Southern Oregon Raiders football
Southern Oregon Raiders football | |
---|---|
First season | 1927 |
Head coach |
Craig Howard 4th year, 34–14 (.708) |
Stadium | Raider Stadium |
Seating capacity | 5,000 |
Field surface | Turf |
Location | Ashland, Oregon |
League | NAIA |
Conference | Frontier Conference |
All-time record | 349–351–15 (.499) |
Claimed nat'l titles | 1 (2014) |
Conference titles | 13 |
Consensus All-Americans | 23 (NAIA) |
Colors |
Red and Black |
Mascot | Red-Tailed Hawk |
Rivals | Montana Tech, Carroll College, Western Oregon |
Website | SOURaiders.com |
The Southern Oregon Raiders football team represents Southern Oregon University in the sport of American football. The Raiders team competes in the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA) as an associate member of the Frontier Conference. Southern Oregon University has fielded an official football team since 1927 and has an all-time record of 349–351–15 (a .499 winning percentage).[Note 1] The Raiders play in Raider Stadium in Ashland, Oregon, which has a capacity of 5,000. Southern Oregon has played in two NAIA national championship games and won thirteen conference championships in multiple conferences.
While not historically a relevant program, the Raiders have been successful in the twenty-first century, participating in the NAIA championship tournament four times. Twenty-three Raiders players have been named first-team NAIA All-Americans and two were named to Academic All-America teams. There have been two Southern Oregon players selected in the NFL Draft, one of which, Jeff Beathard, was the 1988 draft's Mr. Irrelevant. Thirty-eight Raiders players have been inducted into the university's athletic hall of fame, as have three individual football teams. The primary colors for the program are black and red. The school's mascot is a red-tailed hawk. Southern Oregon has long-standing rivalries with three of their current conference opponents: Montana Tech, Carroll College, and Western Oregon.
History
The first iteration of football at Southern Oregon University came in 1896, when the school was a small teachers' college known as Southern Oregon State Normal School (SONS). A student at the school, John Berry, set up a game between a group of people from the school and the Ashland Athletic Club, a team he set up for the match. In front of a large crowd, the SONS team won 18–0. The sport developed at the school over the next few years. Games were played against nearby high schools, primarily Ashland High School. In 1899 and 1900, contests were set up with the University of Oregon Webfoots, a major regional team; SONS was shutout in both contests.[1]<ref name=Oregon 1900">L. L. Goodrich (November 19, 1900). "Eugene Bests Ashland: U O Defeats Southern Oregon Normal School in Football". Daily Eugene Guard (Eugene, OR). p. 1. OCLC 37529729.</ref> In 1900, a school professor organized the program and led it to relative success. However, funding for the school was stopped and it closed in 1909.[1]
The school reopened in 1926 on a new campus with only one building. Roy McNeal, a coach who had been moderately successful at the University of Puget Sound was hired as football coach and athletic director for the college in 1927. The school had no athletic facilities and very few male students at the time; the university president had pushed for a football program as a way to bring in more students. A playing field was leveled by a highway crew working nearby and uniforms were purchased for the players. Three games against local colleges were scheduled, the last of which marked the beginning of a rivalry with the Oregon Normal School, which was later renamed Western Oregon University.[1] SONS shutout their first two opponents and defeated the Oregon Normal School 19-12,[2] giving them an undefeated season and the unofficial title of Oregon teachers' colleges champion.[1][3]
The college struggled in its second season, winning only one match in a five-game schedule.[4] However, more significant than that was the death of star freshman Max Newsom. He died shortly after a game against Oregon State JV from cerebral hemorrhaging after collapsing on the field from injuries sustained making a tackle.[5][6] Newsom was the only Southern Oregon player ever killed during a game. The 1929 season saw slight improvement behind the efforts of Cylde Hines, SONS' first African American student. While Hines was accepted by the school, segregation and racist attitudes from opposing fans created problems for the team. The actions shown to the team by rival Oregon Normal School led McNeal to suspend competition between the schools for two years. McNeal guided the program to winning seasons the following two years. [1]
The Raiders first tasted sustained success under head coach Al Akins. During Akins' 15 years as the Raiders' head coach, Southern Oregon was conference champions seven times (either outright or co-champions).[7] 18 years after Akins' last season, the Raiders experienced their first postseason, defeating Central Washington in the first round of the NAIA playoffs and losing to Mesa State in the quarterfinals.[8] The Raiders found even greater success during the 2001 and 2002 seasons, reaching the quarterfinals of the NAIA playoffs each year. Although, in both years, Southern Oregon lost to Carroll College, neither game was decided by more than four points.[9]
Southern Oregon was seeking to move up to NCAA Division II as the Great Northwest Athletic Conference had only nine teams after Seattle University moved up to Division I. The University is currently a member of the NAIA and an affiliate member of the Frontier Conference for football while being a member of the Cascade Collegiate Conference for all other sports. It had been reported that the move to NCAA may take years to complete.[10] However, the move never happened. In November 2010, Steve Helminiak was fired as head coach at Southern Oregon. He was replaced by Craig Howard, a high school football coach from Florida. Howard is best known for being the head coach of Tim Tebow at Nease High School in St Augustine, Florida.[11]
In December 2014, the Raiders won the NAIA National Championship in Daytona, Florida.[12] The day before, Austin Dodge was named the 2014 NAIA Player of the Year.[13]
Head coaching history
Notable players
Player | Years at SOU | Current team (if any) |
Andy Katoa | 1989–1991 | San Diego Chargers |
Mark Helfrich | 1992–1995 | Oregon Ducks (head coach) |
Griff Yates | 1996–1999 | |
Dusty McGrorty | 2000–2003 | St. Louis Rams |
Andrae Thurman | 2003 | Las Vegas Locomotives |
Kellan Quick | 2002–2006 | Toronto Argonauts |
Bryan Lee-Lauduski | 2006–2008 | |
Austin Dodge | 2011–2014 | 2014 NAIA Player of the Year |
Ryan Retzlaff | 2011–2014 | Munich Cowboys |
Rivalry with Western Oregon
Beginning in 1927, the Western Oregon Wolves and the Southern Oregon Raiders have played 71 games against each other, more than any other opponent either school has faced. Due to the number of times the teams have met some have chosen to refer to the game as the "little civil war".[14] This is in reference to the civil war game played between the state's two NCAA FBS schools, the University of Oregon and Oregon State University. However, the competition between the two squads is not nearly as heated as their division one counterparts, as Southern Oregon has not won since 1998 and holds a 26–44–1 all-time record against the Wolves. SOU has not defeated Western Oregon since WOU made the jump to NCAA Division II.[15]
Year | Visitor | Home | Year | Visitor | Home | Year | Visitor | Home | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1927 | Western Oregon 12 | Southern Oregon 19 | 1928 | Western Oregon 12 | Southern Oregon 0 | 1929 | Southern Oregon 0 | Western Oregon 0 | ||
1930 | Did Not Play | 1931 | Did Not Play | 1932 | Western Oregon 20 | Southern Oregon 6 | ||||
1933 | Southern Oregon 12 | Western Oregon 7 | 1934 | Southern Oregon 6 | Western Oregon 7 | 1935 | Southern Oregon 6 | Western Oregon 12 | ||
1936 | Western Oregon 7 | Southern Oregon 0 | 1937 | Southern Oregon 0 | Western Oregon 6 | 1938 | Southern Oregon 6 | Western Oregon 19 | ||
1938 | Western Oregon 6 | Southern Oregon 0 | 1939 | No Team | 1940 | No Team | ||||
1941 | No Team | 1942 | No Team | 1943 | No Team | |||||
1944 | No Team | 1945 | No Team | 1946 | Southern Oregon 51 | Western Oregon 0 | ||||
1947 | Southern Oregon 20 | Western Oregon 0 | 1948 | Southern Oregon 6 | Western Oregon 13 | 1949 | Western Oregon 30 | Southern Oregon 7 | ||
1950 | Southern Oregon 0 | Western Oregon 40 | 1951 | Western Oregon 48 | Southern Oregon 6 | 1952 | Western Oregon 13 | Southern Oregon 26 | ||
1953 | Southern Oregon 14 | Western Oregon 40 | 1954 | Southern Oregon 13 | Western Oregon 34 | 1955 | Western Oregon 6 | Southern Oregon 13 | ||
1956 | Southern Oregon 12 | Western Oregon 6 | 1957 | Western Oregon 19 | Southern Oregon 21 | 1958 | Southern Oregon 0 | Western Oregon 21 | ||
1959 | Western Oregon 7 | Southern Oregon 20 | 1960 | Southern Oregon 32 | Western Oregon 12 | 1961 | Western Oregon 7 | Southern Oregon 26 | ||
1962 | Southern Oregon 12 | Western Oregon 6 | 1963 | Western Oregon 0 | Southern Oregon 33 | 1964 | Southern Oregon 32 | Western Oregon 19 | ||
1965 | Western Oregon 21 | Southern Oregon 27 | 1966 | Southern Oregon 20 | Western Oregon 32 | 1967 | Western Oregon 20 | Southern Oregon 7 | ||
1968 | Southern Oregon 7 | Western Oregon 17 | 1969 | Western Oregon 33 | Southern Oregon 12 | 1970 | Southern Oregon 13 | Western Oregon 24 | ||
1971 | Western Oregon 17 | Southern Oregon 6 | 1972 | Western Oregon 30 | Southern Oregon 28 | 1973 | Southern Oregon 7 | Western Oregon 24 | ||
1974 | Western Oregon 29 | Southern Oregon 34 | 1975 | Southern Oregon 0 | Western Oregon 12 | 1976 | Western Oregon 28 | Southern Oregon 20 | ||
1977 | Southern Oregon 0 | Western Oregon 40 | 1978 | Southern Oregon 21 | Western Oregon 51 | 1979 | Western Oregon 10 | Southern Oregon 6 | ||
1980 | Southern Oregon 7 | Western Oregon 21 | 1981 | Western Oregon 42 | Southern Oregon 13 | 1982 | Southern Oregon 23 | Western Oregon 13 | ||
1983 | Western Oregon 22 | Southern Oregon 45 | 1984 | Southern Oregon 17 | Western Oregon 24 | 1985 | Western Oregon 32 | Southern Oregon 14 | ||
1986 | Southern Oregon 0 | Western Oregon 36 | 1987 | Western Oregon 17 | Southern Oregon 38 | 1988 | Southern Oregon 3 | Western Oregon 22 | ||
1989 | Western Oregon 21 | Southern Oregon 42 | 1990 | Southern Oregon 57 | Western Oregon 20 | 1991 | Southern Oregon 54 | Western Oregon 13 | ||
1992 | Western Oregon 31 | Southern Oregon 46 | 1993 | Southern Oregon 40 | Western Oregon 45 | 1994 | Western Oregon 33 | Southern Oregon 28 | ||
1995 | Western Oregon 14 | Southern Oregon 32 | 1996 | Southern Oregon 14 | Western Oregon 21 | 1997 | Western Oregon 14 | Southern Oregon 22 | ||
1998 | Southern Oregon 56 | Western Oregon 35 | 1999 | Southern Oregon 17 | Western Oregon 52 | 2000 | Western Oregon 21 | Southern Oregon 13 | ||
2001 | Did Not Play | 2002 | Western Oregon 34 | Southern Oregon 20 | 2003 | Did Not Play | ||||
2004 | Did Not Play | 2005 | Western Oregon 24 | Southern Oregon 10 | 2006 | Western Oregon 38 | Southern Oregon 0 | |||
2006 | Southern Oregon 7 | Western Oregon 53 | 2007 | Southern Oregon 13 | Western Oregon 37 | 2008 | Western Oregon 35 | Southern Oregon 3 |
Championships
Conference championships
Southern Oregon has won a combined 13 conference championships. The Raiders won the Far West Conference three times, the Oregon Collegiate Conference six times, NAIA District II once, the Columbia Football Association Mount Hood League once, and NAIA Independents once and the Frontier Conference once.
|
Conference affiliations
- 1927–1938: Independent
- 1939–1945: No team
- 1946–1952: Far West Conference
- 1953–1954: Independent
- 1955–1965: Oregon Collegiate Conference
- 1966–1970: Independent
- 1971–1985: Evergreen Conference
- 1985–1986: Columbia Football League
- 1987–1994: Columbia Football Association Mount Hood League
- 1995–1998: Columbia Football Association
- 1999–2011: NAIA independent
- 2012–present: Frontier Conference
Notes
- ↑ The Southern Oregon Raiders' official record is taken from the university's official statistics, which may not align with those from other sources.
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 Bennett, Steve (September 1, 2002). "Rising SONS". Mail Tribune (Medford, OR). OCLC 232119333. Archived from the original on December 16, 2015. Retrieved December 15, 2015.
- ↑ "Normal Defeats Arcata Team". Morning Register (Eugene, OR). Associated Press. November 13, 1927. p. 8. OCLC 37529798.
- ↑ Staff writer (November 16, 1927). "Monmouth Normal Tackles Ashland". The Capital Journal (Salem, OR). p. 6. OCLC 21019600.
- ↑ Raider Football Season Results 1927-2014, pg. 1
- ↑ Staff writer (October 13, 1928). "Max Newsom Dies After Fainting In Football Game". The Klamath News (Klamath Falls, OR). p. 1. OCLC 41173134.
- ↑ Staff writer (September 1, 2002). "SOU Football Timeline". Mail Tribune (Medford, OR). OCLC 232119333. Archived from the original on December 17, 2015. Retrieved December 15, 2015.
- ↑ "Southern Oregon Composite Championship Listing". College Football Data Warehouse. July 17, 2008.
- ↑ "Southern Oregon Yearly Results 1985–1989". College Football Data Warehouse. July 17, 2008.
- ↑ "Southern Oregon Yearly Results 2000–2004". College Football Data Warehouse. July 17, 2008.
- ↑ "SOU considers move from NAIA to NCAA". Ashland Daily Tidings.
- ↑ http://jacksonville.com/sports/football/2011-02-10/story/ex-nease-football-coach-craig-howard-takes-southern-oregon-job
- ↑ http://traveljapanblog.com/ashland/2014/12/10-photos-of-the-champions/
- ↑ http://traveljapanblog.com/wordpress/2014/12/2014-naia-football-player-of-the-year/
- ↑ "Little Civil War Football Game on Tap Saturday". SOU Sports. October 15, 2007.
- ↑ "Southern Oregon vs Western Oregon". College Football Data Warehouse. July 17, 2008.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to College football. |
|