I would like to see the Black community make a concerted effort to support the HBCUs. It's a marathon. We have to get back to how great we once were.
A large percentage of the NFL were HBCU grads from the '60s up into the early to mid 70s. The remarkable thing is the HBCUs at that at time we didn't play PWIs, we weren't in any of the Bowl games. We were essentially our own league.
When I spoke with Willie Lanier about his pro football draft experience earlier this week, he reminded me that 2017 marked the 50th anniversary of his being dra…
andscape.com
From 1967, when Lanier was drafted, to 1972, my draft year (I wasn’t drafted), 365 players from HBCUs were drafted.
The history of football in the United States is as much a story of what’s taken place on the field as it is of American history itself. A historical look at the role of Black...read more
www.updconsulting.com
The three common drafts conducted between 1967-1969 resulted in a total of 156 draft picks from the selected HBCUs. In total, the 1960-70 period produced 31 percent of the total draft picks for the 80-year period. In following decades, draft picks from these HBCUs would gradually decrease, with 318 (31 percent) being recorded between 1970-80 and a historical low of 26 picks recorded between 2010 and 2019.
Integration killed the HBCUs. Had we kept our best football players, Grambling, Jackson State and a couple others would be dominating Division II and III championships to this day and beating PWIs in football regularly.
Even moreso in basketball. I have no doubt whatsoever in my mind that if HBCUs kept the best b-ball players we'd have won a few national titles. Far fetched? We already had a predominantly black school, win in the '60s.
My dream future for HBCUs? Dominate men and women's basketball, track and volleyball. Men's football to be highly competitive. On the academic side get back to hiring the best black minds. Have a business school that is taught by blacks that have run companies or been in top positions on Wall Street. As well as business incubator programs. We should already be producing top people in the arts. That's a no brainer.