USA TODAY International Edition

Kansas AD leaves in fallout

- Dan Wolken, Nancy Armour, Kenny Jacoby and Jessica Luther

The University of Kansas announced the departure of athletics director Jeff Long on Wednesday, saying it was necessary for the school to move in “a different direction.”

The move comes less than 48 hours after the school parted ways with football coach Les Miles in the wake of investigat­ive reports detailing sexual misconduct allegation­s against him while he was at LSU.

“It is clear that my continued service as the Director of Athletics would only serve as a distractio­n to the nearly 500 incredible young men and women in our athletics department, as well as to the outstandin­g coaches and staff who support them,” Long said in a statement released by Kansas. “Though this is extremely difficult for me, this is what is best for KU, for me and for my family, and I am at peace with this decision.”

Long had a five- year contract that paid him $ 1.5 million annually and was set to run through July 31, 2023.

“I respect his selfless decision to step down so that we can move Kansas Athletics in a different direction,” Kansas chancellor Douglas A. Girod said.

Long had hired Miles shortly after arriving at Kansas in 2018, leaning on a long personal relationsh­ip they had going back to the 1980s when they both worked at Michigan.

But after LSU released two reports last week detailing the 2013 investigat­ion of Miles, the amount of due diligence Long had done on Miles was called into question.

LSU “chronicled significant alleged misconduct” by Miles from 2009 on, according to a report released Friday by Husch Blackwell, an outside law firm the school hired to review its handling of sexual misconduct cases. That included Miles’ attempts to sexualize the staff of students working for the LSU football team in 2012. A report on the Taylor Porter investigat­ion in 2013, released last Thursday, found Miles had been issued a letter of reprimand after investigat­ors determined his behavior was inappropri­ate. Husch Blackwell found that then- AD Joe Alleva was so concerned after the Taylor Porter investigat­ion that he urged LSU to fire Miles in 2013. Instead, Miles remained at LSU until 2016, when he was fired after a 2- 2 start.

 ??  ?? Long
Long

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States