On Tuesday, the NAACP called for Black athletes and their families to athletically and financially boycott Southern-based universities in response to the Supreme Court’s gutting of the Voting Rights Act.

The announcement followed calls on social media from individuals including former DNC Chair Jaime Harrison, Texas U.S. Representative Marc Veasy, actor Wendell Pierce, and in a since-deleted tweet, Princeton Professor Eddie Glaude, who all echoed the sentiment exploding across the various platforms.

The notion of a Black athlete boycott of these programs was met with swift backlash, even before the NAACP released its “Out of Bounds” campaign. Responding only to loosely organized conversations on X, CNN’s Laura Coates and sportswriter L.Z. Granderson dismissed the idea flat out, claiming that “children” should not be called to fix adult problems, and Black athletes shouldn’t be called upon to sacrifice what “grown folks” won’t.

Though ubiquitous, these common objections— that teenagers are too young, sacrificing NIL isn’t fair, and adults should set precedent— are both ahistorical and rooted in outdated assumptions about the structure of modern college football.

History reveals that high school and college students have always been at the center of the fight for civil rights. Be it gun control, desegregation, or protesting wars and apartheid, young people have a long and documented history of protest. Collegiate football players are not absent from this history. Black football players at WyomingOregon StateIndianaIowaWashington, and Syracuse all organized practice boycotts over racist incidents during the Black Power era.

As recently as 2020, Kylin Hill, an SEC running back at Mississippi State, directly demanded that Mississippi Governor Tate Reeves remove the confederate emblem from the state flag, or else he would not play football in Mississippi. Eight days after Hill’s announcement, state lawmakers adopted a new flag.

In 2015, the University of Missouri football team threatened to boycott an upcoming game unless Chancellor Tim Wolfe, who had ignored racist incidents on campus, resigned. The days-long hunger strike and weeks-long protests by Black students weren’t enough; but after the SEC football team leveraged its position of power, Wolfe resigned within 38 hours.

Were these athletes too young to be involved in civil disobedience?

College-bound freshmen and their teammates are voting, draft-eligible and working-aged citizens, so we cannot expect them to be civically engaged but infantilize them when opportunities to act arise. And prized recruits are not acting alone. They rely on trusted adults—parents, coaches, and mentors—who bear the responsibility to shape not just great athletes but conscientious citizens. [JA1] 

Another objection to these calls for a boycott is that it asks athletes to sacrifice too much. While seemingly reasonable at first, it relies on a fundamental misunderstanding of the supply and demand of elite football talent. Top programs across conferences perform a yearly scramble for a relatively small pool of elite [JA2] players in the newest class, so it’s likely these recruits have offers outside of the eight states identified by the NAACP.

And what’s true for scholarships is also true for NIL deals.

While the SEC and Big 10 dominate in revenue, there’s no evidence to suggest that SEC schools, on average, offer more NIL than Big 10 schools. Both conferences have powerhouse and mid-tier NIL collectives offering comparable deals to elite recruits. Considering that  the last three national champions hail from the Big 10 (Indiana, Ohio State and Michigan, respectively), and no SEC team has even reached the title game in that span, this demonstrates a player can maximize NIL while bypassing schools in the South. Furthermore, the bulk of Power 4 NIL deals, are valued in the low six-figures, which are easily within the reach of ACC and Big 12 schools.

The last objection to the boycott is the charge that adults must act first and set an example. Again, this makes sense on the surface, but it lacks any analysis of power and history.  

Continue reading over at First and Pen.

"First And Pen” was created to inform, inspire and connect through voices of color in sports, and is the sports media vertical of The Khanate Group. Our Mission: “We are first to the field and last to leave it, amplifying local sports stories from voices of color to the national conscience.”

Exit mobile version