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pack0808
07-06-2005, 11:58 AM
nccaa div1a is split right down the middle half and half on number of white players vs black players but the coaches are sure not?? i thought this article was interesting. i did not realize it was that uneven!! :eek:


Uneven playing field

By Terry Bowden, Yahoo! Sports
June 30, 2005




The Black Coaches Association Hiring Report Card came out this month, and when it comes to hiring black head coaches, big-time college football gets a big-time "F."

There are 117 colleges participating in Division I-A football and there are only three black head coaches. You don't have to be too smart to know how stupid this looks.

Let me lay it out for you:


Fifty percent black athletes leads to 25 percent black assistant coaches leads to 3 percent black head coaches.

Fifty percent white athletes leads to 75 percent white assistant coaches leads to 97 percent white head coaches.
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A profession that so desperately seeks a level playing field offers nothing close to one for the black athlete who aspires to rise to the pinnacle of the college coaching profession.

Plainly and simply, folks, this is discrimination. More precisely this is one of the last and greatest bastions of discrimination within all of American sports.

In college football, we are winning games, building programs and making millions of dollars with the sweat and blood of African-American athletes. I should know. In the last dozen years, my family alone has made more than $30 million as Division I-A head football coaches.

At least once a day, I get asked, "When are you getting back into coaching?" Heck, schools don't need to hire me. They need to hire from the untapped talent that exists within the pool of black assistant coaches.

It really isn't that hard to understand why big-time college football is in this embarrassing situation. Quite simply, the 117 Division I-A schools are white. They have a large majority of white students, with 95 percent of the schools with white presidents and 89 percent with white athletics directors. They also have a whole lot of white alumni who aren't afraid to let their opinions be known – especially the fact that they don't want a black head football coach.

So what can be done?

Until this point, there has been nothing more than a toothless debate regarding the hiring of minority coaches. It's time for every party involved to take affirmative action.



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Who are the main parties involved in the hiring of head football coaches?


The NCAA

College presidents

Athletics directors

Head coaches
First of all, although the NCAA cannot select head coaches, it can legislate change, starting with the "Rooney Rule" that has made such a big impact in the NFL. It requires teams to interview an African-American candidate before hiring a coach. Since its enactment in the NFL two years ago, the number of black head coaches has increased from three to six.

Secondly, the NCAA must increase the pool of African-American coaches. Currently, each institution is permitted to hire two graduate assistant coaches. Universities should be allowed to hire a third graduate assistant if that coach is a minority. This will increase the number of available black coaches.

Also, we must expect more out of our college presidents, who have an even more important responsibility. They are the leading scholars of our academic institutions, and they should see beyond bias and stereotypes and seek grander principles. When it comes to hiring and setting the tone at their universities, they are in charge.

Many presidents won't hire black coaches because they are worried about how alumni and donors will react. When black basketball coaches were scarce 30 years ago, the same argument was used – and it was wrong. Positive change only can occur when college presidents provide leadership, refusing to let boosters call the shots.

There is too much of a rush to hire football coaches – to quickly get the hottest name to help in recruiting. A program will not be made or broken in the first three weeks of December. We need to allow the process to take place, and for this to happen, college presidents must make diversity a priority.

Then there are the athletics directors. They gather the list of candidates and form the search committees – and also sit only a phone call away from every wealthy booster's opinion about how to run the program. It's time for them to show some backbone.

Every AD in the country has a short list of coaching candidates for when the time comes. They need to find out who the top black coaches are and add them to their list. At least this may get them in the ballgame.

Finally, head coaches must do everything they can to identify and encourage promising young black athletes to become coaches. They must convince these athletes that coaching is a noble, worthy profession and that, when the time comes, they will give them an opportunity to coach.

Today's head coaches must move beyond the unwritten rule that says staffs will consist of seven white and two black coaches. For today's staffs to be more representative of the student-athletes they recruit, there ought to be at least one black coordinator and three or four black assistant coaches. Most importantly, this must be done not just because it is the right thing to do but also because it is the best way to win games.

Players are told they must make their grades if they are going to play the game. Maybe it's time college football took a look at its own report card.


Terry Bowden is Yahoo! Sports' college football analyst. Send him a question or comment for potential use in a future column.

Updated on Thursday, Jun 30, 2005 2:51 am EDT

dragons08
07-06-2005, 02:58 PM
think its weird that their arent as many black coaches, i think the rule that they must interview a minority, is getting pushed to the max, most teams IMO, already know who they want, so they just interview a minority (if a minority is not one they want) just to get the rule passed, which is not really fair, i think they should have it where so much perecntage of your coaching staff should be african american, which i think would help get african american coaches notcied more leading to more head coaching postions for african americans, thats what im thinking

pack0808
07-06-2005, 03:19 PM
there needs to be a change but it cannot be forced!! the universities have a right to choose who they want!!

dragons08
07-06-2005, 10:05 PM
there needs to be a change but it cannot be forced!! the universities have a right to choose who they want!!
your right, but there has to be a better way out there, than what they have now

v2the4
07-13-2005, 12:41 AM
We all know that the "suits" in charge of hiring football coaches dont want to allienate their fan base, especially their big boosters who are mostly "oldtimers" of the program.....football is the bread and butter of most college athletic programs, and with only three black head coaches (Karl Dorrell at UCLA, Tyrone Willingham at Washington, and Slyvester Croom at Miss St) something is seriously wrong and flawed.

I never attempt to play the race card, but I think that most schools would go with an unknown white canidate before they would hire a qualified and experienced black one. Croom had all the credentials to be hired at Alabama two years ago except one, he was black..and the old south is still the old south. Lets not be fooled to think this only happens on the major college level...it goes all the way down to I-AA, division II, D-III, junior colleges and high schools as well

Last year, there was a report out that there were no black head football coaches at any 1-AA school other then the 14 head coaches at historically black universities. In essence, outside of the MEAC and SWAC, black coaches dont stand a chance of being hired in say the Southland, Patriot or Southern conferences.

as far as high schools, the same thing applies....I have yet to see a black head coach who wasnt at a predominetly black high school in Texas. The HS AD's have no problem hiring black coaches to coach in the hood, but not in the suburbs or at the marquee schools around the state. Im sure there are a few exceptions, if so, someone should point them out.

GoOwls
07-13-2005, 01:00 AM
For arguement's sake, let's assume that de-segregation happened all at one time over the summer and the kids all came to school in Aug-Sept. in a segregated environment, in the 60's.

The team that was all white last year is now 10, 20, 40 50% black.

Do you think any of these schools would hire coaches from the formerly all black high schools? Heck no, the ISD's probably thought the coaches were not qualified to coach at "that level". So all the coaches were white.

Years had to go by with kids graduating, going to college, getting a degree and slowly, by example, prove their "worthiness" to coach at "that level".

Even though it's been 40 years, the change has happened slowly, too slowly, but until the old ones who still have those traces of functional racism left in them die off, real change will come, but slowly.

GoOwls
07-13-2005, 01:01 AM
Sorry, in the previous post in the first paragraph, it should say "de-segregated environment". Thanks.

dragons08
07-13-2005, 01:27 AM
notice, the "edit" button, works like magic

PonyExpress81
07-13-2005, 02:06 AM
If 50% of the NCAA is white I'd like to see more white players actually getting a chance to play on game day, along with more black head coaches coaching on game day at all levels, racial discrimination & stereo-typing negatively effects both the players & coaches of all races in the sports world especially here in the U.S.

mtbray
07-13-2005, 04:19 AM
Merit > Race

pack0808
07-13-2005, 10:13 AM
If 50% of the NCAA is white I'd like to see more white players actually getting a chance to play on game day, along with more black head coaches coaching on game day at all levels, racial discrimination & stereo-typing negatively effects both the players & coaches of all races in the sports world especially here in the U.S.


there are plenty of white players starting on almost all the big programs. most the time it is at least half so i do not know what you are going by?? i know my iowa hawks have more white starting players then black and they are a powerhouse and that is just one example. i could care less if they had more black players i am just making a point. i think they are right on when they say div1a football is 50 percent white players and 50 percent black players and i hate the racial card but even i can admit there is something seriously wrong with only having 3 black coaches in college div1a football considering there is over 100 teams. that just does not make sense and i think there is something to it.