The Buffalo Bills selected Antwon Bailey, Michael Grant, Matthew Scott, Jamar Nesbit and Kevin Mawae as the 2013 Bill Walsh Minority Coaching Fellowship participants. Bailey, Grant, Scott, Nesbit and Mawae assist the Bills’ coaching staff during training camp at St. John Fisher College in Pittsford, NY.
Bailey worked with the Bills’ running backs. A graduate of Syracuse University, Bailey, who amassed 2,144 rushing yards and 11 touchdowns over 44 games with the Orange, is currently the offensive coordinator at his alma mater St. Johns College High School in Washington, D.C.
Grant assisted with the Bills’ defensive backs. The former University of Nebraska quarterback has more than 20 years of coaching experience, including his current stint at North Texas University, where he is in his inaugural season as the Mean Green’s wide receivers coach.
Scott supported the Bills’ linebacking corps. He is entering his fourth season at the University of Albany, where he coaches cornerbacks in addition to working with special teams.
Nesbit assists the offensive line. The 11-year NFL veteran originally signed with the Carolina Panthers, where he played for four seasons, before spending the 2003 season with Jacksonville. He then signed with New Orleans in 2004, and, under the tutelage of then Saints’ offensive coordinator and current Bills’ head coach Doug Marrone, competed from 2006 to 2009. Nesbit currently serves as the Vice President of Talent Acquisition for EZ Executive Search in Charlotte, NC.
Mawae joined the Bills’ offensive line staff on Aug. 5. The Savannah, Ga. native played 16 seasons in the NFL, including stints with Seattle, Tennessee and the Jets, prior to announcing his retirement following the 2009 season. An eight-time All-Pro and Pro Bowl selection, Mawae was named to the NFL 2000s All-Decade Team. In addition, the former Louisiana State University standout was recently inducted into the Louisiana Sports Hall of Fame.
Bailey, Grant, Scott, Nesbit and Mawae join Bills’ running backs coach Tyrone Wheatley as fellow recipients of the honor. Wheatley earned the distinction twice, with Tampa Bay in July 2006 and Pittsburgh in June 2008.
The Bill Walsh Minority Coaching Fellowship is designed to expose talented minority college coaches to the methods and philosophies of Summer NFL training camps. Walsh introduced the idea to the league in 1987 when he brought in a group of such coaches into his San Francisco 49ers training camp. Eventually every NFL team became a participant in the program.
The Buffalo Bills have participated in the Bill Walsh Minority Coaching Fellowship program since 1989.
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