‘We did this for you’: Winston-Salem State wins CIAA title for past and present players

BALTIMORE – In her first season leading the women’s basketball program at her alma mater, Winston-Salem State University head coach Tierra Terry delivered a moment over half a century in the making for the devoted “Ramily” fan base.
Winston-Salem State (25-3 overall, 14-2 CIAA) capped its historic season by winning the program’s first Central Intercollegiate Athletic Association (CIAA) women’s basketball championship, defeating Fayetteville State University 60-43 on Saturday at CFG Bank Arena.
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The victory felt even more profound with Kadis “Mama Kay” Hingleton Hull, who played on Winston-Salem State’s team in 1975, in attendance.
“When I hugged her, [I told her] you know, ‘We did this for you guys.’ Without women like that, we wouldn’t be here right now,” Terry said. “So every woman that’s been a part of the program has pushed the needle. … We were just the ones that were blessed enough to come in and get that banner first.”
Hingleton Hull, who has attended every Rams women’s basketball game since 2014, has followed the program for five decades.
When she played for WSSU in the late 1970s, the program didn’t have a full-time women’s basketball coach, and she said legendary Winston-Salem State coach Clarence “Big House” Gaines would give the female basketball players tips.
Hingleton Hull said she knew the current team could win a championship after she observed how Terry’s strict coaching and calm demeanor would bring out the best in the players.
“We continue to stand on each other’s shoulders, and now we’re at the top, and I believe we will stay there,” Hingleton Hull said. “They know what it feels like. They know what hard work is and what needs happen. They persevered, and now they have the success that they were looking for.
“To take that back to Winston-Salem State University, I think Big House Gaines would be very, very pleased to know that a group of women came along to do the things that he wanted them to do.”
Winston-Salem State’s women’s basketball team won the program’s first CIAA championship on Saturday, defeating Fayetteville State 60-43 in Baltimore.
Mia Berry / Andscape
From the opening tip, the Rams controlled the game’s tempo, building a double-digit cushion they never surrendered. Winston-Salem State suffocated Fayetteville State’s offense and denied the two-time reigning champion an opportunity for a three-peat.
Forward Nevaeh Farmer led the charge for the Rams in the first half, scoring 18 points and shooting 4-of-6 from beyond the 3-point arc. Farmer finished the game with 24 points and won Player of the Game for the Rams. Guard Makayla Waleed added 14 points and won CIAA Tournament MVP.
This season has been a drastic improvement from where the program was last year, when Winston-Salem State finished 7-20 overall and 3-13 in the conference. After the game, WSSU alumnus and NBA Hall of Famer Earl Monroe called Terry and the team to congratulate them.
Hailey Gipson and Dajha William were among dozens of former players who came to Baltimore to watch their former program make history and build upon the foundation they built as student-athletes.
“It is just amazing to see the build-up of the program from where we left it to where they are now,” Gipson said. “We didn’t have a standard before. Now that we have a championship, the standard is set.”
“It’s just the beginning,” Williams added.
Terry, who has lupus, an autoimmune disease where the body’s immune system attacks healthy tissue, said after the game that she had experienced a flare-up during the tournament.
“I just fight through. But it means even more to me because I’m in an active flare, and I have been coaching, doing pretty bad physically and trying to push myself through,” Terry said. “So for them to play that hard for me, I mean, sometimes you don’t see that these days, but those young women really, really love us, and we really love them.”
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The Rams will now turn their attention to the national stage. Currently slotted as the No. 3 seed in the NCAA Division II Atlantic Region, Winston-Salem State awaits its official placement in the NCAA tournament bracket.
Fayetteville State men earn second CIAA title in five years
Hours after Fayetteville State’s women’s basketball team fell short of a CIAA title, the men’s basketball team made sure the Broncos left Baltimore with a trophy in hand.
After trailing by as many as 14 points in the first half of the CIAA men’s championship game, Fayetteville State (23-6 overall, 14-2 CIAA) engineered a comeback. The Broncos defeated Bluefield State 71-68, earning the program’s second conference tournament title in five years.
The Fayetteville State men’s basketball team poses for a photo after winning the CIAA championship on Saturday at CFG Bank Arena in Baltimore.
Raigan Lydon / Andscape
For head coach Devin Hoehn, the victory carried significant meaning.
Last season, as the head coach of Bluefield State’s program, he was the CIAA tournament runner-up. This season, Hoehn’s first leading the Broncos, he secured the program’s third CIAA tournament championship.
“Super happy with these guys. We fought through a lot this year. A lot of people probably had us out, and we were down 28 to 14 early,” Hoehn said. “These guys have been resilient all year. And I’ve said it over and over again. I keep saying it – these guys make us look good at the end of the day.”
Guard Terrell Williams, a member of the Bluefield State team that lost in the championship game a season ago, finished this year’s title game with 29 points and won Player of the Game and CIAA Tournament MVP honors. Forward Larry Howell and guards Travon Cooper took home all-tournament team honors and finished with 14 and three points respectively.
The Broncos had five players with championship game experience, and when fighting to cut the lead in the second half, they relied on the memories and experiences from their loss a year ago.
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“We were supposed to get it [last year], but it wasn’t written,” Howell said. “We worked our butts off all summer, preseason into the season, to win right now. I’m just overly grateful.”
Fayetteville State, the Southern Division champion, backed down Bluefield State slowly over the second half, taking their first lead with 5:48 left in the game.
Hoehn said the difference-maker this year was the Broncos’ No. 1 seed in the tournament. They had to play only three games while Bluefield State had to play four games in five days for a chance at a championship. When fatigue set in for the Big Blue, the Broncos took advantage.
“We wanted a championship. It was that simple,” Hoehn said. “If we played like we did in the first half in the second half, we weren’t gonna get that. So we knew we had to change it, and we did.”
Fayetteville State guard Ezekiel Cannedy finished his senior year with two rings; after the Broncos secured the victory, he proposed to his girlfriend, Broncos cheerleader Mariah Boyd, on the court.
The Broncos have earned the conference’s automatic bid into the NCAA Division II tournament and now await their first-round matchup.
“We’re gonna rest up for the next couple days for sure,” Hoehn said. “The guys could definitely use a couple days off, then we’re gonna get back to it. Just do what we do and be us. It is not done yet.”
Mia Berry is the senior HBCU writer for Andscape and covers everything from sports to student-led protests. She is a Detroit native (What up Doe!), long-suffering Detroit sports fan and Notre Dame alumna who randomly shouts, “Go Irish.”


