Tanking allegations against Dolphins could have a Black Sox-level impact on the NFL

If Dolphins owner Stephen Ross encouraged his coaches to lose games on purpose, the NFL will have an unprecedented scandal on its hands.

Over the last several years, Commissioner Roger Goodell, and the NFL in general, have had to deal with all sorts of “-Gate” scandals. From SpyGate to BountyGate to DeflateGate, the league has tried to close these gates with severe punishments meted out to those involved and responsible.

If what former Dolphins head coach Brian Flores alleged in his class-action complaint against the NFL is true, the league will have a “-Gate” on its hands the likes of which it has never seen before.

The primary focus of Flores’ action is the league’s woeful history of hiring and promoting coaches of color, but this one bombshell put the focus in another direction.

From the complaint, filed Tuesday in the Southern District of New York:

In January 2022, Mr. Flores, who spent three years as the Head Coach of Defendant Miami Dolphins, Ltd. (the “Dolphins” or “Miami”), found himself without a job. He was fired by the Dolphins after leading the team to its first back-to-back winning seasons since 2003. The purported basis for his termination was alleged poor collaboration. In reality, the writing had been on the wall since Mr. Flores’ first season as Head Coach of the Dolphins, when he refused his owner’s directive to “tank” for the first pick in the draft. Indeed, during the 2019 season, Miami’s owner, Stephen Ross, told Mr. Flores that he would pay him $100,000 for every loss, and the team’s General Manager, Chris Grier, told Mr. Flores that “Steve” was “mad” that Mr. Flores’ success in winning games that year was “compromising [the team’s] draft position.”

Flores also claimed that he was fired, in part, because he refused to participate.

“We are aware of the lawsuit through the media reports that came out this afternoon,” the Dolphins said in a Tuesday statement. “We vehemently deny any allegations of racial discrimination and are proud of the diversity and inclusion throughout our organization. The implication that we acted in a manner inconsistent with the integrity of the game is incorrect. We will be withholding further comment on the lawsuit at this time.”

Obviously, accusing a team owner of wanting to throw games, and offering to pay his coaches to do so, is as severe a non-criminal charge as can be leveled in any sport. While there was widespread conjecture that the 2019 Dolphins were “tanking” their season for higher draft picks during the season, Flores’ ability to get the team back on track with a 5-11 finish after an 0-7 start put those thoughts to rest in the minds of most.

This after the team traded quarterback Ryan Tannehill, edge-rusher Robert Quinn, left tackle Laremy Tunsil, receiver Kenny Stills, linebacker Kiko Alonso, defensive back Minkah Fitzpatrick, and running back Kenyan Drake between March and October, 2019.

As Flores led this formerly gutted team to winning seasons in 2020 and 2021 (the first Dolphins head coach to have two straight winning seasons since Dave Wannstedt in 2002 and 2003), his January 10 firing came as a surprise, and many of Flores’ former players were not happy about it.

Dolphins players react emotionally, unhappily to Brian Flores’ firing

On Wednesday, NFL Network reporter Cameron Wolfe, who formerly covered the Miami Dolphins (among other subjects) for ESPN, told NFL Now host Omar Ruiz that he spoke with one of the potential witness who may be able to confirm Flores’ accusations, and that there are multiple potential witnesses.

If that’s the case, and there are multiple people willing to corroborate Flores’ version of events, the NFL has a problem it hasn’t had since Pete Rozelle suspended Paul Hornung and Alex Karras in 1963 for betting on NFL games. Rozelle also fined five Detroit Lions players $2,000 each — Joe Schmidt, Wayne Walker, John Gordy, Gary Lowe and Sam Williams — for betting on the Green Bay Packers to beat the New York Giants in the 1962 NFL Championship game.

Obviously, the specter of a team owner scuttling his team’s season, and offering to play his head coach to do so, falls in a far more serious category than a handful of players making side bets on the Packers here and there. If true, Ross’ malfeasance would be more reminiscent of the 1919 Black Sox scandal, when a handful of disgruntled Chicago White Sox players looked to enhance their income by throwing the World Series to the Cincinnati Reds.

All players involved in that fix were banned from Major League Baseball for life by Commissioner Kenesaw Mountain Landis, a former federal judge who was brought in by team owners to give the public faith in the game again. The Black Sox scandal was far from the only instance of players gambling on the game at the time — in fact, the practice was common in the early 20th century. But it was Landis’ scorched-earth methods, and insistence on absolute autonomy from the owners, that put the toothpaste back in the tune, so to speak.

Roger Goodell would face a similar existential crisis if Flores’ allegations are proven to be true, and the very least he and the NFL’s team owners would have to do in that case would be to force Ross to sell the team, and forbid Ross or any of his representatives from ever participating in NFL ownership ever again.

Because in Ross’ case, there’s another potential issue.

In 2019, at the same time he was allegedly trying to get Flores to lose games on purpose, Ross invested in sports gambling startup The Action Network as part of a $17.5 million fundraising round. Ross did so through his company, RSE Ventures.

“For the Action Network, it’s affirming to our strategy to have all four of the major US sports as investors,” CEO Patrick Keane said at the time. “To be able to call on the counsel of these kinds of owners is super-helpful to the company.”

It could also create super-thorny conflicts of interest if, say, a team owner was encouraging his coaches to lose games. There is no way to separate one entity from the other when it comes to the appearance of impropriety. It certainly gives Ross even more hard questions to answer as Flores’ lawsuit proceeds, and potentially gives the NFL the kind of headache it’s never had to survive before.

Michael Wilbon compares Brian Flores to Colin Kaepernick

The coach may never get another job again.

Brian Flores, the former head coach of the Miami Dolphins, has spent the last couple of weeks interviewing for head coaching positions with multiple teams. As the search has gone on, Flores felt that there were some issues with the process that led him to file a lawsuit against the NFL and multiple teams on Tuesday.

On an episode of ESPN’s “Pardon the Interruption,” Tony Kornheiser asked Michael Wilbon his reaction to the Flores situation, and Wilbon compared it to another alleged issue of racial injustice that the league saw just a few years ago.

“It was straight to Colin Kaepernick,” Flores said. “It was straight to Brian Flores, God bless him for doing this, this takes courage. This takes sacrifice. Flores is not some dummy. He knows that if he goes up against the NFL, legally with a class action suit, we’ve seen how evil the NFL can be. This basically takes him out of play for being an NFL coach like it took Colin Kaepernick out of play for being an NFL quarterback.”

Kaepernick filed a grievance in 2017 that accused the league of colluding to keep him out of the league after he went unsigned in the offseason following his decision to take a knee during the national anthem to protest racial injustices. While Kaepernick and the league settled, the quarterback never took another snap in the NFL.

Wilbon is right. Flores may never be the head coach of a team again, and the coach has acknowledged that in his own statement.

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Brian Flores’ lawyers say more coaches will attach to the lawsuit

More names could be added to this lawsuit.

As Brian Flores makes his tour of interviews on Wednesday, the morning after he filed a class action lawsuit against, he and his legal team have discussed many aspects of his claims with many different outlets including CBS, CNN, and ESPN.

During his interview on ESPN’s “Get Up,” Flores’ legal team insisted that there will be more coaches that will attach to this lawsuit, and made it known that they’ve already been in contact with some of them.

Racial issues in the National Football League aren’t a new discovery, but there haven’t been many who have stood up and put their jobs and futures on the line to protest the injustices that are happening in these hiring processes. If Flores gets more coaches to join the cause, the league will have a real problem on their hands.

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Brain Flores: Stephen Ross’ actions attacked integrity of the game

If the owner was offering money to lose, the coach is right.

On Tuesday, former Miami Dolphins head coach Brian Flores filed a class action lawsuit against multiple NFL teams for racism in the hiring process that included sham interviews to satisfy the requirements of the Rooney Rule.

In that 58-page lawsuit, Flores also spoke about actions that he alleges took place in 2019. The former head coach claims that Dolphins owner Stephen Ross offered to pay him an extra $100,000 per loss to further their efforts for getting a better pick in the 2020 draft.

Flores appeared on “CBS Mornings” on Wednesday to discuss different aspects of his lawsuit. He believes that what he’s alleging Ross did was harmful for the sport of football and led to the disfunction in their relationship.

“To attack the integrity of the game, that’s what I felt was happening in that instance, and I wouldn’t stand for it,” Flores said. “I think it hurt my standing within the organization and, ultimately was the reason why I was let go.”

Flores and his legal representation also made an appearance on CNN where they claimed that they have “corroborating evidence” and witnesses to back up these allegations.

Obviously, if Ross is asking his team to lose on purpose, there are serious fallouts from this. The league would have to look into these allegations, and if they were found to be true, Ross and the Dolphins could be heavily penalized.

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Brian Flores may have legal precedents with NFL’s long racist history, present misery

Former Dolphins head coach Brian Flores hopes to prove the NFL’s racism in his lawsuit. The NFL has a reprehensible racist history, but is it actionable?

On Tuesday, Brian Flores, the former head coach of the Miami Dolphins, filed a class-action claim against the NFL in the Southern District of New York, claiming that the league is racist in its hiring practices of coaches, and claiming that Flores himself has undergone two separate interviews with two different teams — the New York Giants and Denver Broncos — in which it was clear that the interviews were merely setups for the teams to avoid going afoul of the Rooney Rule, which states that all teams must give at least one interview to a minority candidate before making a head coaching hire.

“God has gifted me with a special talent to coach the game of football, but the need for change is bigger than my personal goals,” Flores said in a statement. “In making the decision to file the class action complaint, I understand that I may be risking coaching the game I love, and has done so much for my family and me. My sincere hope is that by standing up against systemic racism in the NFL, others will join me to ensure that positive change is made for generations to come.”

That’s from the lawyers Flores has retained in the complaint.

The NFL was quick to release a statement.

The Giants and Broncos also released statements refuting Flores’ claims.

Proving institutional racism at a level forcing legal relief can be difficult, even in the most advantageous situations for a plaintiff. But in Flores’ case, he’s got the NFL’s history of systemic racism on his side, and that history is damning from the league’s formation in 1920 to the present day.

Studies show that the NFL is not as diverse as it wants you to think

The Dolphins released a statement denying Brian Flores claims

The team denies any wrongdoing.

The sports landscape was blindsided by a class action lawsuit on Tuesday filed by former Miami Dolphins head coach Brian Flores against multiple NFL teams claiming racism as well as disfunction that cost him his job.

After the coach and the NFL made their statements, the Dolphins released one of their own to combat Flores’ claims.

“We are aware of the lawsuit through the media reports that came out this afternoon. We vehemently deny any allegations of racial discrimination and are proud of the diversity and inclusion throughout our organization. The implication that we acted in a manner inconsistent with the integrity of the game is incorrect. We will be withholding further comment on the lawsuit at this time.”

The Dolphins are following suit with the NFL, claiming these stories have no validity and are made up. Time will tell which side is the one telling the truth in this scenario. Either way, it will be a very bad look for the losing side.

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Here is Brian Flores statement on his lawsuit

“The need for change is bigger than my personal goals.”

The Miami Dolphins former head coach Brian Flores filed a class-action lawsuit against multiple NFL teams that alleged that he and other minority coaches have experienced racism throughout the hiring processes.

After the lawsuit was made public, Flores released a statement through the media.

“God has gifted me with a special talent to coach the game of football, but the need for change is bigger than my personal goals. In making the decision to file the class action complaint, I understand that I may be risking coaching the game I love and has done so much for my family and me. My sincere hope is that by standing up against systemic racism in the NFL, others will join me to ensure that positive change is made for generations to come.”

Flores’ ability to comprehend that this may mean that he’ll be without a job in the league, and the fact that he’s still following through with it, shows his commitment to this cause and his belief in this issue.

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Report: Stephen Ross wanted Brian Flores to tamper with Tom Brady

Stephen Ross was allegedly looking to reel in a big fish in 2009.

Brian Flores, former head coach of the Miami Dolphins made news on Tuesday when he filed a class-action lawsuit against multiple NFL teams claiming they were racist.

In these claims, Flores alleged that, in 2019, owner Stephen Ross requested that Brian Flores break league rules and meet with a quarterback that was currently under contract with another team which would’ve been tampering.

Joe Schad of the Miami Beach Post has reported that the quarterback in question was former New England Patriots signal-caller Tom Brady.

With Flores and Brady spending years together in New England where there would likely be a solid relationship between the two, and Ross and Brady both being Michigan alumni, there are enough connections to make this report feasible.

Brady became a free agent in March, signed with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, and spent two seasons there, winning one Super Bowl and going to the playoffs in both years.

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The NFL has released a statement in response to Brian Flores’ lawsuit

The league is saying the coach’s claims were made without merit.

Brian Flores, the former head coach of the Miami Dolphins, filed a class-action lawsuit against multiple NFL teams on Tuesday for racism in their hiring practices.

Flores has accused both the New York Giants and Denver Broncos of holding sham interviews that were used solely for the purpose of fulfilling the league’s Rooney rule requirement.

After this lawsuit went public, the NFL responded on Tuesday night with a statement of their own.

“The NFL and our clubs are deeply committed to ensuring equitable employment practices and continue to make progress in providing equitable opportunities throughout our organizations. Diversity is core to everything we do, and there are few issues on which our clubs and our internal leadership team spend more time. We will defend against these claims, which are without merit.”

The NFL is obviously doing their best to cover their back in this statement, but to say that these accusations are being made without merit is a strong stance just hours after the release of the lawsuit.

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Brian Flores files class-action lawsuit against NFL, claiming racist hiring practices

Former Dolphins head coach Brian Flores has filed a class-action claim against the NFL for allegedly racist hiring practices.

On Tuesday, former Dolphins head coach Brian Flores filed a class-action complaint in the Southern District of New York, claiming that he and several other potential Black head coaches have been denied opportunities to advance in the NFL due to the league’s racist hiring practices and flagrant violations of the Rooney Rule.

The examples Flores cites are individual bombshells on their own. Taken together, they paint a picture of an NFL that is even more widely racist than some would have accused it of being before this complaint was released.

“God has gifted me with a special talent to coach the game of football, but the need for change is bigger than my personal goals,” Flores said in a statement. “In making the decision to file the class action complaint, I understand that I may be risking coaching the game I love, and has done so much for my family and me. My sincere hope is that by standing up against systemic racism in the NFL, others will join me to ensure that positive change is made for generations to come.”

Flores, who was fired by the Miami Dolphins in January 10, led the team to two straight winning seasons in 2020 and 2021 (the first Dolphins head coach to do so since Dave Wannstedt did it in 2002 and 2003), did so despite a depleted roster and claims in the 2020 season that the team was “tanking” to amass better draft picks for the future.

According to Flores’ claim, Dolphins owner Stephen Ross was literally invested in losing games to build higher draft picks for the future. According to the claim, during the 2019 season, Miami’s owner, Stephen Ross, told Mr. Flores that he would pay him $100,000 for everyloss, and the team’s General Manager, Chris Grier, told Mr. Flores that “Steve” was “mad” that Mr. Flores’ success in winning games that year was “compromising [the team’s] draft position.”

Flores also claims that the New York Giants and Denver Broncos engaged in sham interviews with him, knowing full well that those two teams were planning to hire other head coaches. Flores’ claim includes what is purported to be text messages from Bill Belichick, for whom Flores worked as a scout, assistant coach, and de facto defensive coordinator from 2004 through 2018. In the complaint, Flores claims that Belichick congratulated him on getting the vacant Giants’ head coach position, when Belichick was actually trying to text Brian Daboll, the former Buffalo Bills offensive coordinator who got the Giants’ job. (expletive deleted by author)

If this is true, it means that the Giants had made the decision to hire Daboll before interviewing any minority candidates, a clear violation of the Rooney Rule.

Flores also claims that the Denver Broncos engaged in a sham interview with him in 2019 when they either had already decided to hire Vic Fangio, or were just unable to take the interview process seriously.

From the complaint:

Incredibly, this was not Mr. Flores’ first sham interview that was held only in an effort to comply with the Rooney Rule. Indeed, in 2019 Mr. Flores was scheduled to interview with the Denver Broncos. However, the Broncos’ then-General Manager, John Elway, President and Chief Executive Officer Joe Ellis and others, showed up an hour late to the interview. They looked completely disheveled, and it was obvious that they had drinking heavily the night before. It was clear from the substance of the interview that Mr. Flores was interviewed only because of the Rooney Rule, and that the Broncos never had any intention to consider him as a legitimate candidate for the job. Shortly thereafter, Vic Fangio, a white man, was hired to be the Head Coach of the Broncos.

Flores also seeks to group other Black coaches into the class-action portion of the complaint, naming Kris Richard, Eric Bieniemy, Steve Wilks, Jim Caldwell, Eric Studesville, and Teryl Austin among those who should seek legal relief.

Flores seeks injunctive relief that includes the following:

  • Increase the influence of Black individuals in hiring and termination decisions for General Manager, Head Coach and Offensive and Defensive Coordinator positions;
  • Ensure diversity of ownership by creating and funding a committee
    dedicated to sourcing Black investors to take majority ownership
    stakes in NFL Teams;
  • Ensure diversity of decision-making by permitting select Black
    players and coaches to participate in the interviewing process for
    General Manager, Head Coach and Offensive and Defensive
    Coordinator positions;
  • Increase the objectivity of hiring and termination decisions for General Manager, Head Coach and Offensive and Defensive Coordinator positions;
  • Require NFL Teams to reduce to writing the rationale for hiring
    and termination decisions, including a full explanation of the basis
    for any subjective influences (e.g., trust, personality, interview
    performance, etc.);
  • Require NFL Teams to consider side-by-side comparisons of
    objective criteria, such as past performance, experience and
    objective qualifications;
  • Increase the number of Black Offensive and Defensive Coordinators;
  • Create and fund a training program for lower-level Black coaches
    who demonstrate an aptitude for coaching and an interest in advancing to a Coordinator position;
  • Incentivize the hiring and retention of Black General Managers, Head Coaches and Offensive and Defensive Coordinators through monetary, draft and/or other compensation such as additional salary cap space; and
  • Complete transparency with respect to pay for all General Managers, Head Coaches and Offensive and Defensive Coordinators.

In response, the Giants released a statement regarding their hire of Brian Daboll.