News

Racial harmony and a first down - experiences of a head coach at Illinois University

by Lou Tepper , June 17, 2007

I was recently asked, "Why do you think it is important. as a coach, to take the lead in building bridges across racial and cultural lines in athletics?" Succinctly. I would say it would have to do with my background, my resolve and my opportunity. Let me expand on that reaction.

As for my background, I was born and raised in a town of 61 people. No one in my community had ever gone to college prior to my older sister, Nancy. My father had an eighth-grade education and was a laborer like everyone else who earned a living in Keystone, PA.

My entire world was white. I never knew another race in a meaningful fashion until I went to college, yet I was raised in a Christian environment among people who stressed sensitivity and love for all.

During the turbulent 1960s, I was in college and found myself very sensitive to the plight of African Americans. After graduation I would spend the next 29 years as a college football coach. Those 29 years afforded me the wonderful experience of knowing Blacks as well as I know whites. I learned very early that our African-American players were just as intelligent and moral as our whites. Yet, I saw a world that has treated the two races very differently off the field.

Remembering Ron

When I became the head coach at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign in 1991, I resolved to do all I could to help both races appreciate and understand each other. On the day of my appointment, I shared with them--staff and players, alike--a quote and a story.

The quote is used repeatedly by our staff. It is the only quote that hangs in our coaches' locker room and it states: "Prejudice is a great time saver. It enables one to form opinions without bothering to get the facts."

The fact is that all races are filled with trustworthy and talented people. We must invest the time to know one another.

The story I related concerned Ron Dickerson, who coached with me at the University of Colorado in the 1980s. More accurately, he was the assistant head coach, while I was the defensive coordinator. Although we were both from the same locale, had similar academic and professional backgrounds and each cherished the notion of being a head coach. I can tell you, candidly, my phone rang with much more regularity about job opportunities than did Ron's.

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