OT: Teri McKeever

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movielover
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Swim Swam: "Dani Korman has been named a new assistant swimming & diving coach at Yale. She fills the spot that was previously occupied by Connor Beaulieu, who left his position to join the staff at Georgetown.

"Korman's last coaching job was three season for the top-10 women's program at Cal. She resigned from that position before reports broke alleging years of abuse by Cal head coach Teri McKeever that subsequently led to McKeever being placed on administrative leave pending the outcome of an investigation.

"Korman spent her last two seasons at Cal as an associate head coach...."
DiabloWags
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Yup.
I think its pretty clear that people saw "this" coming and positioned themselves appropriately career-wise.
It would be most interesting to be a "fly on the wall" when Cunnane is interviewed for the investigation.
dimitrig
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I have tried to post a few times to this thread, but then deleted my posts before hitting send.

What I want to say is that these situations are complicated.

One of the articles linked above (about Lou Campanelli) states:

"College is about getting better, not getting yelled at. Talented as they may be, these are college kids; 18, 19 and 20 years old. Can you imagine how long a chemistry professor would last if he cursed at his students every day? Not another minute is how long."

This is absolutely correct.

However, the line between college and pros has blurred. Heck, as athletes are recruited and coached younger and younger even the line between children and adults has blurred.

The reality is that there are some coaches who have a very abrasive style. They are very demanding. They have high standards. They don't couch criticisms and spew unwarranted compliments to spare feelings.

I would call Bela Karolyi one of those types of coaches. For all of the horrible things he was accused of doing, he managed to coach his athletes to the highest levels and while some of them hated him there are many who stand by him even to this day.

I think Teri McKeever falls into this category of what some here have referred to as "tough coaches."

Is there room to have coaches like this in 2022? I'm not sure.

However, you can be sure that there are most likely swimmers who didn't have a problem with it. Obviously, some did.

My SO was a ballerina and if you want to talk about a sport (and yes, I'd call it a sport in the sense that ballerinas are highly trained athletes) then there is probably no more abusive environment than professional dance.

My SO hated some of her teachers, but she kept coming back? Why? She wanted to achieve at the highest levels and she couldn't get that instruction anywhere else.

Some (many) dancers quit. Some parents were upset. Like with McKeever, some dancers were criticized no matter what they did (whipping posts) and some were praised even when they weren't as good as others in some sort of twisted attempt to motivate the high achievers.

Yes, dancers were weighed, body-shamed, and verbally abused. They were accused of faking injuries. Their personal issues were sometimes outed in front of others.

Reading how McKeever treated her swimmers sounds very familiar in many ways.

All of this is not to excuse her behavior, but to explain why (some) swimmers put up with it. Those who stayed did so because they saw McKeever as their ticket to the Olympics and I know it is controversial to say this, but some weren't good enough to achieve their dream. That probably hurt them to know/find out as much as anything she said or did. That is why they transferred to other programs.

To me the most interesting aspect of this is how Missy Franklin and Natalie Coughlin both chose to swim for Dave Durden. Their decisions take on new significance given these new allegations. Certainly those swimmers were able to achieve at the highest levels and yet when they came back they opted not to train with McKeever. I'd like to know more about how they feel about McKeever.

I wonder if and how often McKeever was reprimanded for her behavior and asked to alter her coaching style at least a little bit. For someone like that it's difficult to change, especially when you've had so much success doing what you're doing.

Anyway, I wanted to throw my opinion out there, because I've certainly heard a lot of whiny parents back in the day. I tend to discount anything they have to say, because they weren't there and they don't know what the relationship is like. Some athletes will endure toxic relationships if it helps them further their goals. Some have thicker skin than others. Some are favorites. Ask twenty dancers in my SO's ballet company what they think about the ballet mistress and you will get twenty different answers ranging from affection to tolerance to outright hatred.

Has a coach gone too far when even one of his charges is depressed, has anxiety or self-esteem issues, or feels picked on or abused? In Little League, probably. At the highest levels I'm not so sure.

My opinion: quit and find another coach that suits your style. At this level these are professional swimmers and that is exactly what Missy and Natalie did. I am not really sure what the point of tearing down the program is other than furthering some sort of personal grudges (even well-deserved) against McKeever.

You just say: "Look, this program isn't for everyone."

However, with what has happened now I think Cal has to let her go. It's unfortunate it got to that point and I blame the administration for letting things fester like this because we're going to lose a really good coach.

That said, there are other coaches out there that can get the job done - even in our own program - so let's just move on.


DiabloWags
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dimitrig said:



All of this is not to excuse her behavior, but to explain why (some) swimmers put up with it. Those who stayed did so because they saw McKeever as their ticket to the Olympics and I know it is controversial to say this, but some weren't good enough to achieve their dream. That probably hurt them to know/find out as much as anything she said or did. That is why they transferred to other programs.




I would suggest that given the limited number of scholarships (14 full) that a NCAA D-1 program has to offer, I would question your claim that swimmers who chose to stay at Cal did so "because they saw McKeever as their ticket to the Olympics."

That's a pretty simplistic view that doesnt hold water under in reality.

I would strongly suggest that the "mobility" to transfer elsewhere isnt as easy as you make it sound, given that programs (elsewhere) most likely have used up their scholarship allotments to current swimmers and recruits. - - - In other words, some of these swimmers who wanted to transfer out, realistically could not. They were "stuck".

I would also suggest that your "controversial" statement about swimmer's not being up to par and transferring elsewhere doesnt really fit what happened at Cal. While I'm sure that that was part of the story, one "size" doesnt fit all, especially as it applies to one of the TOP PROGRAMS in the Nation.

There were highly talented swimmer's and NCAA qualifiers at Cal that transferred out. We're talking about freshman who qualified for NCAA's. We're talking about some of the highest recruited swimmer's in the Nation. We're talking about highly recruited swimmer's who accepted scholarship offers from one of the top program's in the country. It's not like Cal was simply extending scholarship offers out to "average" kids to simply "fill" out their roster.






calumnus
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dimitrig said:


I have tried to post a few times to this thread, but then deleted my posts before hitting send.

What I want to say is that these situations are complicated.

One of the articles linked above (about Lou Campanelli) states:

"College is about getting better, not getting yelled at. Talented as they may be, these are college kids; 18, 19 and 20 years old. Can you imagine how long a chemistry professor would last if he cursed at his students every day? Not another minute is how long."

This is absolutely correct.

However, the line between college and pros has blurred. Heck, as athletes are recruited and coached younger and younger even the line between children and adults has blurred.

The reality is that there are some coaches who have a very abrasive style. They are very demanding. They have high standards. They don't couch criticisms and spew unwarranted compliments to spare feelings.

I would call Bela Karolyi one of those types of coaches. For all of the horrible things he was accused of doing, he managed to coach his athletes to the highest levels and while some of them hated him there are many who stand by him even to this day.

I think Teri McKeever falls into this category of what some here have referred to as "tough coaches."

Is there room to have coaches like this in 2022? I'm not sure.

However, you can be sure that there are most likely swimmers who didn't have a problem with it. Obviously, some did.

My SO was a ballerina and if you want to talk about a sport (and yes, I'd call it a sport in the sense that ballerinas are highly trained athletes) then there is probably no more abusive environment than professional dance.

My SO hated some of her teachers, but she kept coming back? Why? She wanted to achieve at the highest levels and she couldn't get that instruction anywhere else.

Some (many) dancers quit. Some parents were upset. Like with McKeever, some dancers were criticized no matter what they did (whipping posts) and some were praised even when they weren't as good as others in some sort of twisted attempt to motivate the high achievers.

Yes, dancers were weighed, body-shamed, and verbally abused. They were accused of faking injuries. Their personal issues were sometimes outed in front of others.

Reading how McKeever treated her swimmers sounds very familiar in many ways.

All of this is not to excuse her behavior, but to explain why (some) swimmers put up with it. Those who stayed did so because they saw McKeever as their ticket to the Olympics and I know it is controversial to say this, but some weren't good enough to achieve their dream. That probably hurt them to know/find out as much as anything she said or did. That is why they transferred to other programs.

To me the most interesting aspect of this is how Missy Franklin and Natalie Coughlin both chose to swim for Dave Durden. Their decisions take on new significance given these new allegations. Certainly those swimmers were able to achieve at the highest levels and yet when they came back they opted not to train with McKeever. I'd like to know more about how they feel about McKeever.

I wonder if and how often McKeever was reprimanded for her behavior and asked to alter her coaching style at least a little bit. For someone like that it's difficult to change, especially when you've had so much success doing what you're doing.

Anyway, I wanted to throw my opinion out there, because I've certainly heard a lot of whiny parents back in the day. I tend to discount anything they have to say, because they weren't there and they don't know what the relationship is like. Some athletes will endure toxic relationships if it helps them further their goals. Some have thicker skin than others. Some are favorites. Ask twenty dancers in my SO's ballet company what they think about the ballet mistress and you will get twenty different answers ranging from affection to tolerance to outright hatred.

Has a coach gone too far when even one of his charges is depressed, has anxiety or self-esteem issues, or feels picked on or abused? In Little League, probably. At the highest levels I'm not so sure.

My opinion: quit and find another coach that suits your style. At this level these are professional swimmers and that is exactly what Missy and Natalie did. I am not really sure what the point of tearing down the program is other than furthering some sort of personal grudges (even well-deserved) against McKeever.

You just say: "Look, this program isn't for everyone."

However, with what has happened now I think Cal has to let her go. It's unfortunate it got to that point and I blame the administration for letting things fester like this because we're going to lose a really good coach.

That said, there are other coaches out there that can get the job done - even in our own program - so let's just move on.





Good post. This is essentially what I have been saying from the beginning of this thread. Old school authoritarian coaching techniques were adopted and persisted for so long because they are effective at producing effective military units, winning teams and top performers. And beautiful ballet. Or effective sales teams. Or obedient families. Or they used to be.

One example of common authoritarian techniques that McKeever is accused of is picking one swimmer each year as the target for extreme criticism and bullying. Never her best swimmer. The example keeps everyone else in line. No one wants to be in that position. Yes, that swimmer may become suicidal but the point is getting increased compliance and performance from the other, top swimmers. Many of whom may have a "great" relationship with the coach (might even be shown favoritism). Depending on their own level of narcissism, lack of empathy or family of origin they might not even see anything being "wrong."

There have always been other, positive, ways to motivate, train and inspire top performance. And about 40 years ago you saw that change begin. Abusive coaches, even Hall of Fame coaches, were fired. In professional sports, free agency meant that positive motivating coaches were the ones who could attract the best athletes. And succeed.

In college, coaches could be charming while recruiting without student athletes finding out about their true nature until they were committed, with transfers penalized. That has changed. The Internet and social media gets information out there to high school recruits. The Transfer Portal allows athletes to leave bad situations. But the biggest change is that today's young people will generally not put up with abuse, even "minor" abuse, and will call it out when they see it.

All this to say that authoritarian coaches are a really bad fit for college, but especially for a place like Cal in 2022. And Knowlton, with his background in the military and military academies does not understand that and that makes him a particularly bad fit for Cal especially at this pivotal time in the history of college sports. (His hiring of Mark Fox, a notorious "tough coach," with predictable results, shows that).

A competent AD would have addressed this before it got to this point. Cal could have addressed the issues or moved on with McKeever having some dignity and honor her accomplishments would normally warrant.




DiabloWags
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I think people are missing a potentially much bigger risk here.
The much maligned SafeSport is involved. And they desperately need a high profile "win".

The due-process "crowd" like BearGoggles and WifeisaFurd have totally missed this.
Theyve been too busy obsessing over the "bark" on the tree.

movielover
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The good old authoritarian.

mbBear
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DiabloWags said:

I think people are missing a potentially much bigger risk here. The much maligned SafeSport is involved. And they desperately need a high profile "win".

The due-process "crowd" like BearGoggles and WifeisaFurd have totally missed this. Theyve been too busy obsessing over the "bark" on the tree.


Well, "due process" isn't really opinion is it? It's the reality of what's happening. If the opposite of "due process" is that she should have been fired the day after the article came out, I would disagree with that if somehow "due process" costs Cal less in the medium or long run.
My opinion: we know less than we think we know, so I don't care what "crowd(s)" here think. I do believe this would feel waaay different if the Head (Men's) Basketball coach or Football coach had achieved McKeever's success, and then the same accusations were brought up. But, that opinion matters little, and we will see what the legal system bears out (pun intended) for Cal....
Ps: And I hope the women who have had mental anguish over this are able to get the help they need to end up in a positive place with their lives, and in some cases, their Cal degree.
DiabloWags
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mbBear said:

DiabloWags said:

I think people are missing a potentially much bigger risk here. The much maligned SafeSport is involved. And they desperately need a high profile "win".

The due-process "crowd" like BearGoggles and WifeisaFurd have totally missed this. Theyve been too busy obsessing over the "bark" on the tree.


Well, "due process" isn't really opinion is it? It's the reality of what's happening. If the opposite of "due process" is that she should have been fired the day after the article came out, I would disagree with that if somehow "due process" costs Cal less in the medium or long run.


Again, what happened here indicates a lack of institutional control.

This isnt just about McKeever's "due-process" and posters writing 2500 word "essays" on their understanding of State employment law. The name Mohamed Muqtar should tell you as much.
bearister
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Big article today in Merc News. Not good. Due Process? When she gets terminated, I hope she gets her day in court like former OPD Chief Anne Kirkpatrick did. I predicted the outcome of her case beforehand as well as all the "players" she would make look like fools.

The day coach files her suit, I'm going to a casino to bet heavy on the outcome of the jury verdict.*

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OdontoBear66
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bearister said:

Big article today in Merc News. Not good. Due Process? When she gets terminated, I hope she gets her day in court like former OPD Chief Anne Kirkpatrick did. I predicted the outcome of her case beforehand as well as all the "players" she would make look like fools.

The day coach files her suit, I'm going to a casino to bet heavy on the outcome of the jury verdict.
Yup, we've been chastised for strong opinions but the evidence is mounting. Too many years, too many people, too many confirmers. But, I will wait and hold my opinions. Appears to be major damage to multiple lives if any truth. Been accustomed to hard nosed coaches, but this seems a step over the pale. We shall see.
bearister
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Like the Karolyis, she was funneling young women to a predator.

Source: Scott Reid's paywall protected front page article in today's East Bay Times (Merc News)
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calumnus
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OdontoBear66 said:

bearister said:

Big article today in Merc News. Not good. Due Process? When she gets terminated, I hope she gets her day in court like former OPD Chief Anne Kirkpatrick did. I predicted the outcome of her case beforehand as well as all the "players" she would make look like fools.

The day coach files her suit, I'm going to a casino to bet heavy on the outcome of the jury verdict.
Yup, we've been chastised for strong opinions but the evidence is mounting. Too many years, too many people, too many confirmers. But, I will wait and hold my opinions. Appears to be major damage to multiple lives if any truth. Been accustomed to hard nosed coaches, but this seems a step over the pale. We shall see.


Again, all of this is mismanagement on the part of Knowlton. It should never have gotten to this point. "Tough coach" should never be an excuse not to manage your employees and investigate when there are complaints. The standard for a coach at Cal needs to be a lot higher than "nothing they did to our student athletes breaks any law."
bearister
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Too bad there are not any tribute statues involved to be added to the artificial reef off Florida:



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DiabloWags
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The "retreats" in which McKeever was able to manipulate young student/athletes into divulging very "private" information such as their "deepest, darkest secrets and fears" under the guise of TEAM BONDING (to be used against them later) is about as sick and twisted as you can get. Given the interviews of our swimmers and the consistency of their allegations, there certainly appears to be a pattern regarding this.

https://swimswam.com/cal-swimmers-say-mckeever-learned-their-traumas-at-retreats-then-exploited-them/

No wonder why one of the girls on the team was designated a "5150" at one point.

Throw Mohamed Muqtar and Jennifer Simon-O'Neill into the mix and it's hard to simply discount or dismiss that there was a lack of institutional control.

Like I've previously mentioned, the much-maligned SafeSport needs a "high profile" win. Think Cal isnt in their gun sight? Think again.

Knowlton came in as AD in May of 2018.
Before that, Mike Williams was AD starting in July 2014.

I wish this wasnt true, but I'm thinking that this is only the beginning.
bearister
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How much mental masturbation like what is going on in this thread do you think went on at UCLA and USC over their respective psycho gynos before they figured out..



USC paid $1.1B and UCLA $700M.

*Yes, I realize that the allegations at hand pale in comparison to sexual assault. It is the institutional fiddle f@ucking around with a serious problem that is the basis of my comparison.
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calumnus
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Good opinion piece contrasting Teri McKeever with Steve Kerr in the Sydney, Australia paper:

https://amp.smh.com.au/sport/steve-kerr-teri-mckeever-and-the-demise-of-the-win-at-all-costs-coach-20220526-p5aosa.html
movielover
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Now imagine the position newbie Knowlton is in... (how long was the Senior Women's Administrator employed in ICA?).

1. 'Respected' Olympic female ceiling-shattering coach says "Mary" or "Jane" is having trouble handling Pac 12 competition.
2. SWA - personally tight with the same coach - vouches for said coach.
3. Creepy MM backs the two top female 'leaders'.
4. In said conversations, in private, does someone say "Well, and you know, Jane (Mary) has also had some traumatic experiences ... 90% of the team is fine."
5. Assistant coaches and swimmers, fearful of losing their scholarship, job, future job or recommendation keep quiet.

Knowlton would have to be very perceptive and have inside sources, and we all know he'd risk being accused of discrimination; that's already been implied here though Lou C and MM were ousted. Those inside, off the record tips are key.

Did the coach give a recommendation for the SWA hiring?
Unit2Sucks
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We should reserve judgment until BearGoggles weighs in on whether Scott Reid is merely sensationalizing the story, as he has previously claimed.
DiabloWags
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Unit2Sucks said:

We should reserve judgment until BearGoggles weighs in on whether Scott Reid is merely sensationalizing the story, as he has previously claimed.


Cant wait to read yet another post by him calling me an "insider" when it comes to Cal Aquatic Recruiting ....

Simply because I lived in the dorms 42 years ago with Cal water polo players and ran into Pete Cutino, Jr on a transatlantic flight via NY in 1990.

Lolz!
juarezbear
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bearister said:

How much mental masturbation like what is going on in this thread do you think went on at UCLA and USC over their respective psycho gynos before they figured out..



USC paid $1.1B and UCLA $700M.

*Yes, I realize that the allegations at hand pale in comparison to sexual assault. It is the institutional fiddle f@ucking around with a serious problem that is the basis of my comparison.


The loss of institutional control seems analogous. The scope and scale not so much, so throwing around s numbers like $1.8B and $700 most of which was covered by insurance BTW, is pure sensationalizing. Additionally, sexual predation foisted on hundreds or thousands of young women is also on another level. I'm heartsick over this TM situation for the young women involved.
DiabloWags
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movielover said:

Now imagine the position newbie Knowlton is in... (how long was the Senior Women's Administrator employed in ICA?).



https://swimswam.com/teri-mckeever-is-godmother-to-child-of-high-ranking-cal-athletics-official/
bearister
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I decided to sensationalize for the same 10 dudes that post on BI.
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DiabloWags
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Maybe "WifeisaFurd" can tell us more about employment contracts and California labor law?


movielover
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SwimSwam: "...Parents of swimmers told OC Register that they had made several complaints to Simon-O'Neill.

"Simon-O'Neill began her career at Cal as the Director of Olympic Sports Operations from 2008 through 2013. That meant working directly with the swimming & diving programs, including photos on her personal social media accounts that show her at the 2012 Olympic Trials where McKeever was to serve as head coach of the US Olympic women's team. Six months after those Trials, McKeever participated in the baptism of Simon-O'Neill's oldest child.

"Simon-O'Neill eventually worked her way up the ladder at Cal and is currently the Executive Senior Associate Athletics Director, Chief of Staff, and Senior Woman Administrator for Cal athletics. She is also the sport administrator for women's swimming & diving,"

It would be impossible for her to become the departments SWA without TM support.
GMP
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juarezbear said:

bearister said:

How much mental masturbation like what is going on in this thread do you think went on at UCLA and USC over their respective psycho gynos before they figured out..



USC paid $1.1B and UCLA $700M.

*Yes, I realize that the allegations at hand pale in comparison to sexual assault. It is the institutional fiddle f@ucking around with a serious problem that is the basis of my comparison.


The loss of institutional control seems analogous. The scope and scale not so much, so throwing around s numbers like $1.8B and $700 most of which was covered by insurance BTW, is pure sensationalizing. Additionally, sexual predation foisted on hundreds or thousands of young women is also on another level. I'm heartsick over this TM situation for the young women involved.


Curious if you have inside info on the insurance payouts. Not that I'm doubting one could exist, but I've never seen an insurance policy covering $1.1 billion. Some quick googling did not completely answer the question but I did find this:

Quote:

The university plans to pay out the settlement "largely through a combination of litigation reserves, insurance proceeds, deferred capital spending, sale of non-essential assets, and careful management of non-essential expenses," USC President Carol L. Folt said in a letter to the school community.

"No philanthropic gifts, endowment funds, or tuition will be redirected from their intended purposes," she said.


https://abcnews.go.com/US/breaking-university-southern-californias-11-billion-sex-abuse/story?id=76713012
DiabloWags
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Unit2Sucks said:

We should reserve judgment until BearGoggles weighs in on whether Scott Reid is merely sensationalizing the story, as he has previously claimed.

Yup.
Thus far, he has repeatedly claimed that Scott Reid is biased and writing a sensationalized story.
And he's never claimed otherwise.

This is the kind of position that fosters a culture of hear no evil, see no evil in an athletic department that has not only lost control of itself, but sacrificed its oath and pledge to first and foremost, protect student/athletes.
BearGoggles
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At the risk of responding to the trolls and prevaricators and thereby encouraging them, I'll simply say that being skeptical of the reporting for clearly identified reasons (e.g., the unsubstantiated claim of racial epithets and the reporter's bias in other stories) and wanting to hear all evidence before rendering judgement is not the same thing as: (i) defending McKeever; (ii) defending Cal; or (iii) advocating for the allegations to be ignored or buried.

Personally, I have stated repeatedly that (i) McKeever should have been immediately suspended; (ii) Knowlton and Cal have badly mishandled the situation and should have taken action in advance of publication of the article; (iii) Knowlton and Cal's reaction was woefully inadequate including failing to adequately support former and current student athletes; (iv) Cal's AD has serious structural/culture issues that date back decades and have not been adequately addressed (both related and unrelated to swimming); and (v) if even some of the most serious allegations are true, McKeever should be fired. I've also been critical of the Cal AD on a whole host of other issues unrelated to swimming.

In fact, I've advocated for McKeever to be fired without cause (i.e., paying her buyout) so that Cal can move on, but others have asserted that's not legally possible/wise. I'm not in a position to render a judgment on that other than to say that Cal should follow the advice of its attorneys and paper the file to support any decision (and what will likely be inevitable lawsuit(s)).

We live in a complicated media landscape. It seems to me that critical analysis (if not outright skepticism) of media reports is warranted. Too many times people react to media reports/claims without demanding actual evidence AND considering there might be contrary evidence/claims - or for that matter outright bias. In fact, the current congressional hearings seems to be exploring that exact dynamic. But to each their own.
DiabloWags
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Cal junior Ayla Spitz and sophomore teammate Isabelle Stadden have entered the transfer portal.
OBear073akaSMFan
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Two more swimmers and probably their 2 top returning swimmers, Isabelle Stadden and Ayla Spitz have entered the transfer Portal. We need to do something to stop the bleeding. What a mess!


https://swimswam.com/cal-all-americans-isabelle-stadden-and-ayla-spitz-enter-ncaa-transfer-portal/



mbBear
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DiabloWags said:

mbBear said:

DiabloWags said:

I think people are missing a potentially much bigger risk here. The much maligned SafeSport is involved. And they desperately need a high profile "win".

The due-process "crowd" like BearGoggles and WifeisaFurd have totally missed this. Theyve been too busy obsessing over the "bark" on the tree.


Well, "due process" isn't really opinion is it? It's the reality of what's happening. If the opposite of "due process" is that she should have been fired the day after the article came out, I would disagree with that if somehow "due process" costs Cal less in the medium or long run.


Again, what happened here indicates a lack of institutional control.

This isnt just about McKeever's "due-process" and posters writing 2500 word "essays" on their understanding of State employment law. The name Mohamed Muqtar should tell you as much.


Whatever is important and relevant should part of this. Institutional control, or lack there of, happening how soon after she was hired?
movielover
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Unconscionable and tone deaf for the AD, SWA, and Administration - to allow coach TM to head a swim practice after these allegations were published.

The young ladies who walked out of practice showed more leadership and common sense than their elders.
movielover
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KCBS Radio article: ""... This makes me sound old, but I definitely feel like some athletes, or student athletes, are showing up not quite as resilient as they have been," McKeever said in a 2021 podcast episode. "Their coping skills when things get tough are pretty minimal."

https://www.audacy.com/kcbsradio/news/national/blurred-line-between-toughness-and-abuse-in-college-sports
movielover
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Swim Swam: "Five women from Cal have now entered the NCAA Transfer Portal in 2022. Besides Stadden and Spitz, that includes Emma Davidson, Emily Gantriis, and Lara Phipps. Phipps first entered the portal prior to the conclusion of the collegiate season. Ema Rajic also entered in the fall to use a graduate transfer year, as did Elise Garcia.

"That list doesn't include Olympic and NCAA Champion Maggie MacNeil, who committed to transfer to Cal as a graduate next season, but who after the McKeever fallout ultimately chose LSU for her 5th year."

https://swimswam.com/cal-all-americans-isabelle-stadden-and-ayla-spitz-enter-ncaa-transfer-portal/
calumnus
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movielover said:

Swim Swam: "Five women from Cal have now entered the NCAA Transfer Portal in 2022. Besides Stadden and Spitz, that includes Emma Davidson, Emily Gantriis, and Lara Phipps. Phipps first entered the portal prior to the conclusion of the collegiate season. Ema Rajic also entered in the fall to use a graduate transfer year, as did Elise Garcia.

"That list doesn't include Olympic and NCAA Champion Maggie MacNeil, who committed to transfer to Cal as a graduate next season, but who after the McKeever fallout ultimately chose LSU for her 5th year."

https://swimswam.com/cal-all-americans-isabelle-stadden-and-ayla-spitz-enter-ncaa-transfer-portal/


Exactly why I said above when this first broke that Cal needed to meet with the swimmers and quickly decide whether they should move on from McKeever regardless of whether an investigation would find serious wrongdoing that would warrant firing for cause.

All the handwringing about "the donors"? I am sure they are not happy seeing the program implode.

Again, this is all at the feet of Knowlton (really Christ for hiring him).

 
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