The Commercial Appeal

NFL has no excuse on minority hires

League gives teams annual list of vetted coach, GM candidates

- Mike Jones

For years, whenever questioned about the NFL’S limited diversity in the head coaching and general manager ranks, officials with hiring power have blamed their decision-making on a limited talent pool.

A small number of coaches and front office executives of color to consider compounds the challenge of ensuring greater diversity at the highest ranks, team owners and presidents have claimed.

However, minority assistant coaches and talent evaluators with head coaching and general manager aspiration­s have argued that it’s simply not true that the league has a talent pool problem.

Frustrated by the way that nepotism and the “good old boy” system historical­ly fuels head coach and general manager hiring decisions, minorities with head coaching and GM aspiration­s have long lamented the lack of advancemen­t opportunit­ies they have received. They simply need honest considerat­ion and an opportunit­y to prove themselves.

The leaders of the NFL’S Football Operations department agree with that sentiment and have begun taking action by working year-round to scout talent. The department then provides all 32 teams with an annual list of the leading minority candidates for head coaching and general manager considerat­ion.

Teams recently received this year’s list, which features 11 vetted head coaching candidates of color, and 20 minorities deserving of considerat­ion for general manager/football operations openings.

League officials hope that the extensive recommenda­tion list helps educate team executives with hiring power on the wealth of diverse candidates they have to choose from, and that this

knowledge sparks improvemen­t on the diversity hiring front.

Improving hiring practices has ranked among the priorities of the league office in recent years. In the last two years, the NFL expanded the Rooney Rule to require teams to interview at least two external minority candidates for head coaching, general manager and coordinato­r positions. Teams must conduct an in-person interview for at least one external minority candidate for any head coach or GM position rather than simply interviewi­ng them virtually.

The NFL currently has just one official vacant coaching position as the Las Vegas Raiders are led by interim coach Rich Bisaccia, who took over when Jon Gruden resigned after private emails containing offensive, racist, homophobic and misogynist­ic language came to light. But additional openings likely will follow this offseason. Several teams also could look to make changes in their front office.

The list of vetted head coach candidates from the league features the following:

h Eric Bieniemy, offensive coordinato­r, Kansas City

h Todd Bowles, defensive coordinato­r, Tampa Bay

h James Franklin, head coach, Penn

State

h Leslie Frazier, assistant head coach/ defensive coordinato­r, Buffalo

h Vance Joseph, defensive coordinato­r, Arizona

h Byron Leftwich, offensive coordinato­r, Tampa Bay

h Jerod Mayo, inside linebacker­s coach, New England

h Raheem Morris, defensive coordinato­r, L.A. Rams

h Demeco Ryans, defensive coordinato­r, San Francisco h David Shaw, head coach, Stanford h Mel Tucker, head coach, Michigan State (although his school is in the process of trying to sign him to a 10-year, $95 million contract extension).

The list of vetted general manager candidates is as follows:

h Marvin Allen, assistant general manager, Miami

h Dawn Aponte, NFL senior vice president of football operations

h Brandon Brown, director of player personnel, Philadelph­ia

h Morocco Brown, director of college scouting, Indianapol­is

h Trey Brown, former director of college scouting, Philadelph­ia

h Ran Carthon, director pro personnel, San Francisco

h Jacqueline Davidson, director of football research, Tampa Bay

h Ray Farmer, player personnel consultant, L.A. Rams

h Dwayne Joseph, director pro scouting, Las Vegas

h Champ Kelly, assistant director of player personnel, Chicago

h Omar Khan, vice president of football and business administra­tion, Pittsburgh

h Reggie Mckenzie, senior personnel executive, Miami

h Vincent Newsome, senior personnel executive, Baltimore

h Roman Phifer, senior personnel executive, Denver

h Ryan Poles, executive director of player personnel, Kansas City

h Catherine Raiche, vice president of football operations, Philadelph­ia

h Louis Riddick, former director of pro personnel, Philadelph­ia

h Samir Suleiman, director of player negotiatio­ns and salary cap, Carolina

h Adrian Wilson, vice president of pro personnel, Arizona

h Jojo Wooden, director of player personnel, L.A. Chargers

Last offseason saw improvemen­t on the minority general manager front as Atlanta’s hiring of Terry Fontenot, Detroit’s hiring of Brad Holmes and Washington’s selection of Martin Mayhew brought the league-wide total of people of color in top talent evaluator positions to five (joining Miami and Cleveland)

Only two of the seven head coaching vacancies were filled by minority candidates however as Robert Saleh went to the Jets and David Culley to the Texans.

Five NFL teams currently have minorities in head coaching positions (Pittsburgh, Miami, New York Jets, Washington, and Houston).

NFL owners and team presidents don’t have to take any of the recommenda­tions, and it’s still easy for teams to go through the motions of satisfying the Rooney Rule requiremen­ts and then hire a non-minority candidate of their choosing.

But NFL officials and minorities hoping to crack the head coach and general manager ranks hope that the latest efforts help open the eyes of those with hiring power and remove all excuses for a denial of equal opportunit­y.

 ?? TERRANCE WILLIAMS/AP ?? Buccaneers offensive coordinato­r Byron Leftwich walks onto the field during warmups before a game against Washington on Nov. 14.
TERRANCE WILLIAMS/AP Buccaneers offensive coordinato­r Byron Leftwich walks onto the field during warmups before a game against Washington on Nov. 14.
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