
Turpin was a star for the Kentucky basketball team from 1980 to 1984. The team was heavily favored to win the national championship in 1984, but had it taken in an upset by Georgetown University and Patrick Ewing. The 6-foot-11 Turpin led the team to three straight SEC titles. He also holds the record for the most field goals made in SEC tournament play.
Turpin spent five seasons in the NBA but never turned out to be as good as the rest of the graduating class in the 1984 draft, in which he was the sixth pick behind future greats like Akeem Olajuwan, Michael Jordan and Charles Barkley.
Many are wondering what led Turpin to commit suicide. I was born and raised in Kentucky and went to school at the University of Kentucky. I remember Turpin being a star when I was growing up, but I never met him. Some wonder if he, like some other professional athletes, had trouble adjusting to life after the NBA, when the cheering has stopped and you're no longer the hero you once were. Turpin was a security guard when he died, and his longtime friend, former Kentucky star Dirk Minniefield, said that he felt it difficult to return to his hometown as a regular working guy when others expected him to have a life of riches and NBA fame.
"As an athlete you feel like you have to tell people about a job that they think is below you. Turp would say, 'Why do I feel like I have to explain parts of my life that you feel are unacceptable to you?' That's how it would come across," said Minniefield.
What's saddest about the death of Melvin Turpin is that it leaves me to wonder how well he was educated. His death is the second major tragedy this year involving a University of Kentucky basketball player, starting with the arrest of former Kentucky great Antoine Walker on very serious gambling charges. When I was a student at Kentucky, it was a common perception among the student body that athletes were not getting the academic attention they deserved.
While we can't say for sure that Turpin was or was not educated well when he was at Kentucky, the fact that he came back to a "stellar" career as a security guard seems to imply that his college education hardly prepared him for a life of anything other than basketball. Turpin certainly deserves some of this responsibility, but as someone who attended and taught at the University of Kentucky in the past, it is my presumption that Turpin was probably not forced to study as hard as he was forced to practice. In fact, Kentucky recently hired coach John Calipari, who is known for having numerous NCAA violations, along with a horrifically bad graduation rate. This year, the GPA of Kentucky's basketball team was an abysmal 2.025, which is the lowest among any of U. Kentucky's athletics teams and also the worst among the 20 athletics programs that reported their grades to the Lexington Herald Leader Newspaper in response to their request.
Such terrible academic performance on the basketball team is nothing new at Kentucky, and was likely even worse during the era of Melvin Turpin, when the program nearly received the NCAA death penalty because it had so many recruiting violations. I find is amazing and ironic that a place that allegedly proclaims itself to be an academic institution can always find a way to make sure players come to practice every day, but then claim that they are unable to control how much they study. Additionally, the choice of an academic institution to hire a coach who has clearly communicated that academics are not his top priority is yet another reminder that many of these universities only care about using these kids for money. Perhaps if Turpin had received merely a fraction of the millions he earned for the university as a player, he might have had a more fulfilling existence. My condolences go out to his family. May Melvin Turpin rest in peace.
Dr. Boyce Watkins is the founder of the Your Black World Coalition and a Scholarship in Action resident of the Institute for Black Public Policy. To have Dr. Boyce commentary delivered to your e-mail, please click here.
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By: Phillips Davis on 7/13/2010 1:33AM
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By: Ahlixs on 7/16/2010 12:05PM
I disagree with the message this article is sending. In his opening, Dr. Watkins uses the NCAA and “the League” interchangeably but each plays a totally different role in organized sports. The NCAA governs the activities of STUDENTS, the League governs grown men working under contract of their own volition. Also, why single-out “the liberation of African American males” here? The “exploitation” runs across all sports, races and genders and the professor ignores the thousands of African American students and families who leverage collegiate sports to achieve degrees, lucrative careers, etc. without incident. Perhaps the culprits are ALSO the parents, extended families and social networks of these athletes, who don’t educate themselves about this system of exploitation before selling their children to it. Many just stand-by as inexperienced KIDS make big-time career, education and life decisions and wait for the meager financial benefits they DO get to start rolling in. It’s not just the NCAA…. we must blame members of our community.
That said, If this article were ONLY about the economic discrepancies that need to be worked out, I might support it. I AGREE that there should be a richer revenue sharing agreement worked out between the NCAA, universities and student athletes particularly around ticket sales and licensing. BUT Dr. Watkins’ choice to lead into this discussion with a broad-brushed condemnation of the NCAA and the unsubstantiated suggestion that there’s a causal relationship between what’s happened to Antoine Walker and Melvin Turpin is simply bogus. To blame these 2 men’s problems on the NCAA without taking into account the myriad other factors that impact depression and gambling addiction is both inaccurate and irresponsible. These were grown men who had DECADES to control their own fate, seek help, further their social and academic education, etc., etc.
Is it the NCAA’s fault that Antoine Walker bought into the “baller lifestyle” and spent too much time in Vegas?
Is it the NCAA’s fault that there’s a stigma around mental health issues in the black community, and as a result of that stigma, Turpin never sought help for his esteem/career transition issues?
Child, please. We can’t always point the finger.
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By: Ahlixs on 7/16/2010 12:54PM
To be clear, my comment takes into account this post as well as other post/comments made by Dr. Watkins on another blog (TheLoop)
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By: krod on 7/17/2010 12:44PM
Please replace Turner with Turpin. Did anyone proof this???
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By: 5664ed82 on 7/18/2010 12:07AM
Some of the blame must go to the parents, they allow Mr. Turpin, to attend the school, but they did not demand that he be given a good education.
But the reality is that there is so many more of these men out there. WEhy is it that the girls, are not treated the same way? In many cases the youngmen have to take some responcibilities, they are not sure if they were going to make it in basketball so they should make sure that they get a degree.
Frankly, we make too much of athletes. There is a limited amout of people who are hired to play professional sports. In all the professional sports, I do not believe they have 50.000 athletes playing weather it be basketball, football, baseball. therefore how can you have these people just focus on those fields when the employment is limited?. Nothing can beat a good education, and that should be the driving force. May God bless his soul, and may he find peace at last.
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By: Eldon Pittman on 7/19/2010 4:37PM
Dr Boyce seems to question Turpin's "education". The so-called education that society holds so dear is misleading. There is nothing any sadder than an educated fool. The crap put out by teh colleges and universityies is meaningless. To question someone's education, in the wake of his suicide is insensitive, and the sign of one of those educated fools. Common sense has served me better than these 2 master's degrees that I effortlessly earned!
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