The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Does Gruden reflect broader league culture?

- By Howard Fendrich

When Shad Khan set out more than a decade ago to become the first member of an ethnic minority to own an NFL team, the PakistaniA­merican heard the scuttlebut­t.

“The conjecture was, ‘You will never get approved, because you’re not white,’” Khan, now the owner of the Jaguars, told The Associated Press in a telephone interview this week.

His attempt to purchase a 60% stake in one club fell through, so “the narrative that people had been giving to me kind of got reinforced,” Khan said.

Undaunted — and, he says, encouraged by Commission­er Roger Goodell — Khan moved on and soon reached an agreement to buy the Jaguars. “Got approved unanimousl­y,” Khan noted. “The conjecture and what was going on — and the reality — turned out to be different.”

Current and former players and others around the league have varying opinions about a key question that arose in light of the racist, homophobic and misogynist­ic thoughts expressed by Jon Gruden in emails he wrote from 2011-18, when he was an ESPN analyst between coaching jobs, to then-Washington club executive Bruce Allen: Just how pervasive are those sorts of attitudes around the sport these days?

It’s certainly been a topic of conversati­on in locker rooms.

“I’m not surprised those ideas exist. … I guess I was a little bit surprised by that comfort level, sending an email like that to somebody. I would assume you’re pretty assured that they’re not going to be offended by it or surprised by it or have them say anything to you about the nature of those emails,” said Corey Peters, a Cardinals defensive lineman in his 11th year in the NFL. “But I think it’s good for the league to have that come out, and guys be held accountabl­e for the things that they say, even in private.”

Gruden resigned as coach of the Raiders on Oct. 11 following reports in The Wall Street Journal and The New York Times about messages he wrote demeaning Goodell, union chief DeMaurice Smith and others, using offensive terms to refer to Blacks, gays and women.

Some saw Gruden’s words as indicative of a behind-thescenes culture that could persist in an industry where about 70% of the players are Black while more than 80% of head coaches (27 of 32) and general managers (also 27 of 32) are white — and all are men.

Among principal owners, only Khan and Buffalo’s Kim Pegula are members of minorities.

“The bigger issues aren’t unique to the NFL, but I think they are stark in the NFL: Who’s in positions of power? And who’s making decisions? When that is only one group, particular­ly people who are privileged, who are from the dominant group, then those are going to likely be skewed decisions and skewed world views,” said Diane Goodman, an equity consultant.

“It’s easy to point to Gruden and go, ‘Oh, isn’t he terrible?’ and ‘Look at the terrible things he did.’ But that doesn’t look at that larger culture, where people were participat­ing with him. People were allowing these emails to exist. It really is about the whole culture and that sense, that I’m sure people have cultivated, to feel like, ‘I can say these things and they will be, at best, appreciate­d and reciprocat­ed or, at worst, people may not appreciate them but nothing’s going to happen.’ And that is about privilege and entitlemen­t,” Goodman said. “There is the assumption that ‘I can say these things to another white man who is going to think they’re OK.’”

Broncos safety Justin Simmons raised the point that representa­tion matters, saying Oct. 13: “You get different background­s, you get different opinions.”

He also thinks the workplace culture is getting better.

“Progress has been made. Whether it’s good enough or not good enough, I won’t go into details about that,” said Simmons, who entered the NFL in 2016. “I’m a firm believer that as long as we’re taking steps in the right direction, that has to be positive, right?”

Former defensive end Mike Flores figures the sentiments found in the emails, which were gathered during an investigat­ion into sexual harassment and other workplace misconduct at the Washington Football Team, do not represent merely one man’s mindset.

“I know how people talk and joke around in locker rooms. Most people in the NFL would be highly scrutinize­d if the ‘politicall­y correct police’ examined everyone’s emails,” Flores — who played college football at Louisville with Gruden’s brother, Jay, before spending five seasons with the Eagles, 49ers and Washington — said in a phone interview. “Even the politicall­y correct have many skeletons in their closets. It’s a shame that a man of his stature and expertise is now put on the leper’s list and possibly kicked out of the NFL circle for good for something typed a decade ago.”

Three-time Pro Bowl defensive end Hugh Douglas, with the Jets, Eagles and Jaguars from 1995-2004, told the AP that Black athletes are “conditione­d” to hearing “the racial stuff” and hypothesiz­ed that owners wouldn’t want their emails made public.

Reigning NFL MVP Aaron Rodgers sees a generation­al gap between the folks in charge and those taking the field.

“I can say with real honesty and pride that I don’t feel like those are opinions that are shared by players. I feel like, in the locker room, it’s a close-knit group of guys. And we don’t treat people differentl­y based on the way that they talk, where they’re from, what they’re into, what they look like,” the Packers quarterbac­k said on The Pat McAfee Show.

“I know that there’s probably opinions similar to (Gruden’s), but I feel like they’re few and far between.”

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