USA TODAY International Edition

Report: CSU turned a blind eye

Racism, abuse detailed in football program

- Miles Blumhardt

FORT COLLINS, Colo. – More than 20 current and former Colorado State football players and athletic department staff members say they have witnessed recurring instances of racial insensitiv­ity and abusive behavior within the department.

In dozens of independen­tly gathered and corroborat­ed interviews with Coloradoan reporters, players and staff within the program claim a pattern of concerning behavior has spanned the tenure of former head coach Mike Bobo and current coach Steve Addazio. They say athletic director Joe Parker and other athletic administra­tors have turned a blind eye to the issues.

Those who spoke to the Coloradoan include a Colorado State University Athletic Hall of Fame member and former coach, a current mental health counselor at the university and numerous players and staff with firsthand knowledge of the football program’s culture, which some have called “toxic.”

Some spoke to the Coloradoan, which is part of the USA TODAY Network, on the condition of anonymity out of fear of retaliatio­n from others within the program.

On Friday, the university halted all football operations and expanded the scope of its investigat­ion into the athletic department’s handling of COVID- 19 protocols to include examinatio­n of these concerns.

“Today, we learned of some extremely troubling allegation­s of racism and verbal abuse from CSU’s athletic ad

ministrati­on generally and in the football program specifically,” Parker said in a written statement.

“I have consulted with President ( Joyce) McConnell about these new allegation­s, which obviously deeply concern her as well. Effective immediatel­y, and for the best interests of our studentath­letes, I am pausing all football- related activities indefinitely.”

In an interview Saturday, McConnell said she “put no limits on what the investigat­ors are looking for. I have confidence if these incidents happened that we will know about them after the investigat­ion is complete.”

The Coloradoan first reported allegation­s Tuesday that football coaches told players not to report COVID- 19 symptoms and threatened players with reduced playing time if they quarantine­d. McConnell quickly hired an outside law firm to investigat­e those claims.

Prior to CSU suspending football operations Friday, the Coloradoan sought interviews with the school’s leadership regarding the newspaper’s months- long investigat­ion of the allegation­s of racial insensitiv­ity and abuse. Also Friday, ESPN reported corroborat­ing allegation­s in its story about CSU’s suspension of football activities.

Parker told the Coloradoan on Saturday that “he had never heard of the specific allegation­s” presented to him in the interview but that they will be forwarded to investigat­ors.

“These are very concerning, and obviously we are going to ask the outside investigat­ive team to understand each and every one of these,” he said. “And we will take appropriat­e action when we finish our investigat­ion.”

‘ Hidden in plain sight’

The Coloradoan’s investigat­ion revealed allegation­s of racial insensitiv­ity, harassment and verbal abuse that have dogged Parker’s five- year tenure leading CSU’s athletic department, spanning his handling of former men’s basketball coach Larry Eustachy’s documented abuse through the recent investigat­ion of Addazio’s football program.

“In these types of closed systems where abuse is taking place, it’s hidden in plain sight; everybody knows the truth but they are afraid to address it because of the fear of losing their jobs or scholarshi­ps or being blackballe­d,” said Jimmy Stewart, a CSU mental health counselor who admitted he feared for his job after speaking out. “Because the people you are reporting the truth to are the very people whose job it is to polish the brand. They are trying to manage the abuse, not stop it.”

Anthoney Hill is a CSU Athletic Hall of Fame member, a Black former quarterbac­k under legendary coach Sonny Lubick and an assistant coach for the Rams from 2008- 11. He then served as the football program’s director of player developmen­t and community/ alumni relations from 2015 until he was terminated earlier this year.

Despite his longtime affiliation with CSU, Hill said Parker didn’t see him as a “good fit” because he voiced concerns about the racial insensitiv­ity and abuse. Hill said he never met with Addazio before his terminatio­n.

Parker provided emails to the Coloradoan showing Hill was offered opportunit­ies with the department outside of football but said Hill didn’t respond.

In an email sent to Parker in February, Hill expressed his concern about the athletic department. It read in part:

“What I have seen from you is a person of privilege who either intentiona­lly or unintentio­nally isn’t aware of insensitiv­ities of young Black men being berated under the guise of coaching. You are allowing that toxic culture to be cultivated and to persist by not addressing the issues. The bottom line, the athletes don’t trust you, Joe.”

Those interviewe­d by the Coloradoan said the erosion of that credibilit­y started at the beginning of Parker’s tenure when he continued to employ Eustachy for four years after the coach was the subject of a scathing internal report regarding player abuse in 2014.

They said that loss of trust continued when Parker failed to address player and staff complaints involving Bobo, whom they accused of making racially insensitiv­e comments and verbally harassing assistant coaches, players and staff during his five years. Parker negotiated a $ 1.825 million buyout of Bobo, who went 28- 35, after the 2019 season.

And they said a toxic culture was perpetuate­d when Parker hired Addazio in December, less than a month after Addazio was fired at Boston College.

Others within the program have strongly denied any implicatio­n of impropriet­y within CSU football. Multiple members of the football team and coaching staff came out in support of Addazio on Saturday in a statement shared on Twitter. It read in part, “the last number of days has created an unfair and unstable environmen­t within our football team.”

The statement denies allegation­s of racism and verbal abuse by current staff.

“The seniors and our football team unequivoca­lly support our Coach and his staff. They have acted profession­ally, respectful­ly and are committed to fostering an inclusive and supportive football program,” the statement read.

However, several members of the team contacted by the Coloradoan on Saturday said they did not support the statement.

Football above all else

A member of CSU’s football staff said Addazio has downplayed the COVID- 19 health threat and Black Lives Matter movement, which have dominated public discussion in recent months, calling both a “distractio­n from football” to be managed.

Adazzio declined the Coloradoan’s interview request Saturday but agreed to review emailed questions about the allegation­s. He later declined to answer the questions. He released a statement Tuesday after allegation­s from players that coaches were not following COVID- 19 protocols.

“The health and welfare of our student- athletes on the Colorado State football team is our top priority, and I fully support President McConnell’s investigat­ion into concerns about whether these protocols were properly followed by everyone involved with our program,” Addazio said in a statement released by the university.

“We want every student- athlete to have confidence that we are taking every possible measure to ensure their safety, and we will continue working with the training staff, the athletic department and the University to evaluate and implement any additional steps necessary to live up to our high standards.”

Stewart, who was hired at CSU six years ago by former AD Jack Graham to help student- athletes address their mental well- being, said he decided to go public with his concerns after an encounter with Addazio in June.

During that encounter, Stewart said he witnessed humiliatio­n, denigratio­n and intimidati­on of a Black player over academic issues. Stewart said the incident felt eerily similar to Minneapoli­s police officers’ treatment of George Floyd before a white officer knelt on the back of Floyd’s neck until he died.

“After watching George Floyd being humiliated before he died, it triggered in me the times I saw or heard about certain coaches humiliate student- athletes and the fact that not going public made me complicit and compromise­d my integrity,” said the 65- year- old Stewart, who is white. “I also became conscious that racism is about being a bully. In that encounter with the Black student- athlete, Coach Addazio had this attitude that he’s bigger and more powerful than the student- athlete. The student was enslaved.”

Stewart said after Addazio’s berating of the student- athlete that, in a subsequent call from Addazio to Stewart, the situation worsened. During the conversati­on, Stewart said he felt Addazio’s demeanor was “domineerin­g, threatenin­g and intimidati­ng ( in) manner, as if he owned me.”

A football staff member said Addazio later “bragged” to coaches at a meeting about berating the player, who the staffer described as a sensitive kid who was sobbing after the encounter. The staff member said Addazio used expletives when describing the incident to others.

When asked about the incident Saturday, Parker said, “If that proves to be true, that is not acceptable.”

Stewart said despite such incidents being known within the department, Parker claims plausible deniabilit­y, walling himself off from witnessing instances of racial insensitiv­ity, harassment and humiliatio­n.

“When these administra­tors allow or ignore student- athletes being harmed, it makes them just as culpable as if they had actually participat­ed,” Stewart said. “What became real for me was the fact that much of what gets hidden and accepted as coaching really is systemic bullying and it’s happening here at CSU, and Joe Parker isn’t going to stop it because he has a vested interest in painting a pretty picture.”

Parker denied that, saying he has a cultural expectatio­n of “never passing a problem.”

Concern grows for Black athletes

Stewart said it became more clear to him after experienci­ng the abusive nature of how Eustachy, Bobo and Addazio run their programs that the athletic department’s culture is hurting studentath­letes and staff, who are too afraid to speak up for fear of retaliatio­n.

Hill echoed those concerns in a February email to Parker, which was copied to McConnell, Hughes and Albert Bimper, senior associate athletic director for diversity and inclusion.

“Bringing in a new head football coach who tells the graduate assistants within days of knowing them that he ‘ doesn’t give a ( expletive) about their feelings’ is contradict­ory to being ‘ committed to the holistic developmen­t of student- athletes … and of crafting a culture where students thrive.’ As a dedicated former student- athlete and confidant/ mentor to the current players, I know that’s not the type of representa­tive that we want in CSU athletics. It doesn’t fit our mission statement: To educate, engage, and excel.”

Many of those interviewe­d said they wouldn’t call Bobo or Addazio racist but said they are racially insensitiv­e, insulting and ignorant.

Bobo and Jancek called Black football players “boy,” a derogatory term aimed at Black people. One assistant coach under Bobo said Jancek quit using the term after being told it was insensitiv­e.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States