Black NFL Coaches Lament Hiring Policies That Fall Short
Feb 11, 2022, 1:07 PM
(Photo by Jayne Kamin-Oncea/Getty Images)
AP – Veteran NFL coach Anthony Lynn appreciates the league policy that requires teams to interview minority candidates for their top jobs, and he has even benefited from it.
Like many of his peers, though, the assistant head coach for the San Francisco 49ers believes the policy has fallen short of its good intentions:
There were three non-white head coaches when the rule went into effect in 2003; today, there are five.
Skepticism about NFL hiring practices has remained steady among minority job candidates even after the league introduced the so-called Rooney Rule.
by @willgravesap https://t.co/qOIsmtmXQM pic.twitter.com/jv5jSJ56AM
— AP NFL (@AP_NFL) February 11, 2022
Skepticism about NFL hiring practices has remained steady among minority job candidates, who see parallels to the challenges corporate America faces.
NFL commissioner Roger Goodell says the league has fallen short "by a long shot" in ensuring head coaching opportunities for Black and minority candidates. https://t.co/ZJymKiPMh9 pic.twitter.com/k6KjrMFoX1
— CNN (@CNN) February 10, 2022
A racial discrimination lawsuit filed this month against the NFL by former Miami Dolphins head coach Brian Flores has magnified attention on the league’s hiring practices.