Young Drachma
02-29-2004, 04:23 PM
Here's the story (http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/blackhistory/news/story?id=1743388)
The story basically talks about black colleges, their inability to recruit top players and yadda yadda.
Frankly, if they didn't play in self-segregated conferences and actually competed against other schools in D1-AA or D-1 in other sports or just moved down and won, it'd be of no consequence and people might notice.
But these schools don't fail to recruit whites to their golf teams:
From Aug. 2000
Once again, the Minority Golf Championship for historically Black colleges has been dominated by white players, many from other countries. Bethune-Cookman College placed second in the top division of the men's tournament after winning last year. And the sister Wildcats won the women's tournament this year, beating a runner-up squad from Hampton University by 124 strokes. Both squads had white players, most from Britain and Australia. And Kentucky State University, led by two white Canadians, won the men's second-division tournament, which includes teams from smaller colleges.
This year, Florida A&M University broke a three-year streak of
predominantly white teams winning the top men's division. With
a roster of three Black and two white players, the Rattlers upset
Bethune-Cookman by 23 strokes.
The story basically talks about black colleges, their inability to recruit top players and yadda yadda.
Frankly, if they didn't play in self-segregated conferences and actually competed against other schools in D1-AA or D-1 in other sports or just moved down and won, it'd be of no consequence and people might notice.
But these schools don't fail to recruit whites to their golf teams:
From Aug. 2000
Once again, the Minority Golf Championship for historically Black colleges has been dominated by white players, many from other countries. Bethune-Cookman College placed second in the top division of the men's tournament after winning last year. And the sister Wildcats won the women's tournament this year, beating a runner-up squad from Hampton University by 124 strokes. Both squads had white players, most from Britain and Australia. And Kentucky State University, led by two white Canadians, won the men's second-division tournament, which includes teams from smaller colleges.
This year, Florida A&M University broke a three-year streak of
predominantly white teams winning the top men's division. With
a roster of three Black and two white players, the Rattlers upset
Bethune-Cookman by 23 strokes.