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2 Black Coaches at the Super Bowl--Yes, It's a VERY Big Deal
By Eric L. Hinton
January 22, 2007
Two black head coaches have taken
their football teams to the sport's biggest stage--the Super
Bowl.
So what's the big deal?
It's a question I've asked myself
over the last few days. Honestly, it didn't dawn on me as a story of
significance when Tony Dungy of the Indianapolis Colts and Lovie Smith of the
Chicago Bears made it to their respective championship games, one game removed
from the Super Bowl. I mean, we were past the point of celebrating this as a big
story ... weren't we?
I was wrong. While it may seem odd
to still be rejoicing racial firsts in professional sports in 2007, it will be a
noteworthy accomplishment when these two men meet in
Miami in Super Bowl XLI on Feb. 4.
They'll be the first black head coaches to advance to the Super Bowl in the
sport's 41 years--and yes, it is a big deal.
It's significant because the roll
call of black head coaches, in a sport where the vast majority of the players on
the field are black, remains woefully short. Besides Dungy and Smith, there's
Romeo Crennel (Cleveland), Herman Edwards (Kansas
City) and Marvin Lewis
(Cincinnati). Two other black head coaches,
Art Shell (Oakland) and Dennis Green
(Arizona), were fired in recent weeks
after disappointing seasons. The Pittsburgh Steelers' recent hire of Mike Tomlin
brings the number of black head coaches up to six. Go one step up the food chain and
you'll find black general managers in the sport are practically unheard of.
Indeed, the New York Giants' recent hiring of Jerry Reese marked him as only the
third GM in the league's history.
Smith and Dungy are a big story
because as recently as five years ago, it was so difficult for a black assistant
coach to land a head-coaching interview that a group led by the late Johnnie
Cochran and attorney Cyrus Mehri released a report scrutinizing the NFL's hiring
practice of black head coaches and admonished them to change. (For more on Cyrus Mehri, read the
January/February issue of DiversityInc magazine, focusing on the
real story of the lawsuit he led against Coca-Cola.)
Because of that report and
subsequent diversity policy, any NFL club hiring a head coach must include a
racially diverse candidate in their interview pool. At the time, some decried
the policy as window dressing, but five short years later, two black head
coaches will meet in the Super Bowl.
I imagine both men simply would
rather be known as excellent football coaches trying to win their game's biggest
prize rather than trailblazers. But they're trailblazers nonetheless. Sports are important because they
mirror society. And in some cases, they mirror the way society ought to be. The
Rev. Jesse Jackson has an oft-used line when discussing why sports are a
reflection of the way things should be in society. On the playing field,
Jackson says, everyone is playing by the
same rules. If it's football, both sides have to travel the same distance to
score a touchdown. In baseball, everyone gets three strikes before being called
out. The rules are the same for all, blacks, whites, Asians, Latinos, GLBTs,
people with disabilities. It's the way the rest of the world "should" work, says
Jackson. That's why sports are important.
And that's why this story is still important.
The Power of Being
First
On a personal note, the junior
high school I attended was named after Jackie Robinson, who, in 1947, became the
first black major-league baseball player of the modern era. I also was a student
at Howard University in
Washington, D.C., the year Doug Williams became
the first black quarterback to win a Super Bowl, leading the Washington Redskins
to victory. I still remember how electrified the city was during the Redskins
playoff run leading up to the Super Bowl. In that city, during that time, there
was more than a game at stake ... there was pride. Whether he knew it or not,
Williams' success wasn't only his; it represented the success of all the black
residents in the city, regardless of whether they were football fans.
In the same way blacks across the
nation embraced Joe Louis during his epic rematch with Max Schmeling in 1938,
Williams' triumph would be our triumph. His failure would be our failure.
Are we giving the accomplishments
of Smith and Dungy, two football coaches, too much weight? Perhaps. But better
the story be given too much weight than not enough.
.
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