HBCU Scores was built for fans who just want a clean way to follow HBCU sports.
I’m a proud alum of Fayetteville State University, and this whole idea started with a simple frustration: it was harder than it should have been to find the score for my favorite team.
Not a messy page.
Not five pop-ups.
Not a site covered in chaotic ads.
Just the score, the team, the game, and what happened.
But the more I looked around, the more I realized it was bigger than Fayetteville State.
I like rooting for schools like Howard University, especially since they are one of my local HBCUs. My cousin goes to North Carolina A&T, so I keep an eye on them too. I always hear about programs like Jackson State, Tuskegee, and Florida A&M, but I wanted a better way to actually follow what was happening with them.
Then there are schools like Edward Waters, where I have friends who went there, but their scores and stories do not always show up in the places most people check first.
And beyond sports, I’ve always been curious about the wider HBCU world. Schools like Morehouse and Spelman are historic and important, but unless you already know where to look, it can still feel hard to follow what is happening across the full HBCU landscape.
So I built HBCU Scores to make that easier.
Why this exists
HBCU sports have history, pride, rivalries, bands, alumni, homecomings, and real culture behind them.
But the information is still too scattered.
HBCU Scores is meant to be one clean place to check scores, browse teams, follow conferences, read quick recaps, and learn what is happening across the HBCU sports world.
The goal is simple:
Make it easier to follow HBCU sports without all the clutter.
Built with AI, but made for people
HBCU Scores uses AI to help turn game data into quick recaps, summaries, and stories.
That matters because a lot of HBCU games do not get the same coverage as bigger programs. If AI can help fans quickly understand what happened in a game, who stood out, and what it means, then it is doing something useful.
This is not AI for the sake of AI.
This is AI being used to help celebrate HBCU sports, make scores easier to follow, and give more schools the visibility they deserve.
What’s next
This is just the start.
The vision for HBCU Scores includes more sports, better team pages, cleaner conference views, smarter recaps, and eventually pick’em-style games and tournament challenges built for HBCU fans.
The big conferences have their own tools, games, and fan experiences.
HBCU fans should have that too.