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Los Angeles Times
Los Angeles Times
Sport
Gary Klein

Rams assistant not optimistic Brian Flores lawsuit will help Black coaching candidates

LOS ANGELES — Two years after joining coach Sean McVay's staff, Rams assistant Thomas Brown interviewed in January to become the Miami Dolphins head coach.

"If you had told me two years ago that I had a chance to interview for a head job I would have told you you're probably on drugs and probably should go to rehab," Brown said Wednesday during a videoconference with reporters. "But it was a great opportunity, a great experience for me."

Brown, the Rams assistant head coach, appears on track for more opportunities. After coaching running backs in 2020 and 2021, Brown will coach tight ends this season, a move that will build his resume and ostensibly make him a candidate for offensive coordinator positions that could lead to a head coaching job.

Head coach opportunities, however, are rare for Black coaches.

As the Rams prepare to start offseason workouts next week, there are only three Black NFL head coaches — Pittsburgh's Mike Tomlin, Houston's Lovie Smith and Tampa Bay's Todd Bowles, who recently succeeded retired Bruce Arians. Miami's Mike McDaniel has said that he identifies as biracial.

In February, former Dolphins coach Brian Flores filed a lawsuit against three NFL teams alleging racial discrimination. Last week, Steve Wilks and Ray Horton joined the class-action suit.

Brown was asked, in light of the lawsuit, if he was optimistic that more Black assistants, especially with backgrounds on offense, would get opportunities.

"Am I optimistic?" Brown said. "I'm probably in the minority but I'm going to say no, I'm not, just because I understand the history when it comes to not just the NFL and the hiring process, but … corporate America."

Brown said, "I don't believe that it's impossible" for change to occur. But he said that without seeing real change in hiring practices "talk is cheap."

The NFL in March announced a Rooney Rule initiative that requires every team to hire a minority or female offensive assistant coach for the 2022 season. The goal, according to a league committee, is to put more candidates in the pipeline to become offensive coordinators and, eventually, head coaches.

Brown is part of a Rams staff that includes four Black assistant coaches on offense, including receivers coach Eric Yarber, new running backs coach Ra'Shaad Samples and offensive assistant Nick Jones.

McVay hired former Rams assistant Liam Coen as offensive coordinator to replace Kevin O'Connell, now head coach of the Minnesota Vikings.

Brown said he would be ready for his next interview opportunity.

"Being able to go through that experience is no different to me than a player when it comes to, the more you do things the better you become at them," he said.

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