News and HeadlinesNational News

Actions

NFL looks to bolster inclusion policies, says it will probe tanking allegations

Bengals Titans Football
Posted

NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell told teams over the weekend that the league will look to improve policies meant to encourage the hiring of minorities, particularly as head coaches.

Goodell also pledged an investigation into tanking allegations raised by former Miami Dolphins coach Brian Flores contained in his discrimination lawsuit against the National Football League.

"We will reevaluate and examine all policies, guidelines and initiatives relating to diversity, equity and inclusion, including as they relate to gender," Goodell wrote in a memo to the league's 32 clubs. The commissioner added that the league's record on hiring minority coaches has been "unacceptable."

The memo came just days after Flores sued the league and three teams over alleged racist hiring practices for coaches and general managers, saying the NFL remains "rife with racism" even as it publicly condemns it.

The NFL's main avenue for increasing diversity in its leadership ranks is the two-decade-old Rooney Rule, which requires teams to interview minority candidates for jobs including head coach and general manager. Despite the rule, there is currently one Black head coach in the league: Pittsburgh's Mike Tomlin.

There are no Black team owners, just a handful of Black GMs and relatively few Black coordinators in a league where more than 70% of players are Black or another ethnic minority.

Goodell said the league will include outside experts in its review along with "current and former players and coaches, advocates and other authorities in this area." He said, "Our goal is simple: make our efforts and those of the clubs more effective so that real and tangible results will be achieved."

In a statement, Flores' attorneys said that while Goodell's memo appears to be a positive first step in confronting systemic racism in the league, they "suspect that is it more of a public relations ploy than real commitment to change."

Flores, who is Black, was fired as Miami's coach last month despite back-to-back winning seasons. He named the league and three teams (the Dolphins, Denver Broncos and New York Giants) in a class-action lawsuit this week alleging unfair hiring practices in the NFL.

After the lawsuit was filed, the league said it would defend itself against claims it said were "without merit." The Dolphins, Broncos and Giants also denied Flores' allegations. Goodell took a softer approach to Flores' claims in his memo.

"We understand the concerns expressed by Coach Flores and others this week. While the legal process moves forward, we will not wait to reassess and modify our strategies to ensure that they are consistent with our values and longstanding commitment to diversity, equity and inclusion," the commissioner wrote.

Flores' most serious allegation is his claim that Miami Dolphins owner Stephen Ross told him he would pay him $100,000 for every loss during the coach's first season because the owner wanted the club to "tank" so it could get the top draft pick.

The Dolphins went 5-11 that year. The Cincinnati Bengals went 2-14 and used the No. 1 pick on quarterback Joe Burrow, who led the team to this season's Super Bowl.

"We also take seriously any issue relating to the integrity of NFL games," Goodell's letter said. "These matters will be reviewed thoroughly and independently. We expect that these independent experts will receive full cooperation from everyone associated with the league or any member club as this work proceeds."

Ross pledged his team's full cooperation into an investigation on Thursday when he labeled Flores' accusations "false, malicious and defamatory."

Flores also contends that the Broncos and Giants conducted sham interviews, Denver's in 2019 and New York's during the current hiring cycle. Critics of the Rooney Rule have long contended that many teams complied with the rule by interviewing minority candidates they had no intention of hiring.

"There's a lot of work to do. I wish there was a quick fix. I wish there was a silver bullet for some of these things," Jacksonville Jaguars owner Shad Khan, who is Pakistani-American, said Saturday. "But I think it says as much about America, frankly, as it does anything else."

The Jaguars had two interviews with Tampa Bay offensive coordinator Byron Leftwich, who is Black, for their head coaching job, but talks with him broke down and Jacksonville hired Doug Pederson, the fifth white coach Khan has hired.

Lawyers Douglas H. Wigdor and John Elefterakis, who represent Flores, said they were skeptical that Goodell's memo would lead to meaningful changes and called on a court or government agency to appoint a federal monitor to oversee the league.

"For too many years, the NFL has hidden behind the cover of foundations that were supposed to protect the rights of Black players and coaches, all while letting systemic racial bias fester in its front offices," the attorneys said in their statement. "The NFL is now rolling out the same playbook yet again and that is precisely why this lawsuit was filed."

This story was originally published by Jay Strubberg of Newsy, and the Associated Press contributed to this report.