In NAIA national championship, Langston University men’s basketball has chance at history
My motivational speech centered on enjoying every precious day as a college basketball player with your brothers, knowing that with each passing day you’re closer to the end. Mixed in was talk about being honest with yourself, making the most out of college on and off the court and the potential legacy that can come [...]
My motivational speech centered on enjoying every precious day as a college basketball player with your brothers, knowing that with each passing day you’re closer to the end.
Mixed in was talk about being honest with yourself, making the most out of college on and off the court and the potential legacy that can come from winning a first-ever championship for your university.
What probably should have been talked about was how special it would be to make history at an HBCU.
After speaking to the locked-in Langston University men’s basketball program in its locker room that morning, I saw the Oklahoma City Thunder raise their first NBA championship banner about 40 miles away later that night, Oct. 21, 2025.
Tonight, about five months later, Langston has an opportunity to bring another championship to Oklahoma as the Lions play in the NAIA national championship game in Kansas City, Missouri, against Freed-Hardeman (Tenn.). The Lions earned this opportunity by defeating Ave Maria (Fla.) 72-69 in overtime on Monday night.
Langston’s players can make history that hasn’t been achieved by an NAIA HBCU (historically Black colleges and universities) men’s basketball program in their lifetimes. The last HBCU to win the NAIA men’s basketball national championship was Texas Southern University in 1977. The last HBCU to win an NCAA-sanctioned men’s basketball title was Division II Virginia Union University in 2005.
“Winning a title for Langston in my last college game would mean everything. It’s bigger than me,” Langston senior forward Cameron McCoy said. “It’s about leaving a legacy, honoring everyone who built this program, and showing that all the hard work, sacrifice, and belief paid off. It would be the perfect way to give back to a place that gave me so much.”
Langston head coach Chris Wright and the Lions are hoping his third time is a charm in the NAIA national championship game. He’s been to two title games in recent seasons and come up short both times — a heartbreaking 71-67 defeat to Freed-Hardeman in 2024 in which Langston led by six points with less than a minute remaining, and a 71-56 loss to Loyola (La.) when Wright was coaching Alabama’s Talladega College in 2022.
It’s been remarkable what Wright has done for the Lions since arriving ahead of the 2022-23 campaign. Inheriting a program that finished 1-27 the previous year, Wright led Langston to a 31-3 record and the NAIA Sweet 16 in his first season. The Lions then went 35-2 en route to the national championship game the following year, and went 26-8 with another Sweet 16 appearance in 2024-25.
This season, the 2024 NAIA National Coach of the Year has his Lions back in the title game.
“It would mean a lot to so many people,” Wright told Andscape on Monday. “HBCUs face obstacles that most people in college basketball can’t fathom.
“We realize that we are playing for so many people across the country tomorrow. We hope that the third time will be a charm. Freed-Hardeman has won 31 consecutive games for a reason. We will have to play really well to have a chance to win this.”
Marc J. Spears

I had the honor of giving the commencement speech and receiving an Honorary Doctorate of Humane Letters from Langston University during the school’s 123rd commencement on May 6, 2023. Thank you to then-president Dr. Kent Smith, who hired Wright, and the current president, Dr. Ruth Ray Jackson, for that honor.
It was at that time that I was able to build a rapport with Wright and his program. Wright is a Langston treasure, known for his tough love, discipline and defense-first mentality, while also getting the best from his players on the court and in the classroom.
During a breakfast we shared in Oklahoma City during the 2025 NBA Finals, Wright surprised me with a beautiful 2023 NAIA national runner-up ring. It has company in my awards display, sitting next to my 2023 Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame honor.
Langston University was founded March 12, 1897, as the Colored Agricultural and Normal University. It is the only HBCU in Oklahoma and was established as a public land-grant institution. On this night, HBCUs all over the country will be rooting for the Lions to earn their first basketball crown and bring a long-awaited title to Black colleges 20-plus years in the making.
You have a chance to make the history we talked about at the beginning of this season. It’s legacy time. Go Lions!
And coach, you know my ring size.
The post In NAIA national championship, Langston University men’s basketball has chance at history appeared first on Andscape.
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