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Sylvester Croom

 
Black Biography: Sylvester Croom

college football coach

Personal Information

Born on September 25, 1954, in Tuscaloosa, AL; married Jearline Croom; children: Jennifer
Education: University of Alabama, BS, history, 1975; University of Alabama, MA, educational administration, 1977.

Career

New Orleans Saints, center, 1975; University of Alabama, assistant coach, 1976-86; Tampa Bay Buccaneers, running backs coach, 1987-90; Indianapolis Colts, running backs coach, 1991; San Diego Chargers, running backs coach, 1992-96; Detroit Lions, offensive coordinator, 1997-2000; Green Bay Packers, running backs coach, 2001-03; Mississippi State University, head coach, 2004-.

Life's Work

When Sylvester Croom Jr. became head football coach at Mississippi State University (MSU) late in 2003, the history books beckoned. Croom was the first African American tapped to lead a Southeastern Conference (SEC) school in its 71-year history. National media swooped down on the story and much was made about the progress of racial equality in the Deep South. Croom wanted none of it. In an oft-quoted statement made at his first MSU press conference, he said loudly, "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." Mississippi's school color would be Croom's focus, no matter what history had to say.

Found Refuge from Racism in Football

Sylvester Croom was born on September 25, 1954, in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, the son of a schoolteacher and a preacher. Segregation and racism were the norm for he and his brother Kelvin. "When you were in your black neighborhood and your black churches, that wasn't a problem," Croom told the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. "When you needed to get some food, stop for gas, that's when it hit you in the face." Despite the injustices, the Croom boys kept their heads high, their anger at bay. It is what their parents Louise and Sylvester Sr. had taught them. "Our motto always was that color doesn't matter, it's the people who matter," Louise Croom told the New York Daily News. "There are bad black people, and there are bad white people." After becoming one of the first black students at Tuscaloosa Junior High, Croom joined the football team. Following a game with an all-white team, Croom was taunted and chased by an angry mob. Teachers and parents from Tuscaloosa, both black and white, surrounded Croom, ushering him to safety.

Football was always Croom's preferred refuge. He and his brother spent hours playing in the backyard and practicing slow motion plays in the living room. Louise recalled to the New York Daily News that she would tell Croom, "You don't need to play football; you might get killed." His standard reply was, "If I die playing football, I die happy." As Croom grew into a 6-foot, 230-pound offensive lineman, racial barriers around him were falling. The year he was born the Supreme Court decision Brown v. the Board of Education made segregation in public schools illegal. When he was ten, the Civil Rights Act of 1964 prohibited discrimination based on race in nearly all areas of public life. Yet in the South, old habits died hard, and even as Croom was integrating local Tuscaloosa schools, the Ku Klux Klan was on the rise. Once, while Croom hosted a meeting of the Tuscaloosa High Key Club at his home, a cross was set on fire not far from his front door.

Became Alabama Champion as Player and Coach

Despite the racial turbulence, Croom stayed focused on football and dreamed of playing for Tuscaloosa's University of Alabama. The Crimson Tide was the top-ranked football program in the nation. It was also all white. The coach at the time was Paul "Bear" Bryant, and to the football-crazed masses of the Deep South, he was both a hero and a legend. After losing miserably to a California team led by a star running back who was black, Bryant decided to integrate his team in 1970. No fuss, no fight, he just did it. Croom joined the Crimson Tide when he became a freshman at Alabama in 1971.

Croom quickly distinguished himself on the gridiron. He played on three SEC championship teams and was a starting center on the 1973 national championship team. During his senior year he was named team captain and was selected a 1974 Kodak All-American player. His devotion to the game caused the Alabama athletic staff to create the Sylvester Croom Jr. Commitment to Excellence Award. It also earned him a spot with the NFL's New Orleans Saints. Just before leaving Alabama Coach Bryant stopped Croom in the hallway. Croom told The Sun Herald, "; He says, 'Croom, if you don't make it in pro football, I want you to come back and coach for us.'"

Croom and his wife--high school sweetheart Jeri--moved to New Orleans with all they owned in the back of a van. They would barely have time to unpack. Croom was cut from the Saints after his first game. Back in Tuscaloosa he enrolled in the master's program for educational administration at Alabama and joined Bryant's coaching team. From 1977 to 1986 Croom coached Alabama's linebackers. During Croom's tenure the Crimson Tide won two national championships and went to ten bowl games.

Spurned by Alabama after Stellar NFL Career

In 1987 Croom joined the NFL again, this time as running backs coach for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. He held that position for three years before taking on the same role with the Indianapolis Colts. In 1992 he joined the San Diego Chargers, again as a running backs coach. He helped drive the Chargers to two conference championships and to the 1995 Super Bowl. In 1997 Croom joined the Detroit Lions as offensive coordinator. There he coached Barry Sanders as Sanders made NFL history rushing for 2,063 yards in a single season. Under Croom, the Lions were second in the league in offense. "[Croom] just got better and better," former Lions coach Bobby Ross told The Sporting News. "He conceptually had the big picture." In 2001 Croom joined the Green Bay Packers as running backs coach and by 2003 the Packers ranked number one in the NFL for rushing.

In 2003, the head coaching spot at the University of Alabama became vacant. With Alabama history plus 17 years in the NFL, Croom seemed perfect for the job. It came down to him and Mike Shula, another former Alabama player. However, only Croom had collegiate coaching experience. He was also a Tuscaloosa native and a favorite for the position. When he was passed over for Shula, who was white, disappointment shrouded Alabama. "It angered more than just African-Americans," an assistant Alabama athletic director told The New York Times. "It went way, way beyond race. People had made some decisions about who would be the best person for the job." Croom gave up hopes of coaching college ball. "I was done," he told New York Daily News. "Because I thought if that was going to ever happen in this conference it would have to be a former player going back to his alma mater. That's what I thought. If you're not willing to hire a guy of color who played for you, coached for you, grew up in your hometown, then surely nobody else is going to give him a chance."

Hired as Head Coach at Mississippi State

Another chance did come, however, when the head coach of Mississippi State University (MSU) resigned. MSU wanted Croom, but he was not so sure. Burned by the Alabama incident, he was also wary of being hired only as an enticement to black football recruits. "After our first interview, I made it very clear that if that's what the expectations were, then they needed to look for another coach," Croom told the Knight-Ridder/Tribune News Service. He continued, "But, during that second interview, they made me feel I was the best coach available. That was important to me."

In December of 2003, Croom signed on as head coach of the MSU Bulldogs, a Division 1-A team. In doing so he became the first African-American coach in the SEC. Though his appointment brought national press to MSU, Croom dodged the spotlight. "I'm going to let everyone else focus on it," he told The Sun Herald. "I really don't have time." He continued, "I've been in that situation, where I'm 'the first,' or 'the only.' Maybe all of that was part of being preparation for this, I don't know. Right now I've got to think about a coaching staff, about these players, about the job at hand."

It was a big job. The Bulldogs had won just eight games in the previous three years. MSU was also awaiting NCAA sanctions in response to recruiting violations committed by Croom's predecessor. However Croom's most pressing problem was discipline--or lack of it. Croom wasted no time laying down ground rules. Athletic director Larry Templeton recalled Croom's first meeting with the team to the Knight-Ridder/Tribune News Service. A few players showed up late, one let his cell phone ring, another was busy writing something down. "Sly went over there and stood in front of him and said, 'Son, when I talk, I expect every eye in this room on my two eyes.' For the next 20 minutes you could hear a pin drop." Before long Croom was checking up on his players' classroom attendance and enforcing early morning runs on players who broke rules. He dropped the team's top rusher from the roster when he refused to shape up. The players got the message real quick. "He was very blunt," a senior player told The Sporting News. "He told you what it is, and what it's going to be."

Began Slow Drive to Revive Bulldogs

Croom made his coaching debut in September of 2004 at a home game against Tulane. The Bulldogs won 28-7 in front of 50,000-plus ecstatic fans, many in t-shirts proclaiming "Maroon is all that matters." Fans left that game feeling that just maybe Croom was the salvation the beleaguered team needed. Reality set in, however, as the Bulldogs lost the next five games, including an embarrassing home loss to a lower division team. Yet, no one had expected a program as wrecked as Mississippi's to turn around in one season. "We're not looking for a quick fix," Croom told The Miami Herald. "We're building a foundation. We're trying to win games now, but how we do things now will establish things for a long time."

The following month Mississippi scored an upset victory over 20th-ranked University of Florida with a 38-31 win. "I've been in a lot of big games in my career, but this was the biggest win," Croom said in Sports Illustrated. The Bulldogs also won their next game, 22-7 over Kentucky. However, the game everyone was waiting for was Mississippi versus Alabama. "To me, it meant the culmination of a lifetime dream," Croom told The New York Times. "I stood on the same sidelines as Coach Bryant although it was the other side of the field. I'll take it any way I can get it." The players were not immune to the excitement. "Coming into the game, everybody was talking about how they wanted to win for Coach Croom," a player added. Though they rushed for a season high 225 yards, the Bulldogs lost 14-30. They also lost the last two games of the season, finishing with a 3-8 record.

Despite the losing season, MSU administration extended Croom's contract through 2008. Templeton said in an article on Mississippi's NBC 4 Web site that the contract recognized "the outstanding job that coach Croom has done in just one year." Perhaps more gratifying to Croom were the grade point averages earned by his players. In December of 2004, MSU football players posted their highest GPAs in three years. "I am pleased with the progress our players have made in the classroom," Croom told the Mississippi State University Athletics Web site. "It is obvious that they are taking pride in doing the right things on and off the field. There is a commitment on their part to becoming the complete person." That is just the sort of commitment Croom has long believed in. "My ultimate goal will involve how the players perform, in class, on the field. I know I'm going to be judged on wins and losses," he told The Sun Herald. "My yardstick, my true yardstick, is seeing these young men being successful. That's what it's all about for me."

Awards

Southeastern Conference, Jacobs Blocking Trophy, 1974; Kodak All-American, 1974.

Further Reading

Periodicals

  • Knight Ridder/Tribune News Service, August 3, 2004.
  • Miami Herald, October 23, 2004.
  • Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, October 22, 2004.
  • New York Daily News, December 8, 2003; September 5, 2004.
  • New York Times, July 18, 2004; November 7, 2004.
  • Sporting News, August 23, 2004.
  • Sports Illustrated, November 1, 2004.
  • Sun Herald (Biloxi, MS), December 2, 2003; December 30, 2003.
On-line
  • "Mississippi State Extends Croom," NBC 4, www.nbc4.tv/cfoot545/4003535/detail.html (December 28, 2004).
  • "MSU Football Team Posts Three-Year Grade-Point High," Mississippi State University Athletics, www.mstateathletics.com/0,5604,1_27_0_64826,00.html (December 28, 2004).

— Candace LaBalle

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Wikipedia: Sylvester Croom
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Sylvester Croom
Replace this image male.svg

Sport Football
Born September 25, 1954 (1954-09-25) (age 55)
Place of birth United States Tuscaloosa, Alabama
Career highlights
Overall 21–38 (10–30)
Coaching stats
College Football DataWarehouse
Awards
2007 SEC Coach of the Year, Liberty Mutual Fan Coach of the Year
Playing career
1972-74
1975
Alabama
New Orleans Saints (NFL)
Position Center
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
2009-

2004-2008

2001-2003

1997-2000

1992-1996

1991

1987-1990

1984-1986

1982-1983

1977-1981

1976
St. Louis Rams
- Running Backs Coach
Mississippi State University
- Head Coach
Green Bay Packers
- Running Backs Coach
Detroit Lions
- Offensive Coordinator
San Diego Chargers
- Running Backs Coach
Indianapolis Colts
- Running Backs Coach
Tampa Bay Buccaneers
- Running Backs Coach
University of Alabama
- Inside Linebackers Coach
University of Alabama
- Outside Linebackers Coach
University of Alabama
- Inside Linebackers Coach
University of Alabama
- Centers Coach
- Graduate Assistant Coach

Sylvester Croom, Jr. (born September 25, 1954) is the former football head coach at Mississippi State University and current running backs coach of the St. Louis Rams. He was 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] On November 29, 2008, he announced his resignation as head coach of Mississippi State's football team.

Contents

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.

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 coached 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 a finalist for the head coach position at the University of Alabama 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, the award was changed back to its original name.[2]

After the 2007 season, during which his team won 8 games, including a Liberty Bowl win, Croom garnered Coach of the Year awards from three organizations. On December 4, 2007, Croom was named coach of the year by the American Football Coaches Association for region two. The AFCA has five regional coaches of the year and announces a national coach of the year each January.[3] That same year, on December 5, Croom was named SEC Coach of the Year twice, once as voted by the other SEC coaches and once as voted by The Associated Press. It was the first time a Mississippi State coach received the AP honor since Charley Shira in 1970 and the first time a Mississippi State coach received the coaches award since Wade Walker in 1957.[4]

After a 4-8 record in 2008, culminating with a 45-0 loss to rival Mississippi, Croom resigned as the coach of the Bulldogs.[5]

On February 2, 2009, St. Louis Rams head coach Steve Spagnuolo announced that he hired Croom to his coaching staff to be the team's running backs coach.[6]

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.

First African-American head football coach in the SEC

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, 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."[1] 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."[2]

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 the poorest civil rights record, 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."[3]

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." [4]

In February 2008 Croom was featured in a half-hour segment of "Say it Loud," ESPN's documentary celebration of Black History Month. In it are featured interviews with Croom along with coaches and players, among others. Relevant to the topic he speaks generally in this documentary on his decision to accept Mississippi State's offer for the head coaching position and on his race and the history of race relations in the region being major contributing factors.

Likewise, in a 2009 interview focusing on his work with the St. Louis Rams, Croom spoke to his relevance to racial and cultural integration, saying "It's just worked out in my career where I've had that opportunity to be the first African-American in a lot of situations." He continued to say that "...it was never anything that was planned. It's just the way this life has gone for me, and the opportunities that I've been blessed with. In retrospect, I do take some pride in it, and some sacrifices that I've had to make along this way. But so does everybody else." [5]

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 candidate 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."[6]

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."[7]

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 and 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." [8]


Head coaching record

Year Team Overall Conference Standing Bowl Coaches# AP°
Mississippi State Bulldogs (SEC) (2004–2008)
2004 Mississippi State 3–8 2-6 6th (West)
2005 Mississippi State 3–8 1-7 T-5th (West)
2006 Mississippi State 3–9 1-7 6th (West)
2007 Mississippi State 8–5 4–4 T-3rd (West) W Liberty
2008 Mississippi State 4–8 2-6 T-4th (West)
Mississippi State: 21–38 10–30
Total: 21–38
      National Championship         Conference Title         Conference Division Title
Indicates BCS bowl game. #Rankings from final Coaches Poll.


Preceded by
Jackie Sherrill
Mississippi State University Head Football Coach
2004-2008
Succeeded by
Dan Mullen

References


 
 
Learn More
Sylvester Croom, Sr.
Croom (name)
Billy Jackson (American football)

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Black Biography. Contemporary Black Biography. Copyright © 2006 by The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
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