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Gene Smith - Outgoing Issues at ASU

I thought it was interesting that those of us who know Gene Smith and support Sun Devil athletics because we're so far from Buckeyeland had nothing good to say about him. He really didn't run a "squeaky clean" program. He had absolutely no clue what was going on and athletes are running amok. The coaches I know had a bunker mentality -- close the door, avoid Gene (who was rarely there anyway) and do the best you can while looking for another position. He had no management/organizational skills whatsoever and the program at ASU is a shambles.

The East Valley Trib on Thursday ran a cartoon of Gene Smith -- he was drawn into a cartoon of the Three Stooges as Curly. The papers and letters to the editor from the locals have called for his firing before he leaves for Columbus! That's what we want as our AD? Someone who is someone else's fat, silly, simple - minded, cartoonish, buffoon, incapable of complex thought, who's moving because the axe is about to come down on his head in his current position which requires only a small percentage of the responsibility and competence of OSU's? Anyone who is in a position of managing others or owns a business knows that if it's brought to his/her attention that someone under his/her supervision is a threat, he/she'd better take immediate action to prevent a catastrophic occurrence, or the organization will assume a tremendous amount of liability. Gene Smith had a legal and civil obligation as someone in a leadership capacity who exerts considerable control over those under him, athletes and coaches both, to move affirmatively to prevent this murder after being warned at least twice, then sweeping the entire affair under the carpet. ASU will undoubtedly be sued and lose millions over this incident. If Smith does get to OSU, I doubt the problems that plagued him at ASU will disappear and he will magically acquire or accrue some skills he doesn't currently have. ASU's president held a news conference yesterday to try to mitigate the damages Smith caused and correct the "Smith problem" in the future by putting into policy what should have been there all along -- any threat is recognized immediately with zero tolerance. Are OSU regents going to meet to fix the "Smith problem" proactively by passing a similar resolution? Should they have to?

I find it truly amazing also that someone under fire in a lesser position should receive any support at all at OSU. Are we really so desperately needy that we can only attract other schools' castoffs? Either the standards in O'-hiyah are so low that Gene Smith is a step up coming from the truly sophisticated city of Phoenix, or we are reticent to admit we were wrong and claim to be so progressive that the attacks under which Smith finds himself are hate speech based upon racial/gender hatred. Maybe Karen Holbrook will testify to that effect when Faulkner's family sues Smith and ASU. If there's a victim in all of this, it's not Smith; the courts will undoubtedly find he's a perpetrator. In the end, the victim will be Brandon Faulkner and the black cloud that follows Gene Smith around will hover over Columbus. We're the laughingstock of college athletics right now.
 
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The only flag that went up for me to date regarding Smith was his statement about having never lost to Michigan as a coach. The Dispatch did some research and published the fact that when Smith was on a coaching staff, his team did lose to Michigan. I hope that this isn't an indication of a person who will say anything in the moment regardless of accuracy in order to garner support.
 
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LightningRod said:
The only flag that went up for me to date regarding Smith was his statement about having never lost to Michigan as a coach. The Dispatch did some research and published the fact that when Smith was on a coaching staff, his team did lose to Michigan. I hope that this isn't an indication of a person who will say anything in the moment regardless of accuracy in order to garner support.

That is my fear as well. Diver makes a good point, the folks out Arizona way who have posted here have not been positive about Smith. In fact, quite the opposite.

I also am concerned for another more important reason. Even if Smith wasn't advised about these potential problems at ASU, as what I have seen suggests, there seems to be growing evidence that he was out of touch with potential problems in a program the size of ASU. If he allows that to happen in a program the size of OSU, then there is no telling how much damage could be done.

Still, this is not the time for knee-jerk reactions but rather for vigilance. Perhaps these things are giving Gene Smith an education that he will put to good use as he defines his new managerial relationships at Ohio State.
 
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I hate to belabor a point; I've made my position known that Karen Holbrook did a really horrible job screening candidates, looking only for a PC person, ostensibly to attempt to validate her own hiring at OSU, and that I'm opposed to Gene Smith as AD. I also posted before reading Friday morning's Tribune. There was a half page editorial from a police officer condemning Smith and intimating that a thorough investigation would expose other legal coverups by Smith and ASU athletic staff. The university president also announced he had enlisted a university law professor to investigate the department and whether or not Smith or any other employee was complicit in this tragic event. All university resources are at his disposal and all records in the athletic offices are to be turned over to him. He will report within 90 days.

I realize that this is a pre-emptive move to attempt to defeat a lawsuit; one that will inevitably find no wrongdoing by ASU and is out of page one of the university presidents' primer from graduate school. However, with Smith now formally under investigation by ASU, wouldn't it be prudent to at least delay his arrival on the OSU campus until the results of the investigation be known? Then maybe Holbrook can take another look at whether OSU, an already embattled program in the eyes of the law, can afford to hire an AD who is under public criticism from police officers for covering up serious legal wrongdoing for the purposes of exploiting then not educating Black athletes for his own personal gain, as is charged in the editorial?

As an aside, the sports section also reported that a former ASU player who had attacked his roommate with a 13 inch butcher knife -- one in an entire series of team violations committed before he had even played a down -- had landed with Stoops at the University of Arizona (after all, says Stoops, he is the prototypical DT -- and I thought only guns were legal in the interior lines). Coach Koetter dismissed him from the ASU team (subsequent to numerous offenses) after Smith referred him back to the coach for disciplinary action rather than deal with the matter personally. The article drew an analogy between this situation and Hakim Hill, who by the time he even got to ASU was already on probation for sexual battery on a juvenile female in Iowa (avoiding jail time because he was under 18 at the time). After a series of sexual assault allegations at ASU, Hill was finally dismissed by Koetter and sent home from the bowl game during the holidays -- another situation in which Smith was aware of the accusations and deferred disciplinary action to the coach. Hill is now awaiting trial back in Iowa.

I'm having a hard time coming to grips with the concept that being AD at OSU is the place for an administrator to begin to grow personally and professionally, especially if it's at the expense of the programs and the university's reputation. These are happenings that barely gained mention in the Phoenix - area media. However, if they had occurred at OSU they would have been headline news on Mars. They are also incidents that were quite in the open when Holbrook was researching Smith's background. There are far too many of these occurrences for them to just be accidents and the pattern of deferential disposition of them is equally troubling to me.

Am I the only one who thinks that one of the criterion for hiring an AD is that he not be under investigation for complicity to commit murder?
 
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Racist threats sent to OSU and ASU concerning Gene Smith

Diver, thanks for sharing your opinion so candidly. I am not arguing for or against Smith but rather suggesting that he deserves to have an investigation completed and to be found guilty of something before we run out and set up a new search committee.

Players come into conflict and threaten one another from time to time in all Div 1 athletic programs. Smith knew about the first threat, what we don't know is, what did he know about it? In retrospect, it is now being said that the first threat "basically threatened the life" of the gymnast. What does that mean, did he threaten to "kick her ass" or what? What was really said and how was that reported to Smith? Is the content being emphasized differently now because of this tragedy?

The key issue is, was Smith really aware of what was going on in these last days of being there (the coaches are indicating that he did not and he was in Columbus on the one critical day), even if he did, could Smith have stopped this Wade from killing someone and did Wade receive special treatment that allowed him to verbally and possibly physically abuse people because of his athletic talent and, if so, did Smith know about it and condone it?

So far, I have seen nothing that answers these questions in a way that is damning to Smith, except that it indicates he seems to have been less in control than I would have liked. There are plenty of letters and articles in the Arizona press that support Smith. There also is an indication that racial issues are starting to impact on this debate.

Here are some articles that suggest not everyone is agreeing with the press that you are seeing and, in fact, the opposite is being expressed even in Arizona. Note, by the way, that Smith's press release is made in Columbus.



From Associated Press newswire March 30, 2005:

Incoming Ohio State AD knew of previous threat by player

COLUMBUS, Ohio Ohio State's incoming athletic director says he knew that a suspended Arizona State football player accused of killing a former Sun Devil once threatened a gymnast.

Gene Smith has been at Arizona State since 2000 and is supposed to start at Ohio State in a couple of weeks. He says he knew running back Loren Wade threatened an A-S-U gymnast in November but says he didn't consider it to be life threatening.

Now Wade is charged with murdering former defensive back Brandon Faulkner outside a Scottsdale, Arizona nightclub. Smith says that despite the threat against the gymnast, quote, "there was no evidence that Loren would take a gun and shoot someone."

Smith says he didn't know until Monday about a threat Wade supposedly made against a female soccer player.

Copyright 2005 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


News Update: Threatening letters target Smith by Brian Indrelunas published on Friday, April 1, 2005
http://www.statepress.com/issues/2005/04/01/news/692699

Anonymous letters making "racist threats" toward athletic director Gene Smith have appeared at ASU and Ohio State University, police reported Friday.

The ASU Foundation and the East campus administration building each received a typed letter March 17 from Cleveland that threatened Smith, according to records released Friday by the ASU Department of Public Safety.

Officials at both universities reported the letters were related to Smith's pending employment at Ohio State. Smith will leave ASU April 8 to become Ohio State's athletic director.

At least four other anonymous letters were received at various Ohio State athletic offices, said Rick Amweg, an assistant chief of police and spokesman for the Ohio State University Department of Public Safety.

Neither university released the text of the letters Friday, but ASU spokeswoman Terri Shafer said the letters contained "specific threats" against Smith.

"The person used 'I will do this' and 'I will do that,'" she said.

Shafer said Smith was notified the day the letters were received at ASU. Smith declined to comment on the letters Friday.

An ASU DPS officer wrote on Thursday that a copy of its report would be given to the FBI's Phoenix field office, but FBI officials were unavailable for comment late Friday.

Shafer said she was not aware of any additional security provided to Smith by the University in response to the threats.

"It is my understanding that we're not taking any additional security precautions," she said. "Because [the letters] were postmarked in Ohio ... it's unlikely the person issuing the threats would travel here."

ASU DPS did not release the text of the letters received in Arizona, based on the advice of officials from ASU's Office of General Counsel.

"ASU will not act as a re-publisher of text that can be construed as defamatory and/or text that could place another in a false light or of text that intrudes into the privacy of members of Gene Smith's family," Associate General Counsel Cynthia Jewett wrote in a memo to The State Press.

Amweg said OSU DPS also was not releasing copies of the letters.

"We are not prepared to release the copy of the letter at this time because of the status of the investigation," he said.

But Amweg said all the letters received in Ohio were identical.

"These are not different letters," he said. "These are photocopies ... of one text."

The two letters received in Arizona contained the same text but were not believed to be photocopies, Shafer said.

After speaking with an OSU detective on March 22, an ASU officer reported that OSU DPS was "working on obtaining any fingerprints from the letters/envelopes. They do not have a current suspect."

Amweg would not disclose specifics on the methods being used to investigate the case.

Shafer said ASU DPS had checked its letters for fingerprints but did not know if any usable prints were found.

Reach the reporter at [email protected].

http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/cfootball/218548_miller02.html

Saturday, April 2, 2005

ASU tragedy's lessons surpass blame
By TED MILLER
SEATTLE POST-INTELLIGENCER REPORTER

Blame Loren Wade's teammates. They apparently didn't tell anyone about Wade's handgun, which allegedly killed Brandon Falkner in the early hours last Saturday morning outside a Scottsdale, Ariz., nightclub.

Blame Arizona State coach Dirk Koetter. He apparently recommended counseling for his troubled running back when he wanted to quit football, but not after he threatened three women.

Blame outgoing athletics director Gene Smith or even university president Michael Crow. Shouldn't the buck ultimately stop at the top?

Blame the NRA. The organization fights laws that would take guns off the streets.

Blame Wade. Guns don't kill people, people kill people.

Heck, blame violent music, television, movies, video games, etc.

Blame society.

Blaming, of course, is what we do best.


Tragedies hurt less when we can explain them, when we can transform shock and sadness into anger. Anger is easier.

The system broke down, no doubt. Wade's erratic and threatening behavior over the past year should have set off alarms somewhere. Of course, that's what we often say with the benefit of hindsight, particularly when it's not our rear end getting grilled.

Wade's alleged shooting of Falkner, also a former Sun Devil player, while possessed by a drunken and jealous rage has to be the worst story in college sports in a long time, at least since a Baylor basketball player was murdered by a teammate two years ago.

Arizona State announced campus reforms Thursday, and a previously supportive Crow appeared to suggest that Koetter's conduct will be carefully reviewed during an internal investigation spearheaded by a university law professor.

The critical issue: Was Wade's misbehavior, which included fighting, threats of violence, an NCAA extra-benefits violation and other incidents, tolerated because he was the team's most talented tailback?

It's worth noting that Koetter three years ago booted Falkner for lying about a series of driving violations. Falkner was a marginally talented defensive back who mostly played on special teams.

Looking at Wade's grinning photograph in the Sun Devils' media guide is excruciating. The impression is far different from video of him this week: shackled, head down and despondent, shuffling toward his first arraignment for first-degree murder charges.

He broke a 48-year-old freshman rushing record in 2003. He wanted to major in elementary education. His family included a mother, two brothers and an older sister. He now faces a lifetime behind bars. Even the death penalty.

The aggravating circumstances that ostensibly provoked Wade were only a product of his addled brain. Falkner, sitting in the driver's seat of his car, was completely innocent, his presence at the scene a terrible coincidence. He was only an acquaintance -- not a suitor -- of Wade's girlfriend, Haley van Blommestein, a native of Tacoma who played soccer for Arizona State and the Seattle Sounders and whose sister, Auna, played for Washington.

Van Blommestein, who had reported previous threats from Wade to police and ASU officials, also is a victim. She was just steps away from the fatal event, an eyewitness to an inexplicable horror, reduced to hysterical sobs when she talked to police.

"How long does someone go away for murder?" van Blommestein asked, according to police reports obtained by The Arizona Republic. "God, he killed somebody."

That's not a memory that can easily be erased.

"All I will say is she's OK," said her father, Brian, an accomplished soccer coach, during a brief conversation yesterday.

"We are trying to get her as much help as we can."

Spring is supposed to be a time when every football team begins its hopeful preparation for the next season, but it hasn't been a good month for the Pac-10.

USC cornerback Eric Wright and Washington State running back Kevin McCall were arrested in connection with sexual assault. Oregon State defensive lineman Ben Siegert pleaded no contest this week to DUI, the third major legal scrape over the past six months for a program that appears to be running amuck under nice-guy coach Mike Riley.

Unfortunately, DUIs and sexual assaults are an ugly part of college campuses and society.

But murder, particularly when it involves public figures, is always shocking.

This also feels nearly unprecedented, like a terrible fluke.

Despite the revelations about Wade's past problems, it is dubious to suggest any of them more than remotely indicated he would shoot a random person in his head.

It's not like there were a host of cautionary tales from the coaching handbook that should have immediately appeared in Koetter's mind's eye, compelling him toward a massive intervention.

He had previously recommended Wade for counseling. It's hard to imagine that booting him from the team might have made Wade less likely to shoot someone.


Koetter could have been more diligent, but accusing him of gross negligence -- an offense worthy of termination -- is unfair, unless the investigation reveals substantially more damning evidence.

Don't think Koetter is going to escape punishment, either. Count on him punishing himself every day for the rest of his life.

Arizona State is going to be more vigilant about its weapons ban. Good. It's going to take threats of violence seriously. Good.

Perhaps that one day will save a life. Perhaps this incident will serve a purpose.

That is little consolation now. But it's a better place to look for solace than weaving screeds of blame.

P-I reporter Ted Miller can be reached at 206-448-8017 or [email protected]

http://www.tucsoncitizen.com/index.php?page=college&story_id=033005c1_wade



Football: Wade's murder charge not total surprise

ASU football coach Dirk Koetter knew 'in my heart' more trouble coming.

JEFF METCALFE
The Arizona Republic

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TEMPE - Arizona State University football coach Dirk Koetter said yesterday he knew "in my heart there were other things coming" about Loren Wade after the junior tailback's arrest in the shooting death of a former ASU player.
Koetter addressed some of the "other things" at a news conference yesterday after The Arizona Republic reported that Wade had threatened violence against an ASU gymnast and soccer player, both women.

The threats were part of a disturbing trail of events that culminated yesterday with Wade, ASU's starting tailback at the start of last season, being charged with first-degree murder in the shooting death of Brandon Falkner on Saturday morning outside a Scottsdale nightclub.

The trail traces back to Wade almost quitting football before the first game of last season. Koetter said he didn't "connect the dots" that ultimately resulted in the shooting.

"This one random act of violence, it hurts," Koetter said. "It doesn't hurt as much as hurts the Falkner family or Wade family, but it's affecting a lot of people in here right now. I don't have all the answers, but it hurts me personally to the core that anyone would insinuate a cover-up."

Koetter said there had been other misconduct by Wade but would not offer details except to say it did not involve personal relationships or police reports.

The threat revelations on top of an NCAA investigation centered on Wade receiving illegal benefits have raised questions about whether ASU acted appropriately in maintaining his ties to the team and reinstating him for spring practice.

It adds to a body of evidence suggesting Wade should have been in counseling, which he entered, then dropped out of during the fall.

Wade already was suspended by ASU on Sept. 25 after turning himself in for illegal benefits received from former athletic department employee Wendy Adams. Koetter feels those violations weighed heavily on Wade.

"He came into my office and was very emotionally upset and told me he was going to quit football because, in his words, he was afraid to get hurt," Koetter said. "I never had a player tell me anything like that."

Koetter arranged for counseling for Wade. After Wade's admission to the illegal benefits and news of an internal investigation becoming public Sept. 28, Koetter said he "became convinced that Loren coming to me was tied into his guilt with what he had done."

Student Affairs allowed Wade to remained in school and athletic director Gene Smith kept in contact with Wade's mother, Patsy, as the investigation progressed. But life without football took an ominous turn for Wade in November.

Home in Los Angeles, he phoned ASU gymnast Trisha Dixon and "pretty much threatened my life," she said. Another gymnast convinced Dixon to tell her coach John Spini.

More trouble surfaced before the start of spring practice. He showed up at the apartment of soccer player Haley van Blommestein on March 3, threatening to destroy property. Three days later, ASU soccer coach Ray Leone called Koetter with concerns from his players for her safety, including the threat of Wade having a gun.

Less than three weeks later, at 2:30 a.m. Saturday, Wade went looking for van Blommestein. This time he took a handgun with him to the Coyote Bay Night Club in Scottsdale.

Wade was impaired by alcohol, according to the police report, and enraged to discover van Blommestein talking to Falkner. Witnesses said he put the gun into the driver's side window and pulled the trigger.

Koetter and Smith maintain there were no red flags that led them to believe Wade would turn violent, and Leone said he doubts the incident could have been prevented had the athletic department taken stronger action.
 
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ASU to enforce stricter weapons ban on campus.

http://www.sportsline.com/collegefootball/story/8347005

PHOENIX -- Arizona State University will step up enforcement of its campus weapons ban and set up a committee to better investigate code of conduct violations in the wake of last weekend's fatal shooting involving a football player.

ASU president Michael Crow also appointed a law professor to conduct a thorough investigation of how the university's various units handled issues concerning running back Loren Wade, who was charged Tuesday with first-degree murder.
Wade, 21, has been jailed without bond since Saturday when he was arrested in the shooting death of former ASU football player Brandon Falkner, 25, outside a Scottsdale nightspot.

At a news conference Thursday, Crow said a committee that will include Tempe community representatives will be assembled to help ASU law professor Myles Lynk with the investigation.

The university already bans the possession of weapons on campus, but Crow said the revised weapons policy will require students and employees to inform the ASU Department of Public Safety of any violations of the weapons policy. Failure to do so will result in sanctions under existing employment and student policies.

Crow also said that any student or employee making a threat of violence, if that threat is verified, will be sent for mental health assessment and might be removed from campus and all programs.

In addition, Crow will activate a university committee to adjudicate all possible violations of the student athletic code of conduct

"With these actions, ASU will be implementing new tools to proactively address not only violent behavior but threats of violence as well," Crow said.
 
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<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" width="100%"><tbody><tr><td class="yspsctnhdln">Father of slain ex-ASU football player files wrongful death suit</td> </tr> <tr> <td height="7"><spacer type="block" height="1" width="1"></td> </tr> </tbody></table> March 7, 2006
SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. (AP) -- The father of a former Arizona State football player who was killed outside a nightclub here last year has filed a wrongful death lawsuit.
B. Lee Falkner is suing the university, the state Board of Regents, Sun Devils football coach Dirk Koetter and former ASU athletic director Gene Smith, according to records filed Feb. 22 at Maricopa County Superior Court.<table align="left" border="0" cellpadding="1" hspace="10" vspace="5"> <tbody><tr> <td><script type="text/javascript">if (window.yzq_a == null) document.write("<scr" + "ipt type=text/javascript src=""http://us.js2.yimg.com/us.js.yimg.com/lib/bc/bc_1.7.3.js></scr" + "ipt>"); </script><script type="text/javascript"> if (window.yzq_a) { yzq_a('p', 'P=E3BID9htfvF81NmCQX3DiRnaR2r_ZUQSODsACYh9&T=13r4kno75%2fX%3d1142044731%2fE%3d95862243%2fR%3dsports%2fK%3d5%2fV%3d1.1%2fW%3d8%2fY%3dYAHOO%2fF%3d3549125865%2fS%3d1%2fJ%3dE17E6DD8'); yzq_a('a', '&U=139vasqne%2fN%3dEx9XUdibyhg-%2fC%3d381127.8113298.8933357.1806201%2fD%3dLREC%2fB%3d3352588'); } </script><noscript>
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Falkner's lawsuit said that ASU officials "negligently failed to control" ASU football player Loren Wade, and that their failure to ensure and protect public safety led to his son's death.
The lawsuit also said Koetter "owed a duty to innocent members of the public to control the known violent tendencies of Wade."
Brandon Falkner, 25, was shot to death on March 26 outside the Coyote Bay Night Club.
After the shooting, ASU athletics officials acknowledged that Wade had a troubled history. Three women in five separate incidents had complained to the university, as well as Chandler and Scottsdale police, that Wade had threatened them in the weeks before the shooting.
ASU officials declined to comment, saying they hadn't seen the lawsuit.
Gene Smith, now Ohio State University's athletic director, also would not comment, according to a school spokesman.
Police said witnesses told them jealousy led to the shooting. They said Wade was angry that Brandon Falkner had spoken to his girlfriend.
Wade, 22, of Los Angeles, is scheduled to go on trial April 17.

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