Las Vegas Review-Journal

NFL doctor: Data will drive return

League also eyes repair of ‘broken’ minority hiring system

- By Vincent Bonsignore Las Vegas Review-journal

On the same day some team facilities began opening the business side of their operations, the NFL said it will take a measured, data-driven approach to letting players and coaches return.

For now, there is no timetable for when that might happen.

“We want to walk, then jog, then run as we think about how to open our facilities,” Dr. Allen Sills, the NFL’S chief medical officer, said on a conference call after providing a COVID-19 update to NFL owners during a virtual meeting Tuesday. “We’re taking a very measured approach and have a protocol in place.”

Taking that next step will be dependent on COVID-19 — chiefly the expansion and accuracy of testing — and the approval of the players associatio­n.

“We feel that there are certain important steps that need to occur with regard to testing, with regard to test availabili­ty, with regard to test reliabilit­y, and also our continued evolution of understand­ing about how to manage exposures,” said Sills. “And so all of those things are continuing to evolve, and when we and the players associatio­n together feel like we’re at a point of satisfacti­on with that science, then we’ll be ready to move forward. It’s difficult to give you a date

for that right now, but we’re moving in that direction and we’re moving as fast as the science and data takes us.”

The COVID-19 update was one of two major items on the agenda for Tuesday’s meeting. The other was a hiring system for minorities and women that NFL executive vice president Troy Vincent says is “broken.”

To that end, the NFL made significan­t rule changes and implemente­d new policies in the hiring process for both on-field and front office personnel.

There are currently four minority head coaches and two minority general managers in the NFL. In a conference call with reporters, Vincent said the hiring process that has been in place for minorities and women simply isn’t working.

“Facts are we have a broken system, and we are looking for ways to change the direction of where we’re going,” Vincent said. “It’s been (going) south. Not a gradual south, but a direct south. The fight continues there.”

To address that reality, the NFL made sweeping changes to its hiring process Tuesday while also implementi­ng a handful of programs, all of which are designed to enhance a level of diversity that NFL Commission­er Roger Goodell believes currently is not acceptable.

“We’re not satisfied where we are. We know we can and should do better,” Goodell said on the conference call. “That’s why this package of seven initiative­s is very significan­t. Our work here is not done.”

The biggest modificati­on was to the NFL’S anti-tampering policy, which previously gave teams the power to deny assistant coaches and front office executives the opportunit­y to interview with a new team for a coordinato­r or general manager position.

The tampering provision, which essentiall­y allowed teams to block employees from pursuing better opportunit­ies, has long been considered an impediment to qualified minority candidates moving up in ranks.

Under the new system, clubs will be prohibited from denying an assistant coach the opportunit­y to interview with a new team for a bona fide offensive coordinato­r, defensive coordinato­r or special teams coordinato­r position, and non-high-level/ non-secondary football executives from interviewi­ng for a bona fide assistant general manager position.

The new rule also requires all clubs to submit in writing an organizati­onal reporting structure for the coaching staff with job descriptio­ns for any coach who is a coordinato­r or co-coordinato­r. In addition, if any dispute arises about whether the new team is offering a bona fide opportunit­y the argument will be settled by Goodell, with his decision deemed final, binding and not subject to further review.

The NFL is also broadening the scope of the Rooney Rule by requiring that teams interview at least two

external minority candidates for head coach vacancies, at least one minority candidate for any of the three coordinato­r vacancies and at least one external minority candidate for the senior football operations or general manager position.

In addition, clubs must now include minorities and/or female applicants in the interview processes for senior level front office positions. The league office will also adhere to these requiremen­ts.

To further promote inclusion, all 32 teams will implement a oneto two-year coaching fellowship program for minority candidates to provide former NFL players and minority and female participan­ts with hands-on training in NFL coaching. The goal is to develop and nurture viable candidates within each organizati­on who will then organicall­y grow and advance within the organizati­on.

Contact Vincent Bonsignore at vbonsignor­e@reviewjour­nal.com. Follow @Vinnybonsi­gnore ontwitter

 ?? NFL ?? NFL Commission­er Roger Goodell says “we know we can and should do better” at hiring minorites for league positions.
NFL NFL Commission­er Roger Goodell says “we know we can and should do better” at hiring minorites for league positions.

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