More specifically: that ex-players are selected as coaches far less in the NFL than they are in MLB or the NHL, two sports with a much higher percentage of white players.
We're talking about football, specifically the NFL.
And by "work your way up over the years,"you mean
I mean like:
Mike Tomlin who worked his way up the coaching ranks starting in college in 1995 and entered NFL coaching in 2001. 6 year transition.
Andy Reid who worked his way up the coaching ranks starting in 1982 in college and entered NFL coaching in 1992. 10 year transition.
Dennis Green who worked his way up the coaching ranks starting in 1972 in college and entered NFL coaching in 1979. 7 year transition.
John Harbaugh who worked his way up the coaching ranks starting in 1984 in college and entered NFL coaching in 1998. 14 year transition.
Lovie Smith who worked his way up the coaching ranks starting in 1983 in college and entered NFL coaching in 1996. 13 year transition.
Bruce Arians who worked his way up the coaching ranks starting in 1975 in college and entered NFL coaching in 1989. 14 year transition
David Culley who worked his way up the coaching ranks starting in 1978 in college and entered NFL coaching in 1994. 16 year transition.
Pete Carroll who worked his way up the coaching ranks starting in 1973 in college and entered NFL coaching in 1984. 11 year transition.
Romeo Crennel who worked his way up the coaching ranks starting in 1970 in college and entered NFL coaching in 1981. 11 year transition.
"spend exactly one year coaching in the college ranks before landing an NFL coaching job."
The information above directly contridicts your assertaitions. As a side note, even if that was true, which it's not. It's an extra year of coaching experience added to a resume for a job that mainly requires experience. And extra year experience that a
player doesn't have.
This neglects to consider that there are also many black college football players who don't make it to the NFL. Yet these players are NOT placed on the coaching fast track, then hired by NFL teams less than two years out of college.
So players who wash out should be put on a fast track when they could have went straight into coaching to begin with if that's what they wanted to do? Normally if your career path doesn't work out, you don't just get to skip ahead in line when you change paths.
Given that age is a factor in the ability to play, this point doesn't even make sense.
Of course it makes sense. So you're saying they're too old after saying that they "spend exactly one year coaching in the college ranks". How old are they after coaching for one year at the college ranks? Let's take a look...
Mike Tomlin 23 years old in 1995.
Andy Reid 24 years old in 1982.
Dennis Green 23 years old in 1972.
John Harbaugh 22 years old in 1984.
Lovie Smith 25 years old in 1983.
Bruce Arians 23 years old in 1975.
David Culley 23 years old in 1978.
Pete Carroll 22 years old in 1973.
Romeo Crennel 23 years old in 1970.
Math is math, the percentage of black coaches in the NFL is comparable to the black population of the country. That's equality