Jump to content

Black History Month: The sporting heroes who changed our lives - Sports News - InviteHawk - Your Only Source for Free Torrent Invites

Buy, Sell, Trade or Find Free Torrent Invites for Private Torrent Trackers Such As redacted, blutopia, losslessclub, femdomcult, filelist, Chdbits, Uhdbits, empornium, iptorrents, hdbits, gazellegames, animebytes, privatehd, myspleen, torrentleech, morethantv, bibliotik, alpharatio, blady, passthepopcorn, brokenstones, pornbay, cgpeers, cinemageddon, broadcasthenet, learnbits, torrentseeds, beyondhd, cinemaz, u2.dmhy, Karagarga, PTerclub, Nyaa.si, Polishtracker etc.

Black History Month: The sporting heroes who changed our lives


Animous
 Share

Recommended Posts

Who is your black sporting hero? Who is the sportsperson who first meant everything to you, brought you boundless joy, conquered the world and changed your life in the process?

To kick off Black History Month, we asked BBC Sport staff who their personal hero is, who helped shape their identity, who made them fall in love with sport.

Ian Wright - by Nesta McGregor

Wright scored 185 goals for Arsenal, nine for England, and enjoyed spells at six other clubs

As a child, Ian Wright had a profound impact on me. As an adult, nothing has changed.

Back then it was the gold tooth, the Bogle dance goal celebration and the cocksure way he strolled around a pitch. Today it's the way he continues to use his voice to speak out against all forms of discrimination.

Arsenal legend. England international. Unashamedly black.

He looked, sounded and behaved like people I was surrounded by growing up in south-east London. If Ian could make it, so could any of us. Although my dreams of becoming a professional footballer didn't pan out (Dulwich Hamlet's reserve team is the closest I got), now being employed to report on the sport isn't a bad back-up.

My life and Wrighty's life have some uncanny parallels. I share the same name with his mother (yes, Nesta) and I played in the same youth team as his son Shaun Wright-Phillips. As a child I played for Ten Em Bee FC - the same team where Wrighty got his start.

My grandmother always used to say don't place flowers on her grave, she wanted them while she was alive so she could smell them. So Wrighty - thank you - here's a big bunch of whatever your favourite blossoms are - take a sniff!

Watch Ian Wright: Home Truths on BBC iPlayer

Simone Biles - by Olivia Portas

Biles is a four-time Olympic gymnastics champion and 19-time world champion

This summer, Simone Biles reminded me, and many others like me, that it is OK to choose yourself.

Athletes today are not just athletes. They can be public speakers, political activists or role models and they use their platform to raise awareness, but on top of that they are humans.

Simone demonstrated that at the Tokyo Olympics, when she decided to pull out of the gymnastics team final and focus on her mental health.

"We have to protect our minds and our bodies and not just go out and do what the world wants us to do," she said.

This reminded me that life is short and that every decision we make to do, or not do, something is precious. Do what makes you happy.

Black History Month: The sportswomen you should know more about

Myrtis Dightman - by Califia Davis

Dightman is part of a proud, but not always visible, history of black cowboys in the USA, which protestors drew attention to on a march in honour of George Floyd in Texas in 2020

As a former horse girl who spent some of my formative years barrel racing, I always felt shut out of rodeo. Myrtis Dightman showed me there is space in rodeo for me.

The first black cowboy to compete at the National Finals Rodeo in 1964, he qualified a further six times after initially being told the only way he could ever compete is if he were white. Bull riding is badass - I can't think of any other event that crams so much drama in to eight seconds - but not as badass as breaking down barriers in a sport everyone associates with Good Ol' Boys.

Dightman is a true legend, and even though my barrel racing days are behind me I'll always know I belong in the saddle.

Sir Viv Richards - by Stephen Lyle

Richards struck 8,540 Test runs for the West Indies, plus 14,698 first-class and 7,349 one-day runs for Somerset

Growing up in the '80s, black excellence was underexposed but there was no hiding the West Indies cricket team, or Viv Richards.

I'd watch him walk out to face the fastest bowlers with no helmet, chewing gum, ready to entertain. Then he would dominate, but in such a way that even his opponents would love him for it.

Viv showed us black kids that we too could be the best and do it our way. He was also fiercely proud of his black roots, sporting red, gold and green sweatbands on the pitch.

I had the honour of meeting Viv once and he told me that turning down a fortune to play cricket in apartheid South Africa was the greatest thing he did in his career. Hero, legend, GOAT.

Sir Viv Richards voted county cricket's greatest overseas player by BBC Sport users

John Barnes - by Nelson Kumah

Barnes won two league titles and two FA Cups at Liverpool, also winning 79 England caps

My life can probably be divided into two distinct parts - life before Barnes, and life after.

His ascendance to the top of English football with Liverpool in the late '80s coincided perfectly with my own coming-of-age. My musical tastes upgraded to Public Enemy, and now was the time to dispense with my dad's footballing heroes and claim one of my very own.

Liverpool's title-winning team of 1988 will never be bettered in my eyes. And Barnes was the heartbeat of that side. He showed me that football could be an art, that black people could stand up to racism, but most of all he showed me that black people could be the absolute best.

More than 30 years later, I still feel the same about that man. He changed me. He changed everything.

Mark Lewis-Francis - by Tom Gayle

Lewis-Francis (centre) won 4x100m Olympic gold at Athens 2004 alongside Darren Campbell (left), Marlon Devonish (right) and Jason Gardener

As a fellow, but drastically inferior youth athlete, I witnessed first hand at track meetings as Mark Lewis-Francis became the most talked-about sprinting talent in the country.

He was destined for greatness, and found that greatness years later on the biggest stage of all.

In Athens in 2004, my family and I screamed all the way down the home straight as Lewis-Francis held off the heavily favoured Americans for Team GB to win Olympic 4x100m relay gold by just 0.01 seconds.

Shaun Wright-Phillips - by Liam Loftus

Shaun Wright-Phillips - footballer for England, Chelsea, Man City and QPR

Shaun Wright-Phillips - my sporting hero. Big-time player with even bigger shirts.

SWP29 had me feeling like the man when I stepped into the garden. Dribbling around the dog before blasting the ball past my uninterested brother, 'Shauny Wright Wright Wright' ringing in my head as I wheeled off in celebration.

I liked football before Shaun but after watching him play week in, week out, I LOVED it. You would have thought it was me that scored against Ukraine back in 2004 the way I bragged to my friends about it.

To this day I can't put my finger on what one thing made him so special to me growing up, he just was. I guess that's just football.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Avoid unnecessary posts such as 'Thank you', 'Welcome', etc. Such posts will be deleted and user will be warned if it happens again. If caught spamming, the following actions are applicable -

  • First time - Warning
  • Second time - 5000 Points will be deducted
  • Third time - Ban for 7 days
  • Fourth time - Permanent Ban

If the post helped you, reward the user by reacting to the post like this -

1.jpg

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The last post in this topic was made more than 14 days ago. Only post in this topic if you have something valuable to add. Irrelevant posts are not allowed and you will be warned/banned for spamming old topics.

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Unfortunately, your content contains terms that we do not allow. Please edit your content to remove the highlighted words below.
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

  • Customer Reviews

×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

By using this site, you agree to our Terms of Use.