The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Late score gives Aggies historic victory

Undefeated season earns fourth HBCU crown.

- By Jaylon Thompson Celebratio­n continued on C4

There was a lot of history between the Grambling State Tigers and North Carolina A&T Aggies as they squared off in the

Celebratio­n Bowl. Both teams had won the game since its inception in 2015.

The game lived up to its hype as the Aggies prevailed 21-14 with a fourth-quarter scoring drive and secured their fourth HBCU national title.

Here are five observatio­ns from the bowl game Saturday at Mercedes-Benz Stadium:

Perfect season: North Carolina A&T became the first MEAC

and HBCU school to finish undefeated and untied.

The Aggies also broke the school record with 12 wins in a season, capping it with their second Celebratio­n Bowl victory.

It is also unique as Aggies coach Rod Broadway coached at Grambling from 2007-10. He is 57-22 at North Carolina A&T.

The Aggies gained 397 yards

and held a tough Tigers offense

in check. Only Tulane, of the FBS, has done that to Grambling this season.

“The season was great as 12-0 is something that most teams don’t do,” senior linebacker Jeremy Taylor said. “It is a great feeling and we are blessed to be here.”

Winning drive: With a 1:42 left in the fourth quarter, Aggies junior quarterbac­k Lamar Raynard orchestrat­ed a seven-play, 56-yard touchdown drive to give the Aggies the lead. He was 3 for 5 on the drive with each completion totaling 15 or more yards. This helped set up North Carolina A&T with the ball inside the Grambling 5-yard line.

He scored two plays later on a quarterbac­k sneak. It was only his fourth touchdown of the season.

Raynard completed 23 for 43 for 225 yards. He also had a passing touchdown in the first half. The Aggies are 26-0 in games with Raynard under center.

“Raynard has a lot of natural ability and his knowledge has gotten better with coaching and him putting the time in the film room,” Broadway said. “He is learning schemes defensivel­y and getting the ball out of his hands. (Quarterbac­ks coach Chris) Barnette deserves a lot of credit for that.”

Grambling’s mistakes: Grambling squandered early scoring chances with turnovers. On both occasions, the turnovers ended an opportunit­y to take the lead. The first turnover was a fumble by senior running back Martez Carter late in the second quarter. His fumble set up the Aggies’ first touchdown.

The second turnover was just as detrimenta­l. After the Tigers drove the length of the field to start the third quarter, Devante Kincade threw an ill-advised pass, and it was intercepte­d in the end zone by Franklin McCain III.

North Carolina A&T took advantage, driving 80 yards in seven plays. Marquell Cartwright scored on a run from 29 yards.

The turnovers were unusual for Grambling; the Tigers had just 10 turnovers in the regular season. The three mistakes ultimately cost them a chance at backto-back HBCU titles.

“It boiled down to execution and they made one more play than we did,” Grambling coach Broderick Fobbs said. “We turned the ball over. It’s about execution of eight to 10 plays and that is the way championsh­ip games are.”

Slow out the gate: The high-scoring affair that many people were expecting got off to a slow start. Neither team could find an offensive rhythm and struggled in the first half. The Aggies held the time-of-possession edge, but couldn’t take advantage. They spent most the first quarter in Grambling territory and didn’t score.

Grambling struggled on offense as well. The Tigers were stymied by a tough Aggies defensive front seven and mustered 114 yards of offense in the first half. Kincade was under constant pressure and missed open receivers.

After 25 minutes, North Carolina A&T finally broke through with a 11-yard touchdown pass from Raynard to Cartwright. Grambling answered with a 2-yard touchdown pass to sophomore tight end Jordan James.

The game was tied at 7 at the half.

Goal-line stand: Late in the fourth quarter, the Tigers’ defense kept the game tied at 14 with an impressive goal-line stand. The Aggies were driving in the red zone following a third turnover from the Tigers’ offense.

With the ball at the 1, Grambling forced a turnover on downs and kept North Carolina A&T out of the end zone. They stood tall and stuffed Cartwright on two consecutiv­e runs to keep the game in reach.

Ultimately, the defensive stop wasn’t enough to overcome the Aggies’ late winning drive.

“We got in the right position and made a couple plays,” Grambling junior linebacker De’Arius Christmas said. “They (North Carolina A&T) just made a couple of plays at the end.”

 ?? PHOTOS CONTRIBUTE­D BY JASON GETZ ?? North Carolina A&T defensive back Marquis Willis exults at the end of the 21-14 victory in the Celebratio­n Bowl at Mercedes-Benz Stadium.
PHOTOS CONTRIBUTE­D BY JASON GETZ North Carolina A&T defensive back Marquis Willis exults at the end of the 21-14 victory in the Celebratio­n Bowl at Mercedes-Benz Stadium.
 ??  ?? Rod Broadway, who formerly coached at Grambling, hoists the trophy after North Carolina A&T caps a 12-0 season and earns its fourth HBCU championsh­ip.
Rod Broadway, who formerly coached at Grambling, hoists the trophy after North Carolina A&T caps a 12-0 season and earns its fourth HBCU championsh­ip.

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