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Friday, October 18, 2024

Lion Football closes out season on Senior Day against Tennessee State

The Texas A&M University-Commerce football team concludes its season on Saturday afternoon when it hosts Tennessee State as part of Senior Day, which begins at 1:30 p.m. A win gives the Lions their ninth consecutive winning season.

WHO: Tennessee State at A&M-Commerce

WHERE: Commerce | Ernest Hawkins Field at Memorial Stadium

WHEN: Saturday, November 19 | 2 p.m.

RECORDS: The Lions are 5-5 overall and the Tigers are 3-7. This game is part of the Southland OVC scheduling alliance.   

RANKINGS: Neither team is ranked in either national poll.

 

LIVE AUDIO: Lion Sports Network – KETR 88.9 FM, Commerce (http://www.ketr.org)

LIVE VIDEO: ESPN+ | https://www.espn.com/espnplus/catalog/01209caa-9a9a-4275-b784-c8cdff2fbd7c/southland-conference#bucketId=29804$$sourceCollection=Browse_By_Conference_%28ESPN+%29

LIVE STATS: http://statb.us/b/410407

TICKETS: LionAthletics.com/tickets

GAME NOTES: TAMUC (PDF) | TSU (PDF)

 

A&M-COMMERCE OFFICIALLY JOINS NCAA DIVISION I AND THE SOUTHLAND CONFERENCE

• After 90 successful years as charter members of the Lone Star Conference, the Lions begin a historic transition to NCAA Division I and the Southland Conference. This is the first time the Lions are changing conferences since 1931.

• The Lions play an 11-game schedule during its first season in NCAA Division I FCS. The Lions are eligible to win the Soutland Conference, though they are not eligible for the NCAA Playoffs during the four-year transition period.

• Winners of the 2017 NCAA Division II National Championship, the Lions' football program also won the 1972 NAIA national championship.  Other national championships have included men's basketball (NAIA 1954-55), men's golf (NAIA 1965) and men's tennis (NAIA 1972 and 1978).  Prominent student-athletes at A&M-Commerce have included NFL stars Harvey Martin, Wade Wilson and Dwight White, and noted U.S. Olympic medalist John Carlos.

• Founded in 1889, Texas A&M-Commerce serves rural and urban Northeast Texas with distinction, consistently delivering on a promise that founder Professor William Leonidas Mayo made more than a century ago: "No industrious, ambitious youth shall be denied an education if I can prevent it."  To this day, the institution remains committed to its core mission: "Educate. Discover. Achieve."

• Formerly known as East Texas State University, the 2,100-acre Commerce campus provides many opportunities for students to learn and grow. The university offers more than 135 degree programs at the bachelor's, masters and doctoral levels. A vibrant student life experience includes 14 competitive NCAA athletic teams, a thriving Greek system and more than 120 student organizations. Programs are delivered on site at the Commerce campus as well as in Dallas, Frisco, McKinney, Mesquite and Corsicana. A robust online academic menu of classes is also a point of distinction, and U.S. News & World Report has ranked several programs at Texas A&M University-Commerce among the best in the nation for 2021.

• A member of The Texas A&M University System since 1996, the institution provides quality education to an inclusive community of diverse learners as one of the most affordable universities in East Texas.  Students work with world-class professors who dedicate themselves to excellence in teaching and research. The university maintains strong relationships with local industries to create relevant academic programs and valuable internship and networking opportunities that prepare career ready graduates.

• Serving nearly 12,000 students, Texas A&M-Commerce is a leader in competency-based education, and is the nation's first institution to offer an accredited competency-based bachelor's degree in criminal justice and organizational leadership. The agriculture program is also a national stand-out, featuring one of the only programs where students grow their own experimental crops on the university's 1,500-acre farm. In addition, A&M-Commerce upholds a 130-year legacy as an exceptional teachers' college, graduating more than 400 certified educators in 2019. In 2020, the university opened the 113,470-square-foot Nursing and Health Sciences Building, featuring a state-of-the-art simulation hospital.

 

SOUTHLAND CONFERENCE MEMBERS IN 2022-23

InstitutionOffers Football?
A&M-COMMERCEYES
Houston BaptistYes
Incarnate WordYes
LamarYes
McNeese StateYes
New OrleansNo
Nicholls StateYes
Northwestern StateYes
Southeastern LouisianaYes
Texas A&M-Corpus ChristiNo

SUCCESS IN SEASON OPENERS

• Following the win over Lincoln (Calif.), the Lions have now won nine straight season openers, which is the longest streak in program history.

 

CURRENT STREAK OF SEASON OPENING WINS

2013W, 51-6, Sul Ross State
2014W, 98-20, East Texas Baptist
2015W, 48-17, Adams State
2016W, 40-28, at Delta State
2017W, 8-7, at North Alabama
2018W, 37-36 (OT), Texas A&M-Kingsville
2019W, 93-0, Seleccion Nuevo Leon
2021W, 12-6, at Colorado State-Pueblo
2022W, 52-7, VS. LINCOLN (CALIF.)

SENIOR DAY

• Prior to Saturday's game, the Lions will honor their 19 seniors. The full list of seniors honored by the Lions can be found below.

 

SeniorHometown
BJ BusbeeLong Beach, Calif.
Rehoboth ChibesaLittle Elm, Texas
Celestin HabaColumbia, S.C.
Ben HutchOld Hickory, Tenn.
Treveon JohnsonBrenham, Texas
Michael KeatingBellaire, Texas
Jo-Bentley KeilaniTacoma, Wash.
Prince LollarSeattle, Wash.
Jaiave MagaleiTacoma, Wash.
Hunter MillerBushland, Texas
Xavier MorrisConverse, Texas
Solomon NdukweAlief, Texas
Mike NobleOrange, Calif.
D'Ante SmithRichardson, Texas
J.T. SmithKlein, Texas
Kenedy SnellWaxahachie, Texas
Dee WalkerMoultrie, Ga.
Darius WilliamsFort Worth, Texas
Justice WilliamsDetroit, Mich.

SERIES HISTORY AGAINST THE TIGERS

• A&M-Commerce and Tennessee State are meeting for the second time.

• The Tigers won 15-6 in Nashville during the 1986 season.

 

WINNING FEELING ON HOMECOMING

• By downing HCU 31-3 on homecoming weekend, the Lions won their eighth straight homecoming game and are 60-35-1 all-time on homecoming weekend.

• Since 2008, A&M-Commerce is 8-6 in homecoming games.

 

RARE FEAT FOR THE LIONS

• By moving 3-0 in conference play with the win over HCU. The Lions became just the fourth program to start conference play 3-0 during its first season in NCAA Division I AA/FCS, joining UAlbany (DII), Dayton (DIII), and Gardner-Webb (DII).

• The Lions have completed their conference schedule and will finish either tied for fourth place or in fifth place.

 

Yr.TeamConf.StrkFinal Record
1983DaytonPioneerW66-0
1999UAlbanyNortheastW56-1
2002Gardner-WebbBig SouthW33-0
2022A&M-CommerceSouthlandW33-3

GOING FOR HISTORY

• A win on Saturday gives the Lions six wins on the season, marking its ninth straight winning season, which is the longest consecutive winning season streak in program history. 

• The streak began in 2013 and A&M-Commerce has 81 wins in that stretch.

 

ARMSTRONG IMPRESSIVE IN FCS DEBUT

• Andrew Armstrong (Dallas - Bishop Dunne) has 13 touchdowns on the season, which is third in NCAA FCS. He also has 983 receiving yards, which is sixth in the country.

• He is a touchdown away from tying the Lions' single-season record of 14. 

 

ARMSTRONG AND PAUL EARN SLC HONORS

• The SLC office announced on October 17 that Andrew Armstrong (Dallas - Bishop Dunne) earned the Offensive Player of the Week award and Kendall Paul (Dallas - Bishop Dunne) earned the defensive player of the week award. The Lions' first two weekly honors since joining the SLC.

• At the Cowboys on October 15, Armstrong had 113 yards as well as two touchdown catches.

• Paul made his impact felt in the win at McNeese. He had seven tackles, including one for loss as well, and picked off a pass in the 40-15 win. The Lion defense allowed just 138 passing yards in the game.

 

2022 Southland Football Players of the Week

DateOffensiveDefensiveSpecial Teams
Sept. 5Ismail Mahdi, HCUJalyx Hunt, HCUAustin Dunlap, SLU
Sept. 12Darion Chafin, UIWChris Whittaker, UIWChris Esqueda, Lamar
Sept. 19Cephus Johnson III, Southeastern
 
Lindsey Scott, Jr., UIW
Jack Henderson, SoutheasternJack McCarthy, Lamar
Sept. 26CJ Turner, SoutheasternDonte' Daniels, SoutheasternRiley Callaghan, Southeastern
Oct. 3Javon Antonio, Northwestern StateRodney Dansby, HCUDamashja Harris, Lamar
Oct. 10Lindsey Scott, Jr., UIW (2)Alex Villavaso, NichollsGavin Lasseigne, Nicholls
Oct. 17Andrew Armstrong, A&M-CommerceKendall Paul, A&M-CommerceBrady Buell, HCU
Oct. 24Cephus Johnson III, SoutheasternEli Ennis, NichollsKole Wilson, UIW
Oct. 31Marcus Cooper, UIWDonte' Daniels, Southeastern (2)Austin Dunlap, Southeastern (2)
Nov. 7Lindsey Scott, Jr., UIW (3)PJ Herrington, Northwestern StateGage Larvadain, Southeastern
Nov. 14Marcus McElroy, Jr., McNeeseEli Ennis, Nicholls (2)Riley Callaghan, Southeastern (2)

ARMSTRONG ADDED TO WALTER PAYTON WATCH LIST

• Armstrong has been added to the Walter Payton award watch list, given to the nation's top offensive player.

• Coming into this week, Armstrong is third in the country in receiving touchdowns.

• He is one of four players from the Southland Conference named to the list.

 

NCAA FCS RECEIVING TOUCHDOWNS LEADERS

1Hayden Hatten (Idaho)14
1Joey Hobert (Utah Tech)14
3.Andrew Armstrong (A&M-Commerce)13
4.Three others12

NCAA FCS RECEIVING YARDS LEADERS

1Joey Hobert (Utah Tech)1,158
2Joshua Tomas (Georgetown)1,149
2Payton Rose (Lindenwood)1,149
4T.J. Luther (Gardner-Webb)1,010
5Andrew Armstrong (A&M-Commerce)983

LIONS EARN NATIONAL RECOGNITION

• After the win at Southeastern, Rodriguez was among the honorable mention candidates for FCS National Offensive Player of the Week award.

• As a team, the Lions were also named as an honorable mention National Team of the Week

• On October 17, Paul was also named an honorable mention Defensive Player of the Week after earning the SLC Defensive Player of the Week.

 

BAILIFF RECORDS CAREER WIN NO. 100

• A win at McNeese on October 15, gave coach David Bailiff his 100th career win.

• 24 of his 100 career wins have come in Commerce, as he is in his third season of competition as the leader of the Lions.

 

NO-FLY ZONE

• D'Ante Smith (Richardson – Berkner) has four interceptions on the season, all three coming in the last three games.

• He had two against Incarnate Word, both coming in the red zone, while one, which was also in Lion territory, against Northwestern State as well as one in Lion territory at Nicholls.

• Smith is tied for first in the Southland with four interceptions.

 

NOBLE NAMED SEMIFINALIST FOR CAMPBELL TROPHY

• Senior linebacker Michael Noble (Orange, Calif.) is the Lions' nominee for the prestigious Campbell Trophy, the academic version of the Heisman Trophy. Last week, he was named a semifinalist for the prestigious award, being one of five semfinalists from the SLC.

• Nominated by their schools, which are limited to one nominee each, candidates for the awards must be a senior or graduate student in their final year of playing eligibility, have a GPA of at least 3.2 on a 4.0 scale, have outstanding football ability as a first team player or significant contributor and have demonstrated strong leadership and citizenship. The class is selected each year by the NFF Awards Committee, which is comprised of a nationally recognized group of media, College Football Hall of Famers and athletics administrators.

 

HE'S BEEN HERE BEFORE

• This season begins coach David Bailiff's second stint as a head coach in the Southland Conference.

• Bailiff was previously the head coach at Texas State from 2004-06 going 21-15, advancing all the way to the FCS Semifinals in 2005.

 

SUCCESS AT ALL LEVELS

• Based on our research, coach David Bailiff is the fourth-ever coach to qualify for the Division II playoffs, Division I-AA or FCS playoffs, and win a Division I-A or FBS bowl game.

 

CoachD2FCSFBS Bowl Wins
David Bailiff2019
A&M-Commerce
2005
Texas St.
2008 Texas
2012 Armed Forces
2014 Hawai'i
Rice
Terry Bowden2009-11
North Alabama
1991-92
Samford
1996 Independence^
1997 Peach^
2015 Idaho Potato*
*- Akron
^- Auburn
Willie Fritz2002
Central Missouri
2011-13
Sam Houston State
2018 Cure
Tulane
Joe Glenn1990-91, 95-99
Northern Colorado
2000-02
Montana
2004 Las Vegas
Wyoming

WILLIAMS TAKES OVER AS DEFENSIVE COORDINATOR

• Kyle Williams, who served the past two seasons as assistant defensive coordinator and cornerbacks coach, takes over the Lions' defensive coordinator for the 2022 season.

• The Lions had top 10 passing defenses in Division II during both seasons with Williams on the staff, highlighted by 10 all-conference honors and Kader Kohou, who was named the 2021 LSC Defensive Back of the Year.

• A 2006 graduate of Kansas State, Williams earned all-Big 12 honors as a player and his coaching stints prior to Commerce include University of Southern California and Kansas State.

• Williams was the defensive coordinator at Sul Ross State (DIII) from 2014-17. He had nine defensive players earn All-America status during that stretch.

 

RIEBOCK NAMED TO DAVE CAMPBELL'S  "40 UNDER 40"

• Offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach Billy Riebock was named to the Dave Campbell's Texas Football 40 Under 40 list in the annual publication during the 2021 season.

• Riebock is entering his third competitive season and fourth year as the Lions' offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach, helping lead A&M-Commerce to the third round of the NCAA Division II playoffs, the Super Region Four finals, and an 11-3 overall record in 2019 and a record of 7-4 in 2021.

 

A WHOLE LOT OF EXPERIENCE ADDED TO THE COACHING STAFF

• The Lions welcome five coaches to the staff this year, including two, who have served as coaches in the NFL and all five have former Division I coaching experience.

• Ronnie Vinklarek takes over as offensive line coach. In his 42nd year of coaching, his previous stops include Rice, Houston, SmU, Oklahoma State, Buffalo Bills, Tennessee Titans, the CFL, and the XFL.

• Curtis Fuller, a 12-year coach in the National Football League and four-year NFL player is appointed as the safeties coach. His previous stints are the Dallas Cowboys, the Oakland Raiders, Green Bay Packers, Tennessee Titans, Carolina Panthers, and Arizona Cardinals.

• Jack Tyler, an all-ACC linebacker at Virginia Tech, takes over as linebackers coach. He made his way to Commerce via Virginia Tech and FCS power James Madison.

• Tyron Carrier, the current NCAA record holder with seven kick off return touchdowns, all coming at Houston, with one coming against Bailiff, when he was at Rice, is the new wide receivers coach. He was the 2018 Football Scoop Wide Receivers Coach of the Year at West Virginia and has previously coached at Houston, West Virginia, and Baylor. He also had a stint in the CFL with the Montreal Alouttes.

• Michael Smith, played for Bailiff at Rice and is tasked with coaching the Lion defensive line. He came south to Texas following a two-year stop in South Dakota at Black Hills State (DII). His other coaching stops include Texas, New Mexico, and Iowa.

• Scott Vestal, is on the same sidelines with Bailiff once again and is tasked with coaching the Lion tight ends as well as serving as the recruiting coordinator. His previous coaching stints include SMU, Texas, Kansas, Rice, and Western Kentucky.

 

FINDING SECOND HOMES

• As is the case around the country, the Lions welcome 26 transfers to the squad in 2022. The transfers have found their way to Commerce from all levels of college football.

 

College Football DivisionNumber of Transfers
Division I FBS10 (Five from Power-Five)
Division I FCS6
Division II4
NAIA & JUNIOR COLLEGE6

THE FASTEST MAN IN NCAA DIVISION II

• J.T. Smith (Klein Oak) brought home the NCAA Division II 100 Meter Dash National Championship this past May.

• This was his second National Championship, after winning the 4x100 meter relay National Championship in 2021. Smith and the Lions placed fourth in the 4x100 meter relay in 2022.

• Smith was also a NCAA National Championships qualifier for the 200 meter dash in 2022, placing 15th in the country.

 

DARIUS WILLIAMS EARNS ATHLETIC PERFORMANCE HONORS

• Senior defensive back Darius Williams (Arlington Heights) was named to the Lone Star Conference Athletic Performance team, for excelling in work ethic, dedication to process, attendance, communication, leadership, and growth.

• His current maxes are 315 lbs in the power clean, 20 lbs in the Front Squat, and 270 lbs in the Incline Press.

• Williams earned all-conference honors on the field as well.

 

REPLENESHING GREATNESS WITH MORE GREATNESS

• The 2021 senior class graduated with 42 wins during its four-season span, including the 2017 NCAA Division II National Championship.

• Each of the past two senior classes have finished with 42 or more wins with the 2019 finishing as the most successful class in school history.

• This year's senior class has recorded 28 wins coming into the 2022 season.

 

YearsRecordPct
2016-1946-983.9
2015-1843-1081.1
2014-1742-1080.8
2017-2142-1179.2
1951-5436-5-286.0
2013-1635-1471.4
1957-6034-782.9
2018-2233-1568.7
1972-7532-13-176.0
1936-3931-879.5

KOHOU CONTINUES TO SHINE IN THE NFL

• Lion alum Kader Kohou made his NFL debut on 9/11/21 for the Miami Dolphins against the New England Patriots.

• Kohou recorded three tackles, a pass deflection on fourth down, and forced a fumble as well.

• He received the highest grade among all defensive players on the Dolphins by Pro Football Focus.

• He is the first Lion to appear in an NFL game since Kevin Mathis in 2006 and is the 48th Lion alum to play in a NFL/AFL game.

• Through seven games played, he has 35 tackles, one forced fumble, and five passes deflected. He has recorded four or more tackles in each of his last six games.

• This weekend, the Dolphins are on a bye.

 

PEREZ SHINES IN THE USFL

• 2017 Harlon Hill Trophy (Division II version of the Heisman Trophy) winner and National Championship winning quarterback Luis Perez was drafted on Tuesday night by the revamped XFL's Vegas Vipers.

• The 2023 XFL season begins on February 18, 2023, featuring eight teams and the Vipers are coached by Hall of Famer Rod Woodson.

• In the first edition of the new XFL in 2020, Perez was part of the New York Guardians and had two starts. After his Lion career, which included leading the Lions to the 2017 NCAA Division II National Championship, Perez has had two stints with the Los Angeles Rams, as well as the Philadelphia Eagles, Detroit Lions, the Alliance of American Football, the XFL, the USFL, and the Spring League.

• Perez led the Generals to the semifinal round of the playoffs, playing under coach Mike Riley.

• He started the NFL preseason with the Los Angeles Rams, his second stint with the defending National Champions, but was released during the first round of cuts.

 

SIMON LANDS ON COWBOYS' practice squad

• After being waived by the Dallas Cowboys the day before the roster cut deadline, Lion alum Amon Simon has landed on the Cowboys' practice squad to start the season.

• Simon was a three-time all-conference honoree and the 2019 Lone Star Conference Offensive Lineman of the Year.

• The Lions have had 30 draft picks in the NFL or the AFL all-time, the last player drafted was linebacker Antonio Wilson in 2000 by the Minnesota Vikings in the fourth round.

 

ALEX SHILLOW NAMED TO 2021 ALL STATE/AFLAC GOOD WORKS TEAM

• Lion alum Alex Shillow was selected on the 2021 Allstate AFCA Good Works Team ®. He was one of the 11 student-athletes selected for the Combined Divisions (FCS, Division II, Division III and NAIA) team. He was selected from 42 student-athletes who were nominated by sports information directors around the nation earlier this year.  Since its inception in 1992, the award shines a spotlight on selfless student-athletes and honors their dedication to volunteerism, community service and their commitment to enriching the lives of others. While players are often recognized for their accomplishments and achievements on game day, these student-athletes have made significant contributions to the greater good of society, inspiring future generations of young athletes and the larger college football community.

• Shillow was also a nominee for this award in 2019. As an active participant in multiple leadership roles for the Lions' Student-Athlete Advisory Council, Shillow led community service and fundraising efforts to raise awareness, and funds for the Make A Wish Foundation. Shillow's student-athlete group raised over $15,000 to grant two "Wish Kids" trips to Walt Disney World, as well as a trip to the NBA All-Star Game for the most recent "Wish Kid" at A&M-Commerce. Through fundraising initiatives and coordinated efforts, Shillow drove fundraisers and clothing donation collections to provide underprivileged families in the Commerce community with personalized gifts for Christmas.

• Shillow was also a leader of the Make It Important Campaign in the summer of 2020, which involved a video and an action plan to bring awareness to the social injustices going on in the country in response to the George Floyd murder.

• He led in getting his team fully registered to vote, along with other sport teams in the department, and initiated a conference-wide voter registration challenge. He sat on the university's voter coalition committee to help make voter registration and voting more accessible for A&M-Commerce students. Shillow also led a virtual political open forum with two Texas state legislators – Sen. Royce West (D-Dallas) and former Rep. Dan Flynn (R-Canton) - in front of over 300 student-athletes and guests, moderating an insightful conversation and dialogue between Texas legislators and student-athletes. This initiative won 3rd place for the NCAA Division II Award of Excellence this past year.

• Shillow was also a leader and a part of Athletes In Action - a student-athlete faith based organization.

• Shillow served on the NCAA Division II National Student Athlete Advisory Committee from 2018-21 and was the national chair of the committee from 2019-21. He led discussion and change around the topics of mental health, professional development, name image and likeness, and many student-athlete well-being topics, all while being a student-athlete and involved heavily in the Commerce community.

Lion Football ranked No. 4 in "Top 20 Programs That Inspire"

• The Lion Football program was ranked No. 4 in College Athletic Advisor's Top 20 Programs That Inspire.

• The program rankings are open to all four-year, collegiate-level programs outside of NCAA Division I and are based on a subjective assessment of student experience in four areas:

-Holistic development of student-athletes in the institution;

-Academic achievement and support for the academic success of student-athletes;

-Overall college experience for participants within the program;

-Affordability/graduation rates/student satisfaction.

• Although College Athletic Advisor's list is subjective, the organization believes these rankings "present an informed starting point for a discussion about where student-athletes can excel as 'triple-threat' competitors (academics, athletics, and socially) in college and in their future lives."

 

GREATEST YEAR OF LION ATHLETICS!

• A&M-Commerce s best finish in the NCAA Division II Learfield Director's Cup standings, placing No. 20 in 2021-22, its final year in the division.

• A&M-Commerce recorded 487.25 points, which is the highest total in school history. The Lions received points for their postseason accomplishments in women's basketball, men's basketball, softball, women's golf, men's golf, women's indoor and outdoor track & field, and men's indoor and outdoor track & field.

• The men's track & field program produced top 10 finishes at both the NCAA Indoor National Championships and the NCAA Outdoor National Championships, while the women's track & field program finished in the top 10 at the outdoor championships. The women's golf team reached the National Championships, finishing 12th in the country.

 

WE'VE MET BEFORE

• This is the not the first time that the Lions will be taking on all their opponents this season, their first in Division I.

• A&M-Commerce has at least one prior meeting with all but three teams on the 11-game schedule.

 

Series Record against opponents in 2022

Lincoln (Calif.) - Sept. 1

First Meeting

 

at Tennessee Tech - Sept. 10

Previous Meetings - 1

All-Time Series - 1-0

First Meeting - 1953 (Orlando, Fla. • Tangerine Bowl)

Score - TAMUC 33, TTU 0

 

at Sam Houston - Sept. 17

Previous Meetings - 64

All-time Series - 39-24-1

First Meeting - 1919 (TAMUC 21, SHSU 7)

Last Meeting - 2015 (SHSU 38, TAMUC 24)

 

NORTH AMERICAN - Sept. 24

First Meeting

 

at Southeastern Louisiana - Oct. 8

Previous Meetings - 9

All-Time Series - 4-4-1

First Meeting - 1957 (TAMUC 25, SELU- 7)

Last Meeting - 2009 (SELU 41, TAMUC 7)

 

at McNeese - Oct. 15

Previous Meetings - 2

All-time Series - 1-1

First Meeting - 1970 (TAMUC 57, MSU 26)

Last Meeting - 1971 (MSU 47, TAMUC 3)

 

Houston Baptist - Oct. 22

Previous Meetings - 1

All-Time Series - 1-0

First Meeting - 2013 (TAMUC 55, HBU 21)

 

Incarnate Word - Oct. 29

Previous Meetings - 3

All-Time Series - 0-3

First Meeting - 2010 (UIW 17, TAMUC 16)

Last Meeting - 2012 (UIW 31, TAMUC 9)

 

Northwestern State - Nov. 5

Previous Meetings - 29

All-Time Series - 10-17-2

First Meeting - 1926 (NSU 17, TAMUC 7)

Last Meeting - 2008 (NSU 30, TAMUC 14)

 

at Nicholls - Oct. 12

First Meeting

 

Tennessee State - Oct. 19

Previous Meetings - 1

All-Time Series - 0-1

First Meeting - 1986 (TSU 15, TAMUC 6)

Original source can be found here.

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