Movie Review: Glory Road
The plots of sports movies have become so predictable that audiences have come to expect a series of clichés when they attend them. Glory Road (2006), however, is not merely about an underdog team or an inspirational coach overcoming low expectations or obstacles. It is an incisive history of racism in American sports. Although African-American players have made substantial inroads in college and professional basketball, at least as players (rectifying the racial imbalance in coaching has proven to be more difficult), the ability of players to be treated equally regardless of race was not always a given. Set in 1966, the film relates the story of an all-African-American starting lineup of Texas Western College, a lineup that was then a watershed in college basketball history.
Texas Western College even today is not known as a sports powerhouse, and this was doubly the case when Coach Don Haskins took the helm of its basketball program. Haskins was an unlikely selection, a selection which reflects the desperation of the team. He was working as a high school basketball coach of a girls’ basketball team, a resume that suggested he was not the most desired choice for an aspiring NCAA entrant. The film does not portray Haskins as initially wanting to foster greater equality in sports, but as a man desperate for a job in a slightly more competitive environment. As the underdog coach of an underdog team, Haskins was desperate, as desperate as some of his players to escape the streets and to play. He is on his last chance to prove himself, like the players he recruits. Haskins moves his wife and children to a remote location, staking everything on the chance offered by Texas Western.
Coach Haskins took the radical move of selecting the best players for the Texas Western College Miners, rather than taking race or class into consideration. The film portrays the team, again in true sports...
Work Cited
Glory Road. Directed by James Gardner, 2006.
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