The Union Democrat

Harlem Globetrott­ers faced racial tension, but still entertaine­d,

Members faced racial tension, brought basketball thrills The Harlem Globetrott­ers was a bit of an overstatem­ent in its earliest days.

- By MATT KEMPNER

The team didn't cover the world. Its Black players traveled to tiny, predominan­tly white towns in Iowa, the Dakotas and elsewhere in the Midwest. And the Globetrott­ers, now based in Peachtree Corners, Ga., weren't from Harlem.

But issues of race were often tangled up in its more than 90-year basketball history, for good and ill.

Before countless half-court shots, basketball­s spinning on fingers, shenanigan­s involving buckets of confetti, referees enduring gags that involved their pants being yanked down, even before Black players danced on court with white women when such things would have been considered risky in the outside world, the Globetrott­ers were focused on great basketball.

Twice in the late 1940s they beat the best team in what was then an all-white NBA, with two future Hall of Famers opposing them.

“The fact that the Trotters could beat them in regular basketball showed the quality of basketball that Black players were playing, or capable of playing, had they been given more opportunit­ies,” said Ron Thomas, who authored the book “They Cleared the Lane: The NBA'S Black Pioneers” and is director of Morehouse College's journalism and sports program.

In 1950, the NBA let in its first Black players, including Globetrott­er Nat “Sweetwater” Clifton, who became the first to sign an NBA contract.

The Globetrott­ers launched in the 1920s, an all-black team from Chicago, started by Tommy Brookins, a Black basketball player and jazz singer, according to Ben Green, who wrote the book “Spinning the Globe: The Rise, Fall and Return to Greatness of the Harlem Globetrott­ers.”

Abe Saperstein, a white booking agent, soon took over the business. The Globetrott­ers rumbled into 150 Midwest towns a year to take on the best local teams they could find.

“A lot of times it was the first interactio­n that a lot of white people ever had with Black athletes and maybe with African Americans in general,” Green said.

The team dominated white opponents. So the Globetrott­ers added gags and ball-handling tricks in the middle of games. The shift gave players a breather and limited the margins of their victories, increasing the odds that they might be booked for return visits.

Even early on, the clowning sparked controvers­y. The owner of the New York Rens, another powerhouse Black team, accused the Globetrott­ers of being Uncle Toms who were performing minstrel shows full of demeaning racial stereotype­s, Green said.

Nonetheles­s, the Globetrott­ers became the stronger and better known team. In a 1953 column, an Atlanta Constituti­on sports editor described the Globetrott­ers as “the most watched athletic team in the world.”

Saperstein tried to keep the near-monopoly he had on the nation's best Black players and initially fought NBA plans to integrate, Green said. Later, future Hall of Famers Reece “Goose” Tatum and Marques Haynes complained Saperstein underpaid them.

Still, the Globetrott­ers managed to land talented athletes, including future NBA star Wilt Chamberlai­n.

Players such as Meadowlark Lemon and Curly Neal gained worldwide fame. Later, the team was regularly featured on ABC'S popular Wide World of Sports and Saturday morning cartoons. It also toured overseas.

For much of the team's history, though, players were confronted with the same racism as other Black people.

Mannie Jackson, who played for the Globetrott­ers in the early 1960s, recalled them being blocked from Southern hotels and restaurant­s. Often, they played in segregated arenas.

“Black, young men would go around the world to represent a country that didn't care about them except as entertainm­ent,” said Jackson. Nonetheles­s, he added, the Globetrott­ers “have been one of the greatest ambassador­s of the possibilit­ies of this country.”

Jackson later become a Honeywell executive and, in 1993, bought and rebuilt the Globetrott­ers as it teetered on financial collapse.

The team is owned now by Gwinnett County-based Herschend Enterprise­s, which operates properties such as Dollywood, Callaway Gardens and Stone Mountain Park, with its giant carving of Confederat­e figures.

Before being sidelined by the pandemic, the Globetrott­ers played about 450 games annually, relying on 30 players spread over multiple teams. The team, which included some players of different races, said it was drawing more than 2 million fans a year.

Globetrott­ers coach “Sweet Lou” Dunbar recalled growing up in segregated Louisiana and watching the team.

“You have to give homage to those guys for all the sacrifices they went through,” he said.

 ?? Taylor Hill / Getty Images /TNS ?? Harlem Globetrott­er legend Fred “Curly” Neal visits the Siriusxm Studio in Newyork on Feb. 13, 2012.
Taylor Hill / Getty Images /TNS Harlem Globetrott­er legend Fred “Curly” Neal visits the Siriusxm Studio in Newyork on Feb. 13, 2012.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States