superman7515
May 6th, 2016, 10:30 AM
http://www.sbnation.com/college-football/2016/5/4/11429522/florida-am-football-history-billy-joe-jake-gaither
You don't really know what the high point was until after the fact. You don't really know where the peak was until you've begun to come down.
With 16 years of hindsight, we can pinpoint Florida A&M's modern peak. On December 11, 1999, the Rattlers led Jim Tressel's Youngstown State by 11 points with eight minutes to go in the Division I-AA (now FCS) semifinals. They had the ball at the Penguins' 4. In that moment, the future was green and orange.
Under Jake Gaither from the end of World War II until 1969, the Rattlers were one of the two anchors of Black college football alongside Eddie Robinson's Grambling. Nine years after Gaither's retirement, under former Woody Hayes assistant Rudy Hubbard, they won the inaugural Division I-AA national title in 1978. They were storied and celebrated...
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From the same article:
Some key dates in FAMU history
1945: FAMU hires Gaither. The Rattlers win 22 SIAC titles in 25 years with Gaither and won six Black College National Championships. They lose zero or one games 15 times. He retires after an 8-1 1969. His final win was over Eddie Robinson and Grambling in the 1969 Orange Blossom Classic, an annual battle between FAMU and another top HBCU team. Gaither wins 12 of those.
1974: FAMU hires Hubbard. The Rattlers had gone 21-22 after Gaither retired, but Hubbard, a 28-year-old former Ohio State running back, gets them rolling again.
1978: FAMU wins the inaugural NCAA I-AA title in 1978, beating UMass in the finals, 35-28.
1979: FAMU beats Howard Schnellenberger's first Miami team, 16-13, in the Orange Bowl.
1996: In Billy Joe's third year, FAMU returns to the I-AA playoffs after a nearly two-decade absence. They will go to six straight, reaching the second round in 1998 and the semifinals in 1999.
2004: An ill-timed jump to FBS goes wrong. FAMU goes 3-8, 0-6 against FBS competition, and goes back to the MEAC after one year.
2010: The last time FAMU beat rival Bethune-Cookman. The Rattlers go on to a five-game losing streak to the Wildcats, whom they have historically dominated (45-19 since World War II).
2011: A hazing scandal engulfs the famed FAMU Marching 100 after drum major Robert Champion dies. The band is suspended until 2013.
2015: FAMU hires former James Madison head coach Alex Wood as its 18th head coach.
You don't really know what the high point was until after the fact. You don't really know where the peak was until you've begun to come down.
With 16 years of hindsight, we can pinpoint Florida A&M's modern peak. On December 11, 1999, the Rattlers led Jim Tressel's Youngstown State by 11 points with eight minutes to go in the Division I-AA (now FCS) semifinals. They had the ball at the Penguins' 4. In that moment, the future was green and orange.
Under Jake Gaither from the end of World War II until 1969, the Rattlers were one of the two anchors of Black college football alongside Eddie Robinson's Grambling. Nine years after Gaither's retirement, under former Woody Hayes assistant Rudy Hubbard, they won the inaugural Division I-AA national title in 1978. They were storied and celebrated...
- - - Updated - - -
From the same article:
Some key dates in FAMU history
1945: FAMU hires Gaither. The Rattlers win 22 SIAC titles in 25 years with Gaither and won six Black College National Championships. They lose zero or one games 15 times. He retires after an 8-1 1969. His final win was over Eddie Robinson and Grambling in the 1969 Orange Blossom Classic, an annual battle between FAMU and another top HBCU team. Gaither wins 12 of those.
1974: FAMU hires Hubbard. The Rattlers had gone 21-22 after Gaither retired, but Hubbard, a 28-year-old former Ohio State running back, gets them rolling again.
1978: FAMU wins the inaugural NCAA I-AA title in 1978, beating UMass in the finals, 35-28.
1979: FAMU beats Howard Schnellenberger's first Miami team, 16-13, in the Orange Bowl.
1996: In Billy Joe's third year, FAMU returns to the I-AA playoffs after a nearly two-decade absence. They will go to six straight, reaching the second round in 1998 and the semifinals in 1999.
2004: An ill-timed jump to FBS goes wrong. FAMU goes 3-8, 0-6 against FBS competition, and goes back to the MEAC after one year.
2010: The last time FAMU beat rival Bethune-Cookman. The Rattlers go on to a five-game losing streak to the Wildcats, whom they have historically dominated (45-19 since World War II).
2011: A hazing scandal engulfs the famed FAMU Marching 100 after drum major Robert Champion dies. The band is suspended until 2013.
2015: FAMU hires former James Madison head coach Alex Wood as its 18th head coach.