As we continued our discussion in class about race and its role in sport, we dissected the history of participation within African Americans and their opportunity, or lack of. We have indeed come a long way since the 1600-1800's where African Americans served as slaves to the new world. Jesse Owens and Jackie Robinson pathed the way for black athletes to make a difference everywhere in every sport, and now in modern day they seem to be the
most active participants (stats show 87% of NBA players, 70% of NFL players are African American) What is often overlooked is not their opportunity to strictly play sports, but their roles in "sport" as a whole. ESPN "Outside the Lines" conducted a recent survey asking participants whether sports provided equal opportunities for African-Americans. Eighty-two percent of those surveyed believe that sports provide equal opportunities for African-Americans, compared with 55 percent who think the same is true in all other sectors of society. While a majority of white sports fans believe African-Americans have equal opportunities, most African-Americans surveyed say blacks have fewer opportunities than whites to become owners of professional sports franchises (71 percent); athletic directors at major, Division I universities (72 percent); major league baseball managers (64 percent); NFL head coaches (62 percent); or head coaches at major Division I schools (58 percent). The article pointed out that there is only one African American majority owner in the four major sports, that being Michael Jordan. Some can even argue that his status as a global icon, and one of the most influential sports figures of our time is the only reason he was given that opportunity. ESPN continues on dissecting the difference in treatment from black athletes down to the players to the coaching staff. While the NFL implimented the Rooney Rule there still is an underwhelming number of black head coaches throughout the league. So you can argue that Blacks are given the "opportunity," but still the numbers pale in comparison to white americans. The main outlying factor is that while African Americans have come light years ahead from where they were 200 years ago, they still face obstacles in the way they are treated from a business standpoint and opportunity to succeed in sport as an industry.