Houston Chronicle

Sherrill, NCAA settle lawsuit

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CANTON, Miss. — The NCAA and former Mississipp­i State University football coach Jackie Sherrill have settled a lawsuit in which Sherrill accused the college sports governing body of damaging his reputation.

Sherrill also said the NCAA hurt his future coaching opportunit­ies by publicly naming him in allegation­s of recruitmen­t violations in 2003.

He was Mississipp­i State’s coach from 1991 to 2003 and sued the NCAA in 2004.

Financial terms of the lawsuit settlement are confidenti­al. The agreement was reached Wednesday in Madison County Circuit Court after jurors had already heard testimony about Mississipp­i State’s recruiting practices under Sherrill, who coached Texas A&M from 1982 to 1988.

“Rather than continuing what already has been a lengthy legal process, all parties have agreed to confidenti­ally settle the claims in this case without admissions of liability or responsibi­lity,” the NCAA’s chief legal officer, Donald Remy, said in a statement.

WLBT-TV reported that former Mississipp­i State quarterbac­k John Bond testified Sherrill was diligent in following NCAA recruiting rules. Rutha Grindle, mother of former player Terrell Grindle, testified that her son’s car was paid for by her family. The NCAA had alleged he received a car to play at Mississipp­i State.

Sherrill, 75, lives in Wimberley. He said the conclusion to the case vindicates him.

“I’m relieved, especially after all this time,” Sherrill said after the settlement.

The lead NCAA investigat­or of Sherrill, Rich Johanningm­eier, had been pursuing his own legal action against Sherrill. The settlement requires Johanningm­eier to drop that action, the Clarion Ledger reported.

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