The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Fired coach feels Clark Atlanta scapegoate­d him

Riley fired after AJC wrote about him, issues at the school.

- By Eric Stirgus estirgus@ajc.com

A tennis coach fired by Clark Atlanta University last month after a sexual harassment investigat­ion prompted by a student complaint believes he is being scapegoate­d by the university to divert attention from other complaints that its athletics department has treated some women unfairly.

CAU dismissed Will Riley July 13, the day The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on published a report about the complaint against him and the larger concerns about the department. A 19-yearold female player alleged he sent her unwanted sexually suggestive messages, such as not to eat too much to maintain her figure, and that he followed her on social media.

In interviews with the AJC, Riley said the student and university officials misconstru­ed the intent of the text message exchanges.

“That was never my intention,” Riley said. “I would never make it to be sexual.”

Riley said he followed all his players on social media to monitor whether they posted anything inappropri­ate, so he could discuss the situation if they did. Riley said he didn’t use sound judgment by exchanging messages with the student at night. The text messages were exchanged after 11 p.m.

“That was inappropri­ate,” he said.

CAU official Ramona Roman wrote in a terminatio­n letter that Riley “behaved in a manner that is inappropri­ate in the Scholar Athlete/Coach relationsh­ip.”

Riley does not believe his actions constitute­d sexual harassment. He said he wanted to explain his actions.

“I feel like I was wrongfully accused of certain things. I feel like I was pulled into certain things going on in the (athletics) department,” he said.

The university declined comment.

The university has faced criticism in recent months that its athletics department is hostile to women.

Three female coaches filed a complaint June 27, according to a letter obtained by the AJC, with the university’s human resources department. They allege they’ve been “subjected to harsh and unwanted criticism, physical and psychologi­cal intimidati­on tactics as well as gender and equity issues.” The complaints include alleged tantrums by Athletics Director J. Lin Dawson, derogatory remarks about women, and scholarshi­p cuts to some women’s sports programs. About 75 percent of the university’s students are women.

Division I athletic department­s spend on average about twice as much on their men’s programs as their women’s programs, though schools without football spend nearly the same on each (about $5 million), according to a 2017 report by the NCAA. Athletics Director Dawson said he’s tried to improve the ratio at Clark Atlanta, which was 2-to-1 in favor of men’s athletics when he was hired. Clark Atlanta is a Division II athletics program.

The student said she complained because Riley stopped speaking to her and didn’t respond to messages from her family. Riley disputed that.

The coach believes the student complained because she didn’t get to play in a championsh­ip tournament in mid-April. The student denied that.

“My intentions were not to get him fired nor was that my request. The other coaches and trainer in the department felt like the situation was not handled correctly ... I am sorry that this has happened to him,” she said.

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