MEAC/SWAC Challenge
Presented by Disney
Introduces Walter Payton
Achievement Award in Honor
of NFL Legend
Inaugural
Recipients Selected; Son
Jarrett Payton to make
presentation at Aug. 29
Kick-Off Banquet in Orlando;
Maurice
D. Williams
The MEAC/SWAC Challenge, an
ESPN Regional Television (ERT)
owned-and-operated event,
announced today the creation
of the Walter Payton
Achievement Award in
honor of the NFL football
legend known as “Sweetness.”
Like Payton, who starred at
Jackson State from 1971 to
’74 and earned his
bachelor’s degree in
communications, award
winners are high achievers
in the classroom and on the
football field. The award
will be given annually to a
player from each of the
schools participating in the
MEAC/SWAC Challenge
presented by Disney at
the event’s Kick-Off
Banquet, which this year,
will take place in Orlando
on Friday, Aug. 29. Doug
Williams, former Washington
Redskins quarterback and
Super Bowl MVP, will be the
banquet’s keynote speaker.
This year, The MEAC/SWAC
Challenge will pit Hampton
University from the MEAC
against Jackson State
University of the SWAC. The
game will be played Labor
Day Weekend, Sunday, Aug.
31, at 2 p.m. ET, telecast
live on ESPN2 from the
Florida Citrus Bowl.
The inaugural award
recipients are Jackson State
University linebacker Marcus
Smith and Hampton University
wide receiver Kevin Teel,
who are both entering their
senior year. Walter
Payton’s son, Jarrett
Payton, a running back for
the Canadian Football
League’s Montreal Alouettes,
will present the award to
Smith and Teel, who were
selected by a committee
consisting of academic
advisers and coaches.
“This award is special,”
said Payton, who was drafted
in 2005 by the Tennessee
Titans. “When you think
about awards being named
after someone, you had to
have done something
significant. My dad finished
his degree in three years,
which shows that he was a
student first and an athlete
second. He really showed
that if you work hard it
doesn’t matter where you’re
from.”
“We are proud to present
this honor that symbolizes
the great legacy of Walter
Payton,” said Pete Derzis,
senior vice president and
general manager, ERT. “This
award further personifies
his good character through
student-athletes that are
successful academically and
in the sport of football.”
“Walter Payton was one of
the greatest of all time,”
said Teel, an aviation
electronics systems major.
“This is as big an honor I
could ever imagine.”
Smith, a criminal justice
major, expressed: “This is a
great honor to receive in
the name of Payton who came
from Jackson State and did
great things on the field,
as well as being an
incredible role model off
the field. Receiving awards
like this continues to
motivate me to strive for
higher and higher goals.”
Payton, who was 45 when he
died in 1999 of a rare liver
disease, put Jackson State
on the map when he played
for coach Bob Hill in the
mid-’70s. A nine-time NFL
Pro Bowl selection, Payton
made his mark with the
Chicago Bears from 1975 to
1987, high-stepping and
stiff-arming defenders to
the tune of 16,726 rushing
yards.
About the MEAC/SWAC
Challenge
Each year, the game pits a
MEAC team against a SWAC
member at a neutral site
within the footprint of one
of the conferences. The
inaugural MEAC/SWAC
Challenge in 2005 showcased
the MEAC’s South Carolina
State vs. Alabama State of
the SWAC, with South
Carolina State prevailing,
27-14. In 2006, the contest
went into overtime with the
MEAC’s Hampton University
defeating the SWAC’s
Grambling State, 27-26. Last
year, the SWAC earned its
first MEAC/SWAC Challenge
trophy as Southern defeated
Florida A&M, 33-27. Teams
for future games are
determined on an annual
basis.
For more information about
the MEAC/SWAC Challenge,
please visit
www.meacswacchallenge.com.