The FBS National Championship Game Will Include A Black Head Coach For The First Time In History
While Black athletes have long dominated the sport of football on the field, it’s a completely different story along the sidelines as head coaches have typically been white. That is especially true when it comes to the college national championship game, which has never featured a single Black head coach on the sidelines. That is, until now.
Well, not exactly now, as the FBS (Football Bowl Subdivision) national championship game is scheduled to be held later this month.
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But thanks to Notre Dame University’s decisive victory over the University of Georgia in the Sugar Bowl on Thursday night, we now know for sure that there will be at least one Black head coach vying for a national championship on Jan. 20.
In other words, as unbelievable as it may sound, there has never been a Black head coach to win a national championship college football game, let alone be a part of the game itself. Ever.
Notre Dame head coach Marcus Freeman is changing that after his Fighting Irish team advanced to face Penny State University, whose Nittany Lions are led by head coach James Franklin, another African American head coach.
After Notre Dame won Thursday night, Freeman explained to reporters the significance of two Black head coaches squaring off in the Orange Bowl, the FBS semifinals playoff game.
Noting that he was “grateful,” Freeman said it was “a reminder that you are a representation for many others and many of our players that look the same way I do.”
Franklin and Freeman are part of a small but mighty crop of Black head coaches in college football who are making serious waves in an otherwise lily-white ocean of their peers.
Sherrone Moore at the University of Michigan and Deion Sanders are the University of Colorado are two others.
Moore led his unranked Wolverines to a Bowl win over the #13 University of Alabama on New Year’s Eve to end the season on a promising high note.
Sanders’ Buffaloes lost in his team’s Bowl game last week, but his team included two guaranteed first-round picks in the forthcoming NFL Draft, including his star quarterback son, Shadeur Sanders, and Heisman Trophy-winning two-way sensation Travis Hunter.
Coupled with the success currently being enjoyed by Franklin and Freeman, these Black head coaches could — and likely will — pave the way for even more to not only be hired to further diversify a traditionally white profession but also compete for additional national championships moving forward.
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