Sports Still No Ticket Out Of The Ghetto

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Apr 25, 2002
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Sports Still No Ticket Out Of The Ghetto
By Earl Ofari Hutchinson
TBWT Contributor

The sports world buzzed with the recent news that Black Entertainment Television founder, Bob Johnson became the first African-American to purchase a majority ownership in a professional basketball team in Charlotte, North Carolina. But a few days later with little fanfare the NCAA issued a report on the academic performance of black athletes. While Johnson's acquisition was widely hailed as proof that blacks had finally cracked the clubby, and many say bigoted, world of white billionaire pro sports owners, for most black college basketball players their dream of stocking his team remains a cruel pipe dream.

Only a microscopic fraction of the thousands of black male college basketball and football players will ever don a professional uniform. Even more embarrassing, the majority of them won't graduate. The NCAA report found that though 60 percent of athletes at Division 1 schools graduate in six years, only slightly more than 40 percent of black male athletes graduate. For basketball players, the figure is a dismal 35 percent. And even more embarrassing, many of these athletes will skip through three or four years at colleges and still emerge as educational cripples.

The low graduation rate for black male athletes comes at a time when the enrollment for black males at many colleges has sharply declined due to the gut of affirmative action, special education, diversity outreach programs, and budget cutbacks. At the University of Southern California, for instance, many black males on campus repeatedly complain that they are constantly asked whether they are an athlete.

The question is not necessarily racist since nearly one out of seven black male students on the campus are football or basketball players on an athlete scholarship. This compares to two percent or less of the white, Asian, and Latino males on campus.

The aspiring Michael Jordans in basketball and Emmit Smiths in football spend countless hours mastering their dribbling or ball carrying skills with little thought to their future after their sports days are finished. They live for the day when they will sign megabuck pro contracts. Few ever will.

In 1994, the Washington Post did a ten-year follow-up on thirty-six basketball players who played for Georgetown and the Universities of Maryland and Virginia in the 1980's. Most told sad tales of failed careers, part-time jobs, unsuccessful tryouts with NBA teams, and barnstorming tours with semi-pro or European teams. Twenty-eight eventually got their degrees and settled into careers as salesmen, teachers or counselors. Even though the story is repeated by thousands of other ex-athletes, illusions diehard today.

A group of black high school athletes were told that the odds against them making a pro team were nearly impossible. Fifty-one percent still believed that they could beat them.

The late Tennis great Arthur Ashe was deeply troubled by the slavish adulation of athletes by many young blacks. During visits to black high schools, he was thunderstruck by "the obsession" with sports that borders on pathology. The sports obsession that Ashe spoke of tells much about the otherworldly intoxication of sports. For many it blurs the line between reality and fantasy. Coaches know this better than anyone. They wheel and deal to ram as many blacks as they can into their school's uniforms. The name of the game is not study, baby, study; but win, baby, win.

Major colleges have a huge vested interest in keeping their well-oiled athletic assembly lines moving smoothly. It means hard dollars. Major NCAA universities bag millions in revenue from its athletics programs. In the two major revenue-generating sports, basketball and football, blacks make up respectively fifty and seventy percent of the college players.

The message in this shameful sports saga is that black parents whose sons are involved in athletic programs, and who harbor delusions of pro sport fame and fortune, must hold coaches, teachers and school administrators accountable for their children's courses, grades and campus activities. They must make it clear that if their sons or daughters don't perform in the classroom, they don't get to perform on the field or the court.

Black professionals and educators must create academic self-help programs to recycle young blacks from sports junkies to serious students. They can provide educational scholarships for academically sound athletes and establish career counseling, job and skills training programs. The ultimate responsibility, though, is on the colleges that reap fortunes off of black athletes. They must do much more to insure that their "student-athletes" graduate, or at least better prepare them for a business or professional career. This means providing them counseling, tutoring and financial assistance to encourage them to complete their studies when their eligibility ends.

Sports can be a rewarding, and even profitable experience for many black athletes. But if NCAA Division 1 schools don't stop solely exploiting black athletes as athletes and start educating as students, sports will never be their ticket out of the ghetto.
 
May 12, 2002
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I thibnk the first intention of a college was TO LEARN. If you want to play sports fine and i see that they are swooped up, specially for fotball at 70%+. It is the colleges fault if they spit out all these education-failed-black-males, but it is also the teachers fault for not reaching them or making it know that the players arent doing well enough.
 
May 6, 2002
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This is what I was talking about in the other post, we dont have opportunities as a people but as INDIVIDUALS. These brothers are throwing a chance at a better life out the window. Blight your right about the school and teachers sharing the blame too. Its a fucked up situation we live in and everybody tells young black males that our only options are sports and entertainment. This shit needs to stop. Its like a man who hasnt eaten in a week shows up at my door and I offer him a big ass plate of rice and beans and he tells me "I only eat stake" and throws the plate back at me. WE NEED TO DO EVERTHING WE CAN TO IMPROVE OUR SITUATION, EVEN THINGS WE DONT WANT TO DO!!!! (LIKE GOING TO SCHOOL!)
 
May 8, 2002
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Blight said:
I thibnk the first intention of a college was TO LEARN. If you want to play sports fine and i see that they are swooped up, specially for fotball at 70%+. It is the colleges fault if they spit out all these education-failed-black-males, but it is also the teachers fault for not reaching them or making it know that the players arent doing well enough.
yes and no. it IS the colleges fault that they dont graduate simply but not for the reasons stated above but rather because they recruit "stupid" or "non-college material" individuals whether they be white or black or any other race simply because they can play sports.

what i would do is not recruit anybody to play a sport if they are not "college material" no matter the color of their skin.
 
Apr 25, 2002
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Mcleanhatch said:


yes and no. it IS the colleges fault that they dont graduate simply but not for the reasons stated above but rather because they recruit "stupid" or "non-college material" individuals whether they be white or black or any other race simply because they can play sports.

what i would do is not recruit anybody to play a sport if they are not "college material" no matter the color of their skin.
A lot of this stupid, non college material are the reason why the NCAA is a multi-billion dollar association. SORRY but there's no way the NCAA will cut some of the dumb athletes.
 
May 8, 2002
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Tenkamenin said:
A lot of this stupid, non college material are the reason why the NCAA is a multi-billion dollar association. SORRY but there's no way the NCAA will cut some of the dumb athletes.
i know and it is a shame.. but i would try and do some reform to fix that. if some1 is really talented hey let them go straight to the pros (just like baseball) let the NFL and the NBA have a minor league type system.

because it is hard to expect colleges to graduate "stupid people" academic-wise. some of these athletes have a hard time passing their classes. and believe me i have taken some classes that are sports oriented that all the athletes take. and at most of those classes you can get a C-grade by just appearing to class everyday yet they cant graduate.
 
Apr 25, 2002
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Mcleanhatch said:


i know and it is a shame.. but i would try and do some reform to fix that. if some1 is really talented hey let them go straight to the pros (just like baseball) let the NFL and the NBA have a minor league type system.

because it is hard to expect colleges to graduate "stupid people" academic-wise. some of these athletes have a hard time passing their classes. and believe me i have taken some classes that are sports oriented that all the athletes take. and at most of those classes you can get a C-grade by just appearing to class everyday yet they cant graduate.
A lot of these black athletes come to college with the goal of making it to the pros. For the most part they can care less about getting a degree. The fat paycheck in the pros is worth more than a certificate to a lot of them. A good portion of the black basketball and football players I know at my school can care less about school, they want to do well enough to get them over the academic requirement so they can continue to play there sport. But for the most part they eat, sleep, and think of there sport and how they are going to get better. It's just like you or I studying all day to get an "A" on our midterm. We both want success but it takes some sort of sacrificing for most of us to obtain our goals. Sometimes these athletes sacrifice school so they can focus on there sport.

You could also say that a lot of black athletes are cawky, so it explains this....

"A group of black high school athletes were told that the odds against them making a pro team were nearly impossible. Fifty-one percent still believed that they could beat them."

To a lot of black athletes it's either they succeed or fail, there is no alternative like getting a degree in business or whatever there interest is.
 
May 8, 2002
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Tenkamenin said:
A lot of black athletes come to college with a different goal then non athletic students. A lot of these black athletes goals are to make it to the pros and not get a degree... A good portion of the basketball, football players at my school can care less about school, they want to do well enough to get them over the academic requirement so they can continue to play there sport. But for the most part they eat, sleep, and think all day of there sport and how they are going to get better. It's just like you or I studying all day to get an "A" on our midterm. We both want success but it takes some sort of sacrificing for most of us to obtain our goals. Sometimes these athletes sacrifice school so they can focus on there sport.

You could also say that a lot of black athletes are cawky, so it explains this....

"A group of black high school athletes were told that the odds against them making a pro team were nearly impossible. Fifty-one percent still believed that they could beat them."

So to a lot of black athletes it's either they succeed or fail, A good number of them do not have an alternative plan.
yup
 
May 12, 2002
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LMAO, sorry i couldnt type better in my first reply....

I see what you mean. They just want kids there who can make their team better weather they are smart or not. The kids who make it have something to be proud of. but weather you make it or not, they should be tested, i guess that goes with what your saying. If you get D's in class you ride the bench.