Supreme Court rejects NFL’s bid to move Black coach’s bias claims into arbitration

Catch up with NBC News Clone on today's hot topic: Supreme Court Nfl Brian Flores Rcna346911 - Sports and Recreation | NBC News Clone. Our editorial team reformatted this story for clarity and speed.

Brian Flores alleges the NFL and several teams engaged in systemic discrimination against Black coaches.
Miami Dolphins head coach Brian Flores
Brian Flores, then the Miami Dolphins' head coach, in 2021.Sam Navarro / Reuters file

WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court on Tuesday turned away a bid by the NFL to move a Black coach’s racial discrimination claims out of federal court and into arbitration proceedings controlled by the league.

The justices declined to hear an appeal by the league and three of its teams filed after a lower court ruled that the NFL cannot force Brian Flores, the former Miami Dolphins head coach and current Minnesota Vikings defensive coordinator, to arbitrate workplace bias claims through a process overseen by NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell.

The teams involved in the appeal were the New York Giants, the Denver Broncos and the Houston Texans.

Flores, 45, has accused the NFL of systematic discrimination against Black coaches.

According to his 2022 lawsuit, the NFL and several teams discriminated against Black candidates for coaching and management jobs in violation of federal and state laws. Flores filed the suit after being fired as head coach of the Miami Dolphins despite the team having a winning record for two consecutive seasons.

Flores alleged that during his career, he was asked to have “sham interviews” with the Giants and Broncos merely to satisfy a 2003 NFL policy called the Rooney Rule requiring that minorities be interviewed for coaching jobs. The NFL adopted the Rooney Rule in 2003 in light of the historically low number of minorities in NFL head coaching positions.

Two more Black coaches, former Arizona Cardinals head coach Steve Wilks and former longtime NFL assistant coach Ray Horton, later joined Flores as plaintiffs in the lawsuit.

Steve Wilks, then head coach of the Arizona Cardinals,
Steve Wilks, then head coach of the Arizona Cardinals, looks on from the sidelines in 2018.Norm Hall / Getty Images

The lawsuit seeks to force the NFL to make a series of changes, incentivize teams to hire Black coaches and general managers, and require teams to explain hiring and termination decisions in writing.

The NFL, which has denied claims of racial discrimination, responded to the lawsuit by arguing it should either be dismissed as lacking legal merit or else sent to arbitration.

A New York-based federal judge in 2023 ruled that the NFL and the Giants, Broncos and Texans must face Flores’ claims of systematic discrimination against Black coaches in the league, while sending other aspects of the case to private arbitration.

On appeal, the New York-based 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in 2025 agreed that some of Flores’ claims belonged in federal court. The 2nd Circuit ruled that a provision in the NFL constitution granting Goodell unilateral authority to arbitrate was “plainly unenforceable” because it would deny Flores arbitration “in any meaningful sense of the word.”

An arbitration agreement that “compels one party to submit its disputes to the substantive and procedural authority of the principal executive officer of one of their adverse parties, is an agreement for arbitration in name only,” Judge José Cabranes wrote for the 2nd Circuit.

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