As a lifelong Denver Broncos fan, part of me is disgusted that our division rival, the Kansas City Chiefs, won their first Super Bowl in 50 years on Sunday night. But the rest of me is elated for two very specific reasons: For one, a black quarterbackโgenerational talent Patrick Mahomesโemerged victorious in an electrifying 31-20 comeback win over the San Francisco 49ers. And two, a black coachโan oxymoron if Iโve ever heard oneโled Mahomes and company to victory.
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That black coach would be offensive coordinator Eric Bieniemy, who despite orchestrating the third-highest-scoring offense in league history last season, was forced to return to the Chiefs this year in a supplementary role because bigoted NFL owners wonโt let him be great. More specifically, they refuse to hire black head coaches while the Freddie Kitchens of the world continue to be rewarded with jobs they donโt deserve.
This past off-season, Bieniemy went on interview after interview for head coaching vacancies that concluded with zero offers. And while the rest of the league remains perplexed at how his stellar resume continues to be ignoredโbecause his resume isnโt the problemโper usual, another talented black man is forced to be the bigger person.
โEveryone wants to hear Iโm disappointed,โโ Bieniemy told ESPN on Thursday ahead of the Super Bowl while discussing his lack of head coaching opportunities. โThat is not the case.โ
He added, โI mean, thatโs everybodyโs dream to be one of the 32 head coaches. Thatโs everybodyโs dream. Someday, possibly, it may happen. But right now, the only thing that matters is making sure our guys, our players and our coaching staff is focused on the goalโand thatโs making sure we play to the end of that final echo of the whistle come Sunday.โ
Thankfully, Brian Levy, an agent who represents Bieniemy and a number of other prominent black coaches, will say what his client wonโt: โIn its 100th season, the NFL should be ashamed of itself.โ
But instead of shame, NFL commissioner Roger Goodell echoed a similar sentiment at the annual Super Bowl news conference on Wednesday.
โClearly, we are not where we want to be on this issue,โ he said. โWe have a lot of work thatโs gone into, not only the Rooney Rule but our policies overall.โ
That doesnโt sound like a solution to me; that sounds like the same lip service Bieniemy and other potential black head coaches have been force-fed for yearsโand almost guarantees that despite adding a Super Bowl victory to his resume, heโll be in the exact same position a year from now.
โWhether they hire me or not, thatโs up to them. I work my tail off to be placed in that situation,โ Bieniemy told ESPN. โIโm going to continue chopping wood, going to continue being me. Whatever is going to happen down the line is going to happen. Iโll let the process take care of itself.โ
If only the process took care of black coaches.
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