First Female NFL Scout

Elias

The Invisible Man
Big Fish
Jet Fanatics
Jets Global
I have been on twitter a lot trying to market this site and came upon Connie Carberg. She was the first female scout in the NFL. She actually discovered Mark Gastineau. Cool stuff.

Jets have been so instrumental in the league's history! Too bad we never win! I have spent some time reading about her on her blog and I think she gives some nice info.

Connie Nicholas Carberg was the NFL’s first female scout and broke barriers without even trying. Growing up around the team that she’d love more than most anything else was a blessing for Connie. It all began when her father, Dr. Calvin Nicholas became the Jets’ team internist (and would be for 24 more years). It was one thing to go to every Jets game, but another to turn it into a profession. Following high school, Connie attended the Ohio State University and learned more about football from her mentor and friend, Woody Hayes. Woody took the young Connie under his wing, allowing her to attend every OSU practice, open or closed to the public.

After graduation, Connie was offered a job as a secretary with the New York Jets, and subsequently showed her talents, moving into the scouting department, and marking the first time a woman ever made a draft selection in the NFL (she chose Mike Bartoszek, in the 17th round).

Connie was named the first female scout in NFL history in 1976, under Mike Holovak, and some of the best drafts in New York Jets history occurred with her help. Connie also discovered the passionate defensive end, Mark Gastineau, solidifying her contributions to Jets history.

http://conniescouts.com/about-connie/
 
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CodieneWanKenobi

Guest
Remember the supposed female NFL kicker that wanted a tryout? Man she was horrible.
 

jetgreen13

founding JFU member..
Jet Fanatics
I have been on twitter a lot trying to market this site and came upon Connie Carberg. She was the first female scout in the NFL. She actually discovered Mark Gastineau. Cool stuff.

Jets have been so instrumental in the league's history! Too bad we never win! I have spent some time reading about her on her blog and I think she gives some nice info.



http://conniescouts.com/about-connie/
interesting..

i didn't know anything about her..
 
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sg3

Guest
Interesting story, Elias

thanks for posting it and for this place too.
 

Elias

The Invisible Man
Big Fish
Jet Fanatics
Jets Global
Here's an article about her on ESPN.

http://espn.go.com/espnw/news-commentary/article/8218738/espnw-connie-carberg-blazed-trail-female-nfl-scout

"I just said OK."

That's what Connie Carberg -- the first female scout in the NFL -- said when she was told new Jets owner Leon Hess didn't want a woman traveling on behalf of the team anymore. It was 1978, an age when game tape was reel-to-reel. When player reports were typed on paper and carefully tucked into file cabinets. No cellphones, no voicemail.

It was an era when a woman couldn't easily appeal a demotion based on gender rather than job performance, no matter how much it stung. No matter how badly she wanted it.

"I just didn't think that way," Carberg said.

Carberg continued to work in the Jets front office for a time but missed traveling as a scout. So when her husband had a job opportunity in Florida, they decided to take it. Carberg moved on, raising a family in Coconut Creek. But she has never been far from football or from the team she loves. This summer, like almost every other, she will head to Jets training camp with her critical eye and the heart of a fan.

Connie Carberg fell into the role of scout for the Jets after proving her muster evaluating local talent.

Carberg had grown up around the Jets, with a father and uncle who were team doctors. Her uncle was James Nicholas, the Jets orthopedist. Her dad, Calvin Nicholas, the team's internist, hosted the likes of quarterback Joe Namath and coach and general manager Weeb Ewbank in their Long Island home. As a girl, she would hold her own mock drafts from her home in Babylon. She lived about 20 minutes from the Jets practice facility at Hofstra.

Carberg played sports and spoke football; that's just how it was in her house.

"I thought every girl did this kind of thing," Carberg said.

In the era just before Title IX, when women started regularly getting scholarships, Carberg played basketball for two years at Wheaton before transferring to Ohio State. Legendary football coach Woody Hayes took a liking to her and let her attend Buckeyes practices. When she graduated from Ohio State in 1974, with a degree in home economics, she headed back to New York. Jets coach Charley Winner asked if she would be the team secretary.

It was a dream job. The Jets had won a Super Bowl III just a few years prior with Namath at quarterback.

Carberg quickly became a favorite with co-workers, players and fans. She baked pies for the front office staff and coaches and would get players to come to the phone when fans would call to speak to their favorites. She walked into the locker room and yelled "Girl back!" so many times the team jokingly made it her nickname.

From left, Connie Carberg's father Dr. Cal Nicholas, New York Jets general manger Mike Tannenbaum and Carberg at the Jets celebration of the 40th anniversary of Super Bowl III.

As the team expanded, her knowledge of the game led Carberg to the scouting office.

Carberg would take home game tape, watch it and write reports. Before long, she was checking out local players the Jets were eyeing. She was doing such a good job that when the Jets needed to add a traveling scout, Ewbank made a radical suggestion to then-coach Walt Michaels.

"She'd go nearby and the reports she wrote were very good," Michaels said. "Weeb said, 'Why are we fooling around when we have a good one right here?'"

Michaels didn't need convincing. To him, it just made sense. Carberg already had information on all the key recruits. Most of it was in her head, and when it wasn't she had all the right phone numbers.

So what if the NFL didn't have a lot of women working in a football capacity at the time?

"It was very unusual, but you had to know Weeb Ewbank," said Michaels, now 80. "He said, 'She knows more than a lot of guys we got hanging around here.'"

A few things stand out for Carberg out during her six-year tenure with the team.

She got to make decisions on who the Jets would draft. In 1975, she made the Jets pick in the 17th round -- a tight end named Mike Bartoszek from Ohio State. She was just happy he wasn't the first one cut that summer.

"She always thought her pick was going to be All-Pro or player of the year," Michaels said with a laugh.

Then there was the role she played in getting Mark Gastineau. She made contact with the defensive end and brought him to the team's attention before the 1979 draft.

Wide receiver Wes Walker said Carberg was the first person from the Jets he ever spoke to, right after he was drafted in 1977. Walker was legally blind in one eye, which scared some teams. But the Jets took a chance on him and it paid off handsomely. Walker was a Pro Bowl receiver in 1978 and '82 and was named the team MVP in 1978. And, over the years, Carberg and Walker, now a physical education teacher in Long Island, have remained friends.

Walker also remembered how he could never get Carberg to go on a date with him -- despite his best efforts.

"I never could make any headway with her," Walker said.

Carberg deflects questions about the challenges of being a woman about as deftly as she must have deflected player compliments. She said she wasn't bothered by it or resentful, because she was the rare woman with the team -- one with enough audacity to want a part in football operations.

"I never felt when I talked to guys that they thought, 'Who does she think she is?'" Carberg said.

Carberg knew football, so much so that when she and her husband moved to Florida, she could have pursued a job with the Dolphins.

"I could never bring myself to work for the Dolphins because my loyalty [to the Jets] was so strong," Carberg said.

And that's the same loyalty that keeps bringing her back to Jets' camp year after year, whether it was in Long Island or Cortland, N.Y. Her son and stepdaughter grown, Carberg will return to evaluate the skills she sees on the field again this summer. She will talk to old friends about team dynamics, and she will hope this is the year the Jets get a bookend for the Lombardi Trophy
 
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Christa

Guest
Thanks for sharing this story, I really admire her as a person and hope to someday be a female scout.
 
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flgreen

Guest
Thanks for sharing this story, I really admire her as a person and hope to someday be a female scout.

Hey why stop at scout. Maybe you can become the next "Dawn of the dead" She has a great chance to be the Dolphins next GM now that Tannenbaum is the football czar
 
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Christa

Guest
Hey why stop at scout. Maybe you can become the next "Dawn of the dead" She has a great chance to be the Dolphins next GM now that Tannenbaum is the football czar

aha I'm fine with just being a scout lol
 
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flgreen

Guest
aha I'm fine with just being a scout lol

C'mon girl. If your going to do it, shoot for the stars

I'm assuming you are relativity young. "Dawn of the dead" is a very successful, relativity young women.

After Mike Tannenbaum became GM of the NY Jets, he appointed Dawn Aponte his Gal Friday. She did all his leg work for him for 15 years. Including contracts.

After Mike T was fired from the Jets' she moved on to the league office for three years, making contacts.

She was then hired as the executive vice president of football administration by the Fish.

She quickly got Stephen Ross' ear, much in the way Mike T got Woody's ear When Bradway was GM.

Much like Tannenbaum she undercut GM Dennis Hickey, and got her good friend, and mentor ,Mike Tannenbaum appointed As a consultant, and recently, executive vice president of football operations. Much reducing GM Dennis Hickey's power. Translation: Tannenbaum is totally in charge of the Dolphins.

Odds are very high if the Fish do another December funk, that Dennis Hickey will be fired.

Guess who will be the next GM of the Miami Dolphins? And the first female GM in the NFL. "Dawn of the Dead"


Shoot for the stars girl
 

Savage69

Pro Bowl 1st Team
Jet Fanatics
Hey why stop at scout. Maybe you can become the next "Dawn of the dead" She has a great chance to be the Dolphins next GM now that Tannenbaum is the football czar

You can't be a female scout if your cock-eyed..:)
 
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Christa

Guest
C'mon girl. If your going to do it, shoot for the stars

I'm assuming you are relativity young. "Dawn of the dead" is a very successful, relativity young women.

After Mike Tannenbaum became GM of the NY Jets, he appointed Dawn Aponte his Gal Friday. She did all his leg work for him for 15 years. Including contracts.

After Mike T was fired from the Jets' she moved on to the league office for three years, making contacts.

She was then hired as the executive vice president of football administration by the Fish.

She quickly got Stephen Ross' ear, much in the way Mike T got Woody's ear When Bradway was GM.

Much like Tannenbaum she undercut GM Dennis Hickey, and got her good friend, and mentor ,Mike Tannenbaum appointed As a consultant, and recently, executive vice president of football operations. Much reducing GM Dennis Hickey's power. Translation: Tannenbaum is totally in charge of the Dolphins.

Odds are very high if the Fish do another December funk, that Dennis Hickey will be fired.

Guess who will be the next GM of the Miami Dolphins? And the first female GM in the NFL. "Dawn of the Dead"


Shoot for the stars girl

But being a scout is my dream. I couldn't handle being a GM of an NFL team. I'll stick to scouting college players. :D
 
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