Cincinnati Lion Tamers


Location: Cincinnati, Ohio
Nickname:
“The Tamers”
Manager: DeHart Hubbard
Established: 1930

In 1924, DeHart Hubbard, a graduate of Walnut Hills High School in Cincinnati, became the first African American individual Olympic gold medalist with a first-place victory in the long jump.

Hubbard was a superb all-around athlete and after returning home, he capitalized on his fame and organized an all-Black basketball team in 1926 known as the Cincinnati Comets, which included players formerly with the local Ninth Street Colored YMCA as well as himself playing forward.

This new Black Fives x HOMAGE graphic tee celebrates the Cincinnati Lion Tamers.

After dominating their local opponents, they began playing throughout the Midwest with similar results. Then in 1930, they traveled to Western Kentucky Industrial College in Paducah, KY, an African American institution whose basketball team, nicknamed the Lions, was co-holder of the national “colored” collegiate championship title along with Wilberforce, and who had not lost at home in five years.

A promotional flyer announcing a game between the Lion Tamers and Lincoln University of Philadelphia. (Black Fives Foundation Archives)
A promotional flyer announcing a game between the Lion Tamers and Lincoln University of Philadelphia. (Black Fives Foundation Archives)

Hubbard was so confident in a victory that he renamed his team the Lion Tamers before their arrival. Cincinnati won, 23-20, despite only bringing five men, and with one of those players fouling out.

The Tamers, as they were sometimes called, would go on to play against all the best basketball squads in the area, both Black and White, including the Savoy Big Five, the New York Renaissance, West Virginia State College, Wilberforce University, and the Cleveland Elks as well as the Toledo South Park Shamrocks and the Columbus Turf Club, winning the 1929-30 Ohio Basketball Championship.

Cincinnati Lion Tamers newspaper advertisement.
Cincinnati Lion Tamers newspaper advertisement.

The following season, they defeated the Harlem Globe Trotters. The Lion Tamers began to fade after Hubbard left the team in 1931, but during their height, they became nationally famous, putting the Queen City of Cincinnati on the basketball map and representing its Black community on the hardwood as no other squad would until the arrival of the Cincinnati Royals, with Oscar Robertson, a generation later.

Cincinnati Lion Tamers™ is a trademark of the Black Fives Foundation. All rights reserved.

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