Autumn Lockwood is the first Black woman coach to win a Super Bowl πŸ‘



βœ”οΈ Subscribe to ESPN+ http://espnplus.com/youtube
βœ”οΈ Get the ESPN App: http://www.espn.com/espn/apps/espn
βœ”οΈ Subscribe to ESPN on YouTube: http://es.pn/SUBSCRIBEtoYOUTUBE
βœ”οΈ Subscribe to NBA on ESPN on YouTube: http://bit.ly/SUBSCRIBEtoNBAonESPN
βœ”οΈ Watch ESPN on YouTube TV: http://es.pn/YouTubeTV

source

36 thoughts on “Autumn Lockwood is the first Black woman coach to win a Super Bowl πŸ‘”

  1. Of course people aren't going to like this comment because I'm not just jumping in line with idea that this is achieving anything for women. I watch my team pretty closely and I really didn't know much about her so I decided to go ahead and look. She may in facts do her role very well. But it's a whole lot of fancy job title with very little job duties of significant impact. That's to deny her job makes a difference. But her job specifically and this is what they're saying she is the assistant performance coach that she's in charge of is strength and weakness and then she's assisting in that. So basically she's just playing an enforcer type roll for someone else's design. So every time a player is doing something at one of the actual developmental coaches wants them to change her job is more or less to be an extra set of eyes to watch. Because it's hard for one coach to watch eight guys do a footwork drill at one time. And catch every little minor detail. She's the daughter of a very successful college coach. And she is in fact in a dead end roll that will never go anywhere. Hiring her and putting her at that position is for show. If you understand sports this role isn't very likely to lead to anything. And also realistically it's not like other sports where there are female leagues. For these ladies to go in Garner real experience in the first hand understanding of these techniques. If you've never tackled in pads if you've never done those things you're going to be limited in your ability to teach somebody else to do it. Even if you weren't I talked to your athlete yourself. You still have an understanding because you played the sport. And then when you add the fact that everything that makes a football player dominant. Is Austin considered toxic masculinity. The desire to dominate those around you, wanting to impose your will on someone else via Force. Getting praise for having a violent physical nature… The very nature of the sport this is probably as far as she'll ever go

  2. I'm sorry, tired of this bs, I WILL NOT BE OK WITH A WOMAN TRYING TO TEACH ME HOW TO GO UP AGAINST ANOTHER 6'5"/380lb lineman, just like i would not be ok with sharing a fox hole with a woman on the front lines of war. WE GOTTA STOP THIS BS, EVERYTHING IS NOT NORMAL OR ACCEPTABLE

Comments are closed.

Scroll to Top