Academics

Department of English - Journalism and Sports Program

Director's Bio

Ron Thomas

Ron Thomas, a prolific sports writer and copy editor for more than three decades, is the first director of Morehouse’s Journalism and Sports Program.

Prior to joining Morehouse, Thomas worked for 28 years in the San Francisco Bay Area. From 1979 to 1991, he covered the Golden State Warriors and San
Francisco 49ers for the San Francisco Chronicle, and from 1982-84, he was USA Today’s first NBA reporter/editor. He wrote game stories, features and columns for the San Francisco Examiner from 2000 to 2003, mainly covering the San Francisco Giants, Golden State Warriors, college sports and professional tennis. For the last four years Thomas has been a freelance sports writer and copy editor, contributing articles to BlackAmericaWeb.com and the NAACP’s Crisis Magazine. He currently is chief copy editor for the African American Sports Magazine, a Bay Area publication.

Much of his impetus for becoming a sports writer stemmed from the writings of Harry Edwards and Sports Illustrated’s Jack Olsen in the 1960s, which made Thomas acutely aware of racism in sports. Much of the work he is most proud of relates to that topic, including: a 1999 column titled “Why So Few?” about the lack of black NFL coaches that led to him winning a National Association of Black Journalists first-place award; a 1987 column about Al Campanis’ infamous “necessities” interview; a 1997 column about pro football’s Bill Romanowski-
J.J. Stokes spitting incident; and a 2006 Crisis Magazine article about the lack of black female head coaches at predominantly white colleges.

Thomas’ book, They Cleared the Lane: the NBA’s Black Pioneers, is a culmination of those efforts and was published in 2002 by the University of Nebraska Press. The idea for the book originated when Thomas received overwhelming reader response from a 1987 newspaper series about how the NBA became integrated in 1950. The book is the first written about the process and turmoil that brought black players into the NBA after they were banned secretly from the league's first four seasons.

It has been critically acclaimed by Sports Illustrated, the Chicago Sun-Times, the Library Journal and other publications.

Since 1987, through their firm The Sports Institute, Thomas and business partner Mike Brown have given lectures, workshops and invited conferences about racial, gender and media issues in sports. In 1996, Thomas’ chapter “Black Faces Still Rare in the Press Box” was published in the sociology textbook Sports in Society: Equal Opportunity or Business as Usual?

A native of Buffalo, New York, Thomas virtually grew up in sports stadiums by regularly attending baseball, football and basketball games with his family.
He graduated from the University of Rochester in 1971 with a degree in political science and earned a master’s degree in journalism from Northwestern
University in 1973. A 28-year member of the National Association of Black Journalists, Thomas was an original co-chair of its Sports Task Force and currently co-hosts its annual ceremonies honoring black sports pioneers.

Now residing in Atlanta, Thomas’ hobbies include playing tennis, hearing actors and directors talk about movies he seldom has time to see, and having fun with his teenage daughter, Kali.




RECENT PUBLICATION:


They Cleared the Lane
The NBA's Black Pioneers


They Cleared The Lane Book
From the Publisher
"Today, black players compose more than 80 percent of the National Basketball Association's rosters, providing a strong and valued contribution to professional basketball. In the first half of the twentieth century, however, pro basketball was tainted by racism, as gifted African Americans were denied the opportunity to display their talents."

Through in-depth interviews with players, their families, coaches, teammates, and league officials, Ron Thomas tells the largely untold story of what basketball was really like for the first black NBA players, including recent Hall of Fame inductee Earl Lloyd, early superstars such as Maurice Stokes and Bill Russell, and the league's first black coaches. They Cleared the Lane is both informative and entertaining, full of anecdotes and little-known history. Not all the stories have happy endings, but this unfortunate truth only emphasizes how much we have gained from the accomplishments of these pioneer athletes.