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Season So Far: Flashes, Fight, & Focus
South Carolina State opened its 2025 season with a riveting road win over Wofford, rallying 16–15 on a late touchdown from Ryan Stubblefield to Shamontae Burgess. scsuathletics.com+1 But the ride since then has been a rollercoaster. The Bulldogs dropped decisive games at South Carolina (10–38) and USF (14–63), while also falling 24–31 at Charleston Southern on a walk-off score. scsuathletics.com+2ESPN.com+2
Their Homecoming matchup on Oct. 4 against Savannah State changed the tone. SC State throttled the Tigers 49–6, piling up 414 total yards. Stubblefield delivered 206 passing yards and two touchdowns, and on special teams, Tyler Jones returned a blocked punt for a score. The Bulldog defense held Savannah State to 165 total yards and forced multiple turnovers. scsuathletics.com+1 That dominant performance pushed the Bulldogs to 3–3 overall (per schedule) as they brace for a pivotal road test Oct. 11 at North Carolina A&T. scsuathletics.com+2ESPN.com+2
On the stat sheet, as of now Stubblefield leads the passing attack with 778 yards, while Tyler Smith has logged 171 rushing yards, and Jalen Johnson leads receivers with 302 yards. ESPN.com Defensively, linebacker Roderick Kelly tops SC State in tackles (22), and Brenyen Scott leads the team in interceptions (1) so far this season. ESPN.com The Bulldogs also average about 23.8 points per game offensively. ESPN.com+1
Looking ahead, SC State’s path includes key conference challenges: after the A&T road trip, the Bulldogs travel to Norfolk State, then return home to face Morgan State, before closing on the road at Delaware State. scsuathletics.com The stakes are high: each MEAC game is a chance to reframe the season and pursue positioning in the conference race.
Legacy Foundations: Jeffries & Pough in Bulldog Lore
Willie Jeffries — The Trailblazer Architect
Willie Jeffries holds a landmark place in SC State’s history. A former Bulldog lineman, he began his first coaching tenure in 1973 and later returned for a second stint (1989–2001). Under Jeffries, SC State captured seven MEAC championships and three Black College National Championships (1976, 1977, 1994). scsuathletics.com He is credited with introducing offensive creativity (including a “freeze” or “option” concept) and setting a culture of expectation. His path also broke barriers: in 1979, he became the first African-American head coach at a predominantly white Division I program (Wichita State). scsuathletics.com
To honor his legacy, SC State named its playing surface Willie Jeffries Field at Oliver C. Dawson Stadium. scsuathletics.com Jeffries also coached or mentored NFL talents such as Harry Carson and Donnie Shell, reinforcing the program’s reputation as a breeding ground for pro-level players. scsuathletics.com+1
Buddy Pough — The Standard-Bearer of Consistency
Buddy Pough succeeded in carrying the Jeffries legacy forward in modern context. A Bulldog alumnus, he served as head coach from 2002 through 2023. Over that span, Pough became SC State’s winningest coach and a symbol of sustained competitive relevance. scsuathletics.com
Under Pough, the Bulldogs secured eight MEAC titles (outright in 2008, 2009, 2021; shared in 2004, 2010, 2013, 2014, 2019) and claimed at least two Black College National Championships (notably 2009 and the 2021 Celebration Bowl). scsuathletics.com His teams made multiple FCS playoff appearances (2008–2010, 2013). scsuathletics.com Pough also coached several future NFL players—Javon Hargrave, Darius Leonard, Antonio Hamilton, and Alex Taylor among them—helping maintain the program’s prominence as a professional pipeline. scsuathletics.com+1
Pough’s coaching philosophy, often referred to as “Bulldog Tenacity,” emphasized discipline, toughness, and steady development. In recognition of his impact, even after his retirement as head coach, he has remained a respected elder statesman in the SC State athletic community. scsuathletics.com
This Season Within Their Shadow — The Present Echoes the Past
The echoes of Jeffries and Pough influence not only the culture but also the expectations placed on SC State. In 2025, coach Chennis Berry leads a team striving to reconcile the high standards of past eras with the realities of this season’s ups and downs. The dominant Homecoming showing offers a reminder: when SC State is executing, it can overwhelm lesser foes. The question now is consistency — can they summon that standard on the road, in conference contests, and under pressure?
Their performance in MEAC games is critical. The Bulldogs have to turn nonconference struggles into learning opportunities and posture themselves as legitimate contenders in every conference outing. Special teams play (e.g. blocked punt returned for score), turnover margin, red-zone efficiency, and defensive stops on third down are likely to define how far this team can go.
Moreover, positioning matters: each win shifts not only the conference standings but also how SC State is perceived among peer HBCU and MEAC programs. For each road test (like A&T, Norfolk State, Delaware State), there’s an opportunity to validate the program’s resilience, rooted in the legacies of Jeffries and Pough. If Berry’s squad can sustain flashes of brilliance and iron out vulnerabilities, 2025 could be a season that both honors the past and charts a new direction.