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Black college athletes can send a message to Ron DeSantis by staying away

cigaretteman

HR King
May 29, 2001
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The story was told to me over 30 years ago in a small Southeast Texas church, where I joined regular folk and former NFL stars at the funeral of Willie Ray Smith Sr. The legendary Texas high school football coach, it was said, had for a decade refused to let his players go to White Southern college football teams after they acceded to suit up Black players. Instead, he continued to steer his best players north, particularly to Michigan State, where his middle son, future NFL Pro Bowl defensive lineman and actor Bubba, helped the Spartans win a national championship.


It was a protest born as a sort of athletic underground railroad, as sportswriter Tom Shanahan accurately described it, referencing the escape route north for enslaved Africans in the antebellum South. Because for more than a generation in which Smith coached, those Southern White schools for which his sons and the sons of other Black families dreamed of playing didn’t believe in diversity, equity or inclusion.
It was as if such policies of fairness were “toxic” and had “no place” in the South’s public universities.



Which over half a century later, if you can believe it, is how Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) described diversity, equity and inclusion efforts. This was after the University of Florida announced last week the sacking of all things DEI, something for which the reactionary governor has been clamoring.
“I’m glad that Florida was the first state to eliminate DEI,” DeSantis wrote last week, “and I hope more states follow suit.”

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It was enough to spur Emmitt Smith, the Pro Football Hall of Fame running back who is arguably the greatest football player in the history of Florida’s flagship institution of higher learning, to respond to DeSantis that he was “ … utterly disgusted by UF’s decision and the precedent that it sets. … We cannot continue to believe and trust that a team of leaders all made up of the same background will make the right decision when it comes to equality and diversity. History has already proved that is not the case. We need diverse thinking and backgrounds to enhance our University and the DEI department is necessary to accomplish those goals. …



“To the MANY minority athletes at UF,” Smith continued, “please be aware and vocal about this decision by the University who is now closing doors on other minorities without any oversight.”

Smith, who I’ve never known as a particularly remonstrative person, didn’t conclude with a plan of action. But his message alluded to one. The same one that Willie Ray Smith Sr. took against such intolerant action decades ago.
Black coaches like him, and every Black parent or guardian of a Black college football or basketball recruit, can let wishful college coaches know that those boys-to-men aren’t going to work — which is what playing college sports is — at places where people of color, women and other marginalized folks are not otherwise supported.

Young Black athletes can go elsewhere, rather than to those Southern state universities that are moving to mimic the days they refused Willie Ray Smith Sr.’s graduates. The same goes for Northern states that are implementing policies no different. And then, let any governor or state legislative body defend their retrograde decision-making to coaches who start losing recruits and to university officials who witness waning revenue as a result. The NAACP on Monday even suggested Black college athletes consider boycotting predominantly White schools in Florida.


After all, Florida’s athletic department made more than $190 million during its 2022 fiscal year, the most-recent public financial reporting period detailed by an annual USA Today Sports analysis of the most lucrative college athletic programs. Only seven schools earned more.
In the previous two fiscal years, football accounted for 47 percent and 53 percent of annual athletic revenue, according to the school, while men’s basketball comprised 10 percent and 7 percent, respectively.

And who disproportionately predominated Florida’s football and basketball rosters? Young Black men. In fact, when USC professor Shawn Harper last updated his study of Black male athletes at Power Five conferences in 2018, he found that Black male athletes were more overrepresented at Florida than any other school. “Black men were 2.2% of undergraduates at Florida,” he found, “but comprised 77.7% of football and men’s basketball teams.”


In short, Florida didn’t really have much use for young Black men unless they were playing revenue-generating sports. It’s safe to say not much has changed.
Florida isn’t alone in this discrepancy of dependency on young Black men. But those Southern schools that for so long dismissed Willie Ray Smith Sr.’s players — especially those in the Black belt South that team up with Florida to make the Southeastern Conference — lead the way. Smith was a head coach at three segregated Texas high schools, most famously Charlton-Pollard in Beaumont from 1957 to 1975. Smith won 235 games, won state championships and sent more than 20 players to the pros on his railroad out of the South. But schools like the University of Texas, where Bubba longed to play, weren’t having Black players then. DeSantis’s equally reactionary gubernatorial peer, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott (R), last summer signed into law a bill similar to Florida’s, outlawing DEI at Texas colleges and universities.

The impact that parents and guardians of Black recruits could have on state schools so dependent upon the labor of their kids by avoiding places with regressive racial rules like DeSantis’s Florida would be immeasurable. It’d be like the opening scene that makes for one of my favorite plays, Douglas Turner Ward’s brilliant satire on Southern racism, “Day of Absence,” from 1965, just about the time Southern schools started wising up to the benefits of no longer discriminating against Black athletes. A stereotypical Southern town of the time wakes up to find that all its Black folks have disappeared. Chaos ensues. There’s no one to take care of the babies, cook the food, wash the clothes. The town is paralyzed without its Black labor force.
That’s the kind of pain young Black men could affect on states and schools threatening to turn back the clock. Just find Willie Ray Smith Sr.’s footsteps, and walk in them.
 
The writer of the piece is an idiot.
100 bucks says his CV is more impressive than yours. Let’s see it:

KEVIN B. BLACKISTONE
Professor of the Practice, Merrill College of Journalism, University of Maryland, August 2008-present
Education
M.S., Journalism, Boston University, Boston, MA, 2007
Concentration: Print Journalism, African-American History
Thesis: A non-fiction book proposal on the life and symbolic resurrection of Jack Trice, the first black football player at Iowa State University
B.S., Journalism, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL, 1981 Concentration: Print Journalism
Research/Publications
Summer 2022, Foreword. Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion in Sport, Human Kinetics.
Spring 2022, Imagining the Indian: The Fight Against Native American Mascoting a feature-length documentary film that examines the movement ending the use of Native American names, logos, and mascots in the world of sports and beyond, Ciesla Foundation and Shadow City Films.
Fall 2018, Sports Industries As Plantations. The Burden: African Americans and the Enduring Impact of Slavery, Wayne State University Press.
Winter 2016, Black Male Student-Athletes and Racial Inequities in NCAA Division I College Sports, 2016 Edition, by Shaun R. Harper, (p. 2). Trustees of the University of Pennsylvania.
Summer 2015, Sprawling Hagiography: ESPN’s ’30 for 30’ and the Untangling of Sports Memories, with A.C. Billings. In J.P. McGuire, G.G Armfield, and A.C. Earnheardt (Eds.), The ESPN Effect: Exploring the Worldwide Leader in Sports (pp. 157-168). New York: Peter Lang.
Spring 2015, Media & Civil Rights History Symposium at the University of South Carolina, The Remasculation of the Black Athlete: The Punch that Emancipated and Empowered Him to Join His People’s Struggle of Self Determination, with Justin Hudson, PhD candidate, University of Maryland.
Summer 2012, The Whitening of Sports Media and the Coloring of Black Athletes’ Images, Wake Forest Journal of Law & Policy.
Spring 2012, Sports Journalism, A Definition, Oxford African American Studies Center (http://www.oxfordaasc.com/), a scholarly reference site that provides the most comprehensive collection of scholarship available online to focus on the lives and events which have shaped African American and African history and culture. Blackistone authored an entry under Literature and Communication defining sports journalism in an African-American context.
November 2009, A Gift for Ron, a memoir of former NFL All-Pro player Everson Walls's psychological and emotional journey to become an organ donor to his one-time teammate and longtime friend Ron Springs, who was dying from the ravaging effects of diabetes that shut down his kidneys. The memoir is co-authored by Kevin Blackistone and was purchased by Lyons Press from Farley Chase at the Waxman Literary Agency.
Teaching, Mentoring, and Advising
JOUR382/JOUR628B Special Topics in News Writing and Reporting: Sports Reporting and Writing. A skills’ course designed to give full and wide-ranging instruction in all aspects of sports reporting and sports writing, from the history of the craft to its mechanics, including how to prepare to report and write sports stories, and incorporating photography, audio, video and interactive mechanics.

JOUR458M Special Topics in Journalism: Sports, Protest and the Media. This class examines the development of our games, the history of remonstration upon them, and the machinations of media at the intersection of the two. It answers why agents, whether athletes or not, have long commanded ceremonial and ritualistic games to promote a cause or take a stand. It examines how important the role is of media as a collector, editor, interpreter, and disseminator of information, or news, about athletic competitions, athletes, and political pronouncements revolving around athletic events and their participants.

Experience

Commentator, National Public Radio, May 2016-present
Sports commentary for Morning Edition

Columnist, The Washington Post, May 2015-present
Writes on sports issues, particularly at the intersection of race and politics.

Visiting Lecturer, Beijing Sport University, Summer 2014
Taught sports reporting and writing.

Contributing columnist, The Guardian, April 2014-February 2015
Wrote on sports issues.

Contributor, @daily, August 2011-January 2013.
Wrote on sports issues for the iPad newspaper.

National Columnist, AOL Sports, October 2007-March 2011. Wrote columns of opinion about sports for AOL Sports, a fast-growing and leading Web site devoted to sports with 500 million page views monthly and the fifth-largest unique visitors’ population among sports Web sites nationally.
Commentator, ESPN, 2003-present. Appears regularly each week as a panelist on ESPN’s popular weekday afternoon half-hour show Around the Horn, where four sports columnists and sports commentators from around the country debate the sports news of the day. The show is shown nationally and in Europe, the Middle East and Australia.
Columnist, The Dallas Morning News, 1990-2006. Wrote an award-winning column of opinion several times a week for SportsDay, the Morning News’ award-winning sports section often considered the best daily newspaper sports section in the country. In Upon leaving the Morning News in September 2006, Morning News Editor Bob Mong wrote of Blackistone in an editorial: “His thoughtful and probing journalism almost always stimulated response from readers, and, in this hyper-busy world, that's saying something.”
Columnist, Emerge, 1997-1999. Wrote a sports column for what was a monthly news magazine focused on issues of import to the country’s African-American community that Time magazine hailed as an “uncompromising voice that made [it] the nation’s best black news magazine.”
Reporter, The Dallas Morning News, 1986-1990. Covered national economics and small business issues for the News’ business section, often considered the best daily newspaper business section in the country.
Reporter, The Chicago Reporter, 1983-1986. Covered government and business issues for this award-winning monthly investigative magazine on racial and social issues in metropolitan Chicago. One investigation found the Illinois State Lottery saturated poor and minority communities with lottery machines to a degree it did not in white neighborhoods. The lottery was forced to change its business practice.
Reporter, The Boston Globe, 1981-1982. Assigned to the city desk as a general assignment reporter
Grants and Fellowships
Davenport Fellowship, 1988, University of Missouri. Selected to study economics reporting in what was a month-long program run by the journalism and business colleges at the university.
Martin Luther King Jr. Fellowship, 1982, Boston University. Studied journalism and African-American history in a dual master’s degree program at the university.
Awards and Honors
Second Place, Feature Story, The White House News Photographers Association, 2021
Honorable Mention, Sports Column Writing, Texas Associated Press Managing Editors, 2002
Honorable Mention, Sports Column Writing, Texas Associated Press Managing Editors, 2001
First Place, Sports Column Writing, Texas Associated Press Managing Editors, 1999
Honorable Mention, Sports Column Writing, Texas Associated Press Managing Editors, 1998
First Place, Sports Column Writing, Texas Associated Press Managing Editors, 1997
Second Place, Sports Column Writing, Texas Associated Press Managing Editors, 1996
Award of Excellence, Best Sports Column, Press Club of Dallas, 1992
Award of Excellence, Best Business Reporting, Press Club of Dallas, 1987
Stick-O-Type Award for investigative reporting, Chicago Newspaper Guild, 1985
Print Special Recognition Award for Excellence in Coverage of Blacks and the Black Condition, National Association of Black Journalists, 1982
Service
Board of directors of the Society for Features Journalism Foundation
Task Force on Recruiting for Academic Diversity, Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication
Task Force for Journalism Education Outreach, Merrill College of Journalism, University of Maryland
Football Writers Association of America,
Baseball Writers Association of America, Lifetime
U.S. Basketball Writers Association
National Association of Black Journalists

 
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