Think about all Black athletes crisscrossing America for competitions, from youth basketball and football teams to college players. Some travel alone. Some with teams. Some in small groups. If you think that fear of encounters like this is not part of the mix, think again.
I have my own stories. If you’ve read my columns for a while, you may know that I was once a serious tennis player, one of the few Black nationally ranked juniors in the 1980s — a starter on a top-ranked team at the University of California, Berkeley. After college, I played for a few years in the minor leagues of professional tennis, traveling to every corner of America and good parts of the globe.
I was profiled by the police after playing in one of those tournaments in the early 1990s, when another Black player and I had made the doubles final at an all-white country club in Birmingham, Ala. To say that we were an astonishing sight to the club members — and to the all-Black grounds crew that cheered us at every match — would be the mother of all understatements. We lost, but we were jubilant. We’d made a statement by going as far as we did.
But while driving our rental car to the next event, set to be held in Augusta, Ga., we were pulled over by a highway patrolman in the rural stretch between Birmingham and Atlanta. I remember his wide-brimmed hat and his invasive questioning. What were we doing in this car? Where were we going? The next thing I knew, he was looking through our bags.
Why were we pulled over and searched? My partner had been driving well within the flow of traffic. We were just two young Black guys in a shiny rental. It didn’t help when the patrolman asked for our identification and saw we were from California.
It has been three decades, so I don’t recall all the details about what took place next, but somehow, the deputy hauled my partner off to the local, small-town police station. About an hour later, my partner walked out. As I remember it, he didn’t get so much as a ticket. He was unscathed but shaken. I drove the rest of the way.