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"Lesbians,
Dykes and Atheists"
at Fresno State
Outsports.com
What is going on in
the athletic department at Fresno State? In this Wizard of Odd, it's
lesbians, dykes and atheists, oh my.
The firing of female coaches, filing of lawsuits, and allegations of
harassment and gender discrimination are now centerpieces of the
athletic department at a university that likes to label itself,
"Leading the New California." But one of the few categories in which
Fresno State is leading these days is controversy.
In less than nine months, two female coaches have been fired and
replaced by men. The athletic director resigned just days after
harassment allegations were levied against him by one of those fired
coaches. An associate athletic director, also part of the harassment
allegations, left the school for a new job. And now, the women
affected are fighting back.
In late August, one of the fired female coaches filed a lawsuit
against the university, in part claiming that members of the
athletic department, "would repeatedly refer to certain woman
coaches as lesbians, dykes and atheists." Yet another fired female
coach, according to media reports, is set to file a lawsuit of her
own against the school.
Consider this recent timeline of events at Fresno State:
Dec. 6, 2004: Head women's volleyball coach Lindy Vivas is
fired after 14 years at the school by Athletic Director Scott
Johnson. According to the campus newspaper, Vivas' firing came seven
months after she filed a Title IX complaint against the university
with the U.S. Department of Education Office for Civil Rights. That
was one of four separate complaints of gender-based discrimination
filed by various persons against the athletic department from
November 2002 to May 2004, according to USA Today.
Jan. 28, 2005: Johnson announces the hiring of a new head
women's volleyball coach -- Ruben Nieves, a man who, according to
the official Fresno State athletics web site, hadn't coached women's
volleyball in 17 years.
Feb. 9, 2005: Johnson announces he has placed head women's
basketball coach Stacy Johnson-Klein on administrative leave for
"allegations of serious violations" of university policy. Included
in the allegations are charges that Johnson-Klein inappropriately
used athletic department money and took prescription painkillers
from athletes. The athletic director announces that during
Johnson-Klein's absence, the interim head women's basketball coach
will be Adrian Wiggins, a man who, according to the official Fresno
State athletics web site, had two seasons of head coaching
experience at Division II Cameron University in Lawton, Okla.
Feb. 17, 2005: The Fresno Bee publishes a story saying, "Nine
days before she was suspended, Fresno State women's basketball coach
Stacy Johnson-Klein complained of being harassed by her supervisor
about her attire." According to the newspaper, Johnson-Klein wrote
in an e-mail to athletic director Johnson, "That is harassment I do
not wish to deal with from a male supervisor anymore," apparently
referring to associate athletic director Randy Welniak, who oversees
women's basketball.
Feb. 25, 2005: Johnson, 54, announces he will be retiring
from his athletic director position when his contract ends during
the summer. During Johnson's tenure as AD, Fresno State's men's
basketball program was placed on probation by the NCAA for various
rules violations, stripped of some scholarships, found to have used
an ineligible player, and rocked by a scandal in which a player was
arrested and charged with murder. University president John Welty,
in a press release issued the same day, praised Johnson, saying,
"“Scott has made a lasting contribution to this university." Johnson
himself says, "I know some may want to connect my retirement
announcement with items in the news about the women’s basketball
coach’s suspension. There simply isn’t any connection."
March 2, 2005: Fresno State president Welty announces that
Johnson-Klein has been fired in a news conference carried live on
local television in Fresno. Welty cites deceit, misuse of
prescription painkillers and fiscal mismanagement as reasons for the
termination and, according to The Fresno Bee, presents a 380-page
report prepared by the university that accuses Johnson-Klein of
violating NCAA rules and university policies.
.
July 28, 2005: Welniak resigns his post as associate AD at
Fresno State to accept a similar position at Illinois State.
Aug. 23, 2005: Johnson-Klein files a lawsuit against
Fresno State, accusing the university of retaliation for complaining
about sexual harassment and the lack of support for the women's
athletic programs on campus. According to The Fresno Bee, the
lawsuit names university president Welty, former AD Johnson and
former associate AD Welniak as defendants. The Bee writes that the
lawsuit, "reveals some new allegations in the controversy between
Johnson-Klein and Fresno State's athletic department. Johnson-Klein
claims that Johnson, who announced his retirement in February,
inappropriately touched her, and made comments about her body and
physical appearance." Additionally, according to The Bee, the
lawsuit also maintains that Welty and Welniak "made inappropriate
comments about her breasts, cleavage and what they perceived as
tight-fitting and revealing clothing." Additionally, the suit says
the athletic department "has a long-standing pattern of
discriminating against women coaches, specifically those who are
lesbian or who complained that women's teams were not receiving
funding or support equal to men's."
According to The
Bee, Johnson-Klein says she was told that "lesbian coaches were not
to be hired at California State University-Fresno." On numerous
occasions, she saw or heard her supervisors and athletic department
staffers refer to lesbians as "the other team," adding that "you
need to be on the home team and not the other team." According to
the article, Johnson-Klein said she was told to choose sides and
"was instructed not to harbor or foster any type of relationship
with any women athletes who were considered lesbians or complained
of Title IX violations," the lawsuit alleges. The lawsuit also
states that supervisors repeatedly referred to certain women coaches
as "lesbians, dykes and atheists," according to the newspaper.
Aug. 24, 2005: Vivas tells the local CBS affiliate that the
university's goal regarding female coaches was, "to do anything
possible to create a situation where the women would fail." Part of
Johnson-Klein's claim against the university, according to CBS 47,
alleges that, "The administration in the athletic department would
hope that lesbian coaches would lose, so their contracts would not
be renewed." Vivas told the television station, "My understanding is
that the athletic department would cheer when certain women's
programs would lose." "They stole my career intentionally and
illegally," Vivas said. The CBS affiliate says that Vivas plans to
file her own lawsuit against the university.
Johnson-Klein was considered by many to be the shining star of the
athletic department early in her coaching career at Fresno State.
Before ever coaching a game, she was married to Chuck Klein in an
elaborate wedding ceremony complete with white carriage and attended
by 150 family and friends at the home of Fresno State president
Welty and his wife, Sharon. The university appeared to not only
embrace, but flaunt her heterosexuality by placing a full wedding
album of photos on the official athletics
website
of the university. Johnson-Klein was the talk of Fresno, gracing the
covers of magazines and billboards around town, along with landing
several endorsement deals and making countless public appearances.
She took over a program that had gone 9-20 in the year prior to her
arrival and turned it into a 21-game winner. Her first team advanced
to the National Invitation Tournament quarterfinals, finishing the
season 21-13 overall. It was the first postseason bid for the team
in 13 years.
The year before Johnson-Klein's arrival at Fresno State, the average
attendance for a Bulldog women's basketball game was 552. Her first
season, the average rose to 1,462. Last year, attendance increased
to 4,351 fans per game, including a school-record crowd of 7,042 for
the home opener against Pepperdine.
Vivas, after 14 years of leading the Bulldog volleyball program, was
fired in December despite an overall record of 263-167, three NCAA
Tournament appearances and three NIT appearances. Her 2004 team,
dominated almost exclusively by freshmen, finished 15-13 overall and
advanced to the league tournament semifinals where it took a game
from the nation's unbeaten and 2nd-ranked team, Hawaii. After that
match, Hawaii coach Dave Shoji said of Vivas' Bulldog team, "They
were just outhitting us and outplaying us every phase of the game."
It was the last game Vivas would coach at Fresno State.
In her final three seasons, Vivas' overall record was 59-27. In
2002, she was named WAC Coach of the Year. Her 2003 squad ranked in
the nation's Top 30 in attendance, setting a school record for
average, as well as individual-game crowd, drawing 4,708 for a home
match at the sparkling Save Mart Center against Hawaii.
The team's use of
the new state-of-the-art arena was a bone of contention for Vivas.
When the 16,000-seat arena was under construction, it was being
billed in promotional literature and on the school's athletics
website as the future home for Fresno State basketball (men and
women) and volleyball (women). With this beautiful, expansive arena
as a key recruiting tool, it appeared the Bulldog volleyball program
was looking at a very bright future. But after construction was
complete, the university forced the team to continue playing its
regular-season matches at the tiny and cramped North Gym. Citing
economic concerns, the university allowed only two volleyball
matches in two years to be played in the new arena. Those two
matches drew more than 7,000 fans, more than double the capacity of
the North Gym to which Vivas' teams were relegated.
Despite the 2003 team's record volleyball crowds, Johnson cited low
attendance and poor non-conference scheduling as reasons for Vivas'
firing. New head women's volleyball coach Nieves, entering his
initial season at Fresno State this week, scheduled three home
non-conference matches for the team this year. Two of those three
matches are against Oregon, a team that has lost 35 of its last 36
Pac-10 matches. According to the campus newspaper, Vivas’ lawyer,
Rayma Church, said in a press release after Vivas' firing that
Johnson “did his best to sabotage the success of [her] volleyball
program.”
With the firing of both Vivas and Johnson-Klein, Fresno State is
left with only three female head coaches in an athletic department
that competes in 16 Division I sports. Six of the nine women's
sports on campus have male head coaches. The lone female head
coaches at Fresno State are Margie Wright (softball), Angie Cates
(golf) and Becky Malmo (equestrian). Wright is entering her 21st
year as head softball coach, having won Fresno State's only team
NCAA championship in 1998. She is the only female head coach on
campus with more than one year under her belt. Cates and Malmo were
first-year head coaches last season.
Whew! All this and not a single reference to Jerry Tarkanian.
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