Hall of Fame: Tim Bradley, Carl Froch, Rafael Marquez earned honor

Hall of Fame: Tim Bradley, Carl Froch and Rafael Marquez earned the honor.

The International Boxing Hall of Fame Class of 2023 will be inducted Sunday in Canastota, New York.

Tim Bradley, Carl Froch and Rafael Marquez highlight the diverse class. Bradley is American, Froch British and Marquez Mexican. And, of course, all three were highly successful over long careers.

Here is a breakdown of the boxers who will be inducted (Modern Category, men; Modern Category, women; and Old-Timers).

MODERN CATEGORY (MEN)

TIMOTHY BRADLEY
Years active: 2004-16
Record: 33-2-1 (16 KOs)

I wonder whether people who have come to know Bradley as an analyst have forgotten how good he was as a fighter. Consider this: Between 2007 and 2013, the gifted, clever boxer from the Southern California desert beat in succession (not counting one no-contest): Miguel Vazquez, Junior Witter, Edner Cherry, Kendall Holt, Lamont Peterson, Luis Abregu, Devon Alexander, Joel Casamayor, Manny Pacquiao, Ruslan Provodnikov and Juan Manuel Marquez. That run alone makes Bradley Hall of Fame worthy. OK, most people thought he got a gift in his first meeting with Pacquiao. And he lost both the second and third installments of their trilogy. However, everyone agrees he was competitive with the Filipino legend. And let’s stop and appreciate his victory over Marquez, who was coming off his one-punch stoppage of Pacquiao. Bradley outboxed one of the best to ever do it. Bottom line: Bradley was sometimes overshadowed by bigger stars but his record compares favorably with most of those he’ll join in Canastota.

CARL FROCH
Years active: 2002-14
Record: 33-2 (24 KOs)

The first thing I think of when Froch’s name comes up is his mic-drop retirement, a one-punch knockout of rival George Groves in front of 80,000 screaming fans at Wembley Stadium in London that ended his decorated career. No one went out on a higher note. Of course, Froch should be remembered for more than one spectacular moment. The Nottingham fighter wasn’t great at any particular aspect of boxing but did everything well. That, combined with a nasty streak and unwavering confidence, produced a remarkable career. Among his victims: Robin Reid, Jean Pascal, Jermain Taylor, Andre Dirrell, Arthur Abraham, Glen Johnson, Lucian Bute, Yusaf Mack, Mikkel Kessler and Groves (twice). His only losses came against Kessler in their first fight and all-time great Andre Ward in the final of the Super Six World Boxing Classic, a 168-pound tournament. Few fighters of today even approach the quality of Froch’s deep resume. He richly deserves the honor of being inducted into the Hall.

RAFAEL MARQUEZ
Years active: 1995-2013
Record: 41-9 (37 KOs)

Marquez’s induction arguably is overdue. The brother of Juan Manuel Marquez didn’t have the skill set of his more famous sibling – few did – but he was a good boxer who punched harder than big bro. The younger Marquez burst upon the scene with back-to-back victories over Hall of Famer Mark Johnson, first a split decision and then an eighth-round knockout the following year. The two-division champion went on to beat Tim Austin, Mauricio Pastrana (twice) and Silence Mabuza (twice) before entering one of the most-compelling – and brutal – series of fights in boxing history, his rivalry with Israel Vazquez. Marquez would ultimately split the four fights with Vazquez but solidified his reputation as one of the best and most-exciting fighters of his era. He was never the same after the last fight with Vazquez, going 2-4 in his last six fights. However, the decline is easily forgotten. When he was at his best, Marquez was special. And we have to ask: Is there a better brother combination in the history of the sport?

 

MODERN CATEGORY (WOMEN)

ALICIA ASHLEY
Years active: 1991-2018
Record: 24-12-1 (4 KOs)

The most remarkable thing about Ashley is that she became the oldest boxer to win a world title when she claimed a vacant belt at 48 years old in 2015. There was more to the women’s boxing pioneer than that, however. She didn’t turn professional until she was 31 but still won major belts in three divisions. She finally retired in 2018, when she was 50 years old.

LAURA SERRANO
Years active: 1994-2012
Record: 17-5-3 (6 KOs)

The native of Mexico took on a big challenge in her pro debut, fighting Hall of Famer Christy Martin and emerging with a disputed draw. Many observers believe Serrano was cheated out of what would’ve been a defining victory. However, she persevered. The natural boxer went on to become one of the most accomplished female fighters from her adopted base of Las Vegas.

 

OLD-TIMER CATEGORY

TIGER JACK FOX
Years active: 1928-50
Record: 138-24-12 (91 KOs)

Fox is one of those old-timers who probably would’ve won multiple championships today. The one-time light heavyweight champion from Spokane, Washington, was a good boxer with murderous power, which accounts for his 91 knockouts. He claimed victories over some of the biggest names in history, including Hall of Famers Maxie Rosenbloom and future heavyweight champ Jersey Joe Walcott (twice).

PONE KINGPETCH
Years active: 1954-66
Record: 28-7 (9 KOs)

The Thai star made the most out of relatively few fights. In fact, he became an icon in his native country in only two bouts, back-to-back victories over all-time great Pascual Perez in 1960. He took Perez’s flyweight title by a split decision and then stopped the great Argentine in eight rounds in the rematch. He went on to have two more reigns as 112-pound champion.

JOANN HAGEN
Years active: 1954, ’56
Record: 1-1

Hagen isn’t being inducted because of what she did in the ring, although the fact she defeated women’s boxing legend Barbara Buttrick is noteworthy. The South Bend, Indiana, fighter earned the honor by paving the way for other women. She evidently piqued the interest of television executives because she appeared on multiple talk shows, which raised the profile of women’s boxing.

 

ALSO BEING INDUCTED

Joe Goossen, trainer; Brad Goodman, matchmaker; Brad Jacobs, non-participant; Seth Abraham, television executive; Tim Ryan, broadcaster.

Hall of Fame: Tim Bradley, Carl Froch, Rafael Marquez earned honor

Hall of Fame: Tim Bradley, Carl Froch and Rafael Marquez earned the honor.

The International Boxing Hall of Fame Class of 2023 will be inducted Sunday in Canastota, New York.

Tim Bradley, Carl Froch and Rafael Marquez highlight the diverse class. Bradley is American, Froch British and Marquez Mexican. And, of course, all three were highly successful over long careers.

Here is a breakdown of the boxers who will be inducted (Modern Category, men; Modern Category, women; and Old-Timers).

MODERN CATEGORY (MEN)

TIMOTHY BRADLEY
Years active: 2004-16
Record: 33-2-1 (16 KOs)

I wonder whether people who have come to know Bradley as an analyst have forgotten how good he was as a fighter. Consider this: Between 2007 and 2013, the gifted, clever boxer from the Southern California desert beat in succession (not counting one no-contest): Miguel Vazquez, Junior Witter, Edner Cherry, Kendall Holt, Lamont Peterson, Luis Abregu, Devon Alexander, Joel Casamayor, Manny Pacquiao, Ruslan Provodnikov and Juan Manuel Marquez. That run alone makes Bradley Hall of Fame worthy. OK, most people thought he got a gift in his first meeting with Pacquiao. And he lost both the second and third installments of their trilogy. However, everyone agrees he was competitive with the Filipino legend. And let’s stop and appreciate his victory over Marquez, who was coming off his one-punch stoppage of Pacquiao. Bradley outboxed one of the best to ever do it. Bottom line: Bradley was sometimes overshadowed by bigger stars but his record compares favorably with most of those he’ll join in Canastota.

CARL FROCH
Years active: 2002-14
Record: 33-2 (24 KOs)

The first thing I think of when Froch’s name comes up is his mic-drop retirement, a one-punch knockout of rival George Groves in front of 80,000 screaming fans at Wembley Stadium in London that ended his decorated career. No one went out on a higher note. Of course, Froch should be remembered for more than one spectacular moment. The Nottingham fighter wasn’t great at any particular aspect of boxing but did everything well. That, combined with a nasty streak and unwavering confidence, produced a remarkable career. Among his victims: Robin Reid, Jean Pascal, Jermain Taylor, Andre Dirrell, Arthur Abraham, Glen Johnson, Lucian Bute, Yusaf Mack, Mikkel Kessler and Groves (twice). His only losses came against Kessler in their first fight and all-time great Andre Ward in the final of the Super Six World Boxing Classic, a 168-pound tournament. Few fighters of today even approach the quality of Froch’s deep resume. He richly deserves the honor of being inducted into the Hall.

RAFAEL MARQUEZ
Years active: 1995-2013
Record: 41-9 (37 KOs)

Marquez’s induction arguably is overdue. The brother of Juan Manuel Marquez didn’t have the skill set of his more famous sibling – few did – but he was a good boxer who punched harder than big bro. The younger Marquez burst upon the scene with back-to-back victories over Hall of Famer Mark Johnson, first a split decision and then an eighth-round knockout the following year. The two-division champion went on to beat Tim Austin, Mauricio Pastrana (twice) and Silence Mabuza (twice) before entering one of the most-compelling – and brutal – series of fights in boxing history, his rivalry with Israel Vazquez. Marquez would ultimately split the four fights with Vazquez but solidified his reputation as one of the best and most-exciting fighters of his era. He was never the same after the last fight with Vazquez, going 2-4 in his last six fights. However, the decline is easily forgotten. When he was at his best, Marquez was special. And we have to ask: Is there a better brother combination in the history of the sport?

 

MODERN CATEGORY (WOMEN)

ALICIA ASHLEY
Years active: 1991-2018
Record: 24-12-1 (4 KOs)

The most remarkable thing about Ashley is that she became the oldest boxer to win a world title when she claimed a vacant belt at 48 years old in 2015. There was more to the women’s boxing pioneer than that, however. She didn’t turn professional until she was 31 but still won major belts in three divisions. She finally retired in 2018, when she was 50 years old.

LAURA SERRANO
Years active: 1994-2012
Record: 17-5-3 (6 KOs)

The native of Mexico took on a big challenge in her pro debut, fighting Hall of Famer Christy Martin and emerging with a disputed draw. Many observers believe Serrano was cheated out of what would’ve been a defining victory. However, she persevered. The natural boxer went on to become one of the most accomplished female fighters from her adopted base of Las Vegas.

 

OLD-TIMER CATEGORY

TIGER JACK FOX
Years active: 1928-50
Record: 138-24-12 (91 KOs)

Fox is one of those old-timers who probably would’ve won multiple championships today. The one-time light heavyweight champion from Spokane, Washington, was a good boxer with murderous power, which accounts for his 91 knockouts. He claimed victories over some of the biggest names in history, including Hall of Famers Maxie Rosenbloom and future heavyweight champ Jersey Joe Walcott (twice).

PONE KINGPETCH
Years active: 1954-66
Record: 28-7 (9 KOs)

The Thai star made the most out of relatively few fights. In fact, he became an icon in his native country in only two bouts, back-to-back victories over all-time great Pascual Perez in 1960. He took Perez’s flyweight title by a split decision and then stopped the great Argentine in eight rounds in the rematch. He went on to have two more reigns as 112-pound champion.

JOANN HAGEN
Years active: 1954, ’56
Record: 1-1

Hagen isn’t being inducted because of what she did in the ring, although the fact she defeated women’s boxing legend Barbara Buttrick is noteworthy. The South Bend, Indiana, fighter earned the honor by paving the way for other women. She evidently piqued the interest of television executives because she appeared on multiple talk shows, which raised the profile of women’s boxing.

 

ALSO BEING INDUCTED

Joe Goossen, trainer; Brad Goodman, matchmaker; Brad Jacobs, non-participant; Seth Abraham, television executive; Tim Ryan, broadcaster.

Tim Bradley, Carl Froch, Rafael Marquez elected to International Boxing Hall of Fame

Tim Bradley, Carl Froch and Rafael Marquez have been elected to the International Boxing Hall of Fame.

Timothy Bradley, Carl Froch and Rafael Marquez are Hall of Famers.

The International Boxing Hall of Fame announced Wednesday that those former champions were elected in the men’s Modern category for the Class of 2023. Alicia Ashley and Laura Serrano will enter the Hall in the women’s Modern category. And trainer Joe Goossen and broadcaster Tim Ryan are among others elected.

They will be formally inducted in June during Hall of Fame Weekend in Canastota, New York.

Bradley (33-2-1, 13 KOs) was a five-time titleholder in the junior welterweight and welterweight divisions and went on to become a successful TV analyst on ESPN. He is from Palm Springs, California.

“This is one of the greatest days of my life,” Bradley said. “I appreciate this so much. Thank you from the bottom of my heart. I’m ecstatic and don’t really know what to say. This is everything I wanted and everything I worked for. I’m full of emotions and there are so many things going through my mind from my past that got me to this point.

“This is a dream come true. This is my heaven, the International Boxing Hall of Fame.”

Froch (33-2, 24 KOs) was a three-time super middleweight titleholder. The Englishman had one of the greatest walk-offs in history, stopping rival George Groves with one punch at a packed Wembley Stadium and then calling it quits.

“Brilliant! This is amazing, great news!” Froch said. “It’s amazing to be inducted into the Hall of Fame alongside so many legends of the sport. Boxing is the best sport in the world. It tests everything in a man and a woman. The mentality, discipline, grit, determination, heart, desire, everything is all in that ring and it is just you on your own with your opponent.

“For me to be inducted with the greatest of all time from every weight division is just fantastic! I’m grateful to be recognized.”

The election of Marquez (41-9, 37 KOS) gives his family two Hall of Famers. His brother, Juan Manuel Marquez, was inducted in 2020. Rafael Marquez, from Mexico, held bantamweight and junior featherweight titles in the 2000s.

“Perfect! Thank you very much,” Rafael Marquez said. “I don’t have the words to describe how I feel receiving this great news. I am very happy. It is a great honor to be in the Hall of Fame and I am very proud to be in Canastota with the greatest boxers of all time.”

Ashley (24-12-1, 4 KOs) and Serrano (17-5-3, 6 KOs) were among the best female fighters over the past 20 years.

“OMG! It is such an honor to be among the history of boxing and being there with the females that I absolutely admire as well. I’m totally ecstatic and speechless,” Ashley said.

Said Serrano: “Oh my goodness! This is exciting news. I dedicated my whole life to boxing and I did my best in those days when it was very difficult for women to fight, especially in my country of Mexico, where I fought for women’s rights. I’m so happy. I’m thankful for all of the members of the International Boxing Hall of Fame.”

Joe Goossen has also become the second member of his family to be inducted. The late promoter Dan Goossen, Joe’s older brother, was inducted in 2020. Joe Goossen has trained a long list of elite fighters over several decades and also works as an analyst for Fox.

“I’ve got to tell you, I’m absolutely stunned,” Goossen said. “To think I’ll be in the Hall of Fame with my brother Dan is probably the best thing I’ve heard since he died. When I got into the sport back in 1970, I would have never thought in ten million years that I would really make a mark and eventually end up in the International Boxing Hall of Fame. I’m shocked and honored.”

Three fighters were elected posthumously: light heavyweight Tiger Jack Fox (Old Timer), flyweight Pone Kingpetch (Old Timer) and JoAnn Hagen (Trailblazer).

Also elected were matchmaker Brad Goodman and promotional executive Brad Jacobs (Non-participant).

Those honored were elected by members of the Boxing Writers Association of America and a panel of international boxing historians.

Tim Bradley, Carl Froch, Rafael Marquez elected to International Boxing Hall of Fame

Tim Bradley, Carl Froch and Rafael Marquez have been elected to the International Boxing Hall of Fame.

Timothy Bradley, Carl Froch and Rafael Marquez are Hall of Famers.

The International Boxing Hall of Fame announced Wednesday that those former champions were elected in the men’s Modern category for the Class of 2023. Alicia Ashley and Laura Serrano will enter the Hall in the women’s Modern category. And trainer Joe Goossen and broadcaster Tim Ryan are among others elected.

They will be formally inducted in June during Hall of Fame Weekend in Canastota, New York.

Bradley (33-2-1, 13 KOs) was a five-time titleholder in the junior welterweight and welterweight divisions and went on to become a successful TV analyst on ESPN. He is from Palm Springs, California.

“This is one of the greatest days of my life,” Bradley said. “I appreciate this so much. Thank you from the bottom of my heart. I’m ecstatic and don’t really know what to say. This is everything I wanted and everything I worked for. I’m full of emotions and there are so many things going through my mind from my past that got me to this point.

“This is a dream come true. This is my heaven, the International Boxing Hall of Fame.”

Froch (33-2, 24 KOs) was a three-time super middleweight titleholder. The Englishman had one of the greatest walk-offs in history, stopping rival George Groves with one punch at a packed Wembley Stadium and then calling it quits.

“Brilliant! This is amazing, great news!” Froch said. “It’s amazing to be inducted into the Hall of Fame alongside so many legends of the sport. Boxing is the best sport in the world. It tests everything in a man and a woman. The mentality, discipline, grit, determination, heart, desire, everything is all in that ring and it is just you on your own with your opponent.

“For me to be inducted with the greatest of all time from every weight division is just fantastic! I’m grateful to be recognized.”

The election of Marquez (41-9, 37 KOS) gives his family two Hall of Famers. His brother, Juan Manuel Marquez, was inducted in 2020. Rafael Marquez, from Mexico, held bantamweight and junior featherweight titles in the 2000s.

“Perfect! Thank you very much,” Rafael Marquez said. “I don’t have the words to describe how I feel receiving this great news. I am very happy. It is a great honor to be in the Hall of Fame and I am very proud to be in Canastota with the greatest boxers of all time.”

Ashley (24-12-1, 4 KOs) and Serrano (17-5-3, 6 KOs) were among the best female fighters over the past 20 years.

“OMG! It is such an honor to be among the history of boxing and being there with the females that I absolutely admire as well. I’m totally ecstatic and speechless,” Ashley said.

Said Serrano: “Oh my goodness! This is exciting news. I dedicated my whole life to boxing and I did my best in those days when it was very difficult for women to fight, especially in my country of Mexico, where I fought for women’s rights. I’m so happy. I’m thankful for all of the members of the International Boxing Hall of Fame.”

Joe Goossen has also become the second member of his family to be inducted. The late promoter Dan Goossen, Joe’s older brother, was inducted in 2020. Joe Goossen has trained a long list of elite fighters over several decades and also works as an analyst for Fox.

“I’ve got to tell you, I’m absolutely stunned,” Goossen said. “To think I’ll be in the Hall of Fame with my brother Dan is probably the best thing I’ve heard since he died. When I got into the sport back in 1970, I would have never thought in ten million years that I would really make a mark and eventually end up in the International Boxing Hall of Fame. I’m shocked and honored.”

Three fighters were elected posthumously: light heavyweight Tiger Jack Fox (Old Timer), flyweight Pone Kingpetch (Old Timer) and JoAnn Hagen (Trailblazer).

Also elected were matchmaker Brad Goodman and promotional executive Brad Jacobs (Non-participant).

Those honored were elected by members of the Boxing Writers Association of America and a panel of international boxing historians.

WATCH: 49ers suspend broadcaster Tim Ryan for Lamar Jackson comments

The San Francisco 49ers have suspended broadcaster Tim Ryan for one game after saying on the radio Monday that Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson has an advantage in faking handoffs because of his skin color.

The San Francisco 49ers have suspended broadcaster Tim Ryan for one game after saying on the radio Monday that Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson has an advantage in faking handoffs because of his skin color.

“He’s really good at that fake, Lamar Jackson, but when you consider his dark skin with a dark football with a dark uniform, you could not see that thing,” said Ryan.

The comments were made during Ryan’s weekly segment on local radio station KNBR’s “Murph and Mac” morning radio show when discussing Jackson’s exceptional performance last weekend against the Niners.

Jackson
rushed for more than 100 yards in the Ravens’ 20-17 win, many of which came after successfully faking handoffs and running the ball himself. Lamar has rushed for 970 yards and thrown for 25 touchdowns for his MVP campaign this season.

Ryan’s statement read, “I regret my choice of words in trying to describe the conditions of the game. Lamar Jackson is an MVP-caliber player and I respect him greatly. I want to sincerely apologize to him and anyone else I offended.”

Richard Sherman says he “wasn’t as outraged” by 49ers announcer’s comments

The 49ers players seem ready to move on.

San Francisco 49ers players are coming to the defense of team radio announcer Tim Ryan after his comments about Ravens’ quarterback Lamar Jackson.

A few days after the 49ers loss to the Ravens, Ryan spoke on KNBR radio in San Francisco about the trouble the 49ers had defending Jackson. He said that the Ravens’ quarterback had an advantage on play-fakes because of his “dark skin with a dark football.”

Ryan later issued an apology for his comments, saying he regretted his choice of words on Jackson and called him an MVP candidate. Some were still outraged, but for 49ers players that was good enough.

Richard Sherman was one of the players who came to Ryan’s defense, saying he “wasn’t as outraged as everybody else.”

More from Sherman here:

“I understand how it can be taken under a certain context and be offensive to some. But if you’re saying, hey, this is a brown ball, they’re wearing dark colors and he has a brown arm. Honestly, we were having trouble seeing it on film.”

He wasn’t the only one to come to Ryan’s defense. Defensive end Dee Ford said he told Ryan “I’ve got your back” when he saw him.

“The words kind of got taken out of context…Of course, I think he knows now he could’ve used better judgement with his words, but we’ve got his back. I knew what he was trying to say. This era we live in, man, it’s just what it is.” 

The 49ers players are very clearly defending Ryan here and are trying to put the situation behind them. They believe he made a mistake, but it doesn’t seem to be that big of a deal to them.

In the meantime, Ryan has been suspended by the team for one game. He’s set to return to the booth when the 49ers play the Falcons on the 15th.

49ers announcer suspended for ‘dark skin’ comments. His apology was just as bad.

Tim Ryan had a chance to make amends for his tone deaf comment about Lamar Jackson’s ‘dark skin.’ His apology shows he has learned nothing.

The San Francisco 49ers have suspended announcer Tim Ryan following comments Ryan made about Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson.

Ryan said that Jackson had a distinct advantage on play-fakes because of his “dark skin with a dark football.”

The full quote:

“He’s really good at that fake, Lamar Jackson, but when you consider his dark skin with a dark football with a dark uniform, you could not see that thing. I mean you literally could not see when he was in and out of the mesh point and if you’re a half step slow on him in terms of your vision forget about it, he’s out of the gate.”

That’s bad. He’s disguising racist rhetoric in football wonkery, but it’s there, and not hard to see.

What’s just as concerning to me is his apology for it.

In a statement, Ryan wrote:

“I regret my choice of words in trying to describe the conditions of the game. Lamar Jackson is an MVP-caliber player and I respect him greatly. I want to sincerely apologize to him and anyone else I offended.”

First, he’s evasive. He’s sorry for “trying to describe the conditions of the game,” not for saying Jackson’s “dark skin” gives him an advantage.

Next, he points to Jackson as an “MVP-caliber player.” Which begs the question: If Jackson weren’t an MVP-caliber player, would Ryan still need to apologize? What does his level of play have to do with what Ryan said.

Finally, he ends with the classic I’m sorry to anyone I offended, i.e. it’s your fault you got upset about this.

Ryan’s original comments and apology reflect a really dangerous line of thinking that exists in many sports pundits, and especially in NFL pundits — this idea that when talking about The Game, the rest of the world ceases to matter.

Ryan wasn’t making inappopriate comments, see. He was trying to describe the conditions of the game. The game is all that matters. Skin color doesn’t mean anything on a football field, to Ryan, unless it’s the color of the football.

To do this is opaque and ridiculous. You can’t separate the football field from real life. You can’t pretend that comments made have no repercussions if you are talking about a sport.

Even in his apology, it’s all framed in the context of football. Ryan refuses to see the world any differently. Jackson deserves an apology because he’s an MVP-caliber player and has earned Ryan’s respect … not because he’s a human being.

This is tone deaf and represents a childish, stubborn way of viewing the world. It’s the same line of thinking of people who scream that they don’t want politics in football. They want an escape. They view football as their only outlet from having to think, from having to empathize, from having to understand the world we live in.

Ryan’s comments and apology shows he hasn’t learned anything. He’s just gotten upset that the real world has impinged on the football world he so cherishes.

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49ers analyst Tim Ryan suspended after ‘dark skin’ remarks regarding Lamar Jackson

49ers radio broadcaster Tim Ryan’s comments about Lamar Jackson once again prove that little has changed regarding certain stereotypes.

Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson had already had to deal with more than enough bias on his way to the NFL. There was of course ex-NFL general manager Bill Polian’s belief that the former Louisville star should switch to receiver, a common racial constraint for black quarterbacks that goes back decades. And there is still the perception among some that Jackson is a rudimentary “running quarterback,” despite the fact that he ranks second in the NFL in touchdown passes with 25, ranks first in touchdown pass percentage at 7.8%, ranks fourth in Adjusted Net Yards per Pass Attempt at 7.89 (tied with Wilson) and has posted two games with a perfect passer rating of 158.3 this season.

Despite all that, some people can’t get past the stereotypes. Some other people seem to be interested in creating new ones. The 49ers have suspended former NFL linebacker Tim Ryan, their radio color analyst, based on remarks Ryan made following Baltimore’s 20-17 Week 13 win over San Francisco.

“He’s really good at that fake, Lamar Jackson, but when you consider his dark skin with a dark football with a dark uniform, you could not see that thing,” Ryan said Monday on Bay Area radio station KNBR. “I mean you literally could not see when he was in and out of the mesh point and if you’re a half step slow on him in terms of your vision forget about it, he’s out of the gate.”

(Evan Habeeb-USA TODAY Sports)

The 49ers expressed their disappointment in Ryan in the suspension announcement.

“We hold Tim to a high standard as a representative of our organization and he must be more thoughtful with his words. Tim has expressed remorse in a public statement and has also done so with us privately. We know Tim as a man of high integrity and are confident he will grow and learn from this experience.”

Ryan said this in his own statement:

“I regret my choice of words in trying to describe the conditions of the game. Lamar Jackson is an MVP-caliber player and I respect him greatly. I want to sincerely apologize to him and anyone else I offended.”

(Photo by Cindy Ord/Getty Images for SiriusXM)

Per the San Francisco Chronicle, 49ers officials have reached out to the Ravens organization to apologize, and assure their opponent last Sunday that the matter is being taken seriously.

Ryan, who’s worked for the 49ers since 2014 after 13 years with FOX Sports, has no known history of public racism, which should be taken into account. He’s generally known to be one of the smarter analysts in the game. But the nonsensical nature of what Ryan said, and the complete insensitivity to the larger picture, should draw concern.

“No less damaging than the fact of Tim’s sentiments are their implications,” longtime activist and 49ers consultant Dr. Harry Edwards wrote in an e-mail to the Chronicle. “In a game that is so competitive and where ‘winning edges and even slight advantages’ tend to be critically important if not determinant, are we really to believe that White QB’s are at a strategic disadvantage? Should the 2020 NFL player draft select for dark-skinned, athletic QB prospects in search of the next Lamar Jackson? Or maybe this puts a premium on QB’s – irrespective of race — who can play well wearing the right color gloves — gloves that will give them the right hand hue to camouflage the football on handoffs.”

Whatever the ramifications of Ryan’s ridiculous words, it’s just one more question black quarterbacks have to face. One more obstacle they have to overcome. One more inquiry about their supposed “advantages” when, in truth, black quarterbacks have operated behind considerable, crushing, and at times, career-ending disadvantages throughout the NFL’s 100-year history.

The 49ers are confident that Ryan will “grow and learn from this experience.” It’s a teachable moment for everyone who watches and analyzes the game to check ourselves, our privileges, and our blind spots, and to make sure we’re holding everyone to the same standard.