Jackson State Tigers football

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Jackson State Tigers football
2024 Jackson State Tigers football team
First season1911; 113 years ago (1911)
Athletic directorAshley Robinson
Head coachT. C. Taylor
2nd season, 14–6 (.700)
StadiumMississippi Veterans Memorial Stadium
(capacity: 60,000)
Field surfaceNatural grass
LocationJackson, Mississippi
ConferenceSWAC (Since 1958)
DivisionEast
All-time record501–338–22 (.595)
Bowl record3–2 (.600)
Claimed national titles4 (black college national championships: 1962, 1985, 1996,2021 won a piece due to opponents bad record)[1]
Conference titles19 (SWAC: Championships 1961, 1962, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1975, 1980, 1981, 1982, 1985, 1986, 1987, 1988, 1990, 1995, 1996, 2007, 2021, 2022)
Division titles8 (SWAC East: 1999, 2007, 2008, 2010*, 2011*, 2012, 2013, 2021, 2022)
ColorsNavy blue, white, and light blue[2]
     
Fight songCheer Boys
Marching bandSonic Boom of the South
Websitewww.gojsutigers.com

The Jackson State Tigers football team represents Jackson State University in college football at the NCAA Division I Football Championship Subdivision (FCS) level as a member of the Southwestern Athletic Conference (SWAC).

After joining the Southwestern Athletic Conference (SWAC) in 1958, the program exploded into national prominence. In the 1980s, the program enjoyed its greatest success. Under head coach W. C. Gorden, the Tigers won eight conference championships between 1980 and 1990, including four straight from 1985 to 1988.[3]

Since 1958, Jackson State has won about 25 percent of the conference's football championships (19) and is a perennial powerhouse program among HBCUs. The Tigers have produced 93 professional football players and four Pro Football Hall of Famers: Lem Barney, Walter Payton, Robert Brazile, and Jackie Slater. Only 13 college football teams at any level have produced more Pro Football Hall of Famers than Jackson State.

In 2023 Tigers placekicker Leilani Armenta became the first woman to score in an HBCU game, scoring three extra points in an October 29, 2023 game against the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff.[4]

Classifications

[edit]
  • 1958–1969: NAIA
  • 1970–1982: NAIA Division I
  • 1956–1972: NCAA College Division
  • 1973–1976: NCAA Division II
  • 1977: NCAA Division I
  • 1978–present: NCAA Division I–AA/FCS

Conference memberships

[edit]

JSU fanbase

[edit]

Jackson State is widely noted for its strong football support and culture.[5][6][7] Jackson State fans have led the Division I FCS in attendance for multiple seasons.[8][9][10]

Championships

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The Tigers playing against the Prairie View A&M Panthers during the 2021 SWAC Football Championship Game

National championships

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Jackson State has been named a recipient of the black college football national championship three times.

Year Championship Coach Overall record
1962 Black college national co-champions John Merritt 10–1
1985 Black college national co-champions W. C. Gorden 8–3
1996 Black college national co-champions James Carson 10–2

Conference championships

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Jackson State has earned a total of 20 conference championships and has won the SWAC (Southwestern Athletic Conference) title 18 times since joining in 1958. Conference championships include:

Year Coach Conference Overall record Conference
record
1920 Earnest Richards Mississippi-Louisiana Conference[11]
1957 John Merritt Midwest Athletic Association 6–2 2–0
1961 John Merritt Southwestern Athletic Conference 9–2 6–1
1962 John Merritt Southwestern Athletic Conference 10–1 6–1
1972 Robert Hill Southwestern Athletic Conference 8–3 5–1
1973 Robert Hill Southwestern Athletic Conference 9–2 5–1
1975 Robert Hill Southwestern Athletic Conference 7–3 4–2
1980 W. C. Gorden Southwestern Athletic Conference 8–3 5–1
1981 W. C. Gorden Southwestern Athletic Conference 9–2–1 5–1
1982 W. C. Gorden Southwestern Athletic Conference 9–3 6–0
1985 W. C. Gorden Southwestern Athletic Conference 8–3 6–1
1986 W. C. Gorden Southwestern Athletic Conference 9–3 7–0
1987 W. C. Gorden Southwestern Athletic Conference 8–3–1 7–0
1988 W. C. Gorden Southwestern Athletic Conference 8–1–2 7–0
1990 W. C. Gorden Southwestern Athletic Conference 8–4 5–1
1995 James Carson Southwestern Athletic Conference 9–3 7–0
1996 James Carson Southwestern Athletic Conference 10–2 6–1
2007 Rick Comegy Southwestern Athletic Conference 8–4 8–2
2021 Deion Sanders Southwestern Athletic Conference 11-2 8-0
2022 Deion Sanders Southwestern Athletic Conference 12-1 8-0

Division championships

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The Southwestern Athletic Conference instituted a divisional system for football in 1999. Jackson State plays in the Eastern Division of the conference along with Alabama A&M, Alabama State, Alcorn State, and Mississippi Valley. The SWAC Western Division includes the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff, Grambling, Prairie View A&M, Southern U, and Texas Southern. Each season, the SWAC East and SWAC West divisional champions face off in the SWAC Championship Game. Jackson State University claims seven SWAC Eastern Division championships: 1999, 2007, 2008, 2010, 2011, 2012, and 2013 and has won five outright to advance to the title game.

Year Coach Division Overall record Conference
record
Opponent Championship Game result
1999 Judge Hughes SWAC East 8–4 8–2 Southern L 30–31
2007 Rick Comegy SWAC East 8–4 8–2 Grambling State W 42–31
2008 Rick Comegy SWAC East 7–5 6–1 Grambling State L 9–41
2010† Rick Comegy SWAC East 8–3 6–3 N/A lost tiebreaker to Alabama State
2011† Rick Comegy SWAC East 9–2 7–2 N/A lost tiebreaker to Alabama A&M ^
2012 Rick Comegy SWAC East 7–5 7–2 Arkansas–Pine Bluff L 21–24OT
2013 Rick Comegy SWAC East 8–4 8–1 Southern L 27–342OT (win vacated by Southern^)
2021 Deion Sanders SWAC East 11–2 8–0 Prairie View A&M W 27-10
2022 Deion Sanders SWAC East 12-1 8–0 Southern W 43-24

† Co–champions

^ win vacated by Southern University due to NCAA violations[12]

NCAA I-AA/FCS playoff results

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The Tigers have appeared in the I-AA/FCS playoffs 12 times with a record of 0–12.

Year Round Opponent Result
1978 Semifinals Florida A&M L 10–15
1981 Quarterfinals Boise State L 7–19
1982 First Round Eastern Illinois L 13–16
1985 First Round Georgia Southern L 0–27
1986 First Round Tennessee State L 23–32
1987 First Round Arkansas State L 32–35
1988 First Round Stephen F. Austin L 0–24
1989 First Round Montana L 7–48
1990 First Round Middle Tennessee L 7–28
1995 First Round Marshall L 8–38
1996 First Round William & Mary L 6–45
1997 First Round Western Illinois L 24–31

Bowl games

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Season Bowl Location Opponent Result
1971 Azalea Bowl Mobile, AL Alabama A&M W 40–21
2021 Celebration Bowl Atlanta, GA South Carolina State L 10–31
2022 Celebration Bowl Atlanta, GA North Carolina Central L 34–41 OT

Head coaches

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Tenure Coach Overall record Conference record Pct.
1911–1912 John R. Pinkett 0–3 .000
1913–1915 Jubie Bragg 3–4 .429
1920, 1923 Earnest Richards 3–3 .500
1924–1928 Belford Lawson Jr. 2–8 .200
1929–1936 Charles Clark 6–24–5 .243
1937–1939 John H. Young 3–5–2 .400
1939–1951 T. B. Ellis 32–24–1 .570
1952–1962 John Merritt 63–37–5 20–8 .624
1963 Edward Clemons 4–5 2–5 .444
1964–1968 Rod Paige 25–19–2 15–18–2 .565
1969–1970 Ulysses S. McPherson 6–13 2–11 .316
1971–1976 Robert Hill 44–15–1 24–9–1 .742
1976–1991 W. C. Gorden 119–48–5 79–21 .706
1992–1998 James "Big Daddy" Carson 54–25–1 38–12–1 .681
1999–2002 Robert "Judge" Hughes 32–13 20–5 .711
2003–2005 James Bell 8–23 7–16 .258
2006–2013 Rick Comegy 55–35 49–19 .611
2014–2015 Harold Jackson 6–11 4–8 .353
2016–2018 Tony Hughes 9–20 8–12 .310
2018–2020 John Hendrick 6–9 5–5 .400
2020–2022 Deion Sanders 27–6 19–2 .818
2023– T. C. Taylor 7–4 0–0 .636

Coach of the Year Honors

[edit]
Year Coach Honor
1961 John Merritt SWAC Coach of the Year
1961 John Merritt National Black College Coach of the Year
1962 John Merritt SWAC Coach of the Year
1962 John Merritt National Black College Coach of the Year
1971 Robert Hill SWAC Coach of the Year
1982 W. C. Gorden SWAC Coach of the Year
1985 W. C. Gorden SWAC Coach of the Year
1986 W. C. Gorden SWAC Coach of the Year
1987 W. C. Gorden SWAC Coach of the Year
1988 W. C. Gorden SWAC Coach of the Year
1995 James Carson SWAC Coach of the Year
2007 Rick Comegy SWAC Coach of the Year
2021 Deion Sanders SWAC Coach of the Year
2022 Deion Sanders SWAC Coach of the Year

All-time SWAC records

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This table reflects the results of SWAC (Southwestern Athletic Conference) match-ups when both Jackson State and its opponent were members of the conference. Jackson State began SWAC play in 1958. Examples of excluded results are Grambling 1937–1957, Alabama A&M contests (1948–1995), and 1910s/1950s contests vs Alabama State. See the College Football Data Warehouse Archived 2019-05-08 at the Wayback Machine for more complete series records.

Updated through December 3, 2023 of the 2023 Division I FCS football season.[13]

Opponent SWAC
wins
SWAC
losses
SWAC
ties
Winning
percentage
Streak First SWAC
meeting
Last
meeting
Alabama A&M Bulldogs 13 12 0 .500 Won 3 1999 2023
Alabama State Hornets 27 15 0 .643 Lost 1 1982 2023
Alcorn State Braves 36 23 1 .608 Lost 1 1962 2023
UAPB Golden Lions 24 12 0 .667 Won 2 1959 2023
Bethune-Cookman Wildcats 3 0 0 1.000 Won 3 2021 2023
Grambling State Tigers 24 41 0 .369 Won 2 1958 2022
Florida A&M Rattlers 2 1 0 .667 Lost 1 2021 2023
Mississippi Valley Delta Devils 50 5 1 .902 Won 8 1968 2023
Prairie View Panthers 40 14 2 .732 Won 2 1958 2022
Southern Jaguars 33 37 0 .471 Won 4 1958 2023
Texas College Steers 3 0 0 1.000 Won 3 1959 1961
Texas Southern Tigers 45 15 1 .746 Won 9 1958 2023
Wiley College Wildcats 10 1 0 .909 Won 1 1958 1968
310 176 5 .636

Rivalries

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During the early years of Jackson State's football history, rivalries were established with in-state foes Rust College and Tougaloo. Stillman College was also a common opponent which brought excitement and high interest to games played at the Mississippi Fairgrounds and later at Alumni Field on the campus of Jackson State. Since then, JSU has formed several traditional rivalries with long-time foes.

Alcorn State

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Southern

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Tennessee State

[edit]

All-Americans

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Over 50 Jackson State players have been named All-Americans.[citation needed][when?]

Year Position Player Honor
1962 WR Willie Richardson AP Little All-American
1967 WR Harold Jackson Pittsburg Courier All-American
1971 WR Jerome Barkum AP Little All-American
1973 RB Walter Payton Chevrolet - Mutual Black Network All-American
1974 RB Walter Payton Chevrolet - Mutual Black Network All-American
1974 LB Robert Brazile Chevrolet - Mutual Black Network All-American
1975 RB Walter Payton Chevrolet - Mutual Black Network All-American
1975 LB Robert Brazile Chevrolet - Mutual Black Network All-American
1976 WR Leon Sherrod Mutual Black Network All-American Team
1977 OL Louis Bullard Mutual Black Network All-American Team
1977 RB Ricky Patton Mutual Black Network All-American Team
1977 CB Charles Williams Mutual Black Network All-American Team
1979 RB Perry Harrington Sheridan All-American Team
1980 C Tom Rice Sheridan All-American Team
1980 G Larry Werts Sheridan All-American Team
1981 G Michael Field Sheridan All-American Team
1981 RB Larry Cowan Sheridan All-American Team
1989 OL Tim Brown Sheridan All-American Team
1989 -- Ike Ayozie Sheridan All-American Team
1989 LB Darion Conner Div. I-AA First Team All-American
1989 -- Fred McCrae Sheridan All-American Team
1991 OL Deitrich Lockridge Div. I-AA First Team All-American
1991 TE Harold Heath Div. I-AA All-American
1991 DB Isaac Morehouse Div. I-AA All-American
1991 LB Charles Ray Davis Sheridan All-American Team
1992 OL Lester Holmes Div. I-AA First Team All-American
1992 TE Isiah Bliss Sheridan All-American Team
1992 OL Lester Holmes Sheridan All-American Team
1992 LB Mario Perry Sheridan All-American Team
1993 LB Fernando Smith Div. I-AA All-American
1995 DB Picasso Nelson Sheridan All-American
1996 DB Sean Woodson Div. I-AA First Team All-American
1996 LB Otha Evans Div. I-AA All-American
1999 RB Destry Wright Div. I-AA All-American
1999 WR Sylvester Morris Div. I-AA All-American
1999 DL Eric Chandler Div. I-AA All-American
2011 DL Joseph Lebeau FCS All-American
2011 DL Joseph Lebeau Boxtorow All-American
2011 QB Casey Therriault Boxtorow All-American
2011 TE Renty Rollins Boxtorow All-American
2012 WR Rico Richardson Sheridan All-American Team
2012 WR Rico Richardson Boxtorow All-American
2012 DL Joseph LeBeau Sheridan All-American Team
2012 DL Joseph LeBeau Boxtorow All-American
2012 DB Qua Cox Boxtorow All-American
2013 OL Jordan Arthur Boxtorow All-American
2013 DB Qua Cox Boxtorow All-American
2015 PK Ryan Deising Sheridan All-American Team
2015 DL Javancy Jones Sheridan All-American Team
2015 DL Javancy Jones Boxtorow All-American
2016 DL Javancy Jones Sheridan All-American Team
2021 DL James Houston Associated Press FCS All-American Team
2022 OL Tyler Brown Associated Press FCS All-American Team
2022 DL Aubrey Miller Jr. Associated Press FCS All-American Team

Player of the Year

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Jackson State players that received Player of the Year honors.[citation needed][when?]

Year Position Player Honor Ref.
1971 Sylvester Collins QB SWAC Offensive Player of the Year
1973 Walter Payton RB SWAC Player of the Year
1973 Walter Payton RB Chevrolet - Mutual Black Network Player of the Year
1974 Walter Payton RB Chevrolet - Mutual Black Network Player of the Year
1977 Jessie Griffin LB SWAC Defensive Player of the Year
1979 Perry Harrington RB SWAC Offensive Player of the Year
1980 Larry Werts LB SWAC Defensive Player of the Year
1981 Keith Taylor QB SWAC Offensive Player of the Year
1982 Mario Kirksey LB SWAC Defensive Player of the Year
1985 Jackie Walker LB SWAC Defensive Player of the Year
1985 Daryl Jones RB SWAC Newcomer of the Year
1986 Kevin Dent DB SWAC Defensive Player of the Year
1987 Lewis Tillman RB SWAC Offensive Player of the Year
1987 Andre Lloyd LB SWAC Defensive Player of the Year
1988 Kevin Dent DB SWAC Defensive Player of the Year
1988 Lewis Tillman RB SWAC Offensive Player of the Year
1989 Darion Conner LB SWAC Defensive Player of the Year
1989 Ike Ayozie K SWAC Newcomer of the Year
1990 Marlo Perry LB SWAC Freshman of the Year
1995 Picasso Nelson LB SWAC Newcomer of the Year
1996 Sean Woodson DB SWAC Offensive Player of the Year
1997 Corey Bradford WR SWAC Newcomer of the Year
1998 Sylvester Morris WR SWAC Offensive Player of the Year
1999 Tommy Head LB SWAC Defensive Player of the Year
2000 Robert Kent QB SWAC Newcomer of the Year
2002 Terry Ross WR SWAC Freshman of the Year
2008 Marcellus Speaks DL SWAC Defensive Player of the Year
2008 Marcellus Speaks DL Boxtorow National Defensive Player of the Year
2010 Casey Therriault QB SWAC Newcomer of the Year
2010 Casey Therriault QB Boxtorow National Newcomer of the Year
2011 Casey Therriault QB SWAC Offensive Player of the Year
2011 Casey Therriault QB Boxtorow National Player of the Year
2011 Joseph LeBeau DE SWAC Newcomer of the Year
2012 Rico Richardson WR SWAC Offensive Player of the Year
2013 Javancy Jones DL SWAC Freshman of the Year
2019 Keonte Hampton LB SWAC Defensive Player of the Year [14]
2022 Shedeur Sanders QB SWAC Offensive Player of the Year [15]
2022 Aubrey Miller Jr. LB SWAC Defensive Player of the Year [16]
2022 Shedeur Sanders QB Boxtorow Offensive Player of the Year [17]
2022 Aubrey Miller Jr. LB Boxtorow Defensive Player of the Year [18]

College Football Hall of Fame members

[edit]

Pro football alumni

[edit]
See: List of Jackson State Tigers in the NFL draft

As of 2017, Jackson State has produced over 90 pro football players including four who have been inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame and 16 who have been selected to play in the Pro Bowl.[19] Notable players include:

Player Position Draft Pick Team Seasons Notes
Lem Barney* CB 1967 2-34 Detroit Lions 11 Pro Football Hall of Fame*, 7× Pro Bowler, Defensive Rookie of the Year
Walter Payton* RB 1975 1-4 Chicago Bears 13 Pro Football Hall of Fame*, League MVP, number retired, 9× Pro Bowler, 1994 all-time NFL team, 2019 all-time NFL team
Robert Brazile* LB 1975 1-6 Houston Oilers 10 Pro Football Hall of Fame*, 7× Pro Bowler, Defensive Rookie of the Year
Jackie Slater* OT 1976 3-86 Los Angeles Rams 20 Pro Football Hall of Fame*, 7× Pro Bowler, number retired
Jimmy Smith WR 1992 2-36 Dallas Cowboys 12 5× Pro Bowler
Harold Jackson WR-FL 1968 12-323 Los Angeles Rams 16 5× Pro Bowler
Leon Gray T-G 1973 3-78 Miami Dolphins 11 4× Pro Bowler
Leslie "Speedy" Duncan DB 1964 -- San Diego Chargers 11 3× AFL All-Star, 1x NFL Pro Bowler
Verlon Biggs DE 1965 3-20 New York Jets (AFL) 10 3× AFL All-Star
Rich Caster TE-WR 1970 2-46 New York Jets 13 3× Pro Bowler
Coy Bacon DE-DT 1964 Undrafted 14 3× Pro Bowler
Willie Richardson DE-DT 1963 3-19 New York Jets 9 2× Pro Bowler
Wilbert Montgomery RB 1977 6-154 Philadelphia Eagles 9 2× Pro Bowler, Eagles Hall of Fame
Ben McGee DE-DT 1964 4-51 Pittsburgh Steelers 9 2× Pro Bowler
Jerome Barkum TE-WR 1972 1-9 New York Jets 12 1x Pro Bowler (1973)
Sylvester Stamps RB-WR 1984 -- Atlanta Falcons 6 1x Pro Bowler (1987)
Al Greer E 1963 18-251 Detroit Lions 1
Roy Curry WR 1963 12-164 Pittsburgh Steelers 1
Gloster Richardson WR 1965 7-50 Kansas City Chiefs 1 2x Super Bowl Champion, 1x AFL Champion
Roy Hilton DE 1965 15-210 Baltimore Colts 11
Jim Hayes DT-DE 1963 -- Houston Oilers 2
Frank Molden DT 1965 5-34 Pittsburgh Steelers 1
Dan Pride LB 1966 10-90 Chicago Bears 1
Taft Reed DB 1966 -- Philadelphia Eagles 1
Robert "Judge" Hughes T 1967 6-153 Philadelphia Eagles 3
Claudis James WR-HB 1967 14-366 Green Bay Packers 2
Al Coleman DB 1967 4-87 Minnesota Vikings 6
Tom Funchess T 1968 2-32 Boston Patriots 7
John Outlaw DB 1968 10-249 New England Patriots 10
Jim Holifield DB 1968 12-314 New York Giants 2
Richard Harvey DB 1969 8-203 Los Angeles Rams 2
Tom Richardson WR 1969 -- Boston Patriots 2
Ed Hardy G 1972 7-175 San Francisco 49ers 1
Eddie Payton RB 1973 Undrafted 5 1980 NFL leader in kick returns
Don Reese DT-DE 1974 1-26 Miami Dolphins 7
Ernie Richardson TE 1974 -- Cleveland Browns 1
Roscoe Word DB 1974 3-74 New York Jets 3
Emanuel Zanders T 1974 -- New Orleans Saints 8
Bill Houston WR 1974 -- Dallas Cowboys 1
John Tate LB 1975 8-183 New York Giants 1
Rod Phillips RB 1975 -- Los Angeles Rams 6
Rickey Young RB 1975 7-164 San Diego Chargers 9 1978 NFL leader in receptions (88)
Oakley Dalton DT 1977 12-315 New Orleans Saints 1
Mike Jones LB 1977 -- Seattle Seahawks 1
Larry Franklin WR 1978 -- Tampa Bay Buccaneers 1
Louis Bullard T 1978 5-119 Seattle Seahawks 3
Charles Williams DB 1978 9-230 Philadelphia Eagles 1
Ricky Patton RB 1978 10-257 Atlanta Falcons 7
Larry Hardy TE 1978 12-309 New Orleans Saints 8
Jeff Moore RB 1979 12-319 Seattle Seahawks 6
Robert Hardy DT 1979 10-267 Seattle Seahawks 1
Vernon Perry DB 1979 -- Houston Oilers 5
Perry Harrington RB 1980 2-53 Philadelphia Eagles 6
James Marshall DB 1980 -- New Orleans Saints 1
Buster Barnett TE 1981 11-299 Buffalo Bills 4
Larry Cowan RB 1982 7-192 Miami Dolphins 1
Thomas Strauthers DE-DT 1983 10-258 Philadelphia Eagles 8
Cleo Simmons RB 1983 -- Dallas Cowboys 1
Dave Windham LB 1984 10-258 Washington Redskins 1
Chris Burkett WR 1985 2-42 Buffalo Bills 11
Jackie Walker LB-TE 1986 2-28 Tampa Bay Buccaneers 4
James Harvey G-T 1987 -- Kansas City Chiefs 2
Steve Martin DE 1987 -- Washington Redskins 1
Ladell Willis LB 1987 -- New York Jets 1
Frank Sutton T 1987 -- New York Giants 1
Leon Seals DE 1987 4-109 Buffalo Bills 6
Reggie Carr DE 1987 Undrafted 1
Stacey Mobley WR 1987 -- Los Angeles Rams 2
Fred Molden DT 1987 -- Minnesota Vikings 1
Bobby Curtis LB 1987 -- Washington Redskins 1
Roy Bennett DB 1988 -- San Diego Chargers 2
Houston Hoover G-T 1988 6-140 Atlanta Falcons 7
Lewis Tillman RB 1989 4-93 New York Giants 7
Darion Conner LB 1990 2-27 Atlanta Falcons 8
Tim Barnett WR 1991 3-77 Kansas City Chiefs 3
Paul McJulien P 1991 -- Green Bay Packers 3
Lester Holmes G 1993 1-19 Philadelphia Eagles 8
Fernando Smith DE 1994 2-55 Minnesota Vikings 7
Marlo Perry LB 1994 3-81 Buffalo Bills 6
Robert Staten RB 1996 -- Tampa Bay Buccaneers 1
Eric Austin DB 1996 4-104 Tampa Bay Buccaneers 1
Toby Myles T 1998 5-147 New York Giants 4
Corey Bradford WR 1998 5-150 Green Bay Packers 9 25 career receiving TDs
Sylvester Morris WR 2000 1-21 Kansas City Chiefs 2
Rashard Anderson DB 2000 1-23 Carolina Panthers 2
Robert Kent QB 2004 -- Tennessee Titans --
Cletis Gordon DB/WR 2006 -- San Diego Chargers 5
Jaymar Johnson WR 2008 6th Round Minnesota Vikings 3
D.J. Johnson DB 2009 -- New York Giants 3
Marcus Benard LB 2009 Undrafted 5
Domonique Johnson DB 2009 Undrafted 4
Casey Therriault QB 2013 -- New Yorker Lions 5 2x EuroBowl MVP
Rico Richardson RB 2013 -- Kansas City Chiefs 4
Daniel Williams WR 2017 -- New York Jets --
James Houston IV LB 2022 6-217 Detroit Lions --
Isaiah Bolden CB 2023 7-245 New England Patriots --

Economic impact

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In 2021, Jackson State football was responsible for having a $30 million positive economic impact on Jackson's economy. Jackson State's football program is considered the most powerful in the Division I FCS in regards to generating a notable economic impact and drawing public interest.[20][21]

Facilities

[edit]

Jackson State University owns and operates Mississippi Veterans Memorial Stadium affectionately known as "The Vet".[22] The 60,492-seat stadium has been the home field of Jackson State football since 1970.[23] For many years, the stadium was the largest in Mississippi until 2016.[24] In 2024, The Vet won the championship in the College Football Campus Tour Best FCS Stadium Invitational, beating out the Kibbie Dome in Idaho in the title round with 58% of nearly 12,000 votes.[25]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "2023 JACKSON STATE FOOTBALL" (PDF). Jackson State University Athletics. Retrieved September 3, 2023.
  2. ^ "JSU Color Scheme | Style Guide". Retrieved December 30, 2023.
  3. ^ "Jackson State Football 1990 Season Preview 8". Columbian-Progress. 25 August 1990. p. 34.
  4. ^ Bromberg, Nick (2023-10-29). "Jackson State's Leilani Armenta becomes first woman to score in HBCU football game". Yahoo. Retrieved 2023-10-29.
  5. ^ https://www.google.com/search?q=jackson+state+fan+football+culture&sca_esv=304891942d813308&rlz=1C1ONGR_enUS1108US1108&sxsrf=ADLYWIKBwjLcLXt0Jfrj12S2MUI--LSnYQ%3A1716428029342&ei=_ZxOZrvHFMfcwN4PztiwsA0&ved=0ahUKEwj7ueLX0KKGAxVHLtAFHU4sDNYQ4dUDCBA&uact=5&oq=jackson+state+fan+football+culture&gs_lp=Egxnd3Mtd2l6LXNlcnAiImphY2tzb24gc3RhdGUgZmFuIGZvb3RiYWxsIGN1bHR1cmVIghdQ4wNY-xVwAngBkAEAmAGIAaABqQ6qAQQ4LjEwuAEDyAEA-AEBmAILoAK6B8ICChAAGLADGNYEGEfCAgcQABiABBgNwgIGEAAYBxgewgIIEAAYBxgIGB7CAggQABiABBiiBMICCBAAGKIEGIkFwgIKECEYoAEYwwQYCsICCBAhGKABGMMEwgIEECEYCpgDAIgGAZAGCJIHAzUuNqAH6Ec&sclient=gws-wiz-serp#fpstate=ive&ip=1&vld=cid:a0f60231,vid:-cwQwuPrxRc,st:0 [bare URL]
  6. ^ "'Coach Prime' draws big JSU football ticket sales nearly five months from kickoff". October 2020.
  7. ^ "March to the Joyous, Raucous Beat of the Sonic Boom of the South | Arts & Culture | Smithsonian Magazine".
  8. ^ "FCS HBCU Football Attendance 2019: Jackson State, SWAC stay on top". 25 March 2020.
  9. ^ "2022 FCS Attendance Leaders". 3 December 2022.
  10. ^ "2023 FCS Regular-Season Attendance Leaders". 19 November 2023.
  11. ^ "Jackson State University on Facebook". Facebook. Archived from the original on 2022-04-27.[user-generated source]
  12. ^ "Southern University faces 5 years of probation, other penalties from NCAA". 16 November 2016.
  13. ^ "Jackson St. Records by Team". cfbdatawarehouse.com. Archived from the original on 2016-10-06. Retrieved 2019-05-02.
  14. ^ "Hampton named SWAC Defensive Player of the Year". 4 December 2019.
  15. ^ "12 Players Earn All-SWAC Football Honors". 6 February 2024.
  16. ^ "12 Players Earn All-SWAC Football Honors". 6 February 2024.
  17. ^ "Jackson State leads the BOXTOROW HBCU Superlative Awards". 14 December 2022.
  18. ^ "Jackson State leads the BOXTOROW HBCU Superlative Awards". 14 December 2022.
  19. ^ "Jackson St. Players/Alumni". pro-football-reference.com. Retrieved 17 Feb 2017.
  20. ^ "JSU football breaks record for economic impact to city". 10 December 2021.
  21. ^ "Visit Jackson reports record-breaking economic impact during 2021 JSU football season". 10 December 2021.
  22. ^ "Jackson State returns home to play in their first night game at the Vet since 2019". 20 September 2023.
  23. ^ "Facilities".
  24. ^ "Vaught-Hemingway Stadium Information | Vaught-Hemingway Stadium | Oxford, Mississippi".
  25. ^ "Veterans Memorial Stadium recognized as one of the best in the US". 19 April 2024.
[edit]

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