The Guardian (USA)

Mahomes v Hurts: America’s fear of a Black quarterbac­k begins to fade

- Andrew Lawrence

Thirty-five years ago a harsh spotlight shone on Washington’s Doug Williams. He was the story of Super Bowl XXII, the first Black quarterbac­k to start in the NFL title game. In the run-up to the game he was blitzed with questions about his race, but this was the one that hit home.

Reporter: “How long have you been a Black quarterbac­k?”

Williams: “I’ve been a quarterbac­k since high school. I’ve always been Black.”

Never mind if that wasn’t precisely what was asked; the question lives in infamy as a low point for sport’s fourth estate. Unsurprisi­ngly, that question isn’t anywhere near people’s minds as Kansas City’s Patrick Mahomes and Philadelph­ia’s Jalen Hurts brace for this Sunday’s Super Bowl – and in the last state to observe Martin Luther King’s birthday, to boot. Though they figure to be forever yoked as the first Black quarterbac­ks to face each other in a Super Bowl no matter who wins, the history they’re poised to make has yet to touch off a media frenzy. In one sense, that’s progress.

America has changed a lot since Ronald Reagan feted Williams and his victorious Washington teammates on the White House’s South Portico after the QB’s record-setting MVP performanc­e. Black men read the nightly news, run Fortune 500 companies, run the Department of Defense. Outwardly, it would seem the country has never been more comfortabl­e with letting the Black man lead, even as the contrary has never been easier to prove – starting with the Black president whose mere presence tore the country in half before giving rise to Trumpism. In truth the Super Bowl, America’s grandest cultural expression, doesn’t just belie the state of the nation; it misreprese­nts the NFL’s own inclusiona­ry fairytale as well.

Despite considerab­le effort, the NFL – a league in which the overwhelmi­ng majority of players are Black – has remained stubbornly white within its ownership, executive and coaching ranks. And yet: the league can at least say that the stars of its franchises are no longer the fair-haired boys. Unlike Williams, who came to the NFL from a historical­ly black college and repeatedly pushed against sly attempts to change his position, Mahomes and Hurts were top-rated high school passers who starred at elite Power Five colleges before landing their current jobs. Even the way they’ve been able to grow into those jobs is unremarkab­le in a sense.

Where their Super Bowl-era forebears Marlin Briscoe, Joe Gilliam and Vince Evans were treated as square pegs who needed to be hammered into

shape to conform to the rigid offensive tactics of the day, the modern NFL quarterbac­k throws hard, runs fast and can call on great athletic ability at a moment’s notice – attributes that used to stereotypi­cally be applied to Black QBs.

But now quarterbac­k play is nowhere near as rigid as it used to be. It couldn’t stay that way, not after Lawrence Taylor and the ‘80s-era Miami Hurricanes overwhelme­d the NFL with defensive speed and effectivel­y turned quarterbac­ks into sitting ducks. All the attributes that (usually Black) quarterbac­ks were once stigmatize­d for – their happy feet, sleights of hand and general improvisat­ion wizardry – are highly sought-after now. When the all-Black QB matchup was sealed two weeks ago, Williams had to blink back the tears.

A perceived lack of intelligen­ce, once the biggest knock against Black quarterbac­ks, has rightly been disproven. The prevailing style of contempora­ry quarterbac­k play is unapologet­ically “Black”, that is to say bold, freewheeli­ng and improvisat­ional– and the style is showcased by white stars, such as Josh Allen, Justin Herbert and Joe Burrow too. The position as Tom Brady played it isn’t dead per se, but his retirement surely marks the start of the sunset.

The writing’s been on the wall as far back as 2014, the last time there were two Black quarterbac­ks in the Super Bowl, albeit on the same side. At the Media Day that year, I found Seattle pass rusher Michael Bennett by himself on a dais and asked for his thoughts on Seahawks backup Tavaris Jackson. “I pay attention to every quarterbac­k,” he told me, “especially, um, the … the colored ones. He’s one of those guys that doesn’t get a lot of credit.”

Later that Super Bowl week Russell Wilson guided the Seahawks to championsh­ip glory, becoming the second Black quarterbac­k to win a Super Bowl and avenge the defeats suffered by Steve McNair, Donovan McNabb and Colin Kaepernick. Even though Jackson barely made it into that big game (or many more thereafter), the Black QB takeover was already under way.

This year’s Super Bowl is more than mere validation of the Black quarterbac­k. It’s proof of their evolution into a proper institutio­n. It used to be that a Black quarterbac­k had to be an otherworld­ly talent (Michael Vick, Cam Newton) or an undeniable one (McNabb, Warren Moon) for teams to justify a starting spot for them. Now, it’s plain common sense. Four years ago the Baltimore Ravens were in a long post-championsh­ip swoon, and coach John Harbaugh appeared as good as gone. To save his neck, Harbaugh benched Super Bowl MVP Joe Flacco and elevated Lamar Jackson, then just a rookie out still figuring out the game, and the Ravens have been AFC threats ever since.

Kansas City’s Andy Reid pulled a similar move earlier that same year, subbing out former top pick Alex Smith for Mahomes as soon as the latter’s talent became undeniable. Instead of finding fault with the younger QB’s quirks, Reid let them inform his imaginativ­e schemes and embolden his playcallin­g. As Mahomes prepares to start his third Super Bowl in four years, already, he looks like the best to ever do it.

What’s more, he’s at his most magical when he’s jump-throwing touchdowns, completing no-look third-down conversion­s and otherwise quarterbac­king against tradition. To those who might doubt Mahomes’ identity because he has a white mother and lighter skin, consider: he effectivel­y forced the NFL to bow to the social justice movement after recording a video calling on the league to “condemn racism and the systematic oppression of Black people” and “admit wrong in silencing our players from peacefully protesting”.

But the far wilder success story is Hurts, upstaged on his own Alabama team by Tua Tagovailoa in the Crimson Tide’s comeback victory in the 2018 college national championsh­ip. In another decade, that moment of ignominy would have doomed Hurts to his cohort’s Kordell Stewart or Antwaan Randle El (read: a quarterbac­k turned catch-all athlete) if it didn’t outright quash his pro potential with scouts. But quite frictionle­ssly Hurts moved on to rehab his reputation as a passer at Oklahoma before landing in Philadelph­ia via the second round of the 2020 draft. Thirteen games into that season he unseated franchise QB Carson Wentz.

This season the Eagles cruised to the NFC’s top seed and through the playoffs behind Hurts – who, in addition to speaking in support of the social justice movement, trusts his career to one of the NFL’s few Black woman agents. After the Eagles dispatched the Giants in the NFC divisional round, Philly coach Nick Sirianni went as far as likening Hurts to Michael Jordan – a comparison that feels like a stretch for this Black Eagles QB. Where Randall Cunningham, McNabb and Vick were aweinspiri­ng dynamos, Hurts is still little better than a reliable decision-maker at this point – albeit one with inborn confidence and an unrelentin­g reflex for selfimprov­ement. You could call that a diss if this wasn’t a new frontier – one where a Black quarterbac­k is both clutch andjust OK.

America is still far from being totally comfortabl­e with letting a Black man take the lead on everystage. But on the football field, at least, there doesn’t appear to be an issue with Black starting QBs (actually running the team is a different matter). No one bats an eyelash when Teddy Bridgewate­r, Josh Johnson or Tyler Huntley – career clipboard-holders, all – enter the huddle in relief. To paraphrase that noted American sports philomath Winston Churchill: This isn’t the end or even the beginning of the end but, perhaps, the end of the beginning.

 ?? Guardian Pictures ?? Patrick Mahomes and Jalen Hurts have built on the achievemen­ts of other Black quarterbac­ks such as Colin Kaepernick, Russell Wilson, Cam Newton and Doug Williams. Composite:
Guardian Pictures Patrick Mahomes and Jalen Hurts have built on the achievemen­ts of other Black quarterbac­ks such as Colin Kaepernick, Russell Wilson, Cam Newton and Doug Williams. Composite:
 ?? Dirck Halstead/Getty Images ?? US president Ronald Reagan receives a football from Doug Williams after Washington’s Super Bowl XXII triumph. Photograph:
Dirck Halstead/Getty Images US president Ronald Reagan receives a football from Doug Williams after Washington’s Super Bowl XXII triumph. Photograph:

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