In 2012, about 9% of FBS coordinators were Black. In 2022, it was still under 10%, according to the NCAA.
Oklahoma State’s Kasey Dunn has spent three decades as an assistant football coach, a career that spans nine schools, a couple of NFL teams, four positions and all three phases of the game.
It took Dunn almost 25 years to become an offensive coordinator, and he is now one of just seven Black coaches to hold that position at the 69 schools that play at the highest level of college football. That’s 10% of the total in the Bowl Subdivision, where today!
The post As major college football coaching staffs diversify, Black offensive coordinators remain rare appeared first on TheGrio.
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