Albuquerque Journal

NMSU officials are meeting with players

Hazing accusation­s being investigat­ed

- BY GEOFF GRAMMER JOURNAL STAFF WRITER

New Mexico State University administra­tors began meeting with Aggie basketball players and coaches on Saturday afternoon when the team returned to Las Cruces early from a road trip in California, one day after program was placed on indefinite suspension.

The entire coaching staff has been placed on paid administra­tive leave, and it is unclear if the team will return to the court this season — one that has been an immense disappoint­ment under first-year coach Greg Heiar, on and off the court.

As initially reported Friday night, the Journal has confirmed a police report filed with the NMSU Police Department in the past week alleges multiple Aggie players being involved in ongoing hazing of a teammate that escalated to potential criminal levels. No players have been charged with a crime, and the school has chosen not to comment on the matter other than two statements Friday night — one announcing the program’s suspension and one on behalf of the Board of Regents supporting the decision.

Saturday evening, NMSU Chancellor Dan E. Arvizu sent an email to the entire NMSU community, acknowledg­ing the hazing allegation­s are the reason for the indefinite suspension of the program.

“To ensure we fully understood this situation, we cancelled (the team’s Saturday night game against Cal-Baptist), called the team back to Las Cruces and placed the coaching staff on paid administra­tive leave. Once our student-athletes arrived on campus, they were met and interviewe­d by university personnel who are specially trained to conduct investigat­ions into these kinds of matters.”

Arvizu added he was “heartbroke­n and sickened” to hear of the allegation­s and that more informatio­n will be shared “as we can, going forward.”

Also on Saturday, two players —neither of whom had played in a game this season — announced they are leaving the program, one specifical­ly stating the program no longer “aligns with my beliefs and core values.”

The recent allegation, the school made clear Friday, is unrelated to the ongoing independen­t investigat­ion into the program’s handling of the aftermath of the Nov. 19 shooting in Albuquerqu­e that involved currently suspended player Mike Peake being shot in the leg, and also shooting and killing a UNM student in self defense. Police say the UNM student plotted with three other students to attack Peake after the Aggie player left the team hotel at 3 a.m. to meet with a 17-year-old girl the morning of their rivalry game against New Mexico.

UNM student Brandon Travis had been beat up in a fight that involved Peake, at least one other Aggie teammate and a UTEP basketball player at an October UNM-NMSU football game in Las Cruces. No players were suspended for that fight.

On Saturday guard Shahar Lazar, a former member of the Israeli army who committed over the summer to NMSu but was sitting out as a redshirt, posted on social media, in part, “Having served several years in the Israeli military, I was raised on the values of excellence, discipline, respect, reliabilit­y and accountabi­lity. However, in retrospect, I don’t believe the program that I originally committed to currently aligns with my beliefs and core values.”

He is leaving with four years of playing eligibilit­y remaining.

Guard Kent Olewiler, a walk-on who also hasn’t played, posted on Twitter, “My recruitmen­t is officially 100% open.”

“UNMSU” STRIKES AGAIN: The frequency of national media outlets mixing up the NMSU Aggies and UNM Lobos in reporting has become something that’s turned into a social media game of sorts for fans and media in the state, often using the #UNMSU tag on posts on Twitter pointing out whenever it happens. But the latest such example isn’t a case that can be so easily laughed off.

Saturday night’s NBC Nightly News — a broadcast the network’s own website claimed as recently as Dec. 28 drew a Saturday evening audience of 5.3 million viewers —ran a story with the heading across the bottom of the screen reading “New Mexico State Suspends College Basketball Program.” The picture that ran on the screen with it was of Lobo Jaelen House. As a tease going into commercial, it also ran a photo of Lobo Javonte Johnson. Neither House, nor Johnson, nor anyone with the Lobo men’s basketball program is associated with the problems in the NMSU program.

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