Written by Samuel G. Freedman, New York Times columnist and author
of the book Breaking the Line, the article describes how two rival football
teams, with two star quarterbacks under the leadership of two legendary coaches
revolutionized college sports and transformed the NFL. FAMU coach Jake Gaither
with quarterback Ken Riley, along with Grambling’s Eddie Robinson and James
Harris made a profound difference in how America finally came to appreciate the
talent of black athletes. For a 30-year
period, the Orange Blossom Classic football game in Miami was the most
important annual sporting event and the largest annual gathering of any kind
for African Americans.
“When a Florida A&M Rattler receiver named Nathaniel
“Traz” Powell caught a 45-yard pass to break a tie with Hampton Institute, he
became the first black man to score a touchdown on the Orange Bowl’s previously
whites-only gridiron,” Freedman wrote in the article. “For years to come,
blacks around the state would speak about his touchdown as if he’d been Rosa
Parks refusing to surrender her seat.”
To read the article in its entirety, visit here.