In the 1960s, a college football protest ended with 14 black players kicked off the team
Following the stunning resignation of University of Missouri president Tim Wolfe, and the support of head football coach Gary Pinkel for his players who joined the student protest against racism at the school, it appears that changes to the culture at Missouri and other academic institutions may be coming.
It wasn’t too long ago, however, that a protest led by black football players at a public university led to a markedly different result.
In 1969, 14 black players at the University of Wyoming attempted to show solidarity with a protest against the treatment of African-Americans in the United States. In response, the players were immediately kicked off their team by an unsupportive coach, with thousands of Wyoming fans taking the side of the university and the football program instead of the student-athletes.
High-profile protests in sports were common in America in the late 1960s. Most famously, at the 1968 Olympics in Mexico City, black American sprinters John Carlos and Tommie Smith wore black gloves and raised their fists in the “Black power salute” on the medal stand while the Star-Spangled Banner played. Also in 1968, San Jose State football players boycotted a game against Brigham Young University for the Mormon church’s racial policies, especially a policy that disallowed Black clergy. That spring, the San Jose State basketball team boycotted BYU as well. These protests made headlines.
In 1969, a year after SJSU’s protests against BYU, the University of Wyoming football team opened the season 4-0. The team had visions of an undefeated season. Its hurdle for a fifth victory: conference rival BYU.
A week before the BYU game, a black doctoral student at Wyoming named Willie Black learned of the Mormon church’s policy toward black clergy. He decided to hold a campus-wide protest on that Wednesday. Black had invited African-American athletes to participate in the protest; players on the Wyoming football team could not join, however, because of a policy against taking part in demonstrations put in place by Coach Lloyd Eaton.
14 football players agreed to discuss the matter with the coach in his office that Friday. The meeting led to 14 instantaneous dismissals. Via Wyoming History:
About 9:15 a.m. on Friday, the 14 black players gathered at Washakie Center in the dormitory complex. They donned black armbands and walked to Memorial Fieldhouse where Eaton had his office, hoping to persuade the coach to allow them to show some solidarity with the BSA call for a protest.
Seeing them together, wearing armbands, Eaton led them into the upper seating area of the fieldhouse and, according to the players, immediately told them that they were all off the team. After that, according to the wife of a faculty member who was walking on the fieldhouse floor below, the coach insulted the players in an angry manner, which further polarized the situation.
The dismissed players became known nationally as the Black 14. The resulting lawsuit made its way to federal court, where Eaton testified that he told his players “that if the program at Wyoming was not satisfactory then perhaps they had better think about going to Morgan State or Grambling (State).” Morgan State and Grambling State are historically black colleges, and were football powers at the time.
The players cleared out their lockers and soon met with University President William Carlson, student leadership, and athletic director Red Jacoby. Though Coach Eaton was invited, he did not appear. The players also met with the school board of trustees and Governor Stanley K. Hathaway. The school would not budge. In a statement released after 3 a.m. Saturday morning, the board said, the students would “not play in today’s game or any during the balance of the season,” and added: “The dismissals result from a violation of a football coaching rule Friday morning.”