Johnson C. Smith Golden Bulls and Lady Golden Bulls

Johnson C. Smith Golden Bulls
University Johnson C. Smith University
Conference Central Intercollegiate Athletic Association
NCAA Division II
Location Charlotte, North Carolina
Varsity teams 12
Football stadium Irwin Belk Complex
American Legion Memorial Stadium
Basketball arena Jack S. Brayboy Gymnasium
Nickname Golden Bulls
Colors Navy Blue and Gold[1]
         
Website www.goldenbullsports.com

The Johnson C. Smith Golden Bulls are the athletic teams that represent Johnson C. Smith University, located in Charlotte, North Carolina, in NCAA Division II intercollegiate sports. The Golden Bulls compete as members of the Central Intercollegiate Athletic Association for all 13 varsity sports. The Golden Bulls have been members of the CIAA since 1926.

Varsity teams

Championships
CIAA championships
Basketball (Men's) 2001 • 2008 • 2009
Basketball (Women's) 2009 • 2017
Football 1969
Tennis (Men's) 1934-1936 • 1938-1944 • 1968 • 1999-2004
Track and Field (Men's) 1969 • 1970 • 1971
Track and Field (Women's) 2011 • 2013 • 2014

List of teams

Individual sports

Basketball

In 2001 the men's basketball team won the CIAA Basketball Tournament and advanced to the Division II Elite Eight. In 2006 the men’s and women’s basketball teams were the CIAA Western Division Champions and the Tournament Runners-up. In 2007 the men's basketball team were the 2007 CIAA Western Division Champions. In 2008 the men's basketball team won the 2008 CIAA Men's Basketball Championship. In 2009 the men's and women's basketball team won the 2009 CIAA basketball championship. Fact, the "Brayboy Madness" is famous—Sports Illustrated named it "One of the Loudest Gymnasiums in the Country."

Football

Commemorative Classic: "The Birth of Black College Football"

On December 27 of 1892, Livingstone College and Biddle College, (Johnson C. Smith) University played in the snows of Salisbury, North Carolina, just two days after Christmas. A writer of a story in the 1930 year-book of Livingstone College provided a glimpse of that December experience when the team from Biddle Institute traveled to Livingstone's Old Delta Grove campus in Salisbury to play while writers recorded the results of a historic moment in sports history.

According to historian T.M. Martin, the men of Biddle spent two years studying and practicing the sport of football. In 1892, they challenged the men of Livingstone, whose team was formally organized in the fall of that year.

It is doubtful that when Biddle University and Livingstone College teed it up on Dec. 27, 1892, in what was described as little more than a cow pasture, no less, if the contestants in this momentous occasion had the slightest inkling of the legacy they were about to give birth to. Games of monumental historical significance, coaches of legendary proportions and players of extraordinary brilliance ultimately emerged from the mother lode that was to become known as the historically Black colleges and universities.

The teams played two 45-minute halves on Livingstone's front lawn. W.J. Trent scored Livingstone's only touchdown on a fumble recovery. By then snow had covered the field's markings and Biddle argued that the fumble was recovered out of bounds. The official ruled in Biddle's favor, allowing them to keep the 5–0 lead that they had established early on and giving JCSU the historic 1st victory! And the rivalry continues. ...[2]

Conferences

Bowl games

Johnson C. Smith has made 6 Bowl appearances, winning 4 and losing 2. After an initial appearance in a postseason contest in the 1942 Flower Bowl against Lane College in a shutout, 13-0.

DateBowlW/LOpponentPFPA
January 1, 1942Flower BowlWLane College130
January 1, 1946Cotton-Tobacco BowlWAllen University186
December 7, 1946Pecan BowlLSouth Carolina NIA&M613
December 3, 1949Iodine BowlWAllen University2012
December 2, 2006Pioneer BowlLTuskegee University717
December 3, 2011Pioneer BowlWMiles College3533
Total6 bowl games4–29981

References

  1. Johnson C. Smith University Brand and Editorial Guidelines (PDF). Retrieved September 5, 2016.
  2. "Commemorative Classic official website".
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