History was recently made!

During last week’s NFL game between the Las Vegas Raiders and the Los Angeles Chargers, history was made with the first all-Black on-field and replay officiating crew, which included three women. The officiating crew included Maia Chaka, who served as the line judge; Artenzia Young-Seigler, the replay official; and Desiree Abrams, the replay assistant. The crew called a combined ten penalties for 95 yards in the game.

The NFL posted about the memorable moment on social media with the hashtag #InspireChange.

The NFL has recently improved its diversity and inclusion efforts. Now, the NFL has nine full-time Black general managers, five full-time Black team presidents, and four head coaches, including Raiders head coach Antonio Pierce, whose team had a 63-21 victory on Thursday.

However, this historic moment has been years in the making. The first-ever NFL game to be officiated by an all-Black crew was on November 23, 2020, when the Tampa Bay Buccaneers played against the Los Angeles Rams. Sarah Thomas became the first female to work as an on-field official in 2006. And all of this happened nearly two decades after the NFLโ€™s first Black referee, Johnny Grier, who was promoted from field judge in 1988.

โ€œWeโ€™re focused on working with the clubs to improve diversity up and down the ranks of the NFL in their organizations,โ€ Jonathan Beane, the NFLโ€™s senior vice president and chief diversity & inclusion officer, said during the media session. โ€œItโ€™s really the humans-to-human connection and building relationships that hopefully are long-standing.โ€

(Cover photo: Las Vegas Raiders and the Los Angeles Chargers Officiating Crew/Photo Courtesy of NFL)