Orlando Sentinel

Amid protests, Vols won’t hire Schiano

-

Texas A&M fired veteran coach Kevin Sumlin and Arizona State dismissed coach Todd Graham Sunday, but it was far from the most remarkable coaching news of the day.

Tennessee is no longer pursuing Ohio State defensive coordinato­r Greg Schiano to be the school’s new head coach, a person familiar with the negotiatio­ns told the Associated Press.

The person spoke Sunday on condition of anonymity because none of the negotiatio­ns was intended to be made public until a deal was reached.

The school and Schiano were close to an agreement earlier Sunday, but the deal fell apart after widespread backlash that included a protest on campus and complaints on social media from fans, state representa­tives and gubernator­ial candidates.

Their complaints stemmed from Schiano’s background as an assistant at Penn State during Jerry Sandusky’s tenure as the Nittany Lions’ defensive coordinato­r. Sandusky is serving 30 to 60 years in prison for his conviction on 45 counts of sexual abuse.

Court documents released last year of a deposition in a case related to the Sandusky scandal suggested Schiano might have been aware of Sandusky’s sexual abuse against children, though Schiano says he had no knowledge of what was happening at the time.

“The head football coach at the University of Tennessee is the highest-paid state employee,” Tennessee State Rep. Jeremy Faison said.

“They’re the face of our state. We don’t need a man who has that type of potential reproach in their life as the highest-paid state employee. It’s egregious to the people and it’s wrong to the taxpayers.”

Faison was one of at least three state representa­tives who went on Twitter or issued statements to criticize the possibilit­y of Tennessee hiring Schiano.

Republican gubernator­ial candidates Mae Beavers, Diane Black, Beth Harwell and Bill Lee also relayed their objections to a Schiano hire.

State Rep. Eddie Smith tweeted that “a Greg Schiano hire would be anathema to all that our University and our community stand for.”

Court documents released in the summer of 2016 included a deposition from former Penn State coach Mike McQueary, who indicated former Penn State assistant Tom Bradley said Schiano went to him in the early 1990s “white as a ghost and said he just saw Jerry doing something to a boy in the shower.”

Schiano tweeted in 2016 that he never saw abuse or had any reason to suspect it while working at Penn State.

He worked for late head coach Joe Paterno from 1990-95, starting as a graduate assistant and then as defensive backs coach.

Ohio State coach Urban Meyer said Tennessee had been in contact with Schiano and spoke out on his behalf Sunday during a conference call previewing the Buckeyes’ Big Ten championsh­ip game with Wisconsin.

“Greg’s been a close friend for 20-plus years,” Meyer said.

“He’s an elite person, elite father, elite husband, and that carries over to how he handles his players. Excellent coach, excellent person.”

That didn’t stop Tennessee fans from voicing their displeasur­e with Tennessee’s decision to consider Schiano for the Volunteers’ coaching vacancy.

About 100 people gathered on Tennessee’s campus to protest a potential Schiano hire, with many of them holding signs with various messages such as “Schia-NO.”

At a rock on campus where students often paint various messages, the words “Schiano covered up child rape at Penn State,” appeared Sunday.

“The accusation­s that he knew what was going on at Penn State, whether that’s true or not, we don’t need that kind of drama going on right now,” said Shai Simpson, a Knoxville resident who participat­ed in the protest.

On Sunday, New England Patriots coach Bill Belichick called Schiano “one of the very best coaches, I think, in our profession.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States