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Black QBs in the NFL: An Assessment

by AmphibiousSportsDuo
created September 09, 2008, last edited February 03, 2010
17
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In 2001, the Christian Science Monitor bravely declared, “Football’s Last Race Barrier Crumbles.” In that article, Charles Ross, a history professor from the University of Mississippi concluded, "It's only a matter of time before you see more and more African- Americans at quarterback. The competitive nature of the game will make it a non-issue within the next 10 years." These declarations were made when players such as Donovan McNabb, Daunte Culpepper, and Michael Vick were redefining the quarterback position. It has been almost eight years since those statements, and Daunte Culpepper has declared early retirement. Just four years ago, Culpepper had one of the greatest seasons ever recorded by a quarterback, and heading into this year, only two teams even bothered to work him out. The current landscape of the NFL suggests the bumper crop of Black quarterbacks at the start of the decade was a fad and not a change in the mindset of personnel departments.

A primary cause of the current lack of Black quarterbacks in the NFL remains rooted in the lower levels of football. In high school, a coach wants his most talented players on the field. For most freshmen, this rules out playing quarterback. These young men, being team players and eager for to get on the field, often play other positions. As a result, they do not practice at quarterback, and even though many may eventually play quarterback at the high school level, scouts often have them rated higher at these other positions. A perfect example is Rueben Randle, considered to be one of the top wide receiver recruits in the nation this year. He came to high school as a quarterback, but with his 4.4 speed, was moved to wide receiver. This year Randle will be playing quarterback for his team, but top colleges are recruiting him to catch, not throw. Randle could get a scholarship to play quarterback, but it would be at a smaller school, and he would probably have to wait for playing time. As a wide receiver, he gets to pick which BCS school he wants to attend and will play sooner. Randle’s story is a common one in high school football; a young man too talented to keep off the field, and therefore does not spend adequate time practicing the quarterback position. Rueben’s preference remains wide receiver, but his choice as well as countless other recruits contributes to unintentional discrimination. In the NFL, the quarterback, by average, is the highest paid position. With so many young Black men playing other positions, they self-eliminate from this highest of pay brackets.

At the pro level, there remain disconcerting trends. There are only two Black offensive coordinators and three Black quarterback coaches. Of all coaching positions, these numbers are by far the lowest, including head coaches. The NFL has done well by minority coaches with the Rooney Rule, but these two positions continue to lag behind. Of these five coaches, only Sherman Smith played in the NFL, and he played running back. This is not an indictment of their ability, but several NFL quarterbacks have transitioned into these positions, and yet no Blacks quarterbacks have. Often these quarterbacks that make the transition are career backups, but that is where the next disturbing trend lies.

There are currently fifteen Black quarterbacks on active rosters, injured reserve, or practice squads. This constitutes 14.5% of the total number of quarterbacks in the league. Six Black quarterbacks started for the team at the beginning of this season (18.5%), and all of them were drafted in the first or second round, with the exception of David Garrard, who was a fourth round pick. Consider that ten of the current starting QBs were selected after the fourth round, or were not drafted at all. Black QBs active in the league account for only one more than starters drafted after the fourth round. The only two Black quarterbacks drafted after the fourth round to have careers in the NFL in the last twenty years were both sixth round picks, in 1989, Rodney Peete and in 1992, Jeff Blake. Of the eleven Black quarterbacks on active rosters, only two are backups with more than two years of experience, Byron Leftwich and Cleo Lemon. Two others are on injured reserve this season, Anthony Wright and Charlie Batch, but Leftwich was only signed when Batch was injured. Currently, there are twenty-nine other backups with more than two years of experience, meaning Black backups (with more than two years experience) are only 6.5% of the backup talent pool. Fourteen undrafted quarterbacks made rosters this season; five starting for their team, but Cleo Lemon is the only active undrafted black QB in the league. In the last twenty years, only two undrafted Black quarterbacks, Warren Moon and Anthony Wright have started a playoff game, but between the 1998 and 2001 seasons, six undrafted quarterbacks started in the playoffs. While the supremely talented Black QBs are given an opportunity, Black “project” QBs or backups are almost non-existent. It’s hard to argue with Donovan McNabb when he stated in a 2007 interview with HBO, "Let me start by saying I love those guys (Carson Palmer and Peyton Manning), but they don't get criticized as much as we do. They don't." When black quarterbacks know they are only one new draft pick or one bad training camp away from the end of their career, it’s not hard to imagine the pressure they must feel. Quarterbacks fail at the start of their career. It’s a rule seldom broken, but when Black quarterbacks suffer from “growing pains,” they are often faced with serious choices: find work in a new league, knowing they will likely never return, change position, or abandon their playing careers. In a league known for second chances, the offer does not extend to Black signal callers.

The void of Black backups does not gain credibility when comparing the NFL with other football leagues. Black quarterbacks are having continued success in other leagues, but even when they do, they rarely get a shot with NFL clubs. In 2004, former Patriot draft pick Rohan Davey was the Player of the Year in NFL Europe and led his team to the title. He struggled when he returned to training camp with the Patriots, and was cut before the season started. The second best quarterback in NFL Europe that season, 49er starter, J.T. O’Sullivan. Annually, at least fifty percent of the top quarterbacks in the Canadian Football League are Black, many who never played a down of NFL football, at least not at quarterback. Before shunning both of these leagues remember that quarterbacks such as Warren Moon, Doug Flutie, Kurt Warner, Brad Johnson, and Jay Fiedler have all spent time in either league. With the dearth of quality quarterbacks, it appears at least negligent that personnel departments aren’t considering some of these options. One of the primary complaints against unemployed Black quarterbacks has been a lack of leadership. Kerry Joseph, one of the many Black QBs in the CFL, was the CFL 2007 Most Outstanding Player and won an award for exceptional motivational and leadership skills. When he played with the Seahawks, he was a safety.

Some people have been quick to criticize Daunte Culpepper for not taking the offers of the Packers and the Steelers. Culpepper contended the offers were non-negotiable and below market value. He’s right. Culpepper was offered $1 million by the Packers and the veteran minimum from the Steelers. Black quarterbacks being underpaid is not new, and this was another case of teams attempting to underpay. Excluding the ridiculous rookie contracts, Culpepper would’ve stood to make less than a third of what Rex Grossman, Brad Johnson, Damon Huard, Josh McCown, Patrick Ramsey, and Billy Volek all are being paid. He’d make less than half what Gus Frerotte, Trent Green, and Chris Redman will this season. Culpepper was one of the best young quarterbacks in league, who pushed himself to come back from injury, and landed himself in two bad situations at Miami and Oakland. While these offers seem fair, they both fall well short of market value. In an interview that appeared in the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, NFL scout and FOX analyst Chris Landry offered this assessment, “[T]eams right now, because of (Culpepper's and Leftwich's) injury history, or lack of production recently due to the injury, are not willing to give starter money. They are interested in maybe giving them an incentive-laden deal, where if you come in and win the job, then you've got starter money.” Aaron Brooks does not quite measure up to the other two, but according to Landry, “[i]n the right spot, as a backup, heck, he's a guy that's started enough in this league — I think he can be a solid No. 2.” While Leftwich accepted the veteran minimum with the Steelers, Brooks’s phone stays silent, and Culpepper’s patience has worn out.

Seven years after this controversy “died,” it’s one again alive and well. When playoff-caliber quarterbacks such as Daunte Culpepper, Aaron Brooks, and Byron Leftwich sit for months unemployed while other aging quarterbacks continue to find work, something is amiss. The switching of positions at the prep level may be largely unavoidable, and because it grants scholarship opportunities for more young men, it could be argued it should not be avoided. The situation in the NFL, however, needs to be remedied. Personnel departments may not consciously engage in racism, but by choosing to neglect Black quarterbacks, particularly backups, they rob their teams of the best chance to win and perpetuate one of sports most damning stereotypes.


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CheezerAll-Star
517 days ago
Score 0+-
You just called Aaron Brooks a playoff caliber quarterback. He's not even an NFL caliber quarterback and was lucky to find employment.
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Steel TownDraft Pick
517 days ago
Score 0+-
Same goes for Leftwich. Until he learns not to use all of his strength on every throw no matter how short he has no place on a starting line-up.
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AmphibiousSportsDuoVarsity
517 days ago
Score 0+-
Do you work in a personnel department?
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AmphibiousSportsDuoVarsity
517 days ago
Score 0+-
Perhaps playoff-caliber was the wrong choice of words, but all have led their team to the playoffs, and in the case of Brooks, one of his best games was in the Playoffs.
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CheezerAll-Star
517 days ago
Score 0+-
The game you mention was 8 years ago. As a fan who saw him play in Packers camp as well as many games over the years, I do not think there is enough evidence to justify your contention that teams should be calling him in for tryouts.

I don't understand why it's such a problem. As Dubs says, the numbers are on par with the overall numbers for the population.

If I'm a coach and I have a 6'4" player with above average intelligence who runs a 4.4 40, I'm going to try and make him a wideout. That tall, smart and fast, I want him reading defenses and running option routes.

Of greater concern to me is the lack of coaches and administrators of color.
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AmphibiousSportsDuoVarsity
517 days ago
Score 2+-
Focusing solely on Brooks (or any single quarterback) is not the purpose of the article. When you saw Brooks in camp it was also 8 years ago.
My argument for these three is not for them to be starters, but all three were unsigned (until Batch's injury) and teams were showing minimal interest in bring them in as a backup. That combined with the almost complete lack of any black backups, black QB coaches, and offensive coordinators points to a much bigger problem in philosophy.
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JuTMSY4Legend
517 days ago
Score 3+-
Rumor is Culpepper's talked himself out of a few jobs...
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CheezerAll-Star
517 days ago
Score 1+-
I understand the point of the article.<br.
To clarify, I was not the one that brought the focus onto Brooks. You were. You stated, "When playoff-caliber quarterbacks such as Daunte Culpepper, Aaron Brooks, and Byron Leftwich sit for months unemployed while other aging quarterbacks continue to find work, something is amiss." I disagree that Brooks deserves to be called for tryouts. You could say that I am of the opinion that he is a bad example for you to use. I could also have refuted Culpepper (not the same since the knee injury, overinflated sense of self) and Leftwich (had a chance in camp earlier this year and was cut), but I chose not to.

I'm not going to discuss this any further. Arguing on the internet is fruitless and I do not want to be party to a discussion that detracts from the points you are trying to make with your article.

Like I said earlier, I am more concerned with the fact limited opportunities people of color seem to have in coaching and management.
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AmphibiousSportsDuoVarsity
517 days ago
Score 1+-
I will refrain from using the assessments of NFL scouts in future articles.
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Anonymous Fanatic #1
517 days ago
Score 0+-
Hi
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Anonymous Fanatic #2
496 days ago
Score 0+-
I disagree he is definitely an A class <a href="http://quart...fl.zozuz.com">Quarterback</a> and is definitely going to be making come back this year.
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Davis21wylieMVP
517 days ago
Score 3+-
The 14.5% overall number is to be expected, since 13% of the U.S. population is African-American. But I don't understand the lack of backups, either. There's no shortage of young, white "project" backups like Andrew Walter, Matt Moore, John Beck, Jim Sorgi, Ryan Fitzpatrick, Dan Orlovsky, etc. -- guys who will probably never be starters but can step in if need be -- but where are the black versions of these guys? I'm not worried about the fact that Brooks and Culpepper haven't been given second chances, because they aren't very good right now and are past their primes. But where are the pre-prime, black "born backups"?
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Manny StilesMajor Leaguer
517 days ago
Score 2+-
Shawn King and Andre Ware work for ESPN now...
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BigPPupMajor Leaguer
517 days ago
Score 2+-
Cheezer, having grown up in Charlottesville Va, and being a lifelong season ticket holder and a person who was close to that staff at UVA, I watch Aaron Brooks from the moment he stepped on campus through GB, NO Oakland and now at home. He had all the tools to be a playoff QB and played well when given the chance. Things began to come apart for him at the same time his team came apart. However as far as mechanics go he had skills and ability to make the reads and make the throws. As far as Culpeper goes, it was his attitude, the fact that he represented himself and his unwilingness to take paycuts even after the injury that cost him his NFL career.
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Davis21wylieMVP
517 days ago
Score 2+-
He'll always be haunted by that backwards pass...


On a lighter note, he does hold the patent for the "15-step dropback"... Every time you see a QB with horrible footwork basically run perpendicular to the LOS instead of dropping back, Brooksie gets a royalty check.
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JuTMSY4Legend
517 days ago
Score 0+-
If you're willing to equate black QBs to athletic QBs (relatively) than are you willing to equate the current trend in athletic QBs overall?

Take a look at the current starting QBs in the NFL today versus 2001...Giving the benefit of the doubt, I'd say Russell, Young, Garrard and Jackson and the only bonifide runners, with Garcia, McNabb and Campbell being iffy...

If anything, the trend in QBs right now is away from athleticism...or running
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BigPPupMajor Leaguer
517 days ago
Score 1+-
Running QB's don't work in the NFL. Vick was the perfect example of that. That is also why half of the QB's who run the top college programs in the country will not be NFL stars. Ever wonder why Juice Williams and Pat White are throwing the ball like crazy now that they are upperclassmen?
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JuTMSY4Legend
517 days ago
Score 1+-
I'm not saying they don't work, its just that you need to be a capable passing/pocket QB first. Donovan McNabb and Steve Young are perfect examples...scrambling should be viewed much like a dump off to an RB
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BigPPupMajor Leaguer
517 days ago
Score 1+-
Very good analogy there btw. You're correct you have to be able to throw the ball in the NFL. Hell the league is set up for passing teams. Throw the ball deep and 1/3 of the time you'll at least get a pass interference call and move the ball.
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Manny StilesMajor Leaguer
517 days ago
Score 1+-
Black QB's??? Pffft. Where's the black kickers?
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BigPPupMajor Leaguer
517 days ago
Score 1+-
We don't play enough soccer.
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JuTMSY4Legend
517 days ago
Score 1+-
So if we're complaining about black QBs, should we also be concerned about the number of white DBs? Jason Sehorn where are you?
Permalink | Reply
Manny StilesMajor Leaguer
517 days ago
Score 1+-
Personally, I'm far more concerned with female Tight Ends.
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AmphibiousSportsDuoVarsity
517 days ago
Score 0+-
You must've missed my Urlacher should remain a safety post.
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KelsdadAll-Star
517 days ago
Score 2+-
Living a quite life away from football as Mr. Angie Harmon.
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JuTMSY4Legend
517 days ago
Score 1+-
one of many former New York A.D.A.s
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Anonymous Fanatic #3
517 days ago
Score 3+-
I enjoyed the article and think that it makes a number of fair points. Comparing the percentage of African Americans in the general population against African Americans QBs is disingenuous, given the (stark) over-representation of African Americans in professional sports across all positions (including football). The question as to the imbalance among QBs thus remains valid, in my mind.
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JuTMSY4Legend
517 days ago
Score 2+-
You've got a valid point

A) Sign up

B) There is an over representation of athletes of color in sports...namely african americans in the NFL (since we're talking football), but like I sort of noted (though sort of jokingly) for positions like QB where African-Americans and underrepresented, you've got things like cornerback where there is not a single (read: none) white player at that position

I don't really have a problem with this because the NFL is the essence of meritocracy (or at least from a team building standpoint, you'd be stupid not to take the best/most capable for your team player)

Whoever made the point about African-Americans playing other positions is fairly close, and it would appear to be a major factor...QBs don't have to run sub 4.4 40s, so while a black man may be able to throw just as far or as accurate as a white man, he may also be able to cover the opposing WR and the white man can't...hence the position divide...
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TehLokiVarsity Captain
511 days ago
Score 1+-
Gah race issues, I detest them

The fact seems to be, that there are fewer black QBs who teams see they can build around than white. It happens.

Besides, Where are the Asian QBs? Timmy Chang, Where Art Thou?
Permalink | Reply
Cornfed78Draft Pick
511 days ago
Score 1+-
In the CFL.
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WardenVarsity
509 days ago
Score 0+-
Here's where your little attempt at political correctness falls apart: Daunte Culpepper, Aaron Brooks and Byron Leftwich are not good quarterbacks at the present time, so no team is interested. If they were, they'd be playing. That's too bad for all of the, but to call it racism is just stretching the truth. Just my opinion. Another stupid comment, again my opinion, is bringing up the fact that black QBs were successful in other leagues like NFL Europe. I'm sure you already realize how stupid that looks in print. Good day.
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AmphibiousSportsDuoVarsity
508 days ago
Score 0+-
I flubbed the end of this piece. Cheezer and Steel called me out on it, and they were right. I made the focus on the three quarterbacks, when the overall picture is what I found most interesting. The reason I brought up success in other leagues, was because other NFL quarterbacks have followed a similar route. I don't see the comment as being stupid at all. I would prefer to call it emperical evidence.
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JuTMSY4Legend
508 days ago
Score 0+-
I think the CFL is valid...but NFL europe...i'd say odds are about the same as the practice squad
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AmphibiousSportsDuoVarsity
508 days ago
Score 0+-
Several current NFL QBs have spent time in NFL Europe. Two division leaders, the Cardinals and the Panthers are QB'd by guys that played on the same NFL Europe team.
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Anonymous Fanatic #4
507 days ago
Score 0+-
Culpepper is out of work because he's a stuck up baby and wants to start, but since he isn't good enough, he's hiding behind his "noble" retirement. He's just at home pouting waiting for a call. Brooks on the other hand should be backing up somewhere. He was playoff calliber until the Saints fell apart, and I'm sorry but Tom Brady couldn't've done a damn thing with the 07 Raiders either. All I know is that when there's second string guys like Sorgi, and now even starters like Frerrote, with people like Culpepper and Brooks out of work, something is amiss
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Anonymous Fanatic #5
499 days ago
Score -4+-
Black qb's aren't generally as smart as white qb's. They also don't have leadership skills that white qb's do. Other than Donovan McNabb, there isn't a good starting black qb in the game. Coaches and teams want to win. They put the best players out there regardless of race. Black qb's haven't had much success. T-jack has been in the league for 3 years and he's terrible and hasn't shown any improvement.
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JuTMSY4Legend
496 days ago
Score 3+-
So Warren Moon, Steve McNair and Randall Cunningham were stupid?

This might be the most ignorant AF comment (with some type of intent to sound informed) to date...

I don't think race and intelligence (and Leadership) are mutually exclusive...
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CologalWaterboy
493 days ago
Score 1+-
Wow - is that really where you wanted to go with your comment?
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Anonymous Fanatic #4
493 days ago
Score 0+-
Of course they're not. How about Alex Smith, Ken Dorsey, Rex Grossman etc
Permalink | Reply
CologalWaterboy
493 days ago
Score 0+-
Interesting article - you make some good points and controversy makes for dialogue. It's good to get people thinking.
Permalink | Reply
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Categories: Opinions | Opinions by User AmphibiousSportsDuo | September 9, 2008 | September 2008 | NFL Opinions | Donovan McNabb Opinions | Daunte Culpepper Opinions | Aaron Brooks Opinions | Byron Leftwich Opinions | Warren Moon Opinions | Jeff Blake Opinions | Charlie Batch Opinions | Anthony Wright Opinions

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