This is the time of year every team in the Southland Conference hopes to get to dating back to spring football practice.
All that hard work and sweat has paid off for Stephen F. Austin and McNeese State. The Lumberjacks and Cowboys were the final two teams standing at the end of the regular season and both are hosting Football Championship Subdivision playoff games today.
McNeese State has grown accustomed to being in the postseason on a regular basis, but SFA is making its first trip since 1995.
Only two years removed from an 0-11 season, the Lumberjacks went 9-2 in 2009 and split the SLC championship with the Cowboys by going 6-1 in league play. SFA received the conference’s automatic bid to the playoffs thanks to a 16-13 victory over McNeese.
The Jacks welcome Eastern Washington to Homer Bryce Stadium today for a 2 p.m. kickoff.
Bearkat fans might remember the Eagles out of the Big Sky Conference. During Sam Houston State’s remarkable run to the FCS semifinals in 2004, quarterback Dustin Long guided the Kats to 21 unanswered points on the road in the fourth quarter to stun Eastern Washington 35-34 in the second round.
The Eagles and Lumberjacks both come into the contest on a roll. SFA has won three straight, while Eastern Washington (8-3) has rattled off four victories in a row.
But neither of those teams are as hot as McNeese State (9-2) right now. After dropping their SLC opener to SFA, the Cowboys went unbeaten the rest of the way.
At the same time the Jacks and Eagles are kicking off, McNeese will battle New Hampshire (9-2) at Cowboy Stadium. This marks the 14th time the Cowboys have been to the playoffs and sixth this decade.
Cowboys Stadium is one of the toughest places to go on the road and win at, but McNeese State better come to play. Two years ago when the Cowboys last made the playoffs, Eastern Washington cruised to a 44-15 victory in Lake Charles, La., in an opening-round upset.
Head-scratching move — It’s old news, but the fact that Nicholls fired Jay Thomas as head football coach is still a little shocking.
Thomas broke the news in an interview following the Colonels’ 45-30 upset over Southeastern Louisiana on Nov. 19.
“I was totally surprised by it,” Thomas told the Houma (La.) Today newspaper. “I planned to stay in Thibodaux a long time. My wife teaches at the university and both my girls were born there. I wish the next guy, the next staff, the best of luck.”
Thomas has had a lot to deal with since taking over the Nicholls program in 2004.
There have been several hurricanes that have come through Thibodaux, La. There was an academic scandal stemming from the previous staff, and the program has been hit hard by budget cuts, not to mention a lot of turnover on the coaching staff.
Thomas had some assistant coaching positions that needed to be filled this season, but with the university in a hiring freeze, he didn’t fill those spots until about a month before the season.
Despite missing some games when hurricanes Katrina and Rita hit in 2005, Thomas guided the Colonels to a share of the Southland Conference championship with a 5-1 league mark and 6-3 overall finish.
While Nicholls was only 27-35 in his six seasons as head coach, its going to be tough for the Colonels to find a quality candidate to take over the program.
After all, the new coach is going to have to deal with all those same problems, while trying to earn the trust of the locker room.
Sports
Southland Notebook: Representing the SLC
Jacks, Cowboys set to host opening-round playoff games today
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Bigger, faster and stronger, Hornets can’t wait to kick off 2012 football campaign
This spring, the Hornets have overhauled their offensive plans and head coach Shane Martin, his assistant coaches, and most importantly, the players are pumped about the changes they’ve made.
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Schallenberg: Kats now hoping résumé speaks for itself
Despite one of the best seasons in school and Southland Conference history, all the Bearkats can do now is watch scoreboards, wait and hope for the best.
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The thrill of victory ... the agony of defeat
The Bearkats knew exactly what they needed to get done and they were up to the task.
In order to reach championship day of the Southland Conference Baseball Tournament, the Kats would have to stave off elimination twice just to get to today’s final round.
The Bearkats nearly pulled it off. - Kats beat Texas A&M-Corpus Christi 4-3
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Alive and kicking: Bearkats still in hunt at SLC baseball tourney
With the possibility of going home early from the Southland Conference Tournament and a chance of their season coming to an abrupt end, the Bearkats needed some quality starting pitching and production from their bats in the worst way.
Like he has done all year long, Sam Houston senior Justin Jackson delivered a lights-out performance on the mound and the offense made the kind of impact the Bearkats have been looking for Thursday morning.
Both elements came together at the exact right time as the Kats stayed alive in the tourney with a 7-1 victory over McNeese State in an elimination game at Bobcat Ballpark. -
Bad day for Bearkats
The Bearkats’ road to the NCAA tournament just got a little bit tougher.
Texas A&M-Corpus Christi broke out for four runs before top-seeded Sam Houston even stepped to the plate Wednesday afternoon, but the Kats couldn’t find a way to counter that first punch.
Sam Houston connected for eight hits, but could not get enough of those in a row to make a dent in the deficit and are now one loss away from being eliminated from the Southland Conference tournament following a 9-2 loss at the hands of the eighth-seeded Islanders on Wednesday afternoon at the Bobcat Baseball Ballpark. -
Schallenberg: Time is now for Bearkats in Southland tourney
The Bearkats look to take care of business this week in the Southland Conference baseball tournament.
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Alpha Omega Academy trio shine at state track meet
Freshman brings home four medals, including two golds
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Tough night for Kats against Rice
The Bearkats had a golden opportunity to make a lasting impression for a potential at-large bid in the NCAA tournament with fifth-ranked Rice coming to town. Sam Houston’s bats couldn’t get going early enough or be able to link enough hits together against the Owls pitching staff and succumbed to a 5-0 loss in the final game of the season at Don Sanders Stadium on Tuesday night.
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BEARKAT BASEBALL — Plenty up for grabs against fifth-ranked Rice
For several reasons, today’s game against fifth-ranked Rice is going to be a biggie for the Bearkats.
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