The Commercial Appeal

‘Coach Prime’ finds his calling

- Jarrett Bell

JACKSON, Miss. — Just like old times, Deion Sanders flowed with all sorts of energy, positivity, philosophi­es and, well, style, as he sat in his office at the Walter Payton Center and assessed the state of “Coach Prime.”

That’s what everybody calls him at Jackson State, the moniker emblazoned right there on the nameplate on his desk. “Prime Time” was the tag for other times and places — marking the persona and impact attached to his brilliance as one of the greatest athletes in history — but Coach Prime has its own multiple layers of meaning.

Yeah, it’s a noun, but it may be more of verb, given the action in play. It is a nickname and a message as Sanders seeks to revive the football program — and more — at an HBCU school with a new type of relevance.

“Don’t tell me what we can’t do, tell me what we can,” he declares, wearing a skull cap imprinted with the “I Believe” slogan that has become ubiquitous in these parts.

Sanders, 53, insists he is here, right now, because it is nothing less than a spiritual calling.

“I was going to coach. But then when our country just took that left turn with equality and justice, and with the social unrest last year … I just heard that voice in my head and felt my spirit that said, ‘This is it,’ ” Sanders told USA TODAY Sports.

Before the announceme­nt on Sept. 21 that he would become Jackson State’s fifth head football coach since 2013, Sanders (who coached on the high school level in Texas after operating an elite youth program for several years) discussed the possibilit­y for nearly a year with athletic director Ashley Robinson.

“As stuff transpired, it was an easy navigation in thinking why I had to do it,” he said. “The kids. The community. The vision. The hope. Then you start compiling that with the city of Jackson …

“It was one of those things where it was a calling, and I had to answer.”

Forget about glamour

Jackson State, the SWAC (Southweste­rn Athletic Conference) and the universe of Historical­ly Black Colleges and Universiti­es (HBCUS) undoubtedl­y need him now. That much is evident by the exposure Sanders has commanded during a spring football season the SWAC engineered after shutting down the fall campaign in 2020 due to the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Jackson State (3-3) played its two games on ESPN (and others on ESPN2 and ESPN3), which may be typical for a Power 5 school but not for an FCS operation that hasn’t had a winning season since 2013.

It’s a testament to the sustained interest that remains in the only man to play in both a Super Bowl and World Series — who also happens to have more than 2.5 million combined followers on Twitter and Instagram.

It’s also apparent that the calling fits when considerin­g all that comes with the Coach Prime brand in style and substance. His path to the Pro Football Hall of Fame was paved by status as the game’s best cornerback during his heyday, and his presence as a swing factor on back-to-back Super Bowl titles with two different teams (the 49ers, then the Cowboys). But it was always accented by the flashy marketing and promotion that made “Neon Deion” an icon.

“Ain’t a whole lot of Deions out there,” Doug Williams, the Grambling legend and first Black quarterbac­k to win a Super Bowl, told USA TODAY Sports. “Let’s face it: Deion comes with star power and the flair that gets your attention. He has done wonders for the SWAC. They needed him.”

Said Sanders: “Man, it’s so much more than coaching. You’ve got to be Tyler Perry around here. You’ve got to write the movie, produce the movie, edit the movie, act in the movie, sell the movie. You’ve got a lot of hats to wear.”

Fitting, that he can relate to an entertainm­ent mogul. Sanders has been trailed all season by a film crew collecting footage for a documentar­y pegged to air later this year.

Just don’t mistake this for a glamour job. The Tigers were riding a three-game losing streak heading into an April 17 game against Alcorn State that underscore­s a certain reality check. The defense allowed an average of more than 40 points and nearly 500 yards during the setbacks. Sanders benched quarterbac­k Jalon Jones and replaced him with freshman Quincy Casey. The talent is thin in the trenches.

There’s also a need for upgraded facilities and support systems. HBCU schools have traditiona­lly lagged in these areas when compared to predominan­tly white schools with high-revenue programs. Hearing Sanders break down how the upcoming installati­on of a turf practice field will change the flow provides a snapshot.

As it stands now, a rainstorm adds at least two hours in travel time to bus to Mississipp­i Veterans Memorial Stadium or local high schools to practice, given the flooding issues and poor drainage on the school’s grass practice fields. There’s also a new locker room under constructi­on. And athletic director Robinson outlined efforts to enhance dayto-day necessitie­s for the entire athletic program, including sports medicine, nutrition, strength and conditioni­ng and academic support.

It’s not that Sanders didn’t realize such challenges existed. When he attended Florida State, where the premium facilities could easily be taken for granted, he needed to merely stroll up the street to the nearby HBCU, Florida A&M, to get a sense of the difference.

“FAM was right around the corner,” he reflected. “But it’s one thing to visit. It’s another thing to understand what they’re dealing with. That’s why the inequality is real. When you’re in it, you start saying, ‘Oh my God. I got y’all.’ ”

Williams knows. Before returning to the NFL in 2014 as a personnel executive with Washington, his journey included two stints as head coach at his alma mater, in addition to a year as coach at another HBCU, Morehouse College. About a month before Sanders began at JSU, Williams said he told him, “At an HBCU, you’re not going to have everything that you think you need.”

Yet Williams added, “They’re giving him more than most coaches around the SWAC have.”

Can’t wait to win big

Nothing sells like winning. For that mission, Sanders is like the typical rookie coach, seeking to upgrade talent and change culture.

There’s buzz amid the fan base about the fall season, as JSU is expected to field several new starters — including Deion’s sons, Shilo, a transfer safety, and Shedeur, one of the nation’s top quarterbac­k prospects — from a crop rated as the best recruiting class in the nation on the FCS level.

Dennis Thurman, the longtime NFL defensive coach who signed up as JSU’S defensive coordinato­r, warned against getting caught up in Sanders’ flamboyant persona.

“He’s much deeper than that,” Thurman said.

He described Sanders as a strict disciplina­rian who opens team meetings with a prayer, adding to constant messages about off-the-field conduct. “He’s very committed to developing them for the real world, outside of football,” Thurman said.

Daylen Baldwin, a junior receiver, vouched for the evolution.

“The whole team in general is more discipline­d,” Baldwin said. “The organizati­on ... everything is just very strategic in how our coaches go about talking to us on a daily basis and go about helping us on and off the field.”

Baldwin, 21, is too young to remember Sanders as a player, so he’s grasped much by digging up video clips, and he received an earful from his father.

 ?? BARBARA GAUNTT/CLARION LEDGER/USA TODAY NETWORK ?? Jackson State University coach Deion Sanders is trying to revive the football program — and more.
BARBARA GAUNTT/CLARION LEDGER/USA TODAY NETWORK Jackson State University coach Deion Sanders is trying to revive the football program — and more.

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