Current:Home > StocksThe NFL draft happening in Detroit is an important moment in league history. Here's why. -Streamline Finance
The NFL draft happening in Detroit is an important moment in league history. Here's why.
View
Date:2025-04-14 08:02:34
The NFL draft is in Detroit this week, and I don't think people fully understand the importance of this moment. What it means historically and racially. Let me explain.
In the book "When Lions Were Kings: The Detroit Lions and the Fabulous Fifties," author Richard Bak wrote this about 1950s Detroit:
"Although Detroit's Black population would pass 400,000 during the 1950s, until late in the decade there was no Black representation on city council, there were no Blacks playing for the Detroit Tigers, and policemen patrolled the streets in segregated squad cars. Detroit was the home of the modern labor movement and the membership of the United Auto Workers was one-quarter Black, yet there still wasn't a single minority on the UAW's executive board. When a local firebrand named Coleman Young Jr. visited the offices of The Detroit News, every reporter, editor, printer, and secretary he encountered was white.
"'I did stumble upon a couple of Black men mopping the floor in the lobby,'" the future mayor recalled in his autobiography, "'and when I asked how many Blacks worked in the building, they said, 'You're looking at 'em.'"
To fix roster woes, Patriots counting on new approach in first post-Bill Belichick NFL draft
NFL DRAFT HUB: Latest NFL Draft mock drafts, news, live picks, grades and analysis.
Bak also wrote: "Intentionally or not, during the 1950s the Lions were a microcosm of the segregated Motor City. Between 1950 and 1957, there never was more than one Black on the roster at any given time. For most of that period, there were none. During a six-season stretch, from 1951 through 1956, the Lions fielded just two Black players − defensive linemen Harold Turner and Walter Jenkins − who appeared in a total of five regular-season games between them.
"Bill Matney, Russ Cowans, and other members of the Black press considered the Lions a historically racist organization. Just how fair that characterization was remains open to debate. It was true that the championship squads of 1952 and 1953 didn't have a single Black face in the huddle..."
There was also just one Black player on the 1957 championship team. His name was John Henry Johnson and he'd later be inducted into the Hall of Fame.
Of course none of this is utterly shocking. The disgrace of segregation happened in many American cities. This country has long been soaked in hatred (and in some ways it still is). It's nonetheless remarkable to look back at how far we've come. The Lions also have a unique place in this history because of one remarkable fact.
Bak writes that the two championship teams in 1952 and 1953 didn't have a Black player on them "making the Lions the last team to win an NFL title with an all-white roster."
Over 70 years later, look at Detroit now. The city, the Lions and the NFL draft are so remarkably different. There was a Black mayor. The Tigers are integrated. There have been two Black presidents of the UAW. The Detroit News is no longer all white. The police are no longer segregated.
Now, the best player in Lions history, Barry Sanders, is Black. Receiver Amon-Ra St. Brown, whose father named his children with African and Egyptian names, is immensely popular and is Black. The team's general manager, Brad Holmes, is Black. Many of the players are.
Overall, the second most important event of the NFL calendar is the draft and it's in Detroit. The top overall draft pick is expected to be USC's Caleb Williams, who is Black.
The city, the team, the league, the draft ... all mostly shunned Black people in the past. Each of those entities is super-duper Black. Yes, definitely, we've come a long way. We've traversed the length of several galaxies.
It took three-quarters of a century to reach this point.
There are still disgusting things said about the city and some of the people that inhabit it, but the city has a glow that no one can take away. It started after the team won its first playoff game in 32 years by beating the Los Angeles Rams this past season.
The city ... the Lions ... the draft ... so much has changed. For the better.
veryGood! (851)
Related
- Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
- Are banks, post offices, FedEx, UPS open on MLK Day 2024? Is mail delivered? What to know
- Leon Wildes, immigration lawyer who fought to prevent John Lennon’s deportation, dead at age 90
- Martin Luther King is not your mascot
- Most popular books of the week: See what topped USA TODAY's bestselling books list
- Tisa Farrow, 1970s actress who became a nurse, dies at 72, sister Mia Farrow says
- A Texas woman was driven off her land by a racist mob in 1939. More than eight decades later, she owns it again.
- How Wealthy Corporations Use Investment Agreements to Extract Millions From Developing Countries
- Rylee Arnold Shares a Long
- Martin Luther King is not your mascot
Ranking
- A Georgia governor’s latest work after politics: a children’s book on his cats ‘Veto’ and ‘Bill’
- Beverly Johnson reveals she married Brian Maillian in a secret Las Vegas ceremony
- Louisiana woman grew a cabbage the size of a small child, setting record for massive produce
- UN sets December deadline for its peacekeepers in Congo to completely withdraw
- Audit: California risked millions in homelessness funds due to poor anti-fraud protections
- A royal first: Australia celebrates Princess Mary’s historic rise to be queen consort in Denmark
- As shutdown looms, congressional leaders ready stopgap bill to extend government funding to March
- As the auto industry pivots to EVs, product tester Consumer Reports learns to adjust
Recommendation
US Open player compensation rises to a record $65 million, with singles champs getting $3.6 million
Iowa principal who risked his life to protect students during a high school shooting has died
Houthis vow to keep attacking ships in Red Sea after U.S., U.K. strikes target their weapons in Yemen
Hall of Fame NFL coach Tony Dungy says Taylor Swift is part of why fans are 'disenchanted'
Video shows dog chewing cellphone battery pack, igniting fire in Oklahoma home
Asia Cup holds moment’s silence for Israel-Gaza war victims ahead of Palestinian team’s game
Chiefs-Dolphins could approach NFL record for coldest game. Bills-Steelers postponed due to snow
4th person dies following Kodak Center crash on New Year's Day in Rochester, New York