HBCU
| JCSU grad Claude Saunders inducted to Gaston Co. Sports Hall of Fame |
| Was the school's first All-CIAA basketball player |
| Published Friday, March 25, 2022 7:30 pm |
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| Claude Saunders, a star basketball and baseball player at Highland High in Gastonia, was the first All-CIAA basketball player in Johnson C. Smith history. |
When the late Claude “Doc” Saunders grew up in Gastonia in the 1940s and 1950s, segregation was the law and common practice of the land in the region.

Saunders, a star basketball and baseball player at Gastonia’s all-Black Highland High School, used athletics to survive and thrive in multiple endeavors while also becoming a pioneer in integrated society.
His positive attitude and enjoyment of life regardless of obstacles is perhaps best exhibited by his comments about one of his greatest accomplishments.
In 1979, when Claude Saunders was selected to become the first Black official to work the prestigious Shrine Bowl of the Carolinas high school football all-star game when it was played at Charlotte Memorial Stadium, he had this to say to The Charlotte Observer the week of the game:
“I’m not political. Black folks have always had this philosophy – integration is going to come sometime – so you get all the degrees you can and when the opportunity comes....”
Saunders was more than ready for his chances as he broke all sorts of color barriers in the field of officiating years after his playing career was over.
“Everywhere I ever went and everybody that knew Claude always talked positively about him,” said Don Buckner, an official who moved to the Charlotte area in 1985 and regularly travelled with Saunders to work Southern Conference football games. “And I never heard him say anything bad about anybody. That was Claude’s personality. He was just such a quality guy and person.”
Saunders’ athletic success started as a member of one of Gastonia’s greatest high school basketball teams. In the 1949-50 and 1950-51 seasons – his junior and senior years at Highland – he was a driving force for teams that went 48-9, won the school’s first two Piedmont Conference basketball titles and advanced to the state semifinals of the N.C. High School Athletic Conference for Black high schools before losing to eventual champion Laurinburg Institute.
The Highland teams of that era were coached by 1978 Gaston County Sports Hall of Fame inductee Eugene L. Dunn and led by Saunders’ eventual Johnson C. Smith teammates Douglas Miller and 2011 Gaston County Sports Hall of Fame inductee William Partlow.
In 1950, they won the Piedmont title with a 48-39 victory over host Second Ward in Charlotte, then the 1951 title by defeating West Charlotte 63-50 at Highland’s home gymnasium. West Charlotte’s team featured future high school basketball coaching legend Charles McCullough, who would eventually become a longtime friend of Saunders.
In the 1951 state tournament, the Laurinburg Institute team that ended Highland’s state title pursuit featured future NBA great and Naismith Basketball Hall of Famer Sam Jones.
Saunders told The Gaston Gazette in a 1995 story about Highland’s 1950s teams that Dunn was influenced by the fast-breaking offenses employed at the time by college coaches like North Carolina Central’s John McClendon and N.C. State’s Everett Case, both of whom would be eventual Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame inductees.
“We had a fast-breaking team when few teams knew much about that,” Saunders said. “There was no TV then so everything we learned was pretty much what coach Dunn taught us. It was a very special time for all of us.”
Saunders went on to become the first All-CIAA basketball selection in JCSU history and had an immediate impact on a program where he was coached as a freshman by N.C. Sports Hall of Famer Cal Irvin and during his last three years for the coach for whom the school’s gymnasium is named, Jack Brayboy. He also set a school single-game scoring record with a 45-point game.
In the 1951-52 season, Saunders set a school freshman scoring record with 226 points and helped the Golden Bulls advance to the CIAA tournament championship game before losing 83-81 to Virginia Union. The next season JCSU was a No. 8 seed but finished fourth in the event as Saunders made the all-tournament team for a second straight season.
The Golden Bulls lost in the quarterfinals of the 1954 tournament and failed to qualify for the 1955 CIAA tournament even as Saunders made school history as the first All-CIAA selection.
In seven CIAA tournament games, Saunders averaged 18.5 points per game highlighted by a 32-point effort in a 1953 opening round victory over Virginia State.
After college, those basketball talents were key to his two-year tour of military duty in Germany.
“When he left Smith, he went into the Army,” Saunders’ son Shawn said. “He was such a good basketball player that they put him on the Army basketball team and instead of having to do a lot of regular soldier duties, his job was to be the driver for the general.
“So, his duties were practicing basketball and cleaning up the Jeep that he used to drive the general around.”

Upon returning home, Saunders embarked on a 31-year career as a teacher and administrator while also starting what would become a 50-year run as a football referee, observer, and clock operator. He taught and coached at Belmont’s old Reid High, Highland and at Charlotte’s York Road High School before later becoming Mecklenburg County’s transportation specialist.
Saunders started officiating in 1958 and would eventually work in the CIAA, Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference as well as the Southern Conference, where he was its first Black football referee. Inducted into the CIAA officials Hall of Fame in 2000, Saunders was approached originally by longtime NFL official Johnny Grier in the 1980s about joining its officiating staff.
“They told him he passed all the criteria, but he was older than they wanted for a rookie official,” Shawn Saunders said.
“He was in his early to mid 40s when that happened. But it created another opportunity for him when the (Carolina) Panthers came about.”
Sure enough, Grier, a Charlotte native who died earlier this month, pushed the NFL to hire Saunders as the Panthers first clock operator; Claude Saunders held that position from 1995 until his death on July 1, 2008. Saunders also worked NFL playoff games in that role, working one of the most famous Pittsburgh Steelers’ upset victories of all time on Jan. 15, 2006 when the sixth-seeded Steelers knocked off the top-seeded Indianapolis Colts 21-18 on their way to a Super Bowl title.
Saunders had one more passion in his life that he shared with his son.
Buckner called Saunders “an exceptional golfer” and recalls playing golf several times at courses throughout the region when they refereed college football games together.
Shawn Saunders, a 1986 North Mecklenburg High School graduate, says his father helped coach him up enough to help him earn team MVP honors in high school and a college scholarship to play the sport at Livingstone and Prairie View A&M.
“His favorite sport growing up was basketball,” Shawn Saunders said of his father, who in high school also was a state championship-winning baseball second baseman. “But late in life his favorite thing was golf, and he attacked that with the same passion he did with everything else in his life.”
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