If youโve watched football in the last decade thereโs one thing you know for sure: Aaron Donald is the best defensive player of his generation. At 6โ1โ and nearly 300 pounds, with a neck and shoulders that look like they could easily carry one of the Mt. Rushmore sculptures, Donald is impossible to miss. And with 98 career sacks, three NFL Defensive Player of the Year trophies and a Super Bowl ring to his credit, Donald is clearly Hall of Fame bound. I bring all this up to say that you donโt have to be a football scholar to know who Aaron Donald is. If youโre in LA, where he plays, or Pittsburgh, where heโs from and spends some of his offseason, and happen to see a light skinned dude who looks big enough to swallow you whole, bench press you for fun or cause a total eclipse of the sun depending on where he stands, thatโs him. Which is also to say that if youโre a professional football coach, itโd be fantastically impossible to not know who Aaron Donald is. Thatโd be like a surgeon not knowing the difference between a stethoscope and a scalpel or a lawyer forgetting what state theyโre barred in. Itโd be like a drug dealer forgetting whether it was time to reup on weed or blow, and then forgetting the going rate for either, and then calling his plug in front of an FBI field office and talking as loud as humanly possible. Itโd be malpractice. But according to an incredible story from The Athletic, it actually happened last season when the Jacksonville Jaguarsโthe NFLโs new standard for ineptitudeโtried the destined-to-fail experiment of hiring Urban Meyer as their head coach. During his brief tenure, Meyer did things like trying out Tim Tebow, a former quarterback who flamed out of the NFL years ago, as a tight end, and hiring a strength coach who was fired because his Black players thought he was racist. Meyer himself had issues with Black players when he was Ohio Stateโs head coach at the college level, a job from which he โretiredโ after a scandalous tenure back in 2018. It still didnโt stop the Jags from hiring him. Meyer didnโt survive a full season in Jacksonville. But apparently, his time there was worse than everyone thought because according to the Athleticโs reporting on his tragic 13 games at the helm, holy shit, he didnโt even know who Aaron Donald was.
Suggested Reading
From The Athletic
Signs of dysfunction were apparent early on. Several sources said Meyer stepped into the job as if he had all the answers, even though he had never coached in the NFL.
Meyer said he conducted a six-month deep dive on the NFL that included interviews with his former Florida and Ohio State players as well as a study of the salary cap. But multiple sources said Meyer was unfamiliar with star players around the league, including 49ers receiver Deebo Samuel, Seahawks safety Jamal Adams and Rams defensive tackle Aaron Donald, a three-time NFL defensive player of the year.
โWhoโs this 99 guy on the Rams?โ Meyer asked one staffer during the season, according to a source. โIโm hearing he might be a problem for us.โ
If youโre a non-sports fan whose eyes have glazed over at this point, Iโll reframe it for you: this isnโt a sports story. Itโs a story about competence and what happens when someone is hired for a huge job despite lacking a basic knowledge required to do their jobs. Itโs about something Black professionals have experienced: watching someone whoโs clearly underqualified get, and fuck up, a high-profile, high-paying job while we wait, and age, and accumulate experience and education, and fume as we never get that call.And itโs about what it costs organizations who continuously make these kinds of hiring decisions.When doctors donโt know the difference between stethoscopes and scalpels, people end up dead. When pro football coaches donโt know who the 280-lb human quarterback eater is on the other side of the ball, lots of games get lost; the Jags went 2-11 before they showed Meyer the door. Itโs hardly coincidence that this all went down just months before Brian Flores sued the NFL for discrimination in its head coaching hiring practices. I canโt say Meyer was hired because heโs white, especially since the Jagsโ have the only nonwhite principal owner among the NFLโs 32 teams. But itโs fair to say that Meyer got his job while multiple, more qualified Black coaches, like Tampa Bay offensive coordinator Byron Leftwich and Kansas City OC Eric Bienemy to name two, were looking for opportunities and getting passed over. Itโs what happens to Black would-be executives in Corporate America daily.Maybe Meyer was kidding in what he said about Donald. Itโd be hard to take any NFL head coach seriously after hearing it. But the dysfunction of his tenure and what it says about who can and canโt ascend, ainโt funny at all.
Straight From
Sign up for our free daily newsletter.