Toronto Star

Ticats brass wear Briles fiasco

‘Poor decision’ to bring in disgraced coach drew outcry and was quickly overturned

- DAN RALPH THE CANADIAN PRESS

HAMILTON— As the winless Hamilton Tiger-Cats returned to the field Tuesday looking to regroup after a much-needed week off, they found themselves in the middle of an internatio­nal incident with the team’s decision to hire controvers­ial coach Art Briles, a move the franchise’s owner called a “large and serious mistake.”

Hamilton CEO Scott Mitchell took responsibi­lity for bringing in the 61year-old Briles, who was fired last year as head coach at Baylor in the wake of a sexual assault scandal that included members of the football team. Less than 12 hours after hiring Briles on Monday morning, the Ticats reversed the decision amid pressure from the CFL and a serious backlash from fans, sponsors and the media.

“We want to apologize to our fans, corporate partners and the Canadian Football League,” owner Bob Young said in a statement. “It has been a difficult season and we are searching for answers.

“This is clearly not one of them. We have listened, we are reviewing our decision-making processes and we will learn. We will go on. We want to thank our fans, partners and the CFL for their help and support.”

At a hastily called news conference Tuesday, Mitchell shouldered the blame for hiring Briles.

“It was a poor decision, in retrospect, that we shouldn’t have made,” he said. “Everything we do demonstrat­es great community will, everything we do in the community we’re very very sincere about it and I think, clearly, we missed the mark in terms of the message we were sending.

“Obviously I’m responsibl­e for the bad decision. I think we got wrapped up a little bit too much in the inner sanctum of football discussion­s and forgot about very important things like our standing in the community and how this reflects upon the franchise.”

Hamilton (0-8) raised alarm bells on Monday morning when it announced the hiring of Briles as an assistant to new head coach June Jones. The move was widely criticized by fans and media.

Briles was fired in May 2016 by Baylor after an investigat­ion by a law firm found that over several years the school mishandled numerous sexual assault allegation­s, including some against football players. The Pepper Hamilton review also led to the departures of school president Kenneth Starr and athletic director Ian McCaw.

“There’s a lot of people, for good reason, that support Art Briles personally,” Mitchell said. “We heard from dozens of those people who spoke to coach Briles’ ethics and standards and personalit­y.

“I think at the end of the day we probably got caught being too myopic in the coaching world and not thinking about the franchise and the message we were sending to the public.”

Briles has acknowledg­ed making mistakes and apologized for some “bad things that went on under my watch.” He has also pushed back against some accusation­s made against him and his program in lawsuits and made clear he wanted to return to coaching.

The CFL was riding high on its wildly successful Diversity is Strength campaign. Commission­er Randy Ambrosie even spoke to CNN about the program, which was originally scheduled for launch this fall but was moved ahead following the violent protests in Charlottes­ville, Va., earlier this month.

Jones said Tuesday he’s been friends with Briles for 40 years but declined to address the situation further. The Tiger-Cats host the Toronto Argonauts on Monday in search of its first win of the season.

“What I’ve found is these type of things bring the team closer together,” said Jones. “Even though they (Ticats players) don’t even know who he (Briles) is, they know I’m about football and trying to get them to be the best they can be and I think that matters.

“Thinking it out through (Tuesday), this is really an emotional thing for me, a very personal thing. Catch me another day, I don’t want to break down right in front of you.”

 ?? AARON LYNETT/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Hamilton Tiger-Cats head coach June Jones said the controvers­y was “an emotional thing” for him.
AARON LYNETT/THE CANADIAN PRESS Hamilton Tiger-Cats head coach June Jones said the controvers­y was “an emotional thing” for him.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada