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Carolina Panthers Coach Ron Rivera Details His Path to Being NFL Coach

By Jonathan Jones
Charlotte Obeserver
Posted: Monday, Feb. 18, 2013

Carolina Panthers coach Ron Rivera gave tips to current and prospective coaches on how to break into the league during his keynote address at the third annual NFL-NCAA Coaches Academy at the Omni Hotel.

Rivera spoke Sunday for nearly 30 minutes to more than 60 current and former NFL players about how he got started in coaching, information that enabled him to get a head coaching job nearly 15 years after becoming a coach.

“Just because you played in the league doesn’t mean you’re going to be a better coach. Understand that,” Rivera said. “Just because you played doesn’t make you better. But it does give you perspective. It gives you something to draw from but you have something that others don’t.

“You had the chance to play at the peak of our profession. Use it to your advantage and your team’s advantage, but it doesn’t make you better than everyone else.”

The NFL-NCAA Coaches Academy is one of several NFL player engagement forums and the first of 10 career training programs for current and former players. The academy is a three-day event that’s aimed at helping players climb the college and professional coaching ladders.

Rivera, who is of Mexican and Puerto Rican descent, is one of four minority head coaches in the NFL and became the third Hispanic coach in NFL history when the Panthers hired him in 2011.

The academy comes in an offseason in which no minorities were hired for the eight NFL head-coaching openings.

“It was (disheartening). But I wish we could get past the minority thing, I really do,” Rivera said in an interview with the Observer after the speech. “It kind of bothers me when people say well Cam (Newton) is a black quarterback. Well, he’s a quarterback. Aren’t we past that yet?

“But it is kind of disheartening because, and I’ll give you a name, (Giants defensive coordinator) Perry Fewell. He’s a great coach and I really think he should have been in the cycle.

“This guy went to the Super Bowl last year and helped design a (heck of a) defense. Sometimes you do sit there and go, ‘Wow, some guys do get overlooked,’ and it’s happened to me, too. Hopefully Perry will have a great opportunity next year.

Of the 60 attendees Sunday night, 45 of them are black. Most have coaching jobs at small colleges while some were looking to get hired to their first coaching position.

“I think a lot of it was confirmation that I’m heading down the right path and putting in the time,” said Terrell Buckley, a former NFL cornerback now coaching the position at Akron.

“I’m doing the right things. And to hear a head coach talk about the sacrifices that you have to make, commitment that you have to put forth and something truly that you want to do, in the end it’s worth it.”

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