|
D1 College Football News
April 10, 2006
Source: The National Football Foundation & College Hall of Fame, Inc.
Monday’s Chalktalk
News and Notes from around college football for April 10, 2006
Niswanger Wins H. Boyd McWhorter Scholar-Athlete Award
LSU Center Rudy Niswanger, the 2005 winner of The National Football
Foundation’s Draddy Trophy presented by HealthSouth, took home the SEC’s
2005-2006 male H. Boyd McWhorter Scholar-Athlete of the Year award last
week. A committee of faculty athletics representatives chose Niswanger to
receive a $10,000 postgraduate scholarship to go along with the $25,000 he
received for winning the Draddy. The official presentation will be made on
June 1 at the Annual Awards Banquet during the league’s spring meeting in
Destin, Fla. Other football-playing finalists for the McWhorter Award
included 2005 Draddy Finalist DeMeco Ryans (Alabama), Ryan Schnetzer
(Florida), Taylor Begley (Kentucky) and Sidney McLaurin (Ole Miss).
Niswanger, a senior, starred on an LSU squad that finished 11-2 in 2005 and
captured a 40-3 victory over Miami in the Peach Bowl.
Pitt Hall of Famer Marshall Goldberg Dies at 88
Marshall Goldberg, a member of Pitt's "Dream Backfield" of the 1930s and a
1958 inductee into the College Football Hall of Fame, died last Monday in
Chicago. He was 88. The 1938 runner-up to Davey O’Brien for the Heisman
Trophy, Goldberg racked up a then-school record 1,957 for the Panthers from
1936-1938. Goldberg twice received All-America status, in 1937 and 1938,
and also finished third in the 1937 Heisman Trophy voting. The Pitt teams
he starred on combined for a 25-3-2 record, with the 1936 squad besting
Washington in the Rose Bowl and the 1937 team capturing the national
championship for coach Jock Sutherland, a 1951 Hall of Fame inductee.
Former Wolverine Sponsors Scholarship at Alma Mater
Braylon Edwards’s contributions to the Michigan football program did not
stop after the standout wide receiver concluded his playing career in 2004
as the school’s career leader in receptions, receiving yards and touchdowns.
The current Cleveland Browns wide receiver announced last week he will
donate $500,000 to endow a scholarship to whichever Wolverine wears No. 1, a
jersey number made famous by Edwards, David Terrell and 2001 College
Football Hall of Fame inductee Anthony Carter. The scholarship will go to
another player if no player wears No. 1. The school plans to honor Edwards
for his donation on Friday, April 14, with a reception at the Champions
Center next to Michigan Stadium.
Nehlen Earns Induction into West Virginia Sports Hall of Fame
Former West Virginia head coach Don Nehlen, a 2005 inductee into the College
Football Hall of Fame, will enter the West Virginia Sports Hall of Fame on
May 7. The induction will be made during the 60th annual Victory Awards
Dinner at the Lakeview Resort and Conference Center in Morgantown. Nehlen
retired in 2000 after coaching the Mountaineers for 21 seasons. He guided
them to 149 victories and 13 bowl games as well as undefeated regular
seasons in both 1988 and 1993. Nehlen also coached for nine years at
Bowling Green State University and finished his career with a 202-128-8
record. He joined fellow coach Pat Dye as the two coaches inducted
alongside 11 players into the College Football Hall of Fame last December 6
and who will be enshrined August 10-12 at the Hall in South Bend, Ind.
Two-Minute Drill
Kentucky football player Antoine Huffman received $5,000 as the male
recipient of the SEC Community Service Post-Graduate Scholarship.
Runners-up for the award included football players Greg McLain (Alabama),
James Johnson (Arkansas), Tommy Jackson (Auburn) and Howard Clark (South
Carolina)… Southern Illinois head football coach Jerry Kill returned to the
sidelines only three months after having surgery to remove a cancerous tumor
in his kidney… Texas Coach Mack Brown served as the grand marshal for the
Samsung/RadioShack 500 at the Texas Motor Speedway on Sunday… ESPN announced
last week it will provide the state of New Mexico with a $2 million line of
credit to host a bowl game at New Mexico’s University Stadium in
Albuquerque. ESPN, officials from the Mountain West and Western Athletic
Conferences and the New Mexico Sports Authority will petition the NCAA on
April 27 to become the 29th Division I bowl game… Bud Fernandez, head
equipment manager for the Florida Gators for more than 20 years, died Friday
at the age of 86… The Texas Tech University home football stadium was
officially renamed Jones AT&T Stadium last week as it currently undergoes
more than $45 million in renovations… Justin Hostetler, the son of former
West Virginia quarterback Jeff Hostetler, accepted an invitation to walk on
to the football team at WVU… David Klinger, the NCAA season record holder
for yards per game and touchdown passes, will serve as a color analyst this
season for the University of Houston, his alma mater… Northwestern State
completed their spring practice two Saturdays ago with their 16th Annual Joe
Delaney Bowl, named in honor of the former NSU standout halfback, and 1997
College Football Hall of Fame inductee, who died in 1993 trying to save
three drowning kids… Ben Malcolmson, a writer for the University of Southern
California’s Daily Trojan, successfully walked on to the USC football team,
the first football team he has made since the fifth grade… Filming started
last week on the movie “We Are Marshall” about the crash of the football
team’s plane on November 14, 1970, that killed 75 people, including most of
the football players and coaches… Tulane practiced on their home practice
field last Monday for the first time since last August 27, right before
Hurricane Katrina hit the area… Former Temple assistant coach Raymond Monica
was named the new head football coach at Kutztown… Arizona State announced
the hiring of John Wrenn as running backs coach… Chris Rumph left Memphis to
join Tommy Bowden’s staff at Clemson as a defensive line coach… North Texas
hired Ramone Archie as its running backs coach. Archie played at North
Texas from 1998 to 1999… Portland State named Jeff Hoover as the team’s new
offensive coordinator… Gil Marchman left his post as assistant to the
Supervisor of Officials at the Big Ten Conference to become the Southwestern
Athletics Conference’s Coordinator of Football Officials.
|