83.0 31 19-12 8-9 1-2-4-0 9. North Carolina A&T 11 43-51 84.3 36 27-9 7-10 0-2-2-1

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS Rushing 1. Branche, DeAngelo 2. Mayhew, Mike 3. Sylvester, Phil 4. Jordon, Asheton 5. Jones, Jaashawn 6. Massey, Chris 7. Johnson, Matthew 8. Chisholm, Antwon 9. Brown, David 10. Jackson, Isadore

Team G NSU 11 NCAT 11 FAMU 10 SCSU 10 DSU 11 SCSU 10 BCU 11 HAM 10 MSU 10 BCU 12

Att. Yards Avg. TD Long Avg/G 272 1330 4.9 13 40 120.9 221 1082 4.9 7 41 98.4 170 968 5.7 10 88 96.8 109 622 5.7 5 55 69.1 161 728 4.5 4 48 65.8 124 639 5.2 6 49 63.9 136 700 5.1 7 67 63.6 131 607 4.6 4 72 60.7 77 439 5.7 2 59 43.9 118 514 4.4 8 30 42.8

Passing Avg/Gm 1. Glaud, Anthony 2. Johnson, Matthew 3. Walley, Chris 4. Long, Malcolm 5. Legree, David 6. Ukpai, Martin 7. Elko, Nick 8. Dannehower, Troy 9. Wiley, Derrick 10. Lewis, Ricky

Team G Comp-Att-Int DSU 11 170-296-9 BCU 11 151-231-5 NSU 11 167-272-8 SCSU 12 177-309-12 HAM 11 138-288-7 FAMU 9 67-144-5 DSU 10 39-68- 3 BCU 10 10-14- 0 SCSU 10 10-14- 0 NCAT 9 5-5- 0

Pct. Yards 57.4 2175 65.4 2053 61.4 1859 57.3 1875 47.9 1679 46.5 908 57.4 540 71.4 114 71.4 103 100.0 68

Receptions/Game 1. Wilson, Justin 2. Hairston, Victor 3. Elmore, Lennel 4. Brown, Javaris 5. Reams, Jevaughn 6. Miles, Wallace 7. Jackson, Darius 8. Diggs, Winfred 9. Carter, Willie 10. Warren, Torrian

Team DSU NSU SCSU HAM BCU NCAT DSU MSU HOW NCAT

TD Long Avg/C Avg/G Rec/G 11 44 15.9 85.2 5.4 2 48 11.2 52.7 4.7 2 58 12.4 54.1 4.4 5 68 16.0 58.1 3.6 2 50 17.4 59.5 3.4 2 44 14.9 50.8 3.4 3 47 10.6 35.8 3.4 1 29 9.7 29.1 3.0 3 78 19.4 56.3 2.9 0 49 11.9 33.1 2.8

G Rec. Yards 11 59 937 11 52 580 11 48 595 11 40 639 12 41 714 10 34 508 11 37 394 9 27 262 10 29 563 9 25 298

TD 15 14 10 9 9 4 7 3 1 0

Long Avg/G 85 197.7 70 186.6 76 169.0 64 156.2 68 152.6 78 100.9 60 54.0 18 11.4 32 10.3 44 7.6

79


2010 MEAC STATISTICS Receive Yds/Game 1. Wilson, Justin 2. Reams, Jevaughn 3. Brown, Javaris 4. Carter, Willie 5. Elmore, Lennel 6. Hairston, Victor 7. Miles, Wallace 8. Poole, Eddie 9. Moore, Larrone 10. Garrett, Reggie

Team G Rec. Yards DSU 11 59 937 BCU 12 41 714 HAM 11 40 639 HOW 10 29 563 SCSU 11 48 595 NSU 11 52 580 NCAT 10 34 508 BCU 12 33 550 DSU 10 24 450 NSU 11 30 436

TD Long R ec/G Avg/C Avg/G 11 44 5.4 15.9 85.2 2 50 3.4 17.4 59.5 5 68 3.6 16.0 58.1 3 78 2.9 19.4 56.3 2 58 4.4 12.4 54.1 2 48 4.7 11.2 52.7 2 44 3.4 14.9 50.8 8 70 2.8 16.7 45.8 4 85 2.4 18.8 45.0 3 76 2.7 14.5 39.6

Total Offense 1. Johnson, Matthew 2. Glaud, Anthony 3. Walley, Chris 4. Legree, David 5. Long, Malcolm 6. Ukpai, Martin 7. Branche, DeAngelo 8. Mayhew, Mike 9. Sylvester, Philip 10. Jordon, Asheton

Team G Rush BCU 11 700 DSU 11 67 NSU 11 190 HAM 11 265 SCSU 12 -19 FAMU 9 233 NSU 11 1330 NCAT 11 1082 FAMU 10 968 SCSU 9 622

Pass Plays 2053 367 2175 389 1859 333 1679 401 1875 363 908 224 0 272 0 221 0 170 0 109

Scoring 1. Erickson, Blake 2. Branche, DeAngelo 3. Scarlett, Kemar 4. Wilson, Justin Sylvester, Philip 6. Jackson, Isadore 7. Estep, Ryan 8. Scott, Trevor 9. Poole, Eddie 10. Merrill, Chris

Team G SCSU 12 NSU 11 MSU 11 DSU 11 FAMU 10 BCU 12 NSU 11 FAMU 11 BCU 12 SCSU 11

FG 18 0 18 0 0 0 11 10 0 0

Punt Return Avg 1. Lawrence, Antonio

Team G FAMU 11

Kick Return Avg Team 1. Ferrell, Justin NCAT 2. Hendrix, Tyrone MSU 3. Keith, Courtney BCU 4. Fluker-Berry, Dwight NSU 5. Drayton, Brandon HOW

G 11 11 11 11 11

TD 0 13 0 11 10 11 0 0 9 8

Total Yds/G 2753 250.3 2242 203.8 2049 186.3 1944 176.7 1856 154.7 1141 126.8 1330 120.9 1082 98.4 968 96.8 622 69.1

XPT 2XP 39 0 0 0 13 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 26 0 25 0 0 4 0 0

Pts 93 78 67 66 60 66 59 55 58 48

Pts/G 7.8 7.1 6.1 6.0 6.0 5.5 5.4 5.0 4.8 4.4

No. Yards TD Long 28 258 0 47

Avg. 9.2

No. Yards TD Long 26 694 3 90 30 693 1 93 26 573 0 61 22 401 0 37 23 395 0 32

Avg. 26.7 23.1 22.0 18.2 17.2

All Purpose 1. Branche, DeAngelo 2. Sylvester, Philip 3. Mayhew, Mike 4. Moore, Larrone 5. Wilson, Justin 6. Carter, Willie 7. Elmore, Lennel 8. Keith, Courtney 9. Jordon, Asheton 10. Warren, Torrian Punting 1. Holdren, Brandon 2. Adams, Nicholas 3. Stovall, Jordan 4. Muenzer, Troy 5. Elko, Nick 6. Grubb, Alex 7. Kowalski, Kory 8. Erickson, Blake

Team G Rush Rcv PR NSU 11 1330 56 0 FAMU 10 968 23 0 NCAT 11 1082 36 0 DSU 10 5 450 0 DSU 11 0 937 0 HOW 10 34 563 81 SCSU 11 97 595 10 BCU 11 -2 153 192 SCSU 9 622 13 0 NCAT 9 0 298 0 Team FAMU MSU HAM NSU DSU NCAT BCU SCSU

G 11 11 11 10 10 10 10 12

Field Goals 1. Scarlett, Kemar 2. Erickson, Blake 3. Estep, Ryan 4. Scott, Trevor 5. Hernandez, Rodrigo 6. Shidler, Sullivan 7. Diaz-Aviles, Mario 8. Munoz, Parker 9. Kowalski, Kory

Team MSU SCSU NSU FAMU HAM NCAT DSU HOW BCU

G Made 11 18 12 18 11 11 11 10 11 6 11 6 10 4 11 2 10 1

Att. 24 21 16 14 11 13 7 6 6

Pct. Made/G 75.0 1.64 85.7 1.50 68.8 1.00 71.4 0.91 54.5 0.55 46.2 0.55 57.1 0.40 33.3 0.18 16.7 0.10

Tackles 1. Jackson, Brandon 2. Ellis, Kenrick

Team G Solo NCAT 11 43 HAM 10 33

Ast. 61 60

Total Avg/G 104 9.5 93 9.3

80

No. 67 62 75 47 25 56 46 51

KR Yards Yards/G 0 1386 126.0 30 1021 102.1 0 1118 101.6 522 977 97.7 62 999 90.8 225 903 90.3 248 950 86.4 573 916 83.3 114 749 83.2 446 744 82.7

Yards Long 2680 61 2454 61 2846 61 1748 61 921 75 2058 53 1652 57 1764 52

Avg. 40.0 39.6 37.9 37.2 36.8 36.8 35.9 34.6

3. Pough, Keith 4. Johnson, Darius 5. Caroll, Andre 6. Graham, Jeremy 7. Erby, David 8. Richard, Donovan 9. Peguese, Brandon 10. Harvey, Brandon

HOW HAM DSU NCAT SCSU SCSU HAM DSU

11 11 11 11 12 12 11 11

Sacks 1. Pough, Keith 2. Washington, Pat 3. Peguese, Brandon 4. Davis, Ryan 5. Erby, David 6. Richard, Donovan 7. Ayanbiola, Olusegun 8. Lewis, Ryan 9. Graham, Jeremy 10. Jennings, Ray

Team HOW SCSU HAM BCU SCSU SCSU DSU BCU NCAT NSU

G Solo 11 10 12 7 11 7 12 5 12 5 12 5 11 4 12 5 11 3 11 5

Ast. Yards Total Avg/G 1 84 10.5 0.95 2 60 8.0 0.67 2 54 8.0 0.73 3 43 6.5 0.54 2 43 6.0 0.50 0 38 6.0 0.50 2 39 5.0 0.45 0 37 5.0 0.42 4 27 5.0 0.45 0 27 5.0 0.45

Tackles For Loss 1. Pough, Keith 2. Peguese, Brandon 3. Washington, Pat 4. Ellis, Kenrick 5. Erby, David 6. Davis, Ryan 7. Lewis, Ryan 8. Caroll, Andre 9. Kerkulah, Sackie 10. Richard, Donovan

Team HOW HAM SCSU HAM SCSU BCU BCU DSU HOW SCSU

G Solo 11 25 11 18 12 15 10 9 12 11 12 10 12 11 11 11 11 10 12 10

Ast. Yards Total Avg/G 7 148 28.5 2.59 11 94 23.5 2.14 4 79 17.0 1.42 12 37 15.0 1.50 7 54 14.5 1.21 8 61 14.0 1.17 6 76 14.0 1.17 5 63 13.5 1.23 6 51 13.0 1.18 4 57 12.0 1.00

Passes Defended 1. Pellerin, Micah 2. Graham, D’Vonte 3. Pellim, Romeo Adjei, Francis 5. Kelly, Lanny 6. Williams, Michael 7. Rankin, Joe 8. Knight, Decarlos 9. Silva, Ricardo 10. Smith, Arkee

Team G HAM 11 NCAT 11 HAM 11 DSU 11 HOW 9 BCU 10 MSU 11 HOW 10 HAM 11 BCU 10

Interceptions 1. Graham, D’Vonte 2. Williams, Michael 3. Smith, Arkee 4. Drummond, Darius 5. Miller, Reshaude 6. Silva, Ricardo 7. Lewis, Ryan 8. Kelly, Lanny 9. Holcomb, Curtis 10. Hepburn, Brandon

Team NCAT BCU BCU SCSU MSU HAM BCU HOW FAMU FAMU

G 11 10 10 10 11 11 12 9 11 10

59 43 47 33 58 55 38 46

Brup 14 8 13 12 7 4 9 9 6 4

41 57 49 58 38 38 47 37

Int. 2 7 1 2 3 6 2 1 4 5

No. Yards 7 33 6 51 5 111 4 114 4 181 4 68 4 136 3 86 3 4 2 73

100 100 96 91 96 93 85 83

Total 16 15 14 14 10 10 11 10 10 9

9.1 9.1 8.7 8.3 8.0 7.8 7.7 7.5

Avg/G 1.45 1.36 1.27 1.27 1.11 1.00 1.00 1.00 0.91 0.90

TD Long Avg/G 0 33 0.64 0 44 0.60 0 40 0.50 0 50 0.40 1 89 0.36 1 68 0.36 1 69 0.33 0 50 0.33 0 4 0.27 0 47 0.20

Fumbles Forced 1. Pough, Keith 2. Lewis, Ryan 3. Young, Justin 4. Hammond, Corwin 5. Cills, Chris 6. Caroll, Andre 7. Peguese, Brandon 8. Tyler, Delbert 9. Hall, Qier 10. Smith, Bakari

Team HOW BCU MSU NSU HAM DSU HAM HAM FAMU MSU

G 11 12 10 11 11 11 11 11 11 11

No. 4 4 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2

Avg/G 0.36 0.33 0.20 0.18 0.18 0.18 0.18 0.18 0.18 0.18

Fumbles Recovered 1. Eugene, Chris 2. Graham, Jeremy 3. Harvey, Brandon 4. Craig, Hasan 5. Richard, Donovan 6. Ellis, Kenrick 7. Johnson, Darius 8. Caroll, Andre 9. Sandilands, Reggie 10. Lewis, Ryan

Team G MSU 10 NCAT 11 DSU 11 NSU 11 SCSU 12 HAM 10 HAM 11 DSU 11 BCU 12 BCU 12

No. 5 3 3 3 3 2 2 2 2 2

Avg/G 0.50 0.27 0.27 0.27 0.25 0.20 0.18 0.18 0.17 0.17

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE


HEADER TEXT HERE

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE

81


2011 OPPONENTS Game 1 - VIRGINIA STATE September 3 • 6 p.m. • Dick Price Stadium • Norfolk, Va. • Virginia Lottery Labor Day Classic

General Information

Team Information

2010 Results

Location....................................Petersburg, Va.

2010 Overall Record . ................................... 8-3

Date

Founded........................................................1882

2010 CIAA Record/Finish.........6-1 (1st-North)

Aug. 28 Livingstone

Enrollment...................................................5,000

Lettermen Returning/Lost........................ 33/15

Sept. 11 West Virginia State W

34-21

Nickname............................................... Trojans

Starters Returning........13 (6 off., 6 def., 1 ST)

Sept. 18 at Norfolk State

L

28-51

Color.......................................... Orange & Blue

Starters Lost..................11 (5 off., 5 def., 1 ST)

Sept. 25 at Chowan

W

20-13

Stadium (Capacity)................ Rogers Stadium

Basic Offense.........................................Spread

Oct. 2

at Bowie State

W

16-15

................................................................. (13,500)

Basic Defense............................................... 3-4

Oct. 9

Fayetteville State

L

14-21

Oct. 14

Elizabeth City State W

15-10

Surface........................................Natural Grass

Opponent

Res. Score W

30-6

Affiliation................................NCAA Division II

Sports Information

Oct. 23

Lincoln (Pa.)

W

42-0

Conference............................................... CIAA

SID.............................................. Jason Pompey

Oct. 30

at Virginia Union

W

35-7

President............................... Dr. Keith T. Miller

Phone...........................................(804) 524-5028

Nov. 6

at St. Paul’s

W

34-14

Athletics Director......................... Peggy Davis

Fax................................................(804) 524-5763

Nov. 13 vs. Shaw

L

7-14*

Email.....................................jpompey@vsu.edu

* CIAA Championship Game

Coaching Staff

Press Box Phone........................(804) 524-5030

Head Coach (Alma Mater)......Andrew Faison

Web Site...........www.vsu.edu/pages/102.asp

Series Information

..............................................(Virginia State ’81)

Mailing Address..........................P.O. Box 9058

Record ................................ VSU leads 26-21-1

Record at VSU (Years)..............49-42 (9 years)

........................................ Petersburg, VA 23806

First Meeting . ............... VSU 13, NSU 7 (1963)

Career Record (Years)............................. Same

Last Meeting ............... NSU 51, VSU 28 (2010)

Football Office Phone................(804) 524-5600

2011 Schedule

Pete Adrian vs. VSU .................................... 5-1

Assistant Coaches..............................................

Date..................................................... Opponent

Andrew Faison vs. NSU............................... 3-6

..............................Corey Sullivan (OC/QB/WR)

Sept. 3...................................... at Norfolk State

Largest NSU Win.......................39 (1969, 39-0)

...................................Errick Hargrove (DC/DB)

Sept. 10......................... at West Virginia State

Largest VSU Win .......................48 (1994, 54-6)

..........................Larry Brooks (Defensive Line)

Sept. 17.............................at Johnson C. Smith

............................ Mike Arthur (Offensive Line)

Sept. 24..................................................Chowan

Series notes

..........Christopher Bates (RB/Special Teams)

Oct. 1...............................................Bowie State

• NSU has won the last five meetings by a

..............Theron Jones (Outside Linebackers)

Oct. 8................................. at Fayetteville State

combined score of 188-66.

Oct. 15............................at Elizabeth City State

• Last season’s 51-28 win was the most points

Oct. 22........................................at Lincoln (Pa.)

NSU had ever scored against VSU, topping the

Oct. 29......................................... Virginia Union

previous best of 47 points in 2008.

Nov. 3.................................... at Gardner-Webb

• This year’s game will return to its normal Labor Day weekend slot after a one-year hiatus.

82

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE


2011 OPPONENTS Game 2 - WEST VIRGINIA September 10 • TBA • Milan Puskar Stadium • Morgantown, W.Va.

General Information

Team Information

2010 Results

Location............................ Morgantown, W.V.a

2010 Overall Record . ................................... 9-4

Date

Opponent

Founded........................................................1867

2010 Big East Record/Finish.............. 5-2/T-1st

Sept. 4

Coastal Carolina W

Enrollment.................................................29,306

Lettermen Returning/Lost........................ 41/20

Sept. 10 at Marshall

W

24-21 (OT)

Nickname................................... Mountaineers

Starters Returning........16 (8 off., 4 def., 4 ST)

Sept. 18 Maryland

W

31-17

Color............................................... Gold & Blue

Starters Lost..................15 (4 off., 7 def., 4 ST)

Sept. 25 at LSU

L

14-20

Stadium (Capacity)...... Mountaineer Field at

Basic Offense.........................................Spread

Oct. 9

UNLV

W

49-10

.........................Milan Puskar Stadium (60,000)

Basic Defense................................ 3-3-5 Stack

Oct. 14

South Florida

W

20-6

Oct. 23

Syracuse

L

14-19

at Connecticut

L

13-16 (OT)

Surface................................................. FieldTurf

Res. Score 31-0

Affiliation.........................NCAA Division I FBS

Sports Information

Oct. 29

Conference.......................................... Big East

SID............................................... Mike Montoro

Nov. 13 Cincinnati

W

37-10

President......................Dr. James P. Clements

Phone...........................................(304) 293-2821

Nov. 20 at Louisville

W

17-10

Athletics Director............................Oliver Luck

Fax................................................(304) 293-4105

Nov. 26 at Pitt

W

35-10

Email..................mike.montoro@mail.wvu.edu

Dec. 4

W

35-14

Coaching Staff

Press Box Phone........................(304) 293-3799

Dec. 28 N.C. State

L

7-23*

Head Coach (Alma Mater)....Dana Holgorsen

Web Site...................www.msnsportsnet.com

* Florida Citrus Bowl

.......................................... (Iowa Wesleyan ‘93)

Mailing Address..........................P.O. Box 0877

Record at WVU (Years)....................... 1st year

................................Morgantown, W.Va. 26507

Career Record (Years)......................... 1st year

Rutgers

Series Information First Meeting.

Football Office Phone................(304) 293-4194

2011 Schedule

Assistant Coaches..............................................

Date..................................................... Opponent

Series notes

.........Steve Dunlap (Safeties/Special Teams)

Sept. 4...................................................Marshall

• This will mark NSU’s fourth all-time game

.......................................... Jeff Casteel (DC/LB)

Sept. 10.........................................Norfolk State

against a BCS opponent.

......................................... Robert Gillespie (RB)

Sept. 17...........................................at Maryland

• NSU has faced Rutgers twice and Kentucky

.....................................Shannon Dawson (WR)

Sept. 24......................................................... LSU

once in the last four years.

.........................................Bill Bedenbaugh (OL)

Oct. 1..........................................Bowling Green

• Like Rutgers, West Virginia also hails from the

............................................ Bill Kirelawich (DL)

Oct. 8...............................................Connecticut

BIG EAST Conference.

........................................ David Lockwood (CB)

Oct. 21............................................. at Syracuse

...........................................Daron Roberts (WR)

Oct. 29................................................ at Rutgers Nov.5....................................................Louisville Nov. 12........................................... at Cincinnati Nov. 25............................................................Pitt Dec. 1....................................... at South Florida

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE

83


2011 OPPONENTS Game 3 - howard September 17 • 1 p.m. • William H. Greene Stadium • Washington, D.C.

General Information

Team Information

2010 Results

Location.................................Washington, D.C.

2010 Overall Record . ................................. 1-10

Date

Founded........................................................1867

2010 MEAC Record/Finish.................... 0-8/9th

Sept. 4 at Holy Cross

L

7-38

Enrollment.................................................10,500

Lettermen Returning/Lost........................ 35/18

Sept. 11 Hampton

L

21-31

Nickname.................................................. Bison

Starters Returning..................16 (7 off., 9 def.)

Sept. 18 Florida A&M

L

7-50

Colors................................ Navy Blue & White

Starters Lost..............................6 (4 off., 2 def.)

Sept. 25 vs. Morgan State

L

3-20

Stadium (Capacity)........... William H. Greene

Basic Offense.......................................Multiple

Oct. 2

Lincoln (Pa.)

W

28-14

................................................... Stadium (7,086)

Basic Defense............................................... 4-3

Oct. 9

at Furman

L

14-56

Oct. 23 at N.C. A&T

L

32-52

Surface......................................Artificial Grass

Opponent

Res. Score

Affiliation......................... NCAA Division I FCS

Sports Information

Oct. 30 Norfolk State

L

9-10

Conference............................................. MEAC

SID...............................................Edward Hill Jr.

Nov. 6

L

14-54

President..............................Dr. Sidney Ribeau

Phone...........................................(202) 806-7184

Nov. 13 at Bethune-Cookman L

20-35

Athletics Director........................Louis Perkins

Fax................................................(202) 806-9595

Nov. 20 Delaware State

43-53

at S.C. State

L

Email.....................................ehill@howard.edu

Coaching Staff

Press Box Phone..... (202) 806-5488/5489/5491

Series Information

Head Coach (Alma Mater)...........Gary Harrell

Web Site.................. www.howard-bison.com

Record................................ Howard leads 15-7

........................................................(Howard ’94)

Mailing Address....... 511 Gresham Place NW

First Meeting..........Howard 49, NSU 28 (1981)

Record at HU (Years)........................... 1st year

............................................................. Room 100

Last Meeting............NSU 10, Howard 9 (2010)

Career Record (Years)......................... 1st year

.....................................Washington, D.C. 20059

Pete Adrian vs. Howard............................... 4-2

Football Office Phone................(202) 806-6193

Gary Harrell vs. NSU.................................... 0-0

Assistant Coaches....................Ray Petty (DC)

2011 Schedule

Largest NSU Win.....................37 (2008, 49-12)

...............................................Bobby Jones (DL)

Date..................................................... Opponent

Largest Howard Win.................37 (1987, 43-6)

..................................................Ron Bolton (DB)

Sept. 3.............................. at Eastern Michigan

.............................................Ted White (OC/QB)

Sept. 10......................................vs. Morehouse

Series notes

.............................................Chennis Berry (OL)

Sept. 17.........................................Norfolk State

• NSU has won the last three meetings by a

..............................................Theron Smith (RB)

Sept. 24..................................vs. Morgan State

combined score of 100-27.

..................................... Jonathan Brewer (WR)

Oct. 1....................................at Savannah State

• Last season’s 10-9 win marked the second

................................... Mike Andrews (Kickers)

Oct. 8......................................... at Florida A&M

time during the Division I era the Spartans

Oct. 15............................................ Georgetown

defeated an opponent by one point.

Oct. 22............................... North Carolina A&T

• It also marked just the second game between

Oct. 29..............................South Carolina State

the two schools that was decided by three

Nov. 5...............................................at Hampton

points or less.

Nov. 19................................. at Delaware State

84

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE


2011 OPPONENTS Game 4 - charleston southern September 24 • 1:30 p.m. • CSU Stadium • Charleston, S.C.

General Information

Team Information

2010 Results

Location................................... Charleston, S.C.

2010 Overall Record . ................................... 3-8

Date

Founded........................................................1964

2010 Big South Record/Finish...........1-5/T-6th

Sept. 4 North Greenville

W

41-31

Enrollment...................................................3,287

Lettermen Returning/Lost........................ 31/21

Sept. 11 Wofford

L

23-34

Nickname.......................................Buccaneers

Starters Returning........12 (4 off., 7 def., 1 ST)

Sept. 18 Mars Hill

W

28-14

Colors.................................. Navy Blue & Gold

Starters Lost..................13 (7 off., 4 def., 2 ST)

Sept. 25 at Hawaii

L

7-66

Stadium (Capacity)........ CSU Stadium (4,000)

Basic Offense.................... Multiple/One Back

Oct. 9

L

20-44

Surface........................................Natural Grass

Basic Defense............................................3-5-3

Oct. 16 Gardner-Webb

L

25-35

Oct. 23 VMI

L

16-34

Affiliation......................... NCAA Division I FCS

Opponent

at Liberty

Res. Score

Conference....................................... Big South

Sports Information

Oct. 30 at Stony Brook

L

21-41

President....................... Dr. Jairy C. Hunter Jr.

SID..............................................Blake Freeland

Nov. 6

L

21-49

Athletics Director........................... Hank Small

Phone...........................................(843) 863-7687

Nov. 13 Presbyterian

W

42-39

Fax................................................(843) 863-7676

Nov. 20 at Coastal Carolina

L

3-70

at Kentucky

Coaching Staff

Email............................. bfreeland@csuniv.edu

Head Coach (Alma Mater)................ Jay Mills

Press Box Phone........................(843) 863-7661

Series Information

................................ (Western Washington ‘84)

Web Site......................... www.csusports.com

First meeting

Record at CSU (Years)..............43-46 (8 years)

Mailing Address.............9200 University Blvd.

Career Record (Years)............46-67 (10 years)

....................................... Charleston, S.C. 29406

Football Office Phone................(843) 863-7119

Series notes • This will mark NSU’s sixth all-time game

Assistant Coaches......... Patrick Nix (OC/WR)

2011 Schedule

against a Big South opponent.

............................................... Chuck Kelley (OL)

Date..................................................... Opponent

• The Spartans have previously faced Liberty

.................Gabe Giardina (RB/Special Teams)

Sept. 3....................................at Central Florida

three times and Virginia Military twice.

............................................. Thielen Smith (DC)

Sept. 10..................................... at Florida State

• The Spartans own a 1-4 record against Big

.............................................. RaShan Frost (DL)

Sept. 17......................................at Jacksonville

South opponents.

..................................... Marcus Woodson (DB)

Sept. 24.........................................Norfolk State Oct. 1....................................................... Wesley Oct. 15.......................................................at VMI Oct. 22...................................................... Liberty Oct. 29................................... at Gardner-Webb Nov. 5..............................................Stony Brook Nov. 12.................................... Coastal Carolina Nov. 19...................................... at Presbyterian

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE

85


2011 OPPONENTS Game 5 - South Carolina State October 1 • 4 p.m. • Dick Price Stadium • Norfolk, Va. • Fish Bowl Classic

General Information

Team Information

2010 Results

Location................................. Orangeburg, S.C.

2010 Overall Record . ................................... 9-3

Date

Founded........................................................1896

2010 MEAC Record/Finish................. 7-1/T-1st

Sept. 4 at Georgia Tech

Enrollment...................................................4,700

Lettermen Returning/Lost........................ 44/17

Sept. 11 Mississippi Valley St. W

44-0

Nickname.............................................Bulldogs

Starters Returning........16 (6 off., 8 def., 2 ST)

Sept. 18 at Benedict

W

61-20

Color........................................... Garnet & Blue

Starters Lost..............................8 (5 off., 3 def.)

Oct. 2

at Florida A&M

W

19-0

Stadium (Capacity)............. Oliver C. Dawson

Basic Offense............................. Multiple/Pro I

Oct. 9

Norfolk State

W

34-13

...................................Bulldog Stadium (22,000)

Basic Defense...................................Multiple 4

Oct. 16 Bethune-Cookman

L

0-14

Oct. 23 Hampton

W

10-7

Surface.................................................Poly Turf

Opponent

Res. Score L

10-41

Affiliation......................... NCAA Division I FCS

Sports Information

Oct. 30 at Delaware State

W

38-21

Conference............................................. MEAC

SID.......................................... William Hamilton

Nov. 6

Howard

W

54-14

President........................ Dr. George E. Cooper

Phone...........................................(803) 536-7060

Nov. 11 at Morgan State

W

31-20

Athletics Director...............Charlene Johnson

Fax................................................(803) 536-8622

Nov. 20 at N.C. A&T

W

48-3

Email...............................whamilton@scsu.edu

Nov. 27 at Georgia Southern L

Coaching Staff

Press Box Phone........................(803) 536-8623

* FCS Playoffs

Head Coach (Alma Mater).................................

Web Site................... www.scsuathletics.com

............ Oliver “Buddy” Pough (S.C. State ’75)

Mailing Address..................................................

Series Information

Record at SCSU (Years)...........76-29 (9 years)

.............................Office of Sports Information

Record ................................... SCSU leads 14-2

Career Record (Years)............................. Same

.......................................................P.O. Box 7128

First Meeting . .............NSU 23, BCU 14 (1976)

Football Office Phone................(803) 533-3743

....................................... Orangeburg, SC 29117

Last Meeting .............SCSU 34, NSU 13 (2010)

Assistant Coaches....... David Blanchard (DL)

16-41*

Pete Adrian vs. SCSU .................................. 1-5

..............Mike Adams (DC/LB/Special Teams)

2011 Schedule

Buddy Pough vs. NSU.................................. 8-1

...............................................Danny Lewis (RB)

Date..................................................... Opponent

Largest NSU Win.......................7 (2007, 20-13)

..........................................Gerald Harrison (DL)

Sept. 1............................... at Central Michigan

Largest SCSU Win ..................37 (2006, 47-10)

....................................Joel Taylor (Secondary)

Sept. 10...........................at Bethune-Cookman

...................................Kevin Magouirk (OC/QB)

Sept. 17...............................................at Indiana

Series notes

.............................. Nigel Pearson (TE/Tackles)

Sept. 24.....................................Delaware State

• The Bulldogs have won nine of the last 10

Oct. 1........................................ at Norfolk State

meetings, with the only loss a double-overtime

Oct. 8............................ North Carolina Central

win by NSU in 2007.

Oct. 15..........................................Georgia State

• The only other win for NSU in the series, back

Oct. 22............................................Florida A&M

in 2000, also was an overtime home win for the

Oct. 29................................................at Howard

Spartans.

Nov. 12.............................. North Carolina A&T Nov. 19.................................at Savannah State

86

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE


2011 OPPONENTS Game 6 - delaware state October 8 • 1 p.m. • Alumni Stadium • Dover, Del.

General Information

Team Information

2010 Results

Location............................................ Dover, Del.

2010 Overall Record...................................... 3-8

Date

Founded........................................................1891

2010 MEAC Record/Finish.................... 2-6/7th

Sept. 3 vs. Southern

L

27-37

Enrollment...................................................3,600

Lettermen Returning/Lost........................ 47/17

Sept. 11 Florida A&M

L

14-17

Nickname.............................................. Hornets

Starters Returning........17 (8 off., 7 def., 2 ST)

Sept. 25 at Coastal Carolina

L

14-34

Colors..............................Columbia Blue & Red

Starters Lost..............................7 (3 off., 4 def.)

Sept. 30 Hampton

L

14-20

Stadium (Capacity)....Alumni Stadium (7,000)

Basic Offense.......................................Multiple

Oct. 9

at Bethune-Cookman L

24-47

Surface..................................... Artificial A-Turf

Basic Defense......................................Multiple

Oct. 16 North Carolina A&T W

31-26

Oct. 23 at Morgan State

L

24-34

Affiliation......................... NCAA Division I FCS

Opponent

Res. Score

Conference.............................................. MEAC

Sports Information

Oct. 30 South Carolina State L

21-38

President......................... Dr. Harry L. Williams

SID................................................ Dennis Jones

Nov. 6

W

29-7

Athletics Director.........................Derek Carter

Phone...........................................(302) 857-6068

Nov. 13 at Norfolk State

L

21-31

Fax................................................(302) 857-6069

Nov. 20 at Howard

W

53-43

N.C. Central

Coaching Staff

E-Mail................................... djones@desu.edu

Head Coach (Alma Mater)........ Kermit Blount

Press Box Phone........................(302) 857-7651

Series Information

................................(Winston-Salem State ’80)

Web Site.......................www.dsuhornets.com

Record...................................... DSU leads 13-5

Record at DSU (Years) ....................... 1st year

Mailing Address...........................DSU Athletic

First Meeting..................DSU 18, NSU 0 (1953)

Career Record (Years)........ 91-87-3 (16 years)

................................................. Media Relations

Last Meeting................NSU 31, DSU 21 (2010)

Football Office Phone................(302) 857-7447

...................................1200 N. DuPont Highway

Pete Adrian vs. DSU..................................... 2-4

Assistant Coaches..............................................

.................................................. Dover, DE 19901

Kermit Blount vs. NSU (at WSSU)...........0-6-1

................................ Michael Ketchum (DC/LB)

Largest NSU Win.....................12 (1998, 38-26)

.................................. Arrington Jones (OC/QB)

2011 Schedule

................................................ Jeff Braxton (DL)

Date..................................................... Opponent

........................................ Nick Calcutta (OL/TE)

Sept. 3.......................................................at VMI

Series notes

..............................................Bryant Foster (CB)

Sept. 10...................................................... Shaw

• NSU broke a six-game losing streak to Dela-

............... Curtis Thomas (WR/Special Teams)

Sept. 17...........................................at Delaware

ware State in 2009 and has now won two in a

......................................William King (Safeties)

Sept. 24....................... at South Carolina State

row over the Hornets for the first time ever.

...........................................Tory Woodbury (RB)

Oct. 1......................................... at Florida A&M

• The last four meetings have been decided by

........................................... Mike Gallagher (TE)

Oct. 8.............................................Norfolk State

10 points or less.

Oct. 15...........................at North Carolina A&T

• Prior to the 2009 win, Pete Adrian had de-

Oct. 29..........................................Morgan State

feated every other MEAC opponent in his first

Nov. 5........................... North Carolina Central

four years except Delaware State.

Largest DSU Win......................30 (2001, 43-13)

Nov. 12.............................................at Hampton Nov. 19................................................... Howard

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE

87


2011 OPPONENTS Game 7 - hampton October 15 • 4 p.m. • Dick Price Stadium • Norfolk, Va. • State Farm Battle of the Bay

General Information

Team Information

2010 Results

Location........................................Hampton, Va.

2010 Overall Record . ................................... 6-5

Date

Founded........................................................1868

2010 MEAC Record/Finish.................... 5-3/4th

Sept. 2 at Central Michigan L

0-33

Enrollment...................................................5,402

Lettermen Returning/Lost........................ 50/29

Sept. 11 at Howard

W

31-21

Nickname................................................Pirates

Starters Returning........19 (7 off., 5 def., 7 ST)

Sept. 18 North Carolina A&T W

35-21

Colors............................ Royal Blue and White

Starters Lost............................10 (4 off., 6 def.)

Sept. 30 at Delaware State

W

20-14

Stadium (Capacity)......... Armstrong Stadium

Basic Offense.........................................Spread

Oct. 9

W

27-13

................................................................. (17,000)

Basic Defense............................................... 4-3

Oct. 16 Norfolk State

W

7-6

Oct. 23 at S.C. State

L

7-10

Surface........................................Natural Grass

Opponent

at N.C. Central

Res. Score

Affiliation......................... NCAA Division I FCS

Sports Information

Oct. 30 Old Dominion

L

14-28

Conference............................................. MEAC

SID.........................................Maurice Williams

Nov. 6

L

18-23

President........................Dr. William R. Harvey

Phone...........................................(757) 727-5757

Nov. 13 at Florida A&M

L

12-17

Athletics Director..................Keshia Campbell

Fax................................................(757) 727-5813

Nov. 20 at Morgan State

W

21-16

Bethune-Cookman

Email..........maurice.williams@hamptonu.edu

Coaching Staff

Press Box Phone........................(757) 727-5422

Series Information

Head Coach (Alma Mater).......Donovan Rose

Web Site...............www.hamptonpirates.com

Record.................................NSU leads 24-23-1

......................................................(Hampton ‘79)

Mailing Address.....................210 Holland Hall

First Meeting..........NSU 42, Hampton 0 (1963)

Record at HU (Years)................11-11 (2 years)

............................................ Hampton, VA 23668

Last Meeting............Hampton 7, NSU 6 (2010)

Career Record (Years)............................. Same

Pete Adrian vs. HU........................................ 2-4

Football Office Phone................(757) 727-5322

2011 Schedule

Donovan Rose vs. NSU................................ 1-1

Assistant Coaches......... Willie Snead III (OC)

Date..................................................... Opponent

Largest NSU Win.......................46 (1990, 52-6)

........................................ Keith Goganious (DC)

Sept. 3.................................. vs. Alabama A&M

Largest HU Win..........................60 (1992, 60-0)

................................................... Devan Hill (DB)

Sept. 8............................................Florida A&M

..................................Ray Lewis (Assistant DB)

Sept. 17.................................... at Old Dominion

Series notes

............................................. Stephen Field (RB)

Sept. 24...........................at Bethune-Cookman

• Last year’s 7-6 loss marked the second time in

....................................................Jason Eck (OL)

Oct. 8................................................... Princeton

four years a game between the two teams was

....................................... Delbert Cowsette (DL)

Oct. 15...................................... at Norfolk State

decided by one point.

.....................Michael Villagrana (TE/Asst. OL)

Oct. 22.......................... North Carolina Central

• Only one other time since 2000 has a game

.......................................... Lamar Thomas (WR)

Oct. 29..................................at Savannah State

between Hampton and NSU been decided by

Nov. 5..................................................... Howard

two touchdowns or less.

Nov. 12......................................Delaware State

• Hampton owns an 11-3 record since NSU

Nov. 19.........................................Morgan State

moved to Division I, with two of those wins for the Spartans coming in the last four seasons.

88

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE


2011 OPPONENTS Game 8 - bethune-Cookman October 20 • 7:30 p.m. • Dick Price Stadium • Norfolk, Va.

General Information

Team Information

2010 Results

Location............................Daytona Beach, Fla.

2010 Overall Record . ................................. 10-2

Date

Founded........................................................1904

2010 MEAC Record/Finish................. 7-1/T-1st

Sept. 4 Edward Waters

W

70-10

Enrollment...................................................3,577

Lettermen Returning/Lost........................ 61/22

Sept. 18 Savannah State

W

42-7

Nickname.............................................Wildcats

Starters Returning..................12 (6 off., 6 def.)

Sept. 25 Norfolk State

W

21-7

Color......................................... Maroon & Gold

Starters Lost............................10 (5 off., 5 def.)

Oct. 2

at Morgan State

W

69-32

Stadium (Capacity) Municipal Stadium (9,601)

Basic Offense.......................................Multiple

Oct. 9

Delaware State

W

47-24

Surface................................................ OmniTurf

Basic Defense......................................Multiple

Oct. 16 at S.C. State

W

14-0

Oct. 23 at N.C. Central

W

23-10

Affiliation......................... NCAA Division I FCS

Opponent

Res. Score

Conference............................................. MEAC

Sports Information

Oct. 30 North Carolina A&T W

67-17

President.......................Dr. Trudie Kibbe Reed

SID.......................................... Mike Stambaugh

Nov. 6

W

23-18

Athletics Director..............Lynn W. Thompson

Phone...........................................(386) 481-2278

Nov. 13 Howard

W

35-20

Fax................................................(386) 481-2238

Nov. 20 Florida A&M

L

27-38

Coaching Staff

Email.................. stambaughm@cookman.edu

Dec. 4

L

20-45*

Head Coach (Alma Mater)........Brian Jenkins

Press Box Phone.............. (386) 671-8968/8973

* FCS Playoffs

.................................................... (Cincinnati ‘93)

Web Site................... www.b-cuathletics.com

Record at BCU (Years)..................10-2 (1 year)

Mailing Address..................................................

Series Information

Career Record (Years)............................. Same

.............................Office of Sports Information

Record ..................................... BCU leads 14-7

Football Office Phone................(386) 481-2250

.............. 640 Dr. Mary McLeod Bethune Blvd.

First Meeting . .............NSU 23, BCU 14 (1976)

Assistant Coaches..... Charles Jones (DC/LB)

..................................Daytona Beach, FL 32114

Last Meeting .................BCU 21, NSU 7 (2010)

................................................ Rob Spence (OC)

at Hampton

New Hampshire

Pete Adrian vs. BCU .................................... 2-4

.....................Terry Sims (AHC/Special Teams)

2011 Schedule

Brian Jenkins vs. NSU................................. 1-0

......................................................Earl Lane (DL)

Date..................................................... Opponent

Largest NSU Win.....................26 (2009, 40-14)

................................................Allen Suber (WR)

Sept. 4............................ vs. Prairie View A&M

Largest BCU Win 42 (2002, 49-7; 2003, 56-14)

...................................................Joe Dailey (QB)

Sept. 10............................South Carolina State

............................................ Terry Williams (CB)

Sept. 24................................................ Hampton

Series notes

.............................................Lawal McCray (TE)

Oct. 1........................................... at Miami (Fla.)

• NSU broke a nine-game losing streak to B-CU

...............................................John Powers (OL)

Oct. 8.............................at North Carolina A&T

in 2007 and has now won two of the last four

.......................................Autry Denson (GA/RB)

Oct. 15..................................... Fort Valley State

meetings.

Oct. 20...................................... at Norfolk State

• B-CU’s 63-61 win in 2005 still stands as the

Oct. 29......................at North Carolina Central

highest scoring game in NSU history (124

Nov. 5...........................................Morgan State

points) and holds the record for most overtimes

Nov. 12..................................... Savannah State

(4).

Nov. 19.....................................vs. Florida A&M

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE

89


2011 OPPONENTS Game 9 - North Carolina A&T Oct. 29 • 2 p.m. • Dick Price Stadium • Norfolk, Va. • Homecoming

General Information

Team Information

2010 Results

Location.................................Greensboro, N.C.

2010 Overall Record . ................................. 1-10

Date

Founded........................................................1891

2010 MEAC Record/Finish ................... 1-7/8th

Sept. 4 Winston-Salem State L

14-21

Enrollment.................................................10,383

Lettermen Returning/Lost ....................... 49/24

Sept. 11 Norfolk State

L

14-23

Nickname................................................ Aggies

Starters Returning .......15 (5 off., 7 def., 3 ST)

Sept. 18 at Hampton

L

21-35

Colors.......................................... Blue and Gold

Starters Lost ...........................10 (6 off., 4 def.)

Sept. 25 at N.C. Central

L

16-27

Stadium (Capacity)....Aggie Stadium (21,500)

Basic Offense ........................................Spread

Oct. 2 vs. Tennessee State L

7-37

Surface .......................................Natural Grass

Basic Defense .............................................. 4-3

Oct. 9 Morgan State

L

14-27

Oct. 16 at Delaware State

L

26-31

W 52-32

Affiliation......................... NCAA Division I FCS

Opponent

Res. Score

Conference.............................................. MEAC

Sports Information

Oct. 23 Howard

Chancellor.........................Dr. Harold L. Martin

SID ............................................ Brian Holloway

Oct. 28 at Bethune-Cookman L

17-67

Athletics Director........................ Earl Hilton III

Phone.......................................... (336) 344-7141

Nov. 6 Florida A&M

19-22 (OT)

Fax ...............................................(336) 344-7181

Nov. 20 South Carolina State L

L

3-48

Coaching Staff

Email . ..............................bmhollow@ncat.edu

Head Coach (Alma Mater) . ... Rod Broadway

Press Box Phone . .....................(336) 344-7917

Series Information

............................................(North Carolina ’77)

Web Site....................... www.ncataggies.com

Record ...........................N.C. A&T leads 26-10

Record at A&T (Years) ....................... 1st year

Mailing Address .......... 1601 E. Market Street

First Meeting . ...... N.C. A&T 13, NSU 6 (1976)

Career Record (Years) . ...........68-23 (8 years)

.............................................Moore Gymnasium

Last Meeting ...... NSU 23, N.C. A&T 14 (2010)

Phone ..........................................(336) 285-4260

Pete Adrian vs. N.C. A&T . .......................... 4-2

Assistant Coaches............. Joe Pizzo (OC/QB)

2011 Schedule

Rod Broadway vs. NSU................................ 0-0

....................................... Sam Washington (DC)

Date..................................................... Opponent

Largest NSU Win.....................30 (2007, 50-20)

.............................................. Shawn Gibbs (RB)

Sept. 3......... Virginia University of Lynchburg

Largest N.C. A&T Win ............36 (1991, 50-14)

..............................................Keith Wagner (OL)

Sept. 10...........................at Appalachian State

.......................................... Courtney Coard (DL)

Sept. 24................................... Coastal Carolina

Series notes

............................................Shaun Hunter (WR)

Oct. 1....................................... at Morgan State

• NSU has won five of the last seven meetings

............................................. Colin Williams (TE)

Oct. 8................................... Bethune-Cookman

after having lost the previous nine games to the

Oct. 15.......................................Delaware State

Aggies.

Oct. 22................................................at Howard

• Both of the losses were by four points or less,

Oct. 29...................................... at Norfolk State

while NSU’s five victories during that time were

Nov. 5........................................ at Florida A&M

by an average of 16 points.

Nov. 12........................ at South Carolina State

• Four of NSU’s five wins over A&T recently

Nov. 19......................... North Carolina Central

have come in Norfolk.

90

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE


2011 OPPONENTS Game 10 - savannah State November 5 • 5 p.m. • Theodore A. Wright Stadium • Savannah, Ga.

General Information

Team Information

2010 Results

Location....................................... Savannah, Ga.

2010 Overall Record . ................................. 1-10

Date

Founded......................................................... 1890

2010 Conference Record/Finish . ..............N/A

Sept. 4 at Georgia Southern L

3-48

Enrollment.................................................... 3,200

Lettermen Returning/Lost ....................... 59/23

Sept. 11 at Fort Valley State

10-41

Nickname................................................... Tigers

Starters Returning .................16 (9 off., 2 def.)

Sept. 18 at Bethune-Cookman L

7-42

Colors....................Burnt Orange & Reflex Blue

Starters Lost .............................6 (2 off., 4 def.)

Sept. 25 vs. Albany State

L

14-28

Stadium (Capacity)........... Theodore A. Wright

Basic Offense ......................................Multiple

Oct. 2

at Liberty

L

14-52

..................................................... Stadium (8,000)

Basic Defense .....................................Multiple

Oct. 9

at Georgia State

L

21-55

Oct. 16 at Florida A&M

L

0-31

Surface ........................................ Natural Grass

Opponent

Res. Score L

Affiliation...........................NCAA Division I FCS

Sports Information

Oct. 23 at Alabama State

L

0-24

Conference.....................................Independent

SID ............................................ Opio Mashariki

Nov. 6

L

9-57

President.....................Dr. Earl G. Yarbrough Sr.

Phone.......................................... (912) 358-3430

Nov. 13 N.C. Central

W

28-21

Athletics Director..................... Marilynn Suggs

Fax ...............................................(912) 358-3073

Nov. 20 Norfolk State

L

6-42

at Old Dominion

Email . ............ masharik@savannahstate.edu

Coaching Staff

Press Box Phone . ......................................TBA

Series Information

Head Coach (Alma Mater) . . Steve Davenport

Web Site..................... www.ssuathletics.com

Record ....................................... NSU leads 5-1

.......................................................... (Furman ’90)

Mailing Address........................P.O. Box 20271

First Meeting................ NSU 27, SSU 18 (2001)

Record at SSU (Years) . ........................ 1st year

.......................................... Savannah, GA 31404

Last Meeting.................. NSU 42, SSU 6 (2010)

Career Record (Years) . ........................ 1st year

Pete Adrian vs. SSU..................................... 2-0

Phone ........................................... (912) 358-3430

2011 Schedule

Steve Davenport vs. NSU............................ 0-0

Assistant Coaches...............................................

Date..................................................... Opponent

Largest NSU Win.......................36 (2010, 42-6)

........................Greg Lester (Asst. Head Coach)

Sept. 3......................................vs. Albany State

Largest SSU Win .......................7 (2004, 41-34)

........................Terance Mathis (OC/Inside WR)

Sept. 10..................at Southeastern Louisiana

...........................................Khalif Saeed (DC/DL)

Sept. 17...........................at Appalachian State

Series notes

........................................ Thomas Balkcom (DB)

Sept. 24....................at North Carolina Central

• Savannah State’s only win against NSU was a

.................................................. William Bell (RB)

Oct. 1...................................................... Howard

41-34, double-overtime victory in 2004.

.......................................... Broderick Jones (OL)

Oct. 8....................................... at Morgan State

• The five wins by the Spartans have come by

.................................................Tony Haynes (QB)

Oct. 15............................................Florida A&M

an average of 21.4 points.

.................................. Marcus Peele-Cooke (LB)

Oct. 29.................................................. Hampton

• The game against NSU last season was just

Nov. 5............................................Norfolk State

one of two home games for the Tigers, who

Nov. 12............................at Bethune-Cookman

have five this year against MEAC opponents.

Nov. 19.............................South Carolina State

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE

91


2011 OPPONENTS Game 11 - morgan state November 12 • 1 p.m. • Hughes Stadium • Baltimore, Md.

General Information

Team Information

2010 Results

Location.......................................Baltimore, Md.

2010 Overall Record...................................... 4-7

Date

Founded......................................................... 1867

2010 MEAC Record/Finish.................... 3-5/6th

Sept. 4 Bowie State

W 14-7

Enrollment.................................................... 7,200

Lettermen Returning/Lost........................ 65/12

Sept. 11 at Maryland

L

3-62

Nickname....................................................Bears

Starters Returning........18 (9 off., 8 def., 1 ST)

Sept. 18 at North Dakota State L

9-35

Colors...........................................Orange & Blue

Starters Lost....................8 (2 off., 4 def., 2 ST)

Sept. 25 at Howard

W 20-3

Stadium (Capacity).. Hughes Stadium (10,000)

Basic Offense................................Multiple Pro

Oct. 2

Bethune-Cookman

L

Surface......................................Synthetic Grass

Basic Defense............................... Multiple 4-3

Oct. 9

at N.C. A&T

W 27-14

Affiliation...........................NCAA Division I FCS

Opponent

Res. Score

32-69

Oct. 23 Delaware State

W 34-24

Conference................................................ MEAC

Sports Information

Oct. 30 at Florida A&M

L 17-31

President..................................Dr. David Wilson

SID...................................Leonard L. Haynes IV

Nov. 6

L

25-37

Athletics Director............................... Floyd Kerr

Phone...........................................(443) 885-3831

Nov. 11 South Carolina State L

10-32

Fax................................................(443) 885-4018

Nov. 20 Hampton

16-21

at Norfolk State

L

Coaching Staff

E-Mail.................................lhaynesiv@aol.com

Head Coach (Alma Mater)......Donald Hill-Eley

Press Box Phone........................(443) 885-4018

Series Information

.......................................................(Va. Union ’91)

Web Site.......... www.morganstatebears.com

Record.................................... NSU leads 13-12

Record at MSU (Years) ............ 46-55 (9 years)

Mailing Address......................Hill Field House

First Meeting.................MSU 33, NSU 0 (1965)

Career Record (Years)............................... Same

..........................................Baltimore, MD 21251

Last Meeting...............NSU 37, MSU 25 (2010)

Football Office Phone................. (443) 885-4156

Pete Adrian vs. MSU.................................... 5-1

Assistant Coaches...............................................

2011 Schedule

Donald Hill-Eley vs. NSU.............................. 3-6

........................... Herbert Parham (AHC/Co-DC)

Date..................................................... Opponent

Largest NSU Win.......................42 (1997, 48-6)

.......................................Alonzo Lee (Co-DC/DB)

Sept. 3................................................ at Towson

Largest MSU Win.......................63 (1967, 63-0)

.............................................. Marcus White (LB)

Sept. 10................................. at Bowling Green

................... Benton Harold (Special Teams/TE)

Sept. 17........................................Robert Morris

Series notes

......................................................Earl Davis (RB)

Sept. 24............................................ vs. Howard

• NSU has won the last four games in the

.................................Joseph Wright (Co-OC/OL)

Oct. 1................................. North Carolina A&T

series.

.................... William Sherman (Co-OC/WR/QB)

Oct. 8........................................ Savannah State

• NSU owns an 11-3 record against Morgan

................................................Deondri Clark (DL)

Oct. 15......................at North Carolina Central

since moving to Division I in 1997, the best mark

Oct. 29.................................. at Delaware State

against a MEAC team during that time.

Nov. 5..............................at Bethune-Cookman

• Last season’s 37-25 win marked the most

Nov. 12..........................................Norfolk State

points the Spartans scored against Morgan

Nov. 19.............................................at Hampton

State since 1998.

92

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE



NSU FOOTBALL RECORDS All-Time Records — Team

177.4 per game (1,951 in 11 games) — 1979

Points OFFENSIVE Rushing Yards Game 502 — vs. Southern Connecticut, 10/28/89 Season 2,364 (214.9 per game) — 1984

Game 0 — 47 times, most recent was 7–0 (OT) win over Howard, 11/3/01 Season 3.66 per game (22 in 6 games) — 1945

Most Passing Touchdowns: 31 (in 10 games) — 1994 Fewest Points Scored: 13 (5 games) — 1938; 51 (8 games) — 1956 Lowest NSU Scoring Average: 2.6 (13 in 5 games) — 1938 Highest Scoring Average: 34.5 (345 in 10 games) — 1994

WINS AND LOSSES (Season) Passing Yards Game 516 — vs. Winston-Salem State, 10/8/94 Season 3,674 in 10 games (367.4 per game) — 1994

Pass Completion Percentage Game .909 (20 of 22) — vs. Morgan State, 11/6/10 Season .601 (11 games, 167 of 278) — 2010

Total Yards Game 575 — vs. Southern Connecticut, 10/28/89 Season 467.8 per game (4,678 in 10 games) — 1995

First Downs Game 38 — vs. Bethune-Cookman, 9/24/05 Season 228 in 10 games (22.8 per game) — 1994

Points Game 86 (86-0 W) vs. Friendship — 1959 Season 345 in 10 games (34.5 per game) — 1994

Most Wins: 10 — 1984 (10-2-0) Most Wins, (Division I era): 8 — 2007 (8-3) Fewest Wins: 1 — 2004 (1-8); 2003 (1-11-0); 1953 (1-6-0) Most Losses: 11 — 2003 (1-11-0) Fewest Losses: 0 (twice) — 1949 (6-0-0); 1941 (6-0-1) Highest Winning Percentage: 1.000 — 1949 (6-0-0) Lowest Winning Percentage: .083 — 2003 (1-11-0)

Rushing Yards

Passing Yards Game 0 — Elon, 1976 Season 71.5 per game (715 in 10 games) — 1980

Total Yards Game (–16) — St. Paul’s, 9/1/79 Season

94

Fewest Points Allowed: 0 (47 times) — Most recently vs. Howard (7–0 OT win), 11/3/01 Fewest Points Scored: 0 (46 times) — Most recently vs. Hampton (0–52 L), 10/18/03 Most Points Allowed: 84 (84–14 L) — vs. FAMU, 1998 Most Points Scored: 86 (86–0) — vs. Friendship, 1959 Most Points Combined: 124 (61–63 L), vs. Bethune-Cookman, 9/24/05 Longest Game (OTs): 4 OT, vs. Bethune-Cookman, 9/24/05

STREAKS Longest Winning Streak, Season: 8 — 1984 beginning with 22–7 win over St. Paul’s and ending with 17–14 loss to Virginia State Longest Winning Streak, Overall: 9 — Beginning with 43–20 win over Livingstone in 1983 and ending with 17–14 loss to Virginia State in 1984 Longest Losing Streak, Season: 10 — 2003, beginning with 34–9 loss to VMI on 9/20/03 through end of season Longest Losing Streak, Overall: 13 – 2003–04, beginning with 34–9 loss to VMI on 9/20/03 until 27–14 win over North Carolina A&T on 10/2/04

DEFENSIVE Game (–46) — Cheyney, 9/8/90 Season 53.8 per game (592 in 11 games) — 1984

SINGLE GAME

MISCELLANEOUS (Season) Most Shutouts by NSU: 5 — 1950 Most Times NSU Shut Out: 4 — 1938 Most Points Allowed: 494 (11 Games) — 1999 Fewest Points Allowed: 22 (6 games) — 1945; 26 (7 games) — 1941; 40 (9 games) — 1948 Lowest Opponents’ Scoring Average: 4.9 (39 in 8 games) — 1994 Highest Opponents’ Scoring Average: 44.9 (11 games) — 1999 Most Points Scored: 345 (10 games) — 1994

All-Time Records — individual RUSHING Yards Game 318 — Orlando Goodhope vs. Livingstone, 11/12/83 Season 1,467 — Angelo Todd, 1998 Career 3,678 — DeAngelo Branche, 2006-10

Rushes Game 43 (211 yards) — Anthony Johnson vs. Howard, 1984 Season 310 (1,310 yards) — Anthony Johnson, 1984 Career 825 (3,659 yards) — LaRue Harrington, 1976-79

Yards Per Rush Game 13.8 (23 carries, 318 yards) — Orlando Goodhope vs. Livingstone, 11/12/83 Season 6.9 (494 yards in 72 carries) — Jeffrey Henderson, 1992 Career 5.1 (2,791 yards in 543 carries) — Orlando Goodhope, 1980–83

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE


NSU FOOTBALL RECORDS Touchdowns

RECEIVING

Game 5 — Orlando Goodhope vs. Livingstone, 11/12/83 Season 19 — Angelo Todd, 1998 Career 36 — DeAngelo Branche, 2006-10

Yards Game 305 — Howard Gilmore vs. Morgan State, 11/22/03 Season 1,454 — James Roe, 1994 Career 4,468 — James Roe, 1992–95

PASSING Yards

Receptions

Game 516 — Aaron Sparrow vs. Winston-Salem State, 10/8/94 Season 3,434 — Aaron Sparrow, 1995 Career 8,758 — Aaron Sparrow, 1992–95

Game 13 — Howard Gilmore vs. Morgan State, 11/22/03 Season 77 — James Roe, 1994 Career 241 — James Roe, 1992–95

Yards Per Reception Completions Game 32 — Aaron Sparrow vs. Virginia Union, 10/21/95 Season 238 — Aaron Sparrow, 1995 Career 617 — Aaron Sparrow, 1992–95

Game 47.3 (4-189) — Ray Jarvis vs. West Virginia State, 1969 Season 30.8 (18-555) — Ray Jarvis, 1970 Career 21.5 (54-1,161) — Michael Howard, 1988–91

Attempts

Touchdowns

Game 58 — Aaron Sparrow vs. Bethune-Cookman, 10/7/95 Season 409 — Aaron Sparrow, 1995 Career 1,119 — Aaron Sparrow, 1992–95

Game 3 — James Roe vs. Kentucky State, 11/12/94; Gary Morris vs. Southern Connecticut, 10/27/90; Eric Still vs. Virginia State, 11/5/88 Season 17 — James Roe, 1994 Career 46 — James Roe, 1992–95

Completion Percentage Game .909 (20 of 22) — Chris Walley vs. Morgan State, 11/6/2010 Season .614 (167 of 272) — Chris Walley, 2010 Career .551 (617-1,119) — Aaron Sparrow, 1992–95

Touchdowns Game 7 — Aaron Sparrow vs. Winston-Salem State, 10/8/94 Season 32 — Aaron Sparrow, 1995 Career 79 — Aaron Sparrow, 1992–95

Interceptions Thrown Game 5 — Willie Gillus vs. Virginia Union, 10/22/83 Season 19 — Willie Gillus, 1983; Maurice Selby, 1998 Career 38 — Aaron Sparrow, 1992–95

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE

TOTAL OFFENSE Game 509 — Aaron Sparrow vs. Winston-Salem State, 10/8/94 Season 3,330 — Aaron Sparrow, 1995 Career 8,478 — Aaron Sparrow, 1992–95

SCORING Touchdowns Game 5 — Orlando Goodhope vs. Livingstone, 11/12/83 Season 19 — Angelo Todd, 1998 Career 46 — James Roe, 1992–95

Points Game 30 — Orlando Goodhope vs. Livingstone, 11/12/83 Season 114 — Angelo Todd, 1998

Career 296 (46 TD) — James Roe, 1992–95

DEFENSE Tackles Game 30 — Kevin Talley vs. Savannah State, 9/11/04 Season 195 — Kevin Talley, 2003 Career 416 — Kevin Talley, 2001–04

Interceptions Game 4 — Reggie Smallwood vs. Elizabeth City State, 1979 Season 12 — Mike Ellis, 1977 Career 24 — Mike Ellis, 1976–79 MISCELLANEOUS Longest Running Play: 83 (TD) — Orlando Goodhope vs. Virginia Union, 1980 Longest Pass Play: 97 (TD) — Howard Gilmore from Dontrell Leonard vs. VMI, 9/20/03 Longest Field Goal: 53 — Lawrence Holmes vs. Kentucky State, 10/31/92 Longest Punt: 79 — Antonio Gomez vs. North Carolina A&T, 10/4/03 Punting Yards, Career: 9,053 — Lawrence Holmes, 1990–93 Punting Average, Career: 38.7 — Lawrence Holmes, 1990–93 Longest Punt Return: 89 — Donnie Morris vs. Bloomsburg, 9/3/88 Longest Kick Return: 98 — Roscoe Powell vs. Elon, 9/13/75 Longest Fumble Return: 90 — Lydell Finley vs. Virginia Union, 10/22/94 Longest Interception Return: 100 (TD) — Joe Scott vs. Fayetteville State, 9/19/81 Highest Per-Game Rushing Average, Career: 87.1 (3,649 in 42 games) — LaRue Harrington, 1976– 79 Consecutive Passes Completed, Game: 13 — Aaron Sparrow vs. Bethune-Cookman, 11/14/92 Highest Punt Return Average, Season (Min. 5 returns): 22.8 (5-144) — George Parker, 1981 Highest Kickoff Return Average, Season: 27.7 (30-832) — Anthony Owens, 2002 Passes Broken Up, Season: 27 — Joe Scott, 1981

95


CAREER/SEASON RECORDS CAREER RECORDS

Scoring No. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

Names (Years) James Roe (’92–95) Orlando Goodhope (’80–83) Daryl Jones (2004–07) DeAngelo Branche (2006-10) LaRue Harrington (’76–79)

Total Offense No. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

Name (Years) Aaron Sparrow (’92–95) Dennis Brown (2008-09) Robert Morris (’95–97) Casey Hansen (2006–07) Kermit Buggs (’90–93)

SINGLE-SEASON RECORDS G 41 38 42 44 42

Pass 8758 3771 4263 4277 3874

Net Avg/G 8478 223.1 4617 200.7 4301 138.7 3928 178.5 3790 108.3

Name (Years) G DeAngelo Branche (2006-pres.) 44 LaRue Harrington (’76–79) 42 Terrell Johnson (2002–05) 36 Orlando Goodhope (’80–83) 38 Daryl Jones (2004–07) 42

Rush 741 825 556 543 529

Yards 3679 3659 2821 2791 2402

Avg. Avg/G 4.9 83.6 4.4 87.1 5.1 78.4 5.1 73.4 4.5 60.0

G 41 37 38 33 38

Rec. 239 162 140 104 120

Yards 4468 2501 2459 2211 1661

Avg. Avg/G 18.7 109.0 15.4 67.6 17.6 64.7 21.3 67.0 13.8 43.7

G 41 37 38 38 40

Rec. 239 162 140 120 106

Yards 4468 2501 2459 1661 1499

Avg. Rec/G 18.7 5.8 15.4 4.4 17.6 3.7 13.8 3.1 14.1 2.7

G 38 22 35 23 36

Cmp-Att-Int 617-1119-38 312-593-24 211-480-27 315-591-25 240-541-36

Pct. .551 .526 .440 .533 .444

Yards 8758 4277 3874 3771 3740

TD 79 19 37 27 27

G 30 36 43 42 44

Int. 24 18 18 16 15

Yards 339 301 336 242 247

Avg. 14.1 16.7 18.7 15.1 16.5

Int/G 0.8 0.5 0.4 0.4 0.3

G 41 23 27 30 31

Punts 234 109 131 144 174

Yards 9053 4203 4996 5491 6524

Avg. 38.7 38.6 38.1 38.1 37.5

Name (Years) James Roe (’92–95) Darius Blount (’93–96) Howard Gilmore (2001–04) Ray Jarvis (’68–71) Marty Conner (’93–96)

Receptions No. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

Name (Years) James Roe (’92–95) Darius Blount (’93–96) Howard Gilmore (2001–04) Marty Conner (’93–96) Jeff Gunn (’79–82)

Passing No. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

Name (Years) Aaron Sparrow (’92–95) Casey Hansen (2006–07) Kermit Buggs (’90–93) Dennis Brown (2008-09) Willie Gillus (’82–85)

Interceptions No. 1. 2. 4. 5.

Name (Years) Mike Ellis (’77–79) Reggie Smallwood (’78–81) Terrell Whitehead (2006-09) Raymond Lee (’77–80) Tony Knight (’73–76)

Punting Avg. No. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

PAT 2XPT PTS 0 10 296 0 0 246 0 0 234 0 0 222 0 2 214

Rush -280 846 38 -349 -84

Receiving Yards No. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

FG 0 0 0 0 0

G 38 23 31 22 35

Rushing No. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

TD 46 41 39 37 35

Name (Years) Lawrence Holmes (’90–93) Billy Rudd (2008-09) Bruce Cinibulk (’87–89) Brian Evans (’80–82) Ron Tillis (’72–74)

96

Scoring No. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

Name (Year) Angelo Todd (’98) James Roe (’94) James Roe (’95) Daryl Jones (2007) LaRue Harrington (’76)

G 11 10 10 11 12

Total Offense No. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

Name (Year) Aaron Sparrow (’95) Aaron Sparrow (’94) Dennis Brown (’09) Robert Morris (’97) Kermit Buggs (’93)

Rushing No. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

Name (Year) Angelo Todd (’98) DeAngelo Branche (2010) Tony Johnson (’84) Daryl Jones (2007) LaRue Harrington (’77)

Receiving Yards No. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

Name (Year) James Roe (’94) James Roe (’95) Chris Bell (’09) Darius Blount (’96) James Roe (’93)

Receptions No. 1. 2. 3. 4.

Name (Year) James Roe (’94) James Roe (’95) Darius Blount (’96) James Roe (’93) Victor Hairston (‘10)

Passing No. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

Name (Year) Aaron Sparrow (’95) Aaron Sparrow (’94) Dennis Brown (’09) Casey Hansen (‘06) Robert Morris (’97)

Interceptions No. 1. 2. 3. 4.

Name (Year) Mike Ellis (’77) Mike Ellis (’79) Jesse Chavis III (’91) Larry Bryant (’88) Bob Colbert (’74)

Punting YARDS No. 1. 2. 3 4. 5.

Name (Year) Terry Cornette (‘00) Lawrence Holmes (‘92) Antonio Gomez (‘03) Billy Rudd (‘08) Brian Evans (’82)

TD 19 17 15 15 14

FG 0 0 0 0 0

PAT 0 5 5 0 2

XPT 0 0 0 0 0

PTS 114 112 100 90 88

G 10 10 11 10 10

Rush. -134 -60 380 120 24

Pass 3434 3212 2228 2116 2024

Net Avg/G 3300 330.0 3152 315.2 2608 237.1 2236 223.6 2048 186.9

G 11 11 11 11 11

Rush 280 272 310 254 242

Yards 1467 1330 1310 1134 1090

Avg. Avg/G 5.2 133.4 4.9 120.9 4.2 119.2 4.5 103.1 4.5 99.1

G 10 10 11 11 11

Rec. 77 64 51 55 52

Yards 1454 1248 958 929 916

Avg. Avg/G 18.9 145.4 19.5 124.8 18.8 87.1 16.9 84.4 17.6 83.3

G 10 10 11 11 11

Rec. 77 64 55 52 52

Yards 1454 1248 929 916 580

Avg. Rec/G 18.9 7.7 19.5 6.4 16.9 5.0 17.6 4.7 11.2 4.7

G 10 10 11 11 10

Cmp-Att-Int 238-409-14 216-361-14 161-284-13 148-283-16 183-358-17

Pct. .582 .598 .567 .523 .511

Yards 3434 3212 2228 2166 2116

TD 32 31 18 10 15

G 11 11 10 10 11

Int. 12 10 9 7 7

Yards 257 73 179 110 41

Avg. 21.4 7.3 19.9 11.0 5.9

Int/G 1.1 0.9 0.9 0.7 0.6

G 10 10 12 12 10

Punts 85 70 75 63 53

Yards 3165 2712 2539 2475 2200

Avg. 37.2 38.7 33.9 39.3 41.5

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE


SEASON-BY-SEASON LEADERS SEASON-BY-SEASON LEADERS (Note: Statistics prior to 1970 are unavailable) Names in bold represent single-season record holders Scoring Year 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010

Name Larry James Ray Jarvis Steve Watson Condie Pugh Donald Evans Ken Moody Randy Robinson LaRue Harrington LaRue Harrington Steve Burlas LaRue Harrington Orlando Goodhope Orlando Goodhope Orlando Goodhope Orlando Goodhope Anthony Johnson Dale Browder Tony Graves Maurice Miller Eric Still Karlsten Skinner Gary Morris Gary Morris James Roe James Whitley James Roe James Roe John Quinerly Tyrone Sellers Angelo Todd Angelo Todd Damien Smith William Smith Glenn Thomas Terrell Johnson Howard Gilmore Monte’ Anthony Terrell Johnson Antonio Gomez Howard Gilmore Daryl Jones Daryl Jones Daryl Jones Justin Castellat Chris Bell DeAngelo Branche

Total Offense Year Player 1970 Ike Fullard 1971 McDaniel Anderson 1972 McDaniel Anderson 1973 Adolph Santiful 1974 Steve Graeff 1975 Steve Graeff 1976 LaRue Harrington 1977 LaRue Harrington 1978 Jimmy Robinson 1979 LaRue Harrington 1980 Orlando Goodhope 1981 Raynard Revels 1982 Raynard Revels 1983 Willie Gillus 1984 Anthony Johnson 1985 Willie Gillus 1986 Maurice Lawrence 1987 Maurice Lawrence 1988 Ron Jones 1989 Karlsten Skinner 1990 Joe Bryant 1991 Kermit Buggs

G 9 9 8 10 10 11 11 12 11 10 11 10 9 10 9 11 10 9 9 10 10 10 10 10 11 10 10 11 9 11 11 9 10 8 10 10 12 10 9 9 11 11 11 12 11 11

TD 7 7 0 10 7 7 8 14 8 0 12 13 11 8 9 11 0 7 6 9 6 7 10 10 8 17 15 10 7 19 4 7 5 5 9 5 5 5 0 6 10 10 15 0 13 13

G 9 8 10 10 11 11 12 11 10 11 10 10 9 10 11 10 9 9 9 10 10 10

Rush -90 -20 27 470 -19 73 1059 1090 -138 1026 994 68 92 134 1310 -111 97 151 -55 465 181 -105

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE

FG 0 0 3-5 0 0 0 0 0 0 9-15 0 0 0 0 0 0 9-18 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 5-7 0 0 0 0 11-21 0 0 Pass 827 392 431 0 1168 819 0 10 1154 22 0 1092 571 1206 0 2010 846 246 904 0 774 1212

PAT 0 0 5-7 0 0 0 0 0 0 13-15 0 0 0 0 0 0 24-27 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 21-22 0 0 0 0 35-35 0 0 Total 737 372 458 470 1149 592 1059 1100 1016 1048 994 1160 663 1072 1310 1899 943 397 849 465 955 1105

2-PT 0 0 0 5 1 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 5 5 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

PTS 42 42 14 70 44 42 48 88 48 40 72 78 66 48 54 66 51 42 36 54 36 42 60 60 48 112 100 62 42 114 26 42 30 30 56 30 30 30 36 36 60 60 90 68 78 78.

Avg/G 81.9 46.5 45.8 47.0 104.5 53.8 88.3 100.0 101.6 95.3 99.4 116.0 23.7 107.2 119.1 189.9 104.7 44.1 94.3 46.5 95.5 110.5

1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010

Aaron Sparrow Kermit Buggs Aaron Sparrow Aaron Sparrow Robert Morris Robert Morris Maurice Selby Theodore Harrison Jon Roberts David Johnson Dontrell Leonard Dontrell Leonard Brandon Brooks Brandon Brooks Casey Hansen Casey Hansen Dennis Brown Dennis Brown Chris Walley

10 10 10 10 11 10 11 8 10 7 10 9 9 11 11 11 12 11 11

-177 24 -60 -134 73 120 52 61 -29 -9 -102 -109 32 4 -128 -221 466 380 190

1553 2024 3212 3434 1919 2116 1800 888 894 861 1104 1497 1367 1626 2166 2111 1542 2228 1859

1376 2048 3152 3300 1846 2236 1852 949 865 852 1002 1388 1399 1630 2038 1890 2008 2608 2049

137.6 204.8 315.2 330.0 167.8 223.6 168.4 118.6 86.5 121.7 100.2 154.2 155.4 148.2 185.3 171.8 167.3 237.1 186.3

Rushing Year 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010

Name Larry James Milt Harrell Condie Pugh Adolph Santiful Larry Stepney Ken Moody LaRue Harrington LaRue Harrington LaRue Harrington LaRue Harrington Orlando Goodhope Stanley Allbritton Orlando Goodhope Orlando Goodhope Anthony Johnson Ken Dickens Tony Graves Adrian Miles Mikel Waugh Karlsten Skinner Mikel Waugh Karlsten Skinner Jeffrey Henderson Ricky Wood John Quinerly Jeny Davis John Quinerly Kondwani Johnson Angelo Todd Angelo Todd Damien Smith William Smith Terrell Johnson Terrell Johnson Terrell Johnson Terrell Johnson Monte’ Anthony Daryl Jones DeAngelo Branche DeAngelo Branche DeAngelo Branche

G 9 8 10 10 11 11 12 11 8 11 10 9 10 9 11 10 9 7 10 10 10 10 6 8 10 9 11 9 11 11 9 10 10 10 6 10 11 11 12 11 11

Att. 118 62 129 115 110 132 204 242 107 272 193 150 109 124 310 118 102 67 107 83 123 127 72 81 90 90 213 72 280 174 184 157 168 145 96 147 144 254 229 175 272

Yards 562 220 738 470 469 697 1059 1090 484 1026 994 624 584 758 1310 531 454 334 400 465 718 716 434 483 335 514 1020 282 1467 628 841 525 888 655 461 817 586 1134 1055 922 1330

Avg. 4.8 3.5 5.7 4.1 4.3 5.3 5.2 4.5 4.7 3.8 5.2 4.2 5.4 6.1 4.2 4.5 4.5 4.9 3.7 5.6 5.8 5.6 6.9 6.0 3.7 5.1 4.8 3.9 5.2 3.6 4.6 3.3 5.3 4.5 4.8 5.6 4.1 4.5 4.6 5.3 4.9

Avg/G 62.4 27.5 73.8 47.0 42.6 63.4 88.3 99.1 60.5 93.3 99.4 69.3 58.4 84.2 119.2 53.1 50.4 47.7 40.0 46.5 71.8 71.6 82.3 60.4 33.5 57.1 92.7 31.3 133.4 57.1 93.4 52.5 88.8 65.5 76.8 81.7 53.3 103.1 87.9 83.8 120.9.

Passing Year 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980

Name Ike Fullard McDaniel Anderson McDaniel Anderson Steve Graeff Steve Graeff Steve Graeff Steve Graeff Henry Sheppard Jimmy Robinson Jimmy Robinson Raynard Revels

G 9 8 10 10 11 11 12 11 10 10 6

Yards 827 392 431 336 1168 519 887 512 1154 1025 795

TD 11 2 2 1 11 4 4 4 9 8 9

C-A-Int 47-140-15 35-119-12 34-91-15 28-79-11 64-144-8 42-108-6 51-109-11 37-94-7 90-210-10 84-211-15 58-112-4

Pct. .336 .294 .374 .354 .444 .389 .468 .394 .429 .398 .518

97


SEASON-BY-SEASON LEADERS 1981 Raynard Revels 1982 Raynard Revels 1983 Willie Gillus 1984 Willie Gillus 1985 Willie Gillus 1986 Maurice Lawrence 1987 James Barnes 1988 Ron Jones 1989 James Barnes 1990 Joe Bryant 1991 Kermit Buggs 1992 Aaron Sparrow 1993 Kermit Buggs 1994 Aaron Sparrow 1995 Aaron Sparrow 1996 Robert Morris 1997 Robert Morris 1998 Maurice Selby 1999 Maurice Selby 2000 Jon Roberts 2001 David Johnson 2002 Dontrell Leonard 2003 Dontrell Leonard 2004 Brandon Brooks 2005 Brandon Brooks 2006 Casey Hansen 2007 Casey Hansen 2008 Dennis Brown 2009 Dennis Brown 2010 Chris Walley Receptions Year Name 1970 Ray Jarvis 1971 Horace Lutens 1972 Ron Tillis 1973 Eddie Powell 1974 Robert Powell 1975 Robert Powell 1976 Robert Powell 1977 LaRue Harrington 1978 Emanuel Upton 1979 Dwight Sweatt 1980 Jeff Gunn 1981 Jeff Gunn 1982 Jeff Gunn 1983 Keith Ellis 1984 Leonard Hopkins 1985 Leonard Hopkins 1986 Clarence Brock 1987 Eric Still 1988 Eric Still 1989 Eric Still 1990 Gary Morris 1991 Gary Morris 1992 James Roe 1993 James Roe 1994 James Roe 1995 James Roe 1996 Darius Blount 1997 Charles Burnette 1998 Delvin Peeks 1999 Delvin Peeks 2000 Charles Burnette 2001 Howard Gilmore 2002 Howard Gilmore 2003 Howard Gilmore 2004 Howard Gilmore 2005 James Callaham 2006 James Callaham 2007 Jamar Johnson 2008 Jamar Johnson 2009 Chris Bell 2010 Victor Hairston

98

10 9 10 9 10 9 11 9 7 10 10 10 10 10 10 11 10 11 8 10 7 10 9 9 11 11 11 12 11 11

87-187-11 47-126-9 83-218-19 27-60-1 122-242-13 48-131-13 30-85-5 63-114-9 41-107-7 51-104-4 58-142-11 110-236-5 119-240-11 216-361-14 238-409-14 151-331-15 183-358-17 126-304-19 55-166-9 61-191-18 50-142-8 88-180-9 110-224-4 102-216-10 110-239-6 148-283-16 164-310-8 154-307-12 161-284-13 167-272-8

G 9 8 10 10 11 11 12 11 10 11 9 10 10 10 11 10 10 9 10 10 10 10 10 11 10 10 11 9 10 11 9 10 9 10 9 11 11 11 12 11 11

Rec. 18 9 20 14 23 28 30 28 23 27 31 47 15 20 11 39 17 15 42 21 29 36 46 52 77 64 55 38 39 50 19 23 33 47 37 29 42 42 44 51 52

.465 .373 .380 .450 .504 .360 .352 .552 .383 .490 .408 .466 .496 .598 .582 .456 .511 .414 .331 .319 .352 .489 .491 .472 .460 .523 .529 .502 .567 .614 TD 7 1 1 2 6 5 1 0 2 3 3 6 3 0 4 7 2 1 9 4 6 10 9 5 17 15 6 3 6 4 2 3 1 5 6 3 1 6 5 13 2

1092 571 1206 409 2010 864 416 904 763 774 1212 1553 2024 3212 3434 1919 2116 1807 893 894 861 1104 1497 1367 1626 2166 2111 1542 2228 1859

11 4 8 3 15 6 2 9 9 7 13 11 11 31 32 14 15 13 6 4 6 3 7 6 12 10 9 9 18 10

Yards 555 112 386 270 412 482 500 274 311 453 449 630 226 211 197 734 361 306 721 266 508 839 850 916 1454 1248 929 474 545 837 341 423 492 829 715 457 572 565 401 958 580

Rec./G 2.0 1.3 2.0 1.4 2.1 2.5 2.5 2.5 2.3 2.5 3.4 4.7 1.5 2.0 1.0 3.9 1.7 1.6 4.2 2.1 2.9 3.6 4.6 4.6 7.7 6.4 5.5 4.2 3.9 4.5 2.1 2.3 3.7 4.7 4.1 2.6 3.8 3.8 3.7 4.6 4.7

Receiving Yards Year Name 1970 Ray Jarvis 1971 Horace Lutens 1972 Ron Tillis 1973 Eddie Powell 1974 Robert Powell 1975 Robert Powell 1976 Robert Powell 1977 LaRue Harrington 1978 Donnie Luster 1979 Dwight Sweatt 1980 Jeff Gunn 1981 Jeff Gunn 1982 Jeff Gunn 1983 Orlando Goodhope 1984 Leonard Hopkins 1985 Leonard Hopkins 1986 Clarence Brock 1987 Eric Still 1988 Eric Still 1989 Donnie Morris 1990 Gary Morris 1991 Gary Morris 1992 James Roe 1993 James Roe 1994 James Roe 1995 James Roe 1996 Darius Blount 1997 Tyrone Sellers 1998 Delvin Peeks 1999 Delvin Peeks 2000 Charles Burnette 2001 Charles Burnette 2002 Howard Gilmore 2003 Howard Gilmore 2004 Howard Gilmore 2005 James Callaham 2006 Emery Sammons 2007 Jamar Johnson 2008 Dario Walker 2009 Chris Bell 2010 Victor Hairston

G Rec. 9 18 8 9 10 20 10 14 11 23 11 28 12 30 11 28 8 19 11 27 9 31 10 47 10 15 9 15 11 11 10 39 10 17 9 15 10 42 7 12 10 29 10 36 10 46 11 52 10 77 10 64 11 55 9 36 10 39 11 50 9 19 9 21 9 33 9 47 9 37 11 29 11 35 11 42 12 35 11 51 11 52

Yards 555 112 386 270 412 482 500 274 266 453 449 630 226 256 197 734 361 306 721 320 508 839 850 916 1454 1248 929 601 545 837 341 462 492 829 715 457 639 565 410 958 580

TD 7 1 1 2 6 5 1 0 2 3 3 6 3 1 4 7 2 1 9 3 6 10 9 5 17 15 6 7 6 4 2 3 1 5 6 3 3 6 3 13 2

Avg. 30.8 12.4 19.3 19.3 17.9 17.2 16.7 9.8 14.0 16.8 14.5 13.4 15.1 17.1 17.9 18.8 21.2 20.4 17.2 26.6 17.5 23.3 18.5 17.6 18.9 19.5 16.9 16.7 14.0 16.7 17.9 22.0 14.9 17.6 19.3 15.8 18.3 13.5 11.7 18.8 11.2

Avg/G 61.7 14.0 38.6 27.0 37.5 43.8 41.7 24.9 33.3 41.2 49.9 63.0 22.6 28.4 17.9 73.4 36.1 34.0 72.1 45.6 50.8 83.9 85.0 83.3 145.5 124.8 84.5 66.8 54.5 76.1 37.9 51.3 54.7 92.1 79.4 41.5 58.1 51.4 34.2 87.1 52.7

Interceptions Year Name 2010 Victor Hairston 1970 James Jackson 1970 Thaddeus Roberts 1971 Ronald Bolton 1972 Eddie London 1973 Thomas McLendon 1973 Preston Owens 1973 Troy Knight 1974 Bob Colbert 1975 Jim Flowers 1976 Jim Flowers 1977 Mike Ellis 1978 Reggie Smallwood 1979 Mike Ellis 1980 Reggie Smallwood 1981 Joe Scott 1982 Bruce Manley 1983 Bruce Manley 1984 Bruce Manley 1985 Pat Creecy 1986 Tim Haynes 1987 Michael Rollins 1988 Larry Bryant 1989 Gary Tibbs 1989 Leroy Haynesworth 1989 Anthony Williams 1990 Anthony Williams 1991 Jesse Chavis 1992 Alonzo Kaffman 1992 Robert Ross 1993 Robert Ross 1994 Carlos Robertson

G 11 9 9 8 10 10 10 10 11 11 12 11 7 11 10 10 10 10 11 7 8 6 10 7 9 9 10 10 8 8 10 10

Yards 580 74 13 7 47 70 49 26 41 18 50 257 39 73 46 109 59 22 4 38 7 50 110 20 48 10 11 179 58 32 86 163

AVG 2 24.7 4.3 2.3 9.4 17.5 12.3 6.5 5.9 3.6 8.3 21.4 9.0 7.3 9.2 27.3 14.8 4.4 1.0 9.5 2.3 8.3 11.0 10.0 24.0 5.0 2.8 19.9 5.0 10.7 21.5 10.1

TD 11.2 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1

Int/G 52.7 0.3 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.4 0.4 0.4 0.6 0.5 0.5 1.1 0.6 0.9 0.5 0.4 0.4 0.5 0.4 0.6 0.4 0.5 0.7 0.3 0.2 0.2 0.4 0.9 0.4 0.4 0.4 0.4

Int 52 3 3 3 5 4 4 4 7 5 6 12 4 10 5 4 4 5 4 4 3 3 7 2 2 2 4 9 3 3 4 4

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE


SEASON-BY-SEASON LEADERS 1995 Donsid Broussard 1996 Robert Weaver 1996 Lonnie White 1997 Jason Reeves 1998 Kyle Grove Torrance Jackson 1999 Marcus Gray 2000 Wayne See 2001 Wayne See 2002 Marcus Gray Anthony Owens 2003 Anthony Owens 2004 Dontae Anderson 2005 Daniel Hammett 2006 Terrell Whitehead 2007 Terrell Whitehead 2008 Don Carey 2009 Terrell Whitehead 2010 Dante Barnes

8 11 11 10 11 11 11 10 10 10 11 9 9 11 9 11 12 11 11

Punting Year 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010

G 9 8 10 10 11 11 12 12 10 11 10 10 10 10 11 10 8 11 6 10 10 10 10 11 10 10 11 7 9 7 10 7 10 12 9 11 11 11 12 11 11

No. 49 32 60 48 66 66 39 70 59 66 48 43 53 56 65 51 29 56 23 52 47 56 70 61 15 35 64 35 50 45 85 42 61 75 41 51 41 55 63 46 48

Yards 1776 991 2194 1882 2448 2300 1329 2523 1975 2239 1654 1637 2200 2099 2313 1859 1072 2197 851 1948 1720 2225 2712 2396 551 1217 2264 1227 1691 1503 3165 1504 1966 2539 1434 1929 1573 1979 2475 1728 1757

Avg. 36.3 31.0 36.6 36.2 36.9 34.8 33.5 36.0 33.5 33.9 34.5 38.1 41.5 36.2 35.6 36.5 36.9 39.2 37.0 37.5 36.6 39.7 38.7 39.3 36.7 34.8 35.4 35.1 33.8 33.4 37.2 35.8 32.2 33.9 35.0 37.8 38.4 36.0 39.3 37.6 36.6

G 9 8 10 10 11 11 12 11 9 11 10 8

No. 11 4 7 12 14 9 13 23 22 21 5 5

Yards 194 145 77 262 106 87 144 298 287 237 43 144

Avg. 12.9 36.3 11.0 21.8 7.6 8.7 11.1 12.9 13.0 11.3 8.6 28.8

Name Warren Stone William Betts Ron Tillis Ron Tillis Ron Tillis Jackie Simmons Tony Harris Tony Harris Steve Burlas Steve Burlas Brian Evans Brian Evans Brian Evans Dale Browder Dale Browder Dale Browder Thomas Nicholas Bruce Cinibulk Bruce Cinibulk Bruce Cinibulk Lawrence Holmes Lawrence Holmes Lawrence Holmes Lawrence Holmes Johnnie Harrell Robert Morris Robert Morris Greg Howell Eric Killian Anthony Nwora Terry Cornette Terry Cornette Gideon Tekola Antonio Gomez Antonio Gomez Antonio Gomez Antonio Gomez Brian Jackson Billy Rudd Billy Rudd Troy Muenzer

Punt Returns Year Name 1970 Condie Pugh 1971 Zachary Rogers 1972 Ken Moody 1973 Larry Stepney 1974 Larry Stepney 1975 Ken Moody 1976 Dwight Sweatt 1977 Dwight Sweatt 1978 Dwight Sweatt 1979 Dwight Sweatt 1980 Duncan Howard 1981 George Parker

3 5 5 2 2 2 2 4 4 3 3 3 3 5 3 6 5 5 2

15 97 82 23 52 20 79 27 20 17 22 27 25 177 58 92 115 130 69

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE

5.0 19.4 16.4 11.5 26.0 10.0 39.5 6.8 5.0 5.7 7.3 8.7 8.3 35.4 19.3 15.3 23.0 26.0 34.5

0 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 1 1 1

0.4 0.5 0.5 0.2 0.2 0.2 0.2 0.4 0.4 0.3 0.3 0.3 0.3 0.5 0.3 0.6 0.4 0.5 0.2

TD 0 2 0 2 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 2

1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010

George Parker Glen Jones Phil Smith Calvin Manns Daryl Brown Steven Bailey Donnie Morris Donnie Morris Michael Howard Michael Howard James Roe Brian Rountree James Roe James Roe Darius Blount Lydell Finley Jason Wells Delvin Peeks Chad Smith Chad Smith Anthony Owens Anthony Owens Emery Sammons Emery Sammons Rashad Howard Rashad Howard Dario Walker P.J. Hayden Dwight Fluker-Berry

9 10 7 10 9 11 9 7 10 10 10 7 10 10 11 10 6 11 10 11 11 9 9 11 10 11 12 11 11

10 5 10 29 6 20 15 13 22 19 8 4 10 10 12 18 9 21 33 32 27 13 9 16 10 16 7 9 10

69 102 85 111 89 268 351 207 195 147 181 37 151 124 33 256 13 215 423 205 232 87 42 130 224 127 114 112 205

6.9 20.4 8.5 3.8 14.8 9.9 23.4 15.9 8.9 7.7 22.6 9.3 15.1 12.4 2.8 15.9 1.4 10.2 12.8 6.4 8.6 6.7 4.7 8.1 22.4 7.9 16.3 12.4 20.5

0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0

Kickoff Returns Year Name G No. Yards Avg. TD 1970 Condie Pugh 9 17 400 23.5 1 1971 Condie Pugh 8 16 370 23.1 0 1972 Condie Pugh 10 18 350 19.4 0 1973 Larry Stepney 10 15 319 21.3 0 1974 Ken Moody 11 12 176 14.7 0 1975 Roscoe Powell 11 16 318 19.8 0 1976 Dwight Sweatt 12 11 258 23.4 0 1977 Duncan Howard 11 12 379 23.6 0 1978 Dwight Sweatt 9 10 210 21.0 0 1979 Dwight Sweatt 11 14 257 18.4 0 1980 Gene Tillman 10 7 145 20.7 0 1981 George Parker 8 10 205 20.5 0 1982 George Parker 8 12 224 18.7 0 1983 Tim Richardson 10 16 296 18.5 0 1984 Alphonso Wiggins 11 21 504 24.0 1 1985 Alphonso Wiggins 10 18 320 17.8 0 1986 Maurice Wiggins 8 22 495 22.5 1 1987 Donald Morris 9 25 523 20.9 0 1988 Michael Howard 9 9 197 21.7 0 1989 Donald Morris 7 11 210 19.9 0 1990 Michael Howard 9 14 295 21.1 0 1991 Brian Rountree 10 18 302 16.8 0 1992 Steve Hines 10 16 293 18.3 0 1993 Brian Rountree 7 12 284 23.1 1 1994 Brian Rountree 10 30 692 23.1 0 1995 Reggie Bureau 10 21 358 17.0 1 1996 Theo Roach 11 11 178 16.2 0 1997 Lydell Finley 10 20 414 20.7 0 1998 Tyrone Sellers 10 20 362 18.1 0 1999 Chad Smith 8 20 429 21.5 0 2000 Chad Smith 10 26 521 20.0 0 2001 Ben Anderson 10 14 340 24.3 0 2002 Anthony Owens 11 30 832 27.7 1 2003 Monte’ Anthony 12 34 685 20.1 0 2004 Monte’ Anthony 9 14 290 20.7 0 2005 Monte’ Anthony 11 11 205 18.6 0 2006 Rashad Howard 10 25 522 20.9 0 2007 Rashad Howard 11 29 698 24.1 0 2008 Dwight Fluker-Berry 12 16 424 26.5 1 2009 Dwight Fluker-Berry 11 26 572 22.0 0 2010 Dwight Fluker-Berry 11 22 401 18.2 0 Note: This section was compiled through available statistics and results on file with the NSU Sports Information Office. If any discrepancies are found, please notify the NSU Sports Information Office with proper documentation of any verifiable change.

99


SPARTANS IN THE PROS A look at Norfolk State football players who signed professional football contracts, listed by their final year of eligibility: 1963

John Baker (DE) – Green Bay Packers, Montreal Alouettes,. New York Giants 1964 Willie Holland (RB) – Harrisonburg (Pa.) Capitals 1965 Kenny Reaves (DB) – Atlanta Falcons, St. Louis Cardinals, San Diego Chargers; Lewis Turner (DE) – Dallas Cowboys; . Joe Langston (LB) – Montreal Alouettes, Norfolk Neptunes (CFL*); Charlie Williams (DT) – Norfolk Neptunes (CFL*); Raymond Edmonds (RB) – Harrisonburg (Pa.) Capitals 1966 Johnny Cannon (LB) – Winnipeg Blue Bombers (CFL); . Raymond Smith (DT) – Houston Oilers 1967 Bob Windley (DE) – Miami Dolphins; Don Porter (OE) – Dallas Cowboys; . Andy Hiedeberg (WR/PR) – Rhode Island Steelers; . Milt Mason (RB) – Baltimore Colts, Norfolk Neptunes (CFL*), . Harrisonburg (Pa.) Capitals, Long Island Red Birds; Emzie Abbott (DT) – Montreal Alouettes (CFL) 1968 LaVerne Dickerson (C) – Dallas Cowboys; Mike Johnson (OG) . – Montreal Alouettes (CFL) 1969 Gene Ferguson (DT) – San Diego Chargers; . Kenny Edmonds (TE/PK) – Dallas Cowboys; Bill Murphy (WR) – Kansas City Chiefs, Buffalo Bills; Earl Bryant (DB) Kansas City Chiefs, Norfolk Neptunes (CFL*) 1970 Pettus Farrar (DB) – San Diego Chargers, Norfolk Neptunes (CFL*); Charlie Carroll (RB) – Dallas Cowboys; Harvey Dorsey (OB) – Los Angeles Rams; Lafayette Robinson (LB) – Dallas Cowboys; Wyman Duke (DT) – New Orleans Saints, Richmond Saints; . Jim Minor (RB) – Pittsburgh Steelers 1971 Ray Jarvis (WR) – Atlanta Falcons, Buffalo Bills, Detroit Lions, . New England Patriots; Larry James (RB) – Denver Broncos; . Ron Davis (OG) – Washington Redskins, Norfolk Neptunes (CFL*) 1972 Ron Bolton (DB) – New England Patriots, Cleveland Browns 1973 Condie Pugh (RB) – Edmonton Eskimos, New England Patriots, Zach Rogers (RB/PR) – Dallas Cowboys; . James Jackson (DE) – Miami Dolphins, Edmonton Eskimos (CFL); John Hamilton (DB) – New England Patriots; . William Betts (DB) – Kansas City Chiefs; Robert Beale (RB) – Dallas Cowboys, Edmonton Eskimos (CFL) 1974 Leroy Jones (DE) – Edmonton Eskimos (CFL), San Diego Chargers, Los Angeles Rams 1975 Bob Colbert (DB) – New York Giants; Eddie London (DB) – Dallas Cowboys; Rob Tillis (WR/P) – Philadelphia Bell (WFL); Moses Trotter (DT) – Philadelphia Bell (WFL); Larry Stepney (RB) – Philadelphia Bell (WFL) 1976 Tony Knight (DB) – New York Jets 1977 Jim Flowers (DB) – San Diego Chargers 1978 Joe Bell (DE) – Oakland Raiders; Ricky Ray (DB) – New Orleans Saints 1979 Dennis Anderson (DE) – Hamilton Tiger-Cats (CFL); George Butts (LB) – Kansas City Chiefs; LaRue Harrington (RB) – San Diego Chargers, Los Angeles Express (USFL); Darrell Earl Jones (DB) – Atlanta Falcons; Dwight Sweatt (WR) – Oakland Raiders 1980 None 1981 Don Herring (OT) – Seattle Seahawks, Reggie Smallwood (DB) Seattle Seahawks 1982 George Parker (RB) – Buffalo Bills; Joe Scott (FS) – Seattle Seahawks 1983 Orlando Goodhope (RB) – Dallas Cowboys 1984 Glenn Jones (DB) – Buffalo Bills; . Bruce Manley (DB) – Seattle Seahawks 1988 Willie Gillus (QB) – Green Bay Packers, British Columbia Lions (CFL), . Toronto Argonauts (CFL), Ottawa Roughriders (CFL), Kansas City Chiefs 1990 Art Jimerson (LB) – Los Angeles Raiders 1992 Mikel Waugh (RB) – Hamilton Tiger-Cats; . Jesse Chavis III (DB) – Los Angles Rams; Gary Morris (WR) – San Francisco 49ers, . Memphis Mad Dogs (CFL); Anthony Kearney (OT) – Los Angeles . Raiders; Rodney Baylor (TE/DE) – Charlotte Rage (AFL) 1995 Kenneth McDaniel (OT) – Dallas Cowboys, Norfolk Nighthawks (AF2); James Roe (WR) – Baltimore Ravens, San Jose SaberCats (AFL); Aaron Sparrow (QB) – Calgary Stampeders (CFL), Nashville Kats (Arena), Carolina Cobras (AF2), Buffalo Destroyers (AF2), Augusta Stallions (AF2), Norfolk Nighthawks (AF2)

100

1998 2001

2002

2003 2004 2006 2007 2008 2009

2010

Michael Early (OL) – Chicago Bears, Buffalo Bills, Minnesota Vikings, Baltimore Ravens Travoris Carnes (DL) – Saskatchewan Roughriders (CFL), Norfolk Nighthawks (AF2); Kyle Grove (DB) Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Pioneers (AF2), Scottish Claymores (NFL Europe) LaShaun Mack (OL) – Washington Redskins, New York Giants, Norfolk Nighthawks (AF2); Leon Grove (DB) Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Pioneers (AF2); Jamal Naji (DL) – Atlantic City Cardsharks (NIFL), Lexington Horsemen (AF2) Goodluck Owi (TE/DE) – Toronto Argonauts (CFL) Kevin Talley (LB) – Quad City Steamwheelers (AF2) Emery Sammons (WR) – Manchester Wolves (AF2) Casey Hansen (QB) – Philadelphia Eagles, Spokane Shock (AF2) Don Carey (DB) – Cleveland Browns, Jacksonville Jaguars Terrell Whitehead (DB) – Jacksonville Jaguars; Chris Bell (WR) – New Orleans Saints, Green Bay Blizzard (IFL); Dennis Brown (QB) – Calgary Stampeders (CFL), Richmond Revolution (IFL), Virginia Destroyers (UFL) Dante Barnes (DB) – Virginia Destroyers (UFL), Washington Redskins Calton Ford (OL) – Cleveland Browns

Note: Teams are NFL members unless noted League abbreviations: AFL – Arena Football League AF2 – Arena Football League 2 CFL – Canadian Football League CFL* - Continental Football League (now defunct) IFL – Indoor Football League NIFL – National Indoor Football League WFL – World Football League (later became NFL Europe) NFL Europe – National Football League, Europe UFL – United Football League

Don Carey (left) was drafted by the Cleveland Browns in 2009, then later signed with the Jacksonville Jaguars. Carey started 10 games as a rookie in 2010. He was joined one year later by free-agent Jaguars’ signee Terrell Whitehead (right). (Photo credit: Carey – Harry Scull/Jacksonville Jaguars. Whitehead – Dan Van Slyke/Jacksonville Jaguars).

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE


NSU IN THE NFL DRAFT A look at NSU’s NFL draftees, listed by year. The selection # indicates the number that player was taken in the round in which he was drafted, followed by the number he was drafted overall. Year Round

Selection # Name

Team

Position

Year Round

Selection # Name

Team

Position

2009

6

4 (177)

Don Carey

Browns

CB

1973

15

4 (368)

Condie Pugh

Patriots

RB

1996

5

25 (157)

Kenneth McDaniel Cowboys

OG

16

26 (416)

James Jackson

Dolphins

DE

6

19 (186)

James Roe

Ravens

WR

1972

5

20 (124)

Ron Bolton

Patriots

DB

1990

8

4 (197)

Arthur Jimerson

Raiders

LB

1971

5

7 (111)

Ray Jarvis

Falcons

WR

1985

9

1 (225)

Glenn Jones

Bills

DB

15

9 (373)

Larry James

Broncos

RB

1983

9

10 (234)

George Parker

Bills

RB

1970

5

15 (119)

Pettus Farrar

Chargers

RB

1980

3

7 (63)

Earl Jones

Falcons

DB

1969

3

18 (70)

Eugene Ferguson

Chargers

DT

6

13 (151)

LaRue Harrington

Chargers

RB

1968

14

15 (369)

Alex Moore

49ers

RB

1979

6

9 (146)

Ricky Ray

Saints

DB

1966

14

6 (206)

Lewis Turner

Cowboys

RB

1975

2

22 (48)

Leroy Jones

Rams

DE

1964

19

13 (265)

John Baker

Packers

DE

Ron Bolton

Condie Pugh

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE

101


ALL-AMERICANS 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990

Gene Ferguson – Pittsburgh Courier None None Ron Bolton – Pittsburgh Courier None None Moses Trotter – Pittsburgh Courier None James Flowers – Associated Press, Pittsburgh Courier, Mutual Black Network Mike Macklin – NAIA None None Mike Ellis – Associated Press, NAIA** LaRue Harrington – Mizlou, Pepsi, Football News Darrell Jones – Mizlou, Pepsi, Football News Don Herring – SBN None Joe Scott – NAIA** None Tony Johnson – SBN None Don Lee – Football News None Eric Still – Associated Press*** Art Jimerson – Kodak, Associated Press, Football Gazette, SBN Rod Daniels – SBN, ESPN Black College Sports Leroy Haynesworth – ESPN Black College Sports, College Football Preview

Leroy Haynesworth picked up two honors in 1991.

102

1991 1992 1993 1994

Leroy Haynesworth – SBN, Football Gazette None None James Roe – AFCA, SBC, Sporting News, Eddie Hayes Black. College, Football Gazette, NCAA Division II** Aaron Sparrow – Eddie Hayes**, Football Gazette**, NCM Division II** 1995 James Roe – Kodak, Associated Press, SBN, NCAA Division II, Football Gazette, VaSID, C.M. Franks Aaron Sparrow – Football Gazette, SBN, C.M. Franks, VaSID, NCM Division II**, Associated Press (Third Team) Kenneth McDaniel – VaSID, C.M. Franks, NCAA Division II (Third Team), C.M. Franks, Football Gazette, Associated Press** John Greene – VaSID***, C.M. Franks** Ronald Boone – VaSID***, C.M. Franks 2003 Kevin Talley – AP**, The Sports Network**, SBN Black College 2004 Kevin Talley – Walter Camp, The Sports Network, I-AA.org , AP**, SBN Black College (Defensive Player of the Year) 2005 Jonathan Allen – SBN Black College 2007 Terrell Whitehead – The Sports Network (3rd Team) Marquez Davis – SBN Black College, The Sports Network*** Jason Kressen – SBN Black College 2008 Terrell Whitehead – The Sports Network (3rd Team) 2009 Terrell Whitehead – The Sports Network, Associated Press, Walter Camp, SBN Black College William Falakiseni – SBN Black College 2010 DeAngelo Branche – SBN Black College, Phil Steele (3rd team) **Second team

***Honorable mention

Terrell Whitehead (left) and William Falakiseni (right) were named SBN Black College AllAmericans in 2009.

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE


ALL-CONFERENCE SELECTIONS All-CIAA 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991

John Baker, E None N/A Raymond Smith, G; Chauncey Crenshaw, DB; Bob Windby, DL None Ray Jarvis, WR; Gene Ferguson, OL Ray Jarvis, WR; Lafayette Robinson, LB Ray Jarvis, WR LeRoy Jones, DL LeRoy Jones, DL Adolph Santiful, RB Steve Graeff, QB; Moses Trotter, DL Dexter Curry, OL; Roger Nance, DL Robert Powell, WR; Dexter Curry, OL; James Flowers, DB Mike Ellis, DB; LaRue Harrington, RB Joe Bell, DB; George Butts, LB; Dwight Sweatt, KR/PR LaRue Harrington, RB; Dwight Sweatt, WR; Jimmy Robinson, QB; Mike Ellis, DB; Melvin Sturdifen, LB Don Herring, OL; Alonzo Ricks, MG; Orlando Goodhope, RB; Jeff Gunn, WR; Reggie Smallwood, DB; Johnny High, TE Jeff Gunn, WR; Don Herring, OL; Joe Scott, DB Brian Evans, P/PK; Joe Scott, DB; Quinton Ward, DL Orlando Goodhope, RB; Leon Smith, LB Ernest Hines, OL; Anthony Johnson, RB; Quinton Ward, DL; Glen Jones, DB; Leon Smith, LB; Melvin Wallace, DB Dale Browder, P/K; Alphonso Smith, OL; Ted Bates, DL; Pat Creecy, DB Pat Creecy, DB Rob Robertson, OL; Rod Daniels, OL; Ted Bates, DL; Ben Jackson, LB** Rob Robertson, OL; Eric Still, WR; Donnie Morris, PR; Michael. Howard, KR; Larry Bryant, DB; James Stallings, LB Rob Robertson, OL; Rod Daniels, OL; Doug Edwards, OL; Eric Still, WR; Art Jimerson, LB Rod Daniels, OL; Mikel Waugh, RB; Jesse Chavis, DB; Leroy Haynesworth, DB Jesse Chavis, DB; Leroy Haynesworth, DB; Lawrence Holmes, P;

1992 1993 1994 1995 1996

Karlsten Skinner, RB**; Gary Morris, WR**; Sam Adams, DL**; Michael Howard, KR** None James Roe, WR; James Walton, LB; Kermit Buggs, QB**, Robert Ross, DB**; Darrian Walker, OL**; Lawrence Holmes, P** James Roe, WR/PR; Aaron Sparrow, QB; Chris Patterson, OL;. Darius Blount, WR** James Roe, WR/PR; Ronald Boone, TE; Aaron Sparrow, QB;. Kenneth McDaniel, OL; Keith Mungin***,OL; Robert Morris**, K; John Greene**, DL; John Quinerly, RB; Ronald Boone, TE; Eric Musgrove, T; Robert Johnson, LB; John Greene, DT; Darius Blount, WR**; Sunnil Motley, LB**; Michael Early, OL***

All-MEAC 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010

Michael Early, OL** Angelo Todd, RB; Michael Early, OL LaShaun Mack, OL** Travoris Carnes, DL; LaShaun Mack, OL; Marcus Gray, DB** Michael Kelly, DL; Vaughan McAfee, LB**; Brent Sanders, DL** Jamal Naji, DE; Marcus Gray, DB**; Terrell Johnson, RB**,. Goodluck Owi, TE** Kevin Talley, LB; Terrell Johnson, RB ** Kevin Talley, LB; Howard Gilmore, WR Jonathan Allen, TE; Maguell Davis, LB**; Tyrus Lassiter, OL** Jonathan Allen, TE; Emanuel Swindell, OL** Jason Kressen, OL; Marquez Davis, LB; Terrell Whitehead, DB; Daryl Jones, RB**; Jamar Johnson, WR**; Dexter Bailey, TE**; Dennis Marsh, DL**; Maguell Davis, LB**; Don Carey, DB**; Justin Castellat, K** Terrell Whitehead, DB; Justin Castellat, K; Dennis Marsh, DL;. DeAngelo Branche, RB**; Don Carey, DB** Terrell Whitehead, DB; Chris Bell, WR; Josh Turner, DL; William Falakiseni, C; DeAngelo Branche, RB**; Sherron Childress, TE**; Anthony Taylor, LB**; Calton Ford, OL**; Kendall Noble, OL** DeAngelo Branche, RB; William Falakiseni, C**; Kendall Noble, OL**; Josh Turner, DL**

**Second team

***Honorable mention

Linebacker Arthur Jimerson (middle) was an All-CIAA pick and an AP All-American in 1989.

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE

103


SEASON-BY-SEASON RESULTS Season Total

69-22

1946 (4-5) Opponent Result Elizabeth City State W Swift Junior College W Brown Bombers L Cheyney State L Elizabeth City State W Fayetteville State L Maryland State W Virginia State ‘B’ L Storer College L Season Total

Score 20-6 13-0 6-7 0-13 7-0 0-13 20-6 0-13 6-18 72-76

1947 (5-2) Opponent Result Swift Junior College W Portsmouth ‘Y’ W Cheyney State W Storer College W Fayetteville State W Maryland State L Elizabeth City State L Season Total

Score 32-13 13-0 27-7 20-0 15-12 6-31 8-12 121-75

1948 (5-3-1) Opponent Result Battling Palms L Livingstone W Virginia Seminary W Storer College W Hampton ‘B’ L Fayetteville State T Virginia Union ‘B’ W Miner College W Elizabeth City State L Season Total

Score 9-12 41-0 60-0 50-0 0-2 6-6 14-0 21-6 7-14 208-40

From 1942-44, NSU canceled its football program due to World War II

1949 (6-0) Opponent Result Livingstone W Virginia Seminary W Hampton ‘B’ W Fayetteville State W Storer College W Elizabeth City State W Season Total

Score 28-0 6-0 21-6 25-12 14-6 7-6 101-30

Leroy Porter Era 7 seasons (30-17-4), .627 1945 (3-2-1) Opponent Result Hampton Freshman W Fayetteville State L Navy All-Stars T Fayetteville State L Brown Bombers W BTW High School W

1950 (5-2-1) Opponent Virginia State ‘B’ Cheyney State Fayetteville State Livingstone Miner ClaflinCollege Virginia Seminary Elizabeth City State

Score 0-13 13-0 15-12 28-0 40-0 6-14 20-0 0-0

Mickey Yancey Era 2 seasons (5-7), .417

1938 (1-4) Opponent Result Virginia Union Fr. W Hampton Institute L Fayetteville State L Elizabeth City State L B.T. (Norfolk) L Season Total

Score 13-6 0-13 0-53 0-52 0-9 13-133

1939 (4-3) Opponent Result Virginia Union L Hampton Freshman W Virginia State ‘B’ L Fayetteville State L Elizabeth City State W Kittrell W B.T. (Norfolk) W Season Total

Score 6-22 13-0 0-12 0-7 20-0 79-0 14-8 132-49

James Gill Era 2 seasons (9-3-2), .714 1940 (3-3-1) Opponent Result Princess Anne W Bordentown L Fayetteville State L Virginia State ‘B’ T St. Augustine’s W Hampton Freshman W Elizabeth City State L Season Total

Score 20-6 0-7 20-21 0-0 12-0 20-12 6-13 78-59

1941 (6-0-1) Opponent Result Miner W Bordentown W Fayetteville State W Hampton Freshman W Winston-Salem T St. Augustine’s W Elizabeth City State W Season Total

Score 6-0 19-0 26-0 13-0 13-13 25-7 21-6 123-26

104

Score 39-0 2-4 0-0 8-12 7-6 13-0

Result L W W W W L W T

Season Total

122-39

1951 (2-3-1) Opponent Result Brown Bombers L Morristown W Fayetteville State L Livingstone W Elizabeth City State L Claflin T Season Total

Score 0-12 19-0 6-19 20-0 0-19 14-14 59-64

Ed Ferrell Era 3 seasons (8-12-0), .400

1952 (5-2) Opponent Result Morristown W Miner W Fayetteville State L Livingstone W Miner W Voorhees W Elizabeth City State L Season Total

Score 14-7 25-0 0-32 7-6 19-0 14-0 2-6 81-51

1953 (1-6) Opponent Result Virginia Union L Delaware State L Fayetteville State L Livingstone L Morristown L South Carolina Trade W Elizabeth City State L Season Total

Score 0-45 0-18 2-12 14-20 7-12 26-0 6-13 55-120

1954 (2-4) Opponent Result Delaware State L 3rd Anti-Aircraft W Livingstone L Morristown W South Carolina Trade L Elizabeth City State L Season Total

Score 0-7 13-12 13-14 18-6 13-25 6-19 63-83

Joe Echols Era 6 seasons (28-19-1), .594 1955 (3-5) Opponent Result St. Paul’s L 3rd Anti-Aircraft L South Carolina Trade W Voorhees L Livingstone W Morristown W Fort Monroe L Elizabeth City State L Season Total

Score 0-6 6-42 12-9 6-19 19-6 21-0 6-32 6-21 76-135

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE


SEASON-BY-SEASON RESULTS 1956 (2-6) Opponent Result St. Paul’s L South Carolina Trade L Voorhees L D.C. Teachers W Morristown W Kittrell College L Elizabeth City State L Livingstone L Season Total

Score 0-19 6-7 6-14 19-6 6-0 6-12 8-14 0-6 51-78

1957 (5-1) Opponent Result South Carolina Trade W Voorhees W Livingstone W Morristown W Kittrell W Elizabeth City State L Season Total

Score 13-0 40-18 25-12 25-0 14-6 0-20 117-56

1958 (5-3) Opponent Result Central State L South Carolina Trade L Voorhees W Livingstone L Friendship W Elizabeth City State W Morristown W Kittrell W Season Total

Score 12-18 8-20 16-12 14-30 20-0 8-0 58-6 21-11 162-99

1959 (7-1-1) Opponent Result Virginia Union T Central State W Friendship W South Carolina Trade W Voorhees L Livingstone W Kittrell W Elizabeth City State W Morristown W Season Total

Score 12-12 22-16 86-0 16-0 6-24 12-6 26-12 20-6 8-0 208-76

1960 (6-3) Opponent Result Virginia Union W Central State L Elizabeth City State W South Carolina Trade L West Virginia State W Voorhees W Livingstone L Kittrell W Friendship W Season Total

Score 14-12 0-47 42-20 6-20 20-8 30-20 0-15 19-0 21-6 152-148

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE

Bill Archie Era 6 seasons (22-24), .478

1961 (4-3) Opponent Result Virginia Union L Elizabeth City State W West Virginia State W D.C. Teachers W Livingstone L Maryland State L St. Paul’s W Season Total

Score 8-26 24-7 22-7 16-6 8-14 0-32 13-12 91-104

1962 (5-3) Opponent Result Virginia Union L Elizabeth City State W West Virginia State W North Carolina A&T L D.C. Teachers W Livingstone W Maryland State L St. Paul’s W Season Total

Score 10-26 14-0 20-0 6-13 45-0 34-6 6-7 12-0 147-52

1963 (4-4) Opponent Result Virginia Union W Elizabeth City State W Central State L North Carolina A&T L Hampton W Livingstone W Maryland State L Virginia State L Season Total

Score 12-2 18-8 7-29 7-34 42-0 62-0 6-19 7-13 161-105

1964 (2-5) Opponent Virginia Union Elizabeth City State North Carolina Hampton Livingstone Maryland State Virginia State Season Total

Result L L L W W L L

1965 (4-4) Opponent Result Virginia Union W Elizabeth City State W North Carolina A&T L Hampton W Livingstone W Maryland State L Virginia State L Morgan State L Season Total

Score 0-7 0-20 13-36 13-9 47-6 7-31 0-22 80-131 Score 18-13 19-6 20-27 20-0 22-20 0-14 6-21 0-33 105-134

1966 (3-5) Opponent Result Virginia Union L Elizabeth City State W North Carolina A&T L Hampton W Livingstone L Maryland State W Virginia State L Morgan State L Season Total

Score 17-32 16-6 6-40 33-27 0-31 22-20 3-21 0-34 97-211

Willie Smith Era 1 season (4-4), .500

1967 (4-4) Opponent Result West Virginia State W Elizabeth City State L North Carolina A&T W Hampton W Virginia Union L Maryland State L Virginia State W Morgan State L Season Total

Score 6-3 12-14 17-14 23-20 14-34 0-14 31-7 0-63 103-169

Curt Maddox Era 4 seasons (11-21-1), .348 1968 (2-5-1) Opponent Result Score Glenville State L 6-7 Elizabeth City State W 34-14 North Carolina A&T L 14-61 Hampton L 7-13 Virginia Union W 37-26 Maryland State T 27-27 Virginia State L 17-21 Morgan State L 7-34 Season Total 149-203 1969 (4-4) Opponent Result West Virginia State L Elizabeth City State L North Carolina A&T L Hampton W Virginia Union W Maryland State W Virginia State W Morgan State L Season Total

Score 22-28 19-32 14-20 30-6 22-21 7-6 39-0 6-48 159-161

105


SEASON-BY-SEASON RESULTS 1970 (3-6) Opponent Result Morgan State L Elizabeth City State L Livingstone W North Carolina A&T L Hampton W Virginia Union W Maryland State L Virginia State L Grambling L Season Total

Score 7-15 18-28 34-13 18-21 52-6 22-19 14-32 0-21 13-55 178-210

1971 (2-6) Opponent Result Morgan State L Elizabeth City State L Winston-Salem State W North Carolina A&T L Hampton W Virginia Union L Virginia State L Grambling L Season Total

Score 9-33 7-12 17-14 3-25 30-15 0-21 0-39 0-55 66-214

Bob Ledbetter Era 2 seasons (8-12), .400

1972 (3-7) Opponent Result Tennessee State L Fayetteville State L Elizabeth City State W Winston-Salem State L North Carolina A&T L Hampton W Virginia Union L Virginia State L Grambling L St. Paul’s W Season Total

Score 6-56 14-21 29-14 14-32 14-35 33-14 14-26 6-21 6-39 56-8 192-266

1973 (5-5) Opponent Result Fayetteville State W Elizabeth City State L Winston-Salem State W North Carolina A&T L Hampton W Virginia Union L Shaw W Virginia State L Grambling L St. Paul’s W Season Total

Score 34-16 11-14 21-10 12-26 21-6 0-26 64-12 0-16 6-32 48-8 217-166

106

Dick Price Era 10 seasons (62-41-4), .598 3 CIAA Championships (1974, 1975, 1976) (*-CIAA Championship game) 1974 (8-3) Opponent Result Score St. Paul’s W 47-8 Fayetteville State W 28-9 Elizabeth City State W 27-7 Winston-Salem State W 26-10 North Carolina A&T L 6-8 Hampton W 27-10 Virginia Union W 21-10 Shaw W 22-16 Virginia State* W 7-6 Grambling L 10-16 Tuskegee L 14-15 Season Total 235-115 1975 (8-3) Opponent Result Elon W Fayetteville State W Elizabeth City State W Winston-Salem State W North Carolina A&T L Hampton L Virginia Union W Shaw W Virginia State W Grambling L St. Paul’s* W Season Total

Score 33-31 9-7 33-13 42-14 13-35 7-27 23-14 21-0 28-10 0-26 40-14 249-191

1976 (8-4) Opponent Result Elon L Fayetteville State W Elizabeth City State W Winston-Salem State W North Carolina A&T L Hampton W Virginia Union W Bethune-Cookman W Virginia State W Grambling L St. Paul’s* W South Carolina State L Season Total

Score 0-3 28-7 42-14 13-6 7-13 24-7 10-6 23-14 17-7 19-41 33-17 10-26 226-161

1977 (4-6-1) Opponent William & Mary Livingstone Fayetteville State Elizabeth City State Winston-Salem State North Carolina A&T

Result L W W W L L

Score 13-27 14-13 28-7 37-0 14-21 14-21

Hampton L Virginia Union L Virginia State T Grambling L St. Paul’s W Season Total

0-18 15-21 21-21 21-48 41-0 218-197

1978 (6-4) Opponent Result St. Paul’s W Livingstone W Fayetteville State W Elizabeth City State L Winston-Salem State L North Carolina A&T L Hampton W Virginia Union L Bowie State W Virginia State W Season Total

Score 36-7 36-10 34-12 9-23 7-24 28-39 16-6 0-6 23-7 3-0 192-134

1979 (8-3-1) Opponent Result St. Paul’s W Livingstone W Fayetteville State W Elizabeth City State W Winston-Salem State T North Carolina A&T W Hampton W Virginia Union L Bethune-Cookman L Virginia State W Bowie State W South Carolina State L Season Total

Score 41-0 36-3 35-0 18-8 21-21 27-26 26-13 9-41 14-21 14-12 26-6 7-32 274-183

1980 (5-4-1) Opponent Result Score St. Paul’s L 15-18 Livingstone W 25-0 Fayetteville State W 20-0 Elizabeth City State L 12-21 Winston-Salem State L 13-17 Elon L 26-65 Hampton W 37-14 Virginia Union T 26-26 Bethune-Cookman W 20-7 Virginia State W 32-29 Season Total 226-197 1981 (4-5-1) Opponent St. Paul’s Fayetteville State Elizabeth City State Winston-Salem State Elon

Result W W W L T

Score 67-2 27-6 24-0 6-25 20-20

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE


SEASON-BY-SEASON RESULTS Hampton L Virginia Union L Howard L Virginia State W North Carolina Central L Season Total

20-23 13-43 28-49 36-12 21-27 262-207

1982 (6-4) Opponent Result St. Paul’s W Fayetteville State W Elizabeth City State W Winston-Salem State W North Carolina Central W Hampton W Virginia Union L Howard L Virginia State L Cheyney State L Season Total

Score 27-0 26-6 7-3 16-7 14-9 25-7 0-51 18-24 7-13 19-20 159-140

1983 (5-5) Opponent Result St. Paul’s W Cheyney State W Elizabeth City State L Bowie State W North Carolina Central L Hampton L Virginia Union L Howard W Virginia State L Livingstone W Season Total

Score 15-9 17-0 0-15 21-6 6-47 12-14 21-48 19-12 3-23 43-20 157-194

Willard Bailey Era 9 seasons, (52-40-1), .565 1 CIAA Championship (1984) 1984 (10-2) Opponent Result Score St. Paul’s W 22-7 Cheyney W 14-6 Elizabeth City State W 17-0 Bowie State W 38-0 North Carolina Central W 29-26 Hampton W 15-7 Virginia Union W 6-0 Howard W 42-10 Virginia State L 14-17 Livingstone W 27-18 Winston-Salem State* W 20-19 Towson State ** L 21-31 Season Total 265-141 * CIAA Championship game ** NCAA Division II playoffs 1985 (6-4) Opponent

Result

Score

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE

St. Paul’s W William & Mary L Johnson C. Smith W Elizabeth City State W Fayetteville State W North Carolina Central W Hampton L Virginia Union W Howard L Virginia State L Season Total

37-0 15-28 28-0 45-3 34-14 32-14 35-36 16-10 21-28 17-27 280-160

Morgan State L Cheyney W Livingstone W Elizabeth City State W North Carolina A&T W Bowie State L Hampton T Virginia Union L Southern Connecticut W Virginia State W Season Total

20-31 22-0 43-0 57-0 6-0 13-33 20-20 13-29 39-30 16-13 249-156

1986 (4-6) Opponent Result St. Paul’s W Fayetteville State W Johnson C. Smith W Elizabeth City State L Morgan State W Hampton L Virginia Union L Howard L Virginia State L Bloomsburg L Season Total

Score 45-0 38-21 6-0 14-20 23-21 14-19 24-56 13-38 14-23 7-21 198-219

1990 (7-3) Opponent Result Fort Valley State W Cheyney W Livingstone W Elizabeth City State W North Carolina A&T L Bowie State W Hampton W Virginia Union L Southern Connecticut L Virginia State W Season Total

Score 30-6 32-0 30-14 29-0 6-20 29-17 27-18 23-30 39-48 21-20 266-173

1987 (4-7) Opponent Result Bloomsburg W Cheyney L N. Carolina Central L Elizabeth City State W North Carolina A&T W Winston-Salem State L Hampton L Virginia Union L Howard L Virginia State L St. Paul’s W Season Total

Score 26-17 7-12 20-28 27-7 20-17 20-36 17-48 6-37 6-43 10-35 50-3 209-283

1991 (7-3) Opponent Result Virginia State W Morgan State W Johnson C. Smith W Millersville L Elizabeth City State W North Carolina A&T L Bowie State W Hampton W Virginia Union L Fayetteville State W Season Total

Score 18-12 27-9 32-6 16-34 26-21 14-50 35-13 26-12 11-39 28-14 233-210

1988 (5-5) Opponent Result Bloomsburg L Lane (Tenn.) W N. Carolina Central L Elizabeth City State W North Carolina A&T W Winston-Salem State L Hampton W Virginia Union L Morgan State W Virginia State L Season Total

Score 6-14 51-13 7-10 20-9 30-6 14-31 34-27 28-41 35-9 28-38 253-198

1992 (3-7) Opponent Result Virginia State L Johnson C. Smith L Fayetteville State L Elizabeth City State W North Carolina A&T L Bowie State W Hampton L Virginia Union L Kentucky State W Bethune-Cookman L Season Total

Score 21-28 0-7 23-32 46-45 6-35 24-7 0-60 38-41 23-6 26-31 207-292

1989 (6-3-1) Opponent

Result

Score

107


SEASON-BY-SEASON RESULTS Archie Cooley Era 1 season (3-7-1), .318 1993 (3-7-1) Opponent Result Virginia State L N. Carolina Central L Fayetteville State L Elizabeth City State W Lane W Winston-Salem State T Hampton L Virginia Union W Kentucky State L Johnson C. Smith L Bethune-Cookman L Season Total

Score 7-21 20-30 19-34 40-12 54-8 54-54 21-48 21-9 24-26 13-20 31-33 304-295

Darnell Moore Era 5 seasons (26-26), .500

1994 (7-3) Opponent Result Virginia State L N. Carolina Central W Fayetteville State W Elizabeth City State L Winston-Salem State W Hampton L Virginia Union W Johnson C. Smith W Lane W Kentucky State W Season Total

Score 6-54 26-24 42-14 26-27 50-48 28-53 45-27 34-30 28-26 60-7 345-310

1995 (7-3) Opponent Result Virginia State L Bowie State W Livingstone W Elizabeth City State W Delaware State L Bethune-Cookman W Hampton L Virginia Union W Johnson C. Smith W N. Carolina Central W Season Total

Score 22-41 27-12 42-28 62-50 14-20 35-33 18-23 58-32 55-14 27-6 360-259

1996 (7-4) Opponent Virginia State Bowie State Livingstone Bethune-Cookman Delaware State Central State Virginia Union Elizabeth City State Howard

108

Result L W W W W L W W L

Score 15-24 20-14 21-20 41-29 27-23 14-23 38-0 14-7 14-42

Winston-Salem State L Hampton W Season Total

7-13 14-7 225-202

1997 (3-7) Opponent Result Virginia State L Virginia Union W Florida A&M L Delaware State L Morgan State W South Carolina State L Hampton L Howard L Liberty L Bethune-Cookman W Season Total

Score 7-36 26-0 26-41 21-24 48-6 25-28 2-9 24-32 6-17 21-7 206-200

1998 (2-9, 2-6 MEAC) Opponent Result Score Virginia State L 22-30 Florida A&M L 14-84 Delaware State W 38-26 Morgan State W 46-43 North Carolina A&T L 20-34 South Carolina State L 26-43 Hampton L 14-59 Virginia Union L 8-17 Howard L 20-54 Liberty L 12-45 Bethune-Cookman L 38-59 Season Total 258-494 Mo Forte Era 4 seasons (15-29), .341 1999 (2-9, 1-7 MEAC) Opponent Result Virginia State W Florida A&M L Delaware State L North Carolina A&T L South Carolina State L Hampton L Virginia Union L Howard L Morgan State W Bethune-Cookman L Texas Southern L Season Total 2000 (3-8, 2-6 MEAC) Opponent Virginia State Bethune-Cookman Villanova North Carolina A&T South Carolina State Hampton

Result W L L L W-OT L

Score 19-7 7-56 6-26 14-28 23-27 27-28 9-21 23-29 20-16 6-26 6-22 160-286 Score 31-24 6-24 0-42 0-16 24-21 19-47

Florida A&M L Howard L Morgan State W Delaware State L Texas Southern L Season Total

14-42 0-14 19-14 28-31 12-17 153-292

2001 (5-6, 3-5 MEAC) Opponent Result Virginia State W Bethune-Cookman L North Carolina A&T L Savannah State W Hampton W Florida A&M L Howard W-OT Morgan State W Delaware State L Morris Brown L South Carolina State L Season Total

Score 13-0 7-32 0-43 27-18 28-20 9-47 7-0 33-27 13-43 14-42 10-16 160-288

2002 (5-6, 2-6 MEAC) Opponent Result Score Virginia State W 31-21 Savannah State W 35-6 Bethune-Cookman L 7-49 North Carolina A&T L 10-36 South Carolina State L 9-35 Hampton L 14-31 Florida A&M L 31-34 Howard L 0-21 Morgan State W 17-14 Delaware State W 23-20 Morris Brown W 32-19 Season Total 209-286 Willie Gillus Era 2 seasons (2-19-0), .095 2003 (1-11, 0-7 MEAC) Opponent Result Score Virginia State L 15-16 Savannah State W 7-3 Virginia Military L 9-34 Bethune-Cookman L 14-56 North Carolina A&T L 14-34 South Carolina State L 15-34 Hampton L 0-52 Florida A&M L 10-60 Howard L 28-42 Liberty L 21-69 Delaware State L 25-36 Morgan State L 34-43 Season Total 192-479

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE


SEASON-BY-SEASON RESULTS 2004 (1-8, 1-6 MEAC) Opponent Result Virginia State L Savannah State L-2 OT Bethune-Cookman L North Carolina A&T W South Carolina State L Hampton L Howard L Morgan State L Delaware State L Season Total

Score 7-17 34-41 3-43 27-14 14-39 10-58 17-35 28-58 28-33 168-338

Pete Adrian Era 6 seasons (34-33), .507 2005 (4-7, 2-6 MEAC) Opponent Result Virginia State L North Carolina A&T L Bethune-Cookman L-4 OT Savannah State W South Carolina State L Hampton L Florida A&M L Howard W Morgan State W Delaware State L Liberty W Season Total

Score 6-34 14-16 61-63 58-29 21-35 14-55 17-31 26-7 24-21 17-38 34-17 292-346

2006 (4-7,1-7 MEAC) Opponent Virginia State Virginia Military Bethune-Cookman North Carolina A&T South Carolina State Hampton Florida A&M Howard Morgan State Delware State Winston-Salem State Season Total

Score 29-14 32-19 21-22 42-20 10-47 13-42 33-36 10-13 20-29 10-33 31-14 251-289

2007 (8-3, 6-2 MEAC) Opponent Virginia State Rutgers Bethune-Cookman North Carolina A&T South Carolina State Hampton Florida A&M Howard Morgan State Delaware State Winston-Salem State

Result W W L W L L L-OT L L L W

Result W L W W W-2OT W W L W L-OT W

Score 33-7 0-59 38-31 50-20 20-13 20-19 33-27 10-17 24-16 21-28 23-20

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE

Season Total

272-257

2008 (5-7, 3-5 MEAC) Opponent Result Virginia State W Kentucky L North Carolina A&T W William & Mary L Bethune-Cookman L South Carolina State L Hampton L Florida A&M L Howard W Morgan State W Delaware State L Winston-Salem State W Season Total

Score 47-7 3-38 27-21 12-42 17-33 23-24 17-35 28-31 49-12 35-9 28-34 17-14 303-300

2009 (7-4, 5-3 MEAC) Opponent Result Virginia State W North Carolina A&T L William & Mary L Bethune-Cookman W South Carolina State L Hampton W Florida A&M L Howard W Morgan State W Delaware State W Winston-Salem State W Season Total

Score 28-10 13-17 15-27 40-14 10-37 46-6 20-34 41-6 31-23 21-16 28-21 293-211

2010 (6-5, 4-4 MEAC) Opponent Result Score Rutgers L 0-31 North Carolina A&T W 23-14 Virginia State W 51-28 Bethune-Cookman L 7-21 South Carolina State L 13-34 Hampton L 6-7 Florida A&M L 13-17 Howard W 10-9 Morgan State W 37-25 Delaware State W 31-21 Savannah State W 42-6 Season Total 233-213

109


COACHES RECORDS NSU’S ALL-TIME RECORD BY COACHES Name Years Mickey Yancey 1938-39 James Gill 1940-41 1942-44 canceled due to World War II Leroy Porter 1945-51 Ed Ferrell 1952-54 Joe Echols 1955-60 Bill Archie 1961-66 Willie Smith 1967 Curt Maddox 1968-71 Bob Ledbetter 1972-73 Dick Price 1974-83 Willard Bailey 1984-92 Archie Cooley 1993 Darnell Moore 1994-98 Mo Forte 1999-2002 Willie Gillus 2003-04 Pete Adrian 2005-present TOTAL

NSU’S ALL-TIME RECORD BY COACHES, BY YEAR Year 1938 1939 1940 1941 1942-44 1945 1946 1947 1948 1949 1950 1951 1952 1953 1954

W L 5 7 9 3 30 8 28 22 4 11 8 62 52 3 26 15 2 34 319

Name Record Mickey Yancey 1-4-0 Mickey Yancey 4-3-0 James Gill 3-3-1 James Gill 6-0-1 Canceled due to World War II Leroy Porter 3-2-1 Leroy Porter 4-5-0 Leroy Porter 5-2-0 Leroy Porter 5-3-1 Leroy Porter 6-0-0 Leroy Porter 5-2-1 Leroy Porter 2-3-1 Ed Ferrell 5-2-0 Ed Ferrell 1-6-0 Ed Ferrell 2-4-0

17 12 19 24 4 21 12 41 40 7 26 29 19 33 314 Pct. .200 .571 .500 .929 .583 .444 .714 .611 1.000 .688 .417 .714 .143 .400

T 0 2

Pct. .417 .714

4 0 1 0 0 1 0 4 1 1 0 0 0 0 14

.627 .400 .594 .478 .500 .348 .400 .598 .565 .318 .500 .341 .095 .507 .504

Points Scored Points Allowed 13 133 132 49 78 59 123 26 69 72 121 208 101 122 59 81 55 63

24 76 75 40 30 39 64 51 120 83

Dick Price coached the Spartans from 1974-1983

110

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE


COACHES RECORDS NSU’S ALL-TIME RECORD BY COACHES, BY YEAR, CONT. Year 1955 1956 1957 1958 1959 1960 1961 1962 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992

Name Joe Echols Joe Echols Joe Echols Joe Echols Joe Echols Joe Echols Bill Archie Bill Archie Bill Archie Bill Archie Bill Archie Bill Archie Willie Smith Curt Maddox Curt Maddox Curt Maddox Curt Maddox Bob Ledbetter Bob Ledbetter Dick Price Dick Price Dick Price Dick Price Dick Price Dick Price Dick Price Dick Price Dick Price Dick Price Willard Bailey Willard Bailey Willard Bailey Willard Bailey Willard Bailey Willard Bailey Willard Bailey Willard Bailey Willard Bailey

Record 3-5-0 2-6-0 5-1-0 5-3-0 7-1-1 6-3-0 4-3-0 5-3-0 4-4-0 2-5-0 4-4-0 3-5-0 4-4-0 2-5-1 4-4-0 3-6-0 2-6-0 3-7-0 5-5-0 8-3-0 8-3-0 8-4-0 4-6-1 6-4-0 8-3-1 5-4-1 4-5-1 6-4-0 5-5-0 10-2-0 6-4-0 4-6-0 4-7-0 5-5-0 6-3-1 7-3-0 7-3-0 3-7-0

Pct. .375 .250 .833 .625 .833 .667 .571 .625 .500 .286 .500 .375 .500 .313 .500 .333 .250 .300 .500 .636 .727 .667 .409 .600 .708 .550 .450 .600 .500 .833 .600 .400 .363 .500 .650 .700 .700 .300

Points Scored 76 51 117 162 208 152 91 147 161 80 105 97 103 149 59 178 66 192 271 235 249 226 218 192 274 206 262 159 157 265 280 191 206 253 249 266 233 207

Points Allowed 135 78 56 99 76 148 104 52 105 131 148 211 169 203 161 210 214 266 166 115 191 161 197 134 183 197 207 140 194 141 160 198 283 198 156 173 210 292

1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010

Archie Cooley Darnell Moore Darnell Moore Darnell Moore Darnell Moore Darnell Moore Mo Forte Mo Forte Mo Forte Mo Forte Willie Gillus Willie Gillus Pete Adrian Pete Adrian Pete Adrian Pete Adrian Pete Adrian TOTAL

3-7-1 7-3-0 7-3-0 7-4-0 3-7-0 2-9-0 2-9-0 3-8-0 5-6-0 5-6-0 1-11-0 1-8-0 4-7-0 8-3-0 5-7-0 7-4-0 6-5-0 319-314-14

.318 .700 .700 .636 .300 .182 .182 .375 .455 .455 .083 .111 .364 .723 .417 .636 .545 .504

304 345 360 226 206 258 160 153 161 209 192 168 251 272 303 293 233

295 310 259 203 200 494 286 292 278 286 479 338 289 257 300 211 213

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE

111


RECORD VS. OPPONENTS NSU VS. ALL OPPONENTS Opponent

Battling Palms Bethune-Cookman Bloomsburg Booker T. Wash. HS Bordentown Bowie State Brown Bombers Central State Cheyney Claflin Delaware State D.C. Teachers Elizabeth City State Elon Fayetteville State Florida A&M Friendship (J.C.) Fort Monroe Fort Valley State Glenville State Grambling State Hampton Howard Johnson C. Smith Kentucky Kentucky State Kittrell (J.C.) Lane Liberty Livingstone Maryland State (now UMES) Millersville Miner Teachers Morgan State Morris Brown Morristown Navy All-Stars North Carolina A&T North Carolina Central Portsmouth ‘Y’ Princess Anne Rutgers Savannah State Shaw St. Augustine’s St. Paul’s South Carolina State South Carolina Trade Southern Conn. State Storer Swift (J.C.) Tennessee State 3rd Anti-Aircraft Towson State (now Towson) Tuskegee Virginia Military Virginia Seminary Virginia State Virginia State ‘B’ Voorhees West Virginia State William & Mary Winston-Salem State

Gms. 1 21 3 3 2 10 3 5 9 2 18 3 55 4 31 13 3 1 1 1 8 48 22 7 1 3 6 3 4 30 12 1 5 25 2 9 1 36 10 1 1 2 6 3 2 20 16 8 2 4 2 1 2 1 1 2 3 48 5 7 5 4 21

Rec.

0-1-0 7-14-0 1-2-0 1-2-0 1-1 9-1-0 1-2-0 1-4-0 6-3-0 1-1-0 5-13-0 3-0-0 32-22-1 1-2-1 20-10-1 1-12-0 3-0-0 0-1-0 1-0-0 0-1-0 0-8-0 24-23-1 7-15-0 5-2-0 0-1-0 2-1-0 5-1-0 3-0-0 1-3-0 23-7-0 4-7-1 0-1-0 5-0-0 14-11-0 1-1-0 8-1-0 0-0-1 10-26-0 5-5-0 1-0-0 1-0-0 0-2-0 5-1-0 3-0-0 2-0-0 16-4-0 2-14-0 4-4-0 1-1-0 3-1-0 2-0-0 0-1-0 1-1-0 0-1-0 0-1-0 1-1-0 3-0-0 21-26-1 1-3-1 3-4-0 4-1-0 0-4-0 10-8-3

First Gm Last Gm. 1948 1976 1986 1938 1940 1978 1945 1958 1946 1950 1953 1956 1938 1975 1938 1997 1958 1955 1990 1968 1970 1938 1981 1985 2008 1992 1939 1988 1997 1948 1946 1991 1941 1965 2001 1951 1945 1962 1981 1947 1940 2007 2001 1973 1940 1955 1976 1953 1989 1946 1946 1972 1954 1984 1974 2003 1948 1963 1938 1952 1960 1977 1971

1948 2010 1988 1945 1941 1996 1951 1996 1990 1951 2010 1962 1996 1981 1994 2010 1960 1955 1990 1968 1977 2010 2010 1995 2008 1994 1960 1994 2005 1996 1970 1991 1952 2010 2002 1959 1945 2010 1995 1947 1940 2010 2010 1975 1941 1987 2010 1960 1990 1949 1947 1972 1955 1984 1974 2006 1950 2010 1950 1960 1969 2009 2007

Bold – 2011 opponent

112

2011 NSU FOOTBALL MEDIA GUIDE



2011 NORFOLK

Sept. 10

at West Virginia

Morgantown, W.Va.

TBA

Sept. 17

at Howard *

Washington, D.C.

1 p.m.

Sept. 24

at Charleston Southern

Charleston, S.C.

1:30 p.m.

Oct. 1

South Carolina State* (Fish Bowl Classic)

Norfolk, Va.

4 p.m.

Oct. 8

at Delaware State*

Dover, Del.

1 p.m.

Oct. 15

Hampton* (State Farm Battle of the Bay)

Norfolk, Va.

4 p.m.

Oct. 20

Bethune-Cookman* @

Norfolk, Va.

7:30 p.m.

Oct. 29

North Carolina A&T* (Homecoming presented by Smithfield)

Norfolk, Va.

2 p.m.

Nov. 5

at Savannah State*

Savannah, Ga.

5 p.m.

Nov. 12

at Morgan State*

Baltimore, Md.

1 p.m.

Home games in BOLD Subject to change

@ ESPNU televised game

* MEAC game

MEDIA GUIDE

Time 6 p.m.

FOOTB AL L

Site Norfolk, Va.

UNIVERSITY

Opponent Virginia State (Virginia Lottery Labor Day Classic)

STATE

Date Sept. 3


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