The
Cleveland Browns of the
National Football League (NFL) selected Cole in the later rounds of the
1950 draft, making him the first
African-American player selected by the Browns since joining the league that year. The Browns had four other black players on their roster, including
fullback Marion Motley,
linebacker Bill Willis and
punter Horace Gillom, but they had all joined the team during its years in the defunct
All-America Football Conference. Cleveland head coach
Paul Brown groomed Cole to replace Motley, who was nearing the end of his career in 1950. Cole played in all 12 of the team's games that year, running for 105 yards on 26 carries. He was also used as a
linebacker on defense. The Browns finished the regular season with a 10–2
win–loss record and beat the
Los Angeles Rams to win the
NFL championship. While Cole appeared to be Motley's chosen successor at fullback in an offense that featured
quarterback Otto Graham and
ends
Mac Speedie and
Dante Lavelli, his relationship with Brown was strained. Cole felt that Brown did not like that he challenged his authority and refused to submit to his authoritarian coaching style. Cole saw his carries increase in 1951, when Motley was injured. The Browns again made the
championship game that year but lost to the Rams. Brown cut Cole during the following season, and he spent the remainder of the year with the
Chicago Bears before leaving football. Cleveland halfback
Dub Jones later criticized Brown's handling of Cole, calling it the biggest waste of talent he had ever seen. Like other black players of his era, Cole frequently endured racist taunts on the field and racial discrimination off the field. Black players typically stayed in separate hotels from the white players, and the groups did not mingle socially. White players on opposing teams stepped on the black players after plays were over; they often stepped on Motley's hands and once stepped hard on Cole's face, cutting his mouth. Brown did not tolerate racism within the team, but Cole later said he thought Brown considered black athletes to be physically superior but intellectually inferior to whites. ==Later life==