We Can Get Used to This – Wildcats Secure First SWAC Win 41-34 over Bulldogs

Credits The News-Journal

We Can Get Used to This

Daytona Stadium is starting to feel a little different these days. It’s a little louder, a little bit more lively, and dare I say it…filled with a lot more hope as Bethune-Cookman has strung together back-to-back home wins. The Wildcats are giving their fans something they haven’t truly experienced in years: a reason to believe.

Last week’s victory over Edward Waters felt more like relief. The same with last year’s home win over Grambling State. But Saturday’s win over Alabama A&M just felt different.

-That was an excellent football game against a good, well-coached A&M team.

-That was a game that sparked a lot of pride among the fans.

-That ladies and gentlemen was Wildcat football.

A Well-Played Game from Start to Finish

From the opening whistle, BCU looked sharp, well-prepared, and confident. They looked like a good football program to say it bluntly. They asserted themselves early and repeatedly against a quality SWAC opponent. They also showed just how far this squad has progressed since game one this season. Was it perfect? Nah, not even close but it was the kind of well-rounded performance that sets a tone for the weeks ahead.

When in doubt, give the ball to “Bon-Bon”

Sophomore receiver Javon “Bon-Bon” Ross had himself a game. The Deland native, nicknamed Bon-Bon by his grandmother, electrified the crowd with a breakout performance that was hard to ignore.

On the Wildcats’ very first offensive play, quarterback Cam Ransom uncorked a 79-yard bomb. It dropped perfectly into Ross’s hands and he did the rest by outrunning the defenders on his way to the endzone. On BCU’s next possession, Ross added a 41-yard touchdown run after taking a reverse to the house. Two touchdowns for Ross scored in two different ways. The fanbase now knows what the locals have known for a while…good things happen when you give the ball to Bon-Bon.

The Playmakers Keep Rising

Ross wasn’t the only local product shining on Saturday. True freshman running back Khamani Robinson continues to prove that the moment isn’t too big for him. Robinson scored BCU’s third touchdown on a 24 yard scamper giving the Cats the lead at halftime.

And then there’s Cam Ransom. Each week, he keeps getting better and right now, it’s hard to find any HBCU quarterback who is playing better. His command of the offense, his efficiency, and his growing chemistry with playmakers like Ross and Rickie Shaw, Maleek Huggins, Lorenzo Jenkins and others are changing the Wildcats’ offensive identity right before our eyes.

The Fans are Starting to Believe Too

Shoutout to the fans who showed up Saturday. The threat of rainstorms seemed to have kept a few people away. However, those who decided to attend were treated to a great HBCU experience. Not only did they witness BCU’s best overall performance in years, but they also enjoyed a SWAC Band Battle.

Daytona Stadium hosted an opposing SWAC band for the first time since BCU joined the conference. Alabama A&M’s Marching Maroon and White (MMW) made the trip to “Da Beach”. After speaking with many in attendance, the MMW headed back to Huntsville with a slew of new fans. The MMW are wecolmed back anytime.

BCU’s Marching Wildcats did what they always do…they “showed up and showed out”. Give AAMU’s band the edge in song selection and repertoire, but the Pride delivered in execution and overall sound quality. In the end, both bands represented well and it was the fans who were the biggest winners.

A Shift in the Air

It was great seeing the vibe in the stands all game. The bands helped with the atmosphere and the weather held off for the most part, but it was about more than the good bands and decent weather. The fans were active, engaged, and for the first time in a long time, anxiety-free. Cookman fans regained a bit of their mojo. They actually expected something good to happen, rather than waiting on disaster. Even after the game, I heard from at least a dozen fans. They all echoed the same sentiment…this was the best they had felt after a BCU game in years.

The excitement was palpable and the hope was contagious. You could see it in the way the team responded to mistakes. They didn’t allow miscues to beat them twice. Instead, they corrected them and overcame them in real time.

You could see it in the way the fans cheered…a little louder and a little longer.

And most importantly, you saw it on the scoreboard; Wildcats 41, Bulldogs 34.

I like this feeling. Heck, we all like this feeling. And judging by the team’s growing confidence, we may get to share this feeling a little more often and that’s something we can get used to.

StatisticAAMBCU
First Downs
Total2225
Rushing614
Passing1410
Penalty21
Rushing
Total (Net)125259
Attempts3235
Avg. Per Rush3.97.4
Rushing TDs14
Yds. Gained133266
Yds. Lost87
Passing
Total (Net)355257
Comp.-Att.-Int.2741-118-25-2
Avg. / Att.8.710.3
Avg. / Comp.13.114.3
TDs32
Total Offense
Yards480516
Plays7360
Avg. / Play6.68.6
Fumbles – Lost110-0
Penalties – Yds.4-50661
Punting
Punts – Yds.2-753131
Avg. / Punt37.543.7
Inside 2010
50+ Yds.01
Touchbacks01
Fair Catch00
Kickoffs
Total – Yds.7-3687-435
Avg. Yds. / Kickoff52.662.1
Touchbacks12
Returns
Punt: Total – Yds. – TDs216-00-0-0
Punt: Avg. / Return8.00
Kickoff: Total – Yds. – TDs5-111-06-68-0
Kickoff: Avg. / Return22.211.3
INT: Total – Yds. – TDs2-0-01-0-0
Fumble: Total – Yds. – TDs0-0-00-0-0
Miscellaneous
Misc. Yards00
Poss. Time31:5928:01
3rd. Down Conv.11 of 188 of 11
4th. Down Conversions3 of 30 of 0
Red-Zone: Scores – Chances331-1
Sacks: Total – Yds.0-024
PAT: Total – Made4-456
2PT Conversion: Total – Made0-00-0
Field Goals: Total – Made220-0

QtrTimeScoring PlayAAMBCU
1st09:35AAM – Faulk,David 45 yd field goal 11 plays, 53 yards, TOP 05:2130
1st09:20BCU – Ross,Javon 79 yd pass from Ransom,Cam’Ron (Dominguez,Juan kick) 1 plays, 79 yards, TOP 00:1137
1st01:27AAM – Nero,Kolton 2 yd run (Faulk,David kick), 4 plays, 62 yards, TOP 01:43107
2nd13:38BCU – Ross,Javon 41 yd run (Dominguez,Juan kick), 7 plays, 83 yards, TOP 02:441014
2nd08:41AAM – Pierre,Franck 72 yd pass from Handley,Eric (Faulk,David kick) 4 plays, 83 yards, TOP 01:101714
2nd01:18BCU – Robinson,Khamani 24 yd run ( ), 14 plays, 83 yards, TOP 07:191720
2nd00:08BCU – Shaw II,Rickie 27 yd pass from Ransom,Cam’Ron (Dominguez,Juan kick) 7 plays, 63 yards, TOP 00:541727
3rd11:31AAM – Pierre,Franck 32 yd pass from Handley,Eric (Faulk,David kick) 3 plays, 58 yards, TOP 00:572427
3rd10:18BCU – Scott Jr.,Alihaja 8 yd run (Dominguez,Juan kick), 3 plays, 69 yards, TOP 01:072434
3rd03:44AAM – Abner,Travaunta 1 yd pass from Handley,Eric (Faulk,David kick) 12 plays, 59 yards, TOP 06:253134
4th05:58AAM – Faulk,David 19 yd field goal 15 plays, 57 yards, TOP 06:443434
4th01:07BCU – Scott Jr.,Alihaja 26 yd run (Dominguez,Juan kick), 8 plays, 66 yards, TOP 04:443441
3441

B-CU Outclasses Edward Waters 35-9

DAYTONA BEACH, FL–In a game that was set to be billed as the winless Wildcats of Bethune-Cookman hosting the undefeated Tigers of Edward Waters, the game proved anticlimactic as the B-CU Wildcats jumped out to an early 14-0 lead and never looked back en route to a dominating 35-9 victory Saturday.

The game was one in which both the offensive and defensive lines dominated on both sides of the ball, with the offense amassing over 4 total yards (220 on the ground) while the defense sacked EWU four times and forced four turnovers.

Quarterback Cam’Ron Ramsom turned in another efficient performance completing 10 of his 20 passes for three touchdowns. His go to receiver Maleek Huggins, had a monster day hauling in nine passes for 177 yards and two scores.

Pacing the Wildcats defensively was Jaylen Brown, tallying 10 total tackes (2.0 for loss) and two sacks. Johnny Harris, III with his first interception of the season thwarts the Tigers drive giving the Wildcats the ball to start their first drive at their own seven yard line with 12:44 remaining in the first quarter.

A botched 13 yard punt by Edward Waters’ Ryan Gagne gave the Wildcats the ball at the Tiger 25 yard line. Five plays later, facing a third and goal from the EWU 20, Ransom scrambled right and found Maleek Huggins in the back of the end zone who toe tapped before falling out of the end zone. A Juan Dominguez extra point gave BCU a 7-0 lead with 3:07 remaining in the first.

The Wildcats scored their second touchdown late in the second quarter after capping a three play, 45 yard drive with a nine yard pass from Ransom to Alihaja Scott to increase their lead to 14-0 with 3:29 remaining in the first half.

On the ensuing drive, Edward Waters would hit paydirt as Noah Bodden found Makai Lovett for a 23 yard touchdown to cap an eight play, 75 yard drive over 2:00 to cut the Wildcat lead to 14-6 with 1:13 remaining in the half following the failed PAT by Gagne.

Midway through the third quarter, the Wildcat ground game got going with a 75 yard touchdown run for Khamani Robinson, his first of the season to extend the lead for B-CU to 21-6 with 9:27 remaining.

The quick strike Cats found the endzone again with 4:44 remaining in the 3rd as Ransom found Huggins for an 82 yard catch and score to give B-CU a commanding 28-6 advantage as the Marching Pride fired up their rendition of Cameo’s classic “Neck.”

On the very next drive and 1:30 later, self-inflicted penalties would rear its ugly head again for EWU as an errant throw by Bodden fell into the hands of Naim Lassiter at the Tiger 40 yard line and he raced untouched into the end zone to push the B-CU lead to 35-6 with 3:14 remaining in the third ensuring the rout was on in Daytona Beach.

Edward Waters would add a 41 yard field goal by Gagne with 6:04 remaining in the game to cut the BCU lead to 35-9 with 6:04 remaining to close out the scoring.

With the win, the Wildcats improve to 1-3 overall, while Edward Waters suffers their first defeat of the 2025 football campaign

Wildcats Flex Their Muscle and Find that Winning Feeling Again!

Credits: Bethune-Cookman University

Bethune-Cookman hosted Edward Waters in their first home game of the season this past Saturday.

7,927 fans watched BCU thump their Duval brethren 35-9 and quite honestly, Daytona Stadium felt more alive than it has in quite some time.

Coach Woodie’s guys flashed the kind of explosiveness on offense and backbone on defense that fans have been longing for.

By night’s end, BCU racked up 437 yards on offense including 228 on the ground. Defensively, the Cats held EWU’s vaunted offense to just 9 points despite the Tigers scoring over 40 points per game in each of their first three contests.

True Freshman running back, Khamani Robinson, accounted for 114 yards on 12 carries. His 75 yard touchdown run early in the 3rd quarter broke the game wide open. Robinson was named SWAC Newcomer of the Week for his efforts.

Credits: BCU Athletics

Wide receiver Maleek Huggins promised to give the fans a show this season and he certainly did that on Saturday. Huggins racked up 177 yards receiving and two touchdowns. One of the touchdowns was a highlight-reel 82-yard score. It ended with a Michael Jackson inspired touchdown celebration. The senior from Bradenton also received conference honors this week being named Offensive Player of the Week.

Credits: BCU Athletics

Naim Lassiter added a defensive score with a 40 yard pick-six late in the 3rd.

Mini-homecoming spoiled

I’m not gonna lie, it was really cool seeing Brian Jenkins patrolling the sidelines in Daytona. It was also cool seeing Matt Johnson, Ryan Davis, Eddie Poole, and Brian Dorsey on the sidelines. Several other former Wildcats joined them. They took pictures and shared love with their former head coach. Brian Jenkins won 46 games in 5 years as BCU’s head coach so we knew he would have his team prepared and fired up for this game.

And that he did. Just about 9 minutes before kickoff, BCU’s public address announcer, welcomed Edward Waters to the field from the locker room. But there was one big problem, Jenkins wasn’t ready for his team to leave the locker room just yet. So he waited. And waited. And waited until Bethune was invited to take the field. It was only then that he decided it was time to run out.

It was a reminder of everything we love about Brian Jenkins and his teams. Make every contest a dog fight and find any advantage that you can.

Thankfully for Bethune, the pregame happenings had no impact on the outcome of the game. Neither did the FCS Reddit betting odds, which listed the Wildcats as 5.5 point underdogs against their D2 opponent.

Once the ball was kicked off, the bigger, stronger, faster, and better team won.

Relax Cookman Fans and enjoy the moment !

Relax Cookman Fans and enjoy the moment!

Jerry Bell – HailWildcats.com

Let’s be honest — Bethune-Cookman fans have been conditioned by the past few seasons to flinch, even in the presence of good things happening. Call it sports PTSD, call it phantom pains — call it whatever you want to label it, but the scars are real. Years of heartbreak have taught this fanbase to keep its guard up at all times.

We saw it again on Saturday. BCU dominated the first half. However, costly mistakes and a pesky Edward Waters reduced the Wildcats’ lead to just 14-6 at halftime. You could feel the anxiety of the crowd. There was the proverbial “here we go again” echoing around the stadium.

But the good guys rattled off 21 unanswered points in the third and showed their dominance with a 26 point win. Even still, some folks almost didn’t know how to react.

Should we celebrate?”

How would Saturday’s performance translate against SWAC competition?”

“Why didn’t the team score 40+ points?

It was a weird phenomenon but here is what I say to all of this: Relax Cookman Fans and enjoy the moment.

Wins are hard to come by in college football, and when they do come, you’ve got to savor them. So let’s try to forget the scars and live in the moment.

Saturday was fun, and it’s okay to enjoy the moment.

Was it a perfect game?…Well no. But were there big plays to celebrate, defensive swagger, 4 interceptions, 4 sacks, young guys stepping up?… Heck yeah there was and that’s the kind of football that’s worth celebrating. Who knows, if the Wildcats keep stacking performances like this together, Daytona Stadium can start feeling like the fortress it once was. Maybe then the fans can flex their muscles a little too! 💪

StatisticEWUBCU
First Downs
Total2015
Rushing711
Passing104
Penalty30
Rushing
Total (Net)74228
Attempts3041
Avg. Per Rush2.55.6
Rushing TDs01
Yds. Gained137250
Yds. Lost6322
Passing
Total (Net)173209
Comp.-Att.-Int.1940413-23-1
Avg. / Att.4.39.1
Avg. / Comp.9.116.1
TDs13
Total Offense
Yards247437
Plays7064
Avg. / Play3.56.8
Fumbles – Lost1-00-0
Penalties – Yds.139411-89
Punting
Punts – Yds.7-2305-231
Avg. / Punt32.946.2
Inside 2032
50+ Yds.12
Touchbacks01
Fair Catch30
Kickoffs
Total – Yds.3-1386349
Avg. Yds. / Kickoff46.058.2
Touchbacks03
Returns
Punt: Total – Yds. – TDs212-01-10-0
Punt: Avg. / Return6.010.0
Kickoff: Total – Yds. – TDs359-01-8-0
Kickoff: Avg. / Return19.78.0
INT: Total – Yds. – TDs1-0-04511
Fumble: Total – Yds. – TDs0-0-00-0-0
Miscellaneous
Misc. Yards00
Poss. Time30:4929:11
3rd. Down Conv.4 of 156 of 13
4th. Down Conversions1 of 10 of 1
Red-Zone: Scores – Chances1-124
Sacks: Total – Yds.3-22444
PAT: Total – Made0-155
2PT Conversion: Total – Made0-00-0
Field Goals: Total – Made1-10-1
QtrTimeScoring PlayEWUBCU
1st03:07BCU – Huggins,Maleek 20 yd pass from Ransom,Cam’Ron (Dominguez,Juan kick) 5 plays, 25 yards, TOP 02:5707
2nd03:13BCU – Scott Jr.,Alihaja 9 yd pass from Ransom,Cam’Ron (Dominguez,Juan kick) 3 plays, 45 yards, TOP 01:13014
2nd01:13EWU – Lovett,Makai 23 yd pass from Bodden,Noah ( ) 8 plays, 75 yards, TOP 02:00614
3rd09:27BCU – Robinson,Khamani 75 yd run (Dominguez,Juan kick), 3 plays, 84 yards, TOP 01:32621
3rd04:44BCU – Huggins,Maleek 82 yd pass from Ransom,Cam’Ron (Dominguez,Juan kick) 5 plays, 92 yards, TOP 02:12628
3rd03:14BCU – Lassiter,Naim 40 yd interception (Dominguez,Juan kick)635
4th06:04EWU – Gagne,Ryan 41 yd field goal 17 plays, 67 yards, TOP 09:16935
935

Bulldogs Too Much for Wildcats, 55–41

Credits: BCU Athletics

Heading into this Bethune-Cookman vs South Carolina State matchup, I told y’all this game had more of a chance to be sneaky good game than the expected one-sided snooze fest. Turns out, we got a little of both.

Let’s put it this way. After the game, I got back home just in time to catch the Bud Crawford/Canelo Alvarez boxing match.

South Carolina State played the role of Bud Crawford, superior from the opening bell to the final horn. Bethune-Cookman was Canelo Alvarez, the proud fighter who kept throwing punches, landed some heavy shots, and fought until the end but was ultimately outmanned, overmatched and never got close enough to pose any real threat.

Jerry Bell – HailWildcats.com

If you were comparing the football game to the boxing match, South Carolina State played the role of Bud Crawford, superior from the opening bell to the final horn. Bethune-Cookman was Canelo Alvarez, the proud fighter who kept throwing punches, landed some heavy shots, and fought until the end but was ultimately outmanned, overmatched and never got close enough to pose any real threat.

The results, a 55–41 victory for the Bulldogs in a game they controlled from start to finish…just like Crawford controlled Canelo.

First Quarter: Bulldogs Blitz

From the opening drive, SCSU had their way. Physical on the ground, sharp through the air, and opportunistic on defense. By the end of the first quarter, the Bulldogs had 24 points on the board and 207 yards of total offense. The Wildcats on the other hand, just 4 yards of offense and zero first downs at that point. Yikes!

SC State 1st quarter scoring drives went as follows:

-14 plays, 83 yards ending with a 3 yard Ryan Stubblefield touchdown run.

-7 plays, 63 yard touchdown drive (1 yard KZ Adams run).

-4 yard Malik Harp fumble return for a touchdown.

-9 plays, 61 yard drive ending in a Nico Cavanillas 44 yard field goal.

In the 2nd quarter, Cavanillas added a 41 yard field goal to stretch the lead to 27-0.

Wildcats Swing Back

Then came the fight. 2nd team All-SWAC quarterback, Cam Ransom, entered the game in the 2nd quarter in place of the largely ineffective Timmy McClain who started the contest.

Ransom led the Cats on their first touchdown drive of the season with a two yard TD run with 1:56 remaining in the first half. The drive covered 17 plays, 75 yards and over 8 minutes.

After the halftime break, the Wildcats had 6 highly productive drives that went like this:

Drive 1 – 8 plays, 75 yards; touchdown.

Drive 2 – 7 plays, 67 yards (almost touchdown drive but the officials decided the ball was fumbled into the endzone for a touchdown back). 😤

Drive 3 – 3 plays, 84 yards; touchdown.

Drive 4 – 7 plays, 67 yards; touchdown.

Drive 5 – 7 plays, 75 yard; touchdown.

Drive 6 – 4 plays, 35 yards; touchdown.

That’s 5 touchdowns in 6 second-half drives. And if that disputed fumble call goes the other way? We’re talking about a perfect offensive half.

That’s the good part. But in football and boxing, you don’t just punch; you also get punched.

BCU closed the gap and had multiple chances to make the contest a one-score game, but South Carolina State answered every time. The Cats never got closer than 14.

The Difference Makers

Cam Ransom put on an absolute show. Despite not starting, he finished with:

302 yards passing and 4 touchdowns through the air; 89 yards rushing and 1 touchdown on the ground, and 391 yards of total offense.

That’s a career night against a top notched opponent.

Maleek Huggins also had his best outing of the season, torching the Bulldog secondary for 8 catches, 148 yards, and 2 touchdowns.

Antwone Watts and Nick Rawls II led the Cats on defense with 7 and 6 tackles respectively.

The Bottom Line

Bethune fought back admirably after an abysmal first quarter, and you have to applaud that effort. But effort without execution doesn’t win games. All of these positives couldn’t overcome the Wildcat mistakes. Bethune turned the ball over three times, including the 1st quarter scoop-and-score for the Bulldogs and that drive crushing end-zone fumble that erased points in the 3rd quarter. That’s a 14-point swing and wouldn’t you know it—that’s exactly the margin of defeat.

The better team—the defending MEAC champs—won the game and showed the distance between the two programs at this juncture in time.

Final: South Carolina State 55, Bethune-Cookman 41.

This young BCU team is still learning that in football, like boxing, it’s not enough to just keep swinging. Wins and losses are decided by making adjustments, being disciplined, and paying attention to the details that turn effort into results.

Jerry Bell – HailWildcats.com

The Wildcats fall to 0–3 and are still searching for that first win. This young BCU team is still learning that in football, like boxing, it’s not enough to just keep swinging. Wins and losses are decided by making adjustments, being disciplined, and paying attention to the details that turn effort into results.

The Cats will get another shot at it next week. Until then, Hail Wildcats!

StatisticBCUSCS
First Downs
Total2928
Rushing1012
Passing1715
Penalty21
Rushing
Total (Net)182226
Attempts3437
Avg. Per Rush5.46.1
Rushing TDs25
Yds. Gained200230
Yds. Lost184
Passing
Total (Net)325335
Comp.-Att.-Int.2338122-37-0
Avg. / Att.8.69.1
Avg. / Comp.14.115.2
TDs41
Total Offense
Yards507561
Plays7274
Avg. / Play77.6
Fumbles – Lost220-0
Penalties – Yds.7695-50
Punting
Punts – Yds.2-942-77
Avg. / Punt4738.5
Inside 2010
50+ Yds.10
Touchbacks00
Fair Catch00
Kickoffs
Total – Yds.7-33610541
Avg. Yds. / Kickoff48.054.1
Touchbacks02
Returns
Punt: Total – Yds. – TDs2-9-02-15-0
Punt: Avg. / Return4.57.5
Kickoff: Total – Yds. – TDs7146-04-76-0
Kickoff: Avg. / Return20.919.0
INT: Total – Yds. – TDs0-0-01-0-0
Fumble: Total – Yds. – TDs0-0-0141
Miscellaneous
Misc. Yards00
Poss. Time31:2628:34
3rd. Down Conv.3 of 109 of 13
4th. Down Conversions2 of 30 of 0
Red-Zone: Scores – Chances3-477
Sacks: Total – Yds.1-41-2
PAT: Total – Made5-677
2PT Conversion: Total – Made0-00-0
Field Goals: Total – Made0-022

Preview: BCU at South Carolina State; Sneaky Good or One-Sided 🤔

Credits: Bryce Hoynoski

If you ask most HBCU fans to circle the big games this weekend, you’d be hard-pressed to find anyone pointing to Bethune-Cookman vs. South Carolina State. And honestly—why would they?

South Carolina State is the defending MEAC champ, sitting at 1-1 currently, and looking set to defend their crown. Bethune-Cookman, on the other hand, hasn’t factored into many meaningful contests recently and have been on the butt end of a couple of whoppings the past two weeks.

On paper, this looks like a mismatch. But call me crazy, something tells me this could be a sneaky good game this weekend.

call me crazy, something tells me this could be a sneaky good game this weekend.

J Bell – HailWildcats.com

Maybe that’s the Wildcat fanatic in me talking…Probably is.

Maybe I’m still holding on to the luster of yesteryear when the BCU vs SCSU matchup carried the intensity of a prizefight when the two were MEAC heavyweights.

Or maybe—just maybe—it’s because history says these two programs rarely give us a dud on the gridiron.

Series Split over last 10 games

The series is split at 5 wins and 5 losses apiece over the past 10 matchups. It’s split 11 wins and 9 losses in favor of the Bulldogs over the past 20.  

So despite the difference in expectations for these squads, the back-and-forth series record shows you don’t sleep on this rivalry; even when the Wildcats look down.

What to Expect Saturday

Here is Coach Woodie and the Wildcats’ chance to make an announcement to the HBCU world; and SCSU is the perfect opponent to do it against. Don’t expect the same watered-down schemes we’ve seen through Weeks 1 and 2 against BCU’s FBS opponents.

On Defense: Expect more blitz packages, more disruption, and more variations in coverages.

On Offense: Look for much more tempo, more creativity, more quarterback run, and more getting the ball in the hands of the playmakers quickly.

I’m NOT predicting a BCU upset but that’s not out of the question either. What I am predicting is the type of Dog and Cat fight that has made this series very competitive.

J Bell – HailWildcats.com

Let me be clear, I’m NOT predicting a BCU upset but that’s not out of the question either. What I am predicting is the type of Dog and Cat fight that has made this series very competitive and my favorite on the field matchup for BCU. And who knows, if things break right…well, let’s just say if things break right, it will be hard to shut me up next week.

Yeah, I know I’m crazy. I know how that sounds. I guess I will see y’all in Orangeburg.

Hail Wildcats!

BCU Football Week 2: Final Takeaways on 45-3 loss to #5 MIA

Credits: BCU Athletics

Week 2 Takeaways: Bethune-Cookman vs. Miami

Bethune-Cookman just completed the toughest stretch of its season. The team traveled to Miami in back-to-back weeks to face FBS foes. Call it BCU’s version of a “preseason,” call it the “money games season,” call it whatever you want. The bottom line is the Wildcats faced bigger, stronger teams, and more well-funded programs and now sit at 0–2 to begin the 2025 campaign. But now the real season starts.

From here on out it’s about HBCU opponents, FCS battles, conference matchups and games that matter against similar programs. South Carolina State is first up, but before we look ahead at the game against the Bulldogs, let’s focus on a few takeaways from Saturday night against No. 5 Miami.

Takeaway 1: There is Not Much to Take Away

I don’t mean this in any negative sense at all. The truth is last week’s game was about survival. You can tell by how the staff kept it simple. They held back the playbook on offense and defense. They sat and limited playing time to key contributors including two of your starting offensive linemen. It doesn’t matter if it was about rest, health, or protecting depth. The message was clear. Coach Raymond Woodie was boldly stating that conference play and HBCU play is the priority.

Takeaway 2: Quarterback Steady

Quarterback Timmy McClain continues to look the part under center. He went 13-of-16 passing Saturday night. That’s an 81% completion rate and about as efficient as it gets, even against a 5th ranked Miami squad with all of that size and speed. His only real blemish came on a sack-fumble he probably should’ve eaten, but you’ll take that when you consider the poise and control he showed over the course of the contest. Two games in, McClain feels like a steady hand you can build around.

Takeaway 3: His eye is on the Sparrow

Yeah, I know that sounds churchy but I am a church boy so what are you going to do. At any rate, LB/DB Stephen Sparrow Jr. had an excellent game finishing with 9 total tackles, 1 sack, and 1 tackle for loss. One of the things you look for in these type of contests are what FCS guys look like they belong on the same field as the FBS guys. Sparrow fit the bill on Saturday night. The former Orlando Jones Tiger just looked like he belonged on the field and matched everything the Hurricanes threw at him from a speed, athleticism, and physicality standpoint. Good job Sparrow!

Takeaway 4: Battled to the End

No one expected a close scoreboard, but effort still matters. Down big, outmatched, Bethune kept playing hard. That competitiveness is what you need when the schedule flips into games that are winnable and that count in the conference standings.

Looking Ahead: SCSU

Now it’s go-time.

No more holding back the playbook.

No more “preseason”.

No more FBS opponents.

No more excuses.

It’s time for us to see what this team is made of; and what an opponent to do it against. Back in Bethune’s MEAC days, South Carolina State was always the team BCU used as the measuring-stick program. They were the matchup that told you exactly where you stood. That tradition carries over. This weekend is the first real barometer for Bethune in Year Three under Coach Woodie.

Expect a scrap. Expect a game that feels like Cats versus Dogs. And by late Saturday night, expect to know a whole lot more about what this 2025 Wildcat team is really made of.

StatisticBCUMIA
First Downs
Total1431
Rushing413
Passing717
Penalty31
Rushing
Total (Net)92199
Attempts3330
Avg. Per Rush2.86.6
Rushing TDs04
Yds. Gained115201
Yds. Lost232
Passing
Total (Net)99344
Comp.-Att.-Int.14-18-13036-0
Avg. / Att.5.59.6
Avg. / Comp.7.111.5
TDs02
Total Offense
Yards191543
Plays5166
Avg. / Play3.78.2
Fumbles – Lost1-11-0
Penalties – Yds.2-20450
Punting
Punts – Yds.41670-0
Avg. / Punt41.80
Inside 2010
50+ Yds.00
Touchbacks00
Fair Catch00
Kickoffs
Total – Yds.2-1268520
Avg. Yds. / Kickoff63.065.0
Touchbacks18
Returns
Punt: Total – Yds. – TDs0-0-0211-0
Punt: Avg. / Return05.5
Kickoff: Total – Yds. – TDs0-0-0125-0
Kickoff: Avg. / Return025.0
INT: Total – Yds. – TDs0-0-01-0-0
Fumble: Total – Yds. – TDs0-0-015-0
Miscellaneous
Misc. Yards00
Poss. Time31:5528:05
3rd. Down Conv.1 of 114 of 6
4th. Down Conversions0 of 10 of 1
Red-Zone: Scores – Chances1-255
Sacks: Total – Yds.2-61-8
PAT: Total – Made0-066
2PT Conversion: Total – Made0-00-0
Field Goals: Total – Made1-11-1

Key individual standouts:

🔸Timmy McClain (BCU): 13-of-16 passing, 86 yards—efficient and under control.

🔸Juan Dominguez (BCU Kicker): 32-yard field goal accounted for the only points.

🔸Stephen Sparrow (BCU) 9 tackles including 1 sack and 1 tackle for loss.

🔸Carson Beck (MIA): In near-perfect form with 22-of-24 for 267 yards, 2 TDs.

🔸Mark Fletcher Jr. (MIA): Rushed 11 times for 86 yards and 2 touchdowns.

BCU Football: Final Takeaways from Week 1 Loss to FIU

Credits: Bryce Hoynoski

Week one is in the books, and this game went just about how we expected: Florida International flexed its FBS muscle, walking away with a 42–9 win over our Wildcats.

The odds makers listed BCU as 31 point underdogs heading into this contest. I disagreed and had this game pegged for something in the 41-21 range. I got the 41 part almost right, but unfortunately BCU could only muster three field goals in the contest. Thankfully I didn’t lose my lunch money by betting on Bethune but all was not lost by night’s end.

Here’s what stood out as things BCU can build on moving forward:

1. Relax everyone— This isn’t last year so let’s give the guys a chance to grow into the season. Especially since we knew going into this year that BCU was punching way above its weight class the first two weeks, facing FBS foes in back to back games. The FIU matchup was always going to be an uphill battle. Even still, the offense showed flashes of life piling up 346 yards of total offense (105 rushing, 241 passing)—over double the output from last year’s opener against USF, where they managed just 170 yards. The offense made five trips inside the red zone which is good. But unfortunately, the Cats settled for just three field goals.

2. Meet Javon Ross. Bethune has a fairly deep wide receiver room. On Friday night, it was Ross’ time to shine. The sophomore from Deland, Florida hauled in 6 catches for 109 yards. Fellow receivers Maleek Huggins and Lorenzo Jenkins have proven how productive they can be so watching Ross have a 100+ yard receiving night is something to build on as the season unfolds.

3. Marqui Johnson flashed when his number was called. The transfer running back from Montana State did not get the start the contest at running back. Yet he still went for 76 yards on 9 attempts, a whopping 8.4 yards per carry average.

4. The secondary battled and had a nice outing. Your leading tacklers on the evening were two secondary players, Antwone Watts (7) and Johnny Harris (6). The entire defensive backfield played well and were in good position all night delivering nearly half a dozen pass breakups including three that could have easily been interceptions. That is a good outing against a talented FIU offense.

5. Coach Woodie got a kicker we can trust. Juan Dominguez went 3-for-3 on field goals (35, 22, 28 yards). That kind of reliability can swing close games, and given how many BCU lost by slim margins last year, this is a big morale booster.

Final Thoughts

Despite the final scoreline, there are glimmers of life—an improved offense, a reliable kicker, and bright individual performances. There were some mistakes to extend drives, missed reads, dropped interceptions, and empty trips in the red zone. Those things sting a bit but are to be expected early in the season. Overall, there were seeds of progress when compared to last year. And that’s ultimately what this early part of the season is about, progress. I will take what I saw on Friday and look forward to next week’s matchup against #10 ranked Miami!

StatisticBCUFIU
First Downs
Total1728
Rushing714
Passing1011
Penalty03
Rushing
Total (Net)105223
Attempts3038
Avg. Per Rush3.55.9
Rushing TDs06
Yds. Gained137246
Yds. Lost3223
Passing
Total (Net)241233
Comp.-Att.-Int.2339-022-35-0
Avg. / Att.6.26.7
Avg. / Comp.10.510.6
TDs00
Total Offense
Yards346456
Plays6973
Avg. / Play56.2
Fumbles – Lost2-11-1
Penalties – Yds.8757-40
Punting
Punts – Yds.41712-102
Avg. / Punt42.851
Inside 2011
50+ Yds.02
Touchbacks00
Fair Catch20
Kickoffs
Total – Yds.4-2347421
Avg. Yds. / Kickoff58.560.1
Touchbacks03
Returns
Punt: Total – Yds. – TDs2-9-02-2-0
Punt: Avg. / Return4.51.0
Kickoff: Total – Yds. – TDs3-51-04103-0
Kickoff: Avg. / Return17.025.8
INT: Total – Yds. – TDs0-0-00-0-0
Fumble: Total – Yds. – TDs1-0-00-0-0
Miscellaneous
Misc. Yards00
Poss. Time27:5932:01
3rd. Down Conv.5 of 158 of 14
4th. Down Conversions0 of 31 of 2
Red-Zone: Scores – Chances3-55-5
Sacks: Total – Yds.0-0219
PAT: Total – Made0-066
2PT Conversion: Total – Made0-00-0
Field Goals: Total – Made330-1