Northwestern AD Derrick Gragg upset over 'Cats Against the World' shirts
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[August 10, 2023]
Northwestern athletic director Derrick Gragg is disappointed
that coaches and staff members wore shirts on Wednesday that were
apparently in support of former coach Pat Fitzgerald in the wake of
allegations of hazing in the program.
The shirts read "Cats Against the World" and displayed the number 51
-- Fitzgerald's jersey number when he was a star player at
Northwestern.
Said interim coach David Braun: "It is not my business to censor
anyone's free speech."
The tone from Gragg was much different.
"I am extremely disappointed that a few members of our football
program staff decided to wear 'Cats Against the World' shirts,"
Gragg said in a statement. "Neither I nor the university was aware
that they owned or would wear these shirts today. The shirts are
inappropriate, offensive and tone deaf.
"Let me be crystal clear: Hazing has no place at Northwestern, and
we are committed to do whatever is necessary to address
hazing-related issues, including thoroughly investigating any
incidents or allegations of hazing or any other misconduct."
News that the Northwestern football program was being investigated
for hazing surfaced in January with the school later saying it
received a complaint in November alleging instances of hazing inside
the locker room.
But the turmoil exploded when Fitzgerald was suspended in July and
later fired.
A player then came forward to the student newspaper, the Daily
Northwestern, and revealed that the investigation was not just into
allegations of hazing, but alleged coerced sexual acts.
On Wednesday, current Northwestern players said they were not
discussing the hazing situation and were focused on the 2023 season.
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"We're not addressing any past hazing allegations,"
linebacker Bryce Gallagher told reporters. "What I can tell you is
right now we have a great culture in our locker room and the guys
are really sticking together through all this. The older guys are
really just focused on helping these younger guys out, helping each
other get through this, and just leaning on our relationships."
Northwestern players went through a mandatory
anti-hazing seminar last week while Braun said hazing won't be part
of the team environment moving forward. Braun said only seven
players entered the transfer portal during the 30-day window after
Fitzgerald's firing.
Defensive back Rod Heard II said that togetherness is a big
foundation of the program.
"It just shows that what we have here is valued," Heard told
reporters. "The players that stayed, they want to be here. And the
players that left, we fully support their decision in doing so."
Fitzgerald spent 26 years with the Wildcats -- four as a player,
five as an assistant and 17 as head coach -- and is a member of the
Northwestern Athletics Hall of Fame and the College Football Hall of
Fame.
He was a two-time consensus All-American linebacker during his
playing stint from 1993-96. He was one of the stars of the
Northwestern squad that stunningly won the Big Ten crown in 1995 but
he missed the Rose Bowl loss to Southern California due to a broken
leg.
Fitzgerald, 48, was 110-101 with 10 bowl appearances (5-5 record)
in 17 seasons as head coach. The Wildcats were 1-11 in 2022.
Northwestern opens the 2023 season at Rutgers on Sept. 3.
--Field Level Media
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