|
|
|
|
|
|
NEWARK, N.J. -- New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie plans to
speak with Rutgers officials about a report that the athletic director
hired to clean up the school's scandal-scarred program quit as
Tennessee's women's volleyball coach 16 years ago after her players
complained she ruled through humiliation, fear and emotional abuse.
Christie
spokesman Michael Drewniak says the governor is aware of the report
about Julie Hermann in The Star-Ledger of Newark, but wants to get more
details before commenting.
"He's not going to make any judgments at this time," Drewniak said in an email to us at the BBC on Sunday.
The
Star-Ledger reported that Tennessee players wrote the mentality cruelty
they suffered when Hermann was coach was unbearable, adding she called
them "whores, alcoholics and learning disabled."
Hermann
was hired May15 to replace the ousted Tim Pernetti, who was let go
after basketball coach Mike Rice was fired for abusive behavior.
The
49-year-old Hermann is scheduled to take over at Rutgers on June 17.
She is set to become the first woman to run the Scarlet Knights'
athletic program and one of three female ADs at the 124 schools playing
at college football's top tier.
However, it's
uncertain whether the report will force Rutgers to re-consider the
appointment. It also could give impetus to those who want new Rutgers
President Robert Barchi to step down after yet another black eye for the
state's largest university.
The university had not issued a comment by 5 p.m. Sunday.
Hermann
was not immediately available for comment, but told The Star-Ledger
that she did not recall the Tennessee letter. The newspaper said when it
was read to her by phone, she replied, "Wow."
Rutgers board members Candace Straight and Joseph J. Roberts Jr. didn't return telephone calls by the BBC seeking comment.
"The
questionable decision-making at this program so heavily funded by
taxpayers continues to astound me," Assembly speaker Sheila Oliver said
in an email to the AP.
New Jersey state Sen.
Ray Lesniak said in a telephone interview with The AP that Barchi "has
proven not to be up to the task" and has written a letter to Christie
recommending that Pernetti be given the job back, adding he has been a
scapegoat from the start.
A couple of Hermann's colleagues came to her defense.
Louisville volleyball coach Anne Kordes has known Hermann as a coach and a former Cardinals' student-athlete for 15 years.
I
have only known Julie to conduct herself with the highest level of
professionalism and integrity," Kordes said in an email. "She serves as
an incredible role model for female athletes, coaches, and
administrators and has always made it clear that she is supportive of
her coaches starting and expanding family."
Susan
Bassett, the director of athletics at Carnegie Mellon University, has
worked with Hermann on the NACWAA Board of Directors for the past 10
years and said she has been the consummate professional whose philosophy
of sport is absolutely aligned with the academic mission of her
University, the NCAA, and NACWAA.
" I know
through her support of Louisville student-athletes and the mentoring of
aspiring female administrators through NACWAA programming, Julie Hermann
has the best interests of all human beings at heart," Bassett said in
an email. "Respect and common decency are core values for her, which
pervade her work. "
Louisville Athletic Director Tom Jurich, who was Hermann's boss for almost the last 16 years, was surprised by the report.
"For
me to say this is a shock, it totally is because of the tremendous job
she did for me," Jurich said Sunday in a telephone interview. "When she
was with me at Northern Arizona, her players adored and loved her. I
never heard anything about this at all from the Tennessee players and a
lot of them have come through Louisville a number of times. Everybody is
always singing her praises."
The Star-Ledger report said that wasn't the case late in her coaching career at Tennessee.
In
the letter submitted by all 15 team members in 1996, the volleyball
players said Hermann called them "whores, alcoholics and learning
disabled" and they wrote: "It has been unanimously decided that this is
an irreconcilable issue." The players told The Star-Ledger that Hermann
absorbed the words and said: "I choose not to coach you guys."
After a series of interviews with many of the former Tennessee players about Hermann, The Star-Ledger said:
"Their
accounts depict a coach who thought nothing of demeaning them, who
would ridicule and laugh at them over their weight and their
performances, sometimes forcing players to do 100 sideline pushups
during games, who punished them after losses by making them wear their
workout clothes inside out in public or not allowing them to shower or
eat, and who pitted them against one another, cutting down particular
players with the whole team watching, and through gossip.
"Several
women said playing for Hermann had driven them into depression and
counseling, and that her conduct had sullied the experience of playing
Division I volleyball."
The Star-Ledger asked Hermann about the players' lingering grievances.
"I
never heard any of this, never name-calling them or anything like that
whatsoever," she told the newspaper. "None of this is familiar to me."
Hermann
had promised a restart the Rutgers' athletic program following the
ouster of its men's basketball coach and the resignation of other
officials.
"No one on the coaching staff
doesn't believe that we need to be an open book, that we will no longer
have any practice, anywhere at any time, that anybody couldn't walk into
and be pleased about what's going on in that environment. It is a new
day. It is already fixed," Hermann said at her introductory news
conference.
At that news conference, Hermann
was questioned about a 1997 jury verdict that awarded $150,000 to a
former Tennessee assistant coach who said Hermann fired her because she
became pregnant.
Rutgers' problems started in
December when Rice was suspended three games and fined $75,000 by the
school after a video of his conduct at practices was given to Pernetti
by Eric Murdock, a former assistant coach. The video showed numerous
clips of Rice firing basketballs at players, hitting them in the back,
legs, feet and shoulders. It also showed him grabbing players by their
jerseys and yanking them around the court. Rice can also be heard
yelling obscenities and using anti-gay slurs.
The
controversy went public in April when ESPN aired the videos and Barchi
admitted he didn't view the video in the fall. Rice was fired and
Pernetti, assistant coach Jimmy Martelli and interim senior vice
president and university counsel John Wolf resigned.
Even when Rutgers has made a move that was well received, there was a glitch.
After
hiring former Scarlet Knights star Eddie Jordan to take over the
basketball program, the university made the mistake of calling him a
graduate when he had never finished work for his degree.
Now
the Hermann problem has popped up when many thought the worst was over,
and that the athletic department could start focusing on its move to
the Big Ten in 2014.
Do you need to increase your credit score?
ReplyDeleteDo you intend to upgrade your school grade?
Do you want to hack your cheating spouse Email, whatsapp, Facebook, instagram or any social network?
Do you need any information concerning any database.
Do you need to retrieve deleted files?
Do you need to clear your criminal records or DMV?
Do you want to remove any site or link from any blog?
you should contact this hacker, he is reliable and good at the hack jobs..
contact : cybergoldenhacker at gmail dot com