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During Khari Blasingame’s freshman year at Vanderbilt University, he was already speaking to academic support counselor Elizabeth Wright about graduate school. This year’s Arthur Ashe Jr. Male Sports Scholar has not wavered in his commitment to addressing systemic inequities in health care, and his long-term goal is to become a leader in health care administration.

Wright says Blasingame, Dean’s List honoree and Southeastern Conference (SEC) Academic Honor Roll, is one of the best students and best people with whom she has worked in her career. “He was always very focused on academics and at the same time on football,” says Wright, who describes Blasingame as a natural leader.

A running back for the Commodores, Blasingame says he was raised to pursue academic excellence and be of service to others. Originally planning to be pre-med, he found that incompatible with excellence in football so he switched his major to Medicine, Health and Society (MHS).

“My specific track in MHS was ethnic and racial disparities in health,” says Blasingame, who minored in AfricanAmerican and Diaspora Studies (AADS). “If I can rise through the ranks of a health system or even a hospital, I can make small changes that might make a difference in somebody’s health outcomes. In a health system, I would establish a culture within all the hospitals that we own that things should be equitable as far as health.”

Blasingame grew up in Huntsville, Alabama watching SEC college football, but he wasn’t recruited by nearby SEC schools. There were scholarship offers from high level academic institutions such as Northwestern University, but when Vanderbilt came calling he saw it as the perfect fit. He loved the city of Nashville and had friends at nearby Tennessee State and Fisk universities. The fact that Vanderbilt is just two hours from home sealed the deal — especially with his grandmother.

Balancing academics and athletics wasn’t easy, but Blasingame saw them as equally important. He credits his parents for instilling the discipline of academics in him early in his life. He deeply appreciates the support systems Vanderbilt offered, thanking Wright for keeping him on track. Blasingame says the late David Williams, Vanderbilt’s athletic director who passed away earlier this year, was “the perfect AD for a guy like me.”

“He prioritized graduating the athletes that attend Vanderbilt,” says Blasingame. “Making sure they have a full experience. [Football] coach Derek Mason as well. He’s a football coach first, of course, but he cares about the academic success. He has a saying, ‘The way you do anything is the way you do everything.’”

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American sport has always served as a platform for resistance and has been measured and critiqued by how it responds in critical moments of racial and social crises.
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A New Track: Fostering Diversity and Equity in Athletics