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Roots
Black coaches still can't make headway in football
Posted: Thursday January 31, 2002 12:18 PM
This is always a hectic hiring time in the NFL, as teams rush to jettison losing
coaches and hire new ones -- most often ones who have just been jettisoned by
somebody else. Of course, every time an NFL or college football factory hires a
new coach these days, the race of the man is called to attention. The two sports
that African-American players dominate post quite different records in the
coaching ranks.
In basketball, almost half of the pro coaches are black, and so are almost a
quarter of Division I college coaches. African-Americans are hired and fired in
basketball now without so much as a note made of race. But only three NFL teams
had black head coaches this past season -- and that's down to two now -- while
among the colleges, the only big-time African-American head men are Bobby
Williams at Michigan State and Tyrone Willingham, who's moved up from
Stanford to Notre
Dame.
There are a number of reasons to account for this, beginning with the root
differences between the games themselves. Basketball is a pretty intimate
enterprise, with only a handful of players on a team. Even the substitutes can
emerge as personalities -- and remember, it's the benchwarmers in all sports who
usually make the best coaches. The incumbent coaches, owners, athletic directors
and general managers get to know their basketball players well. They're distinct
people, not just guys in helmets, which is what so many football players
are.
Besides, coaching basketball depends so much on the personal element. A football
coach can be a distant workaholic, organizing and organizing. A basketball coach
can't last unless his players certify him as a human being. He has assistants,
but the system is not so hierarchal. Secure NBA coaches now often even keep wise
old strategists around to advise them. These septuagenarian ex-head coaches are
sort of like consultants -- the medicine men of team sports. Basketball is more
familial, more tribal, football more structured, more corporate.
Football coaches are executives. They have vice presidents -- offensive and
defensive coordinators -- and middle-management department heads in charge of
the myriad positions. So, not only do the people who hire football coaches
probably fail at getting to know young black coaching candidates, there is also
almost surely some kind of submerged racism, which presumes that, sure, a black
man can handle a little basketball club, but a heavy-duty football operation is
really too complicated to trust to a minority.
Athletic directors have also been known to whisper that wealthy alumni wouldn't
stand for a black football coach. It's the same secret excuse they used years
ago, saying alumni wouldn't tolerate black players. General managers and
athletic directors likewise doth protest too much that they won't hire a black
coach because they'll get too much heat when they fire
him.
I first heard that 30 years ago, in basketball. I asked a potential black coach
what he thought of that. He only turned and, smiling, quoted me Tennyson:
"'Tis better to have loved and lost/Than never to have loved at
all."
Sports Illustrated senior contributing writer Frank Deford is a regular
contributor to CNNSI.com and appears each Wednesday on National Public Radio's
Morning Edition. His new novel, The Other Adonis (Sourcebooks Landmark), is
available now at bookstores everywhere.
The opinions expressed here are solely those of the
writer.
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