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For more than a quarter of century, the University of Maryland
Eastern Shore (UMES) was recognized as a football powerhouse among
Historical Black Colleges and Universities. From 1946 to 1970, UMES
had a combine d win-loss record of 139 wins, 36 losses and 7 ties, or
an outstanding 76.4 percent winning percentage. Therefore, the
decision to discontinue football in 1980 was a particularly painful
one for the University and its Alumni.
The decision to discontinue football as an intercollegiate
sport at UMES has generated more interest than any other single issue
in the 116-year history of the University. No other single issue has
posed such an immediate threat to the disenfranchisement of UMES from
its varied constituencies. Reinstatement of intercollegiate football
as UMES would be the catalyst needed to unify the whole UMES
community. There have been many failed attempts to reinstate
intercollegiate football at UMES.
The Pre-1970 Era
No one person was more instrumental in UMES’s success than
Vernon “Skip” McCain. The history of UMES’s football program is
inextricably linked to Coach McCain’s tenure. A profile of Coach
McCain can be found in t he appendix. During his tenure Coach McCain
had a phenomenon success record of 101 wins, 16 losses and 5 ties.
Those who knew him say Coach McCain was the embodiment of the
teacher-coach. From 1948 to 1963, he was the most successful coach in
the country. Coach McCain, himself a student of the game, did miss
many coaching clinics during his tenure. In 1950, he was selected
“Coach of the Year” by the Pigskin Club of Washington. Coach McCain’s
dedication to understanding the deeper qualities and disciplines of
the game laid the foundation for what many have called the “ Golden
Years of Hawk Athletes.”
In addition to being head football coach, Coach McCain was also
the head basketball coach and athletic director. As a result, Coach
McCain had almost total control over the UMES athletic budget and pool
of athletic talent. Further, during this period of time UMES’s
president was John T. Williams. President Williams was an avid
football fan and provided the type of supportive leadership necessary
to build a winning program.
As a result, during the period from 1946 to 1970, over twenty
(20) UMES student- athletes went on to pursue professional careers in
the National Football League. In addition, several others went on to
successful care ers in the Continental and Canadian Football Leagues.
The most notable of these athlete s is Art Shell, eight (8) time
Pro-Bowl player, NFL Hall of Fame Player, and the first African
American head coach of the modern era of professional football with
the Los Angeles Raiders (now the Oakland Raiders).
Further, UMES holds the distinction of having more players play
in a Super Bowl Championship game than any other single institution .
In the 1968 game between the New York Jets and the Baltimore Colts
(now the Indianapolis Colts), UMES was represented by five (5) of its
former student-athletes: Earl Christy (1961-1964), Johnny Sample
(1954-1957), Emerson Boozer (1962-1965), Charles Stukes (1963-1967),
and James Duncan (1968-1971).
The Post-1970 Era
From 1971 to 1979, the retirement and subsequent death of
President Williams combined with: escalating costs, poor management,
lack of leadership, and a shared vision between the administration and
alumni laid the ground work for the demise of this once storied
program. Not only was this a period of great trial a nd tribulation
for the football program, but for the University as a whole. This was
a time when the very existence of UMES was being debated by many state
politicians, school administrators, faculty, staff and representatives
of the local community, many of whom did not hold a favorable view of
UMES.
The lack of leadership coupled with aggressive recruiting of
“quality” African American athletes by “majority” institutions was too
much to overcome. In conjunction with this problem and a lack of
perceived importance of athletics in general and football in
particular, a number of poor decisions were made by personnel
entrusted to run the program’s day-to-day operations. But even doing
this period of trials, the program was not without its successes.
From 1971 to 1979, 12 Hawks received All Mid-Eastern Athletic
Conference honors and several others went on to successful careers in
the NFL. On 01/08/80, after a year of in- depth review and discussion,
Dr. William P. Hytche, Chancellor of UMES officially announced the
suspension of intercollegiate football at UMES. The reasons cited for
discontinuing the program were spiraling inflation costs and the cost
of compliance with Title IX of the Education Act.
Lessons Learned
Central to determining whether or not football can be viable at
UMES is developing a clear understanding what factors govern the
ultimate success of a program. Our research indicates that there are
four (4) key elements need ed to successfully manage a “winning”
intercollegiate football program:
• UMES’s varied constituencies must unite and develop a shared
vision for the program.
• UMES’s alumni must be willing to commit itself to t he
development and implementation of a significant and ongoing
fundraising and endowment building effort.
• UMES’s athletic department’s organizational structure must be
modified to include an assistant athletic director for football ,
whose primary duties would be: developing a quality academic
enhancement program, complying with NCAA rules, fundraising and acting
as a liaison between UMES’s varied constituencies.
• And probably most importantly, the leadership of the
University of Maryland System Board of Regents and UMES must help to
foster the type of supportive environment needed to develop and
maintain a “winning tradition.”
In today’s environment there are numerous obstacles that tend to
limit the ability of small institutions, particularly Historical Black
Institutions, to operate and manage successful intercollegiate
football programs. First and foremost, there is the need to develop a
clear and coherent strategy for the program and the commitment
necessary resources to implement that strategy.
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