The Record (Troy, NY)

Louisville trustees fire AD

- By Gary B. Graves

Louisville trustees have fired athletic director Tom Jurich in the wake of its involvemen­t in a national federal investigat­ion of college basketball.

The Board of Trustees voted 10-3 on Wednesday to fire Jurich after 20 years as the school’s AD. Jurich, 61, had been placed on paid administra­tive Sept. 27 by interim university President Greg Postel. Louisville’s Athletic Associatio­n fired men’s basketball coach Rick Pitino on Monday.

Jurich shepherded Louisville’s 2014 entry into the Atlantic Coast Conference. He also was responsibl­e for facility upgrades and saw numerous sports thrive under coaches he hired.

Vince Tyra was named acting AD since Oct. 3, a move the Athletic Associatio­n approved on Monday before firing Pitino.

Louisville’s acknowledg­ment of being part of a federal probe into bribery of college recruits proved to be Jurich’s undoing. Postel’s Sept. 27 disciplina­ry letter to the AD called allegation­s in the complaint “disturbing and unpreceden­ted.” His letter also called “unacceptab­le” the level of misconduct, alleged criminal activity and the negative attention it has brought to Louisville.

Postel also criticized Jurich for failing to update or consult the athletic board about his negotiatio­n of the department’s sponsorshi­p extension with Adidas.

Jurich’s lawyer, Alison M. Stemler, disputed Postel’s allegation­s in a letter that also questioned whether school’s disciplina­ry action might violate a contract clause.

Several Jurich supporters carrying signs urging trustees to retain the AD gathered outside the Grawemeyer administra­tion building and briefly inside the meeting room. Jurich’s attorney, Alison M. Stemler, and members of Jurich’s legal team joined the meeting shortly after it began.

Trustees ultimately followed the same path as the ULAA, deciding to part ways with Jurich and move forward.

Jurich departs as constructi­on continues on a $63 million expansion of the football stadium due for completion by next season. He had a long record of accomplish­ments that helped Louisville build one of the nation’s top athletic programs.

Jurich also remained loyal to coaches he hired, to a fault in some cases.

Jurich hired Pitino as coach in 2001 and celebrated Louisville’s third NCCA men’s basketball championsh­ip trophy 12 years later in perhaps the school’s most successful year in athletics.

The Cardinals’ women’s basketball team reached the NCAA championsh­ip game that same season and has remained a perennial NCAA Tournament contender. Both programs play in a 22,000seat downtown arena that opened in 2010.

Lamar Jackson became Louisville’s first Heisman Trophy winner last year when the Cardinals flirted with a berth in the college football playoff. The Cardinals in 1998 began playing in Papa John’s Cardinal Stadium, which is undergoing its second expansion from its original 42,000-seat capacity.

The baseball team is coming off its third College World Series berth in five years and is also preparing to expand its stadium.

Jurich was scrutinize­d for his decision to rehire football coach Bobby Petrino in January 2014, less than two years after Arkansas fired Petrino for misleading school officials about a motorcycle accident in which his passenger was later revealed to be his mistress.

Jurich’s support of Pitino through a series of embarrassi­ng transgress­ions in recent years drew the most criticism.

That ultimately contribute­d to his exit.

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