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Committee Chairman

Committee Chairman

Kirk Buchner, "The Committee Chairman", is the owner and operator of the site.  Kirk can be contacted at [email protected] .

The Black College Hall of Fame announced the members who will comprise the 2024 Class.

Selected were:

Joe “747” Adams – Tennessee State, Quarterback, 1977-80:  Adams threw for 8,653 Yards (which is second in school history) and 75 Touchdowns; including 30 in 1980.  He would later play in the Canadian Football League with the Saskatchewan Roughriders, Toronto Argonauts and Ottawa Rough Riders.

Antoine Bethea – Howard, Defensive Back, 2002-05.  Bethea had 187 Tackles and seven Interceptions at Howard, and had a 14-year NFL career playing for Indianapolis, San Francisco, Arizona and the New York Giants.

Waymond Bryant – Tennessee State, Linebacker, 1970-73.  Bryant was a First Team Little All-American and later played four years with the Chicago Bears.

Kevin Dent – Jackson State, Defensive Back, 1985-88.  Dent was the only player in Jackson State history to make three All-American Teams, and he was also a two-time SWAC Defensive Player of the Year.  He had 21 Interceptions, and is a member of the College Football Hall of Fame.

Richard Huntley – Winston-Salem State, Running Back, 1992-95.  Huntley rushed for over 1,000 Yards in all four of his seasons and had 6,286 Rushing Yards and 62 Touchdowns.  He played six years in the NFL with stops in Atlanta, Pittsburgh, Carolina, Buffalo and Detroit.

Eddie Hurt – Morgan State, Coach, 1929-59.  Hurt had a record of 173-67, won 14 CIAA Championships and six Black College National Championships.

Lemar Parrish – Lincoln, Defensive Back, 1966-69.  Parrish was also a star returner for Lincoln, and he went on to have a long career with Cincinnati, Washington and Buffalo and was an eight-time Pro Bowler.

This group will be the 15th Class, with the induction ceremony taking place on June 8, 2024 in Atlanta, Georgia.

We here at Notinhllloffame.com would like to congratulate the impending members of the Black College Hall of Fame.

37. Roope Hintz

The Dallas Stars nabbed Finnish Left Wing, Roope Hintz, in the Second Round of the 2015 Draft, and two years later, he left Scandinavia for the Stars and after a year in the AHL, he made the Dallas roster, and was a full-time NHL player by 2019/20.

Hintz gradually improved his game, and in 2020/21, he was a Point-per-Game Wing (43 Points in 41 Games) showing that he could be a budding All-Star in the future.  In the two seasons after, Hintz had 72 and 75 Points respectively, both of which seeing him light the lamp 37 times.  Last season, Hintz's production dropped to 60 Points, but was still a vital part of Dallas' run to the Western Conference Finals.

It is only a matter of time before he becomes an All-Star.

The Indiana Pacers lost a legend today.

George McGinnis, 73, passed away following the complications from a cardiac arrest he suffered recently.

A former Indiana Mr. Basketball and star at the University of Indiana, McGinnis left college early and signed with the Indiana Pacers of the ABA where he became an instant star.  An All-ABA Rookie, McGinnis played a vital role in Indiana’s ABA Championship that year.  McGinnis then anchored the team to their second straight title, winning the ABA Playoff MVP in the process.  The Pacers did not win another title with McGinnis, but in those years, he was a First Team All-ABA Selection and won the league’s scoring title. 

In 1975, McGinnis’ contract with Indiana ended, and he joined the team that drafted him in the NBA, the Philadelphia 76ers.  There, he was a two-time All-Star, and a First Team All-NBA and Second Team All-NBA Selection.  McGinnis was traded to Denver in 1978 where he was again an All-Star, but was traded back home to Indiana the following season where he would conclude his career.

McGinnis was named to the ABA All-Time Team, had his number retired by the Pacers and was inducted into the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame in 2017 and the University of Indiana Athletic Hall of Fame in 2023.

We here at Notinhllloffame.com would like to extend our condolences to the fans, friends and family of George McGinnis.

35. Jason Robertson

A high Second Round Pick in 2017, California’s Jason Robertson has shown to be one of the steals in that draft.

Robertson first made it to the Stars as a late callup in 2019/20, and though he did not play, absorbed knowledge during the Stars’ playoff run.  He was there to stay afterwards, finishing second for the Calder behind Minnesota’s Kirill Kaprizov, and the year after he scored 79 Points and led the league in Game-Winning Goals (11). 

Robertson had a huge breakout in 2022-23, finishing sixth in Points (109), and was a First Team All-Star.  The Left Wing was also fourth in Hart voting and led Dallas to a deep playoff run.   Last year, Robertson was not as strong with 80 Points, but as of this writing, Robertson is the top gun on Dallas, and should be for a long time to come.