Doug Porter, Former HBCU Coach Who Was the Oldest Living College Football Hall of Famer, Dies at 94

Doug Porter, who coached at Mississippi Valley State, Grambling, Howard and Fort Valley State, was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 2008. AP Photo/Joe Raymond
Doug Porter, who coached at Mississippi Valley State, Grambling, Howard and Fort Valley State, was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 2008. AP Photo/Joe Raymond
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Doug Porter, Former HBCU Coach Who Was the Oldest Living College Football Hall of Famer, Dies at 94

Doug Porter, who coached at Mississippi Valley State, Grambling, Howard and Fort Valley State, was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 2008. AP Photo/Joe Raymond
Doug Porter, who coached at Mississippi Valley State, Grambling, Howard and Fort Valley State, was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 2008. AP Photo/Joe Raymond

Doug Porter, the longtime football coach at historically Black colleges who was the oldest living member of the College Football Hall of Fame, has died. He was 94.

Porter died Wednesday. Miller Funeral Home said a funeral service is set for Saturday, June 15, at St. Benedict Catholic Church in Grambling.

Porter was the head coach at Mississippi Valley State, Howard and Fort Valley State. He was an assistant coach under Eddie Robinson at Grambling, returned to the school in 1997 as an advisor and helped establish the Eddie G. Robinson Museum in Grambling.

Porter coached at Fort Valley State in Georgia from 1979 to 1985 and again from 1987 to 1996, going 112-66-3, The AP reported.

″He left a lasting impact on not only his players, but all students, faculty, staff, and alumni,” said Jeffery Parlor, a former player under Porter at Fort Valley.

At Fort Valley, Porter was a seven-time Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Conference coach of the year and was athletic director for 16 years. He was chairman of the Division II Football Committee and president of the National Athletic Steering Committee. He was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 2008 and the FVSU Athletics Hall of Fame in 2009.

From Memphis, Tennessee, Porter played quarterback at Xavier of Louisiana and served in the U.S. Army before getting into coaching. He began his college coaching career at Mississippi Valley State, going 21-19 from 1961-65, spent nine seasons at Grambling with Robinson, then was 30-21-2 at Howard from 1974-78.

“Doug Porter was a remarkable person, crafting an impressive career in coaching and athletics administration among the HBCU ranks,” National Football Foundation chairman Archie Manning said. “A great football mind, he was a top-flight recruiter who cared deeply about his players and put them in a position to succeed.”

Porter's wife, Dr. Wilma Jean Porter, died in 2017.



Daniil Medvedev Destroys TV Camera Attached to the Net During 5-Set Australian Open Win

Daniil Medvedev of Russia smashes his racket while in action against Kasidit Samrej of Thailand during their Men's Singles first round match during the Australian Open tennis tournament in Melbourne, Australia, 14 January 2025. (EPA)
Daniil Medvedev of Russia smashes his racket while in action against Kasidit Samrej of Thailand during their Men's Singles first round match during the Australian Open tennis tournament in Melbourne, Australia, 14 January 2025. (EPA)
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Daniil Medvedev Destroys TV Camera Attached to the Net During 5-Set Australian Open Win

Daniil Medvedev of Russia smashes his racket while in action against Kasidit Samrej of Thailand during their Men's Singles first round match during the Australian Open tennis tournament in Melbourne, Australia, 14 January 2025. (EPA)
Daniil Medvedev of Russia smashes his racket while in action against Kasidit Samrej of Thailand during their Men's Singles first round match during the Australian Open tennis tournament in Melbourne, Australia, 14 January 2025. (EPA)

Daniil Medvedev used his racket to smash a tiny camera attached to the net at the Australian Open while he was trailing someone ranked 418th before eventually avoiding a monumental upset and winning 6-2, 4-6, 3-6, 6-1, 6-2 in the first round at Rod Laver Arena on Tuesday.

The No. 5-seeded Medvedev earned the title at the 2021 US Open and is a three-time runner-up at Melbourne Park, including a year ago, but was hardly playing his best in the second and third sets against Kasidit Samrej, a wild-card entry from Thailand who was making his Grand Slam debut.

“I know I play better when I play more tennis,” Medvedev joked afterward. “So I was like, ‘Why play 1 hour, 30 (minutes)?’ Need a minimum of three hours, at least, to feel my shots better.”

The camera-destroying racket swings happened in what would be the last game of the third set, which Samrej claimed to take a two-sets-to-one-lead in the best-of-five match.

Medvedev's display of anger came after he lost a 13-stroke point to trail 40-15. Samrej hit a shot that clipped the net, altering its trajectory and throwing off the Russian's balance, before a cross-court forehand passing winner left Medvedev unable to make contact.

Medvedev went up to the net and brought his racket forward with full force five times, breaking his equipment while shattering a small black camera and sending pieces of it flying. That earned a code violation warning for racket abuse from the chair umpire.

Soon enough, Medvedev had dropped the set, leaving him with plenty of work to do to avoid a massive upset in his first match of the 2025 season. Medvedev quickly did turn things around, though, claiming 12 of the remaining 15 games, and 61 of the remaining 94 points.

He finished with 24 aces and fewer than half as many unforced errors as Samrej, 34 to 69.

“In the end of last year, this match, I probably would have lost it,” said Medvedev, who went 3-1 in five-setters at the 2024 Australian Open. “New year, new energy.”

Samrej got treatment from a trainer because of a problem with his left leg late in the fourth set.

He was trying to become the lowest-ranked man to eliminate one of the top five seeded players at a Grand Slam tournament since the ATP's computerized rankings began in 1973, according to the International Tennis Federation.

The biggest such result entering Tuesday was when No. 234 Alex Kim beat No. 4 Yevgeny Kafelnikov at the 2002 Australian Open.

Samrej earned his way into this year's Australian Open bracket by going through four rounds of a wild-card playoff for the Asia-Pacific region in November. He never had played against someone ranked higher than 78th until Tuesday and never has beaten anyone ranked higher than 157th.

“I watched his matches, and I didn't see this level, so I was surprised,” Medvedev said. “If he plays like this every match, his life will be good.”