USA TODAY US Edition

Jen Welter still changing game

- Nancy Armour You can find more on our new podcast at changingth­egame.usatoday.com or on Spotify and Apple Podcasts.

The NFL’s first female assistant coach in 2015 seeing others follow in her footsteps.

Jen Welter didn’t set out to be the first woman to coach in the NFL. Once she was, she was determined she wouldn’t be the last.

It’s been five years since Bruce Arians hired Welter to be part of his training camp coaching staff with the Cardinals. While Welter hasn’t coached in the NFL since, others have. There are now more than a half-dozen women who are fulltime assistants in the league, and Katie Sowers was on Kyle Shanahan’s Super Bowl staff with the 49ers last year.

All of it can be traced back to Welter, who talked about the progress on the latest episode of the “Changing the Game” podcast.

“It’s the four-minute mile run phenomenon,” Welter said. “It’s impossible, unheard of. Can’t work, will never happen. Until it does. That’s what we did. And then the league has done a great job of creating situations with intentiona­lity to move the needle forward from that moment.”

Welter never had intentions of playing football with men, let alone coaching men’s teams.

“I would be like, ‘Dude, I’m not crazy, OK? I am 5-foot-2, 132 pounds. I’m not doing that. I don’t want to get killed,’ ” she recalled. “Until it happens.”

After playing on women’s profession­al

and semiprofes­sional teams for more than a decade – she was part of the U.S. team that won the title at the world championsh­ips in 2010 and 2013 – she was offered a spot with the Texas Revolution, a men’s indoor team, in 2014. A defensive player her entire career, she played running back, a first in a men’s profession­al league.

The following year, she joined the Revolution’s coaching staff. When Welter heard Arians say a woman could coach in the NFL so long as she could

show she’d make players better, she wrangled an introducti­on.

Arians is committed to diversity and inclusion – his offensive and defensive coordinato­rs with Tampa Bay are Black, and there are two women on his current staff – but he wasn’t trying to make a point. And Welter wouldn’t have been interested if he had.

The stakes were too high. “People look at it now and they say, ‘Well, of course Bruce should have done that. That just makes sense.’ And I push back and I’m like, ‘Really? You say that. But what if something had gone wrong?’ ” Welter said. “Then the conversati­on would have been, ‘Bruce Arians. Do you remember the time he lost his mind and hired that girl?’ ”

But Welter was well-received by the players and her fellow coaches. Better yet, she was respected by the players and her fellow coaches. That made it less of a gamble for other coaches to hire female assistants.

Some were coaching interns like Welter. Soon enough, some were full-time assistants like Sowers. When new Browns coach Kevin Stefanski was looking for a chief of staff, the job he had when he broke into the NFL, he hired Callie Brownson, who’d done stints with the Bills, Dartmouth and the Jets.

Last year, Welter was an assistant with the Atlanta Legends of the nowdefunct Alliance of American Football. Her focus now is on Grrridiron Girls, flag football camps that feature former NFL players. The camps introduce young girls to the game but also provide networking opportunit­ies for women who want to be coaches.

She might not ever coach in a Super Bowl. Or be a head coach in the NFL. But other women will, and Welter will have made it possible.

 ?? WELTER BY DAVID KADLUBOWSK­I/THE ARIZONA REPUBLIC ??
WELTER BY DAVID KADLUBOWSK­I/THE ARIZONA REPUBLIC
 ?? MICHAEL CHOW/THE ARIZONA REPUBLIC ?? Jen Welter joins our ‘Changing the Game’ podcast to discuss her time as an NFL coach.
MICHAEL CHOW/THE ARIZONA REPUBLIC Jen Welter joins our ‘Changing the Game’ podcast to discuss her time as an NFL coach.

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