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Arthur Ray Briles
Posted on 12/15/20 at 9:00 pm
Posted on 12/15/20 at 9:00 pm
I’ve got no problem with this hire....
This post was edited on 12/15/20 at 9:43 pm
Posted on 12/15/20 at 9:04 pm to Luke
I didn't follow the Baylor stuff and think he's a great offensive mind but if he had anything to do with coverup of the sexual assault stuff then no thanks.
Posted on 12/15/20 at 9:08 pm to CorchJay
quote:
but if he had anything to do with coverup of the sexual assault stuff then no thanks.
Are we no longer Second Chance U?
Posted on 12/15/20 at 9:38 pm to Luke
At least we would know Greene had a sack if this was pulled off.
Posted on 12/15/20 at 9:47 pm to Luke
No too old
Too much baggage
Been out the game a couple years
Too much baggage
Been out the game a couple years
Posted on 12/15/20 at 10:03 pm to Luke
The timing of that article was very...convenient. If that were the case and he was cleared I’m kind of intrigued by that possibility 
Posted on 12/16/20 at 1:54 am to Luke
I will get blasted but id love the guy.
Read the reports
LINK
WACO, Texas (KWTX) - An independent review of the firing of Baylor head football coach Art Briles in 2016 commissioned by one of the university’s biggest benefactors concludes there’s no reason Briles shouldn’t be a candidate to coach again at the college level.
Baylor had no comment on the review Thursday evening, saying only, “Baylor University’s position on this matter over the past four-plus years remains unchanged. We will decline to comment further.”
John Eddie Williams, a Houston attorney who played football under former coach Grant Teaff, graduated from Baylor, and then earned a law degree from the Baylor Law School, commissioned the Atlanta-based Aloston & Bird law firm to conduct an extensive review of “what’s on the public record” about Briles and “how Baylor handled sensational allegations and ultimately made decisions.”
Williams provided what the university described at the time as a “transformative gift” that helped fund construction of the university’s new law school in 2001, and was among several major donors whose contributions helped fund construction of McLane Stadium, whose field bears his name.
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But after Briles was fired, he helped organize and served as president of the group Bears for Leadership Reform, which demanded more transparency and an independent review of what led to Briles’ firing.
In August 2018 the group called for the resignations of all of the regents involved in Baylor’s handling of the sexual assault scandal that engulfed the school’s football program as well as for release of the complete Pepper Hamilton report and a third party review of the investigation and its aftermath. The group also requested a full accounting of money spent on the investigation, including PR firms and attorneys, and payouts to former athletic department and university officials.
Williams, in a letter dated Dec. 9 to which the results of the law firm’s review are attached, says he hates waste of talent, injustice and stronger interests that bully people.
“My goal is to pursue redemption and fairness,” Williams said in the letter.
ADVERTISEMENT
“Coach Briles deserves a better hearing than he got, and is getting, about his tenure as Baylor’s head football coach.
“There’s no reason someone as talented as Coach Briles shouldn’t be coaching at the collegiate level,” Williams wrote.
“It’s time to redeem Coach Briles’ reputation, his future and to establish our own commitment to fairness.”
The review by the Atlanta-based Alston & Bird law firm’s report, a copy of which KWTX obtained Thursday, makes several points it identifies as important:
ADVERTISEMENT
*”No findings were ever made as to what Briles did or did not do.”
*Baylor never made a determination whether “Briles violated any then-applicable Baylor University policies, procedures, and/or instructions concerning the handling of sexual assault, domestic, violence, dating violence or stalking.”
*Baylor “does not believe that Briles violated an institutional policy or directive at that time.”
*”Baylor does not contend that Briles concealed information from law enforcement.”
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*Baylor is not aware that Briles ‘concealed’ information…'from officials of Baylor University who should have, according to Baylor policy, been notified by Briles.’”
“We are not aware of any conduct on the part of Coach Briles that should serve to foreclose consideration of him as a candidate to coach football again at the collegiate level,” the law firm’s report concludes.
In fact, the report says, Briles’ experience at Baylor would help him improve the Title IX protocols of any university that hires him.
“Indeed, Coach Briles has specific ideas and suggestions for ensuring a robust Title IX compliance program born of his prior experiences should be he selected to coach again at the collegiate level.”
ADVERTISEMENT
On May 26, 2016, following a nine-month investigation by the Philadelphia based Pepper Hamilton law firm, Baylor regents released a 13-page findings of fact statement and a list of 105 recommendations from the law firm, and announced the firing of Briles, the reassignment of Chancellor and President Ken Starr, and the suspension of Athletic Director Ian McCaw.
Four days later, on May 30, 2016, McCaw resigned saying he needed to step down in order to help the university heal and move forward.
He is now the athletic director at Liberty University in Lynchburg. Va.
Starr resigned from his position as chancellor on June 1, and severed all ties with the university in August 2016.
ADVERTISEMENT
But the Pepper Hamilton review was flawed, according to university insiders to whom KWTX talked during a months-long investigation following the scathing report.
Information from sources with direct knowledge of the review, and secret recordings of meetings with athletic staffers obtained by KWTX, suggested that Pepper Hamilton’s investigators came to Waco with an agenda to purge members of the football program and had a racial undertone in their line of questioning.
The Alston & Bird law firm’s report affirms the information the inside sources provided.
Despite university-wide problems with respect to Title IX, the report says, Pepper Hamilton’s presentation to the Board of Regents in May 2016 “focused on a handful of specific cases concerning allegations against football players rather than of specific cases related to other athletic programs or involving other components of the university.”
ADVERTISEMENT
The report cites McCaw’s deposition testimony in a suit brought against Baylor by Jane Doe plaintiffs in which he said he believed there was “a conspiracy…to try to turn a longstanding campus-wide sexual assault scandal into a football problem” and that there was “an elaborate plan that essentially scapegoated black football players and the football program for being responsible for what was a decades-long, university-wide sexual assault scandal.”
Briles spent three years in the wilderness after leaving Baylor, but in August 2019 he was hired as head coach at Mount Vernon High School.
He led Mount Vernon to an 8-3 finish last season, but his team lost in the first round of the state’s high school playoffs.
This year Briles’ 12-2 Tigers face 12-2 Jim Ned in the Class 3A Division I semifinals at 3:15 p.m. Friday at Globe Life Park.
Copyright 2020 KWTX. All rights reserved.
Read the reports
LINK
WACO, Texas (KWTX) - An independent review of the firing of Baylor head football coach Art Briles in 2016 commissioned by one of the university’s biggest benefactors concludes there’s no reason Briles shouldn’t be a candidate to coach again at the college level.
Baylor had no comment on the review Thursday evening, saying only, “Baylor University’s position on this matter over the past four-plus years remains unchanged. We will decline to comment further.”
John Eddie Williams, a Houston attorney who played football under former coach Grant Teaff, graduated from Baylor, and then earned a law degree from the Baylor Law School, commissioned the Atlanta-based Aloston & Bird law firm to conduct an extensive review of “what’s on the public record” about Briles and “how Baylor handled sensational allegations and ultimately made decisions.”
Williams provided what the university described at the time as a “transformative gift” that helped fund construction of the university’s new law school in 2001, and was among several major donors whose contributions helped fund construction of McLane Stadium, whose field bears his name.
ADVERTISEMENT
But after Briles was fired, he helped organize and served as president of the group Bears for Leadership Reform, which demanded more transparency and an independent review of what led to Briles’ firing.
In August 2018 the group called for the resignations of all of the regents involved in Baylor’s handling of the sexual assault scandal that engulfed the school’s football program as well as for release of the complete Pepper Hamilton report and a third party review of the investigation and its aftermath. The group also requested a full accounting of money spent on the investigation, including PR firms and attorneys, and payouts to former athletic department and university officials.
Williams, in a letter dated Dec. 9 to which the results of the law firm’s review are attached, says he hates waste of talent, injustice and stronger interests that bully people.
“My goal is to pursue redemption and fairness,” Williams said in the letter.
ADVERTISEMENT
“Coach Briles deserves a better hearing than he got, and is getting, about his tenure as Baylor’s head football coach.
“There’s no reason someone as talented as Coach Briles shouldn’t be coaching at the collegiate level,” Williams wrote.
“It’s time to redeem Coach Briles’ reputation, his future and to establish our own commitment to fairness.”
The review by the Atlanta-based Alston & Bird law firm’s report, a copy of which KWTX obtained Thursday, makes several points it identifies as important:
ADVERTISEMENT
*”No findings were ever made as to what Briles did or did not do.”
*Baylor never made a determination whether “Briles violated any then-applicable Baylor University policies, procedures, and/or instructions concerning the handling of sexual assault, domestic, violence, dating violence or stalking.”
*Baylor “does not believe that Briles violated an institutional policy or directive at that time.”
*”Baylor does not contend that Briles concealed information from law enforcement.”
ADVERTISEMENT
*Baylor is not aware that Briles ‘concealed’ information…'from officials of Baylor University who should have, according to Baylor policy, been notified by Briles.’”
“We are not aware of any conduct on the part of Coach Briles that should serve to foreclose consideration of him as a candidate to coach football again at the collegiate level,” the law firm’s report concludes.
In fact, the report says, Briles’ experience at Baylor would help him improve the Title IX protocols of any university that hires him.
“Indeed, Coach Briles has specific ideas and suggestions for ensuring a robust Title IX compliance program born of his prior experiences should be he selected to coach again at the collegiate level.”
ADVERTISEMENT
On May 26, 2016, following a nine-month investigation by the Philadelphia based Pepper Hamilton law firm, Baylor regents released a 13-page findings of fact statement and a list of 105 recommendations from the law firm, and announced the firing of Briles, the reassignment of Chancellor and President Ken Starr, and the suspension of Athletic Director Ian McCaw.
Four days later, on May 30, 2016, McCaw resigned saying he needed to step down in order to help the university heal and move forward.
He is now the athletic director at Liberty University in Lynchburg. Va.
Starr resigned from his position as chancellor on June 1, and severed all ties with the university in August 2016.
ADVERTISEMENT
But the Pepper Hamilton review was flawed, according to university insiders to whom KWTX talked during a months-long investigation following the scathing report.
Information from sources with direct knowledge of the review, and secret recordings of meetings with athletic staffers obtained by KWTX, suggested that Pepper Hamilton’s investigators came to Waco with an agenda to purge members of the football program and had a racial undertone in their line of questioning.
The Alston & Bird law firm’s report affirms the information the inside sources provided.
Despite university-wide problems with respect to Title IX, the report says, Pepper Hamilton’s presentation to the Board of Regents in May 2016 “focused on a handful of specific cases concerning allegations against football players rather than of specific cases related to other athletic programs or involving other components of the university.”
ADVERTISEMENT
The report cites McCaw’s deposition testimony in a suit brought against Baylor by Jane Doe plaintiffs in which he said he believed there was “a conspiracy…to try to turn a longstanding campus-wide sexual assault scandal into a football problem” and that there was “an elaborate plan that essentially scapegoated black football players and the football program for being responsible for what was a decades-long, university-wide sexual assault scandal.”
Briles spent three years in the wilderness after leaving Baylor, but in August 2019 he was hired as head coach at Mount Vernon High School.
He led Mount Vernon to an 8-3 finish last season, but his team lost in the first round of the state’s high school playoffs.
This year Briles’ 12-2 Tigers face 12-2 Jim Ned in the Class 3A Division I semifinals at 3:15 p.m. Friday at Globe Life Park.
Copyright 2020 KWTX. All rights reserved.
Posted on 12/16/20 at 5:08 am to Luke
Leach/Morris 2.0 with a hell of a lot more baggage.
Strong pass.
ETA I am convinced Morris would have thrown it 6 of every 7 plays if Gus would have let him. See SC game.
Strong pass.
ETA I am convinced Morris would have thrown it 6 of every 7 plays if Gus would have let him. See SC game.
This post was edited on 12/16/20 at 5:09 am
Posted on 12/16/20 at 6:37 am to auburn2eugene
TL/DR
(However from scanning)
It looks the same could be said for Bruce Pearl and we all know how long that's been. Plus ARB didn't just turn a blind eye to nasty behavior, he was actually sweeping it under the rug. IMO Art has a further walk of shame before settling in here. Maybe him and coach Eaux could set up a camp training came somewhere.... if they wanted to do something productive while hiding out from the NCAA.
(However from scanning)
It looks the same could be said for Bruce Pearl and we all know how long that's been. Plus ARB didn't just turn a blind eye to nasty behavior, he was actually sweeping it under the rug. IMO Art has a further walk of shame before settling in here. Maybe him and coach Eaux could set up a camp training came somewhere.... if they wanted to do something productive while hiding out from the NCAA.
This post was edited on 12/16/20 at 6:42 am
Posted on 12/16/20 at 6:53 am to awestruck
Maybe as OC. Not the head coach.
Posted on 12/16/20 at 7:19 am to allin2010
Texas Tech is the one that has their eye on him. The whole look in the closet deal was to try and deflect on what happened and spin it and deflect away from him. Big 12 had a ban on him and I believe it is now up so he can go back but TT is the group wanting him.
Posted on 12/16/20 at 12:09 pm to awestruck
quote:
Plus ARB didn't just turn a blind eye to nasty behavior, he was actually sweeping it under the rug
Ah... I see you are going with what the media told you back then and up until now rather than reading the actual reports?
Lets make it easier... DIRECTLY from the report
*Baylor never made a determination whether “Briles violated any then-applicable Baylor University policies, procedures, and/or instructions concerning the handling of sexual assault, domestic, violence, dating violence or stalking.”
*Baylor “does not believe that Briles violated an institutional policy or directive at that time.”
*”Baylor does not contend that Briles concealed information from law enforcement.”
*Baylor is not aware that Briles ‘concealed’ information…'from officials of Baylor University who should have, according to Baylor policy, been notified by Briles.’”
“We are not aware of any conduct on the part of Coach Briles that should serve to foreclose consideration of him as a candidate to coach football again at the collegiate level,” the law firm’s report concludes.
There is other stuff. But this right here tells me you just believe whatever the media tells you. Its Ok. Most Americans are like that apparently.
Believe it or not the media has a motive and if you think its to "tell the public the truth" I have some top notch oceanfront property in Nebraska to sell you on the cheap.
Posted on 12/16/20 at 12:18 pm to auburn2eugene
Like I said before.. TL/DR
and now that I have
frick HIM even more... because he thinks he's innocent... and didn't have the nads to stand up for his school or himself.
and now that I have
frick HIM even more... because he thinks he's innocent... and didn't have the nads to stand up for his school or himself.
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