Albany State Golden Rams football explained

Teamname:Albany State Golden Rams football
Firstyear:[1]
Athleticdirector:Robert Skinner
Headcoach:Quinn Gray
Headcoachyear:1st
Hcwins:6
Hclosses:5
Stadium:Albany State University Coliseum
Stadiumbuilt:2004
Stadcapacity:10,000
Location:Albany, Georgia
Ncaadivision:II
Conference:SIAC
Confdivision:East
Atwins:443
Atlosses:311
Atties:22
Bowlwins:1
Bowllosses:1
Playoffapps:14
Playoffs:3–14
Conftitles:19
Rivalries:Fort Valley State
Websitename:asugoldenrams.com
Websiteurl:https://asugoldenrams.com/sports/football

The Albany State Golden Rams football team represents Albany State University (ASU) in the sport of American football. The Golden Rams compete in the Division II of the National Collegiate Athletics Association (NCAA) and in the East Division of the Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (SIAC). They play their home games at Albany State University Coliseum on the university's Albany, Georgia, campus, and are currently led by coach Quinn Gray Sr.

In 2003, the Golden Rams played Fayetteville State in the Pioneer Bowl. Albany State won, 52–30.

The Albany State Golden Rams were named the 2010 SBN Black college Football National Champions.

Former Golden Rams players that have played in the NFL include current Indianapolis Colt Grover Stewart, former Golden Rams head coaches Mike White and Dan Land, Steve Carter, Kenneth Gant, Arthur Green, Jeff Hunter, Keyon Nash, Clarence Benford III and Chris Sheffield.[2]

Rapper Rick Ross played briefly for the Golden Rams during the mid 1990s.

Rivalries

Fort Valley State University

The rivalry began in the first meeting of the two schools in 1945, when FVSU beat ASU, 27–21. The two schools did not play each other in 1946 and 1947. While the rivalry between the two teams spans more than half a century, Fountain City Classic officials moved the game to Columbus in 1990 to attract more corporate support.[3] FVSU leads the series 44–39–4.

Fort Valley State won their last meeting in 2022, 31–21.

Head coaches

4 1945–1948 16 2 12 2 .188
2 1949–1950 18 6 9 3 .417
17 1951–1967 146 79 57 10 .575
2 1968–1969 17 5 12 0 .294
1 1970 10 4 6 0 .400
24 1971–1976, 1982–1999 251 157 90 4 .633
3 1977–1979 31 12 17 2 .419
2 1980–1981 (first 3 games in 1981) 14 4 10 0 .286
1 1981 (last 7 games) 7 0 7 0 .000
15 2000–2014 163 112 51 0 .687
2 2015–2016 19 11 8 0.579
4 2017–2022 54 37 17 0
1 2023–present 11 6 5 0

Championships

SEAC

3: 1955, 1959, 1960

SIAC

16: 1984, 1985, 1986, 1988, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2010, 2013, 2021[4]

SIAC East Division

2011, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2018, 2019, 2021

Black college national

2003, 2004, 2010

Postseason

Bowl games

[5]

1946 Coconut Bowl Bethune–Cookman L 0–32
1952 Bethune–Cookman L 0–54
2003 Fayetteville State W 52–30

NCAA Division II playoffs

1993 First Round Hampton L 7–33
1994 Hampton Smith First Round Valdosta State L 7–14
1995 Hampton Smith First Round North Alabama L 28–38
1996 Hampton Smith First Round Valdosta State L 28–38
1997 Hampton Smith First Round
Quarterfinal
Southern Arkansas
Carson-Newman
W 10–6
L 22–23
2004 Second Round
Quarterfinal
Arkansas Tech
Valdosta State
W 42–24
L 24–38
2005 Mike White First Round Central Arkansas L 20–28
2006 Mike White First Round Newberry L 28–34
2007 Mike White First Round Catawba L 35–66
2008 Mike White First Round Tusculum L 22–34
2009 Mike White First Round West Alabama L 22–24
2010 Mike White Second Round
Quarterfinal
Wingate
Delta State
W 30–28
L 7–28
2011 Mike White First Round North Greenville L 14–63
2021 First Round West Georgia L 7–23

All-Americans

1978 Mike White DT 3rd Team AP Little All-America[6]
1984 Steve Carter WR Honorable Mention AP Little All-America
1995 Antonio Leroy RB 3rd Team AP Little All-America
2004 Rodney Magwood OL 2nd Team AP Little All-America
2004 Walter CurryDL 2nd Team AP Little All-America
2004 Walter Curry DL 1st Team Daktronics[7]
2005 Alton Pettway DL 2nd Team AP Little All-America
2006 Alton Pettway DL 1st Team AFCA[8]
2006 Alton Pettway DL 1st Team AP Little All-America
2006 Alton Pettway DL 1st Team Daktronics[9]
2011 Jamarkus Gaskins LB 1st Team Daktronics[10] DPOY
2011 Jamarkus Gaskins LB 1st Team AP Little All-America
2013 Dexter Moody DB Honorable Mention Beyond Sports Network[11]
2014 Jarvis Small RB 3rd Team Beyond Sports Network[12]

NFL draft picks

See also: List of Albany State Golden Rams in the NFL draft.

1968 Frank Brown DE Dallas Cowboys 8th 211
1969 Joe Walker DE Boston Patriots 9th 214
1970 Willie Dixon DB Buffalo Bills 10th 238
1974 Art Cameron TE Buffalo Bills 10th 241
1974 Eddie Wilson WR Atlanta Falcons 11th 277
1975 Greg Wells OL New York Jets 16th 405
1975 Lester Sherman RB Denver Broncos 17th 433
1976 Jeremiah Cummings DE Baltimore Colts 14th 394
1979 DL Cincinnati Bengals 4th 84
1979 Curtis Bunche DL Philadelphia Eagles 7th 185
1982 WR Dallas Cowboys 11th 295
1989 DE Phoenix Cardinals 11th 291
1990 DB Dallas Cowboys 9th 221
2002 DB Oakland Raiders 6th 189
2017 DL Indianapolis Colts 4th 144

Undrafted

Players that went undrafted but spent at least one season on a team's active roster.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Albany State Golden Rams. college-football-results.com. July 28, 2024.
  2. Web site: Albany State (GA) Players/Alumni. Pro-Football-Reference.com. May 24, 2018.
  3. Web site: Fountain City Classic. Fountaincityclassic.com. May 24, 2018.
  4. Web site: All-Time Conference Champions . NCAA.org . National Collegiate Athletic Association . 18 . December 26, 2012.
  5. http://fs.ncaa.org/Docs/stats/football_records/2022/Bowls.pdf
  6. Web site: AP Little All-America Archive (1934–2017). Static.esuwarriors.com. May 24, 2018.
  7. Web site: Koenen named second-team Daktronics, Inc., Division II All-American. June 4, 2018.
  8. Web site: Chadron State's Danny Woodhead, Albany State's Alton Pettway Headline 2006 AFCA Division II Coaches'-America Team. Ferris-pages.org. May 24, 2018.
  9. Web site: MSU's Burson named Daktronics, Inc. All-American - Midwestern State University. MSUMustangs.com. December 12, 2006 . June 4, 2018.
  10. Web site: Deonte? Gist named to Daktronics All-America Football Team. December 14, 2011. June 4, 2018.
  11. Web site: 2013 Beyond Sports Network Division II All-America Team Announced.
  12. Web site: 2014 Beyond Sports Network Division II All-America and All-Super Region 4 teams.