Sylvester Croom
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Date of birth | September 25, 1954 | |
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Place of birth | Tuscaloosa, Alabama | |
Sport | Football | |
College | Mississippi State | |
Title | Head Coach | |
Record with Team | 9-25 | |
Overall Record | 9-25 | |
Coaching Stats | College Football DataWarehouse | |
School as a player | ||
1972-74 | Alabama | |
Position | center | |
Coaching positions | ||
2004-Present | Mississippi State |
Sylvester Croom (born September 25, 1954) is the football head coach at Mississippi State University. He is the first African American head football coach in the Southeastern Conference. His father, Sylvester Croom, Sr., was himself an All-American football player at Alabama A&M, later the team chaplain at the University of Alabama, and has been recognized posthumously by that school as one of the state's 40 pioneers of civil rights.[1]
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[edit] Playing career
Croom, a native of Tuscaloosa, Alabama, starred at Tuscaloosa High School as a linebacker and tight end. He then played those same positions before settling in at center for Paul "Bear" Bryant at the University of Alabama, where in 1974 he was a senior captain, earned the Jacobs Blocking Trophy, and like his father years earlier earned Kodak All-American honors. During his playing career there, Alabama garnered three SEC championships from 1972 to 1974 and a national title in 1973.
He played one season in the National Football League for the New Orleans Saints before returning to the University of Alabama to begin his coaching career.
[edit] Coaching career
Before coaching at Mississippi State, Croom was an assistant at Alabama for 11 seasons, one as a graduate assistant coach and ten more variably as inside and outside linebackers coach. During this eleven-year period on the Alabama staff Croom participated in ten bowl games, two national championships in 1978 and 1979, and he tutored four eventual NFL first-round draft picks, including Cornelius Bennett and Derrick Thomas.
He then spent 17 years in the professional ranks as running backs coach at Tampa Bay, Indianapolis, San Diego, and Green Bay. Before going to Green Bay he served as offensive coordinator for Detroit from 1997-2000, and during his tenure in San Diego was on the Chargers' staff for Super Bowl XXIX.
He was in the running for the position of Alabama head coach in 2003, but the job ultimately went to Mike Shula. In March 2004, Alabama's Sylvester Croom Commitment to Excellence Award, given annually for 16 years to outstanding players, was changed to the Bart Starr Commitment to Excellence Award, reportedly at Shula's request. The award has since been changed back and has Croom's name attached. Shula originally changed the award because he did not want an award named for a rival coach. After complaints by alumni and fans,[2] the award was changed back to its original name.
[edit] Record
Responses to Croom's record have varied. Among active SEC coaches, his three wins against teams with winning records leads only Mississippi's Ed Orgeron (who has 1), and his overall record leads only Vanderbilt's Bobby Johnson. Publically he has enjoyed the support of Mississippi State's athletic director Larry Templeton and other administrators with oversight of the football program. In an October 2006 interview with website al.com, Templeton said of Croom that he "is the most positive thing that has happened in our athletic department since I took this job 20 years ago" and of the poor record that when Croom was initially hired (8-21 when that interview was conducted), "I felt sure we were hiring the right man at the right time. I'm standing here to tell you again that Sylvester Croom is the right man for the job, and I'm more convinced now than ever."[3] MSU's new University President Gen. Robert H. "Doc" Foglesong has also publically supported Croom. Croom was able to build on that confidence by signing the #27 nationally ranked recruiting class for 2007.
[edit] Education
Croom earned a Bachelor of Science degree in history with a minor in biology from the University of Alabama in 1975 at the age of twenty and while a graduate student and coach there earned a master's degree in educational administration in 1977
[edit] First African-American head football coach in the SEC
[edit] Responses
Croom has consistently downplayed the personal significance of his status as the first African-American to be the head coach of an SEC football team. A characteristic response has been that while he is proud of his African-American heritage, the most important part for him is "the head coach part" and the ability to pursue a dream he has held for all of his adult life,[4] stating notably at a press conference upon his acceptance of the position "I am the first African-American coach in the SEC, but there ain't but one color that matters here, and that color is maroon."[5] Elsewhere, in an interview shortly before his first season as a head coach, when asked if as the first African-American coach in the SEC he considered himself "a trailblazer," Croom responded "I'm just a guy trying to do the best job he can. It just happens that the timing of my hiring puts me in that position. I don't see myself that way. If other people perceive that, so be it. I'm just trying to do the best I can here."[6]
However, the initial response to his hiring was lauded by many as a moment of relative cultural significance. An article published in USA Today on the day that Croom was hired listed a few responses from members of the political, cultural, and athletic communities. In it Julian Bond, chairman of the NAACP, noting that the hire was in Mississippi, a state often regarded as having one of the poorest civil rights records, said that "For Mississippi State to place the fortunes of its team in black hands is more than welcome, however long it has taken." In the same article Bennie Thompson, the lone black member of Mississippi's U.S. congressional delegation, said that the hiring "speaks well of Mississippi State. Mississippi State alumni and friends are more concerned about winning than the color of the coach. There's still a lot of work to be done by other schools."[7]
On February 12, 2007 in observance of Black History Month President George W. Bush, at a gathering of African-American leaders and dignitaries where Croom was present, recognized the efforts and achievements of NFL football coaches Tony Dungy and Lovie Smith, both acquaintances of Croom and a friend in Dungy's case. The President went on to state that he was "proud to be [there] with another football coach who deserves a lot of credit, Sylvester Croom, who is the head football coach from Mississippi State University. His achievement is the first African American coach in the Southeastern Football League -- Southeastern Conference. He was picked because he's a strong leader and a fine man. And I thank you for blazing trails." [8]
[edit] Position at Alabama
Croom's own position on African-American coaches in college football has not always been so apolitical, however. In an interview with Black Athlete Sports Network in July, 2003, after losing out to Mike Shula in the head coach vacancy for the University of Alabama Croom speculated that race was more of a factor in that hiring process than University of Alabama athletic director Mal Moore let on and that he lost the job because of it. "I have a real problem there," he said. "A lot of those [SEC] schools, guys are good enough to play for them, good enough to be assistant coaches and not good enough to be in the positions of decision making and the positions of high financial reward. And they're qualified." In that same interview with Black Athlete Sports Croom acknowledged that he "had great support from the former players and the fans there and even some people within the administration," but that "Somewhere in the final process, somebody made another decision." His initial impression of the interview with Alabama was that it was fair and was so positive that he considered himself to be the lead cadidate afterwards, which was why he was so surprised when the offer was given to Shula, a coach with over ten fewer years of coaching experience. Afterwards the Rev. Jesse Jackson got involved, calling for an investigation into the hiring practices at Alabama and all SEC schools. Croom's response to Jackson's intervention was that "Rev. Jackson did his job. Because quite often, inside the business you can't draw attention to things. He is a voice for a great mass, for a lot of people who don't have a voice." On the question of Croom's timing in his response to this issue being given only after Jackson's call for investigation, he continued by saying that "in this particular case, I felt I could speak for myself. I chose not to say anything at that particular time because there was just too much emotion."[9]
[edit] Legacy of segregation
Elsewhere Croom has treated his status as the first African-American head football coach in the SEC with the complexity he sees befitting the situation of a person so deeply connected to the American South. In a 2004 interview with The Washington Post Croom said of his situation in Mississippi that "There's much more at stake here than football. The fact that I'm African American, that I'm the State football coach -- well, I think it will have a positive impact on race relations in the state of Mississippi, and how the rest of the country views Mississippi. The place has changed a great deal. I don't know how many people outside here understand that. But they're about to find out."[10] A 2003 article from the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel recalls his experiences of integration as a middle-schooler in Tuscaloosa, the near-lynching of his father years before in a case of mistaken identity, and segregated restrooms, an institution which he said “bothered me [then], and it still does to this day.” In that article and elsewhere like the article in the Washington Post Croom and his family have communicated a cultural ad historical connection to the South and an insistence that genuine progress has been made in race relations there. His younger brother Kelvin Croom, a pastor and assistant principal of Paul Bryant High School in Tuscaloosa, said in the Journal Sentinel interview of their experiences in the segregated South that "We chose not to be intimidated. We chose to be motivated and hoped that one day we would make a difference. And we have made a difference, because the crosses have been taken down and the ropes have been put away." [11]
[edit] Head coaching record
Team | Year | Wins | Losses | Average |
---|---|---|---|---|
Mississippi State | 2004 | 3 | 8 | .273 |
Mississippi State | 2005 | 3 | 8 | .273 |
Mississippi State | 2006 | 3 | 9 | .250 |
Total | 3 years | 9 | 25 | .265 |
Preceded by Jackie Sherrill |
Mississippi State University Head Football Coach 2004–present |
Succeeded by Current |
[edit] References
- Sylvester Croom - Head Football Coach. Retrieved on 2005-12-14.
- Bama's decision to erase Croom stinks.
- Croom walking pioneer's path at Mississippi State.
Current Head Football Coaches of the Southeastern Conference |
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Rich Brooks (Kentucky) | Sylvester Croom (Mississippi State) | Phillip Fulmer (Tennessee) | Bobby Johnson (Vanderbilt) | Urban Meyer (Florida) | Les Miles (LSU) | Houston Nutt (Arkansas) | Ed Orgeron (Ole Miss) | Mark Richt (Georgia) | Nick Saban (Alabama) | Steve Spurrier (South Carolina) | Tommy Tuberville (Auburn) | |
Persondata | |
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NAME | Croom, Sylvester |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | Croom, Sly |
SHORT DESCRIPTION | American football coach |
DATE OF BIRTH | September 25, 1954 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Tuscaloosa, Alabama, United States of America |
DATE OF DEATH | |
PLACE OF DEATH |