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Former NFL player Jason Wright named president of Washington pro football team

Fred Jeter | 8/20/2020, 6 p.m.
The Washington NFL team hired Jason Wright as team president on Monday, making him the first Black person to hold ...
Jason Wright is the first Black person and the youngest in the NFL’s history to be named as a team president for the Washington NFL team.

The Washington NFL team hired Jason Wright as team president on Monday, making him the first Black person to hold that position in NFL history.

At 38, he also becomes the NFL’s youngest team president and will run the organization’s business operations with Coach Ron Rivera maintaining control over football decisions.

Wright, a running back for seven years with Atlanta, Cleveland and Arizona, was a captain for the Arizona Cardinals and their NFLPA representative during labor negotiations in 2010-11.

He retired after the 2011 season and earned his MBA from the University of Chicago. He was most recently a partner in the operations practice at McKinsey & Company, where he also helped create the Black Economic Institute and co-piloted their anti-racism and inclusion strategy.

“If I could custom design a leader for this important time in our history, it would be Jason,” Washington team owner Dan Snyder said. “His experience as a former player, coupled with his busi- ness acumen, gives him a perspective that is unrivaled in the league.”

The hiring is another significant change for Snyder, who has in the past nine months fired president and longtime confidant Bruce Allen after another losing season, hired Coach Rivera, revamped the front office and medical staffs, bowed to pressure from sponsors to drop the team’s racist and offensive nickname/mascot and been forced to confront allegations of sexual harassment by members of the organization from former employees.

As part of the national debate over racism following George Floyd’s killing by police in Minnesota, Coach Rivera also launched internal initiatives aimed at educating players and staff and allow- ing minorities’ voices to be heard. Wright seems to fit into that, as well.

“Jason has a proven track record in helping businesses transform culturally, operationally and financially,” Snyder said. “He is a proactive and assertive advocate for inclusion of all people and will set new standards for our organization and for the league.”

The club with a storied history dating to its Boston roots in the 1930s and three long-ago Super Bowl titles is in a phase of transformation. It will be called the “Washington Football Team” for at least the 2020 season, with Terry Bateman spearheading the process to determine a new full-time name. Snyder also is seeking a new stadium to be in place when the lease at FedEx Field expires in 2027.

Wright is the fourth former player to become a team president and does so after several years in business. He called this an “ideal opportunity” and said, “I have always enjoyed building exciting new things and taking on the hard, seemingly intractable challenges that others may not want to tackle.”

Wright, like Coach Rivera, will report directly to Snyder while overseeing Washington’s operations, finance, sales and marketing departments. Coach Rivera, who was a defensive coordinator in Chicago and San Diego at the time, said he remembers Wright as a player and has grown to realize the two share many of the same values that should help them work together.

“It is no surprise to me that he went on to achieve the caliber of success that Jason has in his time in the business world,” Coach Rivera said. “Because he knows the NFL firsthand and how fast it moves, I am excited to have him on board to head up the front office and operations.”