San Diego Union-Tribune

Face time for minorities just one step

- Farmer writes for the L.A. Times.

As an NFL running back — and the son of a legendary one — Ran Carthon learned from an early age how to scan a situation and squeeze through an opening.

Monday, a different kind of daylight.

Carthon, pro personnel director for the San Francisco 49ers, was among more than 60 participan­ts in a first-time NFL program aimed at fostering opportunit­ies for minority candidates who hope to lead franchises.

With a few exceptions, each NFL team sent a potential head coach and general manager to the league's annual May meeting, creating opportunit­ies for them to mingle in a more casual environmen­t with club owners and people in charge of making hires.

The two-day event, deemed the “Coach and Front Office Accelerato­r,” is intended to provide women and minority prospects leadership developmen­t sessions with football operations experts and facilitato­rs, as well as networking time with team owners. The effort is designed to continue building a diverse hiring pipeline.

It's a relatively small step, but one that could help break barriers and further forge relationsh­ips among the future head coaches and GMs.

“The important part is to get in front of the owners and let them get to feel you as a person,” said Carthon, who had a brief NFL playing career and whose father is New York Giants great Maurice Carthon.

“Because our résumés, whether you're a coach or a GM candidate, you can read about that. But you never really get to make the connection, specifical­ly with our scouts, because we're never on the field. There's not a camera on us. We're kind of behind the scenes making everything work.”

The NFL can't tell team

owners whom to hire, but is hoping that its coaching ranks become more diverse and reflective of its players, about 70 percent of whom are Black. Six of the league's 32 coaches are minorities, and three are Black: Pittsburgh's Mike Tomlin, Houston's Lovie Smith and Tampa Bay's Todd Bowles.

Seven GMs are Black, with five getting those jobs in the last two hiring cycles.

Ramping up the urgency for change, the NFL is being sued by fired Miami coach Brian Flores, who has alleged discrimina­tion in the hiring practices of the Denver Broncos and New York Giants.

Typically, anti-tampering rules would bar coaches and executives under contract from having these types of conversati­ons with other franchises, but the NFL set those aside for this event. From the league's perspectiv­e, the conversati­ons do not constitute interviews and the time spent may not be used to set up further interviews.

The Rams sent senior personnel executive Ray Farmer and tight ends coach Thomas Brown.

Representi­ng the Chargers were defensive coordinato­r Renaldo Hill and player personnel director JoJo Wooden.

The league has made other efforts over the years to create diversity initiative­s and programs for minority candidates, but this is the first formal program involving all team owners.

Among those who spoke to the candidates were NFL Commission­er Roger Goodell; team owners Arthur Blank (Atlanta), Art Rooney II (Pittsburgh), Clark Hunt (Kansas City) and Robert Kraft (New England); Falcons President Rich McKay and GM Terry Fontenot, and Indianapol­is Colts coach Frank Reich.

A few teams did not send both a coaching and frontoffic­e representa­tive. The Vikings, for instance, did not send a coach because they

have a first-year staff and OTA workouts are under way.

Jonathan Beane, an NFL senior vice president in charge of diversity and inclusion, said the goal is not only to get candidates in front of owners, but also to give the potential coaches and GMs a more global glimpse of the entire operation.

“We want them to have a broader understand­ing of the business of football,” Beane said. “A lot of times you're in your bubble, you're focusing on being a great coach, but then what goes on in football operations? What about business operations both at a team and league level?

“Across the board we want to create this atmosphere of engagement where relationsh­ips are built among themselves and among the club owners and decision-makers where there's a deeper understand­ing of how the league works.”

 ?? JED JACOBSOHN AP ?? San Francisco director of personnel Ran Carthon was at NFL networking event.
JED JACOBSOHN AP San Francisco director of personnel Ran Carthon was at NFL networking event.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States