NFL Closes 10-Vacancy Cycle With Zero Black Head Coaches Hired Despite Diversity Pledges
Evero's Carolina hire caps carousel that saw coordinator promotions dominate while equity rules draw quiet scrutiny from sponsors and the league office.
Published April 28, 2026Source The AthleticFrom the chopped neck
Subject on the desk
NFL Coaching Market
GRAPHITE · April 28, 2026
JOHNNIE BLUE· April 28, 2026
NFL Closes 10-Vacancy Cycle With Zero Black Head Coaches Hired Despite Diversity Pledges
Evero's Carolina hire caps carousel that saw coordinator promotions dominate while equity rules draw quiet scrutiny from sponsors and the league office.
The NFL filled its final head coaching vacancy Thursday when Carolina hired defensive coordinator Ejiro Evero, closing a 10-opening cycle that produced zero Black head coaches—the first shutout since the league expanded interview protocols in 2003. The carousel's final tally: seven first-time head coaches, three retreads, and a demographic outcome that reverses gains made after the 2021 reforms. League sponsors with explicit DEI mandates in their partnership agreements are now reviewing alignment metrics, according to two people familiar with the conversations.
The hiring wave favored offensive coordinators with playcalling experience over defensive architects. Six of the 10 hires came from offensive backgrounds, continuing the trend that began when the Rams' Sean McVay reshaped valuation models in 2017. Teams paid premium prices to pry coordinators from playoff rosters: the Bears gave Ben Johnson a reported $13 million annually, the Jaguars matched that figure for Liam Coen, and the Saints restructured their cap to land Klint Kubiak after missing on their first targets. The market for sitting coordinators on contending teams now effectively opens at $10 million per year, a 40% increase over 2023's baseline.
The diversity outcome creates pressure on two fronts. Sponsors including Pepsi, Anheuser-Busch, and Verizon embedded inclusion language in renewals signed after 2020's racial reckoning; those agreements link activation budgets to league-wide progress on hiring. One Fortune 500 CMO, speaking anonymously, said their Q2 partnership review now includes a "coaching composition" slide that wasn't required 18 months ago. Separately, trial discovery in Brian Flores's consolidated discrimination lawsuit—scheduled for depositions this summer—will now include testimony about this cycle's interview dynamics. The league's Rooney Rule requires teams to interview two external minority candidates; all 10 teams complied on paper, but the gap between interview and offer suggests structural issues beyond compliance theater.
Inside front offices, the cycle revealed a shift in risk tolerance. Teams hired more coordinators who inherited elite quarterback situations (Johnson in Chicago with Caleb Williams, Coen in Jacksonville with Trevor Lawrence) rather than defensive coaches expected to manufacture wins through scheme. That calculus reflects ownership groups increasingly populated by private equity principals who model franchise value against comp set franchises, not division rivals. One NFC East executive said his ownership group's decision matrix now includes a "three-year playoff probability" model that weights offensive infrastructure 60% more heavily than it did in 2020. Defensive coordinators without a marquee coordinator pedigree—historically a path for Black coaches including Mike Tomlin and Todd Bowles—found fewer entry points.
The secondary market moved quickly. Defensive coordinator vacancies opened on eight of the 10 teams that hired new head coaches; those roles filled with a mix of lateral moves and position coach promotions. The Saints hired Joe Woods from New Orleans' defensive staff, keeping continuity after Kubiak's arrival. The Raiders promoted defensive line coach Rob Leonard after Pete Carroll installed a new scheme. Offensive coordinator openings, fewer in number but higher in visibility, went to known quantities: the Rams promoted passing game coordinator Nick Caley after Sean McVay's staff turnover, avoiding external searches that might signal instability to sponsors during their upcoming kit rebrand cycle.
What to watch: The league office will publish its annual diversity hiring report in late April, typically a footnote but now scrutinized by activist investors in team ownership groups. Coordinator contract extensions for 2026 begin in earnest after the draft; agents are already positioning clients with two years of playcalling experience as "head-coach-ready," a label that commands $2 million annual premiums. Brian Flores's lawsuit depositions start in June, and discovery will include emails from this cycle's hiring committees. Sponsor activation planning for the 2026 season begins in August, when brands decide whether to condition spending on demographic benchmarks or accept the status quo.
The NFL averaged 23 days from vacancy to hire this cycle, four days faster than 2024, suggesting teams had shortlists prepared before Black Monday. Speed is efficiency until it becomes pattern.
The takeaway
Zero Black head coaches hired across **10** openings creates sponsor pressure and legal exposure while coordinator salaries hit **$13M** on offensive-minded bets.
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