Sundayâs upcoming game between the Pittsburgh Steelers and Tampa Bay Buccaneers is absolutely, positively meaninglessâexcept for one thing. The Steelers have lost all but one of their first five games, are starting a rookie QB and have injuries all over their roster. The Bucs come into town with Tom Brady looking, well, old, and a defense thatâs not great. The matchup is so trash that Fox shifted its top broadcast crew to another game. So whatâs the one important thing about this ridiculously trash matchup? Itâs likely the only time this season where two Black NFL head coaches will square off against each other. The Steelersâ Mike Tomlinâthe leagueâs longest tenured Black head coach and the second-longest serving coach overallâand the Bucsâ Todd Bowles, are about to face each other for the first time. Bowles downplayed that storyline yesterday and Tomlin didnât bring it upâand wasnât askedâduring his Tuesday press conference.
âWe donât look at what color we are when we coach against each other, we just know each other,â ESPN quoted Bowles as saying. âI have a lot of very good white friends that coach in this league as well, and I donât think itâs a big deal as far as us coaching against each other, I think itâs normal. Wilks got an opportunity to do a good job, hopefully he does it. And we coach ball, we donât look at color.âHeâs rightâat least it should be normal. But in todayâs NFL, where almost three-quarters of the players are Black, there are only four Black head coaches. Two of them will be playing against each other on Sunday. A third, the aforementioned Steve Wilks, only got his job this week, a promotion that resulted from the Carolina Panthersâ firing of Matt Rhule. Wilks is still part of a class-action lawsuit accusing the NFL of racial bias specifically for making it difficult for Black people to become head coaches. That lawsuit was originally filed by Brian Flores, who used to be head coach of the Miami Dolphins but was fired and is now on Tomlinâs staff.
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In other words, yeah, this is a big deal. Out of 272 regular-season games this year, this will happen exactly once, three days from now. Itâs the Black coaching equivalent of a total solar eclipse, or lightning striking twice in the same place or the McDonaldâs ice cream machine working at the exact time you happen to have a craving for an Oreo McFlurry.
So, come Sunday, Iâll be in attendance. I wonât be witnessing history, per se, and itâll likely be a sloppy game, especially if the weather is bad. Iâll be there as a spectator, not reporting, but Iâll probably find something to write nonetheless. After all, who knows when the next time is weâll get to see such a thing.
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