As the highest-ranking black person working on the business side of an NFL franchise, Vikings chief operating officer Kevin Warren will be honored with the inaugural Texas Southern University Pioneer Award on Saturday in Houston.
Warren is a trailblazer, much like his father.
"I studied the history of what life was like for an African-American family in the South," Warren said on Wednesday. "I know what my family went through."
Warren's father, Morrison, was born in Marlin, Texas, and attended Phoenix Union Colored High after his family moved to Arizona.
He would enlist in World War II and as a sergeant major witness the liberation of Buchenwald concentration camp. According to his obituary on the Arizona State website, it was then that Morrison Warren dedicated himself to bridging differences between people.
After the war he enrolled at Arizona State and became the football team's most valuable player.
"He was part of a team that integrated football in the South," Kevin Warren said. "My dad and my uncle were the only black players on the team."
Texas Western told ASU not to bring black players to a game. ASU refused to play. In 1966, Texas Western would start five black players in an historic upset of Kentucky, a game credited with speeding the integration of major college basketball.