Flores, who is Black, has said his firing by the Dolphins last
month after back-to-back seasons with winning records was
emblematic of the treatment of Black coaches, who comprise a
fraction of team staff positions while 70% of NFL players are
Black.
There is currently just one Black head coach among the National
Football League's 32 teams.
Flores accused two NFL teams of interviewing him just to show
they were considering Black candidates after already having
decided to hire white head coaches.
Flores has acknowledged that the lawsuit, which the NFL said is
without merit, could hurt his chances of landing another
coaching job in the league. His attorney said he hoped that
would not be the case.
"He's a coach and he loves coaching, and he loves developing
young athletes into better athletes and into good people. And so
yes, he wants to keep coaching," David Gottlieb, a partner at
Wigdor Law, told Reuters.
Flores is currently a candidate for at least two vacant head
coaching positions and his hiring would send a positive signal
about the NFL's desire to be more equitable in its hiring,
Gottlieb said.
"This is an opportunity for the league and for its individual
owners to show true leadership and say that those two things can
both happen," he said. "That he can both be an agent for change
and be a head coach at the same time."
The lawsuit also provides the league with a chance to address
past mistakes with regard to Colin Kaepernick, the San Francisco
quarterback who was never hired again by a team after he knelt
before games to protest police brutality and racism, Gottlieb
said.
"It's an opportunity to correct the mistakes of the past,
specifically with respect to how Colin Kaepernick was treated
when he protested racial injustice and then he was blackballed
from the league," Gottlieb said.
"It's an opportunity for the NFL and its owners to show that
they're not going to make the same mistake, and Coach Flores
will not have it held against him that he's standing up and has
the courage to speak out against discrimination that's going on
in the league."
(Additional reporting by David Grip in Washington; Editing by
Bill Berkrot)
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