Friday, April 5, 2013
Friday, April 5, 2013
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Tim Pernetti resigns as Rutgers athletic director in wake of Mike Rice abuse video scandal

Rutgers President Robert L. Barchi addresses the media about the Mike Rice scandal during a presser on the New Brunswick campus Friday afternoon, April 5, 2013. ( David Swanson / Staff Photographer )
Rutgers President Robert L. Barchi addresses the media about the Mike Rice scandal during a presser on the New Brunswick campus Friday afternoon, April 5, 2013. ( David Swanson / Staff Photographer )
Story Highlights
  • Tim Pernetti resigned as athletic director after the firing of Mike Rice.
  • Rice was fired after ESPN broadcast video of him abusing players.
  • Pernetti suspended him and penalized him $75,000 in fines and lost salary.
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    Rutgers University athletic director Tim Pernetti has resigned in the wake of the scandal surrounding former men's basketball coach Mike Rice.

    "It was in the best interests of Rutgers University that I step down from my position as Director of Intercollegiate Athletics," Pernetti wrote in a letter to Rutgers president Robert Barchi that was published on the athletic department's website.

    Rice was fired on Wednesday after ESPN broadcast video footage of him physically and abusing players during practices. Scarlet Knight assistant coach Jimmy Martelli, son of Saint Joseph's head coach Phil Martelli, also resigned after being shown engaging in similar behavior.

    The footage shows Rice firing basketballs at players, hitting them in the back, legs, feet and shoulders. Rice was also shown pushing players in the chest and grabbing them by their jerseys and yanking them around the court. Rice could be heard yelling obscenities at players and using gay slurs.

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    Pernetti had known about Rice's actions previously. Videos were brought to Pernetti's attention last year by former director of player development Eric Murdock. Pernetti hired an independent investigation firm to look at the video, and concluded at the time that firing Rice wasn't necessary.

    Instead, Pernetti suspended Rice for three games and penalized him $75,000 in fines and lost salary. Pernetti also fired Murdock, and Murdock alleges he was dismissed because he brought Rice's actions to Pernetti's attention. Murdock is suing Rutgers for wrongful termination.

    In his letter to Barchi, Pernetti wrote that his "first instinct" upon seeing the video of Rice's actions "was to fire him immediately."

    "However, Rutgers decided to follow a process involving university lawyers, human resources professionals, and outside counsel," Pernetti wrote. "Following review of the independent investigative report, the consensus was that university policy would not justify dismissal. I have admitted my role in, and regret for, that decision, and wish that I had the opportunity to go back and override it for the sake of everyone involved."

    Once the tapes were brought into the national spotlight, the outcry grew for Pernetti and others at Rutgers to take further action. There was also a significant increase in criticism of Pernetti for not having done more to punish Rice in the past.

    Though he had a negative perception outside the Rutgers community, Pernetti had widespread support on campus and among alumni - especially among former athletes. The 42-year-old is a New Jersey native and a Rutgers graduate who played tight end for the Scarlet Knights from 1989 to 1993.

    NFL stars Ray Rice and Shaun O'Hara and U.S. women's national soccer team veteran Carli Lloyd had publicly called for Pernetti to keep his job. So had Eric LeGrand, a former Rutgers defensive tackle who was paralyzed playing in a game for the Scarlet Knights in 2010.

    "My continued tenure as Athletic Director is no longer sustainable for the University which I attended and where a piece of me will always remain," Pernetti wrote in his letter.

    Pernetti played a major role in Rutgers' lucrative move from the Big East conference to the Big Ten. After agreeing to the deal last year, Rutgers will officially join the Big Ten next year. The move will bring the school's financially imperiled athletic department millions of dollars in new revenue from television rights and football ticket sales.

    "I trust that my tenure at Rutgers will not be judged by this one incident," Pernetti wrote. "I am proud of my efforts to lead Rutgers into the Big Ten, and of all of the accomplishments of our student-athletes in the classroom and on the field of play."

    Pernetti also hired Rice to replace Fred Hill Jr. as Rutgers' men's basketball coach back in May of 2010. It was Pernetti's first major move as the Scarlet Knights' athletic director. He took the job in April of 2009.

    "As we move forward here, we are going to take a hit in no longer having a charismatic athletic director at the helm," Barchi said. But, he added, "this is not a one-man ship... the fact that we are going to take a hit in making this change in no way deterred us from making it."

    There have been demands from Rutgers' faculty, state politicians and the public for Barchi to step down. Barchi said Friday that he did not see the video of Rice's actions until this past Tuesday. He noted that he had only recently become Rutgers' president at the time that the video came to Pernetti's attention.

    Barchi became Rutgers' president in September of last year. He previously served as president of Thomas Jefferson University and provost of the University of Pennsylvania. 

    In his press conference remarks, Barchi said that the footage was "much more pervasive and abusive than I had assumed it to be" from a summary of Rice's actions that he received from Pernetti. Barchi added that it was because of the nature of that summary that he backed Pernetti's initial punishment of Rice, and did not move for further sanctions.

    "This was a failure of process," Barchi said. "I regret that I did not ask to see the video when Tim first told me of its existence, because I am certain that this would have a different end had I done so."

    Ralph Izzo, chair of Rutgers' board of governors, said that "for sure we will be doing due diligence in terms of lessons learned."

    Izzo specifically mentioned a focus on "common sense versus what the law might allow you to do... in future high-profile decisions."

    When asked whether this situation would have taken place if ESPN had not brought the videos into a national spotlight, Izzo said, "that's probably true."

    "The visual impact is quite different from the spoken impact," Izzo said. "My understanding was that coach Rice's behavior had been modified. I do expect that if there had been a lapse, Mr. Pernetti would have done what he said what he was going to do, which is fire him on the spot."

    This article contains information from The Associated Press.

    Jonathan Tannenwald Philly.com
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    Comments  (49)
    • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 9:59 AM, 04/05/2013
      Maybe Dad Martelli takes the "hint" from his son....only way Hawks get better......
      kissamiazz
    • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 10:09 AM, 04/05/2013
      Then Barchi will be next. Maybe he'll resign at 2 PM as he announces Pernetti being toast.
      PhillySubsMac
    • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 10:15 AM, 04/05/2013
      This goes to show how just one hateful SOB can bring down an entire organization. Another university wide cover-up related to NCAA sports.
      #1 With A Bullet
    • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 10:19 AM, 04/05/2013
      With what happened at Penn State, negative behavior and oversight are no longer tolerated. These Rutger men did not heed the warning. This one will have a hard time getting a job at any college, let alone a school. They need to continue cleaning house of all the faculty that knew about the coach's abusive and racist/homophobic behavior yet stood by and watched it happen repeatedly over the years. Times are changing. Let him go on unemployment and suffer.
      MS. LOU.
    • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 10:22 AM, 04/05/2013
      Media loves Jersey, Sopranos distant memory, faded snookie,fading Christy. Digging their teeth real deep on this one.
      jrsbarfarm
    • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 10:22 AM, 04/05/2013
      Very disappointed rutgers succumbed to media preasure.... Espn is more dangerous than government at times
      twistedview
    • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 10:24 AM, 04/05/2013
      They should eliminate college sports anyway. It takes away from what a university is supposed to do - TEACH. Giving all these accolades to a bunch of meathead sports players and paying a bunch of ignorant Yahoos a salary to cheer them on is nonsense. These coaches and athletic directors draw in more money off the university than a triple PhD does who is teaching the young folks something useful and worthwhile. Sports contribute nothing to society than the urge to compete and ultimately fight in wars. They are a drag on intellectuals. Get rid of the entire program across the country and focus on teaching. Let idiots like this guy and the meatheads that attend the university just to play sports and rape women off to Korea to fight for real. See how they like competition then. Trifling state of affairs here.
      MS. LOU.
    • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 10:29 AM, 04/05/2013
      It's about time....
      topwonk
    • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 10:40 AM, 04/05/2013
      What do you expect from Rutgers ? Isn't this the school that paid Snookie $ 20,000 for an appearance and paid a Pulitzer Prise winner less ? The inmates are running the asylum !!
      Joe R.
    • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 10:43 AM, 04/05/2013
      Maybe they should hire Snookie . They already paid her $20,000 .
      Joe R.
    • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 10:44 AM, 04/05/2013
      Let's be clear about one thing: ALL major college athletics programs are rotten to the core. How could they not be with so much money sloshing around? But it is blatantly hypocritical for ESPN -- one of the main sources of that money -- to be the one doing the takedown. ESPN draws viewership and ad revenue by creating the problems, then does so again by exposing them. I quote from a news article last December: "The BCS recently signed a 12-year contract with ESPN. The deal averages $470 million annually." TV holds out the money that corrupts college sports; and all of the colleges, not just Rutgers, reach for it.
      Dave Clemens
    • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 10:45 AM, 04/05/2013
      MS Lou are you white?
      oharabri
    • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 10:54 AM, 04/05/2013
      Yay another man has lost his living - his ability to earn for his family. Is that enough for everyone, or do we need to continue to the b1ood1etting? How many more do you need? I for one can say that my life is so much better now that this injustice has been cured.
      Murrayman
    • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 10:56 AM, 04/05/2013
      I guess the lesson is that you NEVER give an employee a second chance, otherwise it's your job; if the pres signed off on the original punishment , I guess they'll fire him too. Pernetti should sue for wrongful discharge; if the regents had no problem with what he did last December, and there was no NEW bad behavior, they don't really have the right to fire him in April just because more people know about it. It's laughable that politicians were leading the charge to get him fired, the next time any of them do the right thing will be the first time.
      drbob1
    • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 12:30 PM, 04/05/2013
      Right on, drbob. Pernetti did not ignore the situation. He disciplined Rice in a meaningful way -- including a sizeable enough monetary penalty to hurt -- and as far as anyone knows, Rice had so far obeyed the conditions of the discipline imposed. The fact that ESPN has now rushed in at the head of a medio-political mob shouldn't make any difference. An organization with integrity would defend Pernetti's decision, not abandon it -- and him -- in a panic because of the shouting of a few people with big megaphones.


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