Bill Yeoman Pulled Off The Houston Commitment That Changed Everything

Warren McVea's historic choice marks a new chapter for Houston football, spearheaded by Coach Yeoman's pioneering recruitment efforts.

Bill Yeoman knew exactly what he was doing when he set out to land Warren McVea.

At a gathering at the Shamrock Hilton, the Houston coach opened with a line that drew gasps from the room. Black doctors, lawyers, and businessmen were stunned until Yeoman finished the thought: “I’m prejudiced, all right,” he said, then added, “I’m prejudiced against bad football players.”

That was the point. After his first season at Houston, Yeoman had seen enough to understand that the Cougars weren’t going to reach the national level with the roster he had.

To compete, he needed elite Black athletes, and in 1963 he began the work of bringing them in. In a region where no one was integrating football teams, Houston could gain an edge by doing what others wouldn’t.

The biggest target was Warren McVea, the San Antonio star who had piled up 591 points at Brackenridge High and was regarded as the top high school recruit in Texas and, by most accounts, the country. Yeoman and athletics director Harry Fouke knew the moment carried weight. UH had been peacefully integrated in the summer of 1962, but the first Black player in major Texas football would be a landmark.

Ted Nance, Houston’s sports information director, helped make the whole thing possible. He had built relationships across the city and connected Yeoman with African-American community leaders and newspaper columnists. Through that network, Yeoman was pointed toward the man who could help him navigate the pressure surrounding McVea: Lloyd Wells, known as The Judge, a columnist for the Forward Times and a mentor to many young Black men in Houston.

Wells was glad to get involved, both for Nance and for the chance to help Houston make history. Nance had already made another important move by opening the UH press box to Black journalists, making Houston the first school in the South to do so.

McVea already knew Wells from meeting other athletes he had mentored, and the recruiting effort widened from there. Houston civic leader Quentin Mease joined in, and his connection to the McVea family ran deep: his in-laws lived down the street from them and attended the same church. Mease was in the room when Yeoman first broke the ice at the Shamrock Hotel, and he had already taken a liking to the coach.

Yeoman made a special effort with Mrs. Mattie, McVea’s mother, and that mattered.

McVea was close to his mother, and years later he said Yeoman had “really focused on winning over my mother,” which helped shape his decision. “My mother thought the world of Coach Yeoman,” McVea told Jerry Wizig for his book, Eat Em Up Cougars.

“Coach Yeoman promised my mama that he would always take care of her son. And he did just that.”

By early 1964, McVea had 74 offers, including nearly every integrated program in the country and plenty that were not. Texas invited him to the 1964 Cotton Bowl.

UCLA brought Jackie Robinson in to meet with him. Missouri had former president Harry Truman send a letter.

There was even an apocryphal story that UH asked Lyndon B. Johnson to reach out.

Still, Houston understood what mattered most to him. Assistant coach Tom Boisture handled much of the daily recruiting and figured out quickly that McVea wanted to stay close to home.

“We figured out that he wanted to stay close to home,” Boisture said. “Being close to his mom was a big factor.”

Boisture built a real relationship with McVea, and the runner later said he always felt close to him. The Cougars also made sure McVea felt included when he visited.

Former UH basketball player Donnie Schverak served as his host, and McVea appreciated that Houston wasn’t simply using Black people to recruit him. David Lattin, then a Worthing High basketball star and an athlete McVea respected, also helped.

Lattin had been mentored by Wells and later became part of Texas Western’s NCAA championship team, the first with an all-black starting lineup.

Yeoman also understood McVea’s faith and how important religion was to his family. “I had never seen a coach like Coach Yeoman,” McVea said years later. “He was also one of two coaches who picked up on the importance of religion to our family.”

The decision came on Saturday, July 11th, 1964. Early that morning, McVea called Yeoman at his UH office and told him he was signing with the Cougars. Yeoman immediately grabbed Ted Nance, and the two drove to San Antonio with the paperwork.

Around 3:30 that afternoon, Mrs. Mattie and McVea’s sisters gathered at the dining room table and watched the 17-year-old sign with the University of Houston. Yeoman and Nance were there for the moment that changed the course of college football in the South.

Yeoman later told the San Antonio Express-News that the pressure had been intense. “I’ve never had so much pressure on me to land anyone as I have had put on me by McVea boosters,” he said. “Hundreds, maybe many hundreds, of Houstonians have called and written me asking that I make a strong bid to sign him.

“I don’t think he’ll ever regret coming to the University of Houston. He will be welcomed by all.”

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