We use cookies to enhance your experience on our website. By continuing to use our website, you are agreeing to our use of cookies. You can change your cookie settings at any time. Find out more

Oxford University Press is a department of the University of Oxford. It furthers the University's objective of excellence in research, scholarship, and education by publishing worldwide.

Print Price: $32.95

Format:
Paperback
224 pp.
6.125" x 9.25"

ISBN-13:
9780199896257

Publication date:
September 2012

Imprint: OUP US


Advancing the Ball

Race, Reformation, and the Quest for Equal Coaching Opportunity in the NFL

N. Jeremi Duru
Foreword by Tony Dungy

Series : Law and Current Events Masters

Two days before Super Bowl XLI in 2007, the game's two opposing head coaches posed with the trophy one of them would hoist after the contest. It was a fairly unremarkable event, except that both coaches were African American - a fact that was as much of a story as the game itself.

As Jeremi Duru reveals in Advancing the Ball, this unique milestone resulted from the work of a determined group of people whose struggles to expand head coaching opportunities for African Americans ultimately changed the National Football League. Since the league's desegregation in 1946, opportunities had grown plentiful for African Americans as players but not as head coaches - the byproduct of the NFL's old-boy network and lingering stereotypes of blacks' intellectual inferiority. Although Major League Baseball and the NBA had, over the years, made progress in this regard, the NFL's head coaches were almost exclusively white up until the mid-1990s.

Advancing the Ball chronicles the campaign of former Cleveland Browns offensive lineman John Wooten to right this wrong and undo decades of discriminatory head coach hiring practices - an initiative that finally bore fruit when he joined forces with attorneys Cyrus Mehri and Johnnie Cochran. Together with a few allies, the triumvirate galvanized the NFL's African American assistant coaches to stand together for equal opportunity and convinced the league to enact the "Rooney Rule," which stipulates that every team must interview at least one minority candidate when searching for a new head coach. In doing so, they spurred a movement that would substantially impact the NFL and, potentially, the nation.

Featuring an impassioned foreword by Coach Tony Dungy, Advancing the Ball offers an eye-opening, first-hand look at how a few committed individuals initiated a sea change in America's most popular sport and added an extraordinary new chapter to the civil rights story.

Readership : Readers of Time, Newsweek, Sports Illustrated, The New York Times; students and scholars of civil rights law and recreation studies.

Introduction
1. Baltimore Love
2. An Idea's Origin
3. Superior Performance, Inferior Opportunities
4. Enter the Godfather
5. The Rooney Rule
6. The Coaching Carousel
7. Millen, Mooch, and the Great Detroit Hiring Debate
8. Birth of an Alliance
9. A Season of Dreams
10. Digging New Wells
11. Road to Super Bowl
Epilogue

There are no Instructor/Student Resources available at this time.

N. Jeremi Duru is Associate Professor of Law at Temple University. He has worked directly with the network of African American coaches in the NFL and brings an insider's perspective to his larger story about race and sports in contemporary American society.

Writing History - William Kelleher Storey and Towser Jones
In Brown's Wake - Martha Minow
Playing With the Boys - Eileen McDonagh and Laura Pappano
Rockne of Notre Dame - Ray Robinson
In Search of Jefferson's Moose - David Post
Icarus in the Boardroom - David Skeel

Special Features

  • The only book to focus on the integration of NFL coaching, rather than playing.
  • With a foreword by Tony Dungy, former coach of the Indianapolis Colts.
  • The author was a part of the struggle for equal hiring practices for NFL coaches and provides an insider's account.