Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Flores lawsuit is not a surprise, not anymore

League has had racial, hiring issues for a long time now

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Because of his racial discrimina­tion lawsuit against the NFL, fired Miami Dolphins coach Brian Flores said he understand­s he might be risking getting another job in the league, despite having back-to-back winning seasons in Miami.

But, as we have learned from Flores alleging Dolphins owner Stephen Ross offered him $100,000 for every game he purposely lost — or tanked — to better Miami’s draft position, nothing should come as a surprise. Not anymore.

Regardless of the ethical impropriet­y, charges of blackballi­ng or collusion by team owners is not uncommon in profession­al sports. Three years ago, the NFL settled a collusion case brought by players Colin Kaepernick and Eric Reid, who claimed owners had blackballe­d them from signing with another team because of their kneeling protests against the national anthem.

Granted, there are no charges of collusion in Flores’ case (not yet, anyway) because his future fate in the league has not been determined. He still was getting interviews as a potential head coach or defensive coordinato­r candidate. But how the league’s owners handle this situation eventually could create a bigger problem than what already exists.

It might be understand­able a team does not want to hire Flores right now, not because of color or qualificat­ion but because he has a brought a lawsuit against the very league in which that team and 31 others are members. He has specifical­ly implicated three teams — Dolphins, New York Giants and Denver Broncos — in his lawsuit. Each of those teams has vehemently denied the charges Flores has leveled.

However, for no team to hire Flores in some capacity — and to ignore the resume he has built the past two seasons with the Dolphins — would only further Flores’ claim of the racial inequality that exists with Black or minority candidates.

The NFL has already dismissed Flores’ claims as being “without merit,” a quick rush-to-judgment from a league that should have learned its lesson from its mishandlin­g of the Ray Rice episode. Instead of the league that wholeheart­edly claims to embrace the Rooney Rule saying it takes such matters seriously and will look into Flores’ claims, its hurried response could be an indication of just how the league’s owners might handle this situation.

How NFL owners proceed from here will be watched by every minority coach and player in the league. Flores might be right. He might be risking future employment in the NFL with his lawsuit.

But the league will bring even more awareness to the problem if Flores doesn’t get another job.

Either way, nobody should be surprised. Not anymore.

Memories of Tomlin’s hiring

When the Steelers were interviewi­ng candidates to replace Bill Cowher as head coach in 2007, they had narrowed their search to two internal candidates — offensive coordinato­r Ken Whisenhunt and offensive line coach Russ Grimm — and two candidates from outside the organizati­on — Chicago Bears defensive coordinato­r Ron Rivera and Minnesota Vikings defensive coordinato­r Mike Tomlin.

Of the finalists, Tomlin was the only one who did not play in the NFL. He had been a coordinato­r for just one season with the Vikings and was considered the long shot to replace Cowher. Meanwhile, Whisenhunt was in demand from other NFL teams, being offered the head coach positions with the Atlanta Falcons and Arizona Cardinals (for whom he eventually coached).

But a short conversati­on with Steelers president Art Rooney II one day during the interview process always stuck with me.

As we were walking through the parking lot outside the team’s South Side facility, he said, unsolicite­d, “You know who was very impressive? That Mike Tomlin.”

More than a year later, Tampa Bay Buccaneers defensive coordinato­r Monte Kiffin said much the same thing when he recalled interviewi­ng Tomlin, then an assistant at the University of Cincinnati, to become the Buccaneers secondary coach in 2001.

“You could feel the room come alive,” Kiffin said.

That’s what happened with the Steelers, too.

The point of all this?

At a time when the hiring process of NFL teams has come under fire, keep in mind why coaches go through the interview process — you never know which owner or general manager you are going to impress, Or, in Tomlin’s case, blow away.

 ?? Associated Press ?? Brian Flores, left, was fired as Dolphins coach after back-to-back winning seasons, while Mike Tomlin blew the Steelers away in his job interview 15 years ago.
Associated Press Brian Flores, left, was fired as Dolphins coach after back-to-back winning seasons, while Mike Tomlin blew the Steelers away in his job interview 15 years ago.

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