The Atlantic Coast Conference has announced the recipients of the inaugural ACC UNITE Award, which was created to honor individuals affiliated with the league who have made an impact in the areas of racial and social justice.
The UNITE Award is an initiative of the ACC’s Committee for Racial and Social Justice (CORE – Champions of Racial Equity) and was developed and approved by its 15 member institutions.
The UNITE Award will be presented annually to individuals who:
- Best exemplify ACC CORE’s mission to promote and encourage racial equity and social justice through education, partnerships, engagement and advocacy;
- Have helped create meaningful, lasting change by improving systems, organizational structures, policies, practices and attitudes;
- Have been a pioneer and/or helped pave the way for minorities either at the institution or in the community
In the first year of the award, the league is celebrating the individuals who – according to available information – are the first male and female athletes of color to integrate the athletic teams at each current ACC institution. Each school will honor its recipients during the current academic year.
For Notre Dame, this year’s honorees are Frazier Thompson (1943, track and field) and Angela Watson (1981, volleyball).
“This is a tremendous opportunity to recognize the amazing pioneers in our league,” said ACC Commissioner Jim Phillips, Ph.D. “As a conference, we are thrilled to celebrate these deserving individuals as we continue our commitment to racial and social justice. As we look to the future, our commitment to diversity, equity and inclusion will remain steadfast.”
The UNITE Award recipients were recognized as part of a 1-hour show on SiriusXM ACC Radio, Channel 371 hosted by Chris Spatola and Dalen Cuff. The show featured guests Ray Bellamy and Irwin Holmes.
Boston College
- Male: Lou Montgomery, 1937-40 (football)
- Female: Doxie McCoy, 1973 (field hockey); LaVerne Mosley, 1973 (basketball)
Clemson
- Male: Craig Mobley, 1969 (basketball)
- Female: Cookie Blackney, 1975 (basketball)
Duke
- Male: CB Claiborne, 1965 (basketball)
- Female: Phyllis Wilson, 1974 (volleyball); Felicia Heath (gymnastics)
Florida State
- Male: Fred Flowers, 1965 (baseball)
- Female: Emma Colquitt, 1971 (basketball)
Georgia Tech
- Male: Harvey Webb, 1967 (basketball-freshman team), Eddie McAshan, 1970 (football varsity team)
- Female: Jan Hillard, 1975 (basketball)
Louisville
- Male: Lawrence Simmons, 1952 (football)
- Female: Von Macklin, 1974 (basketball)
Miami
- Male: Ray Bellamy, 1967 (football) & Will Allen, 1967 (basketball)
- Female: Kim Sands, 1974 (basketball & tennis)
North Carolina
- Male: Edwin Okoroma, 1963 (soccer)
- Female: Ophelia Speight, 1974 (fencing)
NC State
- Male: Irwin Holmes, 1957 (track, tennis) & Manuel Crockett, 1957 (track)
- Female: Gwen Jenkins, 1974 (basketball) & Cynthia Steele, 1974 (basketball)
Notre Dame
- Male: Frazier Thompson, 1943 (track & field)
- Female: Angela Watson, 1981 (volleyball)
Pitt
- Male: Harry Ray Wooten, 1911 (track), Hubbard Hollensworth, 1911 (track)
- Female: Phyllis Singleton, 1974 (basketball); Leslie Nichols and Coach Willa Bentley, 1974 (tennis); Sheree Scott and Elsetta Marshall, 1974 (gymnastics); Alexis Grandy, 1974 (volleyball); Kim Phillips, Rosalind Alford, Michelle Bressant and Terry Akrie, 1974 (track).
Syracuse
- Male: Joseph Edward Trigg, 1913-15 crew, 1914-15 football
- Female: Iman Al Bahar, 1976 basketball
Virginia
- Male: George King III, 1964 (wrestling, lacrosse)
- Female: Sharlene Brightly, 1973 (basketball)
Virginia Tech
- Male: Jerry Gaines, 1967 (track and field)
- Female: Dianne Epps, 1973 (basketball)
Wake Forest
- Male: Robert Grant, 1964 (football), Kenneth “Butch” Henry, 1964 (football)
- Female: Keeva Jackson, 1981 (basketball), Sonya Henderson, 1981 (basketball)
Moving forward, each school will select one male and one female recipient for the annual ACC UNITE Award.C.O.R.E was created in June 2020 to support the ACC’s commitment to social justice and racial equity. Members of C.O.R.E. include conference office staff members and campus representatives from each of the league’s 15 institutions. C.O.R.E.’s mission is to promote and encourage inclusion, racial equity and social justice through education, partnerships, engagement and advocacy.