Sports
“MEAC Volleyball Semifinal Game 1: Howard vs. UMES | Howard Wins 3-1, Advances to Championship vs. Delaware State!”
“The Howard Bison clinch a thrilling 3-1 victory over UMES in the MEAC Volleyball Semifinals! šš„ With standout performances by Rya McKinnon and Amanda Ifeanyichukwu, the Bison move on to face Delaware State in the championship match on Sunday night.
UMES put up a tough fight, led by Ranyla Griggs and Anisa Dorlouis, but Howard’s resilience proved too strong. Donāt miss this exciting recap as HBCU Original brings you exclusive coverage and highlights. Will Howardās dominance continue in the finals, or can Delaware State claim the crown? Stay tuned for the championship showdown!
Game Leaders
Howard University
- Kills: McKinnon, Rya (12); Ifeanyichukwu, Amanda (9); Woodard, Bria (9)
- Aces: Buckner, Aziah (4); Reeves, Leah (2); Awojobi, Dami (1)
- Blocks: Ifeanyichukwu, Amanda (6); Woodard, Cimone (4); Woodard, Bria (3)
- Assists: Reeves, Leah (37); Simpson, Claire (3); Buckner, Aziah (1)
- Digs: Awojobi, Dami (16); Simpson, Claire (13); Reeves, Leah (12)
University of Maryland Eastern Shore (UMES)
- Kills: Griggs, Ranyla (12); Montes, Lilliana (9); Snowden, Lyric (6)
- Aces: Dorlouis, Anisa (3); Griggs, Ranyla (1); Ramdeen, Shanti (1)
- Blocks: Omolewa, Anjola (6); McCoy, Gabrielle (3); Snowden, Lyric (2)
- Assists: Dorlouis, Anisa (23); Yilmaz, Isil (4); Snowden, Lyric (2)
- Digs: Yilmaz, Isil (15); Ramdeen, Shanti (10); Dorlouis, Anisa (9)
#BisonPride #MEACVolleyball #DSUvsHoward”
HBCU ORIGINAL
Saint Augustineās Files Chapter 11 ā A Legacy Institution at a Crossroads
A historic HBCU is now in the fight of its life.
Saint Augustineās University has officially filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy, marking a defining moment not just for the schoolābut for the future of smaller HBCUs across the country.
The Breaking Point
According to recent reporting from WRAL, the university filed for bankruptcy protection on April 27, 2026, as it faces overwhelming financial pressure, mounting debt, and ongoing operational instability.
This move allows the university to restructure what has been described as a severe financial crisisāone that includes tens of millions owed to creditors and government agencies.
But this wasnāt sudden.
Years of financial strain, leadership turnover, and declining enrollment created a slow-building collapse that has now reached a critical stage.
Accreditation Crisis Made It Worse
One of the biggest blows came in 2025, when the university lost its accreditation battle. Without accreditation, access to federal financial aid becomes uncertainācutting off a major pipeline for student enrollment and revenue.
Even with temporary legal relief at one point, the long-term damage had already been done.
Now, with bankruptcy in play, the road back becomes even more complicated.
What Happens to Students?
This is where the story hits hardest.
- Seniors are expected to graduate if theyāre close to completion
- Other students may be forced into transfer or āteach-outā agreements
- The university has discussed shifting toward certificate and non-degree programs during recovery
The reality: students are caught in the middle of an institutional reset.
Not Just One School ā A Warning Sign
Saint Augustineās isnāt aloneāitās just the latest.
Across the HBCU landscape, especially for smaller private institutions, there are growing challenges:
- Declining enrollment numbers
- Rising operational costs
- Limited endowments
- Heavy reliance on federal aid
Saint Augustineās situation highlights how quickly things can shift when multiple pressures collide.

The Cultural Impact
Letās be clearāthis isnāt just about finances.
HBCUs like Saint Augustineās were built to educate Black students when no one else would. Founded in 1867, the institution has served generations of first-generation college students and produced leaders across industries.
When an HBCU struggles, itās not just a campus at riskāitās legacy, access, and opportunity.
What Chapter 11 Really Means
Chapter 11 is not closureāitās a lifeline.
It gives the university a chance to:
- Restructure debt
- Stay operational (for now)
- Attempt a long-term rebuild
But thereās a major obstacle: institutions in bankruptcy typically face restrictions around federal funding, making recovery extremely difficult.
Translation: this is a long road, not a quick fix.
What Comes Next
Right now, Saint Augustineās future is uncertain.
The university must now prove it can:
- Stabilize leadership
- Rebuild trust
- Secure funding
- Regain accreditation
Thatās not easyābut itās not impossible.
HBCU Original Take
This moment is bigger than one campus.
Itās a reminder that:
HBCUs are essentialābut not invincible.
The question moving forward isnāt just whether Saint Augustineās survives.
Itās whether enough attention, investment, and support will come in timeānot just for this institution, but for others quietly facing the same pressures.
Because protecting HBCUs means protecting the pipeline of Black excellence.
Events
š° Penn Relays 2026: Hurdlers Tested, Delaware State Shines in Steeplechase at Franklin Field
The Penn Relays once again turned Franklin Field into a proving ground, where technique, endurance, and toughness were on full display. With a full slate of 400m hurdles and the menās 3000m steeplechase championship, the day delivered both elite performances and unforgettable moments.
šš¾āāļø 400m Hurdlers Battle Through Grueling Heats
The 400m hurdles demanded precision and endurance, and across multiple heats, athletes pushed through fatigue, barriers, and tight competition.
š„ Top Performances Across Heats
- Sanaa Hebron (Miami) ā 55.30
- Gloria Guerrier (Yale) ā 59.02
- Avery Clark (Ohio State) ā 57.71
These performances set the tone, with athletes maintaining rhythm and speed through all ten hurdles.
𦬠HBCU Hurdlers Show Grit and Determination
HBCU athletes stepped into competitive fields and made their presence felt.
Howard University
- Cenaiya Billups ā 56.87
- Aniya Woodruff ā 58.14
- Lindsay Johnson ā 58.87
- Carrie Vannoy ā 1:00.65
Howardās group showed depth and consistency, competing strong across multiple heats against top-tier programs.

Delaware State
- Chidubem (Miriam) Okwudibonye ā 1:01.54
Her race became one of the defining moments of the day:
After clipping the final hurdle, she went downābut got back up and finished, showing resilience that went beyond the clock.

Johnson C. Smith
- Janya Barnes ā 1:03.53
Barnes battled through a competitive heat, continuing to build momentum for the Golden Bulls program.

šš¾āāļø Delaware Stateās Marian Drazan Charges to Steeplechase Podium
While the hurdles tested rhythm, the 3000m steeplechase tested everything else.
Delaware Stateās Marian Drazan delivered one of the most impressive races of the meet, finishing 3rd in 8:43.97.
š Race Breakdown
- Early race: Positioned near the back (as low as 18th)
- Mid-race: Gradually gained ground
- Final laps: Surged into podium position
- Final lap: 1:04.09
š Top Finishers
- Brian Boler (Princeton) ā 8:40.29
- Billy Carlton (Georgia Tech) ā 8:43.32
- Marian Drazan (Delaware State) ā 8:43.97
His performance highlighted strategy, patience, and a powerful closing kick under pressure.
š¤ What Defined the Day
The Penn Relays isnāt just about fast timesāitās about execution under pressure.
And on this day, two themes stood out:
- Technical excellence in the 400m hurdles
- Endurance and strategy in the steeplechase
But above all, it was about resilience:
- A hurdler getting back up
- A distance runner climbing from the back to the podium
- HBCU programs competing with confidence
š„ Final Take
At Franklin Field, the results tell part of the story.
The rest comes from moments:
- Every cleared hurdle
- Every water jump
- Every athlete refusing to quit
And for HBCU programsāespecially Delaware Stateāit was a day of impact, pride, and progress.
HBCU ORIGINAL
š HBCU Prospects Push for Draft Spotlight at First-Ever NFL Combined Showcase
By Tamara Brown
With no HBCU players invited to the 2026 NFL Scouting Combine, a group of 48 standouts took matters into their own handsāusing the leagueās newly expanded showcase to make one final push toward the NFL Draft.
Held at the Washington Commandersā training facility in Ashburn, Virginia, the event marked a historic first as the NFL HBCU Showcase merged with the International Player Pathway Pro Day, creating a unified platform designed to elevate overlooked talent.
For HBCU prospects, the stakes couldnāt be higher.
Over the past three years, only two HBCU players have been selected in the NFL Draft, and with no active HBCU invitees to this yearās combine, opportunities to impress scouts are limited. That reality makes showcases like this one criticalāoffering a direct pipeline to NFL and CFL personnel evaluating talent up close.
This yearās event brought together talent from across the MEAC, SWAC, CIAA, and SIAC, featuring names like Noah Miles (Howard), Walker Harris (North Carolina Central), Quincy Ivory (Jackson State), and Erick Hunter (Morgan State). The field also included top Division II talent, including Virginia Union running back Curtis Allen, the reigning DII Player of the Year.
But one name stood above the rest.
Morgan State linebacker Erick Hunter delivered a combine-level performance that turned heads across the league. At 6-foot-2 and 224 pounds, Hunter clocked a 4.48-second 40-yard dash, a time that would have ranked among the best at his position in Indianapolis. He also posted a 10-foot-10 broad jump and a 37-inch vertical, showcasing elite explosiveness and athleticism.
Other standouts made their mark as well. Jackson Stateās Donerio Davenport and Benedictās Jamal Sam both posted blazing 1.56-second 10-yard splits, while Florida A&M offensive lineman Ashton Grable powered his way to the top of the bench press leaderboard with 28 reps.
Beyond the numbers, prospects also participated in position drills and interviews with NFL and CFL personnelācritical moments that could determine futures at the next level.
As evaluations continue, all eyes now turn to the 2026 NFL Draft, set for April 23ā25 in Pittsburgh. For many of these athletes, Ashburn may have been the moment that changed everything.
HBCU ORIGINAL
Lincoln Universityās Lourraine De Luna Lands Internship with Team Jamaica Bickle
In a move that blends athletics, academics, and global opportunity, Lincoln Universityās Lourraine De Luna has been selected for a prestigious internship with Team Jamaica Bickle during the upcoming 2026 Penn Relays. The experience will place De Luna at the heart of one of track & fieldās most iconic events, where sheāll work directly in event management and sports marketing.
The internshipāslated for April 22ā26 in Philadelphiaāoffers De Luna a rare chance to gain real-world experience beyond the classroom. Sheāll assist with key aspects of the meetās operations, working alongside Team Jamaica Bickle staff to help deliver a world-class competition experience for athletes and fans alike.
De Lunaās selection reflects both her academic strengths and her commitment to excellence off the field. A standout student-athlete, she was chosen for her ability to connect her health science background with strategic thinking and communication skillsāattributes that made her application stand out in a competitive field.
For Lincoln University, the placement underscores the growing emphasis on preparing student-athletes for careers that intersect sport, business, and global engagement. As the Penn Relays approach, De Luna will bring the Pride of Lincoln to an international stageāshowcasing that HBCU athletes excel not just in competition, but in leadership and professional development too.
HBCU ORIGINAL
š¾ Bulldogs Stay Perfect: SC State Rolling Through MEAC Play
The dominance continues for South Carolina State University, and right now, the Bulldogs look like the team to beat in the MEAC.
With a commanding 6-1 victory over Norfolk State, SC State kept its conference record spotless, improving to 4-0 in MEAC play while building momentum at the perfect time in the season.
From the opening serve, the Bulldogs set the tone.
SC State swept all three doubles matches to grab early control, showcasing chemistry and depth across the lineup. The pairs of Mikalai Bankou and Novak Novakovic, along with Iliyas Muratuly and Andrii Borodatiuk, delivered decisive wins, while the third doubles team closed things out in a tight finish.
That early momentum carried straight into singlesāand thatās where the Bulldogs slammed the door.
SC State captured five of six singles matches, with standout performances across the board. Bankou and Novakovic handled business in straight sets at the top of the lineup, while Borodatiuk, Gabriel Johnson, and Hoang Anh Pham each added dominant wins to secure the team victory.
The result? A team that isnāt just winningābut controlling matches from start to finish.
Now sitting at 9-6 overall, SC State has turned conference play into a statement run, blending experienced leadership with lineup depth that few teams in the MEAC can match.
With the regular season winding down and postseason play on the horizon, the message is clear:
The Bulldogs arenāt chasing the top spotātheyāre defending it.
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