Miami Herald (Sunday)

FIU coach has tie to UM’s first Black recruit

- BY WALTER VILLA Miami Herald Writer

FIU coach Mike MacIntyre has a strong connection with Miami Hurricanes football history.

MacIntyre’s late father, George MacIntyre, was best known as Vanderbilt’s head coach from 1979 to 1985. But, from 1964 to 1967, he was a key Hurricanes recruiter, bringing in talented athletes such as Ray Bellamy, the first Black football player to sign a scholarshi­p to compete for Miami. Bellamy was also the first Black athlete at any predominan­tly white university in the Southeast.

“My dad was the one who signed Ray [in

1967],” Mike MacIntyre said. “My dad convinced the coach, the athletic director and the president that they should sign

Ray.”

Bellamy, who became an All-American at Miami and was inducted into UM’s Sports Hall of Fame in 2012, still stays in touch with MacIntyre.

In fact, Bellamy, now 73 years old and retired, called MacIntyre two days after the coach got hired by FIU this past December.

At 6-foot-5 and 205 pounds in his playing days, Bellamy was huge for a 1960s-era wide receiver. Bellamy played his high school ball upstate in the city of Palmetto.

“[George] called me, ‘Big Ray,’ ” Bellamy told the Miami Herald in a recent phone interview. “He said, ‘Big Ray, they’ve never seen anybody [with your size and talents].’

“In high school, I was also a defensive end and a kick returner.”

MacIntyre was right. As a sophomore in 1968 — freshmen weren’t allowed to play varsity back then — Bellamy caught 37 passes for 579 yards and two touchdowns. His 37 catches establishe­d a UM sophomore record.

Bellamy’s career was upended by a near-fatal car crash on Miami’s Tamiami Trail on Jan. 3, 1970.

“It was after Christmas break, and I was on my way back to UM, and I fell asleep driving,” Bellamy said. “I had to sit out for a year after that wreck.”

Bellamy said his car hit a pine tree. He was ejected from the vehicle, landing in the middle of the road. and his girlfriend at the time pulled him to safety.

“I broke my right forearm and my left femur,” Bellamy said. “I laid flat on my back at Doctors Hospital for 13 1⁄2 weeks.”

As bad as it was, that car accident did not take away from the impact that Bellamy — and by extension MacIntyre — had on the Hurricanes transition­ing to an integrated football program.

Bellamy said MacIntyre was a key reason why he signed with Miami instead of Florida State or the other schools who were recruiting him.

“To say that ‘Coach Mac’ was charismati­c was an understate­ment,” Bellamy said. “He had the ability to reach into someone’s heart and make them feel 20 feet tall. He was an amazing man, very organized, and a good and decent person.”

Bellamy, who most recently served as an academic advisor at Florida A&M University, was more than just a dynamic athlete.

In 1971, he became UM’s first Black person to serve as student body president. He earned a Master’s degree in college-student personnel, and he was inducted into Iron Arrow, considered the highest honor at UM.

Following his Hurricane days, Bellamy spent less than one year with Montreal in the Canadian Football League — where he teamed with former Olympic sprinter John Carlos and ex-Nebraska running back Johnny Rodgers — leaving to what became an unsuccessf­ul tryout with

Joe Namath’s New York Jets.

Later, he served as an assistant coach at South Carolina State and at Fort Valley State.

But he has never forgotten MacIntyre’s influence on his life, including the coach standing up for him at a pivotal point in his career.

“I remember one day [in practice], a teammate deliberate­ly ran into my leg in a walk-through drill,” Bellamy said.

“Coach Mac was angry. He yelled: ‘Listen to me. I will not put up with that kind of foolishnes­s. You just hurt the best football player on this field. Big Ray is a human being just like all of you.’ ”

Bellamy said MacIntyre and Dr. Henry King Stanford, who was UM’s president from 1962 to 1981, were the “building blocks” for what became a championsh­ip Hurricanes football program.

According to Bellamy, MacIntyre was heavily involved in the recruiting of several UM star players, such as running backs Tom “Silky” Sullivan and Chuck Foreman, and defensive back Burgess Owens.

Together with Bellamy, they are considered to be the first four Black players in the Hurricanes program, and all of them were wildly successful.

Sullivan played for Miami from 1969-71 and led the NFL in rushing touchdowns in 1974. Foreman and Owens played for Miami from 1970-72 and both were NFL first-round picks in 1973. Owens went on to become a Super Bowl champion with the Raiders in 1980, and is currently serves in Congress as a U.S. Rep. from Utah.

“George MacIntyre had a hand in all of that,” Bellamy said. “He was one of the most respectful human beings I’ve ever met.”

Similarly, Bellamy believes Mike MacIntyre will turn things around at FIU (1-2), which plays at New Mexico State on Saturday night.

“It’s in his DNA,” Bellamy said. “That’s who his father was, and that’s who he is.”

 ?? TIFFANY TOMPKINS Bradenton Herald file, 2020 ?? Ray Bellamy was recruited by George MacIntyre, FIU coach Mike MacIntyre’s father, in 1967, becoming the first Black player on the Hurricanes’ football team.
TIFFANY TOMPKINS Bradenton Herald file, 2020 Ray Bellamy was recruited by George MacIntyre, FIU coach Mike MacIntyre’s father, in 1967, becoming the first Black player on the Hurricanes’ football team.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States