Los Angeles Times

Minnesota coach assertivel­y backs players after boycott

- Wire reports

Minnesota football Coach Tracy Claeys doubled down Sunday on his support for players who boycotted practices and threatened to skip a bowl game if 10 teammates suspended after a sexual assault investigat­ion weren’t reinstated.

Speaking publicly for the first time since a standoff between 110 Golden Gophers football players and the administra­tion, Claeys said he understand­s the players’ frustratio­n with a Title IX investigat­ion they felt was unfair to teammates who were accused of assaulting a woman at an offcampus dorm in September.

“As kids, they have no problem being held to a higher standard than the university requires and should require,” Claeys said after the team’s practice. “This is all about the due process.”

Claeys also clarified a comment he made on WCCO radio Sunday morning when he said he was risking his job by supporting the players. The coach said he was just advising his players of possible ramificati­ons during a team meeting on Thursday, before the team made the announceme­nt to boycott.

“I was a sounding board for them and it was their decision,” Claeys said. “I made sure to make sure that they knew what the possible fallouts could be and we went through all those things. I was there to make sure that they were doing it for the right reasons and they knew what the consequenc­es could be.”

The boycott ended Saturday when the players said they would play in the Dec. 27 Holiday Bowl against Washington State in San Diego, even though officials declined to reinstate their suspended teammates. The players agreed after getting assurances that those accused would get a fair hearing next month.

After the team announced the boycott Thursday, Claeys publicly backed his players on Twitter: “Have never been more proud of our kids. I respect their rights [and] support their effort to make a better world!”

Claeys said Sunday he wished he had chosen his words more carefully in the tweet, but he did not regret sending it. “If you just show support for the players behind closed doors, you’re going to have a group of them that don’t believe you,” he said. “I needed to do that in a public way.”

University officials announced the suspension­s Tuesday after an internal investigat­ion determined the 10 players violated school conduct codes in an encounter involving a woman and several players at an offcampus apartment Sept. 2.

According to the police report, the woman told police that she had consensual sex with two males that night but did not consent to sexual contact with other men, including players. According to the university’s more detailed internal report, she told university investigat­ors she believed 10 to 20 men had sex with her that night, though she wasn’t sure because she had memory gaps from drinking. Prosecutor­s declined to press charges, saying there was insufficie­nt evidence.

Former Minnesota football coach Jerry Kill, the 2014 Big Ten coach of the year who retired after last season because of the effects of epilepsy, reportedly will be hired as offensive coordinato­r at Rutgers, replacing Drew Mehringer, who is joining Tom Herman’s staff at Texas.

Marcel Hirscher matched Alberto Tomba with a record-tying fourth giant slalom victory at Alta Badia, Italy. The overall World Cup leader from Austria won on the Gran Risa course for the fourth straight year. Italian great Tomba’s Alta Badia wins were in 1987, ’90, ’91 and ’94.

Lara Gut of Switzerlan­d ended a slump with a convincing win in a women’s super-G at Val D’Isere, France. The defending World Cup overall champion had failed to finish Friday’s Alpine combined and Saturday’s downhill, dropping points in her battle with current World Cup leader Mikaela Shiffrin of the U.S.

Real Madrid won FIFA’s Club World Cup with a 4-2 victory over Japanese side Kashima Antlers in Yokohama. Cristiano Ronaldo had a hat trick.

Ann Arbor Eddie, trained by Doug O’Neill and ridden by Mario Gutierrez, won the $100,000 King Glorious Stakes for 2-year-olds bred or sired in California by 11⁄4 lengths on closing day of Los Alamitos’ winter meet.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States