Archive for May, 2008

The Future Of The MEAC

May 11, 2008

With the possibility of North Carolina Central University rejoining the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference at the annual spring meetings, the seemingly age-old never fully answered question comes up. Will the MEAC drop the Football Championship Sub-Division playoffs in order to throw down with the Southwestern Athletic Conference for black college football supremacy in a reborn Heritage Bowl?

As a student journalist a little over three years ago, I wrote a commentary on Black College Wire, suggesting that the MEAC was never going to get a fair shake after an 11-0 Hampton team was forced to play its first round playoff game on the road, a loss at William & Mary. I then followed that up by saying a Black College Title game would be better for business instead of trying to go head to head with predominately white institutions. Well, we all have the right to change our minds, and consider this one overhauled. The MEAC should continue to take steps towards an FCS championship instead taking a step backwards.

The MEAC is much closer in terms of parity than even fans, alumni and administration realize, because of the passion and desire of the presidents in this conference to hire quality coaches and recruiters, thinking outside of the box instead of hiring noted HBCU retreads who can’t get the job done. With improving facilities to match the improved staffs, the MEAC will be able to make some noise in the FCS playoffs very shortly.

However with the potential addition of the Eagles (a conference charter member that reclassified as DII in 1979), the MEAC would then have 13 member institutions, 11 of which field football programs. With the usual 11-game schedule, Central’s readmission would seriously put a crimp in the conference mandated hopes of scheduling bigger and better opponents if no open dates are available. So what to do? Simple math says two divisions (North and South) and an eight-game schedule. That would leave three (in some years, four) open dates for MEAC teams to find FCS powers and BCS teams to play.

Yet and still, you have to pose the question of dissent in the ranks. Many people foolishly assume that Delaware State University is looking to join up with the Northeastern Conference, which will gain full scholarship status as soon as 2010, not to mention the fear that Florida A&M will attempt another BCS reclassification effort in the near future. I’m sure those rumors and thoughts are news to Allen Sessoms and James Ammons, but let’s play the game anyway. First the divisional breakdown:

North (Football)

Delaware State

Morgan State

Howard

Hampton

Norfolk State

South

Bethune-Cookman

Florida A&M

North Carolina A&T

North Carolina Central

South Carolina State

Winston Salem State

This alignment keeps a majority of the natural rivalries the conference has alive (especially the Battle of the Bay and the Florida Classic) and leaves room for teams to schedule the UDs, Appalachian States and Kent States of the world. However if the conference does indeed splinter as some are predicting, what would another HBCU conference look like? Here’s my take on what could possibly become a third D-I HBCU conference.

Southeastern Athletic Conference or South Atlantic Athletic Conference:

FAM

BCU

South Carolina State

North Carolina A&T

Alabama A&M

Albany State

A&T

Central

And what’s left of the MEAC would probably be:

DSU

Hampton

Howard

Norfolk

Morgan

WSSU

Splintering the MEAC wouldn’t work because neither hypothetical conference would have enough football playing members to be considered for an autobid in the FCS playoffs, and with that field expanding to 20 teams in 2010, it just makes more sense to keep the conference together as a whole so two MEAC schools could get in on a regular basis.

So the overall point of this is that the MEAC should stand pat and stick together and work as a unit to make that conference the best it can possibly be in FCS from top to bottom. It can be done if all parties involved work together towards the one goal all MEAC schools covet; holding their own and thriving against the best competition possible.

HBCU Players in NFL Camps

May 6, 2008

As the first full week of May signals the beginning of mini-camps around the National Football League, there are several HBCU athletes who were either picked in April’s NFL Draft, signed on with teams as Un-drafted Free Agents or got invites to team mini-camps. Here is the full list, along with brief into about each player, along with the chance that you could see these players representing your alma mater on Sundays this fall.

Dominique Rogers-Cromartie, cornerback, Tennessee State University. Drafted 16th overall in the first round by the Arizona Cardinals.

Notes: The cousin of San Diego Chargers star cornerback Antonio Cromartie, Dominique (First Team All Ohio Valley Conference in 2007) has as much skill and ability as his more famous (for now) relative. Tall and rangy at 6′1 1/2, 184 pounds, Rogers-Cromartie’s speed and quickness will benefit the Cardinals’ defense as the franchise looks to shed its decades-long label as losers.

Kendall Langford, defensive end, Hampton University. Drafted with the 66th pick overall (third round) by the Miami Dolphins.

Notes: One of the more dominant defenders in the MEAC over his four years at Hampton, Langford (6′6, 295 lbs.) is as nasty and as confident as any D-lineman you could have ever seen playing I-AA football. It was hard to run or pass on the Pirates as Langford, a three-time all-MEAC First Team selection, compiled 236 tackles and 23.5 sacks in his career and led the nation’s best I-AA scoring defense (14 ppg) in 2005. Look for Langford to have a big impact as the Bill Parcells era begins in 2008.

William Hayes, defensive end, Winston Salem State University. Drafted with the 103rd pick in the fourth round by the Tennessee Titans.

The man Rams faithful have affectionately dubbed “Big Play” will take that big play ability to Music City to help an aging Titans defensive front (the team recently re-signed long time Titan and former Eagle Jevon Kearse). At 6′2 and 260 pounds, Hayes doesn’t fit the mold of an NFL DE size-wise, but his quickness will make up for it, as he was the defensive leader of a Rams team that won five games in its first season competing in Division I-AA.

Jaymar Johnson, wide receiver, Jackson State University. Drafted with 193rd pick in the sixth round by the Minnesota Vikings.

The lone offensive skill player from any black college chosen in the draft, Johnson will be vying for a roster spot on a team that is sure to have opportunities for receivers, as defenses will no doubt key on all-world running back Adrian Peterson. Johnson (6′0, 176 pounds) caught 36 passes for 613 and scored seven touchdowns for the SWAC champion Tigers.

Alex Hall, defensive end, St. Augustine’s College. Drafted with the 231st pick in the seventh round by the Cleveland Browns.

Notes: Hall, the first player drafted from St. Augustine’s since the school restarted its football program in 2002, will look to crack a Browns roster whose 3-4 defensive scheme might give the 6′6, 250-pound DE a chance to be a key contributer to a team that missed the playoffs by virtue of a tiebreaker with Tennessee last season. Hall comes to Lake Erie as the Falcons all-time leader in sacks (25) and tackles for loss (54).

Notable Undrafted Free Agents.

Shaheer McBride, wide receiver, Delaware State University. Signed by the Philadelphia Eagles.

Notes: With the size (6′2, 205 lbs.) and the stats (DSU’s all-time leading receiver), McBride will be looking to crack the roster of a team that Donovan McNabb says is hungry for playmakers. Time will tell if McBride can help the Birds in 2008.

Marcus Dixon, defensive end, Hampton University. Signed by the Dallas Cowboys.

Notes: Anyone who is familiar with Marcus Dixon’s story should wish him the best, but his immense size (6′5, 275) and talent should give him a shot on a not-so-deep Cowboys defensive line come training camp.

James Lee, offensive tackle, South Carolina State University. Signed by the Cleveland Browns.

Notes: Joe Thomas? Check. Hank Fraley at Center? Check. Maybe the best OT in the MEAC? Check. Lee will more than likely make a Browns roster searching for consistency along the O-line to open holes for Jamal Lewis and protect current starting QB Derek Anderson.

Clyde Edwards, wide receiver, Grambling State University. Signed by the Jacksonville Jaguars.

Notes: The Tigers’ all-time leader in receptions and receiving yards, Edwards joins a Jaguar team that looks to take the next step in David Garrard’s first full season as a starter. Having capable weapons like Edwards on the outside should help their chances.

Bobbie Williams, safety, Bethune-Cookman University. Signed by the Jacksonville Jaguars.

Notes: Another success story in the defensive backfield under legendary coach Alvin “Shine” Wyatt, Williams will join fellow Wildcat Alum Rashean Mathis on a stingy Jags defense that ranked in the top half of the NFL in total defense (giving up 313.8 yards per game).

We will update the progress of these players as well as all HBCU NFL hopefuls during the course of the NFL calendar year.

About Me

May 6, 2008

C.J. Writes is currently involved in two lifelong love affairs of the heart; sports and writing.  An August 2007 graduate of Delaware State University, C.J. is currently employed at a weekly newspaper in rural Maryland.  Sports On The Yard was created on May 6, 2008 to give C.J. an outlet to write and talk about his most pressing sporting interest: Black College Athletics.  After covering Delaware State University for the campus newspaper, The Hornet, C.J. is ready to share his thoughts, opinions and insight on HBCU sports with his readership and the general public.

He can be reached at sportsontheyard@gmail.com if you’d like to engage him in arguments about the HBCU tradition at his alma mater or who has the best fish fry in the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference.