Why would you wait until last night night to make as-yet-unsubstantiated allegations public after releasing statements a week prior that gave no indication of foul play but instead focused on the need for a full-time coach?
I'm sorry, but that looks pathetic. It looks like a weak attempt to divert some of the attention away from the people who are calling for the resignation of the administrators and the board. It looks like the worst possible PR move to have made. They're running scared and they're desperate to find a way out.
There have been whispers of recruiting violations at Mullen for years. YEARS. I started there in the fall of 2003, and even then, there was talk of our heavy recruiting. And yet, I don't believe for a single second that these alleged violations were solely practiced by Logan and that the administrators and board were blind. I think that the whispers of Clement wanting the QB coaching job carry more weight than he wants to admit.
Honestly, I don't care if there were recruiting violations. I will wait for proof. I will wait to see what CHSAA has to say about it. As far as I know, most schools do it. Both Regis and Valor have been found to have committed minor infractions.
This goes so much deeper than just Dave Logan. In speaking to some of my friends from high school about it, they say that they stopped caring about Mullen after one of our English teachers was fired for saying the N-word (in was in the context of a story they were reading in class). That teacher never should have been fired; he was a brilliant educator. He approached as us though we were adults (which, when you're 14 and desperate to be seen as an adult - or at the very least, a young adult, is a wonderful thing) and enabled us to view the material through a more focused lens. It was the foundation for critical thinking. It was about expanding your boundaries and coming face-to-face with material that you might not have otherwise examined. While I have no idea what happened to the kid involved with that, I will posit that he was immature and unable to separate the fictive world of literature with the realities of our modern society.
Since I left Mullen in 2006 - with 9 college credits stemming from my time in Advanced Placement classes, no less, I have heard very little good news. I'd be hard-pressed to find a good piece of press about them that's not football-related (and now, just a good piece of press in general). I'm saddened to see that attempts to bring the school back to its former glory have all but destroyed its reputation in the Denver community. I'm disgusted to hear about some of the changes that have gone on. For further proof, look to the teachers. Mullen has lost more good teachers than it can replace.
The petition that I mentioned earlier this week now has nearly 1300 signatures. I signed, not just because I think that firing Dave Logan was an epic show of idiocy but because I think that Mullen is not the place that it once was. I learned to read good and do other stuff good too, but I also learned a hell of a lot more. I learned about faith - I am not a practicing Catholic due to criticisms relating to the hypocrisy of the Pope and the church structure, but I believe that my time at Mullen taught me how to live a life full of the truest values of any religion: respect, tolerance, kindness, giving, knowledge. Social justice as a principle is something that has been a constant throughout my education and I value that immensely.
These people, both the administration and the board, are preaching Christian values but are acting exactly the opposite. It's a shame to see Christ so misrepresented. I hate to see that lying, deceit, and a complete lack of transparency can be offered up as examples of pure LaSallian values. I'm disappointed, but more than that, I'm embarrassed.
By the way, if and when Logan takes the open coaching job at Creek, they're going to crush our team. And it's sad to see the football players and other students used as pawns in some power grab. They lost more than a coach - a few probably lost their futures. Way to go, Gmelich and Clement. Way to take a good thing and shit all over it. This is not something that will blow over any time soon. You're looking at a black spot.
Edited at 12:04pm: Speaking to someone who was at the meeting, I am becoming more and more nervous about my own graduate school application. My source tells me that a girl going through the interview process at Duke spent most of her interview defending her decision to go to Mullen. Great news for me, especially since I'm applying to a local school. I certainly hope that I don't have to spend my interview wishing I'd gone to Thomas Jefferson or George Washington instead. (That was something I never thought I'd say.)
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Mullen High reveals recruiting violations in football program
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In a tense meeting Wednesday night, the chief executive of Mullen High School announced the school had notified the Colorado High School Activities Association of recruiting violations committed by the staff of former football coach Dave Logan, who was fired last week.
"This is a Mullen failure, top to bottom," Ryan Clement, the Catholic school's president and CEO, told a packed room on campus. "And we need to fix it. ... We are Mullen. The standard is different."
Mullen stunned the Colorado sports community by firing Logan after a nine-year tenure during which he won four state championships. Not until Wednesday did school officials mention recruiting violations.
Logan said Wednesday night that in his 19 years of
coaching football, he has never been sanctioned.
"I would just say that I find the timing of this a bit curious," said Logan, a former star prep quarterback who played in the NFL for the Cleveland Browns and Denver Broncos before embarking on a successful coaching and broadcasting career. "We'll find out what the allegations are, then I'll stand up and deal with it head-on.
"I've conducted myself for 19 years as a head football coach with integrity and have not deviated from that," he said. "I've never deviated from that."
A source familiar with the report of violations said it stems from an Oct. 21 game against Arapahoe High School in which eighth-graders were on the Mullen sideline during the game.
The practice is barred because it could give schools an unfair advantage in recruiting students. The students were later asked to sit in the stands, the source said.
Clement said last week that Logan was fired because the school wanted its football coach to be a full-time faculty member who can "be engaged in every facet" of the school.
Clement elaborated on that Wednesday, saying that in their final conversation with Logan last week, he and principal Jim Gmelich expressed concern that the school's compliance with state rules suffered because there wasn't a full-time commitment to the job.
"This is not the first time these conversations were had," Clement said.
He said that after Logan made his firing public, Mullen leadership has worked "to get to the bottom of the most obvious violations" and reported them to the CHSAA on Wednesday.
He said there also was evidence of other violations. He said the school leadership will develop a "comprehensive and independent" process to determine other possible violations and also create a "more rigorous protocol" to ensure the infractions are not repeated.
"This will be a difficult process but it is necessary — in fact, there is little doubt it is past due," he said.
Clement did not go into detail about the violations, and both he and Gmelich declined interview requests after the meeting.
Jeff Braun, a defensive coordinator last season at Mullen, said the accusations "are just false. I just think they are coming up with an excuse to try to get rid of a good staff."
Paul Angelico, Colorado High School Activities Association commissioner, said the association hasn't had time to review the material from Mullen.
Under CHSAA rules, Mullen is required to give notice of any infractions and lay out a corrective action plan, Clement said. If CHSAA accepts the school's efforts at self-enforcement, no additional penalties will be imposed, he said. Mullen has not faced any previous sanctions for recruiting violations.
Both public and private schools have occasionally been slapped on the wrist for recruiting violations by CHSAA. In a recent series, The Denver Post discovered that numerous schools, including Valor Christian and Regis Jesuit, have broken CHSAA rules regarding recruiting, most of them minor.
Mullen board chairman Kurt Caulson told the standing-room-only crowd that the board was 100 percent behind Clement's decision to fire Logan.
Gmelich, who took over as Mullen principal this year after a stint at Regis, said "systemic issues" exist at Mullen.
Logan's firing has caused turmoil in the tight-knit Mullen community. Clement acknowledged it was "a difficult hour" for the college-preparatory school, which has a rich tradition of academic and athletic success and of helping subsidize the educations of less-fortunate students.
Speaker after speaker Wednesday complained about the administration's lack of transparency and failure to communicate.
When Clement said being football coach can't be a part-time job, one man in the back yelled, "It can't be? It has been!"
"We absolutely love this place," said Jim Healy, a parent of Mullen graduates. "What we have right now is an absolute lack and vacuum of leadership and no trust at all."
Not everyone was critical, however. Some backed the administration, and one speaker expressed dismay at the "lynch mob mentality" in the room.
Clement, a former quarterback at Mullen, also refuted reports that he was angling to coach at the school.
He said the search for a new coach would begin next week and be "open, inclusive and transparent." He also praised Logan for his hard work, commitment to results and success.
However, he said, "we believe it is time for a new start."
Eric Gorski: 303-954-1971 oregorski@denverpost.com
Read more:Mullen High reveals recruiting violations in football program - The Denver Posthttp://www.denverpost.com/preps/ci_19771784#ixzz1jvIXqkP0
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Source: The Denver Post online (article linked here)
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