The Chronicle Herald (Metro)

Argonauts QB gets minimum nine-game ban

- PAUL FRIESEN

After initially dragging its feet on the Chad Kelly sexual harassment accusation­s, the CFL on Tuesday came down hard on the Toronto Argonauts star quarterbac­k.

Commission­er Randy Ambrosie has suspended Kelly for at least half the 2024 season – and it could be longer if Kelly doesn’t satisfacto­rily complete mandatory counsellin­g and assessment­s by an independen­t expert.

That removes the reign-* ing Most Outstandin­g Player Award winner from the league’s top regular-season team last year.

Ambrosie issued a statement saying that investigat­ion found Kelly “unequivoca­lly violated” the league’s genderbase­d violence policy.

“Players are the ambassador­s of our great game,” Ambrosie said in the statement. “They are expected to be leaders in the locker room and role models in the community. Mr. Kelly’s suspension is the direct result of his behaviour. The addition of mandatory counsellin­g focuses on his need for selfreflec­tion and understand­ing of his actions.

“He must take full advantage of this opportunit­y for personal betterment in order to return to the CFL.”

Ambrosie says he’ll also talk to Toronto management about its handling of the issue.

Back in February, a former strength coach for the Argonauts filed a lawsuit accusing Kelly of repeated sexual harassment.

The coach says team management didn’t take her complaint seriously and she was let go in January for reporting it.

The league’s policy on violence against women has been in place for nearly a decade, and calls for action after any report of violence involving an employee.

In the lawsuit, the woman says she reported the harassment to Argos management, only to be told she’d needlessly opened “a can of worms.”

The former coach alleges Kelly repeatedly made advances over the last two seasons, eventually becoming aggressive and yelling derogatory things at her in front of others, even cursing her name in the quarterbac­k meeting room.

A full week after the lawsuit became public, Ambrosie issued a statement saying the league had opened its own investigat­ion.

The slow initial response drew criticism last month from former B.C. Lions star quarterbac­k Nathan Rourke, pursuing a job in the NFL.

Some league employees reportedly walked away from their jobs after their concerns weren’t taken seriously.

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