A college basketball coach accused of physically and mentally abusing his players and staff as well as making racist comments was not fired. Despite the effective proof of more than two dozen people going on record with the allegations and an investigation into the claims, Gregg Marshall was not only allowed to resign from his position at Wichita State University but he also walked away with a nearly $8 million payout.
Marshall officially stepped down Tuesday, nearly a month after the Athletic published the bombshell reports he assaulted one of his former players and a staff member and tried to do the same to a student-athlete who played another sport. On top of that, Marshall also allegedly made racially and ethnically insensitive comments to his players.
Although it was in shame, Marshall was allowed to resign with the assurance of receiving millions of dollars instead of being fired on the spot without any financial severance or settlement like other coaches have been for doing less.
There’s no way to spin it, nor should it be spun: it’s a horrible, disgusting look for the college coaching industry that a man who was effectively proven to have punched one of his players and verbally abused many others was paid $7.75 million to leave. Huge yikes, folks.
— Matt Norlander (@MattNorlander) November 17, 2020
Marshall was given the opportunity to spin the awful narrative of his alleged mental and physical abuse during into one of his own benevolence. His “decision” to resign “was necessary for my family, the university and, most importantly, the student-athletes,” Marshall said in his letter of resignation without addressing the true nature of his departure from the successful basketball program he led for 13 seasons.
Specifically, former player Shaquille Morris claimed Marshall punched him during a practice on the same day he told his coach his mother had been diagnosed with cancer. Morris said he was assaulted by Marshall for trying to help up from the floor a teammate whom he had fouled.
Perhaps even more egregiously, Marshall was accused of mocking the body of a player who allegedly as a result is currently coping with depression and anxiety. Beyond that, Marshall also allegedly made “Indian howling noises” at a Native American player who he told “to get back on his horse.” Taking that alleged racism a step further, Marshall is accused of telling a player from Colombia that he would make “a great coffee bean picker.” Finally, Marshall allegedly and Marshall mocked a white player by implying he was afraid of Black players he reportedly described as “brothers, guys raised by their grandparents eating PB&Js.”
A Black coach could never be accused of what Gregg Marshall is being accused of.
Because if America’s racial reckoning was real, an alleged racist coach that’s hit his players and choked his assistant coach would have been fired.@Deadspinhttps://t.co/S9psCBOTDM pic.twitter.com/LNMFGBpjNY
— Carron J. Phillips (@carronJphillips) October 19, 2020
The Athletic and Stadium first reported the allegations last month following months of their own investigations.
One respected college basketball analyst compared Marshall’s settlement of $7.75 million and voluntary resignation to how the University of Connecticut fired its former coach Kevin Ollie “for minor rules violations” without giving him any kind of payout. Marshall, who has coached Wichita State to the Final Four twice, is white. Ollie, who won a national championship for UConn, is Black.
UConn wouldn’t give Kevin Ollie the money he was owed for minor rules violations.
Wichita State gives Gregg Marshall $7.75 million after punching a player, choking an assistant and numerous incidents of verbal abuse.
What the hell are we doing here …
— Jeff Goodman (@GoodmanHoops) November 17, 2020
With an annual salary of $3.5 million, Marshall had been one of the top paid college basketball coaches. Now, he gets to walk away with more than twice that.
Marshall, for his part, has denied assaulting any of his players. “I simply state unequivocally that I have never physically struck a player or colleague,” Marshall said in a statement after the allegations were first made public in early October. “Allegations claiming otherwise are false.”
There is a lot of messed up stuff in this article. One thing that might get lost in the news is that Gregg Marshall is apparently an abusive racist: https://t.co/qulqpzef0X pic.twitter.com/KrQ7Vde48K
— Grant Day (@GrantDay71) October 9, 2020
Absent from Marshall’s statement was any mention of the allegations of racist comments.
Meanwhile, in an act of apparent proof of Marshall’s allegations, seven of his players moved to transfer from Wichita State this past year alone, an alarmingly elevated number by any standard for any college basketball program.
SEE ALSO:
Wichita State Coach Gregg Marshall Allegedly Punched Former Player, Choked Assistant
Texas State Coach Accused Of Racist ‘Chicken’ Comments Against Athletes
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