Hope Athletics

Use Your Peripheral Vision

This is part of a series titled, Hope Speaks for Social Justice, written by former Hope student-athletes of color. Their words seek to educate and activate the Hope community in the nation’s quest to end racial injustice.

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Some of my most vivid memories as a Hope College women’s basketball player was time spent in practice dedicated to defense. Arguably our team’s best asset was to move in unison and prevent opponents’ from executing their game plan.

Our mantra was consistent:

“Use your peripheral vision; Keep your head on a swivel; Don’t get caught sleeping; and, Make sure you help the helper.”

These commands are repeated by all my coaches, at every practice, over and over, until it is brainwashed in each player’s mind. We were to move on instinct, as one.

This winning approach and mantra was not just embedded in my mind on the basketball court, however. It also became a devastating reality as a Black student-athlete when:

In America, it is impossible to not be impacted or influenced by white supremacy. It is woven into the fabric of our systems and has continued to devastate Black communities. Learning our history as a political science major, while simultaneously experiencing racism, is almost debilitating for a young woman who wants to avoid being labeled “angry.” James Baldwin, a world-renowned novelist, said, “To be a Negro in this country and to be relatively conscious is to be in a rage almost all the time.” I couldn’t agree more.

Now in the year 2020, I truly believe that our college community can refocus, tie up our laces and work a new mantra into our daily practice.

I have the utmost faith in humankind that if we all practice a mantra such as this, over and over, we can reprogram what has been brainwashed in all of us. Imagine how great of a community we could be if we protect and empower all Black people on instinct and work as one!

Living this mantra could be Hope College’s best asset.

Author Kamara Sudberry is a 2015 graduate of Hope College who majored in business management and political science and played basketball for the Flying Dutch. After graduation, Sudberry served as an AmeriCorps Member in Grand Rapids and now works for the Grand Rapids-based Spectrum Health System within the Diversity, Equity & Inclusion Center of Expertise.    

Kamara Sudberry ’15 in action versus Calvin in 2015.

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