ROCKY MOUNT, North Carolina -- Virginia State simply needed good players.
The Trojans had fallen on hard times by 1993, and they needed talent.
In college football, obtaining good players – particularly in Division II –
means thorough recruiting, and Virginia State assistant Waverly Tillar saw an
area in which the team could improve. Ther
e were football players on the roster
from Philadelphia and New Jersey, but none from New York, which also is within a
day’s drive of Virginia State.
Lawrence Kershaw was a kid from Brooklyn who was looking for a new home.
He committed to Stony Brook University out of high school, but he wasn’t
happy there. Kershaw sent film to a handful of schools and hoped to transfer to
a better fit.
One of those tapes found its way to Tillar, who not only saw a potential
starter on the Trojans’ offensive line but perhaps the beginning of a pipeline
to the most populous city in the United States.
“We were hoping to establish a pipeline going to Virginia State to hopefully
be able to get those kids (from New York),” Tillar said. “Of course, part of
recruiting is you got to have a diverse mesh of players from different areas to
put together a consistently winning program.”
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