Santa Fe New Mexican

Amid scandal, NMSU fires coach Heiar

Dismissal comes after men’s basketball players accused last week of severe hazing and November shooting on team trip

- By Will Webber wwebber@sfnewmexic­an.com

Handpicked to be the architect of the next great chapter in the New Mexico State University men’s basketball program, Greg Heiar has been fired less than 11 months into his rocky tenure with the Aggies.

Following a closed-door board of regents meeting Tuesday night in Las Cruces, NMSU Chancellor Dan Arvizu authorized the immediate dismissal of Heiar after allegation­s of hazing with sexual connotatio­ns among his players emerged over the last several days.

“Earlier today, I made the decision to terminate men’s basketball coach

Greg Heiar,” Arvizu said in a prepared statement. “Director of Athletics Mario Moccia informed him of my decision this afternoon. This comes after learning of hazing allegation­s involving student-athletes on our men’s basketball team.”

The remainder of Heiar’s staff is still under contract.

“Through an expansive review and full investigat­ion, we will work to ensure we fully understand what happened here, and that those found responsibl­e are held accountabl­e,” Arvizu said. “We will also ensure that support systems are in place to prevent this from happening again. Any further decisions regarding the remainder of the coaching staff will be made after additional investigat­ions are concluded.”

Arvizu initially suspended the team’s daily operations and put Heiar, 47, and his staff on paid administra­tive leave Friday. Arvizu then canceled the remainder of the season Sunday after a damning police report filed by one of the players outlined some of the allegation­s.

The rare move to halt a team’s season was a bombshell to the college sporting

world. Arvizu hinted at Heiar’s dismissal in a statement last weekend, saying, “It’s time for this program to reset.”

In the report, the unnamed player said three of his teammates had been hazing him for several months, both at home in the team’s locker room and on the road. He said the most recent incident was Feb. 6 when his teammates approached him in the Aggies’ locker room and removed his clothes, making contact with his buttocks and scrotum.

The victim told police he felt he had no choice but to comply because he was outnumbere­d three to one.

The report indicates two counts of criminal sexual contact and one count each of harassment and false imprisonme­nt. No charges have been filed, but a source said the matter is under review by the Doña Ana County District Attorney’s Office.

The firing also comes after another high-profile case that Arvizu said is unrelated to the hazing. In November 2022, NMSU basketball player Mike Peake shot and killed a University of New Mexico student during an altercatio­n on the UNM campus.

Peake told police he left the Aggies’ hotel after curfew with the intent of having sex with a female UNM student he’d been chatting with online. When he and the woman approached a door at the Coronado Hall residence center, three men assaulted Peake, leading to a shootout between Peake and 19-year-old Brandon Travis.

Travis died at the scene while Peake, who was shot in the leg, was taken to the hospital by three of his teammates, who also snuck out of the team’s hotel after curfew.

Peake has not been charged, but he was placed on indefinite suspension in December while the other players faced one-game suspension­s. It led to UNM and NMSU canceling both basketball games this season.

NMSU has also struggled badly on the court. Coming off an NCAA Tournament appearance and a first-round victory under former coach Chris Jans, the Aggies were 9-15 before Arvizu shut down the program. The Western Athletic Conference has declared their final six games as forfeits, ensuring a last-place finish in what is the school’s final year in the league.

NMSU is slated to join Conference USA in all sports this summer.

This hazing incident comes during a critical time in the Legislativ­e session, as NMSU is lobbying for $16.8 million in capital outlay funds for improvemen­ts to its athletic department. On Monday, the school’s football team was honored on the floor of the Senate. Moccia was expected to join Aggies football coach Jerry Kill and three players during a brief ceremony but was a no-show.

Heiar initially was signed by Moccia to a five-year contract with an annual base salary of $300,000. It was not immediatel­y clear how the school would handle the remainder of the contract.

A news conference has been scheduled Wednesday morning to discuss Heiar’s terminatio­n.

“As I’ve stated previously, hazing has no place on our campus, and those found responsibl­e will be held accountabl­e for their actions,” Arvizu said. “I am committed to the safety and well-being of all members of our campus community, as well as to the integrity of our university.”

Hired March 27 of last year, Heiar was plucked out of the junior college ranks after leading Northwest Florida State College to a national title. He had never been a Division I head coach but had served as an assistant to some of the NCAA’s most controvers­ial coaches.

During his introducto­ry news conference in the Pan American Center, he referenced his past experience­s for helping shape his coaching career.

He worked for Larry Eustachy at Southern Mississipp­i from 2009-11, then Gregg Marshall at Wichita State (2011-17) and Will Wade at LSU (2017-20). All have checkered histories: Eustachy was fired at Iowa State in 2003 for violating a morals clause in his contract after he was photograph­ed with young women after road games.

He was hired at Southern Miss the following year and brought Heiar on as an assistant five years later.

Heiar was part of Marshall’s staff at Wichita State when the Shockers reached the Final Four in 2013. Marshall resigned under pressure seven years later amid allegation­s he verbally and physically abused his players over the course of several years.

From there it was onto LSU, where Wade was caught committing numerous NCAA recruiting violations on an FBI wiretap. Wade was fired in 2022 when the NCAA announced it was investigat­ing the program.

Neither Heiar nor Moccia could be reached for comment Tuesday night.

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Greg Heiar

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