2014 Black History Month Sports Thread

Rocket Scientist

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I did one on :hamster: and it was a success.Hope this is one as well. Yes Feb is a short month but we can keep this going if everybody is on board.Post any facts,pictures etc.... To start today is Jackie Robinson 95th b day :salute:
 

Rocket Scientist

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Come on yall a Black History Month Sports Thread.Some of yall preach black excellence and when there is a thread no one wants to contribute :wtf: drop facts,pictures and maybe this could get upped.Gotta contribute yall
 

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That man is none other than Mike Tomlin, the first African-American head coach in Pittsburgh Steelers history and the 10th in the history of the National Football League.


In addition, at the age of 38, Tomlin is the third-youngest head coach in any of the four major North American professional sports leagues, but there can be little argument that his youth belies his vast gridiron acumen.

After only four seasons at Pittsburgh’s helm, Tomlin has guided the Steelers to a winning percentage of 67 percent during the regular season (43-21) and victories in five out of six playoff games.

Along the way, Tomlin has won a Coach of the Year Award (2008), two conference championships and a Super Bowl trophy, which is the precise moment the native of Newport News, Virginia started making headlines.

A little over two years ago, the Steelers captured the AFC North Division by posting a 12-4 record, their second division title in as many seasons under Tomlin, and culminated the 2008 campaign with an AFC Championship Game victory over the Baltimore Ravens, followed by a Super Bowl XLIII triumph against the upstart Arizona Cardinals.

When Pittsburgh defeated the Ravens, Tomlin became the youngest NFL head coach to lead his team to the Super Bowl and the third African-American coach to do so, joining Tony Dungy (Indianapolis Colts) and Lovie Smith (Chicago Bears).

So on February 1, 2009, when the Steelers brought home the franchise’s sixth Lombardi Trophy with a heart-stopping 27-23 victory over the Cardinals, Tomlin became the youngest head coach in NFL history to win the Super Bowl.

Now, Tomlin has the opportunity to become the youngest head coach to win two Super Bowls—all in a day’s work for the husband and father of three, who is well on his way to not only becoming the most successful African-American head coach in the game’s history, but the most successful of all head coaches who have come down the pike.
 

Deadpool1986

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200px-Fritz_Pollard.jpg

Frederick Douglass "Fritz" Pollard
(January 27, 1894 – May 11, 1986) was the first African American head coach in the National Football League (NFL). Pollard along with Bobby Marshall were the first two African American players in the NFL in 1920. Sportswriter Walter Camp ranked Pollard as "one of the greatest runners these eyes have ever seen."

Fritz Pollard, an All-America halfback from Brown University was a pro football pioneer in more ways than one. The 5-9, 165-pound back, who led Brown to the Rose Bowl in 1915, turned pro in 1919, when he joined the Akron (OH) Pros following army service during World War I. In 1920, the Pros joined the newly founded American Professional Football Association, later renamed the National Football League. That season, with Pollard leading the charge, the Pros went undefeated (8-0-3) to win the league's first crown.

As a member of the new league, Pollard immediately earned a place in pro football history as one of just two African Americans in the new league. In 1921 he earned another distinction becoming the first African American head coach in NFL history when the Pros named him co-coach of the team.

Contemporary accounts indicate that Pollard, an exciting elusive runner, was the most feared running back in the fledgling league. During his pro football career the two-time All-America played and sometimes coached for four different NFL teams, the Pros/Indians (1920-21/1925-26), the Milwaukee Badgers (1922), the Hammond Pros (1923, 1925), and the Providence Steam Roller (1925). Fritz also spent time in 1923 and 1924 playing for the Gilberton Cadamounts, a strong independent pro team in the Pennsylvania “Coal League.”

In 1928, Pollard organized and coached the Chicago Black Hawks, an all-African American professional team based in the Windy City. Pollard's Black Hawks played against white teams around Chicago, but enjoyed their greatest success by scheduling exhibition games against West Coast teams during the winter months. From 1929 until 1932 when the Depression caused the team to fold, the Black Hawks had become one of the more popular teams on the West Coast.
 

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Robert Wells "Bobby" Marshall (March 12, 1880 – August 27, 1958) was an American sports player. He was best known for playing football, however he also competed in baseball,[2] track, boxing and ice hockey.

When Marshall played baseball for Minneapolis Central High School, he played first base for three years. Central was the champion of the Twin Cities High Schools for Marshall's Junior and Senior years, of 1900 and 1901.[4]

When he played baseball for the University of Minnesota, he also played first base for two years, 1904 and 1905, helping the University to win the Western Conference Championship in 1905.[4]

Marshall played end for the football team of the University of Minnesota from 1904 to 1906. In 1906, Marshall kicked a 60-yard field goal to beat the University of Chicago 4-2 (field goals counted as four points). He was the first African American to play football in the Big Nine (later the Big Ten Conference). He graduated in 1907 and played with Minneapolis pro teams, the Deans and the Marines. From 1920 through 1924 he played in the National Football League with the Minneapolis Marines, the Kelley Duluths, and the Rock Island Independents. He along with Fritz Pollard were the first African Americans to play in the NFL.

Shortly after graduating college, Marshall played third base for the Minneapolis "Lund-Lands" for one season in 1906. He played third base for one season for Lamoure, North Dakota[1] helping the team win third place in a league of eight teams.

Outside of athletics, Marshall practiced law as an attorney in the law office of Mr. William H. H. Franklin, and later at the well known firm of Nash and Armstrong.


1910 St. Paul Gophers
Marshall left the law offices, spending many years back on the diamonds, playing semi-pro baseball for pre-
Negro National Leagues. In 1908, he played utility for the Minneapolis Keystones, then moved to first base latter in the season. In 1909, he joined the St. Paul Colored Gophers.[4] In 1910, he split the season between the Chicago Giants[5] and the St. Paul Colored Gophers, appearing for and managing the Colored Gophers team occasionally until at least 1916.[6]

It appears that Marshall bought the Twin City Colored Giants team in 1911.[3] At the end of the 1911 season, he received an appointment in the Minnesota state grain department.[7]

In a 1916 game, Marshall brought in "Cannonball Jackson" a pitcher acquired from J.L. Wilkinson's All Nations team.[6] Marshall would later appear in games with John Donaldson and the All Nations team in 1923.

In 1913, he took a job after the baseball season, managing a team at the Washburn-Crosby Milling Company.[1]

He was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 1971.
 

Van Glorious

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Fritz Pollard who alongside Bobby Marshall were the first African American players in the NFL in 1920, Pollard was dubbed as “one of the greatest runners these eyes have ever seen” Pollard played from 1920 until 1926 when him and all of the other 9 black players were taken out of the NFL and never returned , Pollard also became the first Black coach in the NFL .

In 2005 Pollard was inducted into the Pro hall of fame, Now there’s an Alliance named after him called The Fritz Pollard Alliance which is a group that promotes minority hiring in the NFL.

*EDIT* Just seen others post about them
 
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