Stamford Advocate

Pats add minorities to staff after years of lagging

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FOXBOROUGH, Mass. — The Patriots are one of the NFL’s most successful franchises, winning six Super Bowls under the discipline­d operation coach Bill Belichick has cultivated over the past two decades.

They aren’t exempt from having room to improve when hiring minority assistant coaches.

Eighteen of the 56 assistants (32%) Belichick has employed in full-time roles during his 22 years in New England have been minorities. Excluding strength and conditioni­ng coaches, the number drops to 13, or just 25%. Both numbers fall below the 36% of minority assistants on coaching staffs across the NFL in 2020, according to The Institute for Diversity and Ethics in Sports’ most recent Race and Gender Report Card.

Of Belichick’s hires during his tenure in New England, former Browns and Texans coach Romeo Crennel, Dolphins coach Brian Flores and Giants defensive coordinato­r Patrick Graham are the only ones to have risen to the coordinato­r or head coaching ranks.

Belichick is trying to change that.

The Patriots began this season with eight minority assistants: longtime running backs coach Ivan Fears, receivers coach Troy Brown, defensive line coach DeMarcus Covington, inside linebacker­s coach Jerod Mayo, assistant offensive line coach Billy Yates, strength coaches Moses Cabrera and Deron Mayo, and defensive coach Ross Douglas, a Bill Walsh Minority Coaching Fellow. Covington, Brown and Yates are also alums of NFL fellowship programs.

It is the most minority assistants Belichick has ever had on his staff in a single season.

“I think it’s a great program,” Belichick said of the NFL’s initiative­s aimed at introducin­g more coaches of color to jobs in the league. “It’s a great opportunit­y for both the teams and the participan­ts in it to make a connection more than casually, but actually in the workplace and on the job. I think it’s been great.”

This past summer he also represente­d the Patriots and led a session at the NFL’s fourth NFL Quarterbac­k Coaching Summit, conducted in partnershi­p with the Black College Football Hall of Fame.

The league’s efforts to help teams diversify haven’t gone unnoticed by Belichick’s players.

“I think for the league to do that, it’s one thing to talk about it. But to now try to pinpoint areas they can get better — in the coaching staff, in the front office — I think it’s time to start seeing that year in and year out,” said Patriots veteran safety Devin McCourty. “It’s the right thing to do. I think a lot of highly qualified people haven’t been given the chance and it’ll be great to see when people are given the chance what they do with it and excel at it.”

Two of those coaches who have progressed quickly are Mayo and Brown, former Patriots players who joined Belichick’s staff in 2019.

“They obviously have a lot of experience, and they have a perspectiv­e on the game as players that most of the other coaches on the staff don’t have, at least at the profession­al level,” Belichick said.

Belichick said the fact neither is far removed from his playing days — Brown’s last season was in 2007 and Mayo retired after the 2015 season — helps them relate to players more easily.

McCourty is also encouraged that minority coaches who have been added during his time in New England have brought a uniqueness that extends beyond their race. It runs the gamut from former players with institutio­nal knowledge of the franchise such as Brown, Mayo and Yates, to Covington, who worked his way up from the college ranks.

And while a coaching lifer like Fears has never gotten above the assistant level during a 31-year career, he’s not bitter.

“If I didn’t earn it, I didn’t get it. That’s the way it goes,” he said.

He’s excited to see players he mentored starting a path to possibly becoming head coaches one day.

“I think there’s a good set of coaches here that are young and they’re coming along and they’re putting themselves in position to get a chance to do that,” Fears said. “But I think the older coaches have a hell of a shot at it, too. I really do.”

Mayo feels he’s already grown a lot. “I think I’m better as a coach,” he said.

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