Chicago Sun-Times

‘AMAZING’ MATCHUP

Chicago football fans thrilled to see historic Super Bowl duel between two Black QBs

- BY EMMANUEL CAMARILLO, STAFF REPORTER ecamarillo@suntimes.com | @mannycam Contributi­ng: Patrick Finley, AP

“MOSTLY IT’S BEEN EITHER WHITE QUARTERBAC­KS OR ONE OR THE OTHER. IT’S A GREAT TIME TO SEE THAT TWO BLACK QUARTERBAC­KS ARE LEADING THE TEAMS IN THE SUPER BOWL.” MARVIS HINER

Marvis Hiner was thrilled that two Black quarterbac­ks were facing off in the Super Bowl for the first time, something he said he didn’t think would happen in his lifetime.

“Mostly it’s been either white quarterbac­ks or one or the other,” Hiner said while waiting for the game to kick off Sunday at Williams Inn Pizza & Sports Bar. “It’s a great time to see that two Black quarterbac­ks are leading the teams in the Super Bowl. To see this is amazing.”

Hiner and other Black Chicago football fans celebrated the historic significan­ce of the matchup between the Philadelph­ia Eagles’ Jalen Hurts and Patrick Mahomes of the Kansas City Chiefs, saying it shattered stereotype­s of Black players at the position.

“It’s showing that Black quarterbac­ks can do the same thing as other quarterbac­ks,” Hiner said. “They always try to make them play a different position, like a wide receiver or something because they think that they can’t make the quick decisions. But they’re showing them right now that they can.”

For decades, white team owners and coaches operated under the assumption that African Americans were unable to grasp the technicali­ties to be successful at the quarterbac­k spot.

Both Mahomes and Hurts acknowledg­ed history was being made during their media blitz last week. But they hope that having two Black starting quarterbac­ks in the Super Bowl becomes so commonplac­e that it ceases to be notable.

‘‘You’re on the world stage,’’ Mahomes said. ‘‘And to have two Black quarterbac­ks playing the position at a high level and consistent­ly

“IT SHOWS THAT BLACK QUARTERBAC­KS ARE EQUALLY AS TALENTED AND INTELLIGEN­T AS WHITE QUARTERBAC­KS, AND THEY SHOULD BE GIVEN MORE OPPORTUNIT­IES.” MILAN HILL

playing great football just shows where we’re at in football and in society. We’re moving forward. We want to continue to move forward. We’re not done.’’

Milan Hill, who was also at Williams Inn, echoed Hiner. “It shows that Black quarterbac­ks are equally as talented and intelligen­t as white quarterbac­ks, and they should be given more opportunit­ies,” Hill said.

He said similar leadership opportunit­ies should also be extended to Black coaches and executives in the NFL.

“Coaches and front office people in the NFL need to be more represente­d by people of color,” Hill said. “But it’s gonna take a lot of changes and litigation to help transform the league.”

In 2006, two Black head coaches faced off in the Super Bowl for the first time when Tony Dungy’s Indianapol­is Colts and Lovie Smith’s Chicago Bears battled it out. There was optimism at the time that it meant the NFL was making progress in regards to diversity in coaching, but the league has struggled to hire people of color in leadership since then.

Washington’s Doug Williams was the first Black quarterbac­k to start and win a Super Bowl following the 1987 season. That’s back when Black quarterbac­ks were fairly rare across the NFL.

Mahomes became a two-time winner by leading the Chiefs to victory. Hurts was trying to become the fourth Black QB to win the Super Bowl, joining Williams, Mahomes and Russell Wilson.

Steve McNair, Colin Kaepernick, Cam Newton and Wilson also started in a Super Bowl, but they lost.

In Grand Crossing on the South Side, Rico Mays, 44, sported a green Hurts jersey outside the 50 Yard Line sports bar. He said the duel between two Black quarterbac­ks showed how far the game had progressed.

“The game has evolved to where you have Black quarterbac­ks representi­ng both leagues right now in the Super Bowl,” Mays said. “It’s as historic as it should be.”

“It’s going to give a lot of Black quarterbac­ks the opportunit­y to compete at this level, it’s going to open up doors,” Mays said. “And that it’s happening during Black History Month is an added bonus.”

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Jalen Hurts

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