Black coaches may sue to increase numbers

Rise

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INDIANAPOLIS -- The head of a black coaches group is frustrated by the lack of minority head coaches in college football, and his remedy may be to go to court.

The report card has been a start but has not been sufficient. We have called on the NCAA and president Myles Brand to adopt an 'Eddie Robinson Rule,' a college version of the NFL's Rooney Rule mandating that people of color be interviewed for all head coaching positions with sanctions for those who do not.

-- Richard Lapchick, in letter

Keith Floyd, executive director of Black Coaches and Administrators, said Tuesday his group will consider legal action under civil rights legislation.

"We've brought that up and it will be considered on a case-by-case basis," Keith told The Associated Press before the announcement of this year's BCA hiring report card. "But it has to be the right case."

When Keith said his group would begin compiling the annual report in 2002, he promised to re-evaluate the BCA's tactics if he didn't see measurable progress. After four years of promoting the value of diversity and sifting through statistics, Keith is disappointed by the slow pace of progress.

Of 33 coaches hired last season by the Football Bowl Subdivision and Football Championship Subdivision, formerly known as Division I-A and I-AA, only two minority head coaches were hired -- Randy Shannon at Miami and Mario Cristobal, a Hispanic, at Florida International.

Excluding the historically black colleges and universities that play football, the other 220 schools making up Division I had 12 minority head coaches at the start of this season. One of those, Indiana State's Lou West, has already been fired after going 1-25 in a little more than two seasons with the Sycamores.

The report says only 26 black coaches have been hired at FBS schools, and of the 197 openings since 1996, only 12 have gone to blacks.

Some believe the courts could help spur change.

"If somebody gave me a timeline as to how long it would take and what's possible, sure, let's go that route," said Georgia Tech basketball coach Paul Hewitt, the BCA president. "I'm really more interested in getting more interviews for candidates."

Others believe the power of persuasion would create quicker results.

"I think more individuals would be hired faster and sooner without a lawsuit," said Charlotte Westerhaus, the NCAA's vice president of diversity and inclusion.

Another troubling sign for Keith and his proponents is that this year's report card includes a record number of overall grades of F (10). Eleven schools received A's, the second most in the four-year history of the report card.

The data also show that while 54.5 percent of the schools received a grade of A or B, that declined from last year's 57.7 percent and is a significant drop over the 64.3 percent compiled in the inaugural report of 2003-04.

Two schools, Georgia Southern and San Diego, received all F's for not responding to the BCA's survey. Other major schools receiving an overall F included Alabama, Air Force and Louisville.

Four schools -- Florida International, Iowa State, Michigan State and Stanford -- received straight A's. Other big schools to receive an A were Cincinnati, Miami and North Carolina.

Richard Lapchick, director of the Institute for Diversity and Ethics in Sports at Central Florida, called football the most segregated sport in college athletics.

"We have called on the NCAA and president Myles Brand to adopt an 'Eddie Robinson Rule,' a college version of the NFL's Rooney Rule mandating that people of color be interviewed for all head coaching positions with sanctions for those who do not," he wrote in a statement included in the report.

The Rooney Rule required NFL teams interview at least one minority candidate for each head coaching vacancy. The result has been a gradual increase in black coaches around the league, although that number dropped from a record seven to six this season when Art Shell and Dennis Green were fired and Mike Tomlin was hired in Pittsburgh.

Tomlin, Keith said, was a candidate for three college jobs last year but received only one interview before going to the Steelers.

Keith believes the Rooney Rule could be a model for changes at the NCAA level, too, and said there has been significant discussion among the BCA, the Fritz Pollard Alliance and FBS athletic directors to implement a similar rule.

"I don't think the NFL should be four to five times higher than the NCAA," he said, pointing to the difference among the percentage of black coaches -- 18.8 in the NFL vs. 5.5 in the FBS and FCS.

Westerhaus, however, said the NCAA cannot enforce that kind of rule because of institutional rules on hiring practices.

Another proposal in the report suggests adding a Diversity Progress Report, which would act like the Academic Progress Report. The APR, which has become a regular part of many coaches' vocabulary, penalizes teams that consistently perform poorly in the classroom and rewards those that consistently outperform their counterparts.

Other findings in the report:

- Schools, on the average, have 4.31 on-campus interviews per opening and that minority candidates account for 1.27 of those, a B on the BCA's grading scale.

- The average search committee consists of 6.2 members, while minorities account for 1.56 of those. That's also a B. The BCA contends that for each minority on the committee, the number of minority interviewed increases slightly.

- Minorities lost ground on search committees, one of the categories that accounts for the overall grade, this year. That percentage dropped from 25 percent in 2005-06 to 24 percent this year.

- And, perhaps a promising sign, that more than half the 33 schools earned A's or B's in four of the five categories that are graded. Those categories are: number of communications with the BCA, reasonable amount of time conducting the search, inclusion of minority candidates among the finalists and adherence to the school's affirmative action policy.

http://sports.espn.go.com/ncf/news/story?id=3055685
 
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Let them sue, it sets precident. Then Whites can sue the NFL, NBA and MLB for a lack of representation amongst the player ranks. Afterall, if Coaching is considered a skill, how is it any different then a player? And if Blacks must constitute some magic ratio of coaches, then why shouldn't whites constitute the flip side of that ratio on the field/court/diamond?

Besides, the more they over-reach, the more stupid drunk White fans question the status-quo.
 

whiteathlete33

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Here we go again. Blacks whining and crying like they always do. These people are beyond human. No other race on the face of this planet whines like they do. Hell we should just make every CEO and police officer in this country black.
 

Tom Iron

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Slowly but surely people are being turned off by the endless complaints of blacks. It's interesting that blacks really have no idea of how tenuous their position really is in society. Otherwise, they'd know enough to keep as low a profile as possible.

What liberals don't understand is that letting blacks have as much leeway as they've had in the last 30-40 years or so has only showed how incompetant they really are. The excuses for black ineptitude are waring very thin. Trying to make people believe what they're told and not what they see is unraveling, especially with young people.

Time is on our side. White people are going to come out on top in the end. It's just the natural order of things.

Tom Iron...
 

Jimmy Chitwood

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they claim that blacks aren't getting a fair shot, yet blacks aren't doing what it takes to earn said fair shot.

i was involved in collegiate athletics for a number of years, and ALL (well in excess of 95%) of collegiate football teams' Graduate Assistants (the low-rung, often un-paid, first step to become a football coach) were white. in fact, there were more women GA's than blacks. this is true at every college i dealt with.

now then, how is one supposed to become a coach if one doesn't do what it takes to follow the path to get to where one needs to go?

the answer of course is to have black skin and whine like a baby until you get things handed to you.
 

Rise

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Who is this Richard Lapchick douchebag anyway? I see his name mentioned a lot in these ESPN "Racism" articles.
 

Poacher

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Strength is in the attack. As long as we continue to allow our opponents define the debate and force premises on us that we know not to be true then we will continue to play defense. Which, of course, is the whole idea from their point of view.

We need to call out this nonsense and ridicule it as the childish, arrogant, self-righteous moral extortion that it is.

The Lapchicks of the world have no compunction whatsoever about playing the race card against their own people. They are traitors of the worst kind. I doubt that I could be in the same room with that man.
 
G

Guest

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Why do they say minorities when they mean west africans. I have been annoyed by that years. None of the guys who want to sue are interested in seeing anybody other than black americans get these jobs.
 

whiteathlete33

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Its all about the blacks. They want all kind of positions in the world without doing any hard work to get there. As I have stated before no other race on this planet is so naive and combative. They just want and want. They went through this before and the NFL already has a policy in which teams have to interview one minority candidate. Pretty soon they will be asking whites to hand over their homes and money to them as "reparations."
 

yanling

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There are exceptions.

But...

Blacks, as a group, are worthless douchebags.

The end.
 
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Don Wassall said:
Rise said:
Who is this Richard Lapchick douchebag anyway? I see his name mentioned a lot in these ESPN "Racism" articles.


Know your enemy:


[url]http://www.castefootball.us/viewarticle.asp?sportID=14&t eamID=0&ID=22695[/url]

Yes, Lapchick always shows up in these situations. I have written posts before about an incident in the late 1970's. Lapchick showed up to protest a South African tennis (I believe) team playing at Vanderbilt. He went to the police claiming that some racists had attacked him. Medical examiiners said that Lapchick's wounds were self-inflicted.
 

ToughJ.Riggins

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yanling said:
There are exceptions.

But...

Blacks, as a group, are worthless douchebags.

The end.

I have no problem with many blacks I meet as individuals, but as a group all they see is race in most cases. They will side with their black "brother" over a white even when the black is obviously wrong. I am becoming more aware of this already living in Jersey.
 

Tom Iron

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ToughJ.Riggins,

I live in NJ as well.

Another thing about blacks as a group. They can't work worth a da*n.

Tom Iron...
 
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Just what we need, more black coaches! ToughJ. Riggins is right. You can work as blasks as individuals, but not as a group.
 

backrow

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for f**k sakes, they are just that: a MINORITY. plus not that many of them seem to be interested in coaching and its many sacrifices. you want a job, EARN it. start low, make your way to the top.
they are not f**king oppressed anymore.
 

whiteathlete33

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backrow said:
for f**k sakes, they are just that: a MINORITY. plus not that many of them seem to be interested in coaching and its many sacrifices. you want a job, EARN it. start low, make your way to the top.
they are not f**king oppressed anymore.

Yes they are a minority, backrow. What they want is the percentage of black coaches to equal the percentage of black players in the NFL regardless if they are qualified. Its just another smokescreen by blacks trying to get something they DIDN'T earn. It never stops.
 

Rise

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You know they are all going to sue now after this verdict
smiley11.gif


The first black head football coach at any major Louisiana university has won a $2 million judgment in a lawsuit claiming that the University of Louisiana at Lafayette fired him because of his race, not because his teams lost 80 percent of their games.

Jurors found that Jerry Baldwin's race wasn't the only reason he lost the job, but was among the reasons. University officials broke his contract and inflicted emotional distress through negligence, according to the jury of six whites and six blacks.

Jurors took nearly 10 hours to work their way through a complicated verdict form.

"There is no substitute for victory," said Baldwin's attorney, G. Karl Bernard. He said Baldwin appreciates the chance to air his grievances.

ULL attorney Steve Oats said the evidence doesn't support the verdict for Baldwin, who was coach from 1999-2001, but he and university officials haven't decided their next step.

"It is clear Jerry Baldwin was not terminated because of his race," Oats said. "Jerry Baldwin was terminated over his tenure. The team had a record of 6-27 and attendance was terrible. The program was not going in the right direction."

In closing arguments for the eight-day trial, Bernard said white coaches before and after Baldwin got new equipment and had a greater ability to market the football program via a coach's television show and through the university's marketing department.

Baldwin worked with used equipment, the marketing director was fired his second year on the job, and he never had a coach's show to promote the football program, Bernard said.

Oats said the same officials now accused of racial discrimination made the first black head coach at a major Louisiana university.

Jurors voted 10-2 to award Baldwin $500,000 for general damages, including emotional distress; $600,000 for past lost wages; $900,000 for future lost wages, and $2,676 for special damages.

The same administration officials now accused of racial discrimination are the same people who gave Baldwin the job as the first black head coach at a major Louisiana university, Oats argued.

He also said there are no signs that Baldwin's ability to get another job in coaching has been hampered by the firing, and Baldwin's attorneys did not present any evidence that he suffered extreme emotional distress.

Oats said Baldwin is now a minister at New Living Word Ministries in Ruston.

[url]http://sports.espn.go.com/ncf/news/story?id=3070227&campaign =rss&source=ESPNHeadlines[/url]
 

backrow

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what a load of sh*t. i wish Brock Forsey would sue NFL and Lovie Smith already.
 

ToughJ.Riggins

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But whites wouldn't side with Forsey the way blacks side with their race on civil suits. We have a long way to go before whites wake up to athletic discrimination. We live in a country where a lot of liberal whites even support affirmative action despite it's very detrimental affects on the white race! Athletics is the last place whites in the general population are looking to sue over, which is very unfortunate b/c it is most obvious there IMO.
 

Jimmy Chitwood

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Texas A&M hired Mike Sherman today. you may ask why is this on this thread?

well, according to ESPN's Sportscenter, it is an OUTRAGE that they didn't include minority candidates in the process. A&M only interviewed one coach; that coach was Sherman.

ESPN even went so far as to show the 'tragically low number' of black coaches in NCAA Division: 6.

boo freaking hoo. cry me a river. if they really wanted more coaches, they should start doing what it takes to be a coach. start at the bottom and work their way up, the same way white people do.
 
G

Guest

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reclaimsocal said:
I barfed a little in my mouth when I read this
article

<a href="http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2007/writers/lee_jenkins/11/28/
<br / target="_blank">dorrell/index.html">The worst article ever written by a castewhore race-
traitor</a>

If ever someone needed to get their ass kicked, its this hack writer.

Are you sure it's absolutely the WORST article of this ilk EVER written?
That's high praise!
 
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