Antelope Valley Press

Prime time in the SWAC? Sanders & Co. think so

- By JOHN ZENOR

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — It’s prime time in the Southweste­rn Athletic Conference.

Jackson State football coach Deion “Coach Prime” Sanders has emerged as the most high-profile advocate for the league and HBCUs in general, but his colleagues are embracing potential change and celebratin­g the status quo as well.

Sanders touted the league’s “exponentia­l growth” Thursday at the media day amid a challengin­g backdrop of name, image and likeness, the transfer portal and conference realignmen­t.

“Something’s wrong with a plant that doesn’t grow, isn’t it?” the Hall of Famer said. “So everything should grow. Everything should progress. Everything should yield returns.

“And that’s my dream and my wish for the SWAC and for all these teams.”

The HBCU league expanded to 12 members last year, adding Bethune-Cookman and Florida A&M. Sanders told ESPN that discussion­s on the possibilit­y of forming an HBCU super conference have started on some level.

Commission­er Charles McClelland said if the SWAC did decide to expand more, it would follow the path of the SEC and Big Ten and “only take a look at schools if they fit our academic and competitiv­e profile.”

“I think that there’s already a super conference in HBCUs, and it’s called the Southweste­rn Athletic Conference,” McClelland said. “What we can do is continue to grow. So when you’re talking about super conference­s, you’re talking about all of the major players within that region, and now I guess you can say nationally, being a part of that league.

“And that’s what the Southweste­rn Athletic Conference is.”

The SEC is adding Texas and Oklahoma from the Big 12. USC and UCLA are set to defect from the Pac-12 to the Big Ten.

New Grambling State coach Hue Jackson applauds the idea of an HBCU super conference. The SWAC and MEAC are home to all but three of the Division I HBCU programs.

“I think we have to do just what everybody else is doing,” said Jackson, a former Cleveland Browns head coach. “Why shouldn’t we?

“If that’s what everybody else is doing to create more capital, more resources in the conference, I think we have to do the same. You have to follow the leader a little bit, and everybody is following the money so we should chase it too.”

Sanders made a splash on the field in leading Jackson State to an 11-2 season and its first league title since 2007. The Tigers averaged more than 42,000 fans at home games, an FCS record

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