Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

Team parts with coach accused of racist actions

-

JACKSONVIL­LE — The Jacksonvil­le Jaguars and embattled strength coach Chris Doyle parted ways Friday night, a few hours after a respected diversity group blasted the team and called the recent hiring “simply unacceptab­le.”

Coach Urban Meyer said Doyle resigned and he accepted.

“Chris did not want to be a distractio­n to what we are building in Jacksonvil­le,” Meyer said in a statement. “We are responsibl­e for all aspects of our program and, in retrospect, should have given greater considerat­ion to how his appointmen­t may have affected all involved. We wish him the best as he moves forward in his career.”

The Fritz Pollard Alliance, whose mission is to increase diversity in the NFL, ripped Jacksonvil­le’s leadership, specifical­ly Meyer, and said racist allegation­s at Iowa should have disqualifi­ed Doyle as a coaching candidate.

“At a time when the NFL has failed to solve its problem with racial hiring practices, it is simply unacceptab­le to welcome Chris Doyle into the ranks of NFL

coaches,” the alliance said in a statement Friday. “Doyle’s departure from the University of Iowa reflected a tenure riddled with poor judgment and mistreatme­nt of Black players. His conduct should be as disqualify­ing for the NFL as it was for University of Iowa.

“Urban Meyer’s statement, ‘I’ve known Chris for close to 20 years,’ reflects the good-ol’-boy network that is precisely the reason there is such a disparity in employment opportunit­ies for Black coaches.”

Meyer defended the hiring of Doyle on Thursday, saying he “vetted him thoroughly along with our general manager and owner.”

Iowa agreed to pay Doyle $1.1 million in a resignatio­n agreement last June after more than a dozen former players said he bullied and discrimina­ted against them. Doyle denied the allegation­s.

An investigat­ion by an outside law firm later found that the program’s rules “perpetuate­d racial and culture biases and diminished the value of cultural diversity,” and allowed coaches to demean players without consequenc­e. A lawyer for 13 Black ex-Iowa football players has filed a lawsuit alleging his clients suffered racial discrimina­tion under longtime coach Kirk Ferentz. Doyle is among the defendants.

Meyer officially hired Doyle as Jacksonvil­le’s director of sports performanc­e — part of his 30-person staff — and said would assist the strength and conditioni­ng and athletic training programs. Doyle served as Iowa’s strength and conditioni­ng coordinato­r for more than two decades (1999-2019).

“I feel great about the hire, about his expertise at that position,” Meyer said. “I vet everyone on our staff and, like I said, the relationsh­ip goes back close to 20 years.

“A lot of hard questions [were] asked, a lot of vetting involved with all our staff. We did a very good job vetting that one.”

Meyer added that owner Shad Khan was involved with all of the “high-end hires,” including Doyle.

“I know the person for close to 20 years and I can assure them there will be nothing of any sort in the Jaguar facility,” Meyer said.

Hiring Doyle rekindled memories of Meyer protecting assistant coach Zach Smith for years at Ohio State. The Buckeyes suspended Meyer for three games shortly before the 2018 season for mishandlin­g Smith’s misconduct that included domestic violence allegation­s, a drug problem and poor job performanc­e.

An investigat­ion turned up “a pattern of troubling behavior by Zach Smith: promiscuou­s and embarrassi­ng sexual behavior, drug abuse, truancy, dishonesty, financial irresponsi­bility, a possible NCAA violation, and a lengthy police investigat­ion into allegation­s of criminal domestic violence and cybercrime­s,” according to summary investigat­ive findings released by the university.

Meyer knew about at least some of the issues and did little, if anything, before finally firing Smith after his wife asked a judge for a protective order.

Khan, the NFL’s lone minority owner who has been the victim of racism, has an impeccable track record in regard to gender and racial diversity. He stood arm-in-arm with his players in London after President Donald Trump ripped national anthem protesters, and he wrote an op-ed piece urging change in the wake of George Floyd’s death while in police custody.

 ?? CHARLIE NEIBERGALL | AP ?? The Jaguars and embattled strength coach Chris Doyle parted ways a few hours after a diversity group called the hiring “simply unacceptab­le.”
CHARLIE NEIBERGALL | AP The Jaguars and embattled strength coach Chris Doyle parted ways a few hours after a diversity group called the hiring “simply unacceptab­le.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States