The word “opportunity” has been a central theme of the Legacy Bowl since its inception. The Black College Football Hall of Fame created the game three years ago to create a better pipeline for HBCU athletes to the NFL.
Since the inaugural game in 2022, five players have been selected in the NFL Draft, and an additional 50 either signed with a team as a free agent or were invited to a team’s minicamp.
The opportunities the Legacy Bowl hopes to create, however, extend to more than just football players.
Breland Cook, the Black College Football Hall of Fame’s director of development, emphasized that the career fair was open to all HBCU students. The organization even bussed in juniors, seniors and graduate students from across the region to New Orleans for free for the career fair.
“At the end of the day, not everybody will be playing in the National Football League,” Cook said. “[When] we made this all-star game, the plan was to make a platform to elevate HBCU men and women, and give opportunity both on the football field and in the professional world.”
The impact of the career fair, so far, has been just as successful as the game, with Cook touting some students leaving the fair with a job offer in hand, including four students who were hired on-site by the Seattle Seahawks last year.
Jeremy Upton, a senior at Talladega College in Talladega, Alabama, said this was his second time attending the career fair. This year, he set his sights on leaving with a full-time job in finance.
“[One company] that stood out to me was S&P Global,” Upton said. "They're over the S&P 500. They [also] do financial investing, so as a finance and accounting major, that'll definitely be something I’m interested in.”