Chiefs QB Patrick Mahomes is proud to see HBCU players drafted into the NFL

#Chiefs QB Patrick Mahomes took time after OTAs to discuss his excitement about more HBCU players drafted into the NFL. | from @EdEastonJr

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The visibility of Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCU) athletics continues to take positive steps and get the appropriate attention that has been overdue in recent years. Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes has been a very public supporter of HBCU sports and its need for more acknowledgment in the mainstream sports world.

One of Mahomes’ new teammates is rookie cornerback Joshua Williams, one of only four HBCU players drafted this past April. The former league MVP took time after training to discuss his excitement about the addition of more HBCU players into the NFL during Thursday’s press conference following OTAs.

“Yeah, I mean, it was super exciting for me,” Mahomes said. “When you look back, they didn’t have a player drafted last year. And then now to have four guys going. You just wanted to shed light on these guys. They’re guys that are super talented, they’re playing in a competitive division and you want to give them that platform. I think the HBCU bowl game gave them that, and you saw that they got on that platform, they made plays happen. They had the combine as well. And then you got four guys getting drafted and more in camps. And so I think just kind of giving them that light and then letting them go do what they’ve been doing. And they’ve been doing it for a long time. So we give them that platform, and they made the most of it.”

Mahomes served as an honorary captain at this year’s inaugural HBCU Legacy Bowl and his foundation agreed to a multi-year partnership with the event. The postseason all-star game features approximately 100 of the top draft-eligible prospects from HBCUs.

The Chiefs added a talented player in Williams from Fayetteville State, an HBCU, further showing the franchise is in sync with their star quarterback. As time goes on, expect the numbers of HBCU talent in the NFL to grow as these players have even more opportunities to showcase their talents.

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Deion Sanders warns Saban, ‘I’m not the one to play with.’

Deion Sanders and Nick Saban exchange massive shots.

Alabama head coach Nick Saban caused quite the uproar this week for some of his comments regarding the current direction of college football and their NIL laws. While Coach Saban did say that Texas A&M and Jackson State had paid players, he never accused them of cheating. Nonetheless, these two programs did not take it well and both have fired back.

Jackson State, a Historically Black College and University (HBCU), landed the No. 1 overall commit in the 2022 class in defensive back, Travis Hunter. Saban said of Hunter and JSU,  “I mean, Jackson State paid a guy a million dollars last year that was a really good Division I player to come to school. It was in the paper and they bragged about it. Nobody did anything about it.”

First was Texas A&M Head Coach Jimbo Fisher who called a press conference Thursday morning to unload the clip on Saban. Deion Sanders joined shortly after.

Sanders was very hurt by what Saban said and wants to have a public conversation about the comments that he made. Sanders also went on to say, “I don’t even wear a watch and I know what time it is. They forget I know who’s been bringing the bag and dropping it off. I know this stuff. I’m not the one you want to play with when it comes to all of this stuff.”

Saban and Sanders have appeared in Aflac commercials together before so it will be very interesting to see how these two hash out the beef.

Roll Tide Wire will continue to share updates.

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Chiefs rookie CB Joshua Williams discusses transition from HBCU football to the NFL

#Chiefs CB Joshua Williams knows that even coming from an HBCU, it’s a level playing field now that he’s made it to the NFL. | from @EdEastonJr

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Power 5 conference schools may produce the most NFL talent, but lesser celebrated schools have long cultivated top-tier players for the league. Look no further than the Hall of Fame to see it riddled with players from HBCUs.

Kansas City Chiefs GM Brett Veach has honed in on finding hidden gems late in draft classes, and the selection of cornerback Joshua Williams out of Fayetteville State has the potential to be his latest discovery. Williams, the NCAA Division II standout, spoke about his biggest challenges making the pro transition and his pride in attending an HBCU during Monday’s rookie minicamp press conference.

“The biggest transition would probably be just making sure I know what the differences between the NFL playbooks and the NFL offenses that I see now compared to college playbooks and college offenses,” Williams explained.  “So just kind of taking that step up, expanding my mind, expanding my knowledge. I think, this weekend was a huge learning experience, and I think I got better.”

Williams became Fayetteville State’s first Senior Bowl selection in 2021 and earned first-team All-Central Intercollegiate Athletic Association accolades with 31 tackles, three interceptions, and six pass breakups. He expressed his pride openly for playing at a historically black college, but he also knows that making it to the NFL was the hard part.

“Well, of course, I love all HBCUs, and I’m very proud of where I came from,” said Williams. “But at the same time, at this level, nobody really cares where you came from. It’s all about results, honestly. So, I’m kind of just focusing on that, being a professional, getting used to it. Of course, I’m definitely prideful of where I came from, and I’m blessed to be where I am and to have experienced everything I have. At the same time, I’m very humbled and eager to fit in here.”

Williams became the first Fayetteville State NFL draftee since 1976 when he was selected by Kansas City in the fourth round. Even though he didn’t attend a Division I school, he knows that he’s on equal footing with his new teammates. Now, Williams just needs to put in the work to ensure the results show on the field.

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PGA Tour pros, HBCU and First Tee alums team up to host clinic at one of the nation’s most-historic public courses

“No one owns the game of golf. Golf is for everybody.”

WASHINGTON, D.C. — Unless you’re a fan of golf history or you’ve spent some time in our nation’s capital, chances are you’ve never heard of the Langston Golf Course.

For those unfamiliar, the public track in Northeast D.C. is named after John Mercer Langston, the first black man elected to Congress from Virginia and the first dean of the nearby Howard University School of Law, and opened its first nine holes back in 1939 (the back nine came later in 1955). Langston’s front nine were added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1991, has been a safe haven for minority golfers over the years and has played host to the likes of boxing legends Joe Louis (who played an amateur event there in the 1940s), Mike Tyson (who loved the chicken wings) and Muhammad Ali.

“His limousine pulls up, and . . . he said to me, ‘I’ve never picked up a golf club before,’ and he reached out and got my putter,” remembers David Ross, a longtime regular at the course who met Ali on the putting green. Interactions like those were par for the course.

A few more celebrities were on the course’s driving range on Tuesday as part of a Wells Fargo Championship and First Tee skills clinic for the Greater Washington, D.C. chapter that featured PGA Tour professionals Chesson Hadley, Camilo Villegas and college stars Eugenio Chacarra and Jacob Bridgeman. Mr. Langston would’ve been pleased to also see four First Tee alumni and HBCU student-athletes participating and helping the kids: Jakari Harris (Hampton University class of 2022), Lennard Long (Morehouse College class of 2019), Elijah Royal (Fisk University class of 2021) and Joia Robertson (Fisk University class of 2025).

First Tee DC
PGA Tour pro Chesson Hadley during a First Tee clinic at Langston Golf Course in Washington, D.C. (Photo: Simon Bruty for Wells Fargo)

“This place is home and has been treating me so well growing up, so just to see these kids out here has been an amazing opportunity, especially because I didn’t have this opportunity to see pros on the course so I’m glad they are able to,” said Long, who learned the game at Langston. “I wanted to be on Tour, I’m not gonna lie. But I’m happy that I’m with (the kids) and I can use all the knowledge that I’ve gained from my experiences and really give it to them because I didn’t have it at that age.”

“Lennard Long, I first met him when I started 10 years ago and he was 14 years old,” explained Clint Sanchez, the Executive Director for the First Tee’s Greater D.C. chapter. “He was our first kid that could really play. When he was nine or 10, he had never played before. So he learned the game in D.C. He’s our first kid that played in what was then called the Nature Valley First Tee Open at Pebble Beach, he was the first one and now we haven’t looked back. We’ve had a kid every year play in that event, but Lennard started it.”

The program currently has 1,850 kids involved, with Sanchez projecting the number to grow to a record 2,000 by the end of the year.

“I think when the kids see the pros, whether it’s Chesson or Camillo or whoever, that’s just light-years away. I mean, there’s a totally different level,” said Sanchez. “But when they see some of the alums that have played college golf, that’s more relatable, and they see people that look like a lot of them. We have a very diverse program. I think you saw that here today. I think that’s very impactful when they see a young man, speaking of just Lennard right now, that grew up in our program, that’s a coach and that’s a mentor to them, and that can flat out play and that loves to play and loves to teach, that means a lot.”

The fun didn’t stop on Tuesday for the four HBCU students, as each played during the 2022 Wells Fargo Championship pro-am on Wednesday with defending champion and 20-time Tour winner Rory McIlroy.

“It was amazing,” said Long, who detailed how friendly and helpful his Tour partner was. “Asked him some tips for chipping and he was willing to give them to me, so I’m going to take them back and give them to our kids when I coach them so they’re really appreciative of it.”

“Yeah, I would just reiterate that it was unreal,” added Harris. “You see these pros on TV and you never think you’ll get a chance to see them, meet them in person let alone play with them, so it was an amazing experience for sure.”

The common theme of the day, putting aside how cliché the phrase has become, was growing the game and providing opportunities for more players to get involved.

“No one owns the game of golf. Golf is for everybody,” said Hadley. “I think it’s great that there are black people here, there are Asian people here, white people here, nobody owns the game of golf. Everybody should be involved.”

“It’s very important, because we need more people, more kids of color, more women playing this great game,” added Long. “So much business is done on the golf course. Once you get in the professional realm, this is a game that can be used as a tool to get to that next level, you know, not just on the PGA Tour, but then in the business room as well and getting that next promotion. That’s all I want to see from the kids is for them to be successful and to reach new heights.”

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Former Auburn quarterback reveals transfer destination

Former Tigers quarterback Dematrius Davis is staying in-state.

A former Auburn quarterback is staying in-state.

[autotag]Dematrius Davis[/autotag], who recently announced his intention to enter the transfer portal late last month, has found a home at Alabama State. Davis was set to enter Auburn’s quarterback competition this spring before transferring out of the program.

Davis’ decision to attend a Historically Black College or University, or an HBCU, is not unprecedented. More higher-ranked recruits have made decisions to attend HBCUs in recent years, with five-star cornerback Travis Hunter committing to Jackson State to play for Deion Sanders and, on the basketball side, five-star center Markur Maker committing to play for Howard University in 2020.

Davis himself was four-star recruit coming out of high school in Texas, where he was the 24th ranked quarterback and 35th ranked Texan in the 2021 class. Davis didn’t play for Auburn last year, and he was expected to be in the mix in the Tigers’ quarterback battle this spring before leaving the Plains. Davis was the winningest quarterback in Texas high school history when he signed on to play for Alabama at the end of 2020.

With the commitment, Alabama State will get the highest recruit it has ever signed in school history. Davis will try to lead the Hornets to a better record than they managed last year when they finished 5-6 in the SWAC and lost to the Auburn Tigers in a 62-0 shutout.

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It used to not be a unicorn-level …

It used to not be a unicorn-level event, of course, for Black players from HBCUs to make it big in the NBA. Earl Monroe, Sam Jones, Willis Reed, Bob Dandridge — all Hall of Famers — played at HBCUs. Monroe was the second pick of the 1967 draft after leading Division II in scoring at Winston-Salem State. Today, only Robert Covington, who played at Tennessee State, is an HBCU alum. But, more NBA players are making real outreach to HBCU programs. Famously, former NBA player J.R. Smith is playing golf at North Carolina A&T. And, more quietly, real relationships are being built. Chris Paul has championed HBCU investment for the last several years, partnering with the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame to create the four-team Chris Paul HBCU Kick-Off in Connecticut. He’s getting his bachelor’s at Winston-Salem. Stephen Curry is funding the golf programs at Howard for six years, raising $3 million for the program’s endowment in 2021 at a charity golf tournament and auction at Pebble Beach. Both Paul and Curry met with Howard’s and Morgan’s players before Saturday’s game.

Could someone as good as, say, Curry, …

Could someone as good as, say, Curry, really break the college basketball paradigm in the near future and pick an HBCU over college basketball’s blue bloods? “It would not surprise me at all,” Curry said Saturday. “I think that comes with continued effort to highlight the alumni base, the success, the different stories that are coming out of these HBCUs. And just, again, the investment in the athletic programs that can support that kind of talent and create a new lane of opportunity, where it’s not a surprise that somebody can go — a five-star, four-star recruit — could go to an HBCU, have an amazing experience, have amazing coaching, get a great education and then find a way into the NBA and the NBA draft. And that would be more the norm and not so much the exception to the rule.”

5 former Chiefs ranked among greatest HBCU players in NFL history

Celebrating some of the greatest #Chiefs players of all time who played college football at HBCUs.

This Saturday will mark the inaugural HBCU Legacy Bowl — an all-star game compiled of the most talented draft-eligible college football players who attend Historically Black Colleges and Universities. Kansas City Chiefs QB Patrick Mahomes is involved through his foundation, pledging a multi-year commitment to help these players showcase themselves in front of NFL evaluators.

In recent years, it has become a rarity when a player from an HBCU is selected in the NFL draft. The 2021 NFL draft, for instance, had no players selected from HBCUs. In fact, only 18 players from HBCUs made initial 53-man rosters in the 2021 NFL season — the most notable being Indianapolis Colts LB Darius Leonard.

When the AFL was formed in 1960, HBCU talent helped to populate the fledgling league. The Chiefs were one of the teams to help break down remaining racial barriers by selecting Buck Buchanan at No. 1 overall in the 1963 AFL draft. As things currently stand, almost a tenth of NFL Hall of Famers played college football at an HBCU.

With the HBCU Legacy Bowl on our doorstep, our friends over at Touchdown Wire recently revisited their list of the 51 greatest HBCU players in NFL history. A total of five Chiefs players made their list, including one player ranked in the top 10. Here’s a quick look at those players and what was said about them:

HBCU Legacy Bowl players to know

HBCU Legacy Bowl Studs #Browns

The HBCU Legacy Bowl kicks off this Saturday at 3:00 P.M., but much like with the Senior Bowl, the practices are much more important than the game itself. We briefly discussed a few HBCU prospects to monitor from the HBCU combine and the Legacy Bowl and their practices give us a much larger taste of the talent.

I appreciate any game that provides a closer look to smaller school guys and there are a few prospects that would look good in Cleveland. Full disclosure, I am not in New Orleans, but I wanted to highlight the three names that have been most highly celebrated for their efforts so far this week. Two of these names are familiar faces, but the third will surprise:

The 51 greatest HBCU players in NFL history (slight return)

Touchdown Wire’s Doug Farrar ranks the top 51 pro football players who played at Historically Black colleges and universities.

Last year, at the end of Black History Month, I put together my list of the 51 best players in pro football history from HBCUs — Historically Black colleges and universities — and while it was an interesting exercise, there were four reasons I wanted to do it again. 

First, I wanted to get it done BEFORE the end of Black History Month. While the end of the season and the start of free-agency and draft prep pushed this project to the side, it could also be said that there’s never been a more important and relevant time to feature the contributions that Black players, coaches, and executives have made to the game. You can ask Brian Flores about that. 

Brian Flores may have legal precedents with NFL’s long racist history, present misery

Second, there’s one thing I have at my disposal now that I did not have a year ago — Pro Football Reference now has sack totals going back to 1960, which brings a lot of defensive players from Historically Black colleges and universities into sharper focus. 

Pro football’s top sack artists from 1960 through 1981

Third, when looking back at last year’s list, there are some guys I just got wrong — players I underrated, and I wanted to correct that.

Finally, the HCBU Legacy Bowl will be played this Saturday, featuring the best HBCU talent right now. Steve Wyche and Bucky Brooks from the NFL Network will be calling the game, and Steve had his own Top 10 — an estimable list that had be re-thinking my own. 

So, without further ado, here’s Volume 2 of my 51 greatest players from HBCUs in pro football history. 

For a very long time, most major college football programs wanted nothing to do with Black players. Although UCLA boasted a backfield of Kenny Washington, Woody Strode and Jackie Robinson (yes, that Jackie Robinson) in the late 1930s, that was the exception.

In 1959, Alabama was set to play Penn State in the Liberty Bowl. But Alabama’s Board of Trustees threatened to boycott the game because Penn State had an integrated team. As late as 1970, when the Crimson Tide played USC, Alabama’s team had no Black players. Alabama coach Paul “Bear” Bryant had allowed seven Black players to try out in 1967, but none made the team. As Bryant later said, neither the administrators nor the fan base would stand for an integrated team.

Sadly, this was par for the course in certain conferences. Some Southern schools had signed Black players, but even in 1966, although half the schools in the SEC (the Southeastern Conference) and SWC (the now-defunct Southwest Conference) had integrated their student bodies, there still were no Black players in either league. The SWC finally broke its ban when SMU and Baylor began recruiting Black players, but the SEC held out.

That changed after the Alabama-USC game, a 42-21 win for the Trojans in which USC running back Sam Cunningham ran up and down Alabama’s defense, and USC’s long-integrated team beat the daylights out of Bryant’s white team in general. In the end, for competitive reasons alone, those who had blocked Bryant’s calls for integration had to back down.

But before that, in the absence of opportunity at those major programs, Black players in the South found different ways to succeed. HBCUs, some of which had been playing football since the late 19th century, were able to bring in some of the greatest football talent ever seen.

While the major Southern programs insisted on institutional racism, HBCUs were able to recruit and benefit from the talents of athletes such as these:

The all-time leader in career receptions, receiving yards and career touchdowns (Jerry Rice, Mississippi Valley State). The player with the most sacks in a single season (Michael Strahan, Texas Southern). The only man to ever win both a Super Bowl ring and an Olympic gold medal (Bob Hayes, Florida A&M). And the namesake for the NFL’s most prestigious honor (Walter Payton, Jackson State).

Nearly 10 percent of the players in the Pro Football Hall of Fame came from HBCUs, which is an amazing number given the relatively low number of those players who were allowed to break into the NFL after their college successes, given the NFL’s own institutional racism. The NFL banned Black players from 1934 through 1946, and as late as the 1950s, a number of NFL teams wouldn’t even send scouts to HBCUs, even though all teams were well aware of the talent available.

In 1959, Black players accounted for about 12 percent of NFL rosters. What opened the floodgates was the formation of the American Football League in 1960. The new league had no such ban or quota, and its teams signed the best players regardless of color. Still, per historian Charles K. Ross, of the 173 Black players who played in the NFL between 1946 and 1962, only 42 came from historically Black schools. And from 1946 through 1960, no player from an HBCU was selected higher than the fourth round.

In 1963, the AFL’s Kansas City Chiefs became the first professional football team to select a player with the No. 1 overall pick when they drafted defensive lineman Junious “Buck” Buchanan from Grambling State. The NFL did not see fit to select Buchanan until the New York Giants picked him with the 256th overall selection in the 19th round.

As the AFL grew and became fully competitive with the NFL, the older, more established league finally had to realize that its own racism was keeping it from some of the best football talent. It was a long road from that 12 percent to today, when Black players compose over 70 percent of NFL rosters — and goodness knows there’s still a long way to go when it comes to the coaching and administrative sides of things — but it was the HBCUs who held, fostered and perfected so much Hall of Fame talent while the bigger and more established schools turned away players of color. The HBCUs built the bridge Black players needed, and the list of players who competed at those schools because they had no other options is truly transcendent from a talent perspective.

With all that in mind, Touchdown Wire ranks the 51 best players in pro football history who attended historically Black colleges and universities. If you’re not familiar with the history, prepare to be amazed at the names.