TOWSON, Md. - As the highlight of the
first Doc Minnegan Day at Towson University, Herman Boone, one of the most
legendary leaders of the last 50 years, was the featured guest speaker.
He spoke to more than
600 Tiger student-athletes and coaches in the Ballroom at the West Village on
Tuesday evening.
The inspiration for the
popular movie, “Remember the Titans,” Herman Boone was the head football coach at
T.C. Williams High School in northern Virginia in 1971. An African-American, he
was thrust into the middle of a turbulent time when desegregation became the
law in Virginia.
As a result, three segregated
high schools were merged into one, T.C. Williams High School.
“It was a very stressful
time in the history of our nation,” Coach Boone recalled. “We were fighting a
very unpopular war in Vietnam, there were demonstrations everywhere, the
Pentagon Papers were another controversy and there were those tragic shootings
at Kent State.
“Nobody was happy with
the desegregation that was going on,” he said. “I was named as the head coach
of a team where the players did not like each other – and it wasn't just
racial. They were also heated rivals.”
Coach Boone recounted how
things were back then. He says, “Blacks and whites lived in different worlds.
Now, the superintendent wanted me to get them to like each other. I thought he
was out of his mind.”
When Coach Boone held
his first team meeting, everyone sat apart. Players and coaches sat separately
by race.
Then the coach told
them, “I cannot make you like each other but I can make you respect each other.
If anyone has a problem playing on an integrated team, don't come back.”
When the team loaded on
two buses to go away for two weeks of pre-season practice, Coach Boone wasn't
surprised to see all the whites on one bus and all the blacks on the other bus.
He recalls, “I had
everyone get off those buses and re-load. I think everyone on the team was
cursing me under their breath.”
At the two-week camp which
was held in Pennsylvania, things weren't going well until the coach packed his
team into buses and took them to Gettysburg, the scene of the most famous
battle of the Civil War.
In recalling one of the
most famous scenes from the movie, Coach Boone reveals that the movie wasn't
entirely accurate. He said, “In the movie, they had me lead the team on a long
run to Gettysburg. That didn't happen. It wouldn't have a smart thing for me to
lead the team on a long run. We took the buses.”
However, the scene at
Gettysburg actually happened and it was the place where Coach Boone finally
brought his team together.
He told them, “This is
where they fought the battle of Gettysburg. Fifty thousand men died right here
on this field, fighting the same fight that we are still fighting among
ourselves today. This green field right here, painted red, bubblin' with the
blood of young boys. Smoke and hot lead pouring right through their bodies.
Listen to their souls, men. I killed my brother with malice in my heart. Hatred
destroyed my family. You listen, and you take a lesson from the dead. If we
don't come together right now on this hallowed ground, we too will be
destroyed, just like they were. I don't care if you like each other or not, but
you will respect each other. And maybe we'll learn to play this game like men.”
From that point on, his
players started trusting each other. Coach Boone advised them, “Hatred and
prejudice are built out of fear. Everyone deserves respect and respect builds
trust. Trust builds teams.”
Coach Boone realized
that his team was coming together when he saw African-American players dancing
on the bus to country and western music.
They returned to
Alexandria as a football team and they won the Virginia state championship.
“I must admit that it
makes me proud that the movie continues to be a motivational force for the
military and almost every team that has seen it,” Coach Boone added.
Coach Boone refers to
his T.C. Williams High School team as the first example of diversity. He said, “In
order to succeed, we had to celebrate our differences. So many of those young
men went on to enjoy very successful lives and I am so proud of them.”
The 77-year old coach
concluded by telling the Towson University student-athletes and coaches that
everyone has to deal with adversity and that he had his adversity in 1971.
'The world is waiting
for your talents,” he added. “Just like Doc Minnegan taught others here at
Towson, the challenge is for you to overcome adversity and excel.”