C.R. Roberts, a Black working again for the College of Southern California, was afraid of what may occur when his built-in Trojans soccer workforce traveled to the Jim Crow South to play the all-white College of Texas Longhorns in Austin in 1956.
There have been loss of life threats earlier than the sport. He puzzled: Would a shotgun blast from the stands at Memorial Stadium kill him?
“Rigidity was excessive,” he mentioned in a 2018 documentary, “Breaking Down Obstacles: The C.R. Roberts Story,” directed by Jeremy Sadowski. “We may hear the epithets popping out of the gang while you had been close to the sideline.”
Regardless of the potential for violence, Roberts turned in a sensational efficiency, main the Trojans to a 44-20 victory. Within the second quarter, he raced for a 73-yard landing and for an additional that lined 50 yards.
Within the third quarter, on his remaining carry, he scored once more on a 74-yard jaunt. In all, he gained 251 yards, a single-game speeding document that stood at U.S.C. for 19 years. The Los Angeles Instances known as him an “explosive bolt of searing pace.”
However Roberts, who was one in all three Black gamers on the usC. workforce, mentioned that with spectators shouting the N-word, Coach Jess Hill pulled him from the sport quickly after he scored his remaining landing.
“The ambiance in that stadium was very damaging towards a Black individual,” Roberts mentioned in “Breaking Down Obstacles.”
The Trojans’ victory occurred early within the civil rights motion, when Black residents had been boycotting segregated buses in Montgomery, Ala., and the sport stands at present as an essential racial breakthrough of that period.
In 1966, Texas Western Faculty (now the College of Texas at El Paso), turned the primary workforce with an all-Black beginning 5 to win the N.C.A.A. males’s basketball championship, beating an all-white College of Kentucky workforce.
And in 1970, Sam Cunningham, a part of U.S.C.’s all-Black backfield, gained 135 yards and scored two touchdowns in a 42-21 win over an all-white College of Alabama squad. Though the Crimson Tide had a Black participant on its freshman workforce, the sport is credited with giving the Alabama coach, Paul (Bear) Bryant, the inexperienced gentle from higher-ups to actively recruit Black gamers.
Roberts died on Tuesday at a care facility in Norwalk, Conn., his daughter Cathy Creasia mentioned. He was 87.
Cornelius R. Roberts was born on Feb. 29, 1936, in Tupelo, Miss. His father, additionally named Cornelius, picked cotton and was a railroad metal driver. His mom, Audra Mae (Dabbs) Roberts, was a homemaker.
His mom, as Roberts recalled, felt that the household needed to depart racist Mississippi.
“Get our son out of Mississippi or they’re going to kill him,” he quoted her as telling his father, in an interview on a U.S.C. web site in 2015.
Within the third grade, Roberts recalled, as his household was returning by prepare from a trip in Oceanside, Calif., he was enjoying with a white boy in an built-in automobile when the prepare entered the segregated South. At that time his mom pulled him away from the boy; the household needed to transfer to a special coach.
“Whenever you crossed the Mason-Dixon line going south,” he mentioned in “Breaking Down Obstacles,” “the Blacks had to return to their automobile and be segregated once more. I didn’t perceive.”
The household later moved to Oceanside, the place Roberts turned a star at Oceanside-Carlsbad Excessive Faculty, scoring a exceptional 65 touchdowns. Within the vernacular of the time, one native newspaper in 1954 extolled him because the “all-American Negro flash.”
Because the drill-team chief of the R.O.T.C. unit in highschool, Roberts aspired to attend the USA Army Academy at West Level. “I’d have made it there if I used to be smarter in math,” he advised The San Diego Union-Tribune in 2012.
At Southern California, he completed second in speeding to Jon Arnett in 1955; he would lead the workforce in that class in 1956, his junior 12 months, thanks partly to his scintillating sport in opposition to Texas.
However he nearly didn’t make it there. U.S.C.’s coaches initially advised that he not journey to Austin with the workforce due to the race situation. He replied that he would reasonably stop the workforce than keep dwelling. His teammates stood by him, refusing to go to Texas if the workforce’s Black gamers — the others had been Louis Byrd and Hillard Hill — didn’t.
The College of Texas, for its half, was not welcoming, though it had performed in opposition to Washington State College, which had a Black participant, two years earlier. U.S.C. was advised to go away the workforce’s three Black gamers behind.
“Texas known as us a couple of week earlier than the sport and mentioned we couldn’t play any coloreds, that the races couldn’t compete on the similar time,” Roberts advised The Austin American-Statesman in 2005.
After some negotiations, the total workforce traveled to Austin. However the resort that the workforce deliberate to remain in wouldn’t enable Roberts, Byrd and Hill as friends, and it organized for them to remain in a Y.M.C.A. The workforce refused and went to a different resort that, regardless of its segregation coverage and after some persuasion, allow them to in. Black resort staff and native residents gathered to fulfill the three gamers.
Roberts didn’t play in 1957, his senior 12 months, after the Pacific Coast Convention (now the Pac-12) imposed penalties in opposition to U.S.C. and different colleges for offering illicit monetary assist to gamers.
After receiving a bachelor’s diploma in enterprise administration from U.S.C. in 1957, Roberts performed two seasons for the Toronto Argonauts of the Canadian Soccer League. Then he moved to the N.F.L., the place he gained 637 yards on 155 carries throughout 4 seasons with the San Francisco 49ers.
He later taught typing and enterprise expertise in highschool and faculty and opened a journey company and a tax consulting service.
Along with his daughter Cathy, he’s survived by one other daughter, Chandra Roberts; a son, Craig; and 4 grandchildren. His marriages to Joyce Moss and Yvonne Barton resulted in divorce.
For all his soccer exploits, the Texas sport — and the feelings it stirred up — remained vivid in Roberts’s reminiscence. On the day of the sport, he recalled in an interview with The Los Angeles Instances, “I didn’t give a rattling who we performed.”
“We had been going to beat them,” he mentioned. “All people had a chip on their shoulder. We performed our greatest sport.”