From 1st and 10 to
Glory
When it comes to sports in America,
it is a big ordeal. Regardless of what
team or what sport, Americans have a passion about all sports. College football is one of the oldest
collegiate sports played every year in America and over the years, college football
has helped America by making a huge impact on improving race relations. It is through college football that has put
a spotlight on the efforts of a team rather than a player. The progress made in college football has
caused the breakdown of segregation in American’s colleges and
universities. With African Americans
playing for predominately white schools this has helped to start the process of
breaking down the walls of segregation.
This came as the plight of the African American student athlete became
more dominate.
Before 1961, African Americans had not won the Heisman
Trophy until Ernie Davis, a Syracuse University running back, won The Heisman
Trophy in 1961. The Heisman Trophy is
the most sought after individual award in college football. Davis, being the first African American to
win this award, contributed to the sport and helped start a level playing field
for African Americans. It was Davis who
blazed a trail for many others to follow.
While he played at Syracuse University, he met many challenges that were
racial. Davis’s team played in the 1960
Cotton Bowl Classic in Dallas, Texas.
It was Davis and his non-white teammates that were forced to sleep in a
black hotel. Due to the fact, of the
Jim Crow laws in the state of Texas, blacks where not permitted to have
accommodations in regular hotels.
After
the Syracuse victory over the Longhorns, the African American football players
were not allowed to attend the award show and the trophy presentations
according to John Brown a teammate and roommate of Davis. African American players were not allowed to
remain for the banquet either although Davis was the Most Valuable Player of
the game. Davis had to leave with the
other African American teammates and they were not allowed to enjoy the moment
of victory because of the racial segregation.
With
the life of Ernie Davis as a person, and not just an athlete, he gave to
America hope in the form of a brave- hearted soul who worked hard to accomplish
many things in his life. He was an
inspiration to not only African Americans, but anyone who wanted change. Davis made such an impact on the gridiron
that then President Kennedy arranged to meet with him after the presentation of
the Heisman Trophy. Davis and President
Kennedy shook hands. Sad to say, that
this would be the life of a young gifted African American man as Ernie Davis,
died at the age of 23 with acute monocytic leukemia. Although, Davis passed so early in his life before his prime, he
left a legacy of greatness that stretched far beyond football.
This gridiron legend that not only excelled on the
football field but as a man who was a strong advocate for civil rights. It was not all what he said but it was how
Davis carried himself on and off the field.
It is through this man that helped paved the way for a better today and
with Davis's life, we have a glimpse of hope for an even brighter
tomorrow. Ernie Davis left this world
with something that is hope, thank you Ernie Davis.
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