Orlando Sentinel

FAMU controls destiny

Rattlers can claim MEAC crown, halt a ‘Classic’ skid at 7

- By Jordan Culver

TALLAHASSE­E — What a difference a year has made for Florida A&M University’s football team.

Last season — the last few seasons, in fact — the Rattlers went into the annual Florida Blue Florida Classic against the BethuneCoo­kman Wildcats with nothing to play for.

All that was there for FAMU was the opportunit­y to spoil the season of their archrival.

This season, under the leadership of new coach Willie Simmons, the Rattlers are playing for something FAMU’s football program hasn’t had since 2010 — a Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference title. When FAMU plays Bethune-Cookman on Saturday at Camping World Stadium, it’ll be about more than trying to end a bad season on a positive note.

A win would give FAMU the conference title and send the Rattlers to the Air Force Reserve Celebratio­n Bowl in Atlanta for the first time in school history.

Championsh­ip aspiration­s and bowl game dreams aside, Simmons said there was only one topic of conversati­on when he was hired before the start of the 2018 season. The Rattlers are riding a seven-game losing streak in the Florida Classic. One more loss and Bethune-Cookman will own the longest win streak in the series between the two teams.

“You want to check my cell phone? The texts I’ve gotten this week?” Simmons, a native of nearby Quincy, said with a laugh when he was asked how personal this rivalry is for him.

“We understand the magnitude of this game. The moment I took the job, the talk wasn’t winning the MEAC championsh­ip. The talk wasn’t going to the Air Force Reserve Celebratio­n Bowl. The talk was ending this sevenyear losing streak. Every Rattler has had to endure this for seven straight years. To go to work on Monday and hear all the Bethune-Cookman Wildcat fans talk trash about the game.

“That’s been the talk for the last year. I understand that. Growing up in these parts, you have to understand that.”

While he embraces the pressure, Simmons was adamant during his press conference Tuesday he didn’t want his players buying too much into the hype of the game.

“We just focus on what needs to be done to be our very best, the rest will take care of itself,” Simmons said.

The Rattlers have been one of

the best teams in the conference for most of the season.

FAMU is 6-4 and 5-1 in conference play — the team has already secured its first winning season since 2011 — and brought down MEAC titan North Carolina A&T earlier in the season.

During the past two games, however, the Rattlers have struggled. FAMU had a chance to clinch the MEAC title two weeks ago against Howard and lost. The Rattlers followed that with a 44-21 nonconfere­nce loss at the hands of South Carolina State.

The losses add more pressure to the biggest game of the year.

The Wildcats are 6-5 overall and 4-2 in conference play.

The Rattlers control their own destiny. For the first time in years, FAMU is in the driver’s seat.

“It’s just another game,” FAMU redshirt junior quarterbac­k Ryan Stanley said after practice on Tuesday. “That’s what the coaches have been preaching to us. Even versus Fort Valley State [in the first game of the season] all the way until now, they’ll say every week is our biggest game. It’s like nothing’s changed.

“This is just another one of those big games and we’ve just got to come through. We’ve had two good days of practice so far. All our guys are just focused and going hard.”

And Simmons doesn’t plan on changing what’s gotten the Rattlers this far.

“Our approach to coaching can’t change because it’s championsh­ip week, because everything’s on the table,” he said. “We have to believe in the process. As a coach, I put the philosophy of this program together and it’s my job to see that it’s carried out through my coordinato­rs down to my assistant coaches.”

 ?? JORDAN CULVER/ORLANDO SENTINEL ?? FAMU coach Willie Simmons instructs the Rattlers during a rain-drenched practice Tuesday. FAMU will face off with rival Bethune-Cookman on Saturday in the Florida Classic at Camping World Stadium. A win sends the Rattlers to their first Air Force Reserve Celebratio­n Bowl in Atlanta.
JORDAN CULVER/ORLANDO SENTINEL FAMU coach Willie Simmons instructs the Rattlers during a rain-drenched practice Tuesday. FAMU will face off with rival Bethune-Cookman on Saturday in the Florida Classic at Camping World Stadium. A win sends the Rattlers to their first Air Force Reserve Celebratio­n Bowl in Atlanta.

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