Post by Sportsbuck on Jan 15, 2008 19:54:38 GMT -5
sports.espn.go.com/ncf/news/story?id=3197764
No ethics.. whatsoever. All people talked about when he was hired was breaking away from the "Michigan Man" mold.. not such a great idea.
Further enhances his nickname of Dick Fraudriguez.
Report: Player files went missing after Rodriguez took new job
ESPN.com news services
Updated: January 15, 2008, 2:51 PM ET
West Virginia University said Tuesday it will investigate the disappearance of player and football program files found to be missing from the former office of ex-Mountaineers coach Rich Rodriguez.
Paperwork detailing every player on West Virginia's roster, as well as the program's activities over the past seven years, went missing between Rodriguez's resignation as coach to take over at Michigan and the team's return from the Fiesta Bowl, the Charleston (W.Va.) Gazette reported.
A Michigan spokesman told ESPN's Joe Schad that because of an ongoing lawsuit, neither Rodriguez nor the university would comment on the Gazette's report. But Mike Brown, Rodriguez's agent, said he would speak on Rodriguez's behalf later Tuesday.
And a source close to Rodriguez told Schad that Rodriguez will say that any discarded documents were "personal notes" and that many of the items cited in the newspaper report as destroyed are still on file at West Virginia.
After returning to work about a week ago, the staff at WVU's Puskar Center found that most of the files that had been stored in Rodriguez's office, as well as the players' strength and conditioning files in the weight room, were gone, the Gazette reported.
"It's unbelievable. Everything is gone, like it never existed,'' a source within the athletic department, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, told the Gazette. "Good, bad or indifferent, we don't have a record of anything that has happened.''
According to the source, the missing files include all of the players' personal files, which encompass contact information, scholarship money awarded, class attendance records and personal conduct records, the Gazette reported.
"If a player spoke to a school or did public service, we don't have a record of it,'' the source said, according to the newspaper. "If he broke a rule or missed class, we don't have a record of that, either. We don't have anything. All the good things these kids have done over the years, there's nothing -- not a picture of somebody speaking to a class, nothing. Why would somebody do that?''
According to the report, multiple sources said several people in the Puskar Center reported seeing Rodriguez and at least one of his assistants, video coordinator Dusty Rutledge, in Rodriguez's private office shredding paperwork on Dec. 18 -- the day he returned from Ann Arbor after being named Michigan's new head coach. Those who say they witnessed the action said they either paid it no mind or did not know what was being destroyed, according to the report.
The newspaper reported that it could not reach Rodriguez or West Virginia athletic director Ed Pastilong for comment on the report.
West Virginia and Rodriguez are in the midst of a messy legal battle over his departure from Morgantown. The university is trying to recover $4 million from Rodriguez for leaving with six years remaining on his contract. Rodriguez, in turn, said West Virginia breached the contract by not fulfilling all of its terms of the deal.
ESPN college football reporter Joe Schad contributed to this report.
ESPN.com news services
Updated: January 15, 2008, 2:51 PM ET
West Virginia University said Tuesday it will investigate the disappearance of player and football program files found to be missing from the former office of ex-Mountaineers coach Rich Rodriguez.
Paperwork detailing every player on West Virginia's roster, as well as the program's activities over the past seven years, went missing between Rodriguez's resignation as coach to take over at Michigan and the team's return from the Fiesta Bowl, the Charleston (W.Va.) Gazette reported.
A Michigan spokesman told ESPN's Joe Schad that because of an ongoing lawsuit, neither Rodriguez nor the university would comment on the Gazette's report. But Mike Brown, Rodriguez's agent, said he would speak on Rodriguez's behalf later Tuesday.
And a source close to Rodriguez told Schad that Rodriguez will say that any discarded documents were "personal notes" and that many of the items cited in the newspaper report as destroyed are still on file at West Virginia.
After returning to work about a week ago, the staff at WVU's Puskar Center found that most of the files that had been stored in Rodriguez's office, as well as the players' strength and conditioning files in the weight room, were gone, the Gazette reported.
"It's unbelievable. Everything is gone, like it never existed,'' a source within the athletic department, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, told the Gazette. "Good, bad or indifferent, we don't have a record of anything that has happened.''
According to the source, the missing files include all of the players' personal files, which encompass contact information, scholarship money awarded, class attendance records and personal conduct records, the Gazette reported.
"If a player spoke to a school or did public service, we don't have a record of it,'' the source said, according to the newspaper. "If he broke a rule or missed class, we don't have a record of that, either. We don't have anything. All the good things these kids have done over the years, there's nothing -- not a picture of somebody speaking to a class, nothing. Why would somebody do that?''
According to the report, multiple sources said several people in the Puskar Center reported seeing Rodriguez and at least one of his assistants, video coordinator Dusty Rutledge, in Rodriguez's private office shredding paperwork on Dec. 18 -- the day he returned from Ann Arbor after being named Michigan's new head coach. Those who say they witnessed the action said they either paid it no mind or did not know what was being destroyed, according to the report.
The newspaper reported that it could not reach Rodriguez or West Virginia athletic director Ed Pastilong for comment on the report.
West Virginia and Rodriguez are in the midst of a messy legal battle over his departure from Morgantown. The university is trying to recover $4 million from Rodriguez for leaving with six years remaining on his contract. Rodriguez, in turn, said West Virginia breached the contract by not fulfilling all of its terms of the deal.
ESPN college football reporter Joe Schad contributed to this report.
No ethics.. whatsoever. All people talked about when he was hired was breaking away from the "Michigan Man" mold.. not such a great idea.
Further enhances his nickname of Dick Fraudriguez.