The
high school football coach portrayed by Academy Award-winning actor
Denzel Washington in the film "Remember the Titans" will
share his inspirational story at 7 p.m. on Feb. 6 in the Derryberry
Hall Auditorium.
Herman Boone, the former coach of T.C. Williams
High School in Alexandria, Va., who helped his newly integrated
team overcome racial tensions to win the 1971 state football championship,
will speak about his lessons in diversity as a part of our Black
History Month activities.
“The beauty of Herman and of what he did
was that it was sort of unconscious,” says screenwriter Gregory
Allen Howard in a Washington Post interview.
At the time Boone took over as head football coach
at T.C. Williams, if you asked him if he was trying to make a point
about diversity to the students who played on his team, Howard says,
he would have answered, “No, I just want to win football games.”
The team — like the community — was
anything but united in 1971, however, because the recent consolidation
of three schools and integration had resulted in racial strain and
the persistence of old rivalries.
In a move many members of the white community
viewed simply as a gesture of goodwill to the black community, Boone
was selected as the new head coach instead of local favorite Bill
Yoast, who’d successfully coached the white Hammond High football
team.
“He had to get the players to get along
to win football games,” Howard says. “And it worked
for just that reason — because it wasn’t self-conscious.
He did something quite beyond what even he realized.”
Boone and Yoast, in fact, worked to put aside
their own prejudices to reach a remarkable solidarity that set an
example for their players and the community.
With a unified team whose common vision was to
respect each other as well as to win football games, the Titans
compiled a 13-0 season record, became one of the best high school
football teams in Virginia and won the state championship that year.
Co-sponsored by Minority Affairs, Athletics and
University Programming Council, Boone’s presentation is a
Center Stage event that is free and open to the public.
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