CU Athletics Decision To Be Announced Thursday
Athletic Department To Be Placed Under Stricter Oversight By University
POSTED: 6:24 am MDT May 26, 2004
UPDATED: 6:17 pm MDT May 26, 2004
BOULDER, Colo. -- University of Colorado President Betsy
Hoffman plans to reinstate suspended football coach Gary Barnett (pictured, left)
and no other changes in athletics personnel are planned, the Rocky
Mountain News reported Wednesday.Hoffman set an 11 a.m. news conference for Thursday to announce her decision.
The athletic department will be placed under stricter oversight
by the university, the newspaper reported, citing unidentified
sources close to the school. CU spokeswoman Michele Ames said she could neither confirm nor
deny the report. Barnett's attorney declined comment. The coach has an unlisted phone number. Patty Klopfenstein, whose son is a tight end on the team, sent
players' parents an e-mail that said: "There's going be an
impromptu party the night it is announced that Gary is reinstated.
It will be in the Boulder area, and most likely everyone will be
asked to bring something." She did not return telephone messages.
CU director of football operations David Hansburg said he was
not privy to any decision Hoffman might have made about Barnett's
return. "It wouldn't surprise me," he said. "We've said that all
along." Earlier this month, an investigative panel appointed by the CU
Board of Regents and a special liaison whom Hoffman named to study
CU's sports programs recommended more oversight of the athletic
department, which has been led by Dick Tharp since 1997. The investigative commission recommended that Tharp report to
Provost Phil DiStefano rather than Chancellor Richard Byyny because
the provost's office would be able to provide "more attentive
supervision." As for Barnett, Hoffman placed him on paid administrative leave
Feb. 18 after comments he made about some of the nine women who
have alleged since 1997 that they were sexually assaulted by CU
football players or recruits. One of the women was former Buffaloes place-kicker Katie Hnida,
who told Sports Illustrated she was sexually assaulted by a
teammate in 2000. In answering questions from reporters after the
story appeared, Barnett said Hnida was a "terrible" player. His remarks came as the university faced lawsuits from three
women who allege they were sexually assaulted at or after a 2001
party attended by players and recruits. District Attorney Mary
Keenan did not file assault charges, but later said she believed
sex and booze were used as recruiting tools. Last week, the investigating commission concluded that sex and
alcohol were used in recruiting but that there was no evidence that
CU officials "knowingly sanctioned" them. The report criticized
Barnett, Tharp, Byyny and Hoffman for lax oversight and slow
reactions to recruiting problems. Regents, though, affirmed that Hoffman's job was safe, and
Hoffman expressed her confidence in Byyny. Hoffman issued no
statement regarding Barnett and Tharp. On Monday, former coach Bill McCartney weighed in on Barnett's
fate. In a letter to Hoffman, the founder of the Promise Keepers
organization for Christian men said Barnett should keep his job. CU director of football operations David Hansburg said he was
not privy to any decision Hoffman might have made about Barnett's
return. "It wouldn't surprise me," he said. "We've said that all
along." Earlier this month an investigative panel appointed by the CU
Board of Regents and a special liaison whom Hoffman named to study
CU's sports programs recommended more oversight of the athletic
department, which has been led by Dick Tharp since 1997. The investigative commission recommended that Tharp report to
Provost Phil DiStefano rather than Chancellor Richard Byyny because
the provost's office would be able to provide "more attentive
supervision." As for Barnett, Hoffman placed him on paid administrative leave
Feb. 18 after comments he made about some of the nine women who
have alleged since 1997 that they were sexually assaulted by CU
football players or recruits. One of the women was former Buffaloes place-kicker Katie Hnida,
who told Sports Illustrated she was sexually assaulted by a
teammate in 2000. In answering questions from reporters after the
story appeared, Barnett said Hnida was a "terrible" player. His remarks came as the university faced lawsuits from three
women who allege they were sexually assaulted at or after a 2001
party attended by players and recruits. District Attorney Mary
Keenan filed no criminal rape charges but said she believed sex and
booze were used as recruiting tools. Last week, the investigating commission concluded that sex and
alcohol were used in recruiting but that there was no evidence that
CU officials "knowingly sanctioned" them. The report criticized
Barnett, Tharp, Byyny and Hoffman for lax oversight and slow
reactions to recruiting problems. Regents, though, affirmed that Hoffman's job was safe, and
Hoffman expressed her confidence in Byyny. Hoffman issued no
statement regarding Barnett and Tharp. On Monday, former coach Bill McCartney weighed in on Barnett's
fate. In a letter to Hoffman, the founder of the Promise Keepers
organization for Christian men said Barnett should keep his job.

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