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#Indiana Morehead State
kenttsterling · 2 years
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Frank Reich hits bottom! #Colts set record! #iubb, #Pacers, @ButlerMBB tonight! 3-0 possible!
Frank Reich hits bottom! #Colts set record! #iubb, #Pacers, @ButlerMBB tonight! 3-0 possible!
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stubobnumbers · 9 days
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Week Three - Saturday, Part Two.
Saturday, Part Two G5 vs G5:
100 Miles Of Hate: Western Kentucky at Middle Tennessee State - 6 PM ESPN+. WKU leads the series, 37-35-1.
The Shula Bowl: Florida International at Florida Atlantic - 5 PM ESPN+. Florida Atlantic leads the series, 16-5.
Appalachian State at East Carolina - 3 PM ESPNU. App State leads the series, 21-12.
Kennesaw State at San Jose State - 6 PM TruTV. First meeting.
New Mexico State at Fresno State - 9:30 PM TruTV. Fresno State leads the series, 19-1.
Massachusetts at Buffalo - 12 PM CBSSN. Buffalo leads the series, 8-6.
Coastal Carolina at Temple - 1 PM ESPN+. First meeting.
Hawaii at Sam Houston State - 6 PM ESPN+. First meeting.
Jacksonville State at Eastern Michigan - 6 PM ESPN+. Jax State leads the series, 1-0.
South Florida at Southern Mississippi - 6 PM ESPN+. Southern Miss leads the series, 3-1 (Last meeting - 2004).
UTEP at Liberty - 5 PM ESPN+. Liberty leads the series, 1-0.
P4 vs FCS: Northern Iowa at Nebraska - 6:30 PM BTN. First meeting.
Eastern Illinois at Northwestern - 6:30 PM BTN. Northwestern leads the series, 2-0.
Prairie View A&M at Michigan State - 2:30 PM BTN. First meeting.
North Carolina Central at North Carolina - 5 PM ESPN+. First meeting.
VMI at Georgia Tech - 2:30 PM ESPN+. Georgia Tech leads the series, 14-1.
G5 vs FCS: Bethune Cookman at Western Michigan - 5:30 PM ESPN+. First meeting.
Colgate at Akron - 5 PM ESPN+. Colgate leads the series, 1-0.
Gardner Webb at Charlotte - 5 PM ESPN+. Charlotte leads the series, 3-1.
Morgan State at Ohio - 2:30 PM ESPN+. First meeting.
South Carolina State at Georgia Southern - 5 PM ESPN+. Georgia Southern leads the series, 8-0.
Other Games: Morehead State at Montana - 2 PM ESPN+. Idaho State at North Dakota - 1 PM ESPN+. Albany (NY.) at Idaho - 3 PM ESPN+. Nicholls State at Sacramento State - 8 PM ESPN+. Weber State at Lamar - 6 PM ESPN+. William & Mary at Wofford - 5 PM ESPN+. Towson at Villanova - 2:30 PM Youtube. Stephen F. Austin at McNeese State - 7 PM ESPN+. South Dakota at Portland State - 3 PM ESPN+. North Dakota State at East Tennessee State - 4:30 PM ESPN+. Mercer at UT Chattanooga - 5 PM ESPN+. Lindenwood at Missouri State - 6 PM ESPN+. Incarnate Word at Southern Illinois - 6 PM ESPN+. Eastern Washington at Southeastern Louisiana - 6 PM ESPN+. Austin Peay at Central Arkansas - 6 PM ESPN+. Western Carolina at Elon - 5 PM Flo Video. Monmouth (NJ.) at Maine - 2:30 PM Flo Video. Abilene Christian at Northern Colorado - 3 PM ESPN+. Western Illinois at Illinois State - Noon ESPN+. Charleston Southern at Richmond - 1 PM Flo Video. Duquesne at Youngstown State - 1 PM ESPN+. Georgetown at Sacred Heart 12:00 pm SNY / $espn+ Video DII: Kentucky State at FVSU 12:00 pm GrioTV / Vide Howard vs. Morehouse 2:00 pm CNBC / Peacock Video Alabama State at Samford 6:00 pm $espn+ Video Augustana at South Dakota State 6:00 pm $espn+ Video / Midco (cable) Black Hills at St. Thomas 1:00 pm $Midco Sports Plus Campbell at Rhode Island 5:00 pm $Flo Video / WLNE's MeTV CCSU at Saint Francis 11:00 am NEC Front Row Video DII: Central State at Savannah State 5:00 pm $espn+ Video Dayton at Indiana State 5:00 pm $espn+ Video Delaware at North Carolina A&T 12:00 pm $Flo Video / WMYV (cable) Edward Waters at Alcorn 6:00 pm ?SWACDN? Georgetown Kentucky at Alabama A&M 6:00 pm SWACDN Grambling at A&M Commerce 6:00 pm $espn+ Video Hampton at Norfolk State 3:00 pm $espn+ Video Holy Cross at Bryant 1:00 pm $Flo Video Indiana Wesleyan at Valparaiso 6:00 pm $espn+ Video DII: Lane at Benedict 5:00 pm $espn+ Video Lehigh at LIU 11:00 am NEC Front Row Video Louisiana Christian at Houston Christian 6:00 pm $espn+ Video Marist at Lafayette 11:30 am $espn+ Video Mercyhurst at Robert Morris 11:00 am $espn+ Video Merrimack at Bucknell 5:00 pm $espn+ Video MVSU at Murray State 6:00 pm $espn+ Video North Alabama at UT Martin 6:00 pm $espn+ Video North Greenville at The Citadel 11:00 am $espn+ Video / Nexstar (cable) Northern Arizona at Utah Tech 8:00 pm $espn+ Video Point at Davidson 6:00 pm $espn+ Video Southern at Jackson State 6:00 pm $espn+ Video Stetson at Furman 1:00 pm $espn+ Video Stonehill at New Hampshire 5:00 pm $Flo Video Stony Brook at Fordham 12:00 pm $espn+ Video UAPB at Tennessee State 6:00 pm HBCU GO Video UC Davis at Southern Utah 7:00 pm $espn+ Video Virginia Lynchburg at Presbyterian 12:00 pm $espn+ Video Wagner at Delaware State 2:00 pm $espn+ Video West Georgia at Eastern Kentucky 5:00 pm $espn+ Video Western Oregon at Cal Poly 7:00 pm $espn+ Video
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Watch Indiana brushes off missed alternative, takes on Morehead State - Indiana News
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famu720 · 2 years
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NCAA 🏈 week 10 afternoon finals: Air Force 13 Navy 7 Hawks 24 boilers 3 🐐 31 wahoos 28 UK 21 Mizzou 17 Bucks 21 NW 7 🦎 41 gig ems 24 Bugs 28 gobbles 27 Gophers 20 big ♥️ 13 Wisky 23 🐢 10 🐸 34 TTRR 24 🌊 27 🌀 13 Holy Cross 42 Lehigh 14 Yale 🐕 69 brown 🟤 17 Duquesne 35 sacred 💜 28 OT ⚔️ 34 RoMo 21 WKU 59 UNCC 7 NC A &T 49 Norfolk State 24 SFU 38 G town 24 Penn 28 Cornell 21 Kennesaw St 44 UTM 27 Davidson 56 Stetson 48 2OT ND 42 Indiana St 7 Sic'ems 38 boomaz 35 Fordham ♈ 59 Bucknell 17 Lafayette 21 Colgate 16 The 🦬 12 👑 0 LIU 29 CCSU 20 W&M 20 Hampton 14 URI 26 Maine 22 Cola 🦁 21 Harvard 20 Hail 2 Pitt 19 🍊 9 Princeton 17 Dartmouth 14 🌪️ 31 WVU 14 Stony Brook 24 Morgan St 22 KU 37 OK st pokes 16 Quax 49 🦬 10 UC 20 Navy 10 Dayton 52 PC 28 Sparty 23 illini 15 🦉 54 USF 🐂 28 We r Penn State 45 IU 14 UCF 35 Memphis 28 Wazzu 52 🎄 14 🗽 21 🐖 19 Puppies 27 Vols 13 SD 20 Mo St 13 Delaware St 27 Q 🐶 24 OT WCU 36 wofford 27 St Thomas 34 Valpo 7 UTC 31 citadel 21 NCCU 50 Howard 21 Elon 27 Albany 3 Towson st 27 Nova 😺 3 NDSU 🦬 56 WIU 17 YSU 19 ISU 17 Bryant 43 🐫 37 TN Tech 35 Linden 34 Sac St 33 Weber St 30 Idaho 48 EWU 16 G St 😺42 USM 14 Grambling 36 UAPB 10 Samford 🐶 34 VMI 15 LA Tech 40 MTSU 24 Troy 23 ULL 17 Utah st 27 Los lobos 10 NW state 41 TX A &MCC 14 UIW 73 H Town Baptist 20 ULM 31 T St 😺 30 Po State 35 NCU 🐻21 🕷️ 40 NH 34 Meep meep 44 komodos 38 2OT Marist 🦊 31 Morehead 21 Butler 🐶 26 USD 23 Montana St 41 NAU 38 USA 38 Ga. So. 31 Bama St sting 37 B Cook 22 Mean 🍏 52 FIU 14 SE LA 47 Lamar 31 EKU 42 C AR 14 Guvs 38 UNA 31 SE MO 42 TSU 0 🐇 31 UNI 28 (at Laurens, South Carolina) https://www.instagram.com/p/CkmdNcAuF0k/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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katsidhe · 4 years
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13.21 Roadtrip Itinerary
I have a certain obsessive and deathless curiosity with regards to the ill-defined time gap and geographical barriers in 13.21. 
My friend, dauntless, has created a tourist guide from the Nada Tunnel in KY to Dayton, OH. Now, I’m not saying that this trip definitely happened in 13.21. But we don’t know it DIDN’T happen, which is the much more important point.  
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1. Start your journey at the historic Nada tunnel! Built in 1911, this 900-foot railway tunnel is the closest thing Kentucky has to a mountain pass. This is also the highest elevation you’ll experience during your trip - a whopping 1,306 ft above sea level! Remember to stay hydrated and watch for signs of altitude sickness.
2. Next, pass through Winchester, Kentucky, named the “Nicest Place in Kentucky” by Reader’s Digest in 2019. Take the opportunity to check out the Kentucky Bluegrass Heritage Museum, home of the Pioneer Telephone Collection. Reader’s Digest has odd taste.
3. Your next stop is Morehead State University, my best guess for the location of the treacherous Morehead Tunnel. Keep an eye out for vampire hordes or rogue ceiling fans - they’ll getcha. And don’t forget to check out the towns of Pinchem, Rabbit Town, Salt Lick, Sharkey, and Zag on the way!
4. No trip to Kentucky would be complete without stopping at the Creation Museum! Learn how the earth is 6000 years old for just $39.95 - or try the combined Ark Park experience for $79.95! If you’re looking for employment, however, you should be willing to sign a statement saying you’re a straight young-earth creationist. You’re also a stone’s throw away from Union, KY and US Hwy 42, featured prominently in 4.10, “Heaven and Hell.”
5. Can’t wait to see Dayton? Try Dayton, Kentucky (motto: “Big city fun with a small community feel”)! You’ll be able to cross the Ohio River, the only significant geographical barrier on your journey. Also, apparently they have nice bars?
6. If one Winchester isn’t enough, give Winchester, Ohio a shot! There are at least three. I’m talking about the one in Adams County (not the one near Winchester-Vega road or the ghost town south of Newville). The Confederate Army raided it at one point.
7. Continue through Lynx (do not follow signs for Peebles or Bacon Flat) to arrive in Friendship, Ohio. Because the journey is about the friends we made along the way. :) You could have stopped by Friendship, Indiana when you were at the Creation Museum, if you’d wanted to visit a trash state.
8. Here’s a stop the kids will love: The Paul A. Johnson Pencil Sharpener Museum near the Hocking Hills. (Again, altitudes approach 1000 feet, so exercise caution.) Containing over 3,400 pencil sharpeners, this museum is the largest of its kind in America. Visitors rave, “If you’re in the area, why not?” and “Nice restrooms!”
9. Your penultimate stop is Lebanon, Ohio. It may not be the geographic center of the country, but it does have an annual Horse Drawn Carriage Parade. You’ll be passing just north of Gist Settlement, Cozzadale, Lynchburg, and Blanchester (you’ve heard of the Winchesters; get ready for the Blanchesters).
10. A mere 24 more miles, and you’ve made it to the bustling acropolis of Dayton, Ohio, founded on April Fool’s Day in 1796. Its namesake, Capt. Jonathan Dayton, got wrapped up in Burr’s whole “King of Mexico” thing, and Dayton was the site of peace accords that ended the Bosnian War. Check out the US Air Force Museum! And... that’s about it. But you made it, against all odds! Great job!
Allow 181 hours of continuous hiking.
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1-1-s1ay-2-2 · 5 years
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On the trip to Indiana, we drove through Kentucky. From Ashland to Morehead to Frankfort (the capitol) to Lexington to Louisville...and I must say, Kentucky is a beautiful state! Go Wildcats 💙
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Find more of my experiences @deafinitelyhear
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dickinsonstate · 5 years
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Dickinson State among 42 Teacher Prep Programs Recognized for National Excellence in Educator Prep
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DSU now 1 of 238 total providers in the U.S. meeting rigorous CAEP Accreditation Standards to better prepare the teachers of tomorrow.
The Council for the Accreditation of Educator Preparation (CAEP) announced that Dickinson State University (DSU) is one of 42 providers from 23 states and the District of Columbia to receive accreditation for their educator preparation programs. The spring 2019 review by the CAEP Accreditation Council resulted in 42 newly-accredited EPPs, bringing the total to 238 providers approved under the CAEP Teacher Preparation Standards – rigorous, nationally recognized standards that were developed to ensure excellence in educator preparation programs.
“These institutions meet high standards so that their students receive an education that prepares them to succeed in a diverse range of classrooms after they graduate,” said CAEP President Dr. Christopher A. Koch. “Seeking CAEP Accreditation is a significant commitment on the part of an educator preparation provider.”
CAEP is the sole nationally recognized accrediting body for educator preparation. Accreditation is a nongovernmental activity based on peer review that serves the dual functions of assuring quality and promoting improvement. CAEP was created by the consolidation of the National Council for Accreditation of Teacher Education and the Teacher Education Accreditation Council. It is a unified accreditation system intent on raising the performance of all institutions focused on educator preparation. Approximately, 800 educator preparation providers participate in the CAEP Accreditation system, including some previously accredited through former standards.
Educator preparation providers seeking accreditation must pass peer review on five standards, which are based on two principles:
Solid evidence that the provider’s graduates are competent and caring educators, and
Solid evidence that the provider’s educator staff have the capacity to create a culture of evidence and use it to maintain and enhance the quality of the professional programs they offer.
If a program fails to meet one of the five standards, it is placed on probation for two years. Probation may be lifted in two years if a program provides evidence that it meets the standard.
“Our students and instructors should be very proud of the work they are doing. We’ve set a very high bar for our teacher prep program and CAEP Accreditation validates the hard work we are doing,” said Dr. Deborah Secord, associate professor and chair of the department of teacher education at DSU. “Our students and their families are investing in an education program that is designated as nationally accredited for teacher preparation.”
Dickinson State University joins 41 other providers to receive accreditation this spring, bringing the total number to 238 CAEP-accredited providers from 43 states, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico.
Class of spring 2019:
Alabama A&M University American Museum of Natural History – NY Brigham Young University – UT Capital University – OH Crowley’s Ridge College – Arkansas Dickinson State University – North Dakota Duke University – North Carolina Emporia State University – Kansas Fairmont State University – West Virginia George Mason University – Virginia Indiana University of Pennsylvania James Madison University – VA John Carroll University – OH Longwood University – VA Loyola University Chicago Marshall University – WV Minnesota State University, Mankato Minot State University – ND Morehead State University – KY Mount St. Joseph University – OH New York Institute of Technology Northeastern State University – OK Northwestern State University of Louisiana Nova Southeastern University – FL Nyack College – NY The Ohio State University Ohio Wesleyan University Purdue University Fort Wayne – IN Queens College – NY Shenandoah University – VA Southeast Missouri State University Spalding University – KY University of the District of Columbia University of Saint Mary – KS University of the Ozarks – AR University of Sioux Falls – SD University of Virginia Virginia Polytechnic Institute & State University Walden University – MN Wesley College – DE West Virginia Wesleyan College York College – NE
The Council for the Accreditation of Educator Preparation (www.CAEPnet.org) advances excellence in educator preparation through evidence-based accreditation that assures quality and supports continuous improvement to strengthen P-12 student learning.
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eticketsin-blog · 3 years
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IUPUI Jaguars vs. Morehead State Eagles
Tue            Dec 21, 2021            7:00PM                                                
   IUPUI Jaguars vs. Morehead State Eagles         
  Indiana Farmers Coliseum, Indianapolis, IN, United States of America                                                                                        
http://www.eticketsin.com/results-ticket?evtid=4859015&event=IUPUI+Jaguars+vs.+Morehead+State+Eagles
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lvaartebella · 6 years
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Vignette: 2018 Hadley Prize Recipient KCJ Szwedzinki
The Community Foundation of Louisville, in partnership with Louisville Visual Art, is pleased to announce that Louisville-based multi-media artist KCJ Szwedzinski is the winner of the sixth annual Mary Alice Hadley Prize for Visual Art. The $5,000 award is an opportunity for local artists to enhance their careers through a targeted enrichment experience of their own design.
Szwedzinki’s submission outlines a series of research trips, “designed to synthesize seemingly disparate bodies of knowledge (and) archival practices for historical information and my personal inherited legacies.” Her intention is to, “broaden my ability to make work that is rooted in my own Judaic heritage, while facilitating engagement of a more universal audience.” Her itinerary is:
·      Seven days in San Francisco to visit the Jewish Contemporary Museum and The Holocaust   Center.
·      Fourteen days in Washington DC and Philadelphia to visit the United Sates Holocaust Memorial Museum and Archives (DC) and to take a six-day course, entitled “The History of Artists’ Books since 1950”, at the Rare Book School (Philadelphia).
·      Three days at the Genealogy Center in Fort Wayne Indiana
Memory is a central preoccupation of art in the early years of the 21st century. Perhaps it is the turning of the century, or perhaps it is because we can now look further into our immediate past than earlier periods. The last 100 or more years have allowed a continuum of understanding and a voracious appetite for ongoing social narrative that is endlessly fed by digital technology. That continuum is important to Szwedzinski:
“Every time a story is retold it takes on a new life,” she states. “Simultaneously preventing that information from being lost to history while slowly transforming into something new altogether. These mechanisms for transmission slowly shape collective memory across time and ultimately have a huge hand in shaping personal identity. These are the tools and teachers of belief and belonging. My work reflects on belonging, displacement, and the shifting nature of narrative across time and considers the intersection of art, belief, ethics, and atrocity.”
“Printmaking, glassblowing, and kiln forming are the main processes I use in my work. Although producing very different visual results, print and glass have historically played a large role in the documentation of history and the passing on of stories. From the printing press to the spreading of political propaganda, printmaking has always disseminated information to multiple people. Glass as a material often goes unacknowledged but plays a huge role in informing our experience of the world, whether its creating barriers to keep us safely in or to isolate information and objects within a museum or archive setting. I particularly find it interesting that glass and printmaking have been silent, but active, witnesses throughout history and as an artist concerned with legacy, these processes both present rich and dynamic stories that support the concepts I choose to work with.”
Szwedzinski will be interning at the Museum of Glass in Tacoma Washington for the months of July and most of August. 
Louisville Visual Art will honor KCJ Szwedzinski on Thursday, June 21, from 5:30-7:00 p.m. in their Portland gallery at 1538 Lytle Street, 40203. The reception is free and open to the public.
Recent exhibitions (2018):
·      Doors: A Collaborative Book Project, University of Louisville, KY
·      Blue Grass Bienniel: A Juried Exhibition of Kentucky Artists, Claypool-Young Art Gallery, Morehead, KY
·      Glass Art Society International Online Student Exhibition
·      Freeze State: Disassociating From the Here and Now, print exchange and exhibition (co-curator), Louisville, KY (upcoming)
·      It’s Your World: Art About the Future of Community, 1619 Flux: Art + Activism, Louisville, KY (Juried)
·      What’s the Theme?, OPEN Community Arts Center, Louisville, KY (Group Show)
·      OH + 5: Ohio Border 10th Biennial, Dairy Barn Arts Center, Athens, OH (Juried)
Hometown: Jacksonville Florida Education: MFA candidate. University of Louisville, Louisville, KY (expected May 2019); BA cum laude, Art History and Printmaking, University of North Florida, Jacksonville, FL, 2009 Website: www.kcjszwedzinski.com
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Written by Keith Waits. Entire contents copyright © 2018 Louisville Visual Art. All rights reserved.
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stubobnumbers · 16 days
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Saturday, September 7th - Part Three.
Saturday, September 7th - Part Three. (Rest of the G5, FCS, D2, and D3).
G5 vs FCS: Idaho at Wyoming - 2:30 PM TruTV. First meeting.
Northern Colorado at Colorado State. Colorado State leads the series, 20-0-1.
UT Chattanooga at Georgia State - 6 PM ESPN+. UT Chattanooga leads the series, 1-0.
Eastern Kentucky at Western Kentucky - 6 PM ESPN+. Western Kentucky leads the series, 49-34-3.
Gardner Webb at James Madison - 5 PM ESPN+. First meeting.
Merrimack at Connecticut. First meeting.
Missouri State at Ball State - 1 PM ESPN+. First meeting.
Sacramento State at Fresno State. Fresno State leads the series, 2-0.
Southern Utah at UTEP - 8 PM ESPN+. First meeting.
Saint Francis (PA.) at Kent State - 1:30 PM ESPN+. First meeting.
Stephen F. Austin at North Texas - 6:30 PM ESPN+. North Texas leads the series, 22-4-3.
Texas Southern at Rice - 6 PM ESPN+. Rice leads the series, 2-0.
Utah Tech at UNLV. First meeting.
William & Mary at Coastal Carolina - 6 PM ESPN+. First meeting.
Southeastern Louisiana at Southern Mississippi - 6 PM ESPN+. Southern Miss leads the series, 19-3.
FCS Games: Montana at North Dakota - 6 PM ESPN+. Incarnate Word at South Dakota State - 6 PM ESPN+. Tennessee State at North Dakota State - 2:30 PM ESPN+. Northern Iowa at St. Thomas (MN.). Maine at Montana State - 7 PM ESPN+. Portland State at Weber State (Big Sky) - 7 PM ESPN+. Villanova at Colgate - 5 PM ESPN+. Drake at Eastern Washington - 6 PM ESPN+. Southern Illinois at Austin Peay - 6 PM ESPN+. Valparaiso at Youngstown State - 1 PM ESPN+. Wofford at Richmond - 2:30 PM Flo Video. Texas A&M Commerce at UC Davis - 9 PM ESPN+. Illinois State at North Alabama - 6 PM ESPN+. Indiana State at Eastern Illinois - 6 PM ESPN+. New Hampshire at Holy Cross - 1 PM ESPN+. Campbell at Western Carolina - 12 PM ESPN+. Charleston Southern at Furman - 6 PM ESPN+. UT Martin at Southeast Missouri State - 6 PM ESPN+. Tarleton State at Houston Christian - 6 PM ESPN+. Mercer at Bethune Cookman - 2 PM Youtube Video. Lafayette at Monmouth (NJ.) - Flo Video. Morgan State at Towson - 5 PM Flo Video. Fordham at Central Connecticut State. Wagner at Lehigh - 11 AM ESPN+. Bucknell at VMI - 12:30 PM ESPN+. Butler at Murray State - 6 PM ESPN+. Central Arkansas at Lindenwood - ESPN+. Elon at North Carolina Central - 5 PM ESPN+. Georgetown at Marist - 11 AM ESPN+. Mississippi Valley State at Lamar - 6 PM ESPN+. Prairie View A&M at Northwestern State - 6 PM ESPN+. South Carolina State at The Citadel - 11 AM ESPN+. Stonehill at Stony Brook - 2:30 PM Flo Video. West Georgia at Abilene Christian - 7 PM ESPN+.
FCS vs Non-FCS: Edinboro at Robert Morris 5:00 pm ATTPI / NEC Front Row Video Savannah State at Southern 6:00 pm GrioTV Arkansas Baptist at UAPB 7:00 pm TBA Catawba at Davidson 6:00 pm $espn+ Video Central Washington at San Diego 3:00 pm $espn+ Video Franklin Pierce at Bryant 3:00 pm $Flo Video Kentucky Christian at Morehead State 5:00 pm $espn+ Video Kentucky State at Alabama A&M 5:00 pm Youtube Video Lane at Jackson State 6:00 pm Youtube Video Miles at Alabama State 5:00 pm $espn+ Video Presbyterian at Erskine 6:00 pm $Flo Video Tuskegee at Grambling 6:00 pm HBCU Go UVA Wise at ETSU 4:30 pm $espn+ Video Virginia State at Norfolk State 1:00 pm $espn+ Video Virginia Union at Hampton 5:00 pm $Flo Video Warner at Stetson 5:00 pm $espn+ Video Western Oregon at Idaho State 5:00 pm $espn+ Video Winston Salem at North Carolina A&T 6:00 pm $Flo Video
D2 ranked game: Bemidji State (20th) at Minnesota State (8th).
Three D3 ranked games: John Carroll (19th) at UW-Whitewater (3rd). UW-River Falls (17th) at Alma (7th). John Hopkins (8th) at Ithaca (20th).
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famu720 · 2 years
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NCAA 🏈 week 9 finals: Mizzou 23 chikins 10 Puppies 42 🦎 20 Boomaz 27 🌀 13 Gophers 31 RU 0 Hawks 33 NW 13 War chant 41 bugs 16 ♥️ 🐔 48 deacs 21 The U 14 wahoos 12 4OT Irish 41 🍊 24 Illini 29 big ♥️ 9 Bucks 44 we r Penn State 31 Sonic 🤯 35 human Jukebox 0 🐷 41 war 🦅 27 UConn 13 BC 🦅 3 Miami Ohio 27 Akron 9 H Town 42 SFU 🐂 27 🐸 41 WVU 31 Toledo 27 EMU 24 UNCC 56 🍚 23 G St 😺 31 👑 17 UCF 25 UC 21 NMSU 23 uMass 13 Mean 🍏 40 WKU 13 K state 48 OK St pokes 0 Quax 42 Cal 🐻 24 Black n 🪙 42 RoMo 3 🐎 Express 45 Tulsa 34 🔵 Smurfs 49 CSU 🐏 10 Navy 27 🦉 20 OT USA 31 ♥️ 🐺 3 FIU 42 LT 34 2OT Vols 44 UK 6 BU 🐶 56 Morehead 20 LIU 50 Duquesne 48 2OT Chants 24 the 🦬 13 Morgan St 41 Q 🐶 14 CCSU 35 Wagner 7 SFU 44 sacred 💜 14 Colgate 13 Bucknell 7 Kennesaw St 30 ⚔️ 20 Marist 🦊 37 PC 7 Brown 🟤 🐻 34 Penn 31 G Town 30 Lafayette 20 Men of Troy 45 🐻 down 37 Drake 24 Stetson 17 Dayton 31 Valpo 24 Albany 59 Stony Brook 14 Towson st 52 Monmouth 48 Holy Cross 53 Fordham 52 OT 🕷️ 31 Maine 21 St Thomas 49 USD 34 Princeton 35 Cornell 9 Nova 😺24 Hampton 10 Harvard 28 Dartmoth 13 W&M 31 URI 30 Merrimac 17 Stonehenge 10 NC A &T 45 🐫 38 Wofford 48 ETSU 41 FU 24 UTC 20 Big 🔵 29 sparty 7 Sparky 😈 42 🦬 34 UU 21 wazzu 17 (Friday 🌃) Samford 38 citadel 3 EKU 28 SE MO 23 G 🕸️ 48 Bryant 40 NCCU 28 DSU 21 Howard 49 Norfolk State 21 YSU 45 SD 24 Linden 64 WMJL 23 MO St 🐻 64 WIU 14 🐰 49 Indiana St 7 Weber St 24 griz 21 Land 🦈 31 gig ems 28 UNI 37 SIU 36 Grambling 35 MC9 6 Utah Tech 44 SFA 41 UTM 52 HBU 28 Murray St 19 TSU 7 PV 58 B Cook 48 TN Tech 20 EIU 17 TX So 37 LIN CA 2 UIW 35 TX AMC 7 NDSU 24 IL St 7 Elon 27 Delaware 7 🐐 42 hail 2 Pitt 24 Bama St 🪲24 Bama A &M 17 ND 34 Abiline 31 JAX St 40 guvs 16 Po State 40 EWU 35 🐍 27 UAPB 6 Lamar 24 Nichols 17 C AR 🐻 64 UNA 29 UCD 59 cal poly 17 FAU 🦉 24 komodos 17 Sic'ems 45 TTRR 17 SHSU 40 Tarleton 21 SE LA 28 Mc Neese St 27 (at Laurens, South Carolina) https://www.instagram.com/p/CkUssLNLi8Z/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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OVERTONES LIVE CEMENTS ITS REPUTATION AS A VALUABLE ASSET TO THE LOCAL MUSIC SCENE WITH 100th SHOW
By: Lyssa Culbertson
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Renee Collins Cobb & Rachel Crowe; Photo by Arden Barnes
Music is a labor of love, whether you’re writing it, playing it, listening to it, promoting it, or involved in any facet in the industry. Anyone who knows anything knows that it’s not a profession—or hobby—you embark on to get rich: it’s heart work. It’s the soul of the matter. It’s the spirit of the passion. It’s a labor of love that takes a village to keep alive. Renee Collins Cobb, host of Overtones Live, is a force who embodies all of those qualities in her devotion to the Appalachian music scene. Along with her co-host Rachel Crowe, they showcase regional acts live from the historic and world-famous Austin City Saloon in Lexington, KY on Overtones LIVE. Not only is the show special because of the music it bestows upon the world from its grassroots framework, but it’s unique because it’s solely female ran—an impressive feat in today’s typically male-dominated industry.
Now entering its 100th show on March 10th, Overtones LIVE has provided a stage for countless artists to shine and share their gifts with audiences over the years. With its humble beginnings as a radio show recorded for Lexington Community Radio set at The Lyric Theater in Lexington for its first 75 episodes from January 2018-2020, the show has now grown to its current home at Austin City Saloon and is broadcasting on air at Radiolex WLXU, Forward KY Radio, WFMP, Pickup Country WSKV, and Trendkill Radio. Overtones’ format was unique due to its efforts to focus on the multicultural and multigenerational melting pot of genres and sounds found within the Appalachian region, with hour long shows showcasing four diverse acts and their unique sounds. In addition to live music played by some of the area’s finest, the show featured regular segments such as the inspirational “Talking About My Generation,” where according to Renee, “parent-child musical dream teams congregated in the studio to talk about what being a musician looked like and behaved like in their own generation and also opened a forum of productive discussion on what each generation feels they have and can learn from the other generation,” as well as the quarterly “Faculty Meeting” that brought together music faculty from across Kentucky from private studios to public universities, who also had ties into the local music scene. Throughout the duration of the show in its initial years, the music was flowing and listeners were sonically hungry for all the new artists that Overtones LIVE put on their paths. Renee, Rachel, and their team exemplified the notion of service throughout their devotion to artists and live music in the area.
Especially amidst a pandemic. Despite changing times brimming with uncertainty, Renee didn’t lose her vision or drive to serve the music world and found innovative ways to stay on the airwaves to bring the tunes to listeners once The Lyric shutdown due to COVID-related struggles. From March to June, the melodies continued to play out amongst the airwaves by reformulating and repurposing the shows to reflect Tributes to The Men of The Bluegrass, The Women of The Bluegrass, The Bands of the Bluegrass and Tributes to Harlan, Morehead, Eastern Kentucky and Louisville. Additionally, there was a Tributes to Teachers show, featuring Kentucky musicians who also serve as educators within the state, such as David and Teresa Prince—Appalachian royalty also known by their stage names Laid Back Country Picker and Honey. With easing restrictions came a traveling roadshow, as the Overtones LIVE crew traveled to the homes of musicians with home studios to record in, including frequent guests Mama Said String Band at Wave Garden Studio in Indiana.
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Cody Lee Meece; Photo by Jim Cundiff, Off the Trail Photography
The “aha moment” of figuring out how to continue recording the show by adapting the way it was recorded led to its current home at Austin City Saloon, where bands who had not played live in quite a while finally got the chance to do what they do best again. The reopening of restaurants, bars, and venues took Overtones LIVE from the studio to the stage, broadening the realm of possibilities. After a one month trial surrounding a combined vision with a theme referencing the origins of Austin City Saloon and its namesake Greg Austin, months later the show is in its six month of recording the LIVE format at the venue. Having the platform to record live at the saloon reshaped and redesigned the trajectory of the show, as it allowed magic to occur that previously had not. Now, a full band could perform, whereas the studio could only host a small group. Additionally, full concert video could now be recorded by Renee’s husband, Warren Cobb, further increasing the potential of the material shared on the show and successfully supporting artists in a myriad of ways by providing them not only a platform to have their voices and music heard, but also viable footage to share of their essence in live performances, which is pertinent to EPKs and booking. Since its debut at Austin City Saloon, Kevin Dalton and The Tuesday Blooms, Rifletown, Cody Lee Meece, Jenn Marie McDaniel & The Bruce, Eight Daze Sober, Bedford Band and Trippin Roots were a few of the acts featured early out of the gate. Presented by Whitney Adams, Overtones LIVE also brought a Nashville flair to Kentucky by hosted songwriters Blue Foley and Russell Sutton to start to present a Master Class to local singer/songwriters in the area. Despite another shutdown in the fall of 2020, Renee and Rachel were able to continue recording without interruption within the bounds of state rules and regulations, furthering the reach of their content. Nowadays, the show thrives in a socially distanced and mask-required environment, allowing audiences to be captivated by the talent on stage each time, providing a sense of normalcy to a once deprived artistic outlet.
Overtones LIVE continues to be an asset to the local music community in Kentucky and surrounding areas. The work that Renee and Rachel do, as well as Renee’s work with her and Warren’s business Listen Locally, is vital to not only artists but fans alike. Members of the listenership, attendees, and performers echo my sentiments:
Overtones Live is such a great experience for musicians, bands, fans and music lovers.This is because it is hosted and managed by musicians, music lovers and simply put, great people. To have the honor of sharing music to a live recording audience, to have the outlet to detail the stories behind the songs and the creative process is an opportunity that many musicians and bands never get. The Overtones Live staff is top tier when it comes to creating a comfortable and an art conducive environment, with great hospitality for the live audience, a wonderful space to perform, magical sound engineering, professional delivery of the programing and the kindest and warmest of hosts. Rifletown thanks the entire Overtones Live team for making us feel welcomed and special enough to take the stage and for also allowing our family and fans the chance to be part of the show! Thank you: Renee Collins Cobb, Rachel Crowe, Warren Cobb, Garrick Howell, Chris Slater, Austin Brashear and David Howard. --Jason Howard, Lead vocalist of Rifletown
I’ve been fortunate to have appeared on overtones several times in the past 3 years. I am so Grateful for Renee and all involved for what they do to support regional musicians. It’s helped get my music out to he heard by new listeners and also has lead me to meet some other amazing musicians and songwriters. Overtones has become somewhat of a home place that has brought together a family of artists. Thank you so much for building an amazing community and connection between artists and listeners. --Kevin Dalton, of Kevin Dalton & The Tuesday Blooms
It is amazing to hear 100 unique episodes of pure musical talent and the stories behind the songs through Overtones. Many congrats on reaching a milestone to help spread the love of music and people who create it! May there be even more episodes that celebrate the musicians. --Jessica Blankenship, Kentucky Country Music
It was clear from the day that Renee walked into Lexington Community Radio - now RadioLex - that she had a deep care for local music and was thoroughly dedicated to the idea of Overtones and the planning it would take to pull it off, an idea that has now grown beyond her initial pitch and has extended into social media and live performances as well. The fact that the show has made it to such a huge milestone is a testament to her commitment! I’ve enjoyed seeing so many wonderful musicians and collaborators on the program and am looking forward to what the next 100 episodes will bring to the local and regional music community. --Mary Clark, Station manager at WLXU
We were very excited to work with people who’s goal has always been to support the local music scene. Our experience with Overtones has been nothing but good vibes and mutual love for the local music scene. We were very honored to be a small part of something great and would always choose to do so in the future. We are excited for what Overtones and Renee has in store for the music community in the future! --Justin Riley, Eight Daze Sober
I am super thankful for the folks behind Overtones Live! The support, dedication and time put into recording, editing and promoting local music and musicians goes above and beyond. They not only promote your music across multiple media outlets regularly, but they truly care about your well-being as friends who treat you like family, lending a helping hand or word of advice in time of need! Thank you for all that you do!! --Jenn Marie McDaniel
Overtones LIVE is recorded live at Austin City Saloon, Kentucky’s home for live, local music, and brought to you by Listen Locally, produced by Warren Cobb. Sound is engineered by Chris Slater and Garrick Howell and mixed at Jobu’s Rum Recording Studio. Below are some examples of live shows recorded at ACS:
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finishinglinepress · 4 years
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FINISHING LINE PRESS BOOK OF THE DAY: Lucky Boy by Mark Lilley
TO ORDER ONLINE GO TO: https://www.finishinglinepress.com/product/lucky-boy-by-mark-lilley/
RESERVE YOUR COPY TODAY
Mark Lilley was born and raised in Cynthiana, Kentucky. He earned his undergraduate degree from Morehead State University and his MFA in poetry from Butler University. His poems have appeared in Connecticut Review, The Louisville Review, The Midwest Quarterly, Naugatuck River Review, Poet Lore, Plainsongs, Sow’s Ear Poetry Review, Southern Indiana Review, and other journals. Between poems he works in a leadership position for a mutual fund service company. He currently lives in Fishers, Indiana, with his wife and two children.
ADVANCE PRAISE FORLucky Boy by Mark Lilley
Mark Lilley’s Lucky Boy is filled with hints of unsettledness: bus tickets, a storm front, a rootless father, any number of nervously-smoked cigarettes. In cars, vans, pickups, and big rigs, characters seem almost continually on the move. What remains in place, however, is the poet—his unwavering allegiance to memory and attention, as if the poems are a response to Lowell’s question “Yet why not say what happened?” In a plain style that is deceptively simple, Lilley chooses just the right word or concrete detail, creates subtle sonic echoes, and leaps suddenly, briefly, into startling metaphors, so these clear-eyed poems are an expression, finally, of something deep and nearly unnameable—some sense that, whatever our afflictions and yearnings, it is still possible, and necessary, to love what we have been given. It is possible to consider ourselves lucky. We are lucky to have this beautiful, wise book.
–Chris Forhan, author of My Father Before Me: A Memoir, Black Leapt In, The Actual Moon, The Actual Stars, and Forgive Us Our Happiness
Mark Lilley’s debut collection, Lucky Boy, is a graceful and devastating volume, offered through the voice of a survivor. These poems narrate the struggles, dysfunctions and failures of an American family through fearless disclosures, exquisite language, and gentle ironies.
I am deeply struck by this poet’s unwavering eye and ear and narrative balance—his aesthetic depth and steadiness in the thick of these disastrous, broken characters and settings. Lilley’s tonal control is heroic, given the traumatized interior of these narrations.
Lilley’s poems remind us that the poem comes bravely, urgently out of the seizure of human despair. It is their artistic and humane victory to transport us to these realms with compassionate insights, empathy and hard-earned tenderness. These poems take us on the impossible yet inevitable journey to personal reckoning.
Mark Lilley’s lovely and relentless poems answer our human failures with a quiet embrace, acceptance, and a loving ferocity. This is a book always to keep within reach.
–George Eklund, author of Altar, Wanting To Be an Element, The Island Blade, and Each Breath I Cannot Hold
Enter the deeply emotional world of Mark Lilley‘s Lucky Boy and you will encounter people striving to escape the inescapable, whether their fates or their hearts. As these poems skillfully navigate the hard truths of poverty, alcoholism, and infidelity, they are punctuated by acts of kindness—from a trucker, a bereft mother, a river. Lilley’s poetry itself is a profound act of unequivocal kindness.
In its devotion and attentiveness to the broken family, each poem “hold[s] [a] match steady until the stub glows.” These poems depict both the wronged and the wrongdoer with an abiding compassion. By the book’s end, we are listening to a river, understanding that everyone’s been wronged somehow.
Lilley’s beautifully understated images sing to us as we grieve “through patches of clover and foamflower, / and what they found downstream.”
I love these lyrical vignettes for their tenderness, for how they address losses often too deep to name. “Why men drift, where men linger, / what happens when a woman receives word.” They speak with the hard-earned eloquence of a grief addressed and absorbed.
This is a book the world needs, especially now. It is a reminder to be empathetic, humble, and forgiving. These poems will teach you to care.
–Alessandra Lynch, author of Daylily Called It a Dangerous Moment and It Was a Terrible Cloud at Twilight
#poetry #booklovers #FLPauthor
#preorder
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marco42james · 5 years
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Using Comics to Teach Chemistry (and more!)
C.A. Preece shows us how to do this.
From the Cool Cat Teacher Blog by Vicki Davis
Follow @coolcatteacher on Twitter
Science can be difficult for low to average readers. Today, we’ll dig into the power of comic books to help us teach difficult subjects to students by making learning reachable and approachable. C.A. Preece works to reach every learner by working to make science approachable and understandable.
Created by C.A. Preece
Sponsor: The U.S. Toyota Dream Car Art Contest invites youth, ages 4-15, to submit their original hand-drawn artworks that answer the question, “If you could design a car to make the world a better place, what would it look like?” Artwork submissions for this free youth art contest are accepted this year from November 1, 2019, through January 31, 2020. Teachers can download a FREE K-12 standards-aligned lesson plan on car design that includes STEM concepts and art. Go to www.ToyotaDreamCarUSA.com/CoolCat to download artwork guidelines, an entry form, official rules, and the lesson plan today. Encourage your students to create Toyota Dream Car artworks today.
Listen to the Show
Listen to the show on iTunes or Stitcher
Stream by clicking here.
Subscribe to the Show
  Get Credit! Some schools, districts, and organizations allow credit for listening to podcasts. Whether they do or don’t, to get the most out of listening you can use this Podcast PD Template Hyperdoc. Just make a copy and adapt it for your use or print it. If you don’t have Google Docs, just use this PDF.
Your Challenge with this Episode
Find a difficult subject and create a comic or find a comic to help make it more approachable. Reflect on what you learn in your learning journal.
C.A. Preece – Bio As Submitted
MY BACKGROUND I am a high school chemistry teacher and have been for seven beautiful years, now. Using facilitated diffusion, knowledge was beaten into my fertile mind at Morehead State University and the University of Kentucky granting me the power of holding a piece of paper that says: Bachelor’s of Science in Chemistry at Morehead State University as well as a Master’s of Arts in Teaching. In addition, I have taken 30+ graduate chemistry and education hours from the University of Kentucky in the pursuit of a Ph.D. in S.T.E.M. Education. Along with teaching and grad school, I write! My first publication was in July 2017 with CheMystery! A graphic novel aimed at providing quality chemistry knowledge through the lens of superheroes. Also, I do science consulting. I have had the pleasure of assisting Frank Barbiere, Greg Rucka and the creators of Doctor Puppet on projects.
MY PASSION Teaching, science and reading comics! I love comics of all kinds but the ones that truly win my heart are comics with great characters and even greater science. This medium is a great way to communicate many ideas and since science is so graphic, I think it can be a beautiful marriage when done right. Here are some of my favorite characters: Marvel- Captain America/Black Bolt DC- Firestorm Indy- Dr. Solar
PANELS on Science in Comics + Lexington Comic Con 2015 with Bob Hall and Kody Chamberlain + D.C.’s Awesome Con 2015 with Duncan Rouleau and Tom King + Baltimore Comic Con 2015 with Mark Waid and Ramona Fradon + Lexington Comic Con 2016 with Matt Hawkins and Nathan Fox + Indiana Comic Con 2016 with Neal Adams​ + Lexington Comic Con 2017 + Heroes Con 2017 with Josh Reynolds, Shari Brady, and Matt Brady + KSTA Conference 2017 on Using Science Comics in the Classroom with Josh Woodward + Derby City Comic Con 2017 with Megan Scholar + Lexington Comic Con 2018 with Jim Shooter and Erica Schultz + ConGlomeration 2018 + Indy Pop Con 2018
Blog: http://atomicuniverse.org/index.html
Twitter: @AtomicUniverse
Instagram: @Atomic_Universe
Kickstarter: Fire! Salt! Slime! https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/1547322454/fire-salt-slime
Disclosure of Material Connection: This is a “sponsored podcast episode.” The company who sponsored it compensated me via cash payment, gift, or something else of value to include a reference to their product. Regardless, I only recommend products or services I believe will be good for my readers and are from companies I can recommend. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission’s 16 CFR, Part 255: “Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising.”
The post Using Comics to Teach Chemistry (and more!) appeared first on Cool Cat Teacher Blog by Vicki Davis @coolcatteacher helping educators be excellent every day. Meow!
from Cool Cat Teacher BlogCool Cat Teacher Blog https://www.coolcatteacher.com/using-comics-to-teach-chemistry-and-more/
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junker-town · 5 years
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You can make a dang good NFL all-star team from non-FBS alums
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Some NFL legends have taken the path from unheralded recruit to small-school prospect to big-league stardom.
Being a five-star recruit won’t guarantee you a spot in the NFL, but it certainly makes it a little easier to get there. Playing for a powerhouse Power 5 program can turn you into a household name and inundate scouts with plenty of opportunities to study your game. A blue-chip pedigree can also help teams overlook a lackluster college career in hopes of banking on the unknown quantity of untapped potential.
But NFL rosters don’t solely consist of can’t-miss high school stars. Some of the league’s best players were under-appreciated teenagers who never earned the adoration of scouts or collegiate assistant coaches. There are several standouts who played their college ball in front of small or disinterested crowds before overcoming the odds and earning a spot in the pros. In fact, you could probably put together a pretty good all-star team filled with them.
Let’s do that. Let’s say you had to make a team of all the best NFL players who were enrolled from non-FBS colleges from 1978 onward — the year the NCAA split Division I into I-A and I-AA distinctions that would later become the FBS and FCS, respectively. How would it look? How many Hall of Famers would you find?
It turns out, a whole bunch. I padded out the depth chart with a handful of backups for the especially solid positions — settling with 22 players wasn’t an option thanks to the level of talent the NCAA’s lower levels have pumped into the league.
Here’s that slightly unbalanced but totally stacked roster of non-FBS programs.
QB: Kurt Warner, Northern Iowa Phil Simms, Morehead State
Warner’s Hall of Fame career was built on his ability to revive both the Rams and Cardinals en route to Super Bowl appearances at each stop. That journey began in Cedar Falls, Iowa, as a single-year starter for Northern Iowa, weaved through various low-level feeder leagues like the NFL Europe and Arena Football League, and eventually landed in St. Louis as a lottery ticket backup. This crooked path to greatness put him ahead of a host of other celebrated names among the least-lauded high school passers.
Simms gets tabbed for backup duty after a pair of NFL championships in a Giants career that seems downright quaint when stacked up against the high-powered offenses of the 2010s. Only seven times had passers ever thrown for 4,000+ yards in a season when he pulled off that feat (along with Neil Lomax and Dan Marino) in 1984. As of 2019, it’s been done 175 times.
Check out the list of also-rans:
Ken Anderson, Augustana
Steve McNair, Alcorn State
Tony Romo, Eastern Illinois
Rich Gannon, Delaware
Joe Flacco, Delaware (after starting at Pittsburgh)
Ron Jaworski, Youngstown State
Ken O’Brien, Cal-Davis
And that doesn’t even count 2019 starters like Jimmy Garoppolo or Carson Wentz. Good QBs can come from anywhere.
WR: Jerry Rice, Mississippi Valley State Terrell Owens, Tennessee-Chattanooga Andre Reed, Kutztown
Rice is the greatest NFL player to come out of the now-FCS, then I-AA after the 1978 split. One of the few receivers even in his orbit statistically is Owens, who managed to be a longtime game-changer both on and off the field. Reed, the third Hall of Famer in the bunch, was a force in the early 90s and part of the Bills’ fearsome offensive Cerberus alongside Jim Kelly and Thurman Thomas.
There are even a couple of stellar backups available. Jackson State’s Jimmy Smith had nine seasons in which he had more than 1,000 receiving yards, but he was largely underrated as he toiled away for the Jacksonville Jaguars. Alcorn State’s Donald Driver rose up from the seventh round of the 1999 NFL Draft to account for more than 10,000 receiving yards for the Packers.
RB: Terrell Davis, Long Beach State (kinda) Brian Westbrook, Villanova David Johnson, Northern Iowa
Tailback is one of the thinner positions culled from these ranks, but if we cheat a little we can still find a Hall of Fame veteran. Davis started his college career at Long Beach State, then wound up at Georgia after the school discontinued its football program. Otherwise, you’re looking at the ultra-versatile Westbrook to hold down the top spot on the depth chart.
Behind him is a useful receiving threat who can also churn out yardage on the ground, though Johnson’s spot on the team is dependent on proving he’s more than just a one-season wonder after failing to follow up on his breakout 2016 in Arizona.
FB: Larry Centers, Stephen F. Austin
Centers, who played from 1990 to 2003, was ahead of his time as a pass-catching dynamo out of the backfield who could also pick up blitzes in a pinch. If he came to the NFL two decades later, he’d be a perennial Pro Bowler. Instead, he only went three times, which is still pretty good.
TE: Shannon Sharpe, Savannah State Ben Coates, Livingstone
Two of the top pass catchers of the 90s each make the team, just in case we end up throwing a lot of 22-formation sets into the mix.
Sharpe, who spends his days in retirement waking up early to battle a purposefully contrarian Vandy grad, was the decade’s most dominant tight end — an athletic specimen who stretched defenses and chipped blockers despite suboptimal size. Coates was often the best thing about a woeful Patriots’ offense, serving as Drew Bledsoe’s No. 1 target in a pass-happy offense.
OL: Nate Newton, G/T, Florida A&M Matt Birk, C, Harvard Tom Newberry, G/C, UW-La Crosse Jahri Evans, T, Bloomsburg Larry Allen, G, Sonoma State Adam Timmerman, G, South Dakota State Tunch Ilkin, G/C/T, Indiana State
Protecting Warner and clearing a path for Westbrook is a heady brew of Hall of Famers and sturdy pros who range from the FCS to Division III. The headliner is Allen, who made six All-Pro teams while anchoring the Cowboys’ offensive line for 12 seasons and was athletic enough at 325 pounds to stop pick-sixes in progress. Behind him are a combination of players who can hold down multiple positions at an all-star level.
DE: Howie Long, Villanova Richard Dent, Tennessee State Michael Strahan, Texas Southern Jared Allen, Idaho State
There’s an embarrassment of riches when it comes to smaller-school pass rushers. I went four deep and still had to exclude Mark Gastineau (attended East Central University after Arizona State) and Lyle Alzado, whose alma mater — Yankton College — no longer exists.
Instead, you’ve got three Hall of Famers and Allen, who will likely join them once he’s eligible. Between them they’ve got 499 career sacks and the chops to completely terrorize opposing quarterbacks.
DT: John Randle, Texas A&M-Kingsville Clyde Simmons, Western Carolina Pat Williams, Northeastern Oklahoma A&M College
That pass-rushing punch only gets stronger with Randle leading things on the inside; the undersized tackle had nine seasons with 10+ sacks in his Hall of Fame career. He’s bolstered by an out-of-position Simmons, who moved inside late in his career but is best known for a 19-sack breakout season as an Eagles defensive end back in 1992.
If it’s thickness you crave, you can throw Williams into the lineup; the 317-pounder was a blocker-absorbing vacuum up front in 14 years as a pro.
LB: Karl Mecklenburg, Augustana Sam Mills, Montclair State London Fletcher, John Carroll Greg Lloyd, Fort Valley State
MORE BEEF. This lineup provides two run-stopping tackling machines in the middle and some extra power at the edge in Mecklenburg and Lloyd. The outside guys combined for more than 120 sacks, while Mills and Fletcher have nearly 3,300 career tackles between them.
And if you don’t like those guys, you could always sub in Bart Scott, Jessie Tuggle, Charles Haley, Mike Merriweather, Bryan Cox, or Jeremiah Trotter.
CB: Everson Walls, Grambling State Albert Lewis, Grambling State Aeneas Williams, Southern Darrell Green, Texas A&M-Kingsville
Cornerback is stocked with players who were very good for very long, including a pair of Eddie Robinson-coached bookends in Walls and Lewis, who have eight Pro Bowl selections together. They’re stuck in a rotational role behind Williams and Green, however — two Hall of Famers who played for a combined 34 seasons.
S: Eugene Robinson, Colgate Tyrone Braxton, North Dakota State Rodney Harrison, Western Illinois
There’s a lot of range and some big hits from our center fielders in this lineup. Robinson gave the league 16 solid years. Braxton was a versatile defensive back who could line up at either corner or safety and played a major role as Denver crashed through to glory in the late 90s. Harrison brought the lumber over a borderline Hall of Fame career with the Chargers and Patriots.
K: Adam Vinatieri, South Dakota State
Still going at age 46. Few kickers are surefire Hall of Famers, but Vinatieri’s one of them. He’s kicked 582 field goals so far in his career — most in league history and 141 more than the next closest active kicker. His 56 postseason field goals are the most the NFL’s ever seen by a double-digit margin.
P: Sean Landeta, Towson
A pretty good punter! Landeta stuck in the NFL for 21 seasons and was a three-time first team All-Pro. Like Simms, he won two Super Bowl rings with the Giants.
What if we had to make a starting 22 based on only active players? I’ve got some ideas there, too.
QB: Carson Wentz, North Dakota State
RB: David Johnson, Northern Iowa Jerick McKinnon, Georgia Southern Tarik Cohen, North Carolina A&T
FB: Kyle Juszczyk, Harvard
WR: Cooper Kupp, Eastern Washington Adam Thielen, Minnesota State Tyrell Williams, Western Oregon
TE: Delanie Walker, Central Missouri State Dallas Goedert, South Dakota State
OL: Terron Armstead, Arkansas-Pine Bluff J.C. Tretter, Cornell Julie’n Davenport, Bucknell Ryan Jensen, Colorado State-Pueblo Laurent Duvernay-Tardif, McGill (Canada) and, for depth, free agents Jermon Bushrod from Towson and Brandon Fusco from Slippery Rock
DE: Akiem Hicks, Regina (playing a bit out of position) Matt Judon, Grand Valley State Derek Rivers, Youngstown State
DT: Damon Harrison, William Penn Javon Hargrave, South Carolina State Brandon Williams, Missouri Southern
LB: Darius Leonard, South Carolina State Patrick Onwuasor, Portland State Samson Ebukam, Eastern Washington Todd Davis, Sacramento State
CB: Malcolm Butler, West Alabama Trumaine Johnson, Montana Josh Norman, Coastal Carolina Robert Alford, SE Louisiana
S: Jeff Heath, Saginaw Valley State Antoine Bethea, Howard
K: Adam Vinatieri, South Dakota State
P: Jordan Berry, Eastern Kentucky
You can find elite players from the NCAA’s smaller schools at every position in the league. Most of them can even be picked up on Day 3 of the NFL Draft or later. If you’re looking for underdogs just waiting for the opportunity to make good on Sundays, you can start looking toward the gridiron’s non-FBS programs on Saturdays first.
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stubobnumbers · 1 year
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College Football Breakdown - 2023 Week One.
College Football Breakdown - 2023 Week One.
Thursday Florida at Utah. Florida leads the series, 2-0.
Nebraska at Minnesota. Minnesota leads the series, 36-25-2. (Minnesota has won four straight.)
North Carolina State at Connecticut. NC State leads the series, 3-0.
Kent State at Central Florida. The series is tied, 2-2. (Kent State won the last two meetings.)
South Dakota at Missouri. First meeting.
Elon at Wake Forest. Wake Forest leads the series, 11-0-1.
Southern Utah at Arizona State. Arizona State leads the series, 1-0.
North Carolina A&T at UAB. First meeting.
St. Francis (PA.) at Western Michigan. First meeting.
Arky. - Pine Bluff at Tulsa. First meeting.
Rhode Island at Georgia State. Georgia State leads the series, 1-0.
FCS vs FCS: Delaware at Stony Brook. Eastern Illinois at Indiana State. Idaho at Lamar. Sacramento State at Nicholls State. Northern Colorado at Abilene Christian. Tennessee Tech at Furman. UC Davis at Texas A&M-Commerce. Valparaiso at Youngstown State. William & Mary at Campbell.
FCS vs Non D1 Teams: Western Oregon at South Dakota State. Shorter at Samford. Central Washington at Weber State. Tusculum at Kennesaw State. North Greenville at Charleston Southern. West Virginia State at Morehead State. Wisconsin - Stevens Point at Lindenwood.
Friday Louisville at Georgia Tech: Georgia Tech leads the series, 2-0.
Miami (Oh.) at Miami (FL.): Da U leads the series, 3-0.
Central Michigan at Michigan State: Michigan State leads the series, 8-3.
Stanford at Hawaii: Stanford leads the series, 3-0. (They last played in 1972).
Missouri State at Kansas: Kansas leads the series, 2-0.
Howard at Eastern Michigan: Eastern Michigan leads the series, 3-0.
Saturday Colorado at TCU: TCU leads the series, 1-0.
Tennessee vs Virginia: Tennessee leads the series, 3-1. (They last played in 1991).
Ohio State at Indiana: Ohio State leads the series, 78-12-5.
North Carolina vs South Carolina: North Carolina leads the series, 35-20-4.
West Virginia at Penn State: Penn State leads the series, 48-9-2. (They last played in 1992).
Boise State at Washington: Washington leads the series, 3-2.
Fresno State at Purdue: First meeting.
UTSA at Houston: Houston leads the series, 2-1.
Washington State at Colorado State: The series is tied, 1-1.
Coastal Carolina at UCLA: First meeting.
Rice at Texas: Texas leads the series, 74-21-1. (Texas has won 15 straight in the series.)
Arkansas State at Oklahoma: Oklahoma leads the series, 2-0.
Buffalo at Wisconsin: Wisconsin leads the series, 1-0.
California at North Texas: California leads the series, 1-0.
Nevada at Southern California: Southern Cal leads the series, 5-0. (They last played in 1929!)
Texas Tech at Wyoming: Wyoming leads the series, 3-2. (They last played in 1992.)
Middle Tennessee State at Alabama: Alabama leads the series, 2-0.
New Mexico at Texas A&M: Texas A&M leads the series, 5-0.
Toledo at Illinois: First meeting.
Utah State at Iowa: Iowa leads the series, 2-0.
Ball State at Kentucky: Kentucky leads the series, 1-0.
Old Dominion at Virginia Tech: The series is tied, 2-2.
Massachusetts at Auburn: First meeting.
Northern Illinois at Boston College: Boston College leads the series, 3-0.
East Carolina at Michigan: First meeting.
Akron at Temple: Temple leads the series, 15-7.
Tennessee State at Notre Dame: First meeting.
Portland State at Oregon: Oregon leads the series, 5-0.
Sam Houston State at BYU: First meeting.
Texas State at Baylor: Bylor leads the series, 9-0.
Towson at Marland: Maryland leads the series, 2-0.
Wofford at Pittsburgh: First meeting.
Southeastern Louisiana at Mississippi State: Mississippi State leads the series, 1-0.
Central Arkansas at Oklahoma State: Oklahoma State leads the series, 1-0.
Colgate at Syracuse: The series is tied 31-31-5.
Northern Iowa at Iowa State: Iowa State leads the series, 24-6-3.
Southeast Missouri State at Kansas State: First meeting.
Alabama A&M at Vanderbilt: Vanderbilt leads the series, 1-0.
Mercer at Ole Miss: Ole Miss leads the series, 1-0.
UT Martin at Georgia: First meeting.
Western Carolina at Arkansas: First meeting.
Bethune Cookman at Memphis: First meeting.
Eastern Kentucky at Cincinnati: Cincinnati leads the series, 2-0.
Monmouth (NJ.) at Florida Atlantic: First meeting.
South Carolina State at Charlotte: First meeting.
Albany (NY.) at Marshall: First meeting.
Bucknell at James Madison.
Gardner Webb at Appalachian State: Appalachian State leads the series, 6-0.
Northwestern State at UL Lafayette: UL Lafayette leads the series, 38-35-3.
Stephen F. Austin at Troy State: The series is tied, 3-3.
The Citadel at Georgia Southern: Georgia Southern leads the series, 19-5.
Alcorn State at Southern Mississippi: Southern Mississippi leads the series, 3-0.
Bryant University at UNLV: First meeting.
Incarnate Word at UTEP: UTEP leads the series, 1-0.
LIU at Ohio: First meeting.
Maine at FIU: Maine leads the series, 2-0.
Western Illinois at New Mexico State: New Mexico State leads the series, 1-0.
East Tennessee State at Jacksonville State.
G5 vs G5 South Alabama at Tulane: The series is tied, 1-1.
Louisiana Tech at SMU: Louisiana Tech leads the series, 4-2.
South Florida at Western Kentucky: South Florida leads the series, 4-3.
Army at UL Monroe: Army leads the series, 2-0.
Bowling Green at Liberty: Bowling Green leads the series, 1-0.
G5 vs FCS Idaho State at San Diego State: San Diego State leads the series, 2-0.
Robert Morris at Air Force: First meeting.
FCS vs FCS: Eastern Washington vs North Dakota State. Utah Tech at Montana State. Butler at Montana. Villanova at Lehigh. Austin Peay at Southern Illinois. Dayton at Illinois State. New Hampshire at Stonehill. UT Chattanooga at North Alabama. Drake at North Dakota. Tarleton State at McNeese State. Merrimack at Holy Cross. Wagner at Fordham. San Diego at Cal Poly. Presbyterian at Murray State. Southern University at Alabama State. Lafayette at Sacred Heart. Prairie View A&M at Texas Southern. Davidson at VMI. Marist at Georgetown. St. Thomas (MN.) at Stetson.
Other Saturday games: AIC at CCSU 12:00 pm NEC Front Row Video Arkansas Baptist at Houston Christian 6:00 pm $espn+ Video DII: Miles at Lane 2:00 pm $espn+ Video
Sunday And Monday Florida State vs LSU: Florida State leads the series, 8-2. (Florida State has won 5 straight in the series.)
Northwestern at Rutgers: Rutgers leads the series, 3-2.
Clemson at Duke: Clemson leads the series, 37-16-1.
Oregon State at San Jose State: Oregon State leads the series, 4-2.
Florida A&M vs. Jackson State 2:00 pm ESPN / ESPN Video DII: FVSU at Tuskegee 6:00 pm ESPNU / ESPN Video
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