Burnley’s Vincent Kompany is the only black head coach or manager in the Premier League (Nigel French/PA)
New diversity data and hiring statistics further highlight the “grass ceiling” facing black footballers, the co-founder of the Black Footballers Partnership has said.
BFP data published earlier this year found black players make up 43 per cent of those active in the Premier League.
However, statistics released by the Football Association on Wednesday show that only 7.4 per cent of people in senior leadership roles at the 53 clubs signed up to its Football Leadership Diversity Code are black, Asian or mixed heritage.
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The figure was only slightly higher in team operations (8.9 per cent) and only 10.5 per cent among senior coaches. The clubs also failed to hit any of the code’s eight diversity hiring targets in the 2022-23 season, with the FA accepting the hiring rates are too low to drive the necessary rapid change in representation.
The FA is consulting on a new rule to force clubs to report biannually on their workforce, and BFP co-founder Delroy Corinaldi feels if the game cannot get this right, there could be a future role for the independent regulator in ensuring compliance.
“Black players have been told time and again by the FA that you need to give the code time to work,” Corinaldi told the PA news agency.
“How much time do they want? If the FA can’t deliver, it needs to hold its hand up.
“Black players are nearly 50 per cent of your (playing) workforce. The signal you’re sending to those people is that once you
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