Poll has JSU finishing last
http://clarionledger.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20050730/COL0504/507300330/1025
July 30, 2005
Poll has JSU finishing last
By Rick Cleveland
rcleveland@clarionledger.com
Think things will get easier for James Bell and the Jackson State football team? Not if the predictions of SWAC coaches and sports information directors hold true. The Tigers ? coming off a 4-7 season in 2004 ? are picked to finish last in the league this year.
BIRMINGHAM ? Where the Jackson State football Tigers are concerned, one Old Testament phrase seems to fit best:
"Oh how the mighty have fallen."
Jackson State, for so long the SWAC's dominant football program, goes into the 2005 season picked to finish dead last in the East Division of the SWAC by the league's coaches and sports information directors.
Yes, last.
Dead last.
And that's a first for Walter Payton's school.
Behind Alabama State. Behind Alabama A & M. Behind Alcorn State.
Behind even Mississippi Valley State, a program Jackson State has owned (45 victories, five defeats and two ties) over the years.
"That hurts; that really hurts; it's got to be a first and it better be a last," said JSU junior running back David Kinnebrew at SWAC Media Day here Friday. "No offense to Mississippi Valley, but based on our tradition that hurts and it hurts bad."
Safety Cletis Gordon, the Tigers' lone pre-season first team All-SWAC selection, took it a step further.
"It's an insult," Gordon said. "It's an insult to us, and to our alumni and fans. It will definitely be a motivational factor."
'Looks awfully weird'
The pre-season poll had other long-time SWAC watchers shaking their heads.
Take for instance MVSU athletic director Lonza Hardy, who first went to work in the SWAC in 1980 as the sports information director at Alcorn.
"It looks awfully weird, doesn't it?'" Hardy said. "For so many years, Jackson was the most feared team in the SWAC. They dominated the '80s and much of the '90s. It just doesn't look right.
"To me," Hardy continued, "it's a sign of the other schools upgrading their programs."
Perhaps, but the poll also signals just how miserable these last two seasons have been at JSU. James Bell's first team finished 2-10. Last year, the Tigers improved to 4-7.
"Based on last year and the year before, the poll isn't all that surprising," Kinnebrew said. "But after the spring our confidence is a lot higher. We have a rededication to the program that will be evident on the field."
Pick cause for motivation
The Tigers, Kinnebrew said, will not lack for motivation.
"When somebody tells you you're going to finish last, that's big-time motivation to prove them wrong," he said.
The Tigers need all the motivation they can get, because the poll also shows that the league's coaches and publicists realize just how heavy graduation losses were at JSU. The Tigers lost 12 starters, including three each in the offensive and defensive lines. They also lost their leading passer, their leading receiver and their leading tackler.
Nevertheless, Bell remains as optimistic as ever ? and few are more optimistic than he. Some people see their glass as half empty, some as half-filled.
Bell sees his as overflowing.
During his press conference remarks, Bell pointed out the 2004 Tigers lost three games by a total of 11 points. He bragged about about a recruiting class that includes 18 linemen.
"We were better last year than we were the year before. We will be better this year," Bell declared.
Pre-season polls mean nothing, of course. Last year, Alcorn was picked to win the East. The Braves finished third. On the other hand, Jackson State was picked to finish fourth in 2004. That's exactly where the Tigers finished, ahead of only Valley.
A season later, the Tigers are picked to finish even lower, and that surprised Willie Totten, who knows better than most how dominating the Tigers have been.
"I'm sure that's hard to swallow for them," Totten said. "But predictions are just that ? predictions. I wouldn't be surprised if they surprised some people. I just hope it's not Valley."
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Contact Columnist Rick Cleveland at (601) 961-7210 or
rcleveland@clarionledger.com.