THE GAME
North Carolina Central University "Eagles" vs. Norfolk State University "Spartans"
THE KICKOFF
Saturday, Nov. 12, 2022 – Kickoff at 2:00 p.m.
THE SITE
William "Dick" Price Stadium (30,000 capacity) - Norfolk, Va.
THE RECORDS
N.C. Central (7-2 overall, 3-1 MEAC); Norfolk State (1-8, 1-2 MEAC)
MEDIA COVERAGE
TV/Video: Live on ESPN+
QUICK HITS
• With a win over Norfolk State on Saturday, NCCU will clinch its first MEAC football championship since 2016 and earn a trip to the 2022 Cricket Celebration Bowl (Dec. 17 / 12 p.m. / Mercedes-Benz Stadium / Atlanta).
• NCCU leads the series with Norfolk State 11-7. The Eagles have won six of the last eight match-ups, while the Spartans were victorious (38-21) on Nov. 9, 2019, in Durham.Â
• Both head coaches are graduates of NCCU and former college teammates. NCCU head coach
Trei Oliver graduated in 1998, while Norfolk State's Dawson Odums graduated in 1997.
• NCCU junior quarterback
Davius Richard leads the MEAC in passing yards (1,996), passing touchdowns (20), and rushing touchdowns (11).
• After NCCU's 50-21 homecoming victory over Howard, the Eagles extended their home win streak to six games, including a 4-0 record inside O'Kelly-Riddick Stadium this season. In those four home victories, NCCU out-scored its opponents 209-55, averaging 52.3 points and 502.8 yards of total offense per contest. Defensively, the Eagles held the opposition to just 13.8 points and 214.5 total yards per game.Â
• NCCU junior quarterback
Davius Richard is just the third Eagle in NCCU history to reach 7,000 career yards of total offense (7,370) and 6,000 career passing yards (6,149).
• NCCU junior running back Latrell "Mookie" Collier ranks second in the conference with 655 rushing yards, averaging 72.8 ground yards per contest and 5.5 yards per carry, with six rushing touchdowns.
• NCCU sophomore receiver
Devin Smith and senior receiver
E.J. Hicks are tied for second in the league with six receiving touchdowns. Smith ranks fourth in the conference in both receptions (31) and receiving yards (415).
• NCCU junior
Corey Bullock was tagged as the best offensive guard in the NCAA Division I-FCS, according to a position-by-position breakdown on NCAA.com.
• NCCU leads the NCAA Division I-FCS in third down conversions with a success rate of 58.3% (70-for-120), and red zone defense, holding opponents to points on 18 out of 28 trips inside the 20-yard line (64.3%).
• NCCU tops the MEAC and ranks seventh in the nation (FCS) in scoring offense, averaging 39.1 points per game. The Eagles scored 40 points or more in three straight games for the first time in 37 years, and they have scored more than 40 points in five of nine games this season, including three 50-point performances.
• NCCU junior quarterback
Davius Richard is fourth in the nation (FCS) in points responsible for, averaging a MEAC-high 20.9 points per game. Richard has passed for 1,996 yards and 20 touchdowns, and has rushed for 613 yards and 11 touchdowns, leading the league with an average of 289.9 yards of total offense per outing.
• NCCU junior safety
Khalil Baker is 12th in the nation (FCS) with four interceptions. Baker registered a pick in each of the Eagles' first four games this season. As a team in 2021, NCCU totaled five interceptions.
• Seventeen NCCU Eagles have already earned their undergraduate degrees, and are currently pursuing a master's degree or second degree.
• Among NCCU's 44 student-athletes listed on the season-opening offensive and defensive two-deep chart, 25 (57%) are underclassmen (16 sophomores, 9 freshmen), including 14 underclassmen (9 sophomores, 5 freshman) on offense, while 28 (64%) are from North Carolina.Â
• NCCU is under the direction of third-season head coach
Trei Oliver, who was an all-region safety and punter (1994-97) at NCCU, as well as an Eagles' assistant coach (2003-06).
•
Davius Richard's 140 rushing yards at New Hampshire on Sept. 17 are the most by an NCCU quarterback in 23 years.
• Following the 28-13 win over North Carolina A&T in Bank of America Stadium on Sept. 3, NCCU improves its record to 6-2 in games played in an NFL stadium since 2000.
• NCCU won three consecutive games to end the 2021 season as the MEAC runner-up with a 4-1 conference record and a 6-5 overall mark.
• Since the start of the 2012 season, NCCU has scored 43 touchdowns on defense and special teams, including a 33-yard interception return by
Khalil Baker at New Hampshire on Sept. 17.
• NCCU's
Davius Richard needs four passing yards to become just the second quarterback in NCCU history to record 2,000 passing yards in three consecutive seasons, joining NCCU hall of famer Earl Harvey (1985-88). Richard threw for 2,020 yards in 2019, and 2,133 yards in 2021.Â
• NCCU's
Davius Richard's 6,149 career passing yards is third at NCCU, needing 191 yards to move into the second spot. Richard ranks third in total offense with 7,370 yards, only trailing NCCU legends Earl "Air" Harvey (10,667; 1985-88) and Malcolm Bell (7,844; 2013-16). Richard's 47 career passing touchdowns ranks third in NCCU history, trailing Adrian Warren (48) and Harvey (86).
• Running back Latrell "Mookie" Collier led NCCU with nine touchdowns (6 rushing/3 receiving) last season. The West Virginia native also topped the Eagles in 2019 in touchdowns scored with five trips to the end zone (3 rushing/2 receiving).
•
Davius Richard's 74-yard touchdown run versus S.C. State (Oct. 30, 2021) is the longest rush by an NCCU quarterback since Lawrence Fuller raced 74 yards against Morris Brown on Sept. 30, 2000.
• As a freshman in 2019, NCCU quarterback
Davius Richard achieved the sixth-best passing performance in school history versus Norfolk State (Nov. 9, 2019), amassing 384 passing yards with three touchdowns, completing 30 of 46 throws. Only NCCU hall of fame quarterback Earl "Air" Harvey (1985-88) has thrown for more passing yards, as he holds the top five single-game passing efforts in school history.
THE SERIES
This will be the 19th football meeting between NCCU and Norfolk State since the teams first met in 1981. NCCU leads the series 11-7, and the Eagles have won six of the last eight match-ups, but the teams have split the past four meetings.
11/06/2021 - NCCU 38, NSU 36 - 2OT (Durham, N.C.)
11/09/2019 - NSU 38, NCCU 21 (Durham, N.C.)
10/20/2018 - NCCU 36, NSU 6 (Norfolk, Va.)
10/21/2017 - NSU 28, #25 NCCU 21 (Durham, N.C.)
9/24/2016 - NCCU 34, NSU 31 (Norfolk, Va.)
10/31/2015 - NCCU 24, NSU 16 (Durham, N.C.)
11/15/2014 - NCCU 19, NSU 14 (Norfolk, Va.)
11/16/2013 - NCCU 24, NSU 13 (Durham, N.C.)
11/04/1995 - NSU 27, NCCU 6 (Durham, N.C.)
9/10/1994 - NSU 26, NCCU 24 (Norfolk, Va.)
9/11/1993 - NCCU 30, NSU 20 (Durham, N.C.)
9/17/1988 - NCCU 10, NSU 7 (Norfolk, Va.)
9/19/1987 - NCCU 28, NSU 20 (Durham, N.C.)
10/12/1985 - NSU 32, NCCU 14 (Durham, N.C.)
10/6/1984 - NSU 29, NCCU 26 (Norfolk, Va.)
10/8/1983 - NCCU 47, NSU 6 (Durham, N.C.)
10/9/1982 - NSU 14, NCCU 9 (Norfolk, Va.)
11/14/1981 - NCCU 27, NSU 20 (Durham, N.C.)
THE LAST MEETING
(Nov. 6, 2021) NCCU 38, NSU 36 (2OT): North Carolina Central University overcame a 21-point deficit to capture a thrilling, double-overtime, homecoming victory over Norfolk State University, 38-36, in front of 10,027 fans at O'Kelly-Riddick Stadium.
THE COACHES
NCCU:
Trei Oliver (N.C. Central, 1998) is in his third season as a college head coach. With 23 years of college coaching experience that includes five conference championships and three Black college football national titles, Oliver returned to his alma mater as North Carolina Central University's 24th head football coach in December 2018. A native of Yorktown, Virginia, Oliver earned all-conference and all-region honors as a defensive back and punter during his four-year playing career at NCCU from 1994-97. The 1998 graduate later returned to NCCU as an assistant coach from 2003-06, helping the Eagles to back-to-back Central Intercollegiate Athletic Association (CIAA) championships in 2005 and 2006.
Norfolk State: North Carolina Central University alumnus Dawson Odums is in his second season as head coach at Norfolk State. A native of Shelby, North Carolina, Odums has more than 20 years of collegiate coaching experience. Most recently, Odums enjoyed a stellar 10-year run in the Southwestern Athletic Conference at Southern University in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. Odums directed Southern to a winning record in each of his eight full seasons at the helm of the program, including a 5-1 mark in the abbreviated 2021 spring season. In his last five seasons, the Jaguars posted a 29-6 SWAC record. His overall record with the Jaguars was 63-35. During his playing days at NCCU from 1993-96, Odums amassed 139 tackles with 40.5 stops for a loss and 13.5 sacks. He earned All-CIAA Second Team distinction as a senior in 1996, after registering 63 tackles, including a team-high 19.5 tackles for a loss of 73 yards and 5.5 sacks.
HOME SWEET HOME
The Eagles extended their home win streak to six games by posting a 4-0 record inside O'Kelly-Riddick Stadium this season. In those four triumphs, NCCU out-scored its opponents, 209-55, averaging 52.3 points and 502.8 yards of total offense per contest. Defensively, the Eagles held the opposition to just 13.8 points and 214.5 total yards per game. That equates to a differential of +38.5 points and +288.3 total yards per outing.
SPREADING THE WEALTH
NCCU quarterbacks have been distributing the wealth of the MEAC's top passing offense, as eight Eagles have more than 100 receiving yards and seven have 12 or more receptions. In addition, eight Eagles have caught touchdown passes. Sophomore
Devin Smith (31 receptions, 415 yards) and senior
E.J. Hicks (21 catches, 365 yards) lead the way with six trips to the end zone each.
ALUMS AS HEAD FOOTBALL COACHES AT NCCU
Trei Oliver is the third alumnus to lead the NCCU football program, following in the footsteps of Bishop Harris, a 1963 graduate who coached the Eagles from 1991-92, and Herman Riddick, a 1933 graduate who guided the Eagles to a school record 112 victories from 1945-1964.
YOUTH MOVEMENT
Among NCCU's 44 student-athletes listed on the season-opening offensive and defensive two-deep chart, 25 (57%) are underclassmen (16 sophomores, 9 freshmen), including 14 underclassmen (9 sophomores, 5 freshman) on offense. Of the nine freshmen, seven are true freshmen, who were playing high school football last year. With nine seniors on the depth chart, 35 Eagles (80%) are projected to return next season (10 juniors, 16 sophomores, 9 freshmen).
FOCUS ON RECRUITING NORTH CAROLINA
The NCCU football program's emphasis on recruiting talent in North Carolina is demonstrated with 28 Eagles calling the Tar Heel state their home, out of the 44 student-athletes listed on the team's season-opening two-deep chart (64%). The next most-represented states are South Carolina and Florida with three each, followed by Virginia and Maryland with two apiece.
EAGLES TURN DEFENSE, SPECIAL TEAMS INTO POINTS
Since the start of the 2012 season, the Eagles have demonstrated a knack for finding the end zone when the offense is off the field. In the past 110 games, NCCU has scored 43 touchdowns on defense and special teams, including a 33-yard interception return by
Khalil Baker at New Hampshire, two in 2021, two in 2019, two in 2018, three in 2017, three in 2016, six in 2015, five in 2014, nine in 2013 and 10 in 2012. In that time, the Eagles have made trips to the end zone on 16 punt returns, seven kickoff returns, three blocked field goal returns, 13 interceptions and four fumble recoveries.Â
COMMUNITY SERVICE LEADER
NCCU senior defensive end
Jessie Malit (Concord, N.C.) won the 2020-21 STATS Perform FCS Doris Robinson Scholar-Athlete Award, presented to the nation's top FCS student-athlete who excels both in the classroom and in the community and was named to the 2021 Allstate AFCA Good Works Team. Malit spearheaded the NCCU Student-Athlete Advisory Committee's E.A.G.L.E.S. (Educated Actions Generate Lifelong Empowerment & Success) Vote initiative in October 2020, including a campus-wide March to the Polls event (289 out of a possible 315 eligible student-athletes registered to vote [92%], including 100% of the football team), organized a book drive to create a library in his mother's home village in Kenya (currently has collected more than 400 books with a goal of 1,000), volunteered at a battered women's shelter, led his church youth group in providing food and shelter for homeless men, volunteered at the Food Bank of North Carolina, and has advocated for support for poverty issues including housing, food security and quality education. The SAAC (Student-Athlete Advisory Committee) Vice President at NCCU, he owns a 3.305 overall grade point average while pursuing a bachelor's degree in political science with a concentration in pre-law and theory, and is on track to graduate in December 2021, with plans to attend graduate school to study public policy.
SIX NCCU EAGLES VOTED TO PRESEASON ALL-MEAC TEAMS
Six North Carolina Central University Eagles earned recognition on the 2022 Preseason All-MEAC Football Team. NCCU junior quarterback
Davius Richard, junior offensive lineman
Corey Bullock, junior placekicker
Adrian Olivo, and junior return specialist
Brandon Codrington were voted to the Preseason All-MEAC First Team, while senior defensive lineman
Jessie Malit and junior defensive back
Manny Smith were selected to the Preseason All-MEAC Second Team.
• Richard (Jr., 6-3, 215, Belle Glade, Fla.) claimed All-MEAC Second Team recognition in 2021, after ranking second in the MEAC with 2,496 yards of total offense, an average of 226.9 total yards per contest. He threw for 2,133 yards to become just the second quarterback in NCCU history to register more than 2,000 passing yards in consecutive seasons, while completing 58.0% of his passes (177-for-305) and accounting for 23 total touchdowns (15 passing, 8 rushing). After his first two seasons (2019, 2021), Richard ranks eighth on NCCU's all-time career passing list with 4,153 passing yards, and seventh in career total offense with 4,761 total yards.
• Bullock (Jr., 6-4, 315, Accokeek, Md.) captured All-MEAC Second Team merit last season, topping the Eagles with a grade of 85%, along with team-highs of 14 pancake blocks and nine knockdowns. He played multiple positions on the offensive front, surrendering just one sack in 11 games.
• Olivo (Jr., 5-10, 185, Plant City, Fla.) garnered an All-MEAC First Team citation after leading the MEAC with 11 field goals made and ranking second in the nation in field goal percentage (91.7%), converting 11 of 12 field goal attempts with a long of 43 yards. He also topped the Eagles in scoring with 58 points.
• Codrington (Jr., 5-9, 180, Raleigh, N.C.) earned All-MEAC First Team and BOXTOROW HBCU All-America awards as the third-leading punt returner in NCAA Division I-FCS with a MEAC-best 15.0-yard punt return average. He also ranked second in the league with a 22.5-yard kickoff return average.
• Malit (R-Sr., 6-3, 250, Concord, N.C.) received All-MEAC Third Team honors after collecting 28 tackles with 5.5 stops behind the line of scrimmage. His 3.5 sacks tied for the team lead and ranked fifth in the conference.
• Smith (R-Jr., 6-0, 195, Laurel Hill, N.C.) placed third on the squad with 61 tackles, including a team-high 44 solo stops, with a sack, two pass break-ups, an interception, two forced fumbles and a fumble recovery. He was named Defensive MVP of the MEAC/SWAC Challenge with 10 takedowns, a sack, a forced fumble and a fumble recovery in the win over Alcorn State.Â
ABOUT NCCU FOOTBALL
• North Carolina Central University is in its 11th season of full NCAA Division I (FCS) athletics competition as a member of the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference.Â
• The Eagles have won 11 conference championships as members of the Central Intercollegiate Athletic Association (1953, 1954, 1956, 1961, 1963, 1980, 2005, 2006) and the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference (1972, 1973, 2016), and have made three appearances in the NCAA Division II playoffs (1988, 2005, 2006). The Eagles won back-to-back football conference championships and a Black College National Championship in their final two years in the Division II ranks (2005 and 2006) before starting the transition to Division I in 2007.
• During its storied gridiron tradition, NCCU has produced 149 all-conference selections (first team), 70 all-Americans, 41 NFL draft picks, 11 conference championships and two Black College National Championships (1954, 2006).
• Three Eagles have represented NCCU on the National Football League's grandest stage - the Super Bowl. The first NCCU Eagle to make a Super Bowl appearance was Richard Sligh, who was a reserve tackle with the Oakland Raiders in Super Bowl II against the Green Bay Packers on Jan. 14, 1968. Sligh, who holds the distinction as the tallest player in NFL history (7'0"), played at NCCU from 1962-64 and was later drafted by the Raiders in the 10th round of the 1967 NFL draft. On Jan. 24, 1982, former NCCU Eagle Louis Breeden was a starting cornerback for the Cincinnati Bengals in Super Bowl XVI against the San Francisco 49ers. Earlier in the season (Nov. 8, 1981), Breeden intercepted a pass thrown by San Diego Chargers quarterback Dan Fouts and returned it a team-record 102 yards for a touchdown. The following year, he was selected as a First-Team All-Pro. He completed his 10-year NFL career with 33 interceptions for 558 return yards and two touchdowns. The third Eagle to play in the Super Bowl was Ryan Smith with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers on Feb. 7, 2021, as Smith became the first NCCU Eagle to play in a Super Bowl victory.
• The first Eagle selected in the NFL Draft was Matt Boone, who was taken by the Giants with the eighth pick in the 18th round in 1956. The latest Eagle announced during the NFL Draft was Ryan Smith, who was chosen by the Buccaneers in the fourth round in 2016. NCCU's highest draft pick was Doug Wilkerson, who was selected in the first round with the 14th overall pick of the 1970 NFL Draft by the Oilers. The Eagles have also had three second-round NFL draft picks, including Robert Massey in 1989 by the Saints, Charles Smith in 1975 by the Broncos and Chuck Hinton in 1962 by the Browns.Â
• HBCU football pioneer John Brown, who represented NCCU (then North Carolina College) on the gridiron in the 1940s, was one of the first to play professional football out of a historically Black college or university. Brown shares the honor with Ezzret Anderson of Kentucky State and Elmore Harris of Morgan State, who all began their professional football careers in 1947. Brown and Anderson were teammates on the Los Angeles Dons, while Harris was a member of the Brooklyn Dodgers. According to NCCU records, Brown was the first of the three to sign a professional football contract. He played center and linebacker with the Dons from 1947-49, before moving to the Canadian Football League.