Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Golden Lions glad to get back to LR

- TROY SCHULTE

The last time Arkansas-Pine Bluff played at War Memorial Stadium, it went on to win its only outright Southweste­rn Athletic Conference championsh­ip.

The Golden Lions will play in the capital city for the first time in three years at 4:30 p.m. today when they host defending SWAC champion Alcorn State. A victory would qualify as one of UAPB’s biggest since the 2012 SWAC title year and would keep the Golden Lions from slipping further in the Western Division race.

“Hopefully there’s some

magic in the air that can propel us to another one,” UAPB Coach Monte Coleman said.

Even if there isn’t, Coleman sees the benefits of returning to Little Rock.

Playing in War Memorial Stadium was almost an annual tradition for UAPB. The Golden Lions played at the stadium at least once every year in 2006-2012 and played there regularly before that. But when the Delta Classic 4 Literacy, which brought UAPB to Little Rock for one game between 2006-2012, folded after the Golden Lions’ 2012 victory over Langston, the school was unwilling to pay the rental fee to play a game in Little Rock.

UAPB Athletic Director Lonza Hardy Jr. boasted this summer of the priority UAPB puts on Little Rock and that a local sponsor had covered the $25,000 rental fee, which made today’s game at War Memorial possible.

“It’s a big stage for us,” Coleman said. “It’s a great venue for football. We’re excited to get out of Golden Lion Stadium sometimes and go to a second home site. It’s fun for the fans and fun for the team.”

Coleman hopes a renewed presence can improve what he and his staff already consider one of their most prized recruiting grounds.

UAPB has seven players on its roster from central Arkansas (six from Little Rock and one from Maumelle), which marks its largest central Arkansas contingent since Coleman’s first season as head coach in 2008 when it had eight players from the area.

Coleman and his staff view recruiting central Arkansas as important as recruiting southeast Arkansas when putting together classes. Running backs coach Keith Saine, a Little Rock Central graduate, is UAPB’s lead recruiter in central Arkansas. Coleman said Saine has assembled a “host of kids” from the area who will watch today.

Coleman hopes playing at War Memorial can help the Golden Lions land more players like Tim Turner, Mickey Dean, Damien Lee and Ben Anderson, all of whom left Little Rock and became AllSWAC

players for the Golden Lions.

“I would like to have over half of the team from Little Rock because there is a lot of good talent,” Coleman said. “We’ve had a host of great football players that have come out of Little Rock to help our football team.”

Those watching today will see UAPB try to measure up with the SWAC’s best team. Alcorn State is 22-4 against non-FBS competitio­n since the start of the 2013 season, which includes a 10-3 finish last year.

Coach Jay Hopson’s Braves (3-1, 2-0 SWAC) have won their two SWAC games handily, 31-14 over Alabama State and 55-14 over Mississipp­i Valley State, and they rank third in scoring offense (33.0 points per game) and second in scoring defense (26.0) even with a 69-6 loss to Georgia Tech.

Hopson has built his team in part on the backs of transfers. Quarterbac­k John Gibbs started at Houston, receiver Marquis Warford was at Memphis and running back Darryan Ragsdale started at Ole Miss.

“Jay is centralize­d well enough that he can get very experience­d junior-college guys and transfers,” Coleman said. “That’s one of the reasons he’s catapulted himself in a rapid manner.”

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