Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Colts’ Saturday hiring chided on diversity, fairness grounds

- By ROB MAADDI

Even Jeff Saturday was shocked when Indianapol­is Colts owner Jim Irsay called late Sunday night to offer him the head coaching position.

A former two-time AllPro center who snapped the ball to Hall of Fame quarterbac­k Peyton Manning for 12 seasons, Saturday surely knows his X’s and O’s.

But the TV analyst’s only coaching experience was a three-year stint at Hebron Christian Academy in Georgia, where he led the team to a 20-16 record with three playoff appearance­s.

Irsay’s decision stunned people internally and around the league, though his affinity for Saturday was known throughout the organizati­on. Saturday played 13 seasons for the Colts, made the Pro Bowl six times, helped them win a Super Bowl and is a member of the team’s Ring of Honor.

Critics immediatel­y went after Irsay for hiring an inexperien­ced former player instead of elevating someone from the coaching staff, which is typical during inseason firings. Colts defensive coordinato­r Gus Bradley previously served as a head coach in Jacksonvil­le from 2013-16. Senior defensive assistant John Fox spent 16 seasons as head coach in Carolina, Denver and Chicago, and led the Panthers and Broncos to Super Bowl appearance­s.

Former NFL quarterbac­k and current ESPN analyst Robert Griffin III called Irsay’s decision “a headscratc­hing slap in the face to every coach on that staff” in a post on Twitter.

Saturday’s hiring also didn’t sit well with the Fritz Pollard Alliance, which fights for equity and inclusion in pro football. The NFL has seven minority head coaches, including Carolina Panthers interim coach Steve Wilks.

“The Rooney Rule is the only universal hiring policy used by the NFL to promote fairness and diversity,” The Alliance said in a statement. “However, (Monday’s) news in Indianapol­is illuminate­d a gap in the league’s stated objective. If the spirit of the rule is to expand opportunit­ies, we believe that it must be consistent­ly applied, even in the hiring of interim positions.”

Irsay and the Colts didn’t have to follow the Rooney Rule requiremen­ts for interviewi­ng minority candidates because Saturday replaced Frank Reich during the season. The team will have to fulfill those requiremen­ts after the season when seeking a permanent hire.

“We’re following the Rooney Rule to a ‘T.’ I really look forward to the interview process at the end of the season,” Irsay said.

This wasn’t the first time Irsay went after Saturday, who is a paid consultant for the team and was working as an analyst at ESPN.

“Now understand, we’ve tried to hire Jeff a couple times,” Colts general manager Chris Ballard said. “We tried to hire him in 2019 as the offensive line coach and we tried to hire him again this year — just didn’t work out. The timing didn’t work out. I spent a lot of time with Jeff — like I have with a few of the ex-players here, and it doesn’t take long to figure out that he’s got real leadership in him, real special in that regard. For this eight-game stretch and where we’re at, we thought he was going to be a really good fit for us.”

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