% \ % ME AC CONTINl faces Delaware State. But the real test of the amtntious . producers' capabilities will come Saturday, Jan. 19. when the network will cover games in separate cities for simultaneous broadcast in different regions. North Carolina and Florida viewers will seethe matchup between Bethune-Cookman and N.C. A&T from Daytona Beach, while the rest of the country will watch Howard take on Delaware State. Drakeford said the split-game approach will be tried again on Saturday, Jan. 26, when black college basketball fans in Maryland and Florida will view Morgan State and Bethune-Cookman in Baltimore while other stations carry N.C. A&T's game against S.C. State from Greensboro. Game coverage will follow the standard network format, alternating playby-play description with live interviews, commentary and special features. Calling the games will be Don Shea, sports director at WTVD in l BARRY COOPI The Harsh Re< By BARRY COOPER Syndicated Columnist It seems that historically black colleges, once at the forefront of educa uun in mis cuumry, arc wcamcring assaults on all sides these days. Among their woes are money cutbacks from the federal government, as well as drops in enrollment and apathy among alumni. The problem is especially severe in athletics, where many black schools are experiencing acute financial pains. Once powerhouses that attracted professional scouts in droves, the black schools now have taken a back seat to larger universities which have outbid ? oops, outrecruited them for the best talent. The effect of having to settle for less than the very best has been devastating. No longer can Gramblin a matrh nn An fnAthall fiplH UAg iiliftfcVil Up V/AA MAV A WAVWl with larger, more well-known schools. Florida A&M football Coach Rudy Hubbard, who once boasted that his team "can line up against any team in the country and expect to win,*' can no longer make that claim. It is the same for most other black v ~t. > . t . ? M - . . t . 555=5 =IEL, JED Durham for 20 years before joining Jim Valvano Enterprises* and Donnie Tuck, another former WTVD sports announcer and former Howard University sports information director who now edits The Sports Gap. Fred Snow den, former head coach at the University of Arizona and the first . black coach in America at/ a predominantly white school, will handle the games' halftime shows, featuring highlights of each of the MEAC schools. Snowden will provide the shows with analyses of conference, nonconference and league play, as well> as tips from other coaches. What's more, Drakeford said, "We're going to be doing a lot of women's basketball. We're interviewing a number of female announcers for the women's games." The company has signed Eva Watts, a 10-year veteran of ABC, as one of its pro ducers for the wojp^s coverage. If All College Sports gets the tournament E R ility of BigVersi schools, and in every sport. The Mid Eastern Athletic Conference basketball champion is embarrassed each year in the NCAA Tournament. Except for Alcorn State, the champion of the Southwestern Athletic Conference has not fared any better. Most other sports at black colleges, ' < except for some track programs, are a virtual joke, their worth having been ruined by a lack of money and 1 facilities. For the most part, this decay has i taken place at the country's Division I i black schools, such as Grambling, J Florida A&M, North Carolina AAT i and Maryland-Eastern, Shore. The < strain of trying to compete just a < .IWH H MWW UK UJ| UU?& Ul 400UHU and on the same level in all other i sports has been too much for the ] schools to handle. ] Many of the other black colleges, particularly those which remained in i Division II, have relatively healthier 1 bank accounts and seem much more l competitive on their own level. J The bottom line, however, is simple: Most black college athletic pro- i grams are losing respect. It seems that J few people take them seriously I ACT COLLEGE SI V I rights, Drakeford said, it plans to televise 13 women's games this year and field an all-woman team of anTHE SCHEDULE Jan. 12 N.C. A .A T vs. Howard at < Jan. 14 N.C. A A T vs. Dalawaro SI Jan. IS UMES vs. Morgan Stato at Jan. 19 Sothuno Cookman vs. N.C - Jan. 19 - Howard vs. Dalawaro Stat Jan. 21 Bathuna-Cookman vs. S.C. Jan. 26 Morgan Stato vs. BattiunoJan. 26 S.C. Stato vs. N.C. AAT at ( Jan. 26 Howard vs. Morgan Stato < Fob. 4 N.C. AAT vs. UMIS at Oros Fob. 9 Dalawaro Stato vs. N.C. Al Fob. 16 Morgan Stato vs. Howard i Fob. 25 Dalawaro Stato vs. Howar nouncers to call the women's tournament games. it the venture succeeds, Drakeford is Small In Colic anymore. Players from black colleges 1 are left off of the major all-America to teams, have no chance at being con- Stil sidered for the Heisman Trophy and pla are not invited to participate in major rov post-season all-star games. ( Furthermore, black college players pea often are overlooked in the NFL and else NBA drafts, and have to rely on free ha\ A ? CI 1 -I agency iu iiiiu mcir piaces on pro scic rosters. I Such a tactic could mean the loss of Wi] more than $1 million. Take Grambl- pas ing's Everson Walls, for example. A not few years ago, the Dallas Cowboys for signed him as a free agent after the \ Cowboys and every other NFL club ove declined to draft him. wid ? All Walls did was lead the league in ?the interceptions that year and make all- and pro. His-salary: a paltry $40,000, the dra NFL minimum. ? Had Walls been drafted on the first teai ound as he was worthy of, he would Ten iave signed perhaps a three-year con- NC Tact worth 4300-000 n? VMr nine a f ? / w? I f/IMil H AI (250,000 signing bonus. on i So you figure Walls, under the in- T tial contract he signed, lost some V (260,000 a year plus the signing athl x>nus. PORT/ EtVttW ? said, the producers may expand their coverage into other conferences - or possibly into ME AC football. htensbovo. N.C. at* at Oreentboro, N.C. Princess Ann*, Md. . A A T at Daytona Beach, Fla. at Washington, D.C. , State at Daytona Beach, Fla. Cookman at Baltimore, Md. Breensboro, N.C. at Washington, D.C. insboro, N.C. fcT at Dover, Dei. at Baltimore, Md. d at Dover, Del. But, he pointed out, "We're still trying to get the bugs out of this one before we attempt that." >ge Athletics I 7ortunately for Walls, he was able | renegotiate his contract last year. || 11, he'll never catch up with the yer who was taken in the first >; ind. ' | )n the surface, much of this ap- J its to have racist overtones. How ; could the NFL, which claims to B re college scouting down to a p ince, miss out on Everson Walls? ||| low could quarterback Doug iliams, who shattered numerous ^ sing records while at Grambling, have been considered a candidate || the Heisman Trophy? Vhy isn't the nation's press raving r Mississippi Valley's Jerry Rice, a |. e receiver who right now may be * ^ best -in the eollege ranks this year 1 is destined to be a No.l NFL I ffrchoice? low can black college football H ns like Mississippi Valley and j|| hm?M> i/V VAVIUUCU 1IUIU inc E|| AA Division I-AA Top 20 poll? : would be easy to blame the above sheer racism and nothing more. hat is not true, though. _ /hat is hurting black college | etic programs is not so much j| HMMHOctober, 1984-Page 5