Albuquerque Journal

Davie feels no need now to answer online report

UNM coach says he will respond at appropriat­e time

- BY RICK WRIGHT JOURNAL STAFF WRITER

The truth, Bob Davie said on Tuesday, is always the best defense.

When the appropriat­e time comes, he said, the truth is what he’ll tell.

Davie, the University of New Mexico’s sixth-year head football coach, has been asked for comment several times about an online story that broke last week.

The story, citing unnamed sources, reported that Davie was being investigat­ed for mistreatme­nt of his players and the compromise of player drugtestin­g procedures.

The report by freelance journalist Daniel Libit was picked up by ESPN, NBCSports.com, Deadspin, Sporting News and many other outlets.

Davie consistent­ly has declined specific comment on the allegation­s and did so again at Tuesday’s UNM weekly fall sports luncheon.

Yet, while not directly confrontin­g what he called “the elephant in the room,” he positioned himself to do so.

“I don’t really feel the need, quite honestly, to stand up here and defend myself,” he said. “I don’t say that from

an arrogant standpoint. I don’t say that from the standpoint that I’m above being questioned.

“I say it from the standpoint that the truth is the truth, and I don’t think you have to defend the truth. And I say it from the standpoint of how consistent I have been in everything I’ve done, really, since I entered this profession now, 41 years in college football, but in particular how consistent I’ve been in the six years here at the University of New Mexico.”

Of the allegation­s themselves, he said, “I just can’t answer any questions right now. Now is not the right time to do it. Trust me, at the appropriat­e time you guys (the media) will hear every fact, from A to Z, from me.”

IT’S GERHART: Davie said junior Coltin Gerhart will start at quarterbac­k for the Lobos (1-2) Saturday at Tulsa (1-2), dismissing the possibilit­y that redshirt freshman Tevaka Tuioti might be available.

Senior Lamar Jordan, the No. 1 quarterbac­k, was ruled out earlier after taking a blow to the head during Thursday’s 28-14 loss at Boise State. Tuioti, the No. 2 QB, missed the Boise State game after taking a helmet-to-helmet shot during UNM’s 30-28 loss to New Mexico State on Sept. 9.

At Boise State, Gerhart, listed at 6 feet and 205 pounds, entered the game in relief of Jordan late in the second quarter. He finished with a team-best 49 yards rushing and was 7-of-13 passing for 67 yards with a touchdown and an intercepti­on.

Davie said he was comfortabl­e with Gerhart as the starter.

“I would say that he’s not as fast as Lamar, and I think you can see that,” he said. “He probably doesn’t throw it quite as good as Tevaka, but he really is a guy that can do both things pretty equally. It’s not like he runs it better than he throws it or throws it better than he runs it.

“We have no excuses . ... We have a guy that can run our offense, and I’m kind of anxious to watch him play.”

Gerhart, a graduate transfer from Arizona State, was a defensive back at ASU but never made a tackle or defended a pass. As a senior quarterbac­k in 2013 at Vista Murrieta High School in Murrieta, Calif., he completed 111 of 185 passes for 1,733 yards and 20 touchdowns. He rushed 140 times for 1,418 yards and 25 TDs.

THE BACKUP: Davie said either true freshman quarterbac­k Bryson Carroll or junior wide receiver Patrick Reed would be Gerhart’s backup at Tulsa.

Reed, listed at 6-2 and 188 pounds, played quarterbac­k at Silsbee (Texas) High School and came to UNM as a quarterbac­k. He asked to move to wide receiver in the spring of 2015.

As a senior at Silsbee in 2013, Reed completed 117 of 199 passes for 1,832 yards with 21 touchdowns. He rushed 168 times for 1,258 yards and 15 TDs.

Carroll, listed at 5-foot-6 and 183 pounds, has not played in UNM’s first three games. As a senior at Roosevelt High School in San Antonio, Texas, last season, he completed 48 of 98 passes for 700 yards and three touchdowns. He rushed for 1,003 yards on 132 carries with 12 touchdowns.

BIG NICK: Nick Iacovangel­o, a 6-foot-7, 342-pound redshirt sophomore offensive lineman from Rochester, N.Y., confirmed to the Journal on Tuesday that he has left the program in search of more playing time elsewhere. Player mistreatme­nt, he said, was not an issue.

“I have the utmost respect for coach Davie,” Iacovangel­o said via social media. “It just didn’t work out for me here, playing wise. I want something different.”

 ?? JIM THOMPSON/JOURNAL ?? Patrick Reed (5), a junior wide receiver, may serve as New Mexico’s backup quarterbac­k on Saturday at Tulsa as Lamar Jordan and Tevaka Tuioti heal from concussion­s.
JIM THOMPSON/JOURNAL Patrick Reed (5), a junior wide receiver, may serve as New Mexico’s backup quarterbac­k on Saturday at Tulsa as Lamar Jordan and Tevaka Tuioti heal from concussion­s.
 ?? JIM THOMPSON/JOURNAL ?? UNM football coach Bob Davie has declined specific comments on allegation­s that he mistreated players and compromise­d drug tests.
JIM THOMPSON/JOURNAL UNM football coach Bob Davie has declined specific comments on allegation­s that he mistreated players and compromise­d drug tests.

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