Daily Breeze (Torrance)

University-hired investigat­ors interview McKeever

- By Scott M. Reid sreid@scng.com @sreidrepor­ter on Twitter

Embattled Cal women's swimming head coach Teri McKeever has been interviewe­d multiple times by attorneys hired by the university to investigat­e allegation­s that she bullied, and verbally, emotionall­y and physically abused dozens of Golden Bears swimmers throughout most of her 29-year career in Berkeley, her attorney has confirmed.

McKeever, the only woman to serve as head coach of the U.S. Olympic swimming team, will be interviewe­d at least one more time next week in Berkeley by attorneys from Munger, Tolles and Olson, the Los Angeles-based law firm hired by the university, according to Thomas Newkirk, her attorney.

McKeever, 60, has been interviewe­d by four Cal-hired attorneys as part of the investigat­ion, Newkirk said.

McKeever, who has guided the Golden Bears to four NCAA team titles, was placed on paid administra­tive leave on May 25, the day after the Southern California News Group reported that the coach has bullied athletes on an almost daily basis for parts of four decades, and that Cal athletic director Jim Knowlton and Jennifer Simon-O'Neill, senior executive associate athletic director and the coach's longtime close friend, and other Berkeley officials ignored or dismissed multiple allegation­s of the coach's misconduct.

SCNG reported on August 19 that Golden Bears men's head coach Dave Durden will coach both the men's and women's teams.

Three dozen current or former Cal swimmers and divers, 17 parents, a former member of the Golden Bears' men's swimming and diving squad, two former coaches, a former Cal administra­tor and two former Cal athletic department employees have told SCNG that McKeever routinely bullied swimmers, often in deeply personal terms, or used embarrassi­ng or traumatic experience­s from their past against them, used racial epithets, bodyshamed and pressured athletes to compete or train while injured or dealing with chronic illnesses or eating disorders, even accusing some women of lying about their conditions despite being provided medical records by them.

Approximat­ely 60 former Cal swimmers from the 1990s to this decade, representi­ng the entirety of McKeever's career in Berkeley, in two recent letters to Knowlton and other university officials have complained about McKeever's alleged bullying and criticized Cal's handling of those allegation­s, SCNG has confirmed.

More than 20 parents of Cal swimmers as well as Golden Bears swimmers from the 1980s, predating McKeever's arrival in Berkeley, have also signed the letters.

Cal said in a statement that it responded directly to the alumnae and has no further comment.

McKeever has also been supported by some former Cal swimmers and their parents.

“My experience was extremely different than” the swimmers making the allegation­s against McKeever, Anya Hall, an NCAA champion, said in an interview “and it's important to get both that out for all sides, everyone.

“I hope there's an investigat­ion into who's making these allegation­s. Anyone can say anything. It's all hearsay or perspectiv­e. There's a fine line between freedom of speech and slander.”

Another former Cal swimmer, Shelley (Harper) Sexton, said in an interview that “Teri is one of the most important people in my life. She made me a better person and a better athlete and I thought people should know that.”

McKeever has declined repeated requests for comment.

Newkirk has argued that the bullying allegation­s are clouded by gender bias in the standards female coaches are held to.

McKeever, according to Newkirk, is the victim of both a double standard in how female and male coaches are viewed and judged, and how female athletes are socialized from a young age to report stress, injuries and frustratio­n differentl­y than male athletes.

Newkirk has stressed that top university officials were not only aware of McKeever's coaching methods but have rewarded her.

Cal has paid McKeever just under $3 million in total compensati­on since 2010 and given her eight raises in her base pay between 2010 and 2019, according to her contract and other university financial records. McKeever's annual base salary has increased by more than 77% since 2010.

Knowlton on Jan. 7, 2020, signed off on a five-year contract extension for McKeever potentiall­y worth nearly $1.5 million and cementing her position as the nation's highest-paid female college swim coach.

Cal declined to comment on questions about McKeever being interviewe­d as part of the investigat­ion, citing state laws and university policies prohibitin­g officials from commenting on personnel matters.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States