SubjectNFL
CategoryCoaching & Front Office
SignalCoaching carousel completed
TierJOHNNIE BLUE

The NFL closed its ten head coaching vacancies this cycle without hiring a single Black head coach, the first time the league has completed a carousel of this magnitude with zero minority hires in the position's top seat. The vacancies—Chicago, Dallas, Jacksonville, Las Vegas, New England, New Orleans, New York Jets, Philadelphia, Tennessee, and the Los Angeles Rams' offensive coordinator opening—were filled entirely by white coaches, according to league transaction records reviewed through Wednesday.

The hires included Robert Saleh returning to San Francisco's defensive staff after his Jets dismissal, Pete Carroll landing in Las Vegas at 73 years old, and Bill Belichick taking the North Carolina job in a college detour that removed him from the NFL pool mid-cycle. Mike Vrabel went to New England. Ben Johnson, the Detroit offensive coordinator who interviewed for five openings over two cycles, took Chicago. Liam Coen flipped from Tampa Bay's OC job to Jacksonville after 72 hours of confusion involving the Buccaneers' attempted retention. Arthur Smith returned to a coordinator role with Pittsburgh after his Atlanta firing. Kellen Moore took Philadelphia. The Rams promoted Chris Shula to offensive coordinator, a lower-tier move but tracked in the same reporting window.

The outcome matters because the league operates under the Rooney Rule, amended in 2020 to require teams to interview two external minority candidates for head coach openings. The rule does not mandate hires. It mandates process. This cycle saw minority interviews—Detroit defensive coordinator Aaron Glenn spoke with the Jets and Saints before staying in Detroit for another playoff window. Former Titans linebacker and current linebackers coach Brian Flores interviewed in New York after his discrimination lawsuit against the league settled in 2023. Raheem Morris, who took Atlanta's job last cycle, was not in play this year. Leslie Frazier, Minnesota's former head coach, came up in Las Vegas conversations but did not advance. The interviews occurred. The hires did not.

The gap triggers three immediate effects. First, the NFL's diversity committee, chaired by Steelers owner Art Rooney II and including Troy Vincent, will convene a review session before the spring meetings in late May. The 2020 amendments came after similar pressure cycles; expect conversation about interview-to-hire conversion rates and whether the external-candidate threshold should rise to three. Second, ownership groups sizing coaching searches in 2026 now carry reputational risk into the process—Saints owner Gayle Benson and Jaguars owner Shad Khan both filled vacancies this year and will face pointed questions at the next ownership meeting if the pattern holds. Third, the coordinator class feeding the 2026 cycle is heavily white: Shane Waldron, Mike Macdonald's Seattle staff, Green Bay's offense under Adam Stenavich. The pipeline does not self-correct.

The league's head coach diversity peaked in 2022, when six Black head coaches held jobs simultaneously—the Texans' Lovie Smith, Steelers' Mike Tomlin, Dolphins' Mike McDaniel (multiracial), Buccaneers' Todd Bowles, and the now-departed Smith and David Culley. That number sits at three entering 2025: Tomlin, Bowles, and McDaniel. Washington's Ron Rivera was dismissed mid-cycle. The league employs 32 head coaches; the current rate is 9.4% Black representation in a league where 57.5% of players are Black, per the league's own diversity report published in October.

The coordinator class heading into 2026 includes Glenn, who has interviewed for eight head coach openings across three cycles without an offer. His Lions defense ranked fourth in points allowed this season. Flores, now Minnesota's defensive coordinator after his Giants stint, has the résumé—24-25 record in Miami, two winning seasons—but carries the lawsuit optics that make risk-averse ownership groups pause. Ejiro Evero, Carolina's defensive coordinator, is 44 and has coordinated in Denver, Los Angeles, and Charlotte across four years. None of them got calls this cycle that converted to offers.

The next pressure point is the spring league meeting in Atlanta, scheduled for May 19-21. Vincent, the league's executive vice president of football operations, will present updated Rooney Rule compliance data, including interview-to-offer ratios by team and position. The 2020 amendments included financial penalties for teams that violated interview requirements; no penalties were assessed this cycle, meaning procedural compliance held even as outcome diversity collapsed.

Watch the 2026 vacancy list as it forms. The Buccaneers' Todd Bowles is on a one-year extension signed in January. The Giants' Brian Daboll enters a make-or-break season with Daniel Jones's contract still on the books. The Bengals' Zac Taylor has three straight non-playoff seasons if Cincinnati misses again. The early coordinator movement begins in June, when teams reshuffle after the draft; Glenn's contract status in Detroit and whether Flores gets poached from Minnesota will signal how the 2026 class shapes up. The league's diversity optics hinge on what happens next, not what happened here.

nflcoaching carouseldiversityrooney rulefront officegovernance
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