| The EC Baseball Program will be hosting its annual MVP Showcase. The 2011 MVP Showcase will take place on Saurday, January 22. The showcase will be open to 2011, 2012, or 2013 graduates. Registration for position players will begin at 9:00 a.m. and registration for pitcher- onlys will begin at 11:30 a.m. There will be a $75.00 registration fee to hold your spot and each participant will receive a T-shirt and lunch will be provided. We plan to use this oppurtunity to evaluate players that have taken an interest in East Central Community College and also target some unknown prospects. There will also be invitations sent to other institutions to allow prospects to be seen by other scouts. For any questions or to reserve a spot, please call or email.
Neal Holliman - Head Baseball Coach
601-635-6226 / nholliman@eccc.edu |
| Freshman Ja’ Monica Orton’s jumper in the final moments of overtime provided East Central Community College’s Lady Warriors with a stunning 83-82 victory over Northeast Mississippi Community College Saturday afternoon at Bonner Arnold Coliseum on the Booneville campus.
Orton sent the non-division battle into the extra period by draining three straight free throws to knot the score at 75-75 at the end of regulation.
Orton, a 6’ guard and product of Walter E. Stebbins High School in Dayton, Ohio, pumped in 28 points and grabbed 13 rebounds to lead East Central, which evened its record at 3-3 under sixth-year head coach Bill Smith.
Also scoring were Deirdre Hawkins of Dermott (Ark.) High School, 21; Shana Ward of Carthage, 16; Quentinette Odom, six and Shanequa Bufkin, four, both of Scott Central; Inessa Adams of Horn Lake and Annie Brewer of Madison Ridgeland Academy, three each; and Bianca Thomas of Sebastopol, two.
Anna Brooke Page had 20 points to lead the Lady Tigers who dropped to 2-2.
Northeast held a 41-37 advantage at halftime.
In the men’s game, Kenneth Barlow’s failed three-point attempt in the final seconds with East Central Community College trailing 77-76 allowed Northeast Mississippi Community College to escape with a 79-76 nail-biter Saturday afternoon in Booneville.
Robert Wade provided the Tigers with the winning margin after draining two free throws and later preserved the non-division victory by forcing a turnover by Warrior Chris McLendon.
Barlow, a 6-4 sophomore guard and product of Scott Central High School, pumped in 21 points and Keondre Hodges, a 5-11 guard from Newton, added 20 points to lead the Warriors who fell to 4-2 under fourth-year head coach Maurice Bowie.
Also scoring were McLendon, a Morton High School product, nine; Anthony Nieves, a product of John F. Kennedy High School in Bronx, New York and Curtis Loving of Wadleigh High School in Harlem, New York, eight each; Kegan Houston of Quitman, six; and Sharvarus Wilson of Terry and Jimmy Broomfield of Scott Central, two each. McLendon was the top rebounder with 13.
Tyler Pritchard had 20 points to lead the Tigers who evened its record at 2-2.
Northeast led 41-35 at the break.
ECCC squads host Holmes Community College tonight (Monday) at 6 and 8 p.m. in the Brackeen-Wood Physical Education Building.
The Lady Warriors and Warriors travel to East Mississippi Community College Thursday, Nov. 18 in the final contests before the Thanksgiving holidays. Game times are 5:30 and 7:30 p.m. on the Scooba campus.
Competition resumes Thursday, Dec. 2 as ECCC squads begin MACJC South Division play at Mississippi Gulf Coast Community College in Perkinston. Game times are 6 and 8 p.m.
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Several East Central Community College athletes signed national letters of intent to continue their careers during a ceremony held Wednesday, Nov. 10, 2010, the first of the NCAA Signing Period, on the Decatur campus. Signees include (seated from left) softball player Kasie Buckley of Little Rock, University of West Florida in Pensacola; baseball players Colton Mitchell of Lake and Tyler Dalton of Louisville, who both signed with Delta State University in Cleveland, Richie Long of Carthage, University of West Florida in Pensacola, and Darrmal Moore of Wiggins, University of North Alabama; and basketball player Anthony Nieves of Bronx, New York, University of Southern Mississippi in Hattiesburg. Buckley’s honors include NJCAA All-American, All-Region 23 and MACJC All-State recognition after helping lead the Lady Diamond Warriors to the program’s first Region 23 title and a fourth-place finish in the NJCAA Division II Softball Tournament. EC posted a record 47 wins with 11 losses and one tie during the successful 2010 campaign. Buckley, a shortstop/pitcher, is a product of Newton County High School. Mitchell and Dalton, both pitchers, received second team MACJC All-State recognition and Long, a first baseman/pitcher, was named to the All-Region 23 and MACJC All-State First Team after helping lead the 2010 Diamond Warriors to runner-up honors in the MACJC State Baseball Tournament and a berth in the Region 23 Tournament en route to a 39-20 record. Mitchell is a product of Lake High School and Dalton hails from Winston Academy. Long is a product of Carthage High School and Moore, Stone County High School. Nieves is a former standout at John F. Kennedy High School in Bronx, New York, and Southwestern Community College in Chula Vista, Calif. Standing from left are Scott Hill, ECCC head softball coach; signees’ family members Steve and Gina Buckley, Darlene Guyse, Donna Long and Jason Long; Neal Holliman, ECCC head baseball coach; and Maurice Bowie, ECCC men’s head basketball coach.
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| East Central Community College’s golf team participated in the Mississippi Gulf Coast Community College/Holiday Inn Fall Invitational held Nov. 8-9, 2010, at the Windance Country Club in Gulfport.
The Warrior linksters placed 15th with a 674 (341-333) score in the 36-hole event, won by Central Alabama Community College golfers who recorded rounds of 290 and 291 for a 581 total.
Luke Brown led East Central with rounds of 76 and 81 for a 157 total. Brown is a product of Carthage High School.
Other Warrior golfers and their respective scores included Trent Travis of Leake Academy, 160 (81-79); Cole Harris of Newton County, 179 (86-93); Crosby McDonald of Leake Academy, 183 (98-85); and Daniel Moody, also of Leake Academy, 190 (102-88).
Chris Clark serves as ECCC golf coach.
Also participating in the fall tournament included Meridian Community College, 583 (293-290); South Mountain Community College, 584 (284-300); Mississippi Gulf Coast Community College, 602 (302-300); Abraham Baldwin Community College, 602 (301-301); Faulkner State Community College, 611 (303-308); Darton Community College, 612 (310-302); John A. Logan Community College, 624 (312-312); Rend Lake Community College, 629 (315-314); Wallace State Community College, 644 (320-324); Copiah-Lincoln Community College, 646 (320-326); University of New Orleans, 649 (325-324); Andrew Community College, 652 (340-312); Spring Hill Community College, 657 (335-322); and Mississippi Gulf Coast Community College, 686 (338-348). |
| Kenneth Barlow of Forest pumped in 19 points and grabbed 15 rebounds to lead East Central Community College’s Warriors to 78-71 victory over Coahoma Community College and a season sweep of their MACJC North Division opponent Thursday night in the Brackeen-Wood Physical Education Building in Decatur.
With the win, EC improved to 4-1 under fifth-year head coach Maurice Bowie.
In addition to Barlow, a 6-4 sophomore and product of Scott Central High School, other EC scorers were Curtis Loving of Wadleigh, New York, 17; Keondre Hodges of Newton and University of Southern Mississippi signee Antony Nieves, a product of John F. Kennedy High School in Bronx, New York, 10 each; Chris McLendon of Morton, nine; Kegan Houston of Quitman, six; Thomas Straughter of Jackson Callaway, four; Shelton Banks of Morton, two; and Sharvarus Wilson of Terry, one.
Demarcus Lewis of Rosedale had 21 points to lead Coahoma, which dropped to 1-3.
EC, which trailed 41-38 at the break, defeated the Tigers 89-70 in the season opener Nov. 1 in Clarksdale.
In the women’s game, East Central was unable to maintain its 39-29 halftime advantage and fell 70-65 to the Lady Tigers who swept the season series.
Freshman Ja’Monica Orton poured in 16 points to lead the Lady Warriors who fell to 2-3 under sixth-year head coach Bill Smith. Orton is a product of Walter E. Stebbins High School in Dayton, Ohio.
Also scoring were Shana Ward of Carthage, 16; Inessa Adams of Horn Lake, nine; Quentinette Odom of Scott Central, eight; Kurlysha Bell of Kosciusko, seven; Shanequa Bufkin of Scott Central, three; Xenobia Lavender of Noxapater and Annie Brewer of Madison Ridgeland Academy, two each; and Bianca Thomas of Sebastopol, Jakiala McWilliams of Neshoba Central and Alise Bryant of Northwest Rankin, one each.
Malea Malone of Germantown, Tenn., and Tia Nunnally of Memphis had 19 points each to lead Coahoma, which improved to 3-1 under former ECCC assistant coach LaCole Brooks.
The Lady Tigers edged East Central 68-64 in the season opener Nov. 1 in Clarksdale.
ECCC squads travel to Northeast Mississippi Community College Saturday, Nov. 13 for non-division matchups scheduled at 1 and 3 p.m. on the Booneville campus.
The Lady Warriors and Warriors host Holmes Community College Monday, Nov. 15. Women’s action begins at 6 p.m. and will be followed by the men’s contest at 8 p.m. in the Brackeen-Wood Physical Education Building.
EC squads posted victories over Holmes in games held Nov. 4 in Goodman. The Lady Warriors cruised to a 52-39 victory and the Warriors held on for a 58-53 decision.
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| Sophomore Kenneth Barlow pumped in 18 points and led East Central Community College to an easy 74-57 win over Itawamba Community College Monday night in the Brackeen-Wood Physical Education Building on the Decatur campus.
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The non-division victory was especially sweet for Warrior head coach Maurice Bowie, who defeated his former boss – Marty Cooper – for just the second time since taking over the EC program in 2006 after serving four years as Cooper’s assistant. Cooper served as Warrior head coach from 1991-98 and guided the 1992-93 squad to a state title.
“A lot of times it is not just about the X’s and O’s but it’s about the kind of kids you have and if they come to play,” said Bowie. “I felt like our guys came to play tonight.”
Barlow, a 6-4 guard and product of Scott Central High School, had one of his best nights as a Warrior, connecting on one of two three-point attempts and five of eight free throws. He was also credited with four rebounds.
Also scoring for the Warriors, who improved to 3-1 on the young campaign, were Chris McLendon of Morton, 12; Anthony Nieves, a product of John F. Kennedy High School in Bronx, N.Y. and Kegan Houston of Quitman, 11 each; Jimmy Broomfield of Scott Central, nine; Curtis Loving, a product of Wadleigh High School in Harlem, N.Y., seven; Keondre’ Hodges of Newton, three; and Shelton Banks of Morton and Thomas Straughter of Callaway, two each. McLendon led in rebounds with 11.
Todd Nelson had 18 points to lead the Indians, who fell to 1-2.
The Warriors led throughout the contest and held a 44-24 advantage at halftime.
In the women’s game, East Central and Itawamba were deadlock 33-33 at halftime but the visitors outscored the Lady Warriors by a 39-24 margin in the second half and coasted to a 72-57 decision.
Sophomore Quentinette Odom tallied 18 points led the Lady Warriors, who evened their season record at 2-2 under sixth-year head coach Bill Smith. Odom, a 5-8 forward and product of Scott Central High School, was also EC’s top rebounder with 11.
Other scorers were Shana Ward of Carthage and Ja’Monica Orton, a product of Walter E. Stebbins High School in Dayton, Ohio, 12 each; Shanequa Bufkin of Scott Central, eight; Xenobia Lavender of Noxapater and Inessa Adams of Horn Lake, three each; and Jakiala McWilliams of Neshoba Central, one.
Jameika Hoskins poured in 14 points to lead the Lady Indians who improved to 2-1.
ECCC squads host Coahoma Community College Thursday, Nov. 11. Game times are 6 and 8 p.m. in the Brackeen-Wood Physical Education Building.
The Lady Warriors and Warriors travel to Northeast Mississippi Community Saturday, Nov. 13. Women’s action begins at 1 p.m. and the men’s contest is set for 3 p.m. on the Booneville campus.
ECCC returns to campus for games scheduled Monday, Nov. 15 with Holmes Community College. Game times are 6 and 8 p.m. in Brackeen-Wood.
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| A pair of victories was earned by East Central Community College basketball teams in non-division action held Thursday night at Holmes Community College in Goodman.
The Lady Warriors notched their first season win with a 52-39 victory over the Lady Bulldogs, and the Warriors remain undefeated following a hard-earned 58-53 clipping of the Bulldogs.
Sophomore Quentinette Odom of Forest had 10 points to lead the EC women, who improved to 1-1 under sixth-year head coach Bill Smith. Odom is a 5-8 forward and product of Scott Central High School.
Also scoring were Ja’Monica Orton, a product of Walter E. Stebbins High School in Dayton, Ohio, nine points; Alise Bryant of Northwest Rankin, eight; Shana Ward of Carthage and Shanequa Bufkin of Scott Central, five each; Deidre Hawkins, of Demott (Ark.) High School, four; Inessa Adams of Horn Lake, Xenobia Lavender of Noxapater and Kurlysha Bell of Kosciusko, three each; and Annie Brewer of Madison-Ridgeland Academy, two.
Amber Clay of Blytheville, Ark., had nine points to lead the Lady Bulldogs who fell to 1-2.
EC led 25-22 at the break.
Sophomore Kenneth Barlow of Forest pumped in 15 points to lead the Warriors, who are 2-0 under fifth-year head coach Maurice Bowie. Barlow is a 6-4 guard and product of Scott Central High School.
Other EC point makers included Anthony Nieves, a product of John F. Kennedy High School in Bronx, N.Y., and Curtis Loving of Wadleigh High School in Harlem, N.Y, 11 each; Keondre’ Hodges of Newton and Kegan Houston of Quitman, seven each; Thomas Straughter of Jackson Callaway, five; and Sharavarus Wilson, a product of Terry High School, two.
Curtis Bailey of Jackson had 18 points to lead Holmes, which dropped to 0-3.
EC held a 25-22 advantage at halftime.
The Lady Warriors and Warriors host East Mississippi Community College Saturday, Nov. 6 in the home opener. The women’s game begins at 2 p.m. and will be followed by the men’s contest at 4 p.m. in the Brackeen-Wood Physical Education Building. |
| A season-ending victory was not to be for East Central Community College’s Warriors, as back-up Southwest Mississippi Community College quarterback Mardavian Martin of Millbrook, Ala., tossed a 60-yard touchdown strike to wide receiver Alfred Franklin of Kentwood, La., with 2:35 left to rally the Bears for a stunning 20-15 victory Thursday night at Bailey Stadium on the Decatur campus.
East Central, which once again was plagued by penalties and turnovers in the MACJC South Division battle, completed the 2010 campaign at 2-7 overall and 2-4 in league play, while the Bears finished 4-5 and were also 2-4 in the division.
Brian Anderson, who completed his first official season as Warrior head coach after serving on an interim basis in 2009, said following the disappointing loss, “I’ve never seen so many penalties in my life,” in referring to the 12 infractions for 95 yards. “I’m not ever going to criticize officials, but they played a huge part in tonight’s game.
“I know that we sometimes deserve penalties, but it’s a tough way to go out. Our guys played hard enough and well enough to win. It’s not going to leave a good taste in my mouth or any of our mouths.
“I hate it for the kids that they didn’t get to go off this field for the last time as a winner. And I hate we didn’t get to 3-3 in the South because that is not done often here at East Central.”
The Warriors, who trailed 12-10 at halftime, led throughout most of the contest and resumed the lead at 13-12 following Jason Loris’ 38-yard field goal with 8:44 left in the third period. Loris is a product of Moss Point High School.
East Central extended its advantage to 15-12 after standout linebacker Chris Ficklin, a former Scott Central High School standout, tackled the Bears’ starting quarterback Vintavious Cooper of Homerville, Ga., for a safety with 11:55 remaining in the game.
The Warriors had an opportunity to add to their slim margin on the ensuing possession, driving from their 42 to the Southwest 19. But Loris’ 36-yard field goal attempt with 8:21 was wide left.
After an exchange of possession, the Bears took over on their 18 with 3:03 left. Cooper was injured after completing a seven-yard pass on first down to receiver Brian Cook of Independence, La., and was replaced by Martin who started the game at wide receiver.
Martin’s first pass was incomplete but a pass interference penalty awarded the Bears possession on the Southwest 40. He connected with Franklin for the eventual game-winning score on the next play.
The Warriors reached the Southwest 42 on the ensuing possession but turned the ball over on downs after coming up short on fourth and two. The Bears ran out the clock to preserve the win.
East Central took an early 7-0 lead when quarterback Blake Matherne of Boothville, La., tallied on a one-yard run with 8:33 left in the opening stanza, capping a 14-play, 62-yard drive. Loris added the PAT.
Key plays during the scoring drive included Matherne’s 18-yard completion to wide receiver Corey Collier of Tuscaloosa to the Southwest 27, followed by the Belle Chasse High School product’s eight-yard toss on fourth and seven to wide receiver Radarious Owens of Quitman, which gave EC possession on the Southwest 16.
The Bears scored on the next possession with running back Tray Bateaste of Gloster crossing the goal line from 14-yards out with 5:35 left in the first period, capping a 12-play, 50-yard march. Justin Holt’s PAT attempted was blocked and EC held a 7-6 advantage.
East Central scored again on its next possession with Loris connecting on a 26-yard field goal with 2:30 left in the opening stanza. The Warriors had great field position to start the drive, which began at the EC 48 following the Bears’ failed onsides kick attempt. However, the march stalled at the Southwest nine where the Warriors were unable to convert a first down on fourth and two.
Southwest threatened to score on its next possession but the 58-yard drive ended on EC’s 14 following Cooper’s fumble with 12:57 left before halftime.
The Bears registered a defensive score a short time later, as linebacker Kendrick Causey of Gloster picked off a Matherne pass and returned the pigskin 47 yards to pay dirt with 10:10 remaining in the half. The two-point conversion failed, as Dustin Land of Milton, Fla., stopped Bateaste on the effort, but Southwest led for the first time at 12-10.
Matherne completed 12 of 27 passes for 127 yards and one interception.
Collier was his top receiver with three catches for 63 yards. Owens had six grabs for 52 yards.
Matherne also led EC in rushing with 92 yards on 12 carries and one score.
Running back Roderick Hawkins of Union had 83 yards on 18 carries, and running back Brandon Willis of Philadelphia compiled 41 yards on 11 attempts.
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| East Central Community College running back Rod Hawkins (22) of Union takes the handoff from quarterback Blake Matherne (1) of Boothville, La., during last week’s 42-35 loss to Copiah-Lincoln Community College, which eliminated the Warriors from a possible berth in the MACJC South Division playoffs. Hawkins led EC in rushing against the Wolves with 11 carries for 47 yards and one touchdown - a four-yard run which provided EC with a 28-27 lead early in fourth quarter action. Matherne, a Belle Chasse High School product who continues to be recognized as one of the state’s top passers, completed eight of 18 passes for 184 yards and two scores in the loss – a 41-yard strike to Corey Collier of Tuscaloosa County (Ala.) High School and a 24-yard touchdown toss to Zach Pendleton, a product of Forest Hill High School. The Warriors conclude the 2010 campaign by battling Southwest Mississippi College Thursday, Oct. 28. Kickoff is set for 6:30 p.m. at Bailey Stadium on the Decatur campus.
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| A third-straight win over Northeast Mississippi Community College was not to be for East Central Community College's Warriors who were thumped 34-6 by the Tigers Thursday night before an overflow crowd at Bailey Stadium on the Decatur campus.
East Central, which trailed 28-6 at halftime, could not muster enough offense to mount a come-back in the season opener for both squads, unlike last season when the Warriors overcame a late two-touchdown deficit in posting a 34-28 homecoming win in overtime.
Brian Anderson, whose "interim" title as Warrior head football coach was removed following the 2009 campaign, was obviously disappointed in his team's performance.
"They've (Northeast) got a few really good players, but the bottom line is we didn't control us," Anderson said in a post-game interview. "We didn't handle us. We didn't execute offensively. We had turnovers in our hands defensively and didn't take them. We just didn't play well at all."
Anderson knows his young team – which includes only 16 returnees – will need to show vast improvement when the Warriors begin MACJC South Division competition Sept. 23 at Pearl River, after battling two more North Division opponents in home-standing Northwest on Sept. 9 and visiting Itawamba on Sept. 16. Northwest won its season opener 27-17 over Pearl River and Itawamba was outscored by Hinds 52-31.
"We've got a lot of young players," Anderson continued. "We started over and I was very anxious to see how we would respond and we responded like a very young, immature football team. We went out there and didn't make things happen. We waited on other people to do things. Everybody in this league has players. If you don't play well, you're going to have a hard time."
Northeast's offense moved at will in the early going against the Warriors in building a 14-0, first-quarter lead and a 22-point advantage at the break.
Quarterback Clint Wilson, a 5-10, 200-pound sophomore from Olive Branch,
led the Northeast offense by completing 16 of 28 passes for 277 yards and four scores in the first half. Wilson and Josh Jarboe, a 6-3, 200-pound sophomore wide receiver from Atlanta, Ga., connected on the first two scores, both coming on 12-yard pass plays following 47- and 69-yard drives, respectively.
The Warriors narrowed the scoring margin to 14-6 early in the second period on a 24-yard touchdown strike from quarterback Blake Matherne to wide receiver Walter Grayson, capping a 57-yard drive in seven plays. Jason Loris' PAT attempt was not successful. Matherne is a 5-9, 180-pound product of Belle Chasse High School in Boothville, La., and Grayson, at 6-6, 205, hails from Tuscaloosa (Ala.) County High School. Loris is a 5-10, 160-pound product of Moss Point High School.
The Tigers responded with two more scoring pass plays – the first on a 10-yard strike from Wilson to wide receiver Johnathan Johnson of West Helena, Ark., with 10:30 left before halftime, and a 42-yard completion from Wilson to wide receiver Dante Barksdale of Southaven with 54 seconds remaining until the break.
After a scoreless third period, the Warriors threatened to score early in the final stanza but a fumble by Matherne was scooped up on the 16-yard line by Tiger defensive back Johnthan Bates of Tuscumbia, Ala., who returned the miscue 72 yards to the Warrior six. It took just one play for the Tigers to score, as running back Jamarcus Goodloe of Leighton, Ala., found the end zone with 11:04 remaining. Taylor Earhart missed his only PAT of the night following the game's final score. Earhart is from Olive Branch.
EC drove into Tiger territory on the ensuing possession but a fumble by running back Rod Hawkins of Union nipped the drive on the Northeast 44. EC lost possession on three of four fumbles during the non-division matchup.
The Warriors threatened to score late in the contest, driving from their 19 to the Northeast six. But the drive ended when Matherne was sacked at the 19-yard-line on fourth and seven with 12 seconds left.
Matherne completed his debut as the Warrior signal caller by connecting on 12 of 19 passes for 106 yards and one score. Back-up Dustin Land also saw action and completed three of six attempts for minus six yards. Land is a 6-1, 210 signal caller from Milton (Fla.) High School.
Kasey Akins, a 5-5,170-pound wide receiver from Starkville, was the top receiver with two catches for 33 yards. Grayson had one catch – the 24-yard touchdown reception. Zach Pendleton, a 6-3, 185-pound wide receiver from Forest Hill, had three catches for 18 yards and Fabian Johnson, a 5-10, 180-pounder receiver from Coahoma County High School, had one reception for 18 yards.
The Warriors had 167 yards rushing and were led by Hawkins, who rushed 13 times for 70 yards.
Punter Emilio Warnsley of Morton had five boots for a 34.6-yard average. Caleb Porzell punted once for 34 yards and Loris had one attempt for 33 yards. Porzell is a running back from Our Lady of Good Counsel High School in Silver Springs, Maryland.
Wilson finished the night by completing 18 of 35 passes for 271 yards and four scores. He had one interception, registered by Warrior linebacker Damarcus Lewis, a 6-1, 190-pound product of Quitman High School.
Wilson's top receiver was Barksdale, who had four catches for 101 yards and one score. Jarboe finished with five grabs for 87 yards and two touchdowns.
The Tigers were limited to 70 yards on the ground and were led by Jaquise Cook of Ripley with 40 yards on nine carries.
Each team had 15 first downs
East Central hits the road this week to take on Northwest Thursday, Sept. 9. Kickoff is set for 6:30 p.m. on the Senatobia campus.
All Warrior football games can be heard on the College Web site (www.eccc.edu) or on KICKS 98 (98.3 FM), featuring veteran broadcasters Melvin Wooten and Gilbert Barham. Fans can also follow game action on www.twitter.com/Go_Warriors.
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return false;} if(pageid == 'audit') {STSNavigate(unescape(decodeURI('{SiteUrl}'))+'/_layouts/Reporting.aspx?Category=Auditing&backtype=item&ID={ItemId}&List={ListId}'); return false;} if(pageid == 'config') {STSNavigate(unescape(decodeURI('{SiteUrl}'))+'/_layouts/expirationconfig.aspx?ID={ItemId}&List={ListId}'); return false;}}, null); return false; 0x0 0x1 ContentType 0x01 898 Edit in Browser /_layouts/images/icxddoc.gif /athletics/_layouts/formserver.aspx?XsnLocation={ItemUrl}&OpenIn=Browser&Source={Source} 0x0 0x1 FileType xsn 255 Edit in Browser /_layouts/images/icxddoc.gif /athletics/_layouts/formserver.aspx?XmlLocation={ItemUrl}&OpenIn=Browser&Source={Source} 0x0 0x1 ProgId InfoPath.Document 255 Edit in Browser /_layouts/images/icxddoc.gif /athletics/_layouts/formserver.aspx?XmlLocation={ItemUrl}&OpenIn=Browser&Source={Source} 0x0 0x1 ProgId InfoPath.Document.2 255 Edit in Browser /_layouts/images/icxddoc.gif /athletics/_layouts/formserver.aspx?XmlLocation={ItemUrl}&OpenIn=Browser&Source={Source} 0x0 0x1 ProgId InfoPath.Document.3 255 Edit in Browser /_layouts/images/icxddoc.gif /athletics/_layouts/formserver.aspx?XmlLocation={ItemUrl}&OpenIn=Browser&Source={Source} 0x0 0x1 ProgId InfoPath.Document.4 255 View in Browser /athletics/_layouts/xlviewer.aspx?id={ItemUrl}&DefaultItemOpen=1 0x0 0x1 FileType xlsx 255 View in Browser /athletics/_layouts/xlviewer.aspx?id={ItemUrl}&DefaultItemOpen=1 0x0 0x1 FileType xlsm 255 View in Browser /athletics/_layouts/xlviewer.aspx?id={ItemUrl}&DefaultItemOpen=1 0x0 0x1 FileType xlsb 255 View in Browser /athletics/_layouts/xlviewer.aspx?id={ItemUrl}&DefaultItemOpen=1 0x0 0x1 FileType ods 255 Document Set Version History javascript:SP.UI.ModalDialog.ShowPopupDialog('{SiteUrl}/_layouts/DocSetVersions.aspx?List={ListId}&ID={ItemId}') 0x0 0x0 ContentType 0x0120D520 330 Send To other location javascript:GoToPage('{SiteUrl}/_layouts/docsetsend.aspx?List={ListId}&ID={ItemId}') 0x0 0x0 ContentType 0x0120D520 350 |
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