No wayGood call. Now does any D1 program hire her ?
Last edited:
No wayGood call. Now does any D1 program hire her ?
If I recall, Teague took the Minnesota job before Stollings was hired at VCU. I believe Stollings was hired at VCU by Mike Ellis. Shortly after, Ellis followed Teague to Minnesota.
I can remember Stollings crediting Ellis with hiring her at both VCU and Minnesota. Of course, since Ellis also left Minnesota while under investigation it's a distinction with nary a difference.
A little more history.....
Teague left VCU in April, 2012 and started at the U in June, 2012. Marlene was hired at VCU in June, 2012. Here's a tibit from that time from the Richmond newspaper:
Stollings appears to have friends in high places at Minnesota. Gophers athletic director Norwood Teague and senior associate athletics director Mike Ellis occupied similar positions at VCU until leaving for Minnesota following the 2012 basketball season.
Texas Tech has fired assistant women’s basketball coach Nikita Lowry Dawkins, a school spokesperson confirmed to USA TODAY Sports on Friday morning.
The termination follows a USA TODAY investigation into what 10 players allege was an abusive culture under head coach Marlene Stollings, Lowry Dawkins and strength and conditioning coach Ralph Petrella.
Athletic director Kirby Hocutt met with Lowry Dawkins Friday morning before terminating her, effective immediately, the spokesperson said. Hocutt fired Stollings on Thursday night. Petrella, who denies any misconduct, resigned voluntarily in March after the conclusion of the season
Hocutt said Stollings was terminated for objectionable behavior and will not be paid anything more on her contract, which was set to expire in 2024
LUBBOCK, Texas (KCBD) - Texas Tech Athletic Director Kirby Hocutt held a news conference to discuss the termination of Lady Raiders Head Coach Marlene Stollings and other members of the coaching staff on Friday.
Hocutt painted a picture of a troubled program that had received multiple complaints through Stollings’ first and second season, prompting him to conduct an investigation.
He said Texas Tech administrators had tried several times to address complaints from within the program, and each time he thought things had improved.
Hocutt began his news conference with an apology to members of the team: “We have failed them and we have to do better. These should be the best years of their lives. We should be mentoring them for life and to learn lessons they will be carrying with them forever. That’s not been their experience, and for that, I apologize. We’re gonna get this right,” Hocutt said.
Hocutt said the most serious complaint, the Title IX complaint of sexual harassment against strength and conditioning coach Ralph Petrella, was dealt with quickly. He said he learned of the complaint on March 25 and the coach was no longer in his position by March 27.
I heard from a Gopher women's recruit, that they used the heart rate monitoring to see how long it takes to recover after being tired. Some players only took 30 seconds to recover and other players took 60 seconds or longer to recover. It helped the coaches decide how to manage the time outs, etc to maximize the players efficiency. But Stallings seems to have taken it to a cruel level.Heart rate monitoring is about maximizing efficiency of effort, it's beyond preposterous and cruel how Stollings was ulitilizing the tool.
Hocutt met with Stollings at 6:30 p.m. Thursday to notify her of termination, a decision he said she “obviously did not agree with the reasoning behind.”
[...]
Hocutt said Friday that when hiring Stollings, Dawkins and Petrella in 2018 — a search which the school conducted internally — he spoke to head coaches and assistant coaches around the country as part of the vetting process.
“Had we heard directly any of the concerns we are now very well aware of, we would have made a different decision,” Hocutt said. “There were no flags that were presented to us at the time we hired coach Stollings.”
Stollings, whose contract with Texas Tech ran through March 2024, was due to be paid $740,000 for her 2020-21 contract year, according to copies of the agreement obtained by USA TODAY Sports and the Intercollegiate. If she is being fired for cause, the school's "sole obligation" is to pay her basic annual compensation through the termination date. So, such a termination would cost Stollings roughly $2.8 million. Termination without cause would entitle Stollings to 75% of her remaining basic annual compensation, a total surpassing $2 million.
It seems to me that Marlene is just a bit dumb about physics (and perhaps a few other things). She probably couldn't get it through her head that although svelte players like Taiye and Kehinde might be able to play 38 minutes and keep running like the Energizer Bunny the whole time, for someone with a more muscular body style like Annalese, that was just not possible. But perhaps she continued to push the more muscular centers to try to get them to do the impossible.Sheds a lot of light on why all of the posts she recruited were so thin.
There were four younger [Texas Tech Fans] having a lunch at the Loon. Mia Castaneda, a Tech junior, was the lone woman — making the 1,135-mile drive from Lubbock with two cousins and a friend.
Castaneda was a backup guard on the women’s team. I asked how the season had gone with coach Marlene Stollings, in her first Tech year after being hired from Minnesota.
The Castaneda quote appearing in the Star Tribune was: “I’ll be transferring. I’m one of seven transferring.”
There were harsher off-the-record comments, but publicly blasting a coach wasn’t going to help Castaneda find a place to play. She wound up at Washburn, a Division II school in Kansas.
Not a loss of a great player for Stollings, obviously, but a hometown kid feeling mistreated emotionally and transferring — just another indicator as to how so many behind-the-scenes detractors emerged in her four Gophers seasons.
She couldn't take anyone, as part of her departure agreement. However, Pitts did visit TT before she decided on Texas A&M.Although none of those players transferred with her to tech when she left. That could speak to something.
I stopped following her when she left (was asked to leave?) but this Twitter bio is puzzling. Is she including her playing career in these stats? WNIT?
Editor's note: Former Texas Tech women’s basketball player Brittany Brewer, now with the Atlanta Dream of the WNBA, penned this letter to the Lubbock Avalanche-Journal to address recent player allegations of abuse by coaches within the program. These are the first public comments Brewer has made on the subject.
[...]
For most of us, including me, it was hard to relive our experience. Just waking up that day and reading what my teammates went through in writing was a battle in itself, and I already knew all that was shared.
I lived through it with them.
For those of you asking why this just came to light, or why you had no idea, I want you to know it is not your fault. It was not public knowledge. We were terrified of retaliation.
We did not trust a lot of people.
As the team captain, I had no idea how to handle what was happening. My teammates were barely making it, and I was just trying to find some silver lining in order to show up at practice the next day and play the game that I love. I was trying so hard to be the leader my coaches wanted me to be, which I knew was not right and was not who I am. I was walking on eggshells trying to please them, while trying to support my teammates, but also while trying to muster up my own strength not to quit.
Good grief. Feel bad for them and have to wonder if Stollings ratcheted it up after she left here or if more will come out about her time as Gopher coach.Former Texas Tech captain on abuse claims in women's basketball: 'We were terrified of retaliation'
Former Texas Tech women’s basketball player Brittany Brewer wrote a letter after players alleged abuse by coaches. "Everything you read was true."www.usatoday.com
Brittany Brewer's letter:
“I am excited to announce Krista Gerlich as our next Lady Raider basketball coach,” Athletic Director Kirby Hocutt said. “Coach Gerlich has been outstanding as a head coach at both UT-Arlington and West Texas A&M, and her track record as a student-athlete at Texas Tech speaks for itself. I believe that she is the right person to lead our women’s basketball team and I am excited to see what she and the Lady Raiders accomplish in the seasons ahead.”
She graduated from Texas Tech in 1993 with a degree in exercise and sports science.
“I can’t put into words how excited I am to be entrusted with rebuilding the Lady Raider basketball program, which is near and dear to my heart,” Gerlich said. “I can’t wait to get to work on taking this program back to where it’s supposed to be, where it has been and where everyone in the Texas Tech community expects it to be. I’m looking forward to meeting the current Lady Raiders, embracing them and their journey, and helping them write a better ending to their careers at Texas Tech, because they deserve it.
Gerlich spent time as a high school basketball coach before serving as an assistant to Hall of Fame Lady Raider coach Marsha Sharp.
A Texas Tech spokesperson said as part of the interview process Gerlich proactively raised a 2015 public intoxication charge for which she served a two-game suspension.
We asked Texas Tech Athletic Director Kirby Hocutt about the incident and he said, “I spoke with her athletic director about the incident and am satisfied she learned her lesson and has continued to grow as a coach, role model and mentor to her student athletes.”
“I was forthright about the incident throughout the interview process,” Gerlich said. “I’ve shared it with my team as an example of a growing experience to acknowledge that we aren’t all perfect and that everyone makes mistakes.”
Over her 14 years at West Texas A&M and UT Arlington, Gerlich was named TABC Coach of the Year twice, and won three conference titles and five NCAA Tournament games.