This article is one in a series of features produced in partnership with the Southwestern Athletic Conference, exploring the history of the SWAC from its founding in 1920 to the present day. The series will run in April and May.
Of all the great basketball players that have come through the Southwestern Athletic Conference (SWAC), arguably none have had a more transcendent college career than Alphonso Ford.
Okay. All right. All right. All right. Yeah. Okay. Okay. Okay. Amen. Amen. Amen. He’s got a lot of points. Amen. Okay. The Mississippi Valley State standout guard stamped himself as the most prolific scorer in SWAC history, but one of the greatest in college basketball history in general.
As a freshman, Ford led the conference in scoring with 29.9 points per game (fourth in the country), being named the SWAC Freshman of the Year.
He would lead the SWAC in scoring over the next two seasons, becoming the first player to lead the conference in each of his first three seasons since 1963 (James Allen, Arkansas-Pine Bluff).
This included his sophomore season in 1991, when he posted a career-high 32.7 points per game (second in the country), marking the highest single-season scoring average in conference history.
The dynamic scorer helped lead Mississippi Valley State to its second NCAA tournament appearance, claiming the regular season title in a tie with Texas Southern before beating Southern in the conference tournament final.
He concluded his final collegiate season with a 26.0 points per game average, making him the only player in NCAA Division I history (man or woman) to average over 25 points in four consecutive seasons, a distinction that remains exclusive to him.
The MVSU guard finished his college career with 3,165 points, making him the SWAC’s all-time leading scorer, a title he still holds to this day, and in fourth place on the NCAA Division I career scoring list (currently sits at sixth).
Despite never being selected as the SWAC Player of the Year, Ford is one of two players ever to be named to the All-SWAC First Team in all four seasons (along with Harry Kelly).
Ford briefly played in the National Basketball Association (NBA), being selected in the second round by the Philadelphia 76ers, and later signing with the Seattle Supersonics after being waived.
While he would play in 11 career games with the Supersonics and 76ers across two seasons in the NBA, most of his time in the league was spent with the Continental Basketball Association (CBA), the now-defunct developmental program that served as an unofficial feeding system to the NBA.
Ford made a profound impact in the CBA, averaging 23.4 points per game and 1.8 steals while shooting 49% from the field and 35% from three-point range in his two seasons in the CBA.
He was selected to the CBA All-Star in each of his two seasons, including in 1994 when he was named to the CBA First Team.
This was just the beginning of an astounding overseas career that helped Ford cement himself among the top scorers in Euroleague history.
He first made his way to Spain in 1995, playing for AGB Huesca, where he averaged 24.9 points on 56% shooting from the field and 36% from three.
His next stop was Greece, where he signed with TAK Papagos (Papagou B.C.) and won Greek League MVP in his first season with the team, leading the league with a scoring average of 24.7 points per game.
Before the start of the 1998 season, Ford received some life-altering news, being diagnosed with leukemia, forcing him to miss an entire year on the court.
While his contract would be voided by Papagou following his diagnosis, he would bounce back, returning to the basketball court the following year, signing with Sporting B.C. in Greece.
Without missing a beat, Ford once again led the Greek League in scoring during the regular season and was selected to his third Greek All-Star team.
In 1999, Ford signed with Peristeri Betsson, where he played two seasons and had his most successful professional tenure.
He led the Greek League in each of his two seasons with the team while also leading the Euroleague in scoring in 2001, fielding a selection to the All-Euroleague First Team.
Ford then played a year with Olympiacos B.C., where he once again led the Euroleague in scoring, leading the team to the Greek Cup and being named the series MVP.
After a prosperous stint in Greece, Ford then found himself in Italy, where he would spend his final two seasons.
He first played with Montepaschi Siena, being named to the All-Euroleague First Team for the second time.
Despite his leukemia being in advanced stages, Ford still proceeded with playing in the 2003-2004 season, signing with Scavolini Pesaro.
There, he helped lead the team to the playoffs, averaging a team-high 23.5 points per game on 54% shooting from the field and 46% from three, adding 2.0 steals per game.
Less than two weeks after announcing his retirement from Euroleague, Ford succumbed to his Leukemia, passing away at 32 years old.
Shortly after his passing, a trophy was named in his honor, being presented to the leading scorer of the Euroleague season up until the Final Four stage of the postseason.
Ford was inducted into the SWAC Hall of Fame in 2014 and the Greek League Hall of Fame in 2022. In addition, his jersey number was retired by Papagou and Peristeri Betsson.










