NFL hires in the Rooney Rule era

For the NFL’s Black coaches, the hiring landscape is bleak. There’s simply no way to sugarcoat it.
Until the week of Super Bowl LVI, the Pittsburgh Steelers’ Mike Tomlin stood alone as the NFL’s only Black head coach. The NFL has never had more than eight Black head coaches in any season.
For a 32-team league whose player workforce is overwhelmingly Black, those numbers look bad. In 2020, players who were Black or African American accounted for 57.5% of players on NFL rosters. The number has been as high as 69.7%.
In place since 2003 for head coaches and expanded in 2009 to include general manager jobs and equivalent front-office positions, the Rooney Rule mandates that an NFL team must interview at least one minority candidate for these jobs. Through the years, the rule has been modified in an attempt to strengthen it.
Despite the rule, however, the numbers indicate the league still isn’t on the right path.
We analyzed all 127 offseason hires since the rule went into effect to find out how well minority coaches have performed and whether they are put in positions to succeed as often as their white counterparts.
Here are four of the metrics we used.
(Note: This does not include the hirings in the 2022 offseason.)
Overall win percentage: The overall win percentage during a coach’s tenure in one position.
Futures wins: The official Las Vegas projection for wins by a team. In this case, a quick indicator of how viable a coaching position is for a new hire, if we focus on first-season totals.
Average +/- wins: This measures the difference in per-season wins compared to the same time span before a coach is hired. If a coach averages eight wins in five seasons, and the previous five seasons the average was seven wins, the value would be +1.0.
Average hot-seat percentage: A metric created by ESPN, this measures the likelihood of a head coach getting fired for going 4-12 based on his resume, historical data and other factors. A way to measure how precarious a coaching tenure really is.
Below are the most relevant questions that can be answered using data. One caveat: The sample size isn’t large enough to be too definitive. Still, the numbers are the best way to evaluate where things stand. There’s no denying that the gap between minority coach hirings (25) and white coach hirings (102) remains wide.
Explore the data for yourself — all of the hires prior to the 2022 offseason are shown below. Sort by the four metrics outlined above (overall win percentage, average +/- wins, futures wins and average hot-seat percentage), and click the filter button to view only the minority hires.
Erickson
SF
Nolan
SF
Singletary
SF
Harbaugh
SF
Tomsula
SF
Kelly
SF
Shanahan
SF
Smith
CHI
Trestman
CHI
Fox
CHI
Nagy
CHI
Lewis
CIN
Taylor
CIN
Mularkey
BUF
Jauron
BUF
Gailey
BUF
Marrone
BUF
Ryan
BUF
McDermott
BUF
McDaniel
DEN
Fox
DEN
Kubiak
DEN
Joseph
DEN
Fangio
DEN
Crennel
CLE
Mangini
CLE
Shurmur
CLE
Chudzinski
CLE
Pettine
CLE
Jackson
CLE
Kitchens
CLE
Stefanski
CLE
Morris
TB
Schiano
TB
Smith
TB
Koetter
TB
Arians
TB
Green
ARI
Whisenhunt
ARI
Arians
ARI
Wilks
ARI
Kingsbury
ARI
Turner
LAC
McCoy
LAC
Lynn
LAC
Staley
LAC
Edwards
KC
Haley
KC
Crennel
KC
Reid
KC
Caldwell
IND
Pagano
IND
Reich
IND
Gibbs
WSH
Zorn
WSH
Shanahan
WSH
Gruden
WSH
Rivera
WSH
Parcells
DAL
Phillips
DAL
Garrett
DAL
McCarthy
DAL
Saban
MIA
Cameron
MIA
Sparano
MIA
Philbin
MIA
Gase
MIA
Flores
MIA
Kelly
PHI
Pederson
PHI
Sirianni
PHI
Mora Jr.
ATL
Petrino
ATL
Smith
ATL
Quinn
ATL
Smith
ATL
Coughlin
NYG
McAdoo
NYG
Shurmur
NYG
Judge
NYG
Del Rio
JAX
Mularkey
JAX
Bradley
JAX
Marrone
JAX
Meyer
JAX
Mangini
NYJ
Ryan
NYJ
Bowles
NYJ
Saleh
NYJ
Mariucci
DET
Marinelli
DET
Schwartz
DET
Caldwell
DET
Patricia
DET
Campbell
DET
McCarthy
GB
LaFleur
GB
Rivera
CAR
Rhule
CAR
Turner
LVR
Shell
LVR
Kiffin
LVR
Cable
LVR
Jackson
LVR
Allen
LVR
Del Rio
LVR
Gruden
LVR
Linehan
LAR
Haslett
LAR
Spagnuolo
LAR
Fisher
LAR
McVay
LAR
Harbaugh
BAL
Payton
NO
Mora Jr.
SEA
Carroll
SEA
Tomlin
PIT
Kubiak
HOU
O’Brien
HOU
Culley
HOU
Munchak
TEN
Whisenhunt
TEN
Mularkey
TEN
Vrabel
TEN
Childress
MIN
Frazier
MIN
Zimmer
MIN
According to the data, white hires are more than twice as likely to be offensive coordinators (35% of white hires compared with 16% of minority ones), while minority hires are almost twice as likely to be defensive coordinators (44% compared with 23%).
Who are the assistants worth watching? Andscape’s Jason Reid, who has written a series of stories about the Rooney Rule, identified the top five most viable candidates below.
Bowles’ sound defensive game plan helped Tampa Bay rout the Kansas City Chiefs 31-9 in Super Bowl LV. During four seasons (2015-18) as the New York Jets’ head coach, Bowles went 24-40. But after his strong work with the Buccaneers, Bowles has proven he’s ready to lead another team.
He directed a defense that limited Buffalo’s opponents to league-leading averages of 272.8 total yards, 163.0 passing yards and 17.0 points. While serving as the Minnesota Vikings’ head coach for three seasons, Frazier led the team to one playoff appearance. He has helped the Bills win consecutive division titles.
Like Bowles, Leftwich, a former NFL quarterback, played a key role in the Buccaneers’ Super Bowl LV win. The Jacksonville Jaguars, which drafted Leftwich seventh overall in the 2003 NFL draft, considered him for their vacancy, which was filled by Doug Pederson in early February.
He devised a strategy that resulted in Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow being sacked seven times during the Rams’ 23-20 victory in Super Bowl LVI. Fired after going 17-31 in three seasons (2009-11) leading Tampa Bay, Morris hopes to reach the top rung of the coaching ladder again soon.
The fast-rising Ryans is the league’s second-youngest defensive playcaller. In his first season leading San Francisco’s defense, the unit ranked among the top 10 in total yards, passing yards, rushing yards and scoring. A rock star throughout his career, Ryans was a first-team All-Pro linebacker.
Former Miami Dolphins head coach Brian Flores, who is Afro Latino, recently filed a lawsuit – which seeks class-action status – alleging widespread racial discrimination in the league’s hiring practices. In a memo to all 32 clubs after Flores filed his lawsuit, NFL commissioner Roger Goodell revealed that the league will initiate a comprehensive review of its approach to diversity, equity and inclusion.
At the outset of Super Bowl week, the Dolphins hired former 49ers offensive coordinator Mike McDaniel, who is biracial, and the Houston Texans promoted Lovie Smith, who is Black and served as the team’s associate head coach and defensive coordinator this past season. Still, of the nine openings for head coaches at the beginning of the recently completed hiring cycle, seven were filled by white coaches, including the first six.
Over the previous four cycles, there were 27 openings. During that span, three Black men became head coaches. That’s a total of 36 openings over five cycles with only four Black men hired as head coaches.
The Washington Commanders’ Ron Rivera and the New York Jets’ Robert Saleh are the league’s only other minority head coaches.
Repeatedly, Goodell has said the issue of inclusive hiring is important. But the league continues to drop the ball.