Tomlin Adds to African American Success Story
President Barack Obama is making
history this month but there’s another significant African American
story, too. Mike Tomlin, three seasons ago the Minnesota
Vikings’ defensive coordinator, coached the Pittsburgh Steelers to an
AFC championship win on Sunday and will lead his team against the
Arizona Cardinals in next month’s Super Bowl. Tomlin is now the third
African American head coach in three years to have his team in the Super
Bowl and can become the second to win it.
Tomlin’s win on Sunday against Baltimore
comes during a week that Obama is inaugurated as the nation’s first
African American president and the country celebrates Dr. Martin
Luther King Jr.’s birthday. Tomlin will try to win a Super Bowl almost
two years to the day that Lovie Smith of Chicago and
Tony
Dungy of Indianapolis made history. They were the first African
American head coaches in the Super Bowl and Dungy was the first black
coach to win it.
If Tomlin can win the Super Bowl he will
do so on Sunday, February 1, becoming the second African American head
coach to win pro football’s biggest prize and doing it during Black
History Month. Smith and Dungy’s historic Super Bowl also came during
February.
A football team’s performance, perhaps
more than in any sport, is impacted by its coaching. The fact three of the
last six teams to qualify for the Super Bowl have been led by African
Americans will probably lessen remaining prejudices in the NFL and perhaps in
college football, too, where head coaching opportunities have been far
fewer.
Tomlin, 36, impressed observers here with
his football knowledge and calm leadership style. His success in just
two seasons in Pittsburgh, with a 22-10 regular season record and two AFC North
titles, has come despite not having previous head coaching experience.
Tomlin deserves praise but so, too, do
those who have helped him including the Pittsburgh organization and
coaches like Dungy and the Vikings' Brad Childress. The Steelers are part of the gold standard among
NFL organizations. The Steelers make wise personnel decisions (see
former No. 1 draft choice and franchise quarterback Ben
Roethlisberger) and encourage stability within the organization,
having hired just three head coaches since 1969.
Dungy, another former Vikings’ defensive
coordinator, hired Tomlin for his staff when he was head coach at Tampa
Bay. He saw a bright young assistant and let him coach the defensive
backs. Dungy, also known for his steady approach and calm leadership,
had once been the youngest assistant in the NFL at 25 coaching the
Steelers’ defensive backs.
Dungy, who recently retired as
Indianapolis coach, will make his home in Tampa, site of next month’s
Super Bowl.