Las Vegas Review-Journal

Why Super Bowl 57 was not progress for Black quarterbac­ks

- LZ Granderson LZ Granderson is a columnist for the Los Angeles Times.

One of the truest comments I’ve read about race in America came from Chris Rock. It provides a framework for understand­ing Sunday’s historic Super Bowl matchup between two starting Black quarterbac­ks.

“To say that Black people have made progress would be to say they deserve what happened to them before,” Rock said in 2014. “So to say Obama is progress is saying that he’s the first Black person that is qualified to be president. That’s not Black progress. That’s white progress. There’s been Black people qualified to be president for hundreds of years.”

When Major League Baseball added the Negro Leagues to its record books in 2020, it was acknowledg­ing that it wasn’t talent or skill that kept Black men out. It was racism.

Similarly, it’s not that Black men have finally proven themselves capable of playing quarterbac­k. It’s that the NFL has begun to correct a history of discrimina­tion.

What Patrick Mahomes and Jalen Hurts accomplish­ed as Sunday’s starting quarterbac­ks for Kansas City and Philadelph­ia is worth celebratin­g — and not just once. Much as MLB uses Jackie Robinson Day to assess progress on and off the field, the NFL should use this historic Super Bowl as a marker.

Barack Obama was not the first Black man qualified to be president. Jackie Robinson was not the first Black man talented enough to play pro baseball. And the Mahomes-hurts matchup, as special as the players are, did not come about just because Black men were finally good enough.

There was an unofficial infrastruc­ture in place to stop it from happening — and not just through segregatio­n.

The NFL began using the Wonderlic intelligen­ce test in the 1970s — after the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that Duke Power Co. used the same assessment to prevent Black employees from getting higher-paying jobs. The NFL didn’t stop using the test until last year.

That’s not even a take. That’s just the timeline.

Far too often, we talk about “first Black” achievemen­ts as if they unfold by happenstan­ce. But segregatio­n is intentiona­l.

Dan Reeves chose to make the Los Angeles Rams the first to reintegrat­e the NFL in 1946. George Preston Marshall chose to make Washington the last in 1962. Those choices reflected the racial sensibilit­ies of the owners, not the abilities of players.

To reflect on Sunday without considerin­g this history is not to reflect on Sunday at all.

There is a direct correlatio­n between

John F. Kennedy sending the National Guard to back up the Black students who integrated the University of Alabama over Gov. George Wallace’s objections in 1963 and Dock Rone’s integratio­n of the university’s football team as a walk-on in 1967. There’s a line linking Walter Lewis, who became the school’s first Black starting quarterbac­k in 1980, to Hurts, who led Alabama to the championsh­ip game as a true freshman in the 2016 season.

That’s not even a take. That’s just the timeline.

My take is this: Embrace it.

If the NFL wants to end racism — as it states in its end zones — it can’t just spray perfume on it and hope no one notices Colin Kaepernick standing in the corner.

There is a reason it took this long for two Black starting quarterbac­ks to face off in the Super Bowl.

Ever since Joe Namath guaranteed a victory in Super Bowl III, the quarterbac­k position has come to define the American alpha male. In pop culture, it’s the high school quarterbac­k who dates the captain of the cheerleadi­ng squad. The winning Super Bowl quarterbac­k is more often than not the one who shouts that the team is going to Disney World.

It’s not just that quarterbac­k is the most important position in football; given the economic muscle and popularity of the NFL, it’s the most important position in American sports.

The faces of the best teams become the faces of the league. And the faces of the

NFL become part of American folklore. Think Namath, Montana, Elway, Marino, Favre, Brady, Bradshaw and Aikman, athletes who shaped our culture and epitomized leadership.

So the reason it took 57 Super Bowls for two Black starting quarterbac­ks to face off has nothing to do with “Black progress” and everything to do with what James Baldwin wrote in “The Fire Next Time”:

“They have had to believe for many years, and for innumerabl­e reasons, that black men are inferior to white men. Many of them, indeed, know better, but, as you will discover, people find it very difficult to act on what they know.”

The systemic barriers to the quarterbac­k position are being dismantled, but that doesn’t mean the culture that surrounded those barriers has dissipated. There were still NFL teams that had never started a Black quarterbac­k during Obama’s second term.

The stench of yesteryear lingers. You can smell it in the use of Wonderlic scores. You can smell it when ex-players sue the league for racial discrimina­tion. You can smell it whenever someone brings up Black coaches.

Sunday’s historic Super Bowl showdown should mark the end of that ugly chapter. But Sunday didn’t close the book on the NFL’S racist past. That story is still being written.

 ?? ROSS D. FRANKLIN / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Philadelph­ia Eagles quarterbac­k Jalen Hurts, left, and Kansas City Chiefs quarterbac­k Patrick Mahomes shake hands Feb. 6 during the NFL football Super Bowl 57 opening night in Phoenix.
ROSS D. FRANKLIN / ASSOCIATED PRESS Philadelph­ia Eagles quarterbac­k Jalen Hurts, left, and Kansas City Chiefs quarterbac­k Patrick Mahomes shake hands Feb. 6 during the NFL football Super Bowl 57 opening night in Phoenix.

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