LAKE CHARLES, La. —
In a matter of weeks, football season will finally be here.
While most players will be returning to their campuses looking to improve, or for defending Southland Conference co-champions McNeese State and Stephen F. Austin, maintain last fall’s success, there’s a different type of anticipation in Beaumont.
For the first time in 20 years, the Golden Triangle will once again have college football. An NCAA Division I team will playing games there this fall as the Lamar Cardinals revive their dormant program.
“It’s great. It’s new to the school, but we’ve been playing football our whole lives,” junior wide receiver J.J. Hayes said Wednesday at the Southland Conference Football Media Day at L’Auberge du Lac Resort. “It’s not new to us, but it’s good that we’re bringing football back to Lamar. It’s been 20 some odd years since Lamar had football.
“It’s a great feeling that our community is backing us. It’s a great feeling to be a part of history. Everybody wants this back. They’re pumped up for it. We’re pumped up for it. We just can’t wait to play. No matter how the season goes, we’re all a part of history. No matter what happens, we’re going to do our best and go 110 percent.”
Lamar kicks off its season on the road at McNeese State on Sept. 2. Ironically, McNeese State was the last team Lamar played in its final season in 1989 as the Cardinals defeated the Cowboys 22-17 in Beaumont
Following their season opener, the Cardinals host their first home game a little more than week later against Webber International on Sept. 11.
Through the first several weeks of the season, Lamar will get a good idea at what Southland competition will be like as the Cardinals play road games at Southeastern Louisiana and Stephen F. Austin. Lamar closes its Southland slate in a home game at Sam Houston on Oct. 2.
This season, Lamar’s games against Southland Conference competition will not count in the league standings.
“We play four Southland opponents in our first five games,” Lamar head coach Ray Woodard said. “When Sam Houston comes, that’ll be our fifth game and our fourth Southland opponent. When that game’s over with, we’ll have a great feel about Southland competition.
“Where we’ll stand at that point, who knows? We’d like to think that we’re going to be competitive and that we’ll play well. We’ll know pretty quick.”
In the last six games, the Cardinals will play a pair of teams, South Alabama and Georgia State, which are also playing their first football season this fall.
“We’ve got two teams that are in the same boat we’re in,” Woodard said. “It’ll be interesting to see how we’ll stack up against them.”
It has taken a little more than two years for it all to come together for the Cardinals, complete with stadium renovations. Woodard has assembled a staff and recruited players to field Lamar’s first football squad since 1989.
“It’s been a process. There’s been some ups and downs. It’s been very challenging at times, but it’s been rewarding as well. There’s good responsibility being in charge of something of this magnitude,” Woodard said. “It’s coming together nicely, and now we’re finally under the same schedule as everyone else. We’ve got a season to look forward to. We’ve got some games to play, so we’re excited.”
A good percentage of the Cardinals players are from the Beaumont and Houston areas, which Woodard admitted has been helpful in building a fan base for the football program.
“We were fortunate to get a number of local players that we thought could really play at our level to go to class and stay home,” the coach said. “That’s helped in the process. To see local players staying home, that’s brought local communities to tie in to our communities. We’ve built a fan base up and we haven’t even played yet, so that’s been a positive for us.
“I think we’re headed in the right direction. I think we’ve had a lot of young men that want to be there. They’ve worked a little bit harder because it means more to them because they’re representing the Golden Triangle.”
As the football team continues to practice and prepare for the season, Hayes says there’s no lack of support from family, friends and the Beaumont community.
“It’s crazy. We get support wherever we go,” Hayes said. “If we have a shirt that says Lamar football, people want your autograph and your picture. There’s a certain swagger you pick up. You just have to stay composed and make plays on the practice field, which hopefully will transcend to Saturdays.
“Football hasn’t been this big in Beaumont for some time now, so everybody is happy to see it. As long as we keep working hard, people are going to be out there to see it.”
While there may be some growing pains this season as the Cardinals play teams which have solidly developed programs over the course of several years, Woodard and his staff look forward to building a solid foundation for next season as Lamar will play a full Southland schedule.
“We want to build a winning program. We’re going to talk about winning and then we’re going to try to win every game, one game at a time,” Woodard added. “We’re not going to concede to anybody on our schedule before the season starts. We’re just going to take it one game at a time, one day at a time and see where we are when the season’s over with.”
Sports
Lamar’s start-up football program has fans in Golden Triangle anxious, excited
- Sports
-
-
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.
-
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.
-
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
-
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.
-
Alpha Omega Academy trio shine at state track meet
Freshman brings home four medals, including two golds
-
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.
-
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.
- More Sports Headlines
-



