United Airlines, PGA Tour collaborate to assist HBCU golf programs with travel expenses

“The United Airlines grant will impact our program’s ability to travel tremendously.”

One of the biggest expenses in golf, from the junior ranks to the PGA Tour, is travel.

The PGA Tour and United Airlines are joining forces to help golf programs at more than 50 Historically Black Colleges and Universities with travel grants to help teams get to tournaments across the country.

United will award the teams more than $500,000 in grants, divided equally among 51 programs. Each team will receive $10,000 in travel credits, which will help an estimated 250 student-athletes and their coaches fly to tournament sites that might have been previously out of reach.

“Removing barriers for HBCU students to have the same opportunities given to other collegiate athletes will open doors for countless young Black golfers to achieve their dreams and for HBCU golf programs to develop to their full potential,” said United President Brett Hart in a statement.

Winston-Salem University golf coach Charles Penny II, whose program was brought back for the first time in 10 years last year, said the team was able to play in only one fall tournament because it didn’t have enough money in its budget for more travel. He said with the United credits, the team will be able to play as many as four tournaments next fall.

“The United Airlines grant will impact our program’s ability to travel tremendously,” Penny said in a statement.

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The Florida A&M men’s team and Bethune-Cookman women’s team are among the programs that will receive the travel credits. When the Edward Waters women’s team begins play in 2023, they will be able to apply.

United is the official airline of the PGA tour and was the first sponsor for the Tour’s HBCU Grant Program.

“We have made a pledge to help diversify the landscape of competitive golf and this collaboration between United Airlines and these colleges and universities will be a significant step towards leveling the playing field and enhancing the student-athlete experience along the way,” Tour commissioner Jay Monahan said in a statement.

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Top five HBCU prospects for the Browns

Talent comes into the NFL from all over. @joshkeatley16 takes a look at five HBCU players coming into the league this year who the Browns could target:

Last Saturday marked the very first Historically Black Colleges and Universities Combine. The NFL has been trying to provide an opportunity for smaller school prospects to gain more exposure and this combine provided a larger stage for some HBCU prospects to shine.

The Cleveland Browns were on-site to evaluate the 39 prospects who competed and although a few intriguing HBCU players were left off the invite list there was still plenty of interesting talent to dive into.

There have been numerous stars who have played at an HBCU with the most notable being Jerry Rice from Mississippi Valley State and maybe Cleveland can snag the next star. Here are five HBCU prospects the Browns need to take a deeper look at.

Denver Educator’s Inspiring Work With Black Youth Catches Attention Of Jamal Murray, Nikola Jokic

Michelyn Johnson’s effort include organizing tours of HBCUs, with many of the students stepping aboard an airplane for the first time to do so, and the Nuggets stars thank her for changing lives.

Michelyn Johnson’s effort include organizing tours of HBCUs, with many of the students stepping aboard an airplane for the first time to do so, and the Nuggets stars thank her for changing lives.

NBA champion J.R. Smith setting his sights on playing college golf

After passing on college to go straight to the NBA from high school, J.R. Smith is going back to school with a lofty goal.

After passing on college to go straight to the NBA from St. Benedict’s Prep in Newark, New Jersey, J.R. Smith is going back to school with a lofty goal: to play college golf.

The 35-year-old two-time NBA champion with the Cleveland Cavaliers in 2016 and Los Angeles Lakers in 2020 has enrolled at North Carolina A&T and, if cleared by the NCAA, plans to play on the HBCU’s men’s golf team.

“Ray Allen kind of convinced me,” Smith said Wednesday while rocking an Aggies shirt at the Wyndham Championship pro-am in Greensboro, North Carolina. “We had a little golf trip in (the Dominican Republic) and he was talking about some of the things he was doing, about going back to school and challenging yourself for us athletes. I really took heed to it and decided to go back – and one of the best liberal studies programs is at A&T.”

North Carolina A&T competes in Division I in the Big South conference, with classes starting Aug. 18. Smith, a 5 handicap, and his family are moving to Greensboro.

“I’ve got no free time now. Raising kids and going to school, my schedule will be full. I can’t wait to be a part of the HBCU family,” said Smith. “I’ve really been embraced by everybody so far on campus. I’m looking forward to start going to football games and repping Aggie Pride.”

NFL, Senior Bowl announce partnership to host HBCU combine event in 2022

No players from HBCUs were drafted in 2021 but the NFL and the Senior Bowl are hoping to change that in 2022

The 2021 NFL draft came and went without a single player from any Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCU) selected in the seven rounds. It’s an oversight the NFL doesn’t want to have happen again, certainly not with the rich traditions at so many HBCU programs as producers of NFL talent.

To that end, the NFL has partnered with the Senior Bowl to hold a scouting combine for HBCU players at the home of the Senior Bowl in Mobile, Alabama. Players chosen from four HBCU conferences and other HBCU institutions will be invited to participate in the event. The CIAA, MEAC, SIAC, and SWAC will all be well-represented at the event in 2022.

From the press release,

“The Reese’s Senior Bowl is honored to be collaborating with the National Football League to host the inaugural HBCU Combine in Mobile, Alabama,” said Reese’s Senior Bowl Executive Director Jim Nagy. “Over the years, the Senior Bowl has served as a showcase for some of the top Black college football players in America, including seven of our game’s 56 future members of the Pro Football Hall of Fame, and this event will help many more HBCU players secure further attention and exposure from all 32 teams.”

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HBCU Legacy Bowl to showcase top NFL draft talent from HBCU programs

The Black College Football Hall of Fame announced the HBCU Legacy Bowl, which will showcase the top NFL draft talent from HBCU programs

The Black College Football Hall of Fame announced Thursday the establishment of the HBCU Legacy Bowl, which will showcase the top NFL draft talent from HBCU programs.

The inaugural all-star game will take place in February of 2022 at Yulman Stadium at Tulane University, and will be televised on NFL Network.

Here’s more info from the official release:

“The HBCU Legacy Bowl means opportunity and exposure for HBCU players and coaches,” said Co-Founder and Inductee Doug Williams. “We’re excited to have this in New Orleans, especially during Black History Month.”

More than a football game, the week-long celebration of Black culture and history will provide invaluable exposure for HBCU football players and coaches. Approximately 100 of the top HBCU players will be invited to participate.

“HBCUs are a bridge to equality,” said Co-Founder and Inductee James “Shack” Harris. “We thank the NFL for their support and in sharing our commitment to lifting up others.”

The HBCU Legacy Bowl will be a fantastic way to get top talent from the HBCU programs an opportunity to show off their skills for NFL decision-makers leading up to the draft.

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The 51 greatest HBCU players in NFL history

Through NFL, AFL, and AAFC history, some of the best players ever have come from Historically Black Colleges and Universities, or HBCUs.

For a very long time, most of the major college football programs wanted nothing to do with Black players. While UCLA did boast the 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. 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, Bear Bryant’s team had no Black players. Head coach Paul “Bear Bryant” had tried with seven walk-on players 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 in 1966, though half the schools in both conferences had integrated in a general sense, there were still no Black players in either the SEC (the Southeaster Conference) or the SWC (the now-defunct Southwest Conference). The SWC finally broke their ban when Baylor and SMU recruited 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.

In the absence of opportunity at those more storied programs, Black players in the South found different ways to succeed — the Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCU) that had been playing football since the late 19th century and 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 like these:

The all-time leader in career receptions, receiving yards and most 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 players who were able to break into the NFL after their college successes, given the NFL’s own institutional racism. The NFL had a ban on Black players from 1934 through 1946, and as late as the 1950s, a lot of NFL teams wouldn’t even send their scouts to HBCUs, 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 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 Kansas City Chiefs became the first professional football team in any league to select a player with the first overall pick when they drafted defensive linemen Junius “Buck” Buchannan from Grambling State. The NFL did not see fit to select Buchannan until the New York Giants picked him with the 256th overall selection in the 19th round, because Buchannan had agreed to play for the Chiefs so quickly.

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 shutting it out of some of the best talent football would ever see. It was a long road from that 12 percent to NFL today, where over 70 percent of rosters have Black players, and goodness knows there’s 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. The HBCUs built the bridge Black players needed, and the list of players who played at those schools because they had no other options is truly transcendent from a talent perspective.

Here are the 51 best players in NFL history who attended Historically Black Colleges and Universities. If you’re not familiar with the history, prepare to be amazed at the names.

Thunder guard Chris Paul enrolls at HBCU Winston-Salem State

Oklahoma City Thunder point guard Chris Paul told ESPN he enrolled at HBCU Winston-Salem State

In the NBA bubble, Chris Paul took it upon himself to stress the importance of Historically Black Colleges and Universities and encouraged people to attend.

He has taken his own advice.

The Oklahoma City Thunder point guard has enrolled in a class at Winston-Salem State University, according to HBCU Buzz.

Paul’s parents attended the same school, and Paul went to high school in West Forsyth, just miles away from Winston-Salem.

When Paul graduated high school, he chose to play college basketball at Wake Forest instead of attend and HBCU. Now 35, he’s going back to his roots.

“Everyone in my family went to HBCUs except for me,” Paul said to ESPN. “You grow up in the south, you’re going to just have that culture and DNA in you.”

Paul spoke about HBCUs in most press conferences in the bubble in an attempt to raise awareness. He wore clothes to represent many of them during the interviews and on game days.

Big names have attached themselves to HBCUs over the last few months. Five-star basketball prospect Makur Maker committed to Howard, and NFL Hall of Famer Deion Sanders is the new head football coach of Jackson State.

Paul thinks that with the power and platforms that athletes hold, they can dictate where attention goes and they don’t need traditional powers to do it.

“Wherever the top players are, all the networks are going to go there,” Paul said.

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See HBCUs that Chris Paul gave shoutouts to during NBA bubble play

In the NBA bubble, Chris Paul worked to raise awareness about Historically Black Colleges and Universities through messages and clothing.

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Oklahoma City Thunder point guard Chris Paul has made clear his affinity and respect for Historically Black Colleges and Universities.

In July, news broke that he joined on to produce a docuseries about basketball recruiting for the HBCUs.

In the NBA bubble over the last two months, he frequently wore HBCU outfits and ended many Zoom press conference, if not the majority of them, by giving a shout-out to whichever one he was representing that day.

One day it may have been about a family member, like a cousin who went to Florida A&M. On another, it may have been about a professional relationship, like former teammate Mo Williams, who is now the head coach of Alabama State Univeristy’s basketball team. Another day he mentioned Fox Sports’ Shannon Sharpe, a former NFL player who went to Savannah State.

“In doing this, I’ve been able to learn a lot,” Paul said on Aug. 10. “Just trying to bring awareness to … these Historically Black Colleges and Universities that I think a lot of times get overlooked because a lot of times they don’t get the proper funding that a lot of these other schools get.”

Here are some of the other outfits he wore during press conferences. All pictures were taken of the Zoom video:

Ahead of Chris Paul’s docuseries, Makur Maker commits to HBCU Howard

Makur Maker became one of the few elite prospects to commit to and HBCU, and did so days after Chris Paul’s docuseries was announced.

Makur Maker, an elite high school prospect who initially declared for the NBA Draft, has taken a step to try to spark a movement.

Maker announced his commitment to Howard University, a historically Black university, early Friday morning.

Few top prospects go the route of an HBCU; only two active NBA players attended one. Maker hopes his decision encourages more athletes to follow him.

“I was the 1st to announce my visit to Howard & other started to dream “what if,” he wrote in a post to Twitter. “I need to make the HBCU movement real so that others will follow.”

This comes on the heels of an announcement that Oklahoma City Thunder point guard Chris Paul is helping produce a docuseries about the recruiting struggles HBCUs go through.

“HBCUs historically have been at a competitive disadvantage with their basketball programs facing many challenges with funding, recruitment, misperceptions, and exposure,” Paul said in a statement to Deadline.

“With the current racial awakening in our country prompting young athletes to look at where they play, it’s now more important than ever to shine a light on HBCUs and showcase their value in sports and society.”

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Maker is a five-star center on 247Sports’ rankings. He has modern feel to his game, showing the ability to serve as a playmaker at the top of the arc with decent handles and passing, particularly for a player listed at 6-foot-11, but must add bulk to his 235-pound build to match up against the bigs in the NBA.

He was granted eligibility for the 2020 NBA Draft after appealing the league last year, but has elected to attend Howard instead.

Maker hopes more elite athletes will follow him down the HBCU route soon. He specifically called for Mikey Williams in his tweet.

Williams is a five-star 2023 guard on ESPN’s rankings (247Sports hasn’t posted incoming sophomore rankings as of Thursday). He has become well-known among high school basketball enthusiasts online for his dunking prowess and scoring ability, and he scored 77 points in one game as a freshman.

Williams quote-tweeted Maker’s announcement with “let’s shock the world,” and also posted a screenshot of Maker’s Instagram post to Twitter.