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Utah State says it fired Blake Anderson for contacting a potential victim after a player’s arrest. The football coach calls it a ‘sham.’

by Edinburg Post Report
July 20, 2024
in Business • Finance
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Utah State football coach Blake Anderson was fired for contacting a potential domestic violence victim and a witness to the incident after an Aggies player was arrested and for failing to properly report the case, according to a termination letter sent to the coach earlier this month.

The final report of the review conducted by the Husch Blackwell law firm and the termination letter from athletic director Diana Sabau and President Elizabeth Cantwell were obtained Friday by The Associated Press through an open records request.

The review concluded Anderson violated university policy by failing to report information to the Office of Equity.

“He also undermined the university’s goal of responding diligently to issues of sexual misconduct by delaying suspension of this student-athlete and failing to disclose the arrest information with other university administrators while discussing climate issues within the football program,” the report said.

Anderson’s response to the school’s termination letter said he was fired for “convenience,” not for cause, and that the investigation that led to his dismissal was a “sham.”

Anderson’s attorney, Tom Mars, posted excerpts Friday on social media from the 70-page response that was provided to the school earlier this week. Anderson’s firing was made official Thursday.

Utah State notified him of its intent to dismiss for cause July 2 after an investigation found he failed to comply with Title IX policies regarding the reporting of sexual misconduct cases.

The incident with the player occurred in April 2023. Utah State commissioned an investigation in August 2023.

Anderson told investigators, according to the report, that he went on a “fact-finding mission” to determine whether the player should be disciplined after he was informed of an incident.

“While failing to report sexual misconduct alone is a basis for termination, your violations of USU Policy 340 were far more egregious,” the termination letter said. “As outlined in the Investigation Findings and Conclusions, you acknowledged that in addition to failing to report sexual misconduct, you took it upon yourself to investigate the matter and interviewed not only the student-athlete but also the potential victim and a witness to the event that led to the student-athlete’s arrest and solicited written statements from these witnesses.”

Associate vice president and deputy athletic director of external affairs Jerry Bovee and football director of player development and community Austin Albrecht also have been fired “for violations of university policies related to the reporting of sexual and domestic violence and failures of professional responsibilities.”

Anderson’s response referred to Kansas’ dismissal of then-head football coach David Beaty in 2018 as starting a trend in college sports in which schools attempt to manufacture reasons to fire highly paid coaches without paying the agreed-upon buyout.

Beaty won a $2.5 million settlement with Kansas. Anderson was under contract through 2027 and his contract called for a buyout.

The response said Utah State failed to understand the limitations of its policies, violated standards for a professional investigation while “grasping at straws to find cause.”

The response concludes Utah State owes Anderson his full buyout — which stood at $4.5 million as of last December, according to USA Today’s coaches’ salary database — and a public apology.

“While I recognize that today’s decision has a significant impact, it is the only one that could be made based on the facts,” Cantwell said in a statement Thursday, announcing Anderson’s termination. “We are committed to moving forward in building a winning athletics program grounded in student success and integrity.”

The 55-year-old Anderson was 23-17 with a Mountain West title in three seasons at Utah State. He went 6-7 in each of the last two seasons. He is 74-54 in 10 seasons as a major college coach, including seven seasons at Arkansas State.

Nate Dreiling, who had been Utah State’s defensive coordinator and defensive ends coach, was elevated on July 2 to interim coach for the upcoming season.

The Aggies open the 2024 season on Aug. 31 against Robert Morris.

Originally Published: July 19, 2024 at 7:57 p.m.

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