Obstacles faced by black coaches in England highlighted in new report

Non-black former soccer players in England were 50 percent more likely than their black counterparts to progress into management, said a report published on Tuesday.
In a study on coaching diversity, UK-based advocacy group Black Footballers Partnership (BFP) highlighted the disparity in the sport and concluded black managers or assistants were also 41 percent more likely to be fired.
"Football should be a game for everyone on and off the pitch. If you are good enough on the pitch, your dreams and hopes can and should be realized," wrote a group of black former players including Sol Campbell and Les Ferdinand in the report's foreword. "The significant drop-off in off-field opportunities lets down black players and an industry that relies on their talent."
The group, which also includes Chris Ramsey, Paul Davis and Ricky Hill, described the lack of opportunities for black coaches as a "systemic issue".
Burnley's Vincent Kompany began the season as the Premier League's only black manager. Then African-born Nuno Espirito Santo was hired by Nottingham Forest in December. In its 2022 report, the BFP found 43 percent of Premier League players were black, but only 4.4 percent of managerial positions for former players were taken up by black applicants.
In the latest report, academics Sam Hoey from the University of Liverpool, Thomas Peeters from Erasmus University, Rotterdam, and Stefan Szymanski from the University of Michigan studied a sample of about 3,500 players from England's top two divisions from 1990 to 2010 and who stopped playing in 2013 or earlier.
The report said black managerial staff members were also less likely to be promoted.
"In summary, black former players get fewer chances at management, get promoted more slowly (if at all), their progress stalls sooner, and they get fired quicker than their non-black counterparts — and none of that is related to their performance," the BFP said.
"A career in football management often looks like a game of snakes and ladders; but for black former players it's pretty much all snakes and no ladders, and we have the data to prove it," BFP executive director Delroy Corinaldi said.
Agencies Via Xinhua

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