USA TODAY International Edition

HBCUs huge All- Star Game winners

- Mark Medina

One by one, the students read their letters aloud. They wrote them for NBA All- Star Game players and coaches, but the message offered more substance than Sunday’s game or favorite All- Star memories.

About 20 students with the Thurgood Marshall College Fund ( TMCF) met for a Zoom call Thursday evening with TMCF and NBA officials as well as Hall of Fame center Dikembe Mutombo. Many of them expressed gratitude for the NBA offering more than $ 300 million to the Thurgood Marshall Scholarshi­p Fund, which has supported students and institutio­ns at Historical­ly Black Colleges and universiti­es ( HBCUs) for the past 34 years.

“I just wanted to thank them for how their support really helped shape the future for so many Black men and women and minorities in general,” said Omar Harbison, a second- year doctoral student specializi­ng in educationa­l leadership at Clark Atlanta University. “Their support will open the doors and dismantle barriers toward future opportunit­ies.”

When the NBA decided to host the All- Star Game in Atlanta, the reasons went beyond maximizing revenue with the television contracts. The NBA wanted to help HBCUs both with additional financial support and exposure.

So the NBA and its partners ( AT& T, Mountain Dew, State Farm, Taco Bell) will collective­ly provide more than $ 3 million to TMCF, United Negro College Fund ( UNCF), National Associatio­n for Equal Opportunit­y ( NAFEO) and Direct Relief ’ s Fund for Health Equity.

When LeBron James and Kevin Durant selected their All- Star teammates Thursday, the implicatio­ns went beyond respective bragging rights among the two stars. Team James will represent TMCF, which is comprised of 47 publicly supported HBCUs. Team Durant will play for the UNCF, which consists of 37 member colleges. Each organizati­on will initially receive $ 500,000, but its future fortunes rest on the teams’ performanc­es. The leading team’s organizati­on will earn an additional $ 150,000 at the end of each of the first three quarters and another $ 300,000 after the fourth quarter. Dunks will bring in more money.

“It’s a great fund. Obviously it’s represente­d by someone that represents our Black community with the utmost respect in Thurgood Marshall,” James said Thursday on the TNT telecast, referring to the Supreme Court’s first Black justice who had succeeded in having the Court declare racial segregatio­n in public schools as unconstitu­tional. “For us to be able to shed light on that program and shed light on those kids means a lot to me, my foundation and things we do in my hometown. I appreciate us being in a position even to do that. I’m very thankful.”

So are the students.

The NBA invited selected TMCF students to be among the 300 front- line workers and HBCU students to attend Sunday’s game as virtual fans. They will interact with players before the game through a virtual screen. And the students’ letters will be placed at each players’ locker.

The NBA collaborat­ed with HBCU alumni to design a game court that incorporat­es various HBCU icons pertaining to academics, music and campus life. Seven HBCU students will have their artwork displayed in the arena, at the players’ hotel, on the broadcast and across NBA social platforms during AllStar weekend. And though the NBA will host its All- Star Game in a mostly empty arena, the league invited about 1,500 frontline workers, community partners and HBCU alumni, students and faculty to attend in person.

“The NBA’s financial support will definitely help students like me be able to finish school,” said Jaida West, a senior majoring in finance and minoring in accounting at Morgan State. “With the NBA having such a national platform, it will allow aspiring students to know more about HBCUs. They’ll know there are universiti­es and programs that’s really advocating for minorities to finish school and pretty much have an even playing field when it comes to getting job opportunit­ies after graduation.”

Dr. N. Joyce Pain establishe­d the TMCF in 1987 partly because of the NBA’s presence. Former commission­er David Sternwas a cofounder of the Thurgood Marshall Scholarshi­p Fund and TMCF’s board of directors and remained on it until he died in 2020.

“David Stern’s name was not just attached to us. He was engaged,” said Dr. Harry Williams, the president and CEO of TMCF.

The NBA’s partnershi­p with TMCF goes beyond helping HBCU students with scholarshi­ps.

“They’ve been a resource for interns and full- time hires for us at the league office,” said Oris Stuart, the NBA’s chief people and inclusion officer. “We’ve personally benefited from our partnershi­p with Thurgood Marshall with identifyin­g incredible talent. There’s a virtuous circle that exists because of our relationsh­ip with Thurgood.”

The NBA said it has more than 15 league office employees who attended HBCUs. This year, the NBA also included three participan­ts from the TMCF Leadership Institute in its first- ever Future Sales Stars Program, a virtual developmen­t program designed to promote and increase diversity in the ticket sales and corporate partnershi­ps field.

“This is a real partnershi­p with the NBA,” Williams said. “This is not something that just occurred because of the social unrest that’s taking place in our country. The NBA has been with us from the very beginning.”

West and Harbison have not worked for the NBA but have benefited from the NBA’s financial support for TMCF.

West remains on track to graduate in May and plans to begin a full- time job with Boeing this summer after interning with the company the past two summers. Despite receiving a partial athletic scholarshi­p to compete on the women’s track and field team, West became concerned about the amount of student debt she would inherit.

“I was always concerned about if I was going to be able to afford school. That’s how the Thurgood Marshall College Fund came into play. During my junior and senior year, I was going to struggle being able to afford it,” West said. “It really alleviates that stress. I’ve seen students not know if they’d be able to finish school just because of not having enough financial aid.”

After completing bachelor’s and master’s degrees and working various television jobs, Harrison pursued a doctoral degree to increase his opportunit­ies in the education field. To avoid increasing his student debt, Harbison sought support from TMCF. . He has one more year of course work left along with his dissertati­on.

“It’s never too late to pursue your educationa­l dreams and to have an organizati­on like the NBA and TMCF support that,” Harbison said. “I would like to be an example for, ‘ If you think your life is over at a certain point,’ it’s not. Life is a series of short chapters, and I’ve had a string of them. They’ve all been really exciting and fulfilling.”

 ?? TMCF ?? Some of the students who have benefited from the Thurgood Marshall College Fund that the NBA has donated to and worked with through the years.
TMCF Some of the students who have benefited from the Thurgood Marshall College Fund that the NBA has donated to and worked with through the years.

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