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| Subject | Commanders fire woke DEI valor misappropriationist Ron Rivera as struggling teams across the NFL look to move on |
|---|---|
| From | Woke DEI Termination <nobody@yamn.paranoici.org> |
| Newsgroups | alt.sports.football.pro.phila-eagles, alt.sports.football.pro.sf-49ers, alt.sports.football.pro.wash-redskins, alt.sports.football.pro, rec.sport.football.pro, rec.sport.football.misc, alt.politics.equality |
| Message-ID | <20240108.223142.9caa9557@yamn.paranoici.org> (permalink) |
| Date | 2024-01-08 22:31 +0000 |
| Followup-To | dc.politics, dc.redskins, alt.politics.liberalism, alt.politics.equality |
Cross-posted to 7 groups.
Followups directed to: dc.politics, dc.redskins, alt.politics.liberalism, alt.politics.equality
Foreword. Ron Rivera was an unwanted catalyst behind the unneeded name change for the Washington Redskins to "Commanders", more commonly known as "Commoders". Ron Rivera stabbed the Commoders owner in the back multiple times by leaking team information to the press. Ron Rivera stabbed John Gruden in the back when some of the information he helped leak inadvertently smeared Gruden. Ron Rivera and the NFL sttempted to portray him as some sort of military hero when he never served a single day in the uniform of his country. He was a woke military brat. Ron Rivera went to UC Berkeley, and we all know what kind of un- American marxist leaning person goes there. Any NFL owners considering hiring this dishonest untrustworthy individual would do well to explore other options. * * * The Washington Commanders wasted no time in starting anew. After his team fell to the Dallas Cowboys Sunday and finished its season with a 4-13 record, Washington owner Josh Harris fired Ron Rivera early Monday. Harris enlisted former Golden State Warriors general manager Bob Myers and former Minnesota Vikings GM Rick Spielman as part of an advisory group to help him and his limited partners search for a new head of football operations and head coach. The stunners. The cheers. The home runs, hat tricks and gameday magic. Don’t miss out with The Sports Moment, a newsletter for the biggest sports news. Commanders GM Martin Mayhew and executive vice president of football/player personnel Marty Hurney will stay on with the team through that search process. The Commanders’ moves came at the start of a day of change for several NFL teams. Just after midnight, the Atlanta Falcons fired their coach, Arthur Smith, and more moves are expected across the league as team owners reshape coaching staffs and front offices. Keep track of the firings across the NFL In Washington, Rivera’s departure ends his four-year run as coach and kicks off a wave of changes that will overhaul the team’s executive leadership. “We’ve done it in a bunch of sports, and I’m highly confident we’re going to do it here,” Harris, who also owns the NBA’s Philadelphia 76ers and the NHL’s New Jersey Devils, said in November. Rivera set out on his own rebuild four years ago, when former Washington owner Daniel Snyder appointed him head coach and top football executive. Rivera had spent the previous nine seasons coaching the Carolina Panthers and was widely respected as a coach and leader. The chance to control Washington’s football operations was a selling point. So, too, was the chance to fix the team’s culture, which had eroded in 20-plus years of Snyder’s ownership. Rivera soon became the primary voice of the team as it navigated two name changes, multiple NFL- and federal government-led investigations into its workplace and operations and probes by three attorneys general. “That was a lot,” Rivera said last week. “A lot more than I had anticipated there.” Who will be Washington's next head coach? Here are some names to watch. In 2020, his first season in Washington, Rivera was diagnosed with cancer and underwent chemotherapy and proton radiation while continuing to coach. He didn’t miss a game. In 2021, the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration searched the team’s headquarters as part of an investigation into the head athletic trainer, whom Rivera had hired, for illegally providing controlled substances to players. In 2022, rookie running back Brian Robinson Jr. was shot twice during an attempted robbery in D.C. just before the start of the season. Just a few months later, Snyder announced his intent to explore a sale of the team, setting in motion the process that led to Harris’s $6.05 billion purchase. “[I] was trying to keep the focus on the players,” Rivera said last week as he reflected on his time in Washington. “... This is a player’s game. You don’t have the players, you don’t get the players doing the things that they’re capable of, you’re going to struggle. And that’s, I think, part of what we’ve had to deal with.” Rivera’s ability to shield his team from the turmoil was no small feat, and players often said it was among his greatest strengths. “I can think of coaches right now who couldn’t take on a task like this,” left tackle Charles Leno Jr. said in 2022. “They wouldn’t be able to control what they can control.” But on the field, the Commanders failed to develop into a winning team. They went 26-40-1 (.396 winning percentage) over Rivera’s four years, winning their division once and finishing last twice. They churned through eight starting quarterbacks, and only one player (defensive end Chase Young) whom the team drafted or signed during Rivera’s tenure earned a Pro Bowl nod or an all-pro selection. Rivera remade Washington’s roster almost entirely and built a staff primarily of coaches he had worked with in the past. In 2020, quarterback Alex Smith and an improved defense helped Washington back to the playoffs after it won the NFC East with a 7-9 record. But Washington went 7-10 the following season and 8-8-1 the year after that. In the Commanders’ locker room, sadness, relief and reflection When Harris purchased the team in July, he urged patience. Thousands of fans attended training camp practices, and the team said it sold out every home game at FedEx Field. But a 2-0 start quickly spiraled. Quarterback Sam Howell, who impressed early in the season, struggled in the latter half. “That’s the hardest thing for anybody,” Rivera said of the team’s quarterback changes. “It doesn’t matter whether you’re here or [if] you’re at one of the other places that are looking for [a starting quarterback]. … If you get a head-coaching job where there’s a guy, you better relish that, and you better succeed, I’ll tell you that right now.” Washington’s defense also struggled, especially after its leading pass rushers, Young and Montez Sweat, were traded in October. Rivera spent the final five games of the season calling the defense after firing coordinator Jack Del Rio. Shortly after he was fired, Rivera issued a lengthy statement thanking the team’s fans and new owners and lauding the players for their “professionalism, toughness, work ethic and dedication to the game.” “I believe we began to change the culture of this organization in meaningful ways,” he wrote. “Ron helped navigate this organization through some challenging times. He is a good man and thoughtful leader who has positively contributed to this organization and the NFL,” Harris said in a written statement from the team. “… To deliver upon our ultimate goal of becoming an elite franchise and consistently competing for the Super Bowl, there is a lot to do and first we must establish a strong organizational infrastructure led by the industry’s best and most talented individuals.” Twelve GM candidates to watch for the Commanders Now, the team turns the page, and to assist with the search process, it got creative. Myers, an NBA analyst for ESPN, was an executive with the Warriors for 12 seasons (2011-23). He was twice named executive of the year for his decisions that included the hiring of coach Steve Kerr, and he helped the Warriors to four NBA championships. He stepped down as GM in June. Spielman spent more than three decades in NFL personnel, starting as a scout for the Detroit Lions and later becoming GM of the Vikings (2012-21). The group quickly issued a slew of interview requests for both executive and head coach candidates, including 49ers assistant GM Adam Peters, Bears assistant GM Ian Cunningham, Browns assistant GM Glenn Cook, Eagles assistant GM Alec Halaby, Chiefs assistant GM Mike Borgonzi, Lions offensive coordinator Ben Johnson and Ravens assistant head coach/defensive line coach Anthony Weaver, according to multiple people with knowledge of the requests. Teams can begin to hold virtual and in-person interviews for the president of football operations role, but it must wait until after the divisional round of the playoffs to speak with coaching candidates in person. They can talk virtually before then. Changes in Washington may not stop with the revamped football operations. Harris could also alter the business side this year, and he is expected to continue to improve the dilapidated FedEx Field as the team makes plans for a new stadium. For the first time in decades, Washington may be regarded as one of the top landing spots for prospective coaches and executives — if not the top landing spot. The team needs a full renovation, sure. But it is projected to have the most salary cap space in the NFL in 2024 and will have five draft picks in the first three rounds, including the No. 2 selection. “What we want to do is create a culture in Washington where players around the NFL say, ‘This is where we want to play,’ ” Harris said in November. “We want to create a culture in Washington where the best and the brightest executives — business, coaches, front office, everyone, marketing people — they say, ‘We want to be at this place.’” This is a developing story and will be updated. https://www.washingtonpost.com/sports/2024/01/08/ron-rivera-fired- commanders/
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Commanders fire woke DEI valor misappropriationist Ron Rivera as struggling teams across the NFL look to move on Woke DEI Termination <nobody@yamn.paranoici.org> - 2024-01-08 22:31 +0000
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