Tag Archives: coach

Michigan coach Mike Hart back in Ann Arbor, eyes return to team

Michigan running backs coach Mike Hart released a statement Monday saying he is back in Ann Arbor and his health is trending in a positive direction.

Hart suffered what was reported as a seizure on the sideline in the first quarter of Michigan’s game against Indiana. He was placed on a stretcher, carted off the field and hospitalized overnight for evaluation.

At the time, Michigan running backs Blake Corum and Donovan Edwards were visibly emotional as Hart was being attended to. The Indiana coaches came out onto the field to check on Hart, who coached for the Hoosiers from 2017 to 2020 before joining Michigan, where he played football.

As a player, Hart rushed for more than 5,000 yards and is still the career rushing leader for the fourth-ranked Wolverines.

Hart, 36, was alert and moving when he was carted off the field and reached out to the team at halftime to tell them he was doing well. Michigan coach Jim Harbaugh commented on Hart’s situation after the game, saying he was in stable condition.

“He’s going to stay overnight in Bloomington for continued observation. Mike is a strong guy and abundant prayers go his way … it really puts things in perspective,” Harbaugh said after the game. “In the moment, everybody’s thoughts were with Mike. Mine were and everyone around us was to get him the care that he needed …The most important thing is his health at that point in time.”

In Hart’s statement he said he looks forward to rejoining the team soon, but it’s not known at this time when he will be back with the team or what his exact diagnosis is.



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Replacing Karl Dorrell at Colorado: Candidates range from a current SEC coach to an NFL OC

Paul Chryst’s ouster from Wisconsin Sunday was a surprise. But Karl Dorrell? Not at all.

Colorado is 0-5 and 4-13 in the past two seasons. The roster is dreadful by Power 5 standards. This is going to be a really tough job. It doesn’t have a great recruiting base, and it’s got a pretty shaky positioning regarding conference stability. Colorado also hasn’t had back-to-back winning seasons in almost 20 years, dating back to 2004-05. There’s been just one Top 25 season in the past 20 years, a No. 17 finish in 2016 under Mike MacIntyre.

How can Colorado fix this? Who wants to try? The latter is just as important a question.

We think Colorado will try and keep the search focused on candidates with head coaching experience, but there are a couple of men without that experience we think the Buffaloes may consider.

Candidates with head coaching experience

Bronco Mendenhall: Former BYU and Virginia coach Bronco Mendenhall is available. He’s a defensive-minded coach who had a solid run at Virginia after going 99-43 at BYU. He knows this region well and would feel like a pretty safe hire. Would he fire up the fan base? Probably not, but could he develop the Buffaloes into a bowl team? Probably.

Kalani Sitake: The guy who followed Mendenhall at BYU, Sitake would also make some sense. His teams are always very physical and play hard.



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Wisconsin Badgers fire Paul Chryst, name Jim Leonhard as interim coach

The Wisconsin Badgers have fired their head football coach Paul Chryst, the school announced on Sunday night. Defensive coordinator Jim Leonhard will be the team’s interim coach.

The move represents a stunning turn of events for Chryst, who won at least 10 games in four of his first five seasons while guiding Wisconsin to three Big Ten championship game appearances during that stretch. But the product on the field steadily declined following the 2019 Rose Bowl campaign.

“After a heartfelt and authentic conversation with Coach Chryst about what is in the long-term best interest of our football program, I have concluded that now is the time for a change in leadership,” said Wisconsin athletic director Chris McIntosh. “Paul is a man of integrity who loves his players. I have great respect and admiration for Paul and the legacy of him and his family at the University of Wisconsin.”

GO DEEPERWisconsin job profile with Paul Chryst out: Pluses, minuses and candidates

Wisconsin finished a pandemic-shortened 2020 season 4-3 by rallying to win its final two games. The Badgers were in position to claim the Big Ten West title last season but suffered a 23-13 loss to rival Minnesota in the regular-season finale and went 9-4 overall. Wisconsin opened this season 2-3 and lost all three of its games against Power 5 opponents.

Washington State defeated Wisconsin 17-14 in Week 2 despite the Badgers being 17.



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Winless Colorado Buffaloes fire coach Karl Dorrell, DC Chris Wilson

Colorado fired coach Karl Dorrell on Sunday in the wake of the Buffaloes’ 0-5 start to the 2022 season, the university announced Sunday.

The school also dismissed defensive coordinator Chris Wilson.

Offensive coordinator Mike Sanford will serve as interim coach, the school announced. Sanford is the former head coach at Western Kentucky, where he went 9-16 in two seasons (2017-18).

Defensive line coach Gerald Chatman was named the interim defensive coordinator.

“I want to thank Karl for his hard work in leading our program since 2020,” athletic director Rick George said in a statement. “Ultimately, however, the results on the field just did not measure up to our expectations and standards, which made it necessary for us to make this change at this time. It was an extremely difficult decision and I wish Karl all of the best in his future endeavors.”

Colorado’s latest loss was a 43-20 defeat to Arizona on Saturday. The 23-point loss was the closest game Colorado has played this season. TCU trounced Colorado 38-13 in the opener, and the Buffaloes haven’t really been competitive in any games.

Dorrell was in his third season at Colorado. He went 4-8 last year after a solid debut (3-1) during the COVID-19 season of 2020. Colorado suffered significant losses before this season to the transfer portal.

Dorrell finishes his time in Boulder with an 8-15 record in 23 games.

ESPN’s Adam Rittenberg contributed to this report.

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Investigation found Boston Celtics coach Ime Udoka used crude language in dialogue with female subordinate prior to start of improper relationship

The independent law firm probe into Boston Celtics coach Ime Udoka found that he used crude language in his dialogue with a female subordinate prior to the start of an improper workplace relationship with the woman, an element that significantly factored into the severity of his one-year suspension, sources told ESPN.

Those investigative findings — which described verbiage on Udoka’s part that was deemed especially concerning coming from a workplace superior — contribute to what is likely a difficult pathway back to his reinstatement as Celtics coach in 2023, sources told ESPN.

The power dynamic associated with a superior’s improper relationship with a staff member was the primary finding and policy violation cited in the law firm’s report, which was commissioned by the Celtics and completed early last week, sources said.

At a news conference last week, Celtics owner Wyc Grousbeck said the suspension — which extends through June 30, 2023 — was a product of multiple violations of team policies, and sources told ESPN the Celtics won’t stand in Udoka’s way should he have the chance to become a coaching candidate elsewhere. There are teams that have tried to gather a preliminary understanding of the full explanation for Udoka’s suspension in preparation for possibly evaluating him for future coaching employment, sources told ESPN.

Grousbeck also said Udoka would be receiving a cut in his salary during the suspension.

In his first season, Udoka, 45, led the Celtics to an Eastern Conference championship and NBA Finals berth, where Boston lost in six games to the Golden State Warriors. The Celtics return a team expected again to be a championship favorite, and Udoka had appeared destined for a long runway as the franchise’s coach after replacing Brad Stevens, who moved into the front-office role previously occupied by Danny Ainge during the 2021 offseason.

Grousbeck said during the news conference that no one else within the organization faced discipline as a result of the investigation. The Celtics wouldn’t confirm the nature of the violations, but Stevens, the team’s president of basketball operations, became emotional when describing the number of women employed by the Celtics who were targeted by unfounded social media rumors and allegations.

The Celtics promoted assistant coach Joe Mazzulla to interim coach for the upcoming season. Mazzulla, 34, is well-regarded inside and outside of the Celtics organization and counts Stevens among his most significant supporters. Mazzulla was a finalist for the Utah Jazz head-coaching job over the summer that went to top Celtics assistant Will Hardy.

Grousbeck and Stevens would not elaborate on the criteria Udoka would need to meet to return to coaching the Celtics following his suspension.

Grousbeck defended the Celtics’ decision to suspend Udoka for the entire season, insisting it was the proper response based on the probe’s findings.

“This felt right, but there’s no clear guidelines for any of this,” he said. “It’s conscience and gut feel. … We collectively came to this and got there but it was not clear what to do but it was clear something substantial needed to be done, and it was.”

ESPN’s Tim Bontemps contributed to this report.

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Celebrity Cheer Coach Dominick Frizzell and Tennessee’s Premier Athletics Hit With Sex Abuse Lawsuit

The competitive cheerleading community was hit with another bombshell lawsuit on Tuesday, alleging that a Tennessee gym fostered an environment that allowed one of its celebrity coaches to sexually and emotionally abuse at least two teenage male athletes for years.

Among them: a 15-year-old boy who told The Daily Beast that the coach sent him sexually explicit messages, photographs, and videos for months earlier this year when he was still 14. When the coach became aware he was being investigated by the sport’s governing body, U.S. All-Star Federation (USASF), over complaints made by another athlete, the teenager said the messages turned sinister—and included threats that he wanted to “destroy” the initial whistleblower.

“He made it feel like it was a normal thing and it was OK,” the boy, identified as John Doe 1 in a lawsuit filed in Tennessee federal court, said about the abuse. “It wasn’t fair. I feel like it was happening to multiple people.”

John Doe 1 is one of two teenage boys in the lawsuit demanding a jury trial. Among the defendants named in the suit are Varsity Spirit, its associated brands, and its former founder Jeff Webb; USASF; USA Cheer; Charlesbank Capital Partner; Bain Capital; Premier Athletics, where the two teenage boys were allegedly abused, and the gym’s manager Susan Traylor, and coach Dominick “Nick” Frizzell.

Frizzell is well-known in the cheer world and previously competed with a nationally renowned All-Stars team. Currently, he’s a cheerleader at the University of Tennessee and has a large social media following, including 31,000 followers on Instagram and 48,000 on TikTok. (Both accounts were made private on Tuesday morning.)

A spokesperson for the University of Tennessee told The Daily Beast that Frizzell was suspended from participating in the school’s Spirit Program activities on Sept. 16 and “was formally dismissed from the program” on Tuesday.

via Facebook/Premier Athletics – Knoxville West

The lawsuit, obtained by The Daily Beast, alleges that Traylor allowed Frizzell to “emotionally, physically, and sexually exploit and abuse…Premier’s young athletes.” “Premier Athletics and Defendant Frizzell, along with other gyms and coaches, were empowered and placed in positions of trust and authority by the Varsity Defendants, all while the Varsity Defendants knew or should have known that these same coaches and gyms were pervasively abusing athletes or allowing athletes to be abused,” the lawsuit added.

In a statement to The Daily Beast, USA Cheer Executive Director Lauri Harris said the allegations are “tragic and we are heartbroken for any victims of abuse.” “Sexual abuse and misconduct in all forms is reprehensible and has no place in sport or society,” Harris added. “USA Cheer will continue to work with the entire cheer community and all relevant agencies to rid it of bad actors and hold those responsible to account.”

An attorney representing Premier Athletics denied the allegations, claiming the lawsuit contains “many inaccuracies and false statements” about the gym and Traylor. “The health and safety of athletes that train at its facilities is extremely important to Premier Knoxville,” lawyer Chad Hatmaker said. “Premier Knoxville has taken all of the appropriate and required steps based on the reports it received.”

In a statement to The Daily Beast, Varsity Spirit said they rejected “any accusation that Varsity Spirit enabled such unthinkable behavior.” “We are outraged that predators took advantage of cheerleading programs to abuse innocent children,” the statement said.

Other named defendants did not immediately respond to The Daily Beast’s request for comment.

For Mary Doe, the mother of John Doe 1, who also requested anonymity, the notion that she was forced to come forward and file a lawsuit against the people who were supposed to be educating and protecting her son “is maddening.” The lawsuit alleges that Mary Doe wasn’t informed about the allegations made by the initial athlete against Frizzell until this month—and that she and her son were never contacted by Premier after they opened an investigation.

“I am angry that we had to do this,” Mary Doe said. “I am angry that to even move forward, to expose and make sure that something happens to the people that completely botched this up and didn’t protect my son, it has to be a public situation. It’s a necessary evil that has to happen.”

The lawsuit is only the latest harrowing sexual-abuse scandal to hit the cheerleading community. Earlier this month, The Daily Beast first reported on a damning lawsuit filed against Scott Foster, a prominent South Carolina cheerleading coach who died by suicide in August. It alleges he sexually abused male and female athletes and presided over a culture that allowed his staff to do the same. His gym, Rockstar Cheer, has since been closed “indefinitely.” Both lawsuits allege that the well-known private equity firm Bain Capital cashed in on the chaos.

The cheerleading community has also been rocked by the 12-year prison sentence given to Jerry Harris, a former breakout star on Netflix’s Cheer who pleaded guilty to charges involving child porn and sex crimes against minors, and lawsuits filed against well-known Cheer Athletics Coach Jason McCartney, who is accused of “twisted” sex abuse against his Texas athletes.

“This lawsuit makes it clear that we’re not talking about some isolated incident in South Carolina,” Strom Law Firm’s Bakari Sellers, one of the lawyers who filed Tuesday’s suit, said in a statement. “This is a nationwide epidemic of abuse that infects all of competitive cheerleading enabled and concealed by Varsity Spirit, the U.S. All Star Federation (USASF) and Bain Capital.”

The lawsuit filed on Tuesday takes direct aim at Premier Athletics in Tennessee, which was purchased by Varsity Spirit in 2005. The “cheer, dance, and tumbling gym” is a USASF member gym that prides itself on “highly trained” and “highly qualified” instructors.

The lawsuit states that in 2018, when he was just 14, John Doe 2 met 19-year-old Frizzell when they were both athletes at Premier Athletics. Frizzell added the teenager on Snapchat but it wasn’t until two years later, the lawsuit states, that Frizzell “finally convinced Plaintiff John Doe 2 to meet up, and they began to engage in oral sex and other sexual conduct.”

“When Defendant Frizzell turned twenty-one, he told Plaintiff John Doe 2 that he could get in trouble for having sex with Plaintiff John Doe 2,” the lawsuit said. “Nevertheless, the conduct continued.”

The lawsuit alleges that Premier Athletics knew about the “ongoing sexual relationship,” but nobody ever questioned “Frizzell’s continued interaction” with John Doe 2 or “any other underaged athlete.” Instead, Frizzell was hired as a coach.

Around the same time, in 2020, John Doe 1 began cheering at Premier Athletics and became aware of Frizzell, who is described in the lawsuit as a “cheerlebrity.” By the end of 2021, Frizzell, who was in his early twenties, was following John Doe 1 on Snapchat—even though he was aware John Doe 1 was only 14, the lawsuit states.

In January 2022, Frizzell began sending “sexually explicit messages and photographs of himself” to John Doe 1, including photographs of his penis and videos of him masturbating, the suit alleges. On several occasions, Frizzell also allegedly asked John Doe 1 to meet up, including once in May when the two engaged in oral sex.

About a month later, the lawsuit states that John Doe 1 learned that a fellow underaged athlete was also receiving sexually explicit photographs from Frizzell—and that the other teenager had asked Frizzell to “stop behaving in a predatory manner.” (The fellow underaged athlete is not included in the lawsuit.)

Shortly thereafter, John Doe 1 changed to a new gym. The teenager told The Daily Beast that despite changing gyms—a decision he said was the “best choice”—and despite Frizzell knowing that a sexual misconduct complaint had been made against him, he still contacted John Doe 1.

In one July 2022 message, he “bragged” that he was “not permanently banned” and that Susan Traylor said she wasn’t going to fire him, the lawsuit states, adding that Frizzell sent John Doe 1 “numerous messages threatening the minor athlete who made the initial report.”

John Doe 1 told The Daily Beast that some of the messages included that Frizzell “wanted to destroy” the teenager that reported him. He said he soon found out that some people at Premier were being interviewed about Frizzell’s misconduct—but neither he nor his mother were ever contacted.

“We were never contacted, talked about it all,” Mary Doe said. “It’s infuriating.”

The lawsuit alleges that Frizzell even tried to contact John Doe 1 in an attempt to influence how he would respond to questions about their interactions. Earlier this month, John Doe 1’s new gym contacted Mary Doe to inform her that Premier Athletics was investigating allegations of abuse against Frizzell and that those allegations included her son.

“It’s been a complete whirlwind,” Mary Doe, who ultimately made a report to law enforcement, added. “It’s completely maddening to me.”

“Ultimately, Defendant Premier Athletics’ bungled internal investigation determined that insufficient proof existed to hold Defendant Frizzell accountable,” the lawsuit states, adding that the determination was based, at least in part, on the fact that John Doe 1 had left the gym.

According to the lawsuit, Premier Athletics acknowledged in a Sept. 18 Instagram statement that an “additional report” had been filed with law enforcement, but provided no information.

In a statement, Premier Athletics lawyer Chad Hatmaker stated that Traylor was told by an athlete on June 26, 2022, that he had received inappropriate photos from Frizzell. “No copies or screenshots of the photographs were provided to substantiate this claim and this was the first time Ms. Traylor or Premier Knoxville had received reports about this alleged misconduct,” Hatmaker said, adding that Frizzell was suspended and the athlete’s claim was immediately reported to local law enforcement as well as USASF.

The statement said that law enforcement “did not substantiate the complaint, nor did USASF” but Premier Knoxville terminated Frizzell. On Sept. 18, the statement adds, the gym was informed of another student—who they believed is John Doe 1—who had a “physical relationship” with Frizzell. But the gym states that neither the teenager nor his mother reported the claim—but Premiere Athletics went to law enforcement and USAF that day.

“After reporting the matter to law enforcement Premier Knoxville did not have any contact with the alleged victim or his family so as not to be falsely accused of interfering with law enforcement’s investigation,” the gym’s statement added.

For Mary Doe, the latest allegations against Frizzell are symptomatic of an ongoing problem in the cheerleading community. She and her son both said they hope this lawsuit lands Frizzell in jail and that Premier is “held accountable for what they did.”

“It’s disgusting,” she said.

According to USA Cheer’s ineligibility list, Frizzell’s membership with USASF as a coach and athlete has been temporarily suspended “pending investigation” because he violated policy “related to athlete protection.”

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Jaylen Brown, Boston Celtics set to ‘put our best foot forward’ under interim coach Joe Mazzulla

CANTON, Mass. — In the wake of the suspension of Boston Celtics coach Ime Udoka for the entire 2022-23 NBA season for violations of team rules, interim coach Joe Mazzulla said Monday that his goal is to simply continue building upon what allowed the Celtics to reach the NBA Finals last season for the first time in 12 years.

“It’s not about carrying on from one person,” Mazzulla said during the team’s media day here in the Boston suburbs. “It’s about carrying on the identity of our players. We had our struggles early last season, but at our best, we knew what our identity was. It was our defense, it was our buy-in from a defensive standpoint, and then it was sharing the ball and moving quickly on the offensive end.

“So as much as we can stick to the things we were great at last year, and then find areas to improve along the way, I think is the right way to go.”

The overwhelming message emanating from everyone who stepped to the podium Monday, from Mazzulla to the players, was that all of them are still coming to grips with the events of the past several days. After Udoka oversaw a dramatic in-season turnaround in his first year as head coach to lead Boston from being under .500 in late January to in the NBA Finals in June, the expectation was that it was the beginning of a long run with him in charge of the franchise.

For the players, that was the case until the middle of last week, as each of them said they had no idea anything was coming before ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski broke the news that the team was considering suspending Udoka last Wednesday for violations of team rules. And, even after meeting with the front office and ownership last week, the players admitted they still didn’t have much information over what took place. Sources previously told Wojnarowski that Udoka had an intimate relationship with a female member of the franchise’s staff.

“It’s a lot going on,” said Jaylen Brown, who, like Tatum, said he hadn’t spoken to Udoka since last week’s events took place. “Some we could control, some we couldn’t. The best we can say is to move on.

“Initial reaction, like you said, I was a little confused. No one really has any of the information, so it’s difficult to make a comment on how things were supposed to go and how the process went or anything. The best thing we can do is put our best foot forward.”

And while the players were open about being in the dark over what took place, and where things were headed, they also said they understood how the organization was in a difficult situation, and that the privacy of everyone involved made for a very complicated situation for the Celtics to navigate moving forward.

“Literally no one knows anything right now,” said Marcus Smart, the team’s longest-tenured player and the NBA’s reigning Defensive Player of the Year. “We’re still waiting just like everybody else. So as a player, you’d like to know [more information], but that’s none of our business. It’s their lives, the people that are involved. It’s between them, and we should respect that privacy and we understand, just like we want our privacy respected. Although as a player, yeah, you’d like to know, but like I said, it’s not an obligation.

“Like I said, they handled it the best way they could with how they can do it and from what they know, and we’ve got to just go from there.”

The process of going forward now lies in the hands of Mazzulla, who has skyrocketed from being the head coach at Division II Fairmont State in West Virginia from 2017 to ’19 to now manning the sidelines for the Boston Celtics, the defending Eastern Conference champions and a group that is among the favorites to win it again this season.

But while most of the rest of Udoka’s staff last season was new to the franchise after he took over for Brad Stevens — who himself moved upstairs to serve as the team’s president of basketball operations, replacing Danny Ainge — Mazzulla has been with Boston since 2019, when he was hired by Stevens to be an assistant coach on his staff.

Smart, in particular, highlighted that additional time as a significant help to a team that’s trying to process quite a bit at the moment.

“It helps tremendously,” Smart said. “Like I said, it would’ve been different if we had somebody new that we didn’t know and were trying to build that connection with.

“Joe has been here. He knows the scheme, he knows the players, so it makes it a little bit more easier to adjust to a guy that’s been here and knows you.”

Mazzulla also addressed the two arrests he had back in college while playing for West Virginia University — once, in 2008, for underage drinking and aggravated assault, a case in which he pled guilty and paid a fine, and then in 2009 for domestic battery after an incident at a bar, a case that was settled out of court.

Last week, Stevens said he thoroughly vetted those situations before hiring Mazzulla as part of his staff in 2019, adding that he believed in Mazzulla’s “substantiveness” as a person. For his part, Mazzulla said he has used what he’s learned from those incidents to become a better person since then.

“Listen, I’ve made mistakes. I’m not perfect. I’ve hurt people, and I’ve had to use the situations I put myself in as a younger man, I’ve had to use to learn from and to become a better person. That’s what I’ve tried to focus on.

“How can I recreate my identity on a person? How I can rely on my faith? And how can I have a positive impact on the people around me? And I’ve always had good people around me.”

He declined to get into any specifics about what happened but said, “I’m not the same person that I was.”

“I think as you grow as a person, you’re constantly having to build an identity, and I didn’t have an identity at a certain point in my life, for whatever reason,” Mazzulla said. “I think it’s, ‘How can I develop an identity? How can I find a foundation, which for me is my faith and then how can I impact people positively around me.’ That’s something I really learned throughout my life.”

The Celtics will now attempt to shift their focus to the start of training camp here Tuesday, when they will not only be without Udoka, but both their starting center, Robert Williams III, who is out for another eight to 12 weeks before resuming basketball activities following knee surgery, and top free agent signing Danilo Gallinari, who suffered a torn ACL late last month.

But despite all that’s happened in the past few weeks, it hasn’t diminished the group’s confidence that it can go a step further than it did last season and claim the franchise’s first NBA championship since 2008.

“Can we [win a championship]? Do I believe that? Absolutely,” Tatum said in response to being asked if the team still believes it has what it takes to win a title.

“Absolutely I believe that, and I think everybody else does in that locker room as well.”

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Miami Dolphins QB Tua Tagovailoa not in concussion protocol, coach Mike McDaniel says

MIAMI — Dolphins quarterback Tua Tagovailoa is not in concussion protocol as the team prepares for Thursday’s game against the Cincinnati Bengals, coach Mike McDaniel said Monday.

Tagovailoa briefly left Sunday’s win over the Buffalo Bills and was evaluated for a concussion after hitting the back of his head on the ground during the second quarter. He stumbled while trying to jog back to the huddle after the play, prompting the Dolphins to evaluate him for a concussion on the sideline and ultimately in the locker room.

After the game, both McDaniel and Tagovailoa said it was the quarterback’s back that caused him to stumble, not a head injury. Tagovailoa said he felt like he “hyperextended” his back earlier in the game on a designed quarterback sneak, and it flared up late in the second quarter.

Tagovailoa said he passed the league-mandated concussion protocol at halftime and was allowed to return to the game.

Despite Tagovailoa’s and McDaniel’s comments, the NFL Players Association told the NFL it wanted a review of the league’s concussion protocol because of Tagovailoa’s quick return to the game. Speaking to reporters Monday afternoon, McDaniel said the Dolphins will comply with any league investigation and insisted that he would not have allowed his quarterback to be put in harm’s way “if there were any red flags.”

“The one thing that our players know more than anybody is there’s certain things that I’m very sensitive to — I’ve been called emotional from time to time — and one of those things is player health,” he said. “I don’t mess around with that at all. Tua was pretty annoyed with me in the game because he knew what hurt and didn’t understand why people kept talking to him about what we were talking to him about. I think watching replays, he probably could.

“The pillar of importance for all of it is player safety — that’s why the protocols are in place. We’re happy to comply and I feel fine about that whole process, really.”

McDaniel also said Monday that Tagovailoa was sore, as expected, and dealing with ankle soreness as well as back soreness from the game.

He did not commit one way or the other as far as Tagovailoa’s availability for Thursday’s game but did say they’re still acquiring information and will be ready for any scenario.

“It’s my first time on a Thursday night game with Tua, so I don’t assume anything,” he said. “As far as me being able to access my crystal ball — it’s broken right now. That’s one of the reasons why you have a roster of capable people, that’s why we brought Teddy [Bridgewater] here and drafted Skylar [Thompson]. You have to be ready for these type of adjustments. Just like Teddy was ready in the game, we’ll be ready for whatever we have to deal with moving forward.

“These Thursday night games, you just try to do the best you can. We’re trying to get information as fast as possible and we’ll be working fluidly from that. Right now, not just Tua, but there’s a lot of players that we’ll be adjusting to on the fly, seeing if they can turn it around and give a healthy outing on Thursday.”

The Dolphins did not practice on Monday but estimated that Tagovailoa would not have participated in their injury report.

Tagovailoa is currently the NFL’s second-leading passer and ranks second in yards per attempts and first in QBR. He finished Sunday’s game with 186 passing yards and a touchdown on 13-of-17 passing.

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Nia Long breaks her silence on her Boston Celtics coach fiance’s affair with an aide

‘Blindsided’ Nia Long breaks her silence after learning her Boston Celtics coach fiancé cheated on her with an aide

  • Ime Udoka’s fiancé Nia Long was reportedly blindsided by his reported affair
  • Long, 51, acted on the Fresh Prince of Bel-Air and is the mother of Udoka’s son
  • This week, Udoka was suspended a year for violating unspecified team rules 
  • Reports claim he had a consensual affair with a female member of the team staff
  • Long reportedly moved to Boston just weeks ago and was unaware of the affair
  • Her spokesperson said Long is seeking privacy and is concerned for her family 
  • Click here for all your latest international Sports news from DailyMail.com 

Fresh Prince of Bel Air actress Nia Long has broken her silence today after learning that her Boston Celtics fiancé, Ime Udoka, cheated on her with one of his staffers. 

The starlet told TMZ in a statement that she was left ‘blindsided’ by the affair, that comes as she relocates to Boston to be with her longtime beau.

Long, 51, and Udoka, a former NBA player turned coach, have been together for more than a decade. 

They became engaged in 2015 but have never married, though they share a ten-year-old son. She also has another son from a previous relationship. 

This week, their family bliss was destroyed when the Boston Celtics suspended Udoka for violating ethics rules by having a consensual affair with the unnamed staffer. 

Nia Long with fiance Ime Udoka in 2017. He has been suspended as the head coach of the Boston Celtics for an inappropriate relationship with a female staffer, despite being engaged to Long 

Long, 51, and Udoka, 45, have been together for over a decade. They are shown together at the Barclays Center in New York last August 

Udoka and Long with their son, Kez, in 2018. He is now ten. She also has an older son, Massai, from a previous relationship (shown together) 

It’s believed that is how Long discovered the infidelity.  

‘The outpouring of love and support from family, friends and the community during this difficult time means so much to me,’ Long said through her spokeswoman.

‘I ask that my privacy be respected as I process the recent events. 

‘Above all, I am a mother and will continue to focus on my children,’ she said. 

Udoka, the Celtics’ second-year head coach with a once-sterling reputation, was suspended for all of the upcoming season on Thursday over ‘multiple’ unspecified violations of team rules. 

In a statement on Thursday night, he said: ‘I want to apologize to our players, fans, the entire Celtics organization, and my family for letting them down.’ 

He also suffered a ‘significant financial penalty’, though the amount has not been disclosed. 

The 45-year-old is said to have had an improper relationship with a female member of staff. 

That woman has not been named. In the team statement naming assistant Joe Mazzulla as interim coach, Boston said Udoka’s future would be determined ‘at a later date.’ 

Long became a household name with her role in the Fresh Prince of Bel Air as Lisa Wilkes, Will Smith’s girlfriend. 



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Celtics coach Ime Udoka facing disciplinary action for violation of team rules

Celtics coach Ime Udoka is facing a suspension for a violation of team policy, a league source confirmed late Wednesday night. The source said the discipline will likely be decided shortly, but declined to elaborate on Udoka’s situation.

The Athletic reported early Thursday morning that Udoka, 45, had an improper intimate and consensual relationship with a female team staff member. Udoka has been engaged to the actress Nia Long since 2015, and the couple has an 11-year-old son.

According to ESPN, the Celtics are considering a suspension that could last as long as one year.

After a challenging start in which the Celtics appeared in danger of missing the playoffs last season, Udoka led the team to the NBA Finals in his first season as an NBA head coach and finished fourth in Coach of the Year voting. He gained the trust and respect of his players with his demanding, disciplined style that was built on accountability.

It’s unclear which Celtics assistant would fill in for Udoka if he is suspended. Will Hardy, Boston’s lead assistant last season, would have been the obvious choice, but in June he was named head coach of the Jazz. Ben Sullivan guided Boston’s Las Vegas summer league team in July and was an assistant with the Bucks when they won the NBA title in 2021. Joe Mazzulla, viewed as a rising star in coaching, interviewed for Utah’s opening before eventually being promoted to a bench role on Udoka’s staff this summer.

After coming within two wins of an NBA title last June, the Celtics added veterans Malcolm Brogdon and Danilo Gallinari to their young, talented roster that is built around First Team All-NBA pick Jayson Tatum. Boston subsequently became the betting favorite to win the championship.

But the past few weeks have been bumpy.

Gallinari tore his ACL while playing for Italy in a FIBA World Cup qualifier and is expected to miss the entire season. Then on Tuesday, the Celtics announced that center Robert Williams, who missed a month last spring after tearing his meniscus, will undergo a second left knee surgery and be sidelined for 4-6 weeks.

Now, Udoka’s situation has made things even more unsettled. The Celtics are scheduled to hold media day on Monday before opening training camp at the Auerbach Center on Tuesday.


Adam Himmelsbach can be reached at adam.himmelsbach@globe.com. Follow him on Twitter @adamhimmelsbach.



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