Sam Shade and T.C. Taylor share an appreciation for the Gulf Coast Challenge.
But one thing remained abundantly clear on Tuesday:
When Oct. 3 arrives, respect will give way to expectation. With Jackson State chasing another Celebration Bowl run and Alabama A&M eager to close the gap, this year’s meeting in Mobile is already carrying more than early-season weight.
Shade didn’t shy away from praising Jackson State and head coach T.C. Taylor, calling the Tigers one of the most talented and well-coached programs in the SWAC in recent years. He pointed to last season as proof—Jackson State’s physical run game and stout run defense set the tone across the league, and the Tigers came within two points of another Celebration Bowl appearance.
“A lot of teams have been chasing Jackson State,” Shade said Tuesday during a press conference.
But the Bulldogs’ message wasn’t about admiration alone. Shade emphasized urgency. With six home games on the schedule, he noted, those are the kinds of matchups teams “have to find a way to win.” And while an early test against Howard in the MEAC/SWAC Challenge looms, the clash in Mobile carries special weight.
“This game means a lot to our coaching staff, our players, our fans, and Alabama A&M,” Shade said. “It’s right here in our home state. We’ve got a lot of players from Alabama, and from Mobile, so this one is important.”
For Alabama A&M, it is more than a neutral-site game. The Bulldogs hope to bounce back from a 2025 season in which they won just four games overall and went 1-7 in the SWAC.
Jackson State beat Alabama A&M 57-24 in last season’s matchup.

Jackson State carries a mix of appreciation, expectation
When Taylor took the microphone, his focus sharpened quickly.
He echoed the importance of the event and its organizers, but made it clear that for his program the stakes are always internal. The Tigers are still carrying the sting of last season’s loss in the SWAC Championship Game to Prairie View.
“That left a bad taste in my mouth,” he said. “Being two points away from getting back—that’s always our goal, and that doesn’t change.”
At the same time, Taylor acknowledged the reality of modern college football. Roster turnover, fueled by the transfer portal, has reshaped Jackson State into what he described as a “new team”—younger, but still talented. With dozens of players arriving over the summer and already grinding through workouts, the foundation is being laid again.
“It’s an entire new team, but a talented team,” Taylor said. “A young team, but we’re excited about it. Those guys are working right now, and that’s what you want to see this time of year.”
By the time the microphones were set down, the tone was clear: respect, yes—but also urgency.
Both programs are chasing something in 2026. And come Oct. 3, in Mobile, they’ll measure exactly how close they are.





