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Shannon: Seeing Black Coach Number Fall to 3 ‘Sad’

by Associated Press , December 5, 2008

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CORAL GABLES, Fla.

Of the 65 coaches leading programs affiliated with the Bowl Championship Series, Miami’s Randy Shannon is about to stand alone.

A week from now, he'll be the only Black man in the group. After Sylvester Croom resigned Saturday from Mississippi State, along with the recent firings of Kansas State’s Ron Prince and Washington’s Tyrone Willingham who’ll coach his final game with the Huskies on Saturday, Shannon is one of three Black coaches left in major college football, and the only one at a BCS school.

The last time there were only three Black coaches at the Division I-A level was 1993, and Shannon, who waited many years before getting his first legitimate chance at becoming a head coach, simply can't understand the lack of progress in bridging the sideline race gap.

“It’s sad that we keep talking about the same things,” Shannon told The Associated Press. “Maybe Sylvester was tired. I know a year or two ago he had surgery on his hip or back. But after a while, you say to yourself, how much longer can we keep going just talking about this? We can’t keep talking about the same issues every year.”

And yet, at this time every year, the issue keeps coming back. Bowl season hasn’t even started, but already, some marquee jobs have come open and, in some cases, apparently been filled.

Tennessee named Lane Kiffin as Phillip Fulmer’s replacement, and Clemson could move to promote interim coach Dabo Sweeney sometime this week.

One of the few Black candidates believed to have legitimate interest from a BCS school that’s changing coaches is Illinois offensive coordinator Mike Locksley, who has been mentioned as a replacement for Greg Robinson at Syracuse. Buffalo’s Turner Gill who, along with Shannon and Houston’s Kevin Sumlin, is one of the three Black coaches who have jobs for 2009 is also thought to be a Syracuse candidate.

The only other prominent Black assistant to be mentioned so far is Notre Dame offensive coordinator Michael Haywood, who reportedly was interviewed by Washington to replace Willingham.

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