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C.R. Roberts, Who Made Memorable Stand Against Segregation, Dies at 87

Roberts held USC’s single-game rushing record for 20 years after his iconic performance against Texas in 1956.
C.R. Roberts, Who Made Memorable Stand Against Segregation, Dies at 87
C.R. Roberts, Who Made Memorable Stand Against Segregation, Dies at 87

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Former USC football player C.R. Roberts died at the age of 87 on Tuesday due to natural causes, the school announced in a press release.

Roberts is best known for his stand against segregation during the 1956 season when USC was headed to Texas to play the Longhorns. Texas’s football program didn’t want Roberts and USC’s other Black players to compete in the game. Additionally, USC had difficulty finding a hotel in Texas that would allow Black customers.

In the game itself, Roberts enjoyed a memorable performance. Despite enduring racist epithets and obscenities from the crowd, Roberts rushed for 251 yards on 12 carries to help USC win 44–20. That mark set a USC single-game rushing record that would stand for 20 years. The Trojans pulled Roberts from the game early due to crowd concerns.

Roberts spoke about the game with USC’s official athletics website for Black History Month in 2015.

“I was upset that they didn’t want me down there,” Roberts admitted. “Damn right, I had something to prove to them.”

After his college career, Roberts played one season in the Canadian Football League before moving to the NFL to play for the 49ers for four seasons.

Roberts was inducted into the USC Athletics Hall of Fame in 2007.


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Madison Williams
MADISON WILLIAMS

Madison Williams is a staff writer on the Breaking and Trending News team at Sports Illustrated, where she specializes in tennis but covers a wide range of sports from a national perspective. Before joining SI in 2022, Williams worked at The Sporting News. Having graduated from Augustana College, she completed a master’s in sports media at Northwestern University. She is a dog mom and an avid reader.

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