HBCU Wrestling: Kenya Sloan to Lead Delaware State Team
Sloan's wrestling journey began at age seven, inspired by her younger brother. Their bond shaped her early motivation to compete.
"I remember being able to just have the connection with him and for us to be able to do something together that we both loved and was hard for both of us," she said.
That encouragement stayed with her throughout her youth. "He'd be waiting on the side of the mat for me to come off… and there's nobody who wanted to see me win more than my brother," she added.
During high school, Sloan became a four-time girls' state champion in Tennessee-a record-setting achievement.
"It was non-negotiable for me to want to say championship four times," she said. "When I choose something, I'm a bit stubborn so it was easy to stay focused on it."
At Campbellsville University, Sloan earned a national title and led both on and off the mat.
"I went to college with an open mind," she said. "I knew if I was gonna wrestle in college I was gonna dedicate myself to it."
Moreover, she stayed grounded. "I knew anything that I did anywhere was a representation of myself and my family and it was setting me up for my future," she added.
Before arriving at Delaware State, Sloan served on the coaching staff at Sacred Heart University.
"My biggest takeaway coaching at Sacred Heart really gave me an excitement for this Division 1 movement," she said. "It inspired me to pursue Division 1 opportunities elsewhere just to provide again more opportunities for people who have that dream."
She left with more than experience. "I felt like I got to join another part of the family," she said. "Even though I'm not their coach anymore, those girls are still my family."
In addition to wrestling, Sloan co-authored 'Can We Go to Lunch?', a book on mentoring teens, with her mentor, Kendra Berry.
"Writing through some of the lessons that we learned helped me to see how much weight there is in influencing the life of a young person," she said.
Consequently, that philosophy now guides her coaching. "It helps me to walk into this role with a little bit more purpose and maybe heaviness-but in a good way," she added. "It's a good heavy. It's a good weight to carry."
At Delaware State, Kenya Sloan promises a competitive, close-knit culture.
"You can expect a team with great camaraderie," she said. "But also a team that shows up for business. We don't need to be perfect-but we will give our best."
Furthermore, she sees this as a turning point for women in college wrestling, especially at HBCUs.
Sloan recognizes this opportunity isn't just hers-it's shared.
"I want to specifically extend my gratitude to HBCU Wrestling," Sloan said. "Before this was my dream, it was someone else's dream to start a program and give opportunities to women who have never had this opportunity. They really put in the legwork to making sure that this was a possibility."
"They found people like Delaware State University's administration and then me to help make that dream a reality," she added.
The post HBCU Wrestling: Kenya Sloan to Lead Delaware State Team appeared first on HBCU Gameday.
Copyright HBCU Gameday 2012-2025

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Miami Herald
4 hours ago
- Miami Herald
HBCU Star Makes Resilient NFL Return After ACL Tear
Ian Wheeler's NFL journey was already the stuff of underdog legend. The former HBCU star from Howard University burst onto the scene in the 2024 preseason. Wheeler rushed for 52 yards and two touchdowns in three games for the Chicago Bears - including a highlight performance against Buffalo that had fans chanting his name. But in the preseason finale against the Kansas City Chiefs, his momentum came to a gut-wrenching halt. A torn ACL ended his rookie season before it began. Nearly a year later, Wheeler is back, making the most of his second chance. In his first game since the injury, the HBCU product posted 20 rushing yards, 14 receiving yards, and even crossed the goal line before a penalty wiped out his touchdown. More importantly, he proved he could take hits, make cuts, and compete at full speed again. "It felt good to get out there and compete," Wheeler said. "Practice isn't the same as a game. It took me a second to get in the groove. But it felt good to really go out there, get hit, make contact, and play ball again." Wheeler's injury was captured on HBO's Hard Knocks: Training Camp With the Chicago Bears, in a scene that struck a chord with fans nationwide. Cameras rolled as general manager Ryan Poles told the undrafted HBCU rookie from Howard University that his season was over. Poles also assured him the team's door and his phone line were always open. The moment was raw and real, capped by an emotional embrace between Wheeler and his mother, Beaura, that went viral after the NFL posted it on social media. "Being an undrafted guy from a smaller school like Howard, having the GM believe in me meant a lot," Wheeler said. Rehab was grueling. Ian Wheeler spent months in the training room, using blood-flow restriction therapy, grinding through single-leg strength work, and fighting through the mental toll of a long recovery. There were no major setbacks, but there were plenty of quiet battles. "It's almost a year now - honestly a mental grind more than anything," Wheeler said. Despite missing the entire season, Wheeler stayed involved with the team and continued his off-field impact as a longtime volunteer with Grassroots Health. Wheeler mentored youth in Washington, D.C., inspiring the Bears to donate to the program in his name. Before the injury, Wheeler had already proven he belonged. At Howard University, he racked up nearly 2,500 all-purpose yards, returned a school-record three kickoffs for touchdowns, and earned MEAC All-Academic honors with a 3.57 GPA. He even deferred medical school to pursue the NFL dream. With a new Bears coaching staff under Ben Johnson, and a roster spot once again within reach. Ian Wheeler is determined to make the most of this chapter. "Nothing is guaranteed," Wheeler said. "Coming from a smaller school and making an impact reminds people that good football is good football. Just stepping into an NFL building is a blessing - and I'm not taking that for granted." Wheeler's Chicago Bears comeback isn't just about yards and touchdowns. It's about resilience, faith, and the quiet decision to keep moving forward when the easier option is to quit. If he keeps playing like he did in his return, the next Hard Knocks moment might be him celebrating a roster spot - not a setback. The post HBCU Star Makes Resilient NFL Return After ACL Tear appeared first on HBCU Gameday. Copyright HBCU Gameday 2012-2025


CBS News
4 hours ago
- CBS News
From NFL stars to HBCU head coaches, DeSean Jackson and Michael Vick briefly reunite in Philadelphia
Michael Vick tossed the ball to DeSean Jackson at much shorter distances than, say, the time the former Eagles connected on an 88-yard touchdown pass in 2010. Wearing a green polo shirt and cap, Vick still had some zip on the left arm. Jackson laughed as he made a few short runs before he had to change out of a white T-shirt and into a sports coat. The kind of outfit needed at a news conference for a head coach. Vick and Jackson haven't played for the Eagles in more than a decade, but the two franchise greats felt every bit at home Tuesday at their old stomping ground at the team's complex. The duo has now graduated into becoming rookie head coaches at HBCU schools; Vick at Norfolk State and Jackson at Delaware State out of the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference. They are the kind of football programs and a conference that would never have such a major platform in the regular season as the one they will boast when Vick and Jackson go head-to-head (well, the teams will) on Oct. 30 at Lincoln Financial Field — the home of the Super Bowl champs. "The Linc gets crazy already," Jackson said. "Now you've got two legends. It's going to be hype." Vick, who played quarterback, and Jackson, who was a receiver, each hope to add one more signature moment as coaches in Philadelphia after a career full of them during successful tenures with the Eagles (as well as other stops in the NFL). "There are a lot of things we could be doing," Vick said. "But we chose to go down this route." Neither Vick nor Jackson has coaching experience, but they are just the latest former NFL stars who had not coached before taking the helm at an HBCU program, a club that includes Deion Sanders and Eddie George. Norfolk State has made only one playoff appearance since moving to FCS in 1997. The last five Spartan head coaches have had losing records, including Dawson Odoms, who was fired in November after going 15-30 in four seasons. Jackson replaced Lee Hull after the Hornets went 1-11 last season. Sanders eventually jumped from an HBCU program to a Big 12 team in Colorado. He led Colorado to a 9-4 record last season and earned a spot in the Alamo Bowl. "Without Deion's success, our success would never be presented to us," Jackson said. "When I had an opportunity to be in this role, in this seat, I reached out to him. I never thought I would be a coach. I'm just going to be real. All those years I played, I seen how much time the coaches spent in the building. After practice, meetings." Vick actually approached Jackson about joining his coaching staff at Norfolk State. Jackson considered the opportunity but jumped at his own chance to run a program. "The kids and the youth are something that we really pour into," Jackson said. "To have all the information and the knowledge we have, it would be selfish for us not to give back to these young men that are trying to get somewhere in life." Vick said he always wanted to coach and spent most of the last few years coaching his daughter's flag football team. Vick — who earned a second chance in Philadelphia after his NFL career with Atlanta was derailed by his conviction in 2007 for his involvement in a dogfighting ring — had run football camps since he was a rookie with the Falcons. "Every time I have a camp, I feel bad when I leave, I feel bad when the kid goes on to get other coaching," Vick said. "It was always in me to be with a group of young men, to develop them, see how they transition over a three-month period, a six-month period, a 12-month period." The good friends (each called the other a brother) now get a chance to measure their own coaching careers over those same time frames, and beyond. Just maybe if the wins come, they'll get a call to a Power Four program like Sanders. "Hopefully, I won't say hopefully," Vick said, "it will be a success."


San Francisco Chronicle
4 hours ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
From NFL stars to HBCU head coaches: Vick and Jackson on same path as they briefly reunite in Philly
PHILADELPHIA (AP) — Michael Vick tossed the ball to DeSean Jackson at much shorter distances than, say, the time the former Eagles connected on an 88-yard touchdown pass in 2010. Wearing a green polo shirt and cap, Vick still had some zip on the left arm. Jackson laughed as he made a few short runs before he had to change out of a white T-shirt and into a sports coat. The kind of outfit needed at a news conference for a head coach. Vick and Jackson haven't played for the Eagles in more than a decade but the two franchise greats felt every bit at home Tuesday at their old stomping ground at the team's complex. The duo have now graduated into becoming rookie head coaches at HBCU schools; Vick at Norfolk State and Jackson at Delaware State out of the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference. They are the kind of football programs and a conference that would never have such a major platform in the regular season as the one they will boast when Vick and Jackson go head-to-head (well, the teams will) on Oct. 30 at Lincoln Financial Field — the home of the Super Bowl champs. 'The Linc gets crazy already,' Jackson said. 'Now you've got two legends. It's going to be hype.' Vick, who played quarterback, and Jackson, who was a receiver, each hope to add one more signature moment as coaches in Philadelphia after a career full of them during successful tenures with the Eagles (as well as other stops in the NFL). 'There are a lot of things we could be doing,' Vick said. 'But we chose to go down this route.' Neither Vick nor Jackson have coaching experience but they are just the latest former NFL stars who had not coached before taking the helm at an HBCU program, a club that includes Deion Sanders and Eddie George. Norfolk State has made only one playoff appearance since moving to FCS in 1997. The last five Spartan head coaches have had losing records, including Dawson Odoms, who was fired in November after going 15-30 in four seasons. Jackson replaced Lee Hull after the Hornets went 1-11 last season. Sanders eventually jumped from an HBCU program to a Big 12 team in Colorado. He led Colorado to a 9-4 record last season and earned a spot in the Alamo Bowl. 'Without Deion's success, our success would never be presented to us,' Jackson said. 'When I had an opportunity to be in this role, in this seat, I reached out to him. I never thought I would be a coach. I'm just going to be real. All those years I played, I seen how much time the coaches spent in the building. After practice, meetings.' Vick actually approached Jackson about joining his coaching staff at Norfolk State. Jackson considered the opportunity but jumped at his own chance to run a program. 'The kids and the youth are something that we really pour into,' Jackson said. 'To have all the information and the knowledge we have, it would be selfish for us not to give back to these young men that are trying to get somewhere in life.' Vick said he always wanted to coach and spent most of the last few years coaching his daughter's flag football team. Vick — who earned a second chance in Philadelphia after his NFL career with Atlanta was derailed by his conviction in 2007 for his involvement in a dogfighting ring — had run football camps since he was a rookie with the Falcons. 'Every time I have a camp, I feel bad when I leave, I feel bad when the kid goes on to get other coaching,' Vick said. 'It was always in me to be with a group of young men, to develop them, see how they transition over a three-month period, a six-month period, a 12-month period.' 'Hopefully, I won't say hopefully,' Vick said, 'it will be a success.' ___