Texarkana Gazette

HBCUs to glitter on basketball’s All-Star stage with game, events

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CLEVELAND — This year’s NBA’s All-Star stage isn’t reserved for just LeBron James, Steph Curry and the league’s other top performers.

There’s another game in town, one that can make a much longer-lasting impact.

When basketball’s best gather in Cleveland to dunk, fire 3-pointers and hobnob with corporate partners as the league celebrates its 75th anniversar­y this weekend, another group of players will get a chance to shine amid the glittering stars.

Morgan State will play Howard on Saturday in the inaugural NBA HBCU Classic, a matchup that will provide major exposure — and funding — for historical­ly Black colleges and universiti­es while expanding the league’s longtime commitment to HBCUs, a nationwide network of 107 schools.

“I’m excited about it,” said Phoenix Suns guard Chris Paul, a 12-time All-Star and former president of the NBA Players Associatio­n. “It’s a great stage for them. It’s the education of it. A lot of people don’t understand the importance of HBCUs and why they were formed. To continue to elevate them and give them a stage and a platform is very important.”

Paul played a major role in broadening the league’s ties with HBCUs, a partnershi­p that goes back 35 years to former Commission­er David Stern serving as a founding board member for the Thurgood Marshall College Fund.

The HBCU experience was celebrated at last year’s All-Star Weekend in Atlanta, where marching bands trumpeted players onto the floor, step teams performed and the league used NBA referees who attended HBCUs.

In all, the league and NBPA donated $3 million to the HBCU community for academic scholarshi­ps, advancemen­t initiative­s and other programs last year. Those funds are expected to grow in 2022 with TNT and ESPN broadcasti­ng Saturday’s game from Cleveland State’s campus.

And while the financial windfall is essential, the All-Star stage also provides an opportunit­y for the institutio­ns to promote their histories while serving as a recruiting tool — for academics and athletics.

Attracting high-profile players has been a decades-old challenge at HBCUs. They’re rarely on national TV, typically get one or two teams in the NCAA Tournament and rarely get past the first round.

It’s a tough sell for a coach, who might be trying to convince blue-chip athletes to come play in front of less than 1,000 fans while a Power 5 school can promise sold-out arenas, trips abroad and state-of-the-art facilities.

That’s why the NBA’s All-Star invitation is so vital.

“They’re like the big brother, and we’re the little brother,” said Morgan State coach Kevin Broadus. “They’re bringing us in and showing the kids you can make it from anywhere in the world.”

HBCU players have made it to the world’s best league in the past with Charles Oakley, Avery Johnson, Rick Mahorn and Ben Wallace among the most notable. Robert Covington (Tennessee State), traded last week from Portland to the Clippers, is the only HBCU alum currently in the league.

But Broadus, who played at Grambling and Bowie State, believes the All-Star showcase can prime the HBCU-to-NBA pipeline.

“There are a lot of guys who have played at HBCUs before this that have made it to the NBA and the league is helping open that eye back up and giving guys hope that they have a chance to play at that level,” Broadus said. “They’re saying, ‘We’ll bring you on our stage and show you what it’s all about,’ and hopefully some of these guys will get looks.

“Like I always tell these guys, you can play anywhere in the country and someone’s going to find you. It’s their job to find good players.”

Along with the potential of attracting the eyes of NBA scouts, Morgan State and Howard’s inclusion in All-Star festivitie­s will get their programs seen by high school athletes who may not have HBCUs on their radars.

Broadus knows the drill. As Binghamton’s coach and an assistant at Georgetown and Maryland, he understand­s what it’s like recruiting for talent against the game’s goliaths.

But just as Howard landed heralded recruit Makur Maker (he spent one year at the school and is now playing profession­ally in Australia) a couple years ago, one elite player can raise a school’s profile.

“You only need one of those high-profile players to like you,” Broadus said. “You don’t need all 100 — just one. We’re just looking for the next really good player to help our program go to the next level.”

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