Showing posts with label James Madison. Show all posts
Showing posts with label James Madison. Show all posts

Saturday, December 11, 2021

James Madison Dukes (1972)

A James Madison profile? In a New England blog? Yup.

James Madison University is normally out of the milieux of this site, being based way down in Harrisonburg, Va. (Although from the places I've lived the last 15 years or so, hamlets like Durham, N.H., and Amherst, Mass., are considered "way down.") But JMU, a longtime member of the Yankee Conference/Atlantic 10/CAA, has been on the brain since it announced it was moving on up to the FBS and Sun Belt Conference, effective 2023. It's sad to see the Dukes leave, but since they play in a football-rich region and have a rabid fanbase, my guess is they'll handle FBS better than, well, these guys have

The school was known simply as Madison College when it fielded its first football team in 1972. According to Wikipedia (so it must be true),  the school's president wanted to attract more men and change its reputation as an all-women's teachers college. 

James Madison University's first football team in 1972,
when it was still known as Madison College. 
You've got to start somewhere. 

A newspaper article from 1972
heralds the arrival of JMU football.

Judging by the results and pictures, the Dukes appear to have been little more than a ragtag club team in '72; they were shut out in all five games, with the "highlight" a scoreless tie with the mighty Hampden–Sydney jayvees. The uniforms, as you might expect, were pretty basic; they look barely above the level of practice duds. JMU wore yellow helmets (gold didn't arrive until the mid-80s) with an extremely basic "MC" on each side.

A couple shots of the first-year Dukes from the 1973 Bluestone yearbook.
Note that one Duke has a white helmet, a reminder of the first-year team's ragtag nature.
(No, I'm not putting it in the uniform graphic. That's just getting silly.) 

The '72 Dukes under the lights.

After a rough start, MC/JMU took off pretty quickly, going undefeated in 1975 and winning the Virginia Collegiate Athletic Association title. (Two members of the spotless '75 team also were on the winless '73 bunch.) The Dukes joined I-AA/FCS in 1980 and the Yankee Conference in 1993, and won NCAA FCS titles in 2004 and '16.

For perspective, a shot of the undefeated 1975 team in action.
Note the turf field and fans in the larger stands.

So just think: Somewhere out there, some small school no one has ever heard of is borrowing pads and socks and scrambling to put a club football team together. And that obscure team today may be playing for a national title in front of 20,000 fans in 20-30 years.

I also took a brief look at JMU in this profile of the 1996 Yankee Conference teams.

Friday, January 31, 2020

Yankee Conference 1996



In this post, we discussed the Yankee Conference’s inaugural season of 1947. Now, let’s look at 1996, the 50th and final season of the YC before it morphed into the Atlantic 10 football conference and, in 2007, the Colonial Athletic Association. 

One quick note: I have no plans to do full histories for James Madison, Richmond, Villanova and William & Mary unless there’s some massive demand (or JMU jumps off the flavor-of-the-week uniform derby). These four are here just for the sake of completeness. But ya never know …

The YC split into two divisions from 1993-96: The Mid-Atlantic (all the newbies who had joined the YC over the previous decade, including decidedly non-Mid Atlantic Northeastern) and New England (with the six traditional YC teams). The YC’s successors, the A-10 and CAA, used a two-division setup off and on over the next several seasons, but the CAA has gone with one division since 2010. 

My memory may be fuzzy, but I seem to recall there was some hand-wringing over how the Mid-Atlantic teams basically marched in during the 1980s and took over the good ol’ YC (in both 1995 and ’96, five league teams ended the season nationally ranked in the TSN poll, four from the Mid-Atlantic). Of course, just two years later, UMass became the first YC/A10/CAA team to win the FCS (I-AA) national title, so who knows?

The YC ended after NCAA legislation frowned upon single-sport conferences in "major" sports such as football and basketball. The YC needed to attach itself to an already existing conference, and the Atlantic 10 was willing to oblige. 

And now, some notes about the season and uniforms, with an emphasis on our “guest” teams …

William & Mary was the final YC champion, and thus got to retire the sacred Bean Bot trophy, which apparently now sits in the Tribe’s trophy case. (Kinda odd for a team that played in the conference only four years. In a better world, a longtime YC powerhouse like UNH or UMass would have won the last title.) W&M’s uniforms have yellow trim here, but the Tribe switched to gold around 2001, and have kept it ever since. 


One of W&M’s more notable players was safety Sean McDermott (No. 28), who was an all-A10 selection in 1997. The former walk-on now coaches the Buffalo Bills for a living. (Speaking of coaches, Steelers coach Mike Tomlin was a standout wide receiver at W&M from 1991-94.) Another safety, Darren Sharper, was a two-time All-American and three-time all-YC selection who was named YC defensive player of the year in ’96. He went on to an outstanding NFL career with the Packers, Vikings and Saints … and currently is doing a 20-year sentence for multiple rape and drug-related charges.

Also note the unusual placement of the YC patch on W&M’s home jerseys; it’s on the shoulder instead of on the front. One of Northeastern’s road styles has it on the sleeve.

Villanova, which became a I-AA/FCS powerhouse almost immediately after resuming the program in 1985 following a four-year layoff, had some notable players, too. Wide receiver Brian Finneran (No. 25; two brothers were teammates, thus the full name on the back) went on to a distinguished NFL career, mostly with the Atlanta Falcons. His Wikipedia bio offers this gem: “Finneran also has one of the most powerful and sought-after cards in the Ultimate Team portion of the video game Madden 25 due to him being listed as 6'7", two inches taller than his actual height.”



Nova’s helmets are kinda off compared with the rest of its color scheme: The Wildcats have always had navy blue as their primary color, but the “V” on the helmet had bright red and gold trim, while the jersey trim veers closer to maroon. Today, the uniforms use light blue trim, obviously out of a deep respect for my Black Bears. (Sarcasm mode)

And let’s not forget Villanova’s cartoonish primary logo from this period, which I believe lasted only a year or two, and for good reason: You’re a Division I school, not a minor league hockey team.

A logo only an Odessa Jackalopes fan could love.
Actually, that team is still around, so what do I know?

I miss the old James Madison uniforms that served the Dukes well for many years: Gold helmets, purple jerseys and gold pants. These days, it’s white helmets and pants, and it’s not the same. (The gold lids were worn for one game in 2019, I believe.) Although methinks JMU fans would rather watch a perpetual powerhouse than a mediocre team in throwback duds, right? 

JMU didn’t make the I-AA playoffs in ’96, but qualified in ’94, ’95 and ’99 — and all four games were against teams that now play in FBS (2 against Troy, 1 apiece against Marshall and Appalachian State).



Richmond was the one Mid-Atlantic team (I don’t really count Northeastern, which was a YC team in everything but name for decades before it officially joined in ’93) that didn’t dominate the YC in ’96. I did a post a while back on the most boring uniforms in this project, but these unis win the Bland Bowl trophy hands down. Plain navy helmets, plain navy jersey with a white sleeve stripe and plain white pants — the whole thing looks like those awful airbrushed photos Topps used in the 1970s when it made football cards but didn’t have a license to use NFL logos. The Spiders wore flashy red-and-silver uniforms until former Maine defensive back Jim Reid became coach in ’95. Wonder why he chose to make his team look so dull? (Reid, who played at Maine in the early ‘70s, is still coaching, and was Boston College’s defensive coordinator the last four years.)

Spiders linebacker Paris Lenon (No. 6) went onto a journeyman NFL career as a linebacker/special teamer.



Other tidbits from ’96 …
  • New Hampshire had one of New England’s most exciting players in Jerry Azumah, who ran for 1,308 yards and 17 TDs and was named the YC’s offensive player of the year. (Two years later, he took home the Walter Payton Award as the top player in all of I-AA/FCS.) He went on to a Pro Bowl NFL career as a Chicago Bears special-teamer.

Jerry Azumah flies high against Villanova in 1996.
  • Maine’s Jack Cosgrove was named YC coach of the year after leading the Black Bears to their best record in seven years. Maine had to toil in a temporary stadium after Alumni Field, their home since 1946, was condemned. (Alfond Stadium, its current digs, was built in 1998.)
Maine offensive lineman Mike Flynn blocks against James Madison in 1996.
Flynn went on to start for the 2000 Baltimore Ravens team that won the Super Bowl.
  • Rhode Island’s game at UConn was cancelled after 31 players (yes, THIRTY-ONE) were involved in an assault on a URI fraternity the week of the game. You can read more on that here.

  • Rhode Island faces Boston U. in 1996.
    This photo came from the 1997 Renaissance yearbook, but it looks more
    like a fan pic from the stands, which it probably was.

  • Delaware's 8-4 season, which included a trip to the I-AA playoffs, was actually pretty ho-hum by the Blue Hens' standards. In the '90s, Delaware made the NCAAs six times and had a winning record every year.



  • Northeastern, meanwhile, had only two winning seasons the whole decade -- '96 and '97. The Huskies' coach, Barry Gallup, was a player and assistant coach at Boston College for 25 years before he took over at Northeastern, going 38-60-1 from 1991-99. (Trivia: One of his NU assistants was current Jaguars coach Doug Marrone.)

Northeastern visits UMass in 1996. The attendance in Amherst was 12,206;
the Minutemen's largest crowd in 2019 was 12,234 (HINT, HINT).