Calling the plays
But what about the way she appears? A woman wearing a hijab is not a common sight among the ranks of the NFL—not on the field, not on the sidelines, not in the boardroom. As the first Muslim woman to hold her position in the NFL—a trailblazer for her faith and gender—Soliman lets her professionalism do the talking.
“Just being around football, you have to be prepared for how to handle yourself in that environment and in groups of people,” she said. “You have to carry yourself in a professional way in everything that you do.”
Looking good
While studying film is the meat and potatoes of Soliman’s day-to-day job, it’s the time spent out of office where things get most exciting.
During the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, Eagles scouting personnel staggered their time inside the NovaCare Complex. With internship programs also sidelined, Soliman volunteered to handle what seemed to be a menial task: videotaping the defensive line as they practiced.
Instead, she turned it into an education, listening closely when, for example, Eagles defensive linemen Fletcher Cox and Brandon Graham talked about the intricacies of the game, and paying attention to the smallest details during all conversations.
“Coaches and players see it at a whole different level,” Soliman said. “During drills, a coach will say, ‘No, your foot’s wrong. Your toes are too far off to the left.’ Some of those details I wouldn’t otherwise know.”
But Soliman learned fast.
Now when the Eagles have an away game scheduled, she hits the road a week in advance to get her well-trained eyes on the opposing players. Her responsibilities become amplified, urgent. She and other scouts watch through binoculars, scanning the field and sidelines for anything unexpected, like an injury.
“We’re basically looking for anything we can see in-game that we didn’t see on the practice film,” Soliman said.