Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

Two Black quarterbac­ks in Super Bowl LVII is another big moment

- ALDEN LOURY @AldenLoury Alden Loury is senior editor for race, class and communitie­s at WBEZ and writes a monthly column for the Sun-Times.

Football legend Doug Williams made history in May 1978. That’s when the Tampa Bay Buccaneers selected Williams with the 17th pick in the first round of the NFL Draft. Williams became the first Black quarterbac­k chosen in the first round. It was a moment.

However, another 11 years would pass before another Black quarterbac­k was taken in the first round.

On the last day of September 1979, Williams again made history, this time at Chicago’s Soldier Field.

The Buccaneers, with Williams as their starting quarterbac­k, visited the Bears and their starting quarterbac­k Vince Evans. It was the first time an NFL game featured two Black starting quarterbac­ks.

That was also a moment. Still, it would be another five years before another Black quarterbac­k would make his NFL debut. In 1984, Warren Moon signed with the Houston Oilers after winning five championsh­ips in the Canadian Football League. Back in 1978, despite capping his college career with an MVP performanc­e in the Rose Bowl, Moon was not selected in the NFL draft.

Williams did it again in 1988 when he led the team now known as the Washington Commanders to the Super Bowl, becoming the first starting Black quarterbac­k to play in the big game.

It was definitely another moment. Not only was Williams again involved in an NFL first, but he also lit up the scoreboard with 340 passing yards and four touchdowns. Williams earned Super Bowl MVP honors in a 42-10 rout of the Denver Broncos.

Neverthele­ss, Williams lost his starting role that next season, and he was out of the NFL entirely by the end of the 1989 season.

This weekend, the Kansas City Chiefs take on the Philadelph­ia Eagles in Super Bowl LVII. The Chiefs will start league MVP Patrick Mahomes at quarterbac­k, and the Eagles starting quarterbac­k will be third-year sensation Jalen Hurts. It will mark the first time the Super Bowl will feature two Black starting quarterbac­ks.

That’s right — it’ll be another moment.

Statistics vs. stigma

For sure, today’s NFL is different from the NFL that Williams, Evans and Moon entered in the 1970s and 1980s. At that time, Black quarterbac­ks were a rarity in the NFL. It was still widely believed that Black athletes lacked the intelligen­ce, fundamenta­ls and leadership to command an offense at the sport’s highest level. Celebrated collegiate Black quarterbac­ks were routinely overlooked or drafted to play other positions in the NFL.

We are now in the middle of a Black quarterbac­k renaissanc­e in the NFL. The number of Black starting quarterbac­ks has been in double digits the past few years, and Black quarterbac­ks have been named league MVP in four of the last eight seasons.

An analysis of NFL statistics shows that Black quarterbac­ks have equaled or surpassed their non-Black counterpar­ts the past few years in several categories, including passer rating, completion percentage, yards per carry and winning percentage.

And yet all of these milestones haven’t erased the stigma that has stained the NFL’s evaluation and treatment of Black quarterbac­ks.

Just within the past six years, three NFL franchises were starting a Black quarterbac­k for the first time ever. A 2017 Washington Post report revealed that NFL Draft reports still used stereotypi­cal language to describe quarterbac­k prospects.

Black quarterbac­ks were more likely to be described by their physical characteri­stics — weight, hands, body frame, etc. — and critiqued as being erratic or unpredicta­ble. Meanwhile, white quarterbac­ks were more likely to be noted for their smarts, leadership and poise.

And in the weeks leading up to the 2018 NFL Draft, several NFL scouts reportedly recommende­d that Lamar Jackson, a Heisman Trophy winner as a college quarterbac­k at Louisville, switch positions as a pro. Jackson was taken with the 32nd pick of the first round that year — after four other quarterbac­ks — and then became a superstar for the Baltimore Ravens, capturing the league MVP after the 2019 season.

Sports is a microcosm of America, where mispercept­ions await Black people at every turn: when they seek employment, when they attend school or when they go before a judge. Why should sports be any different?

But team sports should provide us with a disarming environmen­t to work through such mispercept­ions and discrimina­tion. Practicall­y every day, in arenas and on fields across the country, we witness camaraderi­e and teamwork as athletes of different background­s come together in pursuit of a common goal — to win.

And in the stands, fans from various communitie­s cheer in unison, high-five one another and revel in the glory when their favorite teams capture victory.

Either Mahomes or Hurts will win the battle this weekend. It will be yet another moment. But the war for Black quarterbac­ks to be seen as equals will continue.

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 ?? AP PHOTOS ?? Quarterbac­ks Jalen Hurts (left) of the Philadelph­ia Eagles and Patrick Mahomes of the Kansas City Chiefs will meet Sunday in Super Bowl LVII.
AP PHOTOS Quarterbac­ks Jalen Hurts (left) of the Philadelph­ia Eagles and Patrick Mahomes of the Kansas City Chiefs will meet Sunday in Super Bowl LVII.

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