NFL

NFL coaching summit highlights minority candidates

The biggest takeaway following the NFL's two-day quarterback coaching summit is there's no shortage of qualified minority candidates waiting for opportunities to be head coaches and co-ordinators.

'All they're asking for is an opportunity,' says Washington executive Doug Williams

Chiefs offensive coordinator Eric Bieniemy, right, interviewed with the Panthers, Browns and Giants for head coaching positions before his dynamic offence led Kansas City to a win over the 49ers in the Super Bowl. (Steven Senne/The Associated Press)

The biggest takeaway following the NFL's two-day quarterback coaching summit is there's no shortage of qualified minority candidates waiting for opportunities to be head coaches and co-ordinators.

The league and the Black College Football Hall of Fame earlier this week held a virtual version of their summit, a third-year project aimed at improving the league's diversity. Dozens of pro and college football coaches and assistants participated.

'We've got a bunch of guys in line'

"We hear it all the time about how nobody's in the pipeline," said Washington Redskins executive Doug Williams, who co-founded the Black College Football Hall of Fame with James "Shack" Harris. "I hope after [the summit] that we get away from pipeline and realize we've got a bunch of guys in line. All they're asking for is an opportunity. The pipeline is full. The most important thing is to open up the valve."

There are three Black head coaches (Mike Tomlin, Anthony Lynn and Brian Flores), two Black general managers (Chris Grier and Andrew Berry), two Black offensive co-ordinators (Eric Bieniemy and Byron Leftwich) and two Black quarterback coaches (Pep Hamilton and Marcus Brady) in the NFL.

Lynn, Bieniemy, Leftwich, Hamilton and Brady were among the presenters during several sessions on Monday and Tuesday. San Francisco 49ers defensive co-ordinator Robert Saleh, a Lebanese-American, also spoke to the attendees.

Bieniemy, who interviewed with the Panthers, Browns and Giants before his dynamic offence led Kansas City to a 31-20 win over the 49ers in the Super Bowl, spoke at the summit about leadership and building a winning culture.

"True direction within an organization is born with a vision," he said. "It begins when a leader accepts it. It gains acceptance when a leader models it. It becomes reality when the people respond to it."

After the 2018 season, eight head coaches lost their jobs. Only one opening was filled by a minority candidate, Flores in Miami.

Following last season, five jobs came open and one minority, Ron Rivera, was hired, by Washington. That makes four minority head coaches out of a possible 32 in the league.

Rooney Rule amended

The NFL amended the Rooney Rule last month to require more interviews of minority candidates for head coaching and co-ordinator positions. The league will require teams to interview at least two minority candidates from outside the organization for head coach openings. At least one minority candidate must be interviewed for a co-ordinator's spot.

"We knew we had to change. We weren't getting the results that we had to have so there was a commitment to do that," Commissioner Roger Goodell said.

The summit is one of several NFL programs intended to build the coaching and personnel development pipelines and strengthen diversity across the league.

"This is incredibly important to the NFL, not just this event but this effort to do the things that are right to create equality and opportunity for our coaches and our executives and for everybody in the NFL to be able to advance their careers, particularly for people of colour that we are focusing a lot of these efforts on," Goodell told the attendees.

Pittsburgh Steelers president Art Rooney II, chairman of the NFL's workplace diversity committee, Buffalo Bills co-owner Kim Pegula and New York Giants co-owner John Mara were among the panelists.

"Leadership is important," Rooney said during the conference. "Being a head coach in this league you have to be a great leader. You're really the face of any franchise at that point. The bottom line in terms of being a leader, you have to be yourself. You can't pretend. People will see through anything that isn't genuine."

Of the 32 NFL teams, 22 were represented at the summit.

'We'll continue to fight'

"Would we love to have all 32? Absolutely. But we went from two clubs to 22," NFL Executive Vice-President of Football Operations Troy Vincent said. "And in hoping to share, we've got to do our part. I would say myself and my colleagues here, we failed. We failed to promote and continue to promote these men that we saw over the last two days. We failed to amplify, to show them in a different light. We have to do a better job of sharing the information to the clubs, making sure that every club, every president, every general manager has all of the information.

"It's been a work in progress, we'll continue to fight, but we do have club ownership leadership that is driving change. And we know it's not going to happen overnight."

Harris, who played quarterback for more than a decade and later served as a front-office executive, echoed Williams' thoughts.

"There's no shortage of people capable of coaching and coaching quarterbacks," Harris said. "I think what we need is a commitment to hire."