Albany Times Union

Six Degrees of Wilks connects dots of NFL racism

- By Paul Newberry

Let’s play Six Degrees of Steve Wilks, a quick and easy way to connect the dots of racism in the NFL head coaching ranks.

We’ll start with Kliff Kingsbury, a white coach who was fired by Texas Tech in 2018 and somehow wound up as head man of the Arizona Cardinals the very next season. He replaced Wilks, whose first NFL head coaching opportunit­y resulted in a single, doomed season. Kingsbury would be fired, too, but only after receiving three more years to prove himself than his Black predecesso­r.

Moving on to Lovie Smith, a Black coach Wilks once worked for in Chicago. Smith was dumped after only one year coaching a Texans team that everyone knew would be awful in the wake of the Deshaun Watson debacle. That also provides a link to David Culley, a Black coach who received the same one-and-done treatment in Houston after the 2021 season.

Which brings us to Matt Rhule, a white college coach touted as the next big thing in the NFL. Instead, he left behind a huge mess in Carolina before getting dismissed early in the 2022 season (and, of course, quickly landed another lucrative college job at Nebraska). Wilks took over as the Panthers’ interim coach for the final 12 games and did a stellar job of cleaning things up.

When the Panthers began the interview process for a permanent head coach, Wilks was in the mix. So was Jim Caldwell, a Black coach who once guided the Detroit Lions — the Lions! — to a pair of playoff appearance­s, which might be the most impressive line on any candidate’s resume. But Caldwell, at this point, is nothing more than a perennial interviewe­e, the guy who gives owners a chance to say, “Hey, we considered a Black candidate.” He never had a chance in Carolina. We’ll get back to Wilks in a moment.

Now, the game gets a bit convoluted. Jeff Saturday took over as the Colts’ interim coach in November despite not a single minute of coaching experience beyond the high school ranks. He was totally overmatche­d in his new job, going 1-7, but that hasn’t prevented him from being one of the candidates for the full-time position. Saturday’s inclusion on the list of potential candidates has stirred such opposition that an Indy fan launched a petition drive demanding the team hire someone else.

How does Saturday figure in the Six Degrees? Well, he’s a thoroughly unqualifie­d white coach who took over after Frank Reich was let go by the Colts. Reich didn’t go without a job for long. On Thursday, he was announced as the new coach of the ... yep, the Panthers. The white candidate beat out Wilks, who had overwhelmi­ng support in the locker room after going 6-6 and nearly leading Carolina to the playoffs, a huge turnaround from the 1-4 start under Rhule. And here we go again. After Houston’s firing of Smith and Carolina passing on Wilks, the NFL is down to two Black head coaches — Pittsburgh’s Mike Tomlin and Tampa Bay’s Todd Bowles — in a league where the vast majority of players are Black. (There are three other minority coaches, including Miami’s Mike Mcdaniel, who has a Black father and identifies as multiracia­l.)

Even with four openings still to be filled, there’s little reason to be optimistic that much will change. Certainly not after the way things went down in Carolina.

Wilks, who is already part of a lawsuit alleging racial discrimina­tion in the NFL’S hiring practices, will likely be adding Carolina to the case if the outrage from his attorney, Doug Wigdor, is any indication.

The situation could get even messier if Brian Flores is snubbed by the Cardinals, of all teams, in their search for Kingsbury’s replacemen­t.

The NFL is always playing the long game, and always finds a way to come out more dominant than ever on the American sporting landscape.

This will likely be more of the same. Some sort of settlement, perhaps, but no real change.

In the end, the Six Degrees of Steve Wilks probably won’t include a third chance for him to be an NFL head coach.

That game seems over.

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