USA TODAY International Edition

Diverse coaching staff starts with Bucs’ Arians

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Bruce Arians swears he might not have come out of retirement in 2019 to take over the Buccaneers if Byron Leftwich were not riding shotgun.

“I needed somebody to be the offensive coordinato­r,” Arians, 68, reflected on Monday for USA TODAY Sports. “I didn’t want to have to do that. Healthwise, for one thing. And then I just wanted to watch him grow.”

When Arians, who previously coached the Cardinals for five seasons, came back from a one- year hiatus, his health was such a concern that Tampa Bay had him take a physical as part of his interview process. He’s beaten cancer three times, most recently in 2017 when part of a kidney was removed to combat renal cell carcinoma.

“I probably wouldn’t have gotten back into coaching if I hadn’t gotten him, because I didn’t want to call the plays,” Arians added of Leftwich. “And I

trust him where I don’t trust anybody else.”

Not long ago, Leftwich would not have been an option. It took a few years of “recruiting” by Arians to persuade Leftwich – one of his backup quarterbac­ks when Arians coordinate­d the Steelers offense – to consider a coaching career. Leftwich, a former first- round pick and Jaguars starting quarterbac­k, began his second career on the Cardinals staff in 2017.

“Yeah, I had to get him off the golf course,” Arians said. “I knew once he got in it was going to be like a hook in a fish. He’s swallowed it all the way. He wasn’t there three weeks and he said, ‘ Aw, coach. This is what I was meant to do.’ I said, ‘ I told you.’ ”

Look at them now. The Bucs, with

Tom Brady still throwing down, are headed to the NFC championsh­ip game Sunday against the Packers in Green Bay, Wisconsin. But this is so much deeper than the story of a rising star in the coaching ranks making good with his mentor.

As the issue of the dearth of advancemen­t opportunit­ies for coaches of color continues to sizzle in the NFL with another hiring cycle in full swing, it’s striking that the Bucs are in the final four as the first team in NFL history to contain three Black coaches handling the major coordinato­r duties, including defensive whiz Todd Bowles and special teams strategist Keith Armstrong. A fourth, Harold Goodwin – of whom Arians also contends, “I wouldn’t have gotten back in it if Harold wasn’t available” – is the assistant head coach and running game coordinato­r.

What a statement at a time the NFL could really use a model for diversity. A sweep of Black coordinato­rs?

“I think it’s more coincident­al because these are my guys,” Arians

maintains. “Todd was my coordinato­r at Arizona before he got the Jets ( head coaching) job and then he was available. Byron, I kind of got him into coaching. Keith, he became available. He was one of my captains at Temple.”

Like Bowles and Armstrong, two other Black assistants on Arians’ staff, Todd McNair ( running backs) and Kevin Ross ( cornerback­s), were captains when they played for him at Temple.

“These are my guys,” Arians added. “And Harold Goodwin’s been with me, shoot, going on 18 years.”

Yet the Black coaches reflect just one layer of the diversity. There are two women on the staff – Lori Locust, assistant defensive line coach, and Maral Javadifar, assistant strength and conditioni­ng coach. Then there’s the oldest coach in the league, Tom Moore, 82, on board as offensive consultant. And twotime Olympic gold medalist hurdler Roger Kingdom is the speed coach.

“This is an example of how diversity is in the best interest of the game,” Rod Graves, executive director of the Fritz Pollard Alliance ( FPA), told USA TODAY Sports. The FPA monitors and promotes minority hiring for coaches and executives in the NFL.

Mindful of the sorry track record of NFL teams in advancing coaches of color to the top jobs, Graves added, “It’s really why diversity should be pursued in the business model of every team.”

Graves hailed the progressiv­eness that Arians, a two- time NFL coach of the year award winner, has long exhibited on this front, dating to his first head coaching job at Temple in 1983.

“He’s always approached this with an open heart, an open mind,” Graves said.

On Monday, a day after the Bucs upset the Saints in the NFC divisional playoffs, a Black assistant coach for a team that didn’t qualify for the playoffs praised Arians as a figure who has had more impact than anyone else in the league in progressiv­e hiring – this, despite so many efforts from league officials including Commission­er Roger Goodell and executive vice president Troy Vincent.

“I pray they can pull it off in Green Bay so the world can see him with his little kangaroo hat in the biggest game,” the assistant coach texted to USA TODAY Sports under the condition of anonymity, given the sensitive nature of the issue and his status with a competitor. “I tip my cap to Bruce Arians. He was able to do what no other person in America could do, to find not one, not two, not three, but four Black men to help lead his team.”

Arians fully recognizes the optics. He also has a keen sense of the frustratio­ns that exist for coaches victimized by a pattern – which includes white candidates with lesser resumes landing jobs rather than establishe­d candidates of color – that suggests there’s not a level playing field.

Bottom line, he believes in the value of diversity.

“I think you have to have different outlooks to get input,” he said. “It helps to have all that diversity, so the guys hear it in different ways. Sometimes, women teach better than men. So we have those voices. More than just a coach, you’ve got to teach ’ em.”

Arians chuckled when reminded that he was once the young, hot coaching candidate who landed a prime job. He was one of the youngest head coaches in Division I history when he became Temple’s coach at 30. He has also experience­d the other end of the spectrum. After Temple, it took 25 years and multiple stops in the NFL and in the college ranks for him to land another head coaching job. Arians was 60 when hired by the Cardinals in 2013. He emerged as an “accidental candidate,” so to speak, put on the map after winning coach of the year honors in 2012 while serving as the Colts interim coach as Chuck Pagano battled leukemia. He knows all about getting shut out during the hiring cycle … and what he can do now.

“After Super Bowl XLIII, I said, ‘ Man, I’m at least going to get an interview,’ ” he said, reflecting on the Steelers win against the Cardinals, when he coordinate­d the Pittsburgh offense. “I didn’t even get a phone call. So it’s like not having had opportunit­ies, I love giving opportunit­ies.”

Arians is encouraged that Bowles has interviewe­d for current head coaching jobs, including the still- vacant Eagles position. But he’s miffed that Leftwich has been shut out.

“I’m still pissed that Byron didn’t get an interview,” he said. “I’m looking at who got interviewe­d, and I’m like, ‘ What?’ They don’t have his resume. I mean, with our offense, Byron runs that show.”

Arians gets it. It takes opportunit­y. For all types.

 ?? TIM FULLER/ USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Buccaneers head coach Bruce Arians says of his diverse football staff that includes a sweep of Black coordinato­rs: “I think it’s more coincident­al because these are my guys.”
TIM FULLER/ USA TODAY SPORTS Buccaneers head coach Bruce Arians says of his diverse football staff that includes a sweep of Black coordinato­rs: “I think it’s more coincident­al because these are my guys.”
 ?? Jarrett Bell Columnist USA TODAY ??
Jarrett Bell Columnist USA TODAY
 ??  ?? Keith Armstrong
Keith Armstrong
 ??  ?? Byron Leftwich
Byron Leftwich
 ??  ?? Todd Bowles
Todd Bowles
 ?? 2017 PHOTO BY MARK J. REBILAS/ USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Harold Goodwin is the Bucs’ assistant head coach and running game coordinato­r under Bruce Arians.
2017 PHOTO BY MARK J. REBILAS/ USA TODAY SPORTS Harold Goodwin is the Bucs’ assistant head coach and running game coordinato­r under Bruce Arians.

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