The Big Ten men's basketball tournament starts this week in the nation's capital, and all 14 teams will have two things in common: championship dreams and a white head coach.
Once a national leader in the hiring of black coaches, the Big Ten is now the only major conference without one. The last black coach hired in the conference was Tubby Smith at Minnesota, and that was 10 years ago this month.
The story of declining racial diversity on college basketball sidelines is shared coast to coast. Diversity peaked just over a decade ago, with a third of major-conference teams (23 of 70) coached by a minority in 2005. That number has fallen steadily and hit 17 percent (13 of 75 teams) this season, the lowest since 1995, according to a Star Tribune analysis of hiring in the six major basketball conferences.
The trend is troubling to some coaches and proponents of diversity, yet solutions are hard to find.
A proposal from two leading advocacy groups that would mirror the NFL's Rooney Rule and require schools to interview at least one minority candidate when a head coaching opening occurs has lost traction. Big Ten Commissioner Jim Delany said diversity has "always been an important issue" but added that his conference does not get involved in hiring decisions of schools.
"[Hiring] should be based on fairness, opportunity and merit," Delany said. "And that's what it is — for the most part."
After 30 years of having at least one black coach, in two of the past four seasons all of the Big Ten's head coaches have been white. Meanwhile, 74 percent of players in power conferences were nonwhite last season (the most recent data available), up from 67 percent in 2008.
From the middle of Bob Knight's conference-dominating glory days in 1983 all the way until Minnesota fired Smith in 2013, the Big Ten had at least one black coach — peaking with four multiple times in the mid-1990s. Diversity hiring faded from there, the Star Tribune's analysis revealed, and now has sagged in every other major conference as well.