Tuesday, September 9, 2008

DON HASKINS, AN AMERICAN HERO

When I was asked by Brian Seidman of NewSouth Books to share my feelings about the recent passing of Don Haskins, my first thoughts were that Coach Haskins, long-time basketball coach at the University of Texas at El Paso (known at Texas Western for may years),was a true American hero. He was well know for establishing a stellar coaching record of 719 wins and 354 losses, winning a NCAA National Basketball Championship, and being inducted into the NCAA Basketball Coaches' Hall of Fame.

Despite the significance of these accomplishments, I think that Haskins' greatest achievement was having the courage to start five black players at a predominately white insitution during the 1965-66 basketball season. Many college (especially in the South) had not even integrated their athletic programs at this time, much less considered starting five black players. For many of the schools already integrated, there seemed to be an unwritten rule related to how many black players should be permitted to start a gme. The rule was that you should not start more than "three black players at home and four on the road." It was in this culture that Coach Haskins chose to do the right thing and start his best five players, regardless of skin color. In today's culture this does not seem like a big deal but in the 1960s it was a radical decision.

Coach Haskins' decision not only proved to be the right one on the court where his Texas Western squad defeated the all white University of Kentucky team coached by the legendary Adolf Rupp for the national championship, but it also proved to be one of the most socially meaningful decisions in the history of sports. The victory drew attention to the egregious racially exclusionary policies practiced in the world of college athletics and changed the face of the recruitment of black athletes across the nation.

Coach Haskins was a man of exceptional courage and integrity and will be greatly missed.