Number of women working in the NFL steadily rising
From the owner’s suite to the front office to the sideline, the number of women in the NFL is steadily rising. And, they’re here to stay.
Kalen Jackson was born into football, one of three daughters for Indianapolis Colts owner Jim Irsay. She got her introduction to the sport attending community events. Now, she has a seat at the table for owners’ meetings. Sam Rapoport fell in love with football the first time she held a ball and threw a spiral as a 12-year-old growing up in Canada. Rapoport ended up becoming a professional quarterback in a women’s tackle football league and has spent two decades working to expand career opportunities for women in the sport.
ADVERTISING
Ashton Washington was surrounded by football as a kid in Texas, but she says she preferred playing with Barbie dolls. By high school, Washington wanted a career in football. Last year, the Chicago Bears hired her as the first full-time female scout in team history.
Katie Sylvan grew up in San Diego rooting for the Chargers. She was determined to find a job in football and applied for the NFL’s junior rotational program while in college. After nine years working for the league, Sylvan was hired by the Chargers to be the team’s director of football administration. The overall percentage of women in the NFL’s league office is at an all-time high of 41.3% in 2022 with 319 females holding various positions. The Institute for Diversity and Ethics in Sport said in its 2022 racial and gender report card that the league office “has been a model of diversity and inclusion for their clubs to follow.”
“To see so many things changing that weren’t this way when I was little is super exciting,” Jackson, the Colts vice chair/owner, said on the AP Pro Football Podcast last month. “Being from a family of three girls and being told you belong here and your opinion about this matters, we definitely had a blessing to have a very passionate girl dad.”
Rapoport, the NFL’s senior director of diversity, equity and inclusion, is determined to open doors for women in the league.
“I was somewhat relentless with the idea that I was put on this planet to work in football in some way,” said Rapoport,
Rapoport runs the NFL’s Women’s Forum, an annual event that connects participants in college football with owners, general managers, head coaches and executives. More than 225 female coaching, scouting and operations candidates have been hired since the forum started in 2017.
“We just put women in a position to impress people,” Rapoport said. “Half our fan base are women. Why aren’t they working in it? We’re working toward that.”