South Alabama Jaguars

South Alabama Jaguars
University University of South Alabama
Conference Sun Belt
NCAA Division I
Athletic director Joel Erdmann
Location Mobile, Alabama
Varsity teams 17 (8 Men's, 9 Women's)[1]
Football stadium Ladd-Peebles Stadium
Basketball arena Mitchell Center
Baseball stadium Eddie Stanky Field
Mascot South Paw
Nickname Jaguars
Colors Blue, White, and Red[2]
              
Website www.usajaguars.com

The South Alabama Jaguars represent the University of South Alabama in NCAA Division I intercollegiate athletics.

USA competes in the Sun Belt Conference; it is the conference's only remaining charter member from its inception. USA's athletics teams are nicknamed the Jaguars. Popular sports are baseball and men's basketball. USA sponsors 8 men's sports teams and 9 women's sports teams. The board of trustees recently voted to start a football program that began play in the fall of 2009.

Men's Sports: basketball, baseball, cross country, golf, tennis, indoor and outdoor track and field, football (FCS Independent 2011-2012, Full Sun Belt Conference play by 2013)

Women's Sports: basketball, softball, cross country, golf, tennis, indoor and outdoor track and field, volleyball, soccer

Though not officially recognized by the administration the students of The University of South Alabama maintain a multi-sport battle cry "South in your Mouth." It is used widely across the school through primarily heard in reference to football and basketball.

USA formerly used Lady Jaguars for its women's teams, but by the 2012–13 school year, only the women's basketball team was using "Lady Jaguars", and starting with the 2013–14 school year, that team also became simply the Jaguars.

Football

On December 6, 2007, the school's Board of Trustees approved the addition of football to the intercollegiate athletics program. The team began play in 2009 with a planned full transition to the NCAA Football Bowl Subdivision (Division I-A) by 2013.[3] On February 15, 2008, President Gordon Moulton and Athletic Director Joe Gottfried announced that Joey Jones, former University of Alabama and Atlanta Falcons receiver, would be the first head football coach in the university's history. On September 5, 2009, the South Alabama Jaguars defeated Hargrave Military Academy 30-13 in their first ever game, and finished their first ever football season on November 12, 2009 with a shutout of an NCAA Division III team with a 35-0 victory over Huntingdon (Ala.) College. USA completed its first season undefeated at 7-0, outscoring its opponents by a combined score of 321-41. The 2010 schedule was made up of schools from National Collegiate Athletics Association Division I-FCS, NCAA Division II, and the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics. USA finished the season undefeated at 10-0, outscoring its opponents by a combined score of 413-130. On September 17, 2011, South Alabama suffered its first loss in the new program's history when it traveled to Carter-Finley Stadium in Raleigh,NC against the North Carolina State Wolfpack. After the week 3 game of the 2011-2012 football season S. Alabama's season record stood at 2-1, with an all-time record of 19-1.

Baseball

The baseball team is typically a powerhouse in the Sun Belt Conference, and has produced a number of successful Major League players, such as Juan Pierre, Adam Lind, Luis Gonzalez, Jon Lieber, Marlon Anderson and David Freese. The head coach of the baseball team is Mark Calvi. Since the creation of the Sun Belt conference in 1978, South Alabama leads with 11 Sun Belt Tournament titles; the next highest is The University of New Orleans with 3. In addition to the 11 conference titles, Coach Kittrell has led South Alabama to 18 NCAA Tournament appearances during his tenure.

The South Alabama baseball team plays its home games at Eddie Stanky Field, which is the largest baseball stadium in the Sun Belt Conference. The stadium is named after former coach Eddie Stanky who compiled a 488-193 (.717) record in 14 seasons as coach. Stanky Field seats 4,500 spectators, and features the Jon Lieber Clubhouse and Luis Gonzalez Hitting Facility. The current head coach is Steve Kittrell. Kittrell has led the Jaguars baseball program to more than 1,000 victories, numerous NCAA Tournament appearances and Sun Belt Conference championships. On July 15, 2010, it was announced that Mark Calvi, pitching coach at College World Series Champion University of South Carolina, would be Kittrell's assistant coach for the 2011 season, and take over as the new head coach in 2012.[4]

In 2011, alumnus David Freese was named the National League Championship Series MVP and World Series MVP.

Basketball

The men's basketball team has a strong history as a founding member of the Sun Belt Conference. After a successful stint in the late 1980s and 1990s, South Alabama basketball declined in the early part of the 2000s. In 2002 John Pelphrey was named coach and brought the team back to its winning ways. In 2006, South Alabama won the Sun Belt Conference Tournament, beating Western Kentucky 95-70 in the championship game. They earned a bid into the 2006 NCAA Tournament. This was their first since NCAA bid since 1998 and were seeded 14th in the Minneapolis bracket. They lost to the 3rd-seeded Florida Gators, 76-50, who went on to win the 2006 NCAA Men's Basketball Tournament. The 2005-2006 basketball season marked the best turnaround in the nation for a Division I basketball program. South Alabama was 10-18 in 2004-05 and went 24-7 in 2005-2006. This yielded a 12.5 differential to lead the nation, ahead of Brigham Young and Memphis who both had 11.5 differentials. South Alabama followed that with three more 20-win seasons in a row, and in 2008 received an at-large bid to the NCAA tournament, but lost to Butler University in the first round. Since the Sun Belt expansion to 13 members in the 2006-2007 season, South Alabama is second only to Western Kentucky in conference winning percentage (65.3% to WKU's 76.4%).

Men's golf

The men's golf team has won 10 Sun Belt Conference championships: 1991–92, 1994–96, 1998–99, 2002, 2005, 2010.[5] Heath Slocum is the team's most successful professional golfer with four PGA Tour wins.

Other sports

References

External links

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