CSC selects Warrick Dunn as 2024 Dick Enberg Award recipient

CSC selects Warrick Dunn as 2024 Dick Enberg Award recipient

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About the Dick Enberg Award

CSC Selects Warrick Dunn as 2024 Dick Enberg Award Recipient
Dunn will be in attendance at the #CSCUnite24 convention to accept his award during the CSC All-Star Night of Honors, presented by ESPN

by Beau White – College Sports Communicators

223 and counting.

That’s the number of homes Warrick Dunn Charities has furnished for single parent families through Dunn’s flagship program, Homes for the Holidays, since 1997.

Warrick Dunn, the Florida State Seminoles football legend, NFL star, and College Football Hall of Fame Class of 2024 honoree, is the 2024 College Sports Communicators (CSC) Dick Enberg Award winner.

The Dick Enberg Award is presented annually to an individual who has distinguished themselves nationally through their career achievement and meaningful contributions to society while promoting the values of education and academics.

“I am always grateful to be recognized for the work we do because it honors the life my mother lived — for me and my siblings and for the public she served.” Dunn said. “Thank you for helping me shine the light on the issue of housing in America and specifically the need for affordable housing for everyday people trying to live a decent fulfilling life. More than anything besides doing for her kids, my mom dreamed of owning her own home and that never happened. My foundation and the growth we have experienced is because others have cared enough about her, and about our family to help. I appreciate that confidence and I appreciate this recognition.”
 
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Warrick Dunn, a Freshman All-American in 1993 while helping Florida State win its first national championship, earned first-team All-America honors in 1996 as FSU played for another national title. He appeared in 41 games and rushed 575 times for 3,959 yards and 37 touchdowns while adding 132 receptions for 1,314 yards and 12 touchdowns.


Dunn will be in attendance at the 2024 CSC Unite Convention to accept his award during the CSC All-Star Night of Honors, presented by ESPN on Monday, June 10. He’ll also be featured in a featured conversation on Tuesday, June 11 for convention attendees.

“It is hard to imagine someone more deserving of our Dick Enberg Award than Warrick Dunn,” said CSC President John Paquette. “For those of us who can recall watching him play first at Florida State and then for Tampa Bay and Atlanta for a total of 12 seasons in the NFL, we knew of his personal story, raising his five siblings after his mother had died while on duty as a police officer. As a pro football player, he got involved in team management and became a limited partner with the Falcons, though his philanthropy work may surpass all of his accomplishments with his wide-ranging Warren Dunn Charities that has improved the lives in so many communities in so many ways. CSC is thrilled to honor him.”

WATCH: The Inspirational Life Story of 10,000 Yard Rusher Warrick Dunn | NFL Films Presents

Raised in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, Dunn was the oldest of six to his single mother, Betty Smothers. Betty worked tirelessly as a police officer until January 7th, 1993, when she was ambushed and killed while escorting a businesswoman to make a night deposit. Warrick was only 18 years old.

Thrust into the role of head of the household, Dunn used his mother’s life insurance to purchase a home for his younger siblings. In the midst of the tragedy, he was also being heavily recruited as a senior out of Catholic High School to play football. He would ultimately choose to fulfill his mother’s dream and play at Florida State University.

With the help of his grandmother, Dunn managed to both parent and be a brother to his siblings from afar, while becoming one of the best running backs the Seminoles have ever seen. At FSU, Dunn was a three-time first-team All-ACC performer where he became the first back in the school’s history to record three 1,000-yard rushing seasons. He finished as the Seminoles’ career leader in rushing yards, gaining 3,959 to surpass Greg Allen’s 3,769 (1981-84), and he graduated on time in 1997 with a degree in Information Studies.

Continuing to defy the odds, Dunn was drafted in the first round (12th pick overall) of the 1997 NFL Draft by the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. In 1997 he was named NFL Rookie of the Year by Football News, Pro Football Weekly and Sports Illustrated, and designated Offensive Rookie of the Year by the Associated Press, Football Digest and College and Pro Football Newsweekly. Warrick would go on to play five seasons with the Buccaneers, six seasons with the Falcons, and then one final year with the Buccaneers. He retired from the NFL 14th all-time in all-purpose yards with 15,306 and 19th in rushing yards with 10,967.
 
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Warrick Dunn was selected 12th overall in the first round of the 1997 NFL Draft by the Tampa Bay Buccaneers and spent 12 seasons in the NFL for the Bucs and the Atlanta Falcons.


During his tenure as a Falcons running back, Dunn’s curiosity and interests off the field helped him develop a close relationship with Falcons owner Arthur Blank. In December 2009, that relationship helped Dunn realize a long-time goal of expanding his knowledge and experience in the area of NFL team management, branding, and operations by being unanimously approved by NFL owners to become a limited partner of the Atlanta Falcons. The purchase of his minority ownership position in the club was completed in March 2010.

In addition to his impressive on-field accomplishments and resume, Dunn is perhaps best known for his involvement in philanthropy. As a rookie for Tampa Bay, he founded the Homes for the Holidays program to fulfill his mother’s dream of home ownership for single parent families. The program partners with local organizations to turn houses into homes for single parent families through home furnishings and down-payment assistance. Since its inception, Homes for the Holidays has furnished 223 homes, provided over $1,070,000 in down-payment assistance, and served over 578 dependents.

The impact of Homes for the Holidays inspired Warrick to expand into three additional programs: Count on Your Future, Sculpt, and Hearts for Community Service Scholarships, all housed today under the Warrick Dunn Charities umbrella. Together, the four programs are dedicated to strengthening and transforming communities by combating poverty, hunger, and improving the quality of lives for families academically, socially, and economically.
 
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Warrick Dunn established his Homes for the Holidays program in 1997, which serves as the flagship program at Warrick Dunn Charities. That initiative has provided single-parent families with home furnishing and down-payment assistance on new homes. The program has helped 223 families reach the dream of home ownership.


“With his strong commitment to education and helping others, Warrick Dunn truly embodies the values of the Dick Enberg Award,” said CSC Executive Director Erik Christianson. “He has leveraged his own personal challenges and professional success beyond his playing days to greatly assist those truly in need, and it is our privilege to honor him and his achievements.”

The CSC Unite Convention is held each year in conjunction with the annual National Association of Collegiate Directors of Athletics (NACDA) and Affiliates Convention. This year’s convention will be held June 9-12 at the Mandalay Bay Resort in Las Vegas. All #CSCUnite24 convention attendees can attend the CSC All-Star Night of Honors, presented by ESPN, on Monday, June 10 with their convention badge. Those without a #CSCUnite24 convention badge may purchase tickets to the event at CollegeSportsCommunicators.com/tickets.

Dunn becomes the 28th individual to receive the CSC Dick Enberg Award. Enberg was a loyal supporter of CSC and served as the official spokesperson for the Academic All-America program from 1986 until his passing in 2017. The award given in Enberg’s name is considered as the most prestigious award CSC gives to an individual outside the membership. The Enberg family continues to support the selection.
 


Previous Dick Enberg Award Recipients
 
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Dick Enberg

2023   Tamika Catchings, University of Tennessee / Catch the Stars Foundation 
2022   Patricia Melton, Yale University / New Haven Promise 
2021   Billie Jean King, Cal State LA/Tennis and Women's Rights Icon 
2020   Amy Privette Perko, Knight Commission on Intercollegiate Athletics
2019   Frank Beamer, Virginia Tech
2018   Bill Walton, UCLA/NBA Hall of Famer
2017   Dr. Robert Khayat, Former Chancellor, University of Mississippi
2016   Roger Staubach, United States Naval Academy/Pro Football Hall of Famer, Dallas Cowboys
2015   Andre Agassi, International Tennis Hall of Famer
2014   Ann Meyers Drysdale, Basketball Hall of Famer, UCLA/Vice President, Phoenix Mercury & Suns
2013   Mike Krzyzewski, Head Men's Basketball Coach, Duke University
2012   Joe Paterno, Head Football Coach Emeritus, Penn State University
2011   Jackie Joyner-Kersee, UCLA, United States Olympian
2010   Tom Hansen, Commissioner Emeritus, Pac-10 Conference
2009   Steve Smith, Former Basketball Standout, Michigan State & NBA
2008   Chuck Lee, CEO Emeritus, GTE Corporation
2007   Pat Summit, Head Women's Basketball Coach Emeritus, University of Tennessee
2006   Gerald R. Ford, Former U.S. President
2005   Father Theodore Hesburgh, President Emeritus, University of Notre Dame
2004   Dr. Ted Leland, Director of Athletics Emeritus, Stanford University
2003   Dr. Tom Osborne, Director of Athletics/Head Football Coach Emeritus, University of Nebraska
2002   Judge Alan Page, Associate Justice, Minnesota Supreme Court
2001   Dr. Donna Shalala, President, Clinton Foundations; former President, University of Miami/Former U.S. Secretary of Education
2000   Bill Russell, Basketball Hall of Famer, University of San Francisco/Boston Celtics
1999   Dean Smith, Head Men's Basketball Coach Emeritus, University of North Carolina
1998   John Humenik, Former CoSIDA Executive Director, University of Florida/CoSIDA Board
1997   Dick Enberg, Hall of Fame Broadcaster/National Baseball Hall of Fame Ford C. Frick Award


 
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