Emory and Henry Wasps | |
---|---|
University | Emory and Henry College |
Conference | Old Dominion Athletic Conference |
NCAA | Division III |
Athletic director | Myra Sims |
Location | Emory, Virginia |
Varsity teams | 15 |
Football stadium | Fred Selfe Stadium |
Basketball arena | Bob Johnson Court at the King Center |
Baseball stadium | Porterfield-DeVault Field |
Other arenas | King Aquatics Center |
Nickname | Wasps |
Colors | Blue and Gold |
Website | www |
The Emory and Henry Wasps (also E&H Wasps) are the athletic teams that represent Emory and Henry College, located in Emory, Virginia, in NCAA Division III intercollegiate sports. The Wasps compete as members of the Old Dominion Athletic Conference, having joined as founding members in 1976. Altogether, Emory & Henry sponsors 15 sports: 7 for men and 8 for women.
The Emory and Henry football team came under investigation for alleged violations of NCAA bylaws in 2014. The allegations came to public attention after the resignation of former coach Don Montgomery from the football program and departure of the College's president, Dr. Rosalind Reichard. The student newspaper reported that allegations were due to lack of "institutional control" of the athletic department
The official Emory and Henry mascot is the Wasps. While there are many rumored origins of the nickname, the most commonly accepted story is that Emory and Henry was first called the Wasps after the football team played the first ever game in Tennessee's Neyland Stadium by a local Knoxville newspaper. Though Emory and Henry was beaten 27–0, legend has it that the local paper declared "that those Virginia boys stung like wasps," and the nickname has stuck ever since.
The Emory and Henry basketball team's unofficial mascot is a dog named "Pete," who wears an Emory and Henry jersey and is yellowish in nature. Pete is a reference to the late Emory and Henry basketball coach Bob Johnson's Labrador retriever (which was also named Pete). Pete (the dog) was often seen sitting beside Coach Johnson during games at the King Center.
Men's sports
Women's sports
The E&H Wasps are credited with inventing an American football offensive formation, named in the college's honor, that divides the offensive line and wide receivers into three groupings of three. While it is primarily used today as a trick play, it was revived in 2007 as an integral part of the A-11 offense, a high school football offensive scheme that was eventually banned due to the exploitation of loopholes in the high school rulebooks. The offense inspired Steve Spurrier to use variations of it as a trick play formation at Florida and South Carolina named "Emory and Henry", as Spurrier attended Wasps games as a child growing up in nearby Johnson City, Tennessee. The formation is featured on EA Sports' NCAA Football 07 video game as well.