Wildcats Win An Instant Classic Florida Classic 38-34

Josh Evans scores winning TD with 28 seconds remaining – 2025 FL Classic

It’s the Monday after the 2025 Florida Classic and I’m just now typing out this wrap-up. Not because I’m short on words or emotion. It’s the opposite. I’ve spent the last two days trying to sort through the highs, the lows, the despair, the delirium, the absolute emotional whiplash that this game dropped on all of us. I’m still not sure I’m ready to capture that roller coaster in writing, but here goes.

For the past decade, my wife and I have made it our business to bring someone new to the Florida Classic each year. It’s a personal ministry at this point despite the fact that our Bethune-Cookman Wildcats had dropped four in a row heading into Saturday’s game. 

The Florida Classic(S), as some pronounce it, is one of the premier Black cultural events in the state of Florida. It just has to be experienced! From the trash talk within families, offices, churches, sororities and fraternities; to the food vendors lined up on Tampa Avenue. From the excellence of The Marching Wildcats and The Marching 100; to the barbs thrown at the other school at the luncheon the day prior to the game. It’s all amazing.

But as great as all of those things are, nothing…and I mean nothing tops a dramatic football moment in this extravaganza. On Saturday night we got all the dramatics we could handle. 

There were four lead changes and thirty-two points scored in the fourth quarter alone. Punch. Counter punch. Kick. Counter kick. One moment you’re talking trash, the next you’re feeling like trash.

THE SWINGING OF EMOTIONS

BCU dominated the first half and took a 24–9 lead into halftime. Wildcat fans were floating higher than those seven hills we always hear about. But FAMU opened the second half with a touchdown to cut it to 24–16. Then came a pair of missed BCU field goals, followed by a made FAMU field goal to make it 24–19 with 8:51 left in the fourth quarter.

At this point, Wildcat fans were feeling tight. And I mean, tight-tight.

A quick BCU three-and-out opened the door, and FAMU kicked it in. One play later, a 72 yard Jamal Hailey run up the gut, felt like a kick in the gut. The two-point conversion was successful and suddenly the Rattlers were up 27–24.  For the first time in probably a month, the thought occurred to me that Cookman might actually lose this ballgame. 

I was flabbergasted. Shook. Nervous.

My wife and I’s first-time Classic guest asked, “what just happened?”

On the inside I was asking the same thing. But with clinched teeth and a tight stomach I uttered: “there’s still over 7 minutes left. A lot can happen.”

BON-BON LIGHTS UP THE NIGHT

BCU got the ball back and on 2nd and 5, with both bands blasting, something special happened. Timmy McClain hit Javon “Bon-Bon” Ross on a short crosser. Bon-Bon hit the brakes, reverse-pivoted, dropped two Rattlers flat to the ground, outran another, and raced 67 yards up the FAMU sideline directly towards their band for a highlight reel touchdown.

31–27, Cats. All is well in the world again. 

I exhaled 4-years worth of Classic stress in one breath. Surely, surely, that was enough excitement for the night and BCU had this game won right?

Nope. Not yet at least. 

THE SWING… AGAIN

FAMU marched right back. On 3rd and 10 from the BCU 29, the defense came up with what looked like a massive stop. But a questionable holding call on CB Johnny Harris III extended the drive. One play later, Thad Franklin punched it in. Cats down 34–31 with 2:19 left.

I’d seen this movie. Twice this season— Grambling and Jackson State—similar situation, similar heartbreak. I told myself to accept the L. Five straight to FAMU? The dark clouds were rising. 

The bands struck up again: The 100 playing “Hey Let’s Go,” the Marching Wildcats blasting “Vice Versa.”

Me? I was playing sad songs in my head.

Sack on first down against BCU.

My sad playlist turned into a depressed playlist.

Incomplete on 2nd and 20.

Stomach now in my socks and I am  speaking in strange tongues trying to keep it all together. 

On 3rd and 20, McClain found Rickie Shaw for 17 yards—just enough to make 4th down manageable. The Cats converted and hope reentered my body.  

THE MOMENT THAT CHANGED EVERYTHING

Fifty-five seconds later: 4th and 8 from the FAMU 41.

A first down puts you in field goal range. No first down and it’s over. Simple math.

McClain drops back. The safe throw is there. He passes it up. He looks deep… and he finds a WIDE OPEN Josh Evans streaking untouched down the BCU sideline.

Forty-one yards. Touchdown.

Twenty-eight seconds left.

UN.

FREAKING.

BELIEVABLE.

BCU 38, FAMU 34. Final.

Our first-time guest was crying. Offensive Coordinator Donte Pimpleton was crying. Half the stadium was crying—some from heartbreak, some from pure joy. Depends on which colors you were rocking.

THE LOCAL KIDS WHO OWNED THE MOMENT

McClain and Evans—two Central Florida Area kids transferred to BCU to be closer to home. Playing in front of their people; in the biggest game of the year; they are now forever etched into the lore of this rivalry.

McClain called it “an out-of-body experience” in the postgame presser. No lie detected.

As for our guest? She rated it a 10 out of 10 experience. Said it was way better than advertised. Said she’ll be back every year.

That’s what this event is about. Abject agony for some; utter joy for others. Lasting memories for all.

The 2025 edition…An Instant Classic Florida Classic.

QtrTimeScoring PlayFAMBCU
1st08:33FAM – Porto,Daniel 45 yd field goal 7 plays, 36 yards, TOP 04:2230
1st04:38BCU – Jenkins,Lorenzo 25 yd pass from McClain,Timmy (Dominguez,Juan kick) 7 plays, 61 yards, TOP 03:2837
2nd13:31BCU – Dominguez,Juan 30 yd field goal 7 plays, 43 yards, TOP 03:38310
2nd06:52BCU – Robinson,Khamani 50 yd run (Dominguez,Juan kick), 1 plays, 50 yards, TOP 00:10317
2nd04:04FAM – Burris,Armand 44 yd pass from Johnson III,RJ ( ) 6 plays, 75 yards, TOP 02:48917
2nd00:23BCU – Huggins,Maleek 7 yd pass from McClain,Timmy (Dominguez,Juan kick) 10 plays, 90 yards, TOP 03:33924
3rd11:56FAM – Burris,Armand 17 yd pass from Johnson III,RJ (Porto,Daniel kick) 8 plays, 68 yards, TOP 02:581624
4th08:49FAM – Porto,Daniel 37 yd field goal 10 plays, 62 yards, TOP 03:551924
4th07:47FAM – Hailey,Jamal 72 yd run (Lawrence,Goldie pass), 1 plays, 72 yards, TOP 00:122724
4th07:03BCU – Ross,Javon 67 yd pass from McClain,Timmy (Dominguez,Juan kick) 2 plays, 72 yards, TOP 00:362731
4th02:19FAM – Franklin, Jr.,Thad 19 yd run (Porto,Daniel kick), 9 plays, 75 yards, TOP 04:433431
4th00:20BCU – Evans,Josh 41 yd pass from McClain,Timmy (Dominguez,Juan kick) 8 plays, 70 yards, TOP 01:523438
3438
StatisticFAMBCU
First Downs
Total2223
Rushing1010
Passing98
Penalty35
Rushing
Total (Net)195211
Attempts2534
Avg. Per Rush7.86.2
Rushing TDs21
Yds. Gained225244
Yds. Lost3033
Passing
Total (Net)228274
Comp.-Att.-Int.22-35-022-33-0
Avg. / Att.6.58.3
Avg. / Comp.10.412.5
TDs24
Total Offense
Yards423485
Plays6067
Avg. / Play77.2
Fumbles – Lost1-12-1
Penalties – Yds.7-70990
Punting
Punts – Yds.41773-146
Avg. / Punt44.248.7
Inside 2011
50+ Yds.12
Touchbacks01
Fair Catch20
Kickoffs
Total – Yds.7-3947-434
Avg. Yds. / Kickoff56.362.0
Touchbacks12
Returns
Punt: Total – Yds. – TDs1-0-01-21-0
Punt: Avg. / Return0.021.0
Kickoff: Total – Yds. – TDs2-44-06138-0
Kickoff: Avg. / Return22.023.0
INT: Total – Yds. – TDs0-0-00-0-0
Fumble: Total – Yds. – TDs0-0-015-0
Miscellaneous
Misc. Yards00
Poss. Time28:1931:41
3rd. Down Conv.3 of 104 of 12
4th. Down Conversions0 of 11 of 1
Red-Zone: Scores – Chances443-3
Sacks: Total – Yds.3-254-23
PAT: Total – Made2-355
2PT Conversion: Total – Made110-0
Field Goals: Total – Made2-21-3

Memorable Florida Classic Moments

The 2025 edition of the Florida Blue Florida Classic will kickoff this weekend. Players from both schools will look to add their names to the lore of their respective schools by having a “Classic Moment.”

Before the next hero arises, let’s take a look back at some of the more memorable moments in Florida Classic history.

Memorable Florida Classic Moments

1978 – Florida A&M trailed BCU 17-0 at halftime in the first ever Florida Classic played in Tampa Stadium. The Rattlers scored 27 unanswered points in the second half en route to a 27-17 victory. Rudy Hubbard’s squad went on to win the first 1-AA (now FCS) National Championship later that season. A year later (1979) BCU won their first Florida Classic 25-20.

1994 – BCU QB Tony Kerrin connected with Morris Nobles on a 2 yard TD reception in the corner of the endzone to give the Wildcats a 27-24 lead with :47 remaining in the contest. BCU went on to win by the same margin and Coach Cy McClairen earned his first victory over the Rattlers as a head coach.

2000 – In what was essentially a de facto MEAC Title game, 70,719 fans witnessed what many argue to be the greatest Florida Classic of all time. The game had everything. The conference title was on the line. You had memorable moments. You had all time great players like Quinn Gray, Jacquay Nunnerlly, Pa’Tell Troutman, Allen Suber, Rashean Mathis, the list goes on.

The most memorable moment of the contest came when Mathis fielded a missed field goal and returned it 106 yards for a BCU touchdown. The missed-field goal return gave BCU a 28-25 lead. However, two Juan Vazquez field goals pushed the final outcome in favor of the Rattlers 31-28.

2003 – Daytona Beach native and NFL Pro Bowler, Eric Weems, scored 3 touchdowns and helped the Wildcats rally from a 28-10 halftime deficit. The final touchdown was set up by a fake punt attempt on 4th and 17 with less than 2:00 remaining in the contest. A FAMU player was flagged for pass interference on the fake punt and BCU was awarded an automatic first down.

Later in the drive, quarterback Allen Suber avoided a sack, rolled to his right, and hit Weems who beat triple coverage just beyond the pylon with 9 seconds remaining to give BCU a 39-35 advantage in front of the largest crowd (73,358) in Florida Classic history.

2004 – Florida Classic fans were treated to the first overtime in the history of the series. The Wildcats eventually prevailed 58-52.

FAMU’s Ben Dougherty (QB) and Roosevelt Kiser (WR) had career days in that contest. Midway through the third quarter, Dougherty connected with Kiser on a 66 yard TD reception and extended FAMU’s lead to 45-24.

Head coach Alvin Wyatt then made the decision to move eventual three-time All-Pro defensive back Nick Collins from safety to cornerback with the assignment of blanketing Kiser. The move proved to be very effective for the maroon and gold. The FAMU passing game was severely limited as a result of the coaching decision and the Wildcats outscored FAMU 34-7 from that point forward. Rodney Johnson’s 15 yard touchdown run in overtime sealed the victory for BCU.

Coach Wyatt, who was overcome with emotion after the win, fainted and had to be carted off the field by medical personnel. Wyatt was eventually treated for dehydration but was no worse for the wear.

Not only was the 2004 victory the first overtime game in Florida Classic history, it was also the first time BCU won three consecutive victories over the FAMU.

2005 – Like the year prior, this game was also decided in overtime; only this time FAMU would emerge as the victor. The Rattlers entered the contest as underdogs and quickly fell behind to the Wildcats 17-0. But A&M slowly climbed back into the contest and forced the game into overtime on the strength of a Wesley Taylor 43-yard field goal with less than 3 minutes remaining in the 4th quarter. Taylor’s 26-yarder in overtime vaulted the Rattlers to a 26-23 win.

2010 – BCU entered the 2010 FC (Brian Jenkins’ first year) with an unblemished 10-0 record. However, a 3rd quarter injury to eventual MEAC Offensive Player of the Year, quarterback Matt Johnson, derailed BCU’s high-octane “Speedway Offense.” FAMU capitalized on the opportunity and secured a 38-27 win in one of the biggest upsets in FC history. Phillip Sylvester scored 3 times for the Rattlers and rushed for 146 yards on 26 carries in the process.

2019 – FAMU entered the FC buzzing in Willie Simmons second season as head ball coach. The Rattlers were 9-1 with their only loss coming against FBS powerhouse UCF. The Rattlers held a 27-24 lead late in the 4th quarter. BCU used a 9 play, 69 yard touchdown drive to go ahead for good. The key play of the drive was a 44 yard Arkevious Williams to Steffon Francois reception on 2nd and 25. A play later, Isaac Washington took an inside run 15 yards to score the game winning touchdown.

BCU’s 9 game winning streak over FAMU was ultimately sealed when linebacker Devin James picked off a Ryan Stanley pass with 1:25 remaining to secure the 31-27 victory.

These are just a handful of the memories that make this game so special. Let us know your favorite Florida Classic moment!

BCU Fall In “The Hole” to G-Men; 31–23

Saturday afternoon began as an opportunity for Bethune-Cookman to keep its three-game winning streak alive. It was a chance to remain tied for first place in the East and show that the Wildcats’ rebuilding project was full steam ahead. Instead, it turned into a frustrating, head-scratching, and downright disappointing 31–23 loss to Grambling State.

Let’s be clear: Grambling is a good football team on the rise. Losing to the G-Men in The Hole isn’t a shameful thing. And to be fair, Bethune had won five of the previous six matchups, so the law of averages leaned toward Grambling’s favor.

But the disappointment isn’t in who they lost to — it’s in how they lost.

The Hard Truth

BCU fell to a team led by a 17-year-old, true freshman, walk-on quarterback — Hayden Benoit. Salute to the young man for playing a solid game, but as a Wildcat fan, it’s a gut punch to watch a kid who’s still legally… well, a kid, throw four touchdown passes and rack up 220 yards through the air.

Add to that the G-Men pounding the ball for 197 rushing yards on 4.8 yards per carry, and you’re left feeling — you guessed it — disappointed.

This Wildcat defense looked unprepared and uninspired against a Grambling offense that has struggled all year to find the end zone. Just a week ago, that same Grambling team managed only 13 points against Alabama A&M, a defense that’s been pedestrian at best. But against BCU? They looked like an offensive juggernaut. That’s disappointing.

And if that wasn’t enough to make you sigh, the Wildcats’ offense didn’t help themselves either. Senior quarterback Camron Ransom led five offensive possessions that totaled -18 yards, no first downs, and three turnovers. You read that right — negative 18 yards and three giveaways in five possessions.

Ransom’s had a good season overall, but Saturday? It just wasn’t his night. Again — disappointing.

Peaked, Plateaued, or Just a Poor Performance?

Sometimes a bye week comes at just the right time. And sometimes, you wish you could’ve just kept playing. For BCU, you wish they could have skipped the bye.

Through the first half of the season, we saw this team improve week by week. But since the bye, the Maroon and Gold haven’t looked quite as sharp. They slogged through wins against UAPB and Valley — games that masked deeper issues for those of us who follow this team closely.

Valley hung 34 points on this same BCU defense a week ago, yet they managed to score just three points against Jackson State on Saturday. UAPB only scored 14 versus BCU, but they missed three wide open touchdowns in the process.

On Saturday, Grambling did what neither Valley nor UAPB could — they made Bethune pay for its mistakes.

So here’s the question that has to be asked: has Bethune-Cookman peaked, plateaued, or was Saturday just a poor performance?

The numbers tell a story: Bethune is 4–0 against SWAC teams currently with losing records, but 0–2 against teams with winning records. That’s not an indictment for beating the teams you should or losing to good ones — it’s simply a reflection of where you are.

To borrow from Bill Parcells, “you are what your record says you are.” And right now, the record says BCU is better than last year; but still a .500 team who is not yet ready to compete for a SWAC title. That’s disappointing, yes, but it’s also okay. The rebuild is real but just not as far along as some in Daytona had hoped.

Worth Celebrating

There were bright spots. Timmy McClain entered the game for the struggling Ransom and delivered a spark, completing 15 of 18 passes (83%) for 224 yards and a touchdown.

Trailing 24–20 early in the fourth, McClain led the Wildcats down to Grambling’s 29-yard line with a chance to take the lead. But a nagging lower-body injury forced him to the medical tent, and Ransom re-entered the game. A few snaps later, Grambling recovered a Ransom sack-fumble; his third turnover of the afternoon. BCU’s comeback hopes were extinguished at that point.

Maleek Huggins continues to shine, hauling in six receptions for 122 yards, including a 61-yard touchdown. That’s his seventh score of the year, and he now sits just 223 yards away from the 1,000-yard mark.

Chaos Erupts

You’d like the primary storyline to be the 17-year-old quarterback leading Grambling to victory. Or maybe Grambling clinching its first winning season since 2019. Heck, choose any of the points made in this article as main takeaways. But instead, the headlines from Saturday will be dominated by the halftime brawl that erupted as both teams returned to the field.

Grambling head coach Mickey Joseph used part of his postgame presser to say, “Disrespect will be met with disrespect,” and “Disrespect will not be tolerated at Grambling.” He places the blame squarely on Bethune-Cookman — claiming the Wildcats’ slow return to the field caused the altercation.

My take? It’s football. It’s emotional, it’s physical, and sometimes things boil over. I don’t condone it, but I understand and I can live with it. What’s harder to stomach is Coach Joseph’s public stance — seemingly justifying a full-on melee that ended with nine players ejected (five from Grambling, four from BCU), at least one player swinging at an opposing coach, and administrators getting tangled up.

It was an ugly scene on an otherwise beautiful afternoon of football.

As of this writing, the SWAC has yet to issue an official statement or announce additional discipline or fines related to the incident. I am sure some are forthcoming.

Bottom line: This one hurt. Grambling was the better team on Saturday. Respect to them! But BCU didn’t play close to their best game even with first place one the line and that, Wildcats fans, is simply — disappointing.

BCU Shakes the Devils Off: Finishes Undefeated at Home This Season

The Delta Devils traveled from Mississippi on the first Saturday after Halloween. They did everything in their power to haunt Bethune-Cookman’s perfect home record this season. Thankfully for the Wildcat faithful, BCU casted off some second-half complacency and “shook the Devils off” (or whatever that song says).

From the opening kickoff, it was clear Bethune-Cookman was the more complete team. They were faster, bigger, deeper and just better.

Bon-Bon Ross scores on 24 yard reception

Javon “Bon-Bon” Ross set the tone early, fielding the opening kickoff at his own 15-yard line. Fourteen seconds and 85 yards later, Ross was crossing the goal line. That electrifying return helped earn him SWAC Co-Specialist of the Week honors. Ross added a 24-yard receiving touchdown just three minutes later. At that point, it looked like this one might be a cakewalk. But football is a funny sport.

From that moment until the final whistle, Josh Brown, Mississippi Valley’s dual-threat quarterback, took over the game. He became the most dynamic player on the field. Maybe it was because his family made the short three-hour drive from Camden County, Georgia. Maybe it was the Florida sunshine. I am not sure of the reason. Whatever it was, Brown played like a man possessed for the final three and a half quarters. He had the game of his life.

And it wasn’t as if BCU’s defense played poorly. They got pressure and moved him off his spot all afternoon. But Brown had an answer for everything. He got the ball out quickly on short routes. He showed tremendous pocket awareness. He turned would-be sacks into highlight reel scrambles. It was almost hocus pocus like how he escaped free blitzers a half dozen times at least. He finished with 418 passing yards, a passing touchdown, and two rushing touchdowns. All you can do is tip your cap to the young man. A job well done sir! 👏

Still, Bethune-Cookman proved why they’re the better team. When it mattered most, they controlled the trenches. They executed in the red zone. They finished drives whenever Valley seemed to threaten the lead.

Antwone Watts celebrates his Pick Six

It was an Antwone Watts pick-six midway through the fourth quarter that stretched the lead and essentially sealed the deal. The Wildcats never trailed in the game and remained in control throughout, even if the Devils made things a little too interesting at times.

The biggest coaching point is this: BCU has to do a better job of respecting every opponent. They must put teams away when they have the chance. Coach Woodie said this in his postgame presser. He admitted his guys didn’t believe him. He had warned them throughout the week that Valley would put up a fight.

The Cats survived and advanced. They finish the year undefeated at home and currently sit tied for first in the SWAC East. Next up: a road trip to Grambling, where they’ll look to earn their first road victory of 2025.

If they can handle business in Louisiana, it sets up a massive first-place showdown with JSU in Jackson.

In other words — now that Mary’s Babies dealt with the Devils, it’s time to grab a few Tigers by the tail. GSU, you’re on the clock. 🐾

StatisticMVSBCU
First Downs
Total2920
Rushing512
Passing217
Penalty31
Rushing
Total (Net)60200
Attempts2541
Avg. Per Rush2.44.9
Rushing TDs33
Yds. Gained84224
Yds. Lost2424
Passing
Total (Net)418154
Comp.-Att.-Int.3657114-23-0
Avg. / Att.7.36.7
Avg. / Comp.11.611.0
TDs11
Total Offense
Yards478354
Plays8264
Avg. / Play5.85.5
Fumbles – Lost0-00-0
Penalties – Yds.8646-62
Punting
Punts – Yds.4-1446249
Avg. / Punt3641.5
Inside 2010
50+ Yds.01
Touchbacks12
Fair Catch00
Kickoffs
Total – Yds.7-4097-438
Avg. Yds. / Kickoff58.462.6
Touchbacks13
Returns
Punt: Total – Yds. – TDs2-18-01-20-0
Punt: Avg. / Return9.020.0
Kickoff: Total – Yds. – TDs4-69-061841
Kickoff: Avg. / Return17.330.7
INT: Total – Yds. – TDs0-0-01321
Fumble: Total – Yds. – TDs0-0-00-0-0
Miscellaneous
Misc. Yards00
Poss. Time32:1427:46
3rd. Down Conv.7 of 167 of 14
4th. Down Conversions1 of 31 of 1
Red-Zone: Scores – Chances443-3
Sacks: Total – Yds.2-15319
PAT: Total – Made4-466
2PT Conversion: Total – Made0-00-0
Field Goals: Total – Made220-0

QtrTimeScoring PlayMVSBCU
1st14:46BCU – Ross,Javon 85 yd kickoff return (Dominguez,Juan kick)07
1st11:27BCU – Ross,Javon 24 yd pass from Ransom,Cam’Ron (Dominguez,Juan kick) 4 plays, 41 yards, TOP 02:00014
1st09:02MVS – Brown,Josh 5 yd run (Jovisic,Marko kick), 6 plays, 78 yards, TOP 02:18714
1st03:07BCU – Scott Jr.,Alihaja 1 yd run (Dominguez,Juan kick), 13 plays, 91 yards, TOP 05:50721
2nd14:34MVS – Brown,Josh 2 yd run (Jovisic,Marko kick), 8 plays, 72 yards, TOP 03:281421
2nd10:32BCU – Ransom,Cam’Ron 2 yd run (Dominguez,Juan kick), 9 plays, 77 yards, TOP 03:561428
2nd03:28MVS – Jovisic,Marko 48 yd field goal 15 plays, 54 yards, TOP 06:561728
3rd12:04MVS – Jovisic,Marko 31 yd field goal 9 plays, 58 yards, TOP 02:562028
3rd01:01BCU – Robinson,Khamani 19 yd run (Dominguez,Juan kick), 10 plays, 68 yards, TOP 04:412035
4th11:45MVS – Fant,DePhabian 12 yd run (Jovisic,Marko kick), 11 plays, 75 yards, TOP 04:162735
4th09:43BCU – Watts,Antwone 32 yd interception (Dominguez,Juan kick)2742
4th06:48MVS – Nelson,Cameron 35 yd pass from Brown,Josh (Jovisic,Marko kick) 6 plays, 88 yards, TOP 02:493442
3442