Rooney Rule praised ahead of Super Bowl

Tony Dungy Jim Caldwell

Indianapolis Colts head coach Jim Caldwell (left) with former coach Tony Dungy

As the US prepares for the biggest day of their sporting year, Indianapolis Colts head coach Jim Caldwell will be hoping to become the latest African American coach to triumph in the Super Bowl.

From NFL Fanhouse
Nobody's writing this week that Jim Caldwell is black. That means the Rooney Rule is working.

"We're not talking about it as much and that's a good thing," said Caldwell, who was Indianapolis' assistant head coach three years ago when the Colts' Tony Dungy and the Bears' Lovie Smith were the first black coaches in Super Bowl history

When Caldwell leads the Indianapolis Colts onto the field for the Super Bowl on Sunday, he will be the fourth African-American coach in the last four Super Bowls following Dungy and Smith in 2007 and Pittsburgh's Mike Tomlin last season.

In addition, Jerry Reese, general manager of the New York Giants, the 2008 winner, also is African-American.

"I think the face of the league looks a lot different in 2010 than it did in 2002," Caldwell said as he prepared for Sunday's game.

'Opportunity'
"I think a lot of that has to do with the opportunity that is being presented. There are some sharp guys out there that are certainly capable and deserve an opportunity."

The rule was established in 2003 by a committee headed by Pittsburgh owner Dan Rooney and requires NFL teams to interview minority candidates for every coaching vacancy.

The committee was established by then-commissioner Paul Tagliabue after Johnnie Cochran Jr. and Cyrus Mehri, two lawyers, pointed out the low percentage of minority coaches in the NFL compared to the high percentage of minority players.

It was expanded this year to include hirings for senior front-office positions - there currently are five black general managers or the equivalent and six black coaches, one less than the high.

Although Rooney's name is on the rule, it could just as easily be Dungy's.

Outspoken
His outspoken statements in 2002, when he believed a number of qualified African-American candidates were being passed over for recycled whites, led in part to the Cochran-Mehri news conference. That in turn, led to the creation of the Rooney committee.

And the four black coaches who have been in Super Bowls all coached under Dungy - Caldwell, obviously, with the Colts, and Smith and Tomlin in Tampa Bay. Lesley Frazier, who is considered likely to be the next black head coach, was the defensive backs coach for Dungy in Indianapolis.

No black coaches were hired this year for what turned out to be only three vacancies, in Washington, Buffalo and Seattle. But Frazier's exposure is almost sure to put him at the top of next season's lists, and another potential African-American candidate could be Perry Fewell, who was 3-4 as Buffalo's interim coach last season.

Meanwhile, Caldwell is looking at an opportunity to become the third black coach in four seasons to win a title. Even though he didn't benefit from the Rooney rule, he thinks it applies to others.

"It gives you an opportunity to get interviewed, to get in position, to get in front of the owners,'' he said. "I don't think it's perfect, but it's heading in the right direction."

Excerpt from NFL Fanhouse

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Sol Campbell

Sol Campbell
"Football must be open regardless of colour or ethnicity."

Sol Campbell