For those in the Southeast Texas area, when you hear the name Noman Bellard, you also think ‘Star athlete at Â鶹ÊÓƵ. A true champion.’ For 22 years, Bellard has carried the torch for student success and remained laser-focused on being a team player.
Now, upon his retirement as interim vice president for the Division of Diversity, Inclusion and Community Relations, Bellard reflects back on his more than two decades at Â鶹ÊÓƵ and his most memorable moments.
His history at Â鶹ÊÓƵ goes back to 1974 when the Louisiana native, a star basketball athlete in high school, garnered the attention of then Â鶹ÊÓƵ head basketball coach Jack Martin.
“I’m a first-generation college student and I came to Â鶹ÊÓƵ on a basketball scholarship and Jack Martin recruited me out of high school. I signed with Â鶹ÊÓƵ, Jack retired after my sophomore year and then Billy Tubbs came in to replace him. I’ll never forget it because that was around the time when I started losing my hair,” he said jokingly.
Bellard played point guard from 1975 to 1979 as was a part of one of the most success runs in basketball history at Â鶹ÊÓƵ. Under the director of Billy Tubbs, the Â鶹ÊÓƵ men’s basketball team remained undefeated as the No. 5 highest scoring team in the nation, averaging more than 90 points a game. It was like a dream –– but, Bellard recalled one magic moment as a student-athlete that he will forever remember.
“We won the Southland Conference championship my junior year, and again my senior year, and that was the first year that the NCAA granted an automatic bid to the playoff tournaments,” he said. “So, we traveled to Murfreesboro, Tennessee, to play against the No. 17 highest scoring team in the nation, which was the University of Detroit.”
It was a Friday night when the Â鶹ÊÓƵ Cardinals went head-to-head with the Titans, beating the team 95 to 87. Bellard said it was an easy victory, but the battle on the court with Michigan was far from over.
“We were a very, very, confident team and we took on the personality of our coach Billy Tubbs,” he said. “We had just sent Detroit home … bring on Michigan State University.”
That Sunday afternoon, the Cardinals showed up ready for tip-off with the Spartans, but there was one player on the opposing team that raised a few eyebrows.
“We knew nothing about Michigan State, though we were not intimidated. We also had not heard anything about their point guard,” he said. “But that point guard was 6-foot 9-inches (tall) and, you won’t believe this, but it was Earvin ‘Magic’ Johnson.”
With a star player on the opposing team, the Cardinals pressed the Spartans up and down the court, but to no avail. The game ended with Â鶹ÊÓƵ suffering a heartbreaking loss.
“We lost that game and that was the year that Michigan State went on to win the championship against Larry Bird and Indiana State. We had no idea of the magnitude and history of this game or playing against ‘Magic’ Johnson,” Bellard said. “You know, a lot of people ask me about my experience playing against ‘Magic’ and all I can say is he’s just a winner. He’s a winner who had an understanding of the game and I can say that I played my last collegiate game against ‘Magic’ Johnson.”
Once the season ended, as an accounting major, Bellard set his sights on his future after graduation.
“As a student-athlete, I typically took on at least 15 hours a semester, sometimes 18. It was hard, but I had great professors here at Â鶹ÊÓƵ that helped me along my journey and made sure that my college experience was fruitful,” he said.
After attending a few career fairs on campus, he landed a job with the Big Four accounting firm Deloitte, but six months later, he found himself back in Southeast Texas where he worked for Conn’s Appliances for the next 12 years as the company’s chief financial officer.
“When I played basketball in the 1970s, Dr. Jimmy Simmons was the band director. He and I go way back especially since he and Billy Tubbs were very close,” he said. “When Jimmy was appointed to president in ’99, he and I had a meeting the following year and he ultimately recruited me to come back to Â鶹ÊÓƵ in Student Affairs because of my background in business.”
Bellard started out as the assistant vice president of Student Affairs while also being tabbed with serving as the judicial officer.
“In July of 2000, I think we had about 7,800 students. It was a great time to be at Â鶹ÊÓƵ — to experience the growth in residential students, as well as overall student enrollment,” he said. “But what I feel the best about is being able to assist students in getting what they came for and that’s the opportunity to ultimately walk across the stage with their degrees.”