Tampa Bay Buccaneers become 1st team in NFL history with 2 female coaches on staff

Lori Locust and Maral Javadifar are taking their talents to Tampa.

This story by ESPN Senior Writer Adam Schefter originally appeared on espn.com.

The Buccaneers have hired Lori Locust and Maral Javadifar, making Tampa Bay the first NFL team with two female coaches on staff.

Locust and Javadifar are the first full-time female coaches in Bucs franchise history. Locust is an assistant defensive line coach, and Javadifar is an assistant strength and conditioning coach, the team announced.

Locust was the defensive line coach for the Alliance of American Football's Birmingham Iron this spring and was a defensive coaching intern for the Baltimore Ravens during training camp last year.

She also has coaching experience in the National Arena League, in the Women's Football Alliance, and at the semipro and prep levels. She played four years of women's semiprofessional football and attended Temple University.

"I have known Lori going back to my days at Temple University, and I've seen firsthand just how knowledgeable and passionate she is about this game," Arians said. "I was equally impressed with Maral's background in performance training and physical therapy, and I know she will be a valuable asset to our strength and conditioning program."

Javadifar, who played basketball at Pace University in New York, has her doctorate in physical therapy from New York Medical College and completed her sports physical therapy residency at VCU in August. She has worked as a physical therapist and performance trainer in Seattle and Virginia.

In 2015, Arians hired Jen Welter as a training camp intern with the Arizona Cardinals, making her the first woman to hold an NFL coaching position.

Arians said at the NFL combine this year that he planned to hire a woman in a full-time coaching capacity.

ESPN's Jenna Laine contributed to this report.

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