Link
Even the most hard-core football fans are unlikely to have heard of Cody Pearcy. As a wide receiver Pearcy rewrote his college team’s record book. He was an all-American receiver who registered 44 receptions for 766 yards and 8 touchdowns in 2011; in 2010 Pearcy caught 51 passes for 1,078 yards and 12 touchdowns. But the team Pearcy starred for was the Huntingdon (AL) Hawks, a Division III team.
Pearcy was also a high school football star in Phenix City, Alabama. Besides football, he also lettered in basketball, golf and soccer. But there was no interest in him from any major college football programs. There almost never is for a White kid who stars at wide receiver, running back or cornerback, among other positions. For some reason only blacks are considered capable of continuing their high school success in college. White high school stars are routinely downgraded or ignored altogether by the extremely important “scouting” services such as Rivals, or are considered only at positions they didn’t even play in high school, you know, more “racially appropriate” ones.
Take a look at Pearcy’s Pro Day workout at Alabama State the other day, the link for which is given at the end of this article. His phenomenal numbers included 4.31 seconds in the 40, 3.76 seconds in the short shuttle, 6.7 seconds in the three-cone, a vertical jump of 44 inches and 10-6 in the broad jump. Only his marks in the broad jump and three-cone were bettered by any of the receivers at the NFL Combine last month, the prestigious annual February event that most college players must attend in order to better their chances of being drafted into the NFL. In other words, Cody Pearcy from little Huntingdon College is more “athletic” than all of the best and most-touted black receivers from the nation’s premier college football programs, as measured by the tests given at the Combine.
The NFL Combine is an invitation-only event and even many Whites who slip through the cracks of the Caste System and excel at “taboo” positions at major college football programs are ignored when Combine invites are given out. Certainly no White Division III players like Cody Pearcy stand a snowball’s chance in hell of being invited. But, unknown, small college, White receiver Cody Pearcy outperformed all receivers at the Combine at his Pro Day.
So why does such a gifted athlete languish at a small school? To those who understand the NFL’s Caste System the answer is obvious. Pearcy looked to be about the only White person at his Pro Day other than one of the coaches. It’s a reversal of how things were in football in the 1950s and early ’60s, when a black player was a rarity, and had to be very good to get a shot and was often a better athlete than the sea of White players around him. Now it’s the black players milling around watching someone more athletic than them excel at one event after another. The difference is that the NFL was interested in finding black players and playing them in the early days when the league was desegregating; but now we’ve had 30 years of the NFL resegregating around blacks and an ideology of black athletic supremacy and the league has zero interest in having a level playing field for Whites at most positions. Pearcy has but a very tiny chance of ever playing in the NFL. Sadly, his story is little different than that of hundreds of White football players who have NFL talent but very rarely get a fair opportunity to show it. The NFL’s long-standing extreme affirmative action policies make sure of that.
Here’s Pearcy’s Pro Day workout: