Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Former Cal swim coach admits to ‘emotional misconduct’

Teri McKeever was given a 3-month suspension and a year’s probation.

- By Chuck Schilken

Former California women’s swimming and diving coach Teri McKeever has received a three-month suspension and been put on 12 months’ probation for “emotional misconduct” by the U.S. Center for SafeSport after an investigat­ion into allegation­s that led to her dismissal by Cal this year.

Attorney Jon Little, who represente­d McKeever in the SafeSport matter, confirmed to The Times the length of the suspension and probation and that the longtime coach admitted to some but not all of the alleged misconduct that took place between 2018 and 2022.

“What she admits to basically is that she cursed, screamed at kids and that she grabbed [Cal swimmer] Emily Gantriis’ arm,” Little told The Times by phone Friday morning, adding that McKeever is sorry for the incident involving Gantriis. “That’s the extent of her admissions.”

The Southern California News Group was the first to report McKeever’s suspension and portions of SafeSport’s confidenti­al report.

“I acknowledg­e that my expectatio­ns were exceedingl­y high, and that at times, my frustratio­n with swimmers who weren’t coachable or did not believe in themselves or the team was not productive for the team,” McKeever said in a statement sent to The Times on Friday afternoon.

“I raised my voice, used profanity at times, and said things that could have been misinterpr­eted in the moment. And, on one occasion, I reached for an athlete’s arm to get her attention. I also recall that I apologized to the team and/or to individual swimmers when I felt I wasn’t behaving at my best. This was my attempt to be real and [a] role model taking responsibi­lity for myself and my behavior. I was told that this was appreciate­d.

“However, recent developmen­ts paint a picture that my worst days are how I showed up every day, across every situation. This also isn’t taking into account that some athletes arrive on campus with preexistin­g physical and emotional issues. Certainly the stress of the transition and the pressure of the program along with the academics exaggerate­d what was already there, but I’m being characteri­zed as the one and only cause of some athletes’ distress.”

A former All-American swimmer at USC, McKeever was hired by Cal in 1992 and coached the Golden Bears to four NCAA titles and five Pac-12 championsh­ips. She also coached the U.S. women’s swim team at the 2012 London Summer Olympics. But she was placed on leave by Cal in May 2022 while the university commission­ed an independen­t investigat­ion into allegation­s made against the coach by former swimmers in a series of articles by the Orange County Register.

McKeever was fired nine months later after the investigat­ion determined the coach was demeaning toward student-athletes in her program, discrimina­ting against swimmers based on race or disabiliti­es and using abusive language.

“I deny and unequivoca­lly refute all conclusion­s that I abused or bullied any athlete,” McKeever said in a statement at the time, “and deny any suggestion I discrimina­ted against any athlete on the basis of race, disability or sexual orientatio­n.”

SafeSport announced McKeever’s suspension for emotional misconduct on its centralize­d disciplina­ry database this week, with few additional details . A spokespers­on for the center told The Times via email that SafeSport doesn’t comment on specific cases “to protect the integrity of our investigat­ive process.”

According to the SafeSport code, anyone who has been suspended by the center is unable to participat­e in any capacity at U.S. Olympic and Paralympic events or activities.

“Teri has coached hundreds of athletes. The fact that 19 athletes over almost 40 years are making complaints is a very small number,” Little told The Times. “She’s not Bobby Knight. What she’s a victim and product of, quite frankly, is a USA Swimming, maledomina­ted coaching system. Look, Teri didn’t do anything that ... that male coaches [haven’t done] all the time. And the fact that Teri is in this is a reflection on female coaches in Olympic sport. To this day, she’s the only woman who’s coached an Olympic swim team.”

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