SantaClaraHawk
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- Sep 18, 2015
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https://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2 ... -shameful/
First, I absoutely support the Rooney Rule. Old-boy networks are pervasive and often subconscious, with the white "good-ol-boy" network the most powerful amongst them. Today, I saw part of the Rhule and McCarthy intro interviews. The McCarthy one with him sandwiched between Stephen and Jerrah, pure white good-ol-boyism. But Martin Lewis got at least a chance to interview there. It may have been just to check the box, but he got his face out there.
However, stating that black coaches are being shut out is an overreach. Three of 32 HCs is just under 10 percent. The black US population is 14.8 percent. Relative to population size, they are underrepresented, but by far less than Latinos, Asians and Pacific Islanders. The article implies that there are few black candidates in the pipeline. I have yet to find racial demographics of college/coordinators/position coaches/available legacy coaches, but my eye test puts it at around 10-15 percent.
With the sample size being so small, swings between parity and nonparity can depend on one individual. What 3 in 32 tells me, plus these men's history, is that in fact progress is being made toward proportional hiring wrt black candidates. The trend of bringing recently retired players up through the pipeline will surely continue, and with players being 70 percent black, you'd expect to see more blacks in the pipeline that way.
Some would argue the coaching jobs should reflect player population, but that leads to why there's disproportional overrepresentation of black men among NFL players. Are we implying that blacks tend to be better athletes, better at football, better at certain positions? That there's a racially based reason there are no white CBs, why there are few if any black punters or placekickers? And if so, is this something that anyone believes should be acted upon?
First, I absoutely support the Rooney Rule. Old-boy networks are pervasive and often subconscious, with the white "good-ol-boy" network the most powerful amongst them. Today, I saw part of the Rhule and McCarthy intro interviews. The McCarthy one with him sandwiched between Stephen and Jerrah, pure white good-ol-boyism. But Martin Lewis got at least a chance to interview there. It may have been just to check the box, but he got his face out there.
However, stating that black coaches are being shut out is an overreach. Three of 32 HCs is just under 10 percent. The black US population is 14.8 percent. Relative to population size, they are underrepresented, but by far less than Latinos, Asians and Pacific Islanders. The article implies that there are few black candidates in the pipeline. I have yet to find racial demographics of college/coordinators/position coaches/available legacy coaches, but my eye test puts it at around 10-15 percent.
With the sample size being so small, swings between parity and nonparity can depend on one individual. What 3 in 32 tells me, plus these men's history, is that in fact progress is being made toward proportional hiring wrt black candidates. The trend of bringing recently retired players up through the pipeline will surely continue, and with players being 70 percent black, you'd expect to see more blacks in the pipeline that way.
Some would argue the coaching jobs should reflect player population, but that leads to why there's disproportional overrepresentation of black men among NFL players. Are we implying that blacks tend to be better athletes, better at football, better at certain positions? That there's a racially based reason there are no white CBs, why there are few if any black punters or placekickers? And if so, is this something that anyone believes should be acted upon?