Former Jackson State defensive end Kevin Dent was inducted Saturday into the Black College Football Hall of Fame in Canton, Ohio.
Dent was joined in the Class of 2024 by Joe “747” Adams (Tennessee State); Antoine Bethea (Howard); Waymond Bryant (Tennessee State); Richard Huntley (Winston-Salem State); Lemar Parrish (University of Lincoln); and Eddie Hurt (Morgan State).
“It is a great honor to be inducted into the Black College Football Hall of Fame,” Dent told The Clarion Ledger. “It’s great to be introduced to some amazing guys like Harold Jackson. They just paved the way for me.”
Dent, 57, a two-time SWAC Defensive Player of the Year, is the only JSU football player to be named a three-time All-American and was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 2006.
The Vicksburg native played safety for Jackson State from 1985 to 1988 and helped lead the Tigers to winning 27 of 28 conference games. Dent ranks second on the school’s all-time interceptions list with 21, behind Lem Barney.
After college, he was signed as a free agent by the Arizona Cardinals, but did not make the team. He played for the Birmingham Fire of the World Football League and the Tampa Bay Storm of the Arena Football League, but injury cut his career short.
This article originally appeared in the Mississippi Clarion Ledger: Kevin Dent, formerly of Jackson State, in the Black College Football Hall of Fame