Baltimore Sun

UM briefs congressio­nal delegation

Members have questions about McNair’s death

- By Michael Dresser

Members of the state’s congressio­nal delegation expressed their concerns to top officials of the University System of Maryland about how it handled the varsity football program after the heatstroke death of a College Park football player.

Chancellor Robert Caret and Board of Regents Chairwoman Linda Gooden traveled to Capitol Hill to brief Maryland’s U.S. senators and representa­tives on developmen­ts involving the state’s flagship campus

University of Maryland, College Park President Wallace Loh fired Terrapins coach DJ Durkin on Oct. 31, saying members of the campus community and others “expressed serious concerns about coach DJ Durkin returning to the campus.”

At a news conference following the closed-doors briefing, some delegation members expressed strong hopes that Loh would stay on despite his announced plan to retire next June.

U.S. Rep. Elijah Cummings said he has spoken with Loh recently.

“I’m not going to talk for him, but I’m praying that he does,” Cummings said.

The meeting came a day after the Terrapins announced the hiring of University of Alabama offensive coordinato­r Mike Locksley as football coach.

Besides Cummings, U.S. Sen. Ben Cardin and Reps. Steny Hoyer, C. A. Dutch Ruppersber­ger and John Sarbanes took part in the news conference. Sen. Chris Van Hollen and Rep. Anthony G. Brown skipped the news conference but participat­ed in the meeting, delegation members said. They said Rep. John Delaney, who is retiring, as well as Reps. Jamie Raskin and Andy Harris did not take part.

All Maryland delegation members except Harris are Democrats.

The lawmakers, Caret and Gooden all agreed that the Board of Regents had handled the aftermath of McNair’s death abysmally

“The death of any young person is a tragedy. The death of a young person that could have been avoided is an even greater tragedy,” Hoyer said. “Hopefully this tragic incident will never be repeated.”

The football program has been in turmoil since McNair, a19-year-old offensive lineman, collapsed during practice May 29 and died two weeks later.

His death was determined to be the result of the team staff’s failure to promptly immerse the former McDonough School star in cold water, the standard treatment for heatstroke.

The fatality set off a chain of events that ultimately led to Durkin’s firing and the resignatio­n of Board of Regents Chairman James Brady for what was widely seen as the mishandlin­g of the response to reported problems in the football program.

Their departures came after months of negative publicity about the program, including an ESPN report that described a “toxic” culture in which players faced bullying and intimidati­on from members of the coaching staff. A task force named by the regents rejected that descriptio­n, but found “a culture where problems festered because too many players feared speaking out.”

The controvers­y has left Loh’s future up in the air. The day before he fired Durkin, Loh announced plans to retire in June at the same news conference at which Brady said Durkin had been cleared to return from administra­tive leave. The board’s decisions prompted a public backlash, joined by Gov. Larry Hogan, that led to Brady’s resignatio­n.

There has been no announceme­nt of a change in Loh’s plans.

Congressio­nal delegation members did not characteri­ze what they said to Caret and Gooden about Loh behind closed doors, but some members were outspoken in support of the College Park president at the news conference with the two university system leaders.

“I believe Dr. Wallace Loh is providing extraordin­ary leadership to the University of Maryland College Park,” Hoyer said. “He is going to be part of the solution to make sure this doesn’t happen again.”

“Let me make no bones about it: I want to see Dr. Loh stay, Cummings said.

Cardin said the delegation generally expressed confidence in Loh but stressed that it’s up to the university president to stay beyond his planned retirement date.

Delegation members said Caret and Gooden appeared to be receptive to their message.

“They were very honest. They told us what the problems were,” Ruppersber­ger said.

Caret vowed that the system would learn from its mistakes and implement statewide solutions.

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