Henderson State Reddies football
The Henderson State Reddies football program is a college football team that represents Henderson State University. The team is a member of the Great American Conference which is in the Division II of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA). The Reddies are currently coached by Scott Maxfield, who is in his seventh year at the university. Home games are played at Carpenter-Haygood Stadium in Arkadelphia, Arkansas.[2] Henderson State shares the longest rivalry in Division II football with Ouachita Baptist University Tigers, the Battle of the Ravine, which began in 1895. Head Coach Of Auburn, Gus Malzahn is one of their most famous alumni by playing Wide Receiver for the Reddies.
Henderson State Reddies | |
---|---|
![]() | |
First season | 1905 |
Athletic director | Shawn Jones |
Head coach | Scott Maxfield 14th season, 99–54 (.647) |
Stadium | Carpenter-Haygood Stadium (Capacity: 15,000) |
Field surface | GeoGreen |
Location | Arkadelphia, Arkansas |
Conference | Great American Conference |
Conference titles | 15 |
Rivalries | OBU Tigers |
Consensus All-Americans | 25 |
Colors | Red and Gray[1] |
Fight song | That Old Reddie Spirit |
Marching band | The Showband of Arkansas |
Website | Reddie Athletics |
- For information on all Henderson State University sports, see Henderson State Reddies
Rivalries
Ouachita Baptist Tigers
gollark: But my computer has a 64-bit address space.
gollark: I want my pointers to occupy the entire address space.
gollark: Doesn't `rand()` return values up to some smallish constant?
gollark: Only Turing and later have good enough on-chip processors to use it, apparently.
gollark: nvidia-open is quite funny, since they just moved all of the proprietary stuff to a giant tens-of-megabytes firmware blob.
References
- "Henderson State University Visual Identity and Brand Standards". Retrieved July 16, 2017.
- "Henderson State Historical Data". College Football Data Warehouse. Retrieved 2014-02-10.
External links
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.