šŸˆ Rich Rodriguez fired at Arizona.

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Rich Rodriguez fired after president, AD question 'climate and direction' of Wildcats football program

Rich Rodriguez fired after president, AD question 'climate and direction' of Wildcats football program

  • Arizona Daily Star
  • Jan 2, 2018 Updated 5 min ago
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Rich Rodriguez has been fired as Arizona's head football coach after a $7.5 million notice of claim was filed with the state’s attorney general’s office alleging that the UA's football coach ran a hostile workplace and sexually harassed a former employee.
In a letter sent to the campus at 8:30 p.m. Tuesday, university president Robert C. Robbins and athletic director Dave Heeke said they will honor the separation terms of his contract.
"While this is a difficult decision, it is the right decision," they wrote. "And it is a decision that lives up to the core values of the University of Arizona."
Rodriguez, 54, just finished his sixth season as the Wildcats’ coach following stops at Michigan and West Virginia. This year’s team went 7-6, losing four of its final five games following a surprisingly hot start. Purdue beat the UA in the Dec. 27 Foster Farms Bowl.
The notice of claim was filed Thursday by a former employee. A notice of claim is an advance notice of a lawsuit against a public body. Most notices of claim are first sent to the Arizona Board of Regents or the University of Arizona itself. This claim went directly to the attorney general's office.
The notice was filed after the University’s Office of Institutional Equity retained outside counsel to investigate allegations of sexual harassment from a former employee. The law firm of Cohen Dowd Quigley began investigating the coach in October, the university said. The investigation concluded last week, the university said, and while the counsel did not find enough to terminate Rodriguez, the university became concerned with the "climate and the direction" of the football program.
Portions of the claim obtained by the Star Tuesday paints a culture in which secrecy was valued above all else.
The notice of claim alleges, among other things, that Rodriguez and his closest aides followed a "hideaway book" that detailed such sayings as "Title IX doesn't exist in our office." Those who had the most interaction with Rodriguez — the former employee and two assistant coaches — referred to themselves as the "Triangle of Secrecy," according to the claim. The three were charged with lying to Rodriguez's wife on his behalf, according to the claim, and were ordered to protect the coach's reputation above all else.
The former employee said in the claim that she "had to walk on eggshells at work, because of (Rodriguez's) volatility and sheer power over the department." Rodriguez would call her at all hours of the night, she said in the claim, to change travel plans or deal with Rodriguez's personal emergencies.
Another troubling issue for the UA
The notice of claim is the latest legal issue facing the UA. Former assistant track and field coach Craig Carter is facing multiple felony charges for threatening a former athlete with whom he was involved in a sexual relationship. The case has been featured on both ESPN’s ā€œOutside the Linesā€ and ABC’s ā€œ20/20.ā€
The UA is being sued in federal court by one of three victims of former running back Orlando Bradford. The victim says the university knew Bradford was a danger to women and failed to protect her. Bradford was recently sentenced to five years in prison after pleading guilty to two felony counts of aggravated assault.
And in August, Rodriguez was sued in civil court by Creative Artist Agencies (CAA). The agency represented the coach until the fall of 2015, and claims Rodriguez owes $230,050 in past-due fees.
Rodriguez’s contract was set to run through May 31, 2020. His buyout as of Dec. 1 was $6,487,500, according to USA Today’s annual survey of NCAA football coaches’ salaries. Because he was let go before March 15, Rodriguez will miss out on approximately $3.2 million from a master-limited-partnership provision in his contract. That pay came via publicly traded units on the so-called ā€œLongevity Fund.ā€ Rodriguez was set to receive 25 percent of the value on March 15. If he had been terminated any time after then, he would have been entitled to the full value of the fund.
A fast start, ugly finish
Rodriguez's hiring on Nov. 23, 2011 was seen as a coup for the UA and newly hired athletic director Greg Byrne.
Arizona won the Pac-12 South Division title and finished 10-4 in 2014, then started trending downward.
The Wildcats finished 7-6 the following season, most of which was played without star linebacker Scooby Wright. Sensing that recruiting was lagging and the defense wasn’t performing up to expectations, Rodriguez turned over Arizona’s defensive staff. He hired Boise State’s Marcel Yates as defensive coordinator and promoted Jahmile Addae and Vince Amey from analysts to full-time assistant coaches.
The injury issues worsened in 2016, when Arizona lost its top two quarterbacks and running backs at various points. After starting 2-1, Arizona lost eight in a row. Only a season-ending victory over rival Arizona State put a bandage on an otherwise painful season.
The Wildcats entered 2017 with the lowest of expectations outside the Lowell-Stevens Football Facility, picked to finish last by the media in the Pac-12 South. An uneven 2-2 start only served to validate that prediction.
But in Game 5, sophomore quarterback Khalil Tate came off the bench and set a Football Bowl Subdivision record for quarterbacks with 327 rushing yards in a 45-42 win at Colorado. Tate would lead Arizona to four straight victories, winning an unprecedented four consecutive Pac-12 Offensive Player of the Week awards.
The Wildcats secured bowl eligibility with a 58-37 win over Washington State on Oct. 28. They couldn’t follow up their perfect October, however, losing three of four games in November. Arizona finished the season with a 38-35 loss to Purdue in the Dec. 27 Foster Farms Bowl.
The emergence of Tate and several freshmen on defense, including Pac-12 Defensive Freshman of the Year Colin Schooler, gave hope for bigger and better things to come in 2018. It also offered proof that the changes Rodriguez had made to the defensive staff were working, even if the immediate on-field results didn’t show it.
Heeke wrote Tuesday night that Arizona's next head coach will "will build a solid foundation for our program and create an identity of Arizona football that the University, Tucson and Southern Arizona communities can be proud of. We’re excited about the future of our football program and we look forward to introducing our new head coach at the completion of the search process.ā€
 
Portions of the claim obtained by the Star Tuesday paints a culture in which secrecy was valued above all else.
The notice of claim alleges, among other things, that Rodriguez and his closest aides followed a "hideaway book" that detailed such sayings as "Title IX doesn't exist in our office." Those who had the most interaction with Rodriguez — the former employee and two assistant coaches — referred to themselves as the "Triangle of Secrecy," according to the claim. The three were charged with lying to Rodriguez's wife on his behalf, according to the claim, and were ordered to protect the coach's reputation above all else.
The former employee said in the claim that she "had to walk on eggshells at work, because of (Rodriguez's) volatility and sheer power over the department." Rodriguez would call her at all hours of the night, she said in the claim, to change travel plans or deal with Rodriguez's personal emergencies.
Wait. There's a hidden book, only shared by three people around the football offices, and this claim is citing a book that's...hidden?

Something sure doesn't ring right here.
 
More details via Ex-Arizona Wildcats coach Rich Rodriguez accused by former employee of sexual harassment



Ex-Arizona Wildcats coach Rich Rodriguez accused by former employee of sexual harassment
Craig Harris andAnne Ryman, The Republic | azcentral.comPublished 1:06 a.m. MT Jan. 3, 2018 | Updated 9:38 a.m. MT Jan. 3, 2018

Five days before University of Arizona football coach Rich Rodriguez was abruptly fired, his former administrative assistant filed a multimillion-dollar claim accusing him of sexually harassing her and creating a hostile work environment.

The allegations included forcing her to keep secrets about Rodriguez's extramarital affair and inappropriate behavior toward her.

The notice of claim, filed with the state Attorney General's Office by an attorney representing Melissa Wilhelmsen and her husband, Jason, seeks $7.5 million in damages from Rodriguez and his wife.

The claim was filed Dec. 28, the day after Arizona played its last game of the year, and the day the university said that an investigation into harassment allegations against Rodriguez had been completed.

The nine-page claim by the Wilhelmsens is a precursor to a lawsuit. The Arizona Republic obtained a copy of the document Tuesday night.

The claim alleges that Melissa Wilhelmsen, who worked for Rodriguez from late 2011 to August 2017, felt constant pressure to hide Rodriguez's extramarital affair from his wife. She said she, along with two others on the football staff, referred to themselves as the ā€œTriangle of Secrecy.ā€


She described several occasions in which Rodriguez’s actions and words made her particularly uncomfortable, including walking past her shirtless in his underwear, trying to kiss her and asking her to come to his house alone to assist him with his dog.

The university, in a letter about his firing signed by President Robert C. Robbins and Athletic Director Dave Heeke, said that it had hired the Phoenix law firm of Cohen Dowd Quigley to ā€œconduct a comprehensive investigationā€ in October after a former employee in the athletics department alleged that Rodriguez harassed her on multiple occasions.

The investigation finished Dec. 28 and found that the original harassment allegations against ā€œcould not be substantiated based on the evidence and witnesses available. However, Arizona Athletics did become aware of information, both before and during the investigation, which caused it to be concerned with the direction and climate of the football program,ā€ the letter said.

The university said the former employee declined multiple requests to participate in the investigation into her allegations and was ā€œunwilling to turn over communications that she alleged provided support for her allegations.ā€

The university said its decision to fire Rodriguez was based on several factors, including the ā€œdirection and climate of our football program.ā€

Rodriguez released a statement on Twitter Tuesday night, calling the harassment claims "baseless and false."



He said that he was "deeply disappointed to learn by email this evening that the University of Arizona is buying out my contract."

He admitted to having a consensual extramarital affair with a woman not affiliated with the university, and added he was working to regain the trust of his wife and children.

The Wilhelmsens' claim alleges that Rodriguez was a demanding boss, frequently calling "at all hours of the night just to change travel plans or make some other requests which were only emergencies to him."

Rodriguez had Wilhelmsen get a sideline pass for his girlfriend for a November 2015 game against USC. His wife also was on the sideline during that game, and Wilhelmsen had to stand between the two women to avoid a confrontation, the claim says.

Wilhelmsen said Rodriguez's wife in May 2016 asked her to lunch, "which became a 3-hour interrogation of sorts to find out what Melissa knew about Rodriguez's flirting and promiscuity."

Rodriguez's personal behavior toward Wilhelmsen led her first to seek, unsuccessfully, a job in another university position and later to resign her job as the coach's assistant, the claim says. Among the allegations:

  • The coach called her into his office in January 2017 when he began discussing his marital problems and then grabbed her, ā€œembraced her, touched the side of her breast, and tried to kiss her.ā€ She managed to pull away. Two weeks later, he called her back to his office and said he wanted to "take care of her." Rodriguez handed her $300 in cash, but she refused the money.
  • In February 2017, he called her into his office, and while talking she saw him "grasping his penis beneath his basketball shorts."
  • Rodriguez asked Wilhelmsen to get him underwear from the equipment area. After she found a male staff member to bring them to him, Rodriguez told her how "his preferred style of underwear ā€˜visually enhanced’ his genitalia when worn."
  • Rodriguez timed his workouts so would walk back to his office shirtless in front of Wilhelmsen.
  • A coaching assistant made a comment that when Wilhelmsen raised money for the football program she did it by rubbing her breasts on donors. Rodriguez laughed at the comment.
  • Rodriguez asked Wilhelmsen to come to his home alone to help him with his dog. Wilhelmsen texted the coach that she and her husband could come, but she would not come alone. ā€œYou know I love you,ā€ Rodriguez texted back, with a kissing-face emoji.
  • On Wilhelmsen’s last day of work on Aug. 11, 2017, Rodriguez’s wife cornered her in the office and demanded to know the truth about her husband’s affair. Wilhelmsen said she apologized for not informing his wife sooner.
Wilhelmsen also expressed concern about a so-called ā€œHideaway Bookā€ that was written by Rodriguez and given annually to coaches and football operations staff. The goal was to "establish secrecy within Rodriguez’s inner circle and establish complete control of the group."

The claim said one outgrowth of the Hideaway Book was the saying ā€œTitle IX doesn’t exist in our office.ā€ Title IX is a federal law that bars discrimination on the basis of sex and covers sexual harassment, sexual violence and gender-based discrimination.

The claim said that Wilhelmsen suffered migraines and nightmares and the work-related stress put a strain on her marriage. She has had to enter counseling as a result. She quit her job at the university in August 2017, the claim says, after being refused a transfer to another job at the school.

Wilhelmsen’s attorney, Augustine B. Jimenez III, did not respond to a phone call and email Tuesday night.

University officials announced Tuesday evening that Rodriguez was being fired without cause and said they will ā€œhonor the separation terms of his contract,ā€ which includes a $6.3 million buyout.

The 54-year-old coach just finished his sixth year at the school.

His was considered to be on the hot seat following a 3-9 record in 2016. But he seemed to have stopped any talk of losing his job until this year's late-season slide when Arizona lost three of its final four season games, including a loss to long-time rival Arizona State.

His contract runs through May 31, 2020.
 
HOLD UP!

Key paragraph here:
Les Miles and the University of Arizona have mutual interest to fill the Wildcats' head coaching vacancy following Rich Rodriguez's messy exit this week, sources have Rivals analyst Neal McCready.

Neal McCready. The infamous McCready...of recent fame the never-ending defense that all is well at Ole Miss Neal McCready.

Personally, I'd look for Butch Jones name to surface.
 
The bottom line for me is that RichRod is not a good coach even without all the drama. Keeping him around is like keeping Marvin Lewis at Cincy. That owner must have a masochist complex. Culturally there are not many places he has proven to be a good fit. The fact his defenses always rank in the 100s was a guarantee he wasn't bringing back "Desert Swarm."
 
Rich Rodriguez’s attorneys prepping to sue accuser for attempted extortion

PHOENIX — Attorneys for former Arizona head football coach Rich Rodriguez were preparing to sue a woman who accused him of sexual harassment. The suit will likely focus on attempted extortion.

Sources told 98.7 FM Arizona’s Sports Station’s John Gambadoro that the accuser, Melissa Wilhelmsen, had attempted to extort ā€œmultiple millionsā€ from Rodriguez and only filed her $7.5 million notice of claim after he refused to pay.

The sources, who requested to remain anonymous, said Rodriguez denies Wilhelmsen’s allegations, save for his extramarital affair.

They did not immediately indicate when Rodriguez’s potential suit could be filed.

Wilhelmsen accused Rodriguez of both sexual harassment and creating a hostile work environment for multiple employees.

She claimed Rodriguez touched her breast and would appear before her in various states of undress, including in his underwear. At one point, she claimed he held a closed-door meeting with her while touching his privates.

She also alleged that Rodriguez attempted to give her thousands of dollars on multiple occasions because he ā€œwanted to take care of herā€ and forced her and others to lie about his affair.

Wilhelmsen has yet to officially sue. Her claim is the first step in Arizona to filing a lawsuit.

The school fired Rodriguez on Tuesday after saying it had conducted an investigation into the coach but was unable to confirm that the harassment occurred.

However, the athletic department said it became aware of information during the investigation that ā€œcaused it to be concerned with the direction and climate of the football program.ā€

In a Tuesday statement, Rodriguez admitted to the affair but denied the claims against him.

ā€œI am not a perfect man, but the claims by my former assistant are simply not true and her demands for a financial settlement are outrageous,ā€ he said.

http://arizonasports.com/story/1367...eys-prepping-sue-accuser-attempted-extortion/
 
I'm gonna go with guilty but not close to 7.5 mil. :dance:
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