Hall of Famer, ex-Cub Andre Dawson lends name to MLB-sponsored tourney for HBCUs

SHARE Hall of Famer, ex-Cub Andre Dawson lends name to MLB-sponsored tourney for HBCUs
52260922jd_acr025931013_37145450.jpg

Baseball Hall of Famer Andre Dawson is lending his name to a college tournament formed as part of Major League Baseball’s effort to promote historically black college and university programs. | Jonathan Daniel/Getty Images

NEW ORLEANS — Baseball Hall of Famer Andre Dawson is lending his name to a college tournament formed as part of Major League Baseball’s effort to promote historically black college and university programs.

Now in its 11th year, the New Orleans tournament formerly known as the Urban Invitational has been renamed the Andre Dawson Classic. It will feature six HBCU teams as part of an eight-team round robin from Feb. 16-18.

Dawson, a former Chicago Cubs and Montreal Expos star, played college baseball at Florida A&M. He is one of only two HBCU alumni in the Baseball Hall of Fame. Dawson says he’s honored to be involved.

Games are played at the New Orleans MLB Youth Academy and at nearby University of New Orleans. The HBCU teams involved this year are: Alabama State, Alcorn State, Arkansas-Pine Bluff, Grambling State, Prairie View A&M and Southern. Also playing are New Orleans and Illinois-Chicago.

The Latest
At Cesar’s Killer Margaritas in Lake View, siblings Sandra “Sandy” Sánchez, Israel Sánchez and Lourdes “Lulu” Durán are serving up a mole poblano recipe that runs three generations deep.
Russell Elleven was out of school for months at 13 while facing cancer treatments. One thing kept him entertained: The Chicago Cubs. Now, as an adult, he feels priced out of Wrigley Field.
“We continue to engage in productive conversations with interested ownership groups in a number of markets,” A spokesperson for the WNBA shared in a statement with the Sun-Times. “The granting of any expansion teams requires a vote by the WNBA and NBA Board of Governors.”
During one heist in West Ridge the robber fired a gun at a liquor store staffer but no one was hurt, police said.
The ongoing migrant crisis, crime, staff shake-ups, City Council turmoil — and some legislative wins for progressives — were among the highlights and lowlights of Johnson’s first term.