INDIANAPOLIS (USBWA) – The U.S. Basketball
Writers Association is naming its annual award for extraordinary
courage after Perry Wallace of Vanderbilt University, the first
African-American basketball player in the Southeastern Conference
and the first Black athlete to play a full four-year career in the
SEC in any sport.
The Perry Wallace Most Courageous Award will
be presented as part of a virtual USBWA awards celebration during
the Final Four at Indianapolis in April. Since its creation in 1978,
the award has recognized a player, coach, team, official or administrator
demonstrating extraordinary courage reflecting honor on amateur
basketball. Past recipients include Steve Kerr of the University
of Arizona, Landon Turner of Indiana University, former North Carolina
State coach Jim Valvano, former Arkansas coach Nolan Richardson,
the 2001 Oklahoma State Cowboys, Andrew Smith of Butler University
and his wife Samantha.
The 2020 winner, Sam Toney of New Jersey City University, will
also be honored this year.
The USBWA has recognized players, officials, coaches and administrators
in women's basketball with the Pat Summitt Most Courageous Award,
which was first presented to the Hall-of-Fame coach from the University
of Tennessee in 2012.
"I can't think of a more worthy person to grace this award with
his name than Perry Wallace," said USBWA President Seth Davis, college
basketball reporter for CBS Sports and Managing Editor of The Athletic
College Basketball. "Perry exemplified courage, not to mention character,
integrity, perseverance and talent. He epitomizes everything we
value about college basketball."
Funding provided by Vanderbilt University will help cover the
travel and lodging expenses of future honorees and their guests
at the Final Four.
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Perry Wallace |
"We are thrilled that the USBWA has renamed its Most Courageous
Award to honor the late Perry Wallace, a brilliant man and pioneer
who stands as one of the most courageous figures in the history
of college basketball," said Candice Storey Lee, the university's
Vice Chancellor for Athletics and University Affairs and Athletic
Director. "Following his days at Vanderbilt, Perry enjoyed a long
career as a professor, and I am certain he would be proud to see
his name associated with an award that recognizes the most courageous
amongst a new generation of college students. This award will ensure
that Perry's story is told long into the future, and that means
a tremendous amount to all of us who knew him and respected him
so much."
During Wallace's time at Vanderbilt at the height of the civil
rights movement, he displayed tremendous courage in the face of
vicious threats around the South and social isolation on campus,
and equal courage in speaking up against racism and injustice throughout
his life.
Wallace, born on this day in 1948, graduated from Vanderbilt
in 1970 with a double major in Engineering, earned a law degree
from Columbia University, and practiced law as an attorney for the
U.S. Department of Justice. Wallace later became the first Black
tenured law professor at the University of Baltimore and led the
JD/MBA joint degree program as a law professor at American University's
Washington College of Law.
Fluent in French and an accomplished musician, singer, actor
and martial arts practitioner, Wallace was honored with the NCAA's
Silver Anniversary Award in 1995 and is the subject of the bestselling
biography STRONG INSIDE by Andrew Maraniss. Wallace passed away
in 2017 at the age of 69, and is survived by his wife, Karen, and
daughter, Gabrielle.
The U.S. Basketball Writers Association, in
its 65th season, serves as an advocate for professional and college
journalists covering men's and women's basketball and recognizes
extraordinary achievement on and off the court. For more information
about the USBWA and its award programs, contact executive director
Malcolm Moran at 814-574-1485.
Related links: •
All-time Most Courageous
Award recipients • Perry Wallace Most Courageous Award
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