Mel is walking to collect his things [James Coller]

Exit: Mel Pearson Comment Count

Alex.Drain August 5th, 2022 at 12:51 PM

A messy, tiring, and embarrassing saga in Michigan Athletics history came to the only logical end today as interim university President Mary Sue Coleman and Athletic Director Warde Manuel announced that hockey coach Mel Pearson has been relieved of his duties: 

For those living under a rock, Pearson was under investigation by the WilmerHale law firm from fall 2021 until spring 2022 due to a complaint filed by former goalie consultant Steve Shields that Pearson retaliated against him in firing Shields in August 2021, in violation of the university's code. The investigation's report, which was finished on May 5 and leaked to the public on Tuesday through MLive, concluded that while Pearson did not technically violate university code in firing Shields, the tenure of Pearson and his right-hand man, former Director of Hockey Operations Rick Bancroft, was deeply troubling and problematic.

The report painted a rather muddled picture of the allegations that Pearson directed his players to lie on contact tracing forms during the COVID-19 outbreak in March 2021 and regarded the allegation that Bancroft's (supposed) knowledge of Dr. Robert Anderson's conduct was central to the feud between Shields and Pearson as unfounded. However, the report did uncover what could best be described as a toxic workplace culture towards female employees in the hockey department, largely perpetrated by Bancroft, forcing one employee into retirement rather than to continue to work for Michigan. The report didn't list a multitude of instances of negative conduct by Pearson towards women, but did highlight one troublesome incident involving Hockey Sports Information Director Kristy McNeil that Pearson was involved in. At the very least, the report described Pearson as enabling Bancroft's behavior. 

Finally, the report detailed a culture of intimidation between Pearson and some members of the Michigan team. It stated how Pearson set conditions around team captain Strauss Mann that pushed Mann towards departing the program after Mann spoke up in favor of greater "respect" for the players (Mann was closely associated with Shields), leading to Mann signing in Sweden in April 2021. After that, the university commissioned an anonymous survey of players and staffers, which found that between 30 and 35% felt that they were not "respected and treated fairly" by Pearson, that they "personally experienced offensive, intimidating, discriminatory, or harassing conduct", and that they rated the culture more negatively than positively (this was not in the report but was leaked to The Athletic on Tuesday in conjunction with the report). The report also documented a meeting between the eight seniors from the 2021-22 team and Sport Administrator Josh Richelew, in which the group stated that Pearson "holds grudges", that if players were to speak up or complain they "won't play", and that the Mann incident made them "afraid of the consequences" if they "came forward". 

If you would like to read the report in full, you can do so here, or you can read a full summary with excerpts included in a tweet thread from your author here

[James Coller]

After the report was released to the Athletic Department in early May, Warde Manuel and his department did.... basically nothing. Pearson's contract expired at midnight on May 1, 2022, and for three months, he remained as head coach without a contract, one of the stranger developments anyone can remember. Insiders on paid sites like 24/7 and Rivals continued to signal that the university intended to keep Pearson, but as the weeks went by with no extension announced, more confusion and doubt began to shroud the situation. In June, MLive reported that Bancroft had been let go, leading many (myself included) to theorize that Michigan intended to use Bancroft as the fall guy to keep Pearson. That said, as the dog days of summer began to arrive and still no news was around the corner, more questions began to be asked. Then, the report was leaked to the media. We got word it had been obtained by independent journalists (no word as to how) a week ago today, and then it was published on Tuesday. 

The report's shocking bombshells led many on this space and elsewhere to conclude on Tuesday that Pearson needed to be removed from his position. Interim President Mary Sue Coleman met with Manuel on Wednesday, who, it had been indicated to this blog privately, was still in firm support of Pearson. That was confirmed publicly yesterday morning when John U. Bacon reported that Manuel stood in opposition to Coleman, as well as the unanimous (8-0) assent of the Board of Regents, who all supported the firing of Pearson. It was then reported last night by Bacon that unanimity had been reached between Manuel, Coleman, and the Regents. Given that Coleman and the Regents are the superiors to Manuel, most saw the writing on the wall as to Pearson's future. Indeed, the news that was very predictable last night came to fruition today. 

[it the JUMP for a reflection on the Mel Era]

---------------------

 

[JD Scott]

The End of the Pearson Era 

Mel's exit as head coach is a bit of an odd, full-circle moment for your author as a media member: he's the first Michigan coach of any sport who I covered closely from the beginning to leave Michigan. I got my start before MGoBlog through WCBN Sports Radio, the student radio station on campus back in the fall of 2017 as a freshman. The first major sports game I got to cover as a student media member was also Mel's first regular season game at Yost, October 20, 2017, against Vermont. Over the course of the next four years, I broadcasted countless home hockey games of Mel's Wolverines for WCBN Sports, as well as one Duel in the D, one GLI, and one Frozen Four. I also hosted a (short-lived) student hockey podcast on the team that occasionally featured player interviews. I joined MGoBlog's hockey coverage team part-time for the 2020-21 season, and stayed on the gig this past season after becoming a full-time employee at the company last summer. I'm one of the few media members who has been involved at Michigan all five years of the Pearson Era. 

Mel's first season was one of sugary optimism. After a tough start to the season, the team went 12-4-1 from mid-January to the middle of March, and the only squad they couldn't seem to beat was Ohio State. Led by star veterans Cooper Marody and Tony Calderone, as well as youngsters Josh Norris and Quinn Hughes, Michigan made the NCAA Tournament. They beat a pair of talented teams in Northeastern and Boston U to make the Frozen Four, exceeding expectations. A heart-wrenching loss in St. Paul to Notre Dame was a bitter end, but in Year 1, it seemed like the sky was the limit. 

Year 2 was a fall from that. The veterans left but with Hughes and Norris returning, expectations were high. Too high, it turned out. The team struggled even before Norris was ruled out for the season, and then they sputtered in exceptionally frustrating fashion through the season, with a limited offense and middling defense. When the team lost four straight to close out the season and miss the tournament, the reaction from most was "good riddance". Year 3 was Mel's least-talented roster, but one of his better coaching jobs. After starting 4-9-2, the team caught fire in the second half behind the dominant goaltending of Strauss Mann. They were on a 14-5-2 run and set to play Ohio State in the B1G Semifinals with a berth to the NCAA Tournament on the line when the COVID pandemic canceled the remainder of the season. 

Thank you, Strauss [James Coller]

After COVID rocked our world for much of 2020, Michigan Hockey returned in November of that year with an entirely new roster of hyper-talented players. The recruiting tree had finally bore its fruits, an embarrassment of riches like Brendan Brisson and Owen Power and Matty Beniers and Thomas Bordeleau. Year 4 was a young and inconsistent team, but one that again played better in the second half. They didn't come away with any hardware after losing to Minnesota in the semis of the B1G Tournament but were the #8 overall seed in the NCAA Tournament when the COVID-19 outbreak that was involved in the investigation knocked Michigan out of the tourney before it started. 

It was a heartbreaking end to the season, but redemption seemed like destiny when nearly every key player from the preceding year returned for 2021-22. Year 5 had the highest expectations for any Michigan Hockey season in recent memory and it started well. The team won the Ice Breaker Tournament in Duluth to catapult to #1 in late October, but then took some hits in November and December, as it always seemed like Mel's teams did. As the calendar turned to 2022, the Wolverines were swept up in controversy after they backed out of a date in the "Great Lakes Invitational" against Western Michigan under the iffy pretext of health and welfare protocols. Michigan had a shorthanded roster due to the World Juniors and injuries and while they were short-staffed, they had a full roster to play that game (they'd played the day before against Michigan Tech). To many, it seemed like Michigan declined to play because they didn't want to play the #4 team in the land without their best players. 

That made Michigan Hockey a national villain throughout most of the year. The team surged in January and February and seemed positioned to win the regular season crown before fumbling it away to Minnesota through two losses in South Bend. The Wolverines did get payback by beating Minnesota in Minneapolis in the B1G Tournament, the only B1G banner Mel would raise at Michigan. That got the Wolverines the #1 ranking the NCAA Tournament, and they easily handled American International before going up 4-0 on Quinnipiac in the Regional Final, only to see that one narrow to 4-3. Michigan ended up winning 7-4 and punched their ticket to the Frozen Four in Boston, but there they met their end, losing in devastating fashion again, a 3-2 OT loss to eventual national champion Denver. 

[David Wilcomes]

In total, Mel Pearson finishes his career 99-65-16 (.594) and 57-47-10 (.510) in the B1G. He won one B1G Tournament crown but was unable to win a regular season title. Pearson led the team to three NCAA Tournaments (may have been four if they'd played OSU in 2020, but we will never know) and reached the Frozen Four both times his team played a game. However, they went 0-2 in National Semifinal games, losing both by one goal. Pearson's on-ice record was indicative of a good coach, but not one whose success was overwhelming or legendary. 

If there is one area that Mel will most be remembered for, besides being fired in disgrace, it will be his impeccable recruiting. In his five years in Ann Arbor, he took Michigan Hockey's already-excellent track record of producing NHL players to a new level. He turned Yost into a factory of future NHLers in 2021 and 2022, once his recruits arrived. He inherited several top notch recruits from Red, Norris and Quinn Hughes, both of whom have become very good NHL players, and then built on that through his own guys.

In July 2021, Michigan accomplished an NCAA first, having four of the top five picks in the NHL Draft be current or future Michigan Wolverines, as Owen Power went 1, Matty Beniers went 2, Luke Hughes went 4, and Kent Johnson went 5. The 2021-22 Michigan roster, featuring seven first round picks, one second round pick, and one third round pick, was the most talented in NCAA Hockey history. The team he leaves behind (which still includes Hughes) is still remarkably talented, likely to feature four current first round picks (as well as two future firsts), one second rounder, one third rounder, and one fourth rounder. Deepening the existing NHL ties and turning Michigan into The Place You Play In The NCAA If You Are A Future First Rounder will be Mel's lasting (positive) legacy, if it can be sustained. 

[James Coller]

From the Mel era, I will remember the brutal Novembers and Decembers, and the torrid paces that followed. I'll remember the goaltending effort of Hayden Lavigne down the stretch in 2018, the greatness of Strauss Mann, and the excellence of Erik Portillo last season. I'll remember the beautiful skating of Quinn Hughes, the dominance of Cooper Marody, the silky hands of Thomas Bordeleau, the beatdowns of MSU, the development of unheralded Nick Blankenburg into a captain and NHLer, and the grit and heart of the Raabe-Van Wyhe-Moyle line. I'll remember the highs of winning the B1G Tournament in March and yes, I will remember the pain and heartache after both Frozen Fours. Unfortunately, I also have to remember writing my frustrations about frequently having to cover off ice drama over the past 18 months, as Michigan was seemingly swept up in controversy after controversy, becoming a punch-line in national NCAA Hockey circles. 

Despite what Michigan did accomplish on the ice, and the great players who played here under Mel, the biggest part of his legacy must be what the report uncovered and the black mark that leaves on the program. Of the players I just mentioned above, three of them, Van Wyhe, Moyle, and Blankenburg, were seniors this past season and thus are assumed to have been in the group of eight players that told Richelew how they felt intimidated, threatened, and silenced by Mel's reign over the program. If that's not heartbreaking for a fan who loves these players, I don't know what is. As good as the Michigan teams were under Mel, it's hard not to wonder if they could've been better if certain players weren't afraid of the coach and if the locker room were closer and more in harmony. That's a part of Mel's legacy. He recruited great players, but also likely held them back by the manner in which he conducted business.

Mel also must be remembered as a liar who lowered the integrity of Michigan Athletics. I don't know Mel personally and so I can't speak of his personal character, but the report caught Mel in a blatant lie when he told investigators that he and Steve Shields never discussed Strauss Mann on May 12, 2021, which was proven false when Shields produced tapes of that conversation, proving Mann was discussed. That is the clearest example we have, but the report continued to use terms like "we do not find [Mel's] account to be credible", contrasting his story with a synchronous one provided by many witnesses. When you combine it with the Mel emails uncovered through FOIA requests back in January surrounding the GLI cancelation, which, while not nearly as damning as Tech Hockey Guide made them out to be, did indicate that Mel was not telling the whole truth about his involvement with the decision to cancel, you see a portrait of a coach who does not have a pattern of reliably telling the truth and should not be afforded the benefit of the doubt on anything. That is below the standard of integrity of what Michigan Athletics should be. 

[James Coller]

Mel must be remembered as a coach who created a divided program and locker room due to his paranoiac authoritarian grip over it. The survey results provide conclusive evidence of that. He also created a seemingly toxic work environment for female employees by employing Rick Bancroft and refusing to listen when his employees complained about Bancroft's behavior. The team won a healthy number of games with Mel Pearson as coach, but his off-ice costs to employees, players, and the image of the program was not, under any circumstances, acceptable. That is why he was rightly shown the door today. 

It's a funny thing, how a coach can embarrass the program and be fired unceremoniously yet leave the program better off than he found it. That's the weird case with Mel Pearson. The final Red years were rough, making the NCAA Tournament once in his last five seasons and the 2017 team was particularly putrid. Red left behind a couple prized recruits but the program needed a breath of fresh air and someone to steer the ship back on course. Mel did that on-ice, making the tournament much more frequently, recruiting at an elite level, and leaving behind a cupboard stocked with talent and a recent tradition of winning. The job is much better than when Mel inherited it, but that doesn't mean whoever comes in won't have problems to clean up. The new coach will need to patch up the locker room and instill a new culture of respect towards players and staffers. Oh, and they'll need to do it on the fly, with less than two months before the season thanks to the (at best) confusing and (at worst) incompetent manner that the Athletic Department handled this process. Mel leaves the program better than he found it, but there's a very good reason he got fired. All of that is his legacy. 

 

What's Next?

Michigan now needs to find a coach. I will have a piece on coaching candidates out at the start of next week, but for reasons mentioned above, this will need to be an expedited search. They really have until the end of August to get someone in there, and even then, that person will be operating on the fly. The circumstances thus suggest an internal hire could be the likeliest solution here. If only they hadn't waited until August to make this decision when the report was available months ago... 

Comments

JonnyHintz

August 5th, 2022 at 5:39 PM ^

That’s just blatantly false. Whoever is hired will be inheriting a recruiting juggernaut and a very talented roster. A team that just made the Frozen Four to boot. The only thing that will hinder the coaching search at all is the fact that we’re a month away from practice starting and two months from the first game.

 

Had Michigan made this move back in May, they would have had their pick of the litter. 

fergodsake

August 5th, 2022 at 1:16 PM ^

The fact that Pearson was fired only after the report was leaked is embarrassing. It feels like Warde hasn't done much as AD up until now, and then of all people he chose to stick his neck out for, he chose Pearson. Warde clearly needs to go.

bronxblue

August 5th, 2022 at 6:09 PM ^

I think Warde handled this poorly but he did, to varying degrees, put his neck out for Harbaugh after 2020 and Juwan last year after the incident in Wisconsin.  Now, he seems like a guy who'll reflexively defend UM coaches so maybe he doesn't deserve a ton of credit for those decisions but his instincts have seemingly always been pro-UM.

sarto1g

August 5th, 2022 at 1:30 PM ^

Fire Warde Manuel.  His #1 responsibility as AD is to create a healthy environment for coaches, staff, and athletes alike.  With evidence that Pearson was at the very minimum enabling a toxic culture, Warde did nothing FOR THREE MONTHS.  This man cannot be trusted to have the best interest of the school and his department at heart. 

Lasty, Warde Manuel is not some revered Michigan figure.  He's an empty suit  He has not elevated the athletic department in any way.  He's doesn't have the clout of a Jim Hackett who worked his way through tumultuous conditions to deliver results for the AD.  There is no reason to think a replacement-level AD could not do the same or better in his place.  

MRunner73

August 5th, 2022 at 1:53 PM ^

You are correct on many points but I differ on the point where Warde has elevated the athletic department because of how well many other sports have been doing. Michigan finished only behind Stanford in the Director's Cup which says a lot about the coaching staffs of these non revenue sports.

I like the comparison to Jim Hackett. It would be great to have him back in the AD office.

(you still got an upvote from me)

Musket Rebellion

August 5th, 2022 at 2:20 PM ^

This is going to be an unpopular take, but one of the major reasons Michigan was second in the director's cup is because Dave Brandon - for all his faults - pumped resources into the non-revenue sports like no other AD before him. The facilities UM has for many of those sports are amongst the best in the nation and it was this effort, not Warde being handed the keys to this castle, that is mostly why we are seeing the results we are now. Dave Brandon is an absolute turdburger, but he did do this one thing smartly and correctly. 

Sopwith

August 5th, 2022 at 1:35 PM ^

So did Warde just leave the WilmerHale report on his desk in May, take the summer off, and just got back to find it still sitting on his desk and go "Oh yeah, that"? 

MRunner73

August 5th, 2022 at 1:46 PM ^

The burning question remains: Why did Warde Manual wait so long? Was it really about dotting the I's and crossing the T's on this? Expediting a coaching search is the issue. The cost would be a setback of a few years for the hockey program.

No doubt, Mel Pearson self destructed. Very sad and unnecessary.

This is an excellent write up, thanks Alex for the perspective.

Double-D

August 5th, 2022 at 2:09 PM ^

I’ve seen how often people in high profile positions like this lose perspective and their good moral compass.

I think the pressures of winning, leading, and public decision making with the criticism that can come with it can drive some people to an “us against them” at all cost mentality.

They lose their way. 

HChiti76

August 5th, 2022 at 2:03 PM ^

M had the report in May. He is not fired until August. This is inexcusable. On many levels. If M thought the report was a basis for firing him, it should have happened in May. If not, then he should still be coach. I guess this is the result of having an interim President. Not sure how the AD survives this. 
 

I don’t pretend to be a M hockey expert. I leave that to my good friend koklaw, and Alex and Brian but as a fan/non-expert, I pose this question to the experts & the Board, if Mel was such a horrible guy to play for, why did all these first rounds picks forego the NHL & return to play for him last year? Discuss. 

bronxblue

August 5th, 2022 at 4:07 PM ^

I'm not an expert either but assholes aren't usually such to everyone, so if you're in the favored group there'd be no reason to think otherwise.  And some players may just be taught that being pushed around by your coach is part of the deal and makes you "tough".  I mean, Brian Kelly seems like an absolutely awful person to be around and yet football players stuck around there, and Tom Izzo constantly screams at high 4* kids and tanks their careers yet they stick around to play for him.  Maybe there are a couple of grandma's stuck in basements but otherwise you can be a not-great dude on the whole without burning everyone out.

I Bleed Maize N Blue

August 5th, 2022 at 6:44 PM ^

The youngest 1st rounders were Mel's guys, top talent that was likely treated better. Also they were robbed of a normal season by the pandemic. Instead of the packed arena that existed before, it was empty; they also didn't get to play in the NCAA tournament. So maybe they got together and said if we all come back, we can make a run at a national championship. And none of them really needed to go pro just yet and/or their NHL teams didn't need them to sign just yet.

kehnonymous

August 5th, 2022 at 2:18 PM ^

There is of course an explanation for why Manuel sat on the report all summer, but I suspect we won't get it because it'll likely be far more damning than his current silence which can be charitably described as a not-great look. 

I usually try to withhold judgement on these things as the only thing I know that I don't know shit and that there is a ton of information none of us have.  That said, Warde M. is the head of the Athletic Dept. and one of his first duties in that capacity is managing public perception and, as a member of the public. I am entitled to say that he's making us look realllllly bad right now.

pmorgan

August 5th, 2022 at 2:23 PM ^

About time. Having read the whole report, it is soooo damning and detailed. How did this take 3 months after U-M officials had the report in May???

Well, Mel is thankfully gone and I look forward to focusing on our exceptional players coming back this year, and the talented crop of Freshman coming in. I sure hope the end of Mel will make Michigan Hockey a better place for our athletes. Go Blue! 

BlueFish

August 5th, 2022 at 2:38 PM ^

Fuck Rick Bancroft.

I interviewed with that guy in Fall 1991, as an incoming sophomore, for a work-study student manager position. Grew up watching M hockey, dating back to the lean years (1985). Die-hard fan, at the time; it would've been a dream to work for the team. But he came off as such a prick, even then. It was heartbreaking to turn that opportunity down. Turns out, he was a dickhead the entire time.

Good riddance, asshole.

UAUM

August 5th, 2022 at 2:58 PM ^

This is such a mistake. I was lucky enough for Steve Shields to coach me when I went to hockey camp at M, am a democrat, and wholeheartedly believe intimidation is not an effective leadership style at all; however, firing someone because they are rude to subordinates is too far. Pearson does not have to be remembered as the tyrant you are trying to paint him as. 

Armchair intolerance is wrong.

 

bronxblue

August 5th, 2022 at 4:03 PM ^

I'd point you to the article you commented on for evidence of Pearson's many transgressions beyond "being rude to subordinates", but at this point it's pretty clear there's a contingent of Mel Truthers who just won't accept that his cumulative behavior justified a firing.

mtzlblk

August 5th, 2022 at 4:22 PM ^

Your characterization of why he is being let go is way off and I don't think "rude" has much, if anything, to do with it.

I would imagine that the rationale for the firing went like this:

  • 70% - ignored repeated cases/reports of sexist/toxic behavior toward female employees by his right-hand man, if this is what you consider "rude" then you are sadly out of touch with the way the modern world works
  • 20% - outright lied during the process of investigation
  • 5% - (most) players hated him and considered him toxic
  • 4% - did not technically break a rule about retaliation against his own employee, but.....philosophically probably did. 
  • 1% - he's apparently turned into quite a dick and ran a very talented goalie off the team, one that stood on his head and pretty much salvaged the previous season through stellar play....a player who in all likelihood was trying to communicate to him that the way Mel is coaching the team was going to lose it for him (had Mel only listened to Mann he might likely have taken a different path...the irony).

If the report had determined everything but the first bullet point had occurred, or perhaps credibly demonstrated that he had no knowledge of the sexist behavior, you could make the case for keeping Mel, but with some structural guidance/whatever to address the toxic behavior and environment and some sort of reprimand for the second bullet point, however this is still sketchy and not a great look for a University that purports to be "better."

UAUM

August 5th, 2022 at 5:42 PM ^

This is the worst ALLEGATION, which is not corroborated, against Mel: “belittling her, prohibiting her from entering the hockey locker room, and excluding her from team activities and meals.” The only corroborated account is that Mel yelled when McNeil incorrectly scheduled a meeting. Like I said before, I don’t think being a jerk is a good way to lead, but it’s not crazy or unheard of or discrimination for someone to yell at a subordinate screw something up.

The race to judge others to claim the moral high ground is ridiculous. I wouldn’t be surprised if the reason that war didn’t want to fire mental is because the university address this with Mel and Mel responded and got better. But yeah, fire Warde!

 

mtzlblk

August 6th, 2022 at 2:32 PM ^

Not sure if you're being deliberately obtuse, or just low on reading comprehension skills, but I'll humor you. Hint: it is Bancroft, not Mel on the abuse and the lie is 100% corroborated.

Read through the report and look at the results showing that Mel knew of and did nothing about Bancroft, his direct report, mistreating female employees; belittling them, excluding them from team activities and singling them out to create a toxic environment for them specifically. You can't just ignore that. If you are the boss of this person, your job is to immediately rectify that situation through whatever means necessary, no excuses, no delays, no "I don't want to hear about that." This is all 100% corroborated in the report. Long running abuse ignored by the only person who could do anything about it, PLUS retaliation against people trying to make him aware of it. Just reminding you that the year is 2022, not 1972 (or 1992, for that matter), to be sure we are on the same page here. If I did any of that in my current position with the people that report to me, I would expect to be shown the door within a week. 

Also, the lie about the conversation that was then produced in taped format.....100% corroborated. Lied to investigators.

Either on their own is an offense for which immediate termination is warranted. 

drjaws

August 6th, 2022 at 4:53 PM ^

A) Steve Shields is a great guy. Worked with him as a kid when he was the M staring goalie. Was phenomenal with us kids and bought all the goalies milkshakes one day.

B) what the fuck does you being a democrat have to do with anything? It’s not like you have a better moral compass or are a more compassionate person because of it. What was the point of mentioning that? I have met piece of shit humans who align with both parties, as well as many generous, kind, compassionate people who align with both parties.

C) unacceptable behavior is unacceptable whether viewed from an armchair or experienced in person.

LabattsBleu

August 5th, 2022 at 3:07 PM ^

it boggles the mind that people in positions of authority still behave in a way that is completely out of step in today's world. 

I thought Mel was a great hire at the time, however, as the findings have shown, he was not very good to many people around him, which is really disappointing.

Hopefully, when they hire their next coach, they'll reach out to former members of the staff, administration, players to get a better sense of the person this are hiring and not just the coach.

sad end to an era that started with a ton of promise

mtzlblk

August 5th, 2022 at 4:32 PM ^

Right?

How can anyone in this day and age not immediately investigate and react to a situation where an employee is mistreating female employees? A "wait and see if there is an incident" approach is bad enough, but to not even react or investigate? Especially when the transgressor is your long-time, right-hand man. I can't even fathom the thought process that went into that, nor Warde's decision to wait on reacting to the result of the report.

The absolute base standard is to preemptively and very publicly make it clear that this type of behavior is unacceptable and will be met with a zero-tolerance approach to any infractions, whether it is racism, sexism, whatever. Day one.

bronxblue

August 5th, 2022 at 4:00 PM ^

Good write-up.  Pearson came across as conspiratorial and controlling in the investigation, and the parts where he kept lying and trying to cut corners doomed whatever goodwill fans could have for him.  I also think Warde is going to have to answer somewhat for the parts of Pearson's misgivings that he failed to address properly despite warnings.  

Michigan hockey is big enough to survive a loss of a coach like Pearson, and I do think they'll have a slew of good options either this year or next depending on when they look to fill the position long-term.

tybert

August 5th, 2022 at 4:05 PM ^

I just retired from a large company and am shocked that this behavior went on for as long as it did without action.  In the corporate world, stuff like this would have been acted on months ago. These days, everyone knows quickly about bad culture - the gossip mill is always working. These issues must have been known across the larger Department. What Warde needs to own up to is when did HE find out about the issues. If it took an outside firm to find out about the bullying and harassment, the A.D. is incompetent or a liar. Warde was probably fine not worrying about a temp Prez telling him what to do but when the entire board of regents (made up of Rep and Dem, who fight each other on every other issue, but agreed Mel had to go) voted for his dismissal it should have happened then and there.

I'm all for Warde telling his side of the story to the new Prez and board before he gets forced out. There's still too much not known about what he did and didn't know before I'd think it was fair to can him.

wavintheflag

August 5th, 2022 at 4:29 PM ^

I am shocked I tell ya! Seriously, it sounds like the issues mostly WERE addressed but the report did not engage in them directly. Personnel complaints were raised and the climate survey. Presumably these were acted upon in some form (not part of report scope). Police report for the Covid issues. The Anderson angle seemed honestly not Mel’s responsibility to address. Not being truthful in responses .. new info but have to question if that will be a new strategy in future to play gotcha … withhold secret tape until opportunity arises for the payoff.

 

 

 

tybert

August 5th, 2022 at 4:15 PM ^

Whomever mentioned the Peter Principle is right. Mel was maybe the "bad cop" for Red when he was assistant. Mich Tech is hockey crazy and a small town so Mel could have gotten away with murder there as long as he won. Problem is Michigan is too big and popular for stuff like this to stay buried. Hard to see Mel resurfacing anyway after this - LYING is actually the worst thing of all. No employer trusts someone like that. People can get a 2nd chance after harassment (as long as it's not Art Briles bad) by being away from the game for a year and coming back with a contrite "I've learned and am a much better person" speech. Problem for Mel is he's in his 60s and caught dead with a lie on tape. This isn't a he said, she said where he could say the conversation with Shields wasn't the way Steve said it was. Kudos to Steve for being smart enough to tape it. I'm generally not one for taping others secretly but a lying bully is the exception.

I'mTheStig

August 5th, 2022 at 9:56 PM ^

Problem is Michigan is too big and popular for stuff like this to stay buried. 

That's bullshit.

The Dr Anderson misconduct lingered and was covered up for DECADES!  The statue of Bo is still standing.

Unfortunately, over the past couple of years, we've learned Michigan isn't as saintly as we's all like it to be... and for revenue sports, willing cures all.

 I'm generally not one for taping others secretly 

Me neither... especially since it's against the law.