Texas Southern Tigers football

The Texas Southern Tigers is the college football team representing Texas Southern University, a historically black university (HBCU) in Houston. The Tigers play in the NCAA's Division I FCS as a member of the Southwestern Athletic Conference (SWAC), a conference whose members are all HBCUs. In 2012, the Tigers moved into the new Shell Energy Stadium, built for the city's Major League Soccer team, the Houston Dynamo. It replaced the Alexander Durley Sports Complex as the home of Tiger football.

Texas Southern Tigers football
2023 Texas Southern Tigers football team
First season1947
Head coachClarence McKinney
4th season, 9–27 (.250)
StadiumShell Energy Stadium
(capacity: 22,000)
Year built2012
Field surfaceNatural grass
LocationHouston, Texas
ConferenceSWAC
DivisionWest
All-time record33043927 (.432)
Unclaimed national titles2 (Black College): 1952, 2010
Conference titles4 (1 MWAA, 3 SWAC)
ColorsMaroon and gray[1]
   
Websitetsusports.com

History

Shell Energy Stadium

Classifications

Conference memberships

Football classics

Labor Day Classic

The Tigers compete against the Panthers of Prairie View A&M in the Labor Day Classic for the Durley-Nicks Trophy. The popular football rivalry began in 1946 but the classic was created in 1985.

TV broadcasting

In July 2017, Texas Southern renewed their deal with AT&T SportsNet (formerly ROOT Sports Southwest) to televise all home football games. The cable channel reaches over 13 million households.[2]

Championships

National

Year Championship Coach Overall record Conference
1952Black College National co-championsAlexander Durley10–0–1MWAA
2010Black College National co-championsJohnnie Cole9–3SWAC

Conference championships

Year Conference Coach Overall Record Conference Record
1952Midwest Athletic AssociationAlexander Durley10–0–1
1956Southwestern Athletic ConferenceAlexander Durley9–25–1
1964Southwestern Athletic ConferenceClifford Paul5–4–14–2–1
1968Southwestern Athletic ConferenceClifford Paul6–46–1
2010*Southwestern Athletic ConferenceJohnnie Cole9–38–1
Total Conference Championships: 4 (1 vacated)
† Denotes co-champions * Denotes vacated title

Alumni in the NFL

Over 60 Texas Southern alumni have played in the NFL or AFL,[3] including:

°° Pro Football Hall of Fame inductee

2012 NCAA sanctions

In October 2012, the NCAA found Texas Southern University guilty of repeated rules violations in 13 sports over a seven-year period from 2005 to 2012. The most serious violations occurred within the football and men's basketball programs, involving academic fraud, illicit benefits given to student athletes, lying on the part of coaches, and lying to the NCAA about previously self-imposed sanctions.[4]

Prior to the NCAA's verdict, the school had taken numerous corrective measuresincluding the April 2011 firing of football coach Johnnie Cole (2010 SWAC Football Coach of the Year) and vacating every game that the Tiger football team had won from 2006 to 2010 - including the 2010 SWAC Championship, their first championship in 42 years.[5]

The NCAA banned TSU's football team from the 2013 and 2014 postseason.[6]

See also

References

  1. TSU Graphic Standards (PDF). September 1, 2015. Retrieved April 9, 2016.
  2. "AT&T SportsNet set to broadcast TSU home football games". Texas Southern University.
  3. "Texas Southern Players/Alumni - Pro-Football-Reference.com". Pro-Football-Reference.com.
  4. "NCAA". 26 October 2012. Archived from the original on 26 October 2012.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  5. "NCAA imposes postseason bans for Texas Southern". CBSSports.com. Archived from the original on May 20, 2013. Retrieved 2012-10-09.
  6. The New York Times, 2012-10-09.
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