Archive for Saturday, December 15, 2001
Scandal stuns Irish
O’Leary admits falsifying resume, resigns as coach
December 15, 2001
Advertisement
SOUTH BEND, IND. George O'Leary built his career as a football coach on lies.
Only five days after getting the job he always wanted, his past finally caught up with him at Notre Dame.
George O'Leary speaks to the media during a news conference Thursday at South Bend, Ind. Notre Dame announced Friday that O'Leary had resigned as football coach after admitting he had lied about his background.
O'Leary stunned and embarrassed the nation's most storied program by resigning, admitting Friday he had falsified his academic and athletic credentials for decades.
He claimed to have a master's degree in education and to have played college football for three years, but checks into his background showed those statements were not true.
"Many years ago, as a young married father, I sought to pursue my dream as a football coach," he said in a statement released by Notre Dame. "In seeking employment I prepared a resume that contained inaccuracies regarding my completion of course work for a master's degree and also my level of participation in football at my alma mater. These misstatements were never stricken from my resume or biographical sketch in later years."
The 55-year-old former Georgia Tech coach signed a six-year contract Saturday night and was introduced to the media and public on Sunday.
He promised to turn around an Irish program that had become mediocre in five years under Bob Davie, fired on Dec. 2 after the Irish posted a 5-6 record after an 0-3 start. Davie's 35-25 record gave him the third-worst winning percentage in Irish history.
By Friday, though, O'Leary himself was history.
"Due to a selfish and thoughtless act many years ago, I have personally embarrassed Notre Dame, its alumni and fans," O'Leary said.
"The integrity and credibility of Notre Dame is impeccable and with that in mind, I will resign my position as head football coach," O'Leary's statement said. His resignation was effective Thursday.
News of the resignation jolted campus at the nation's most prominent Roman Catholic university, which has used its history of football success to help it become one of the nation's premiere schools. Students studying for finals said they were embarrassed.
"It makes us look very silly that we have suffered through Bob Davie, found a coach that wasn't necessarily at the top of our priority list, and then this coach resigns over dishonesty," said Todd Engstrom, a chemistry junior from Spokane, Wash.
Notre Dame athletics director Kevin White said O'Leary's admission made it impossible for him to continue as Notre Dame coach.
"I understand that these inaccuracies represent a very human failing; nonetheless, they constitute a breach of trust that makes it impossible for us to go forward with our relationship," White said in a statement. He was not available to talk to reporters on Friday.
Casey Robin, an offensive guard for the Irish who completed his eligibility this fall, said he agreed with O'Leary's decision to resign.
"He was talking about loyalty and even honesty, and obviously he didn't live up to that expectation," Robin said. "The team needs some honesty and loyalty from a coach."
The search for a new coach will begin immediately, White said, raising the possibility he might again turn his attention to Oakland Raiders coach Jon Gruden.
With recruiting entering a dead period until about Jan. 3, there is no longer the same sense of urgency to hire a coach as there was two weeks ago.
A biography released by Notre Dame on Sunday when it announced his hiring said O'Leary received a master's degree from New York University in 1972. Sue Edson, athletics director at Syracuse, said O'Leary claimed the same thing on a biography sheet when he was hired at Syracuse as an assistant coach in 1980.
John Beckman, assistant vice president for public affairs at NYU, said O'Leary was a student there but did not receive a master's as he had claimed.
O'Leary also never earned a letter playing football at New Hampshire even though his biography says he earned three. In fact, the school said he never played in a game. Before arriving at New Hampshire, he attended the University of Dubuque for two years, 1964-66 and played on the '64 team, school officials said.
O'Leary went to New Hampshire for two years, and never made it into a game. He said he was on the team in 1967 and 1968, but was unable to play his first year because of mononucleosis, and did not play his second year because of a knee injury.
"I can't understand how you could go all those years and not catch or correct it," former Notre Dame coach Ara Parseghian said. "That bio has been in the Georgia Tech guide for a number of years. Every year, you read your own bio and you can correct any mistakes. You add or delete things every year. All those years it was in there. How did it get in there?"
Notre Dame quarterback Carlyle Holiday was surprised by the resignation.
"It's a big shock," he said. "I never knew anything could happen like this before. (We've) just got to keep going on and find a new coach in a hurry ... try to get things going."
More like this
- Leary admits falsifying resume, resigns as coach December 15, 2001
- Notre Dame coach never lettered in college December 14, 2001
- O'Leary earns second chance December 9, 2003
- Despite lies, Irish likely to win again December 16, 2001
- Despite lies, Irish likely to win again December 16, 2001
Top ads RSS
- DERMATOLOGY Nurse Seeking LPN/MA for dermatology practice in Lawrence. Part-time ...
- DENTAL RECEPTIONIST/ OFFICE COORDINATOR Established dental practice has a full ...
- KU College of Liberal Arts
- KU Medical Center
- RETIREMENT COMMUNITY Pioneer Ridge Retirement Community is currently accepting applications ...
Marketplace
Arts & Entertainment · Bars · Theatres · Restaurants · Coffeehouses · Libraries · Antiques · Services
- Obama finding it harder to blame Bush for job woes November 7, 2009 · 58 comments
- Blog: Dillons, Hyvee, And Checkers---I'Ve Shopped And Compared. See The Results. November 8, 2009 · 1 comment
- FINAL: Daniel Thomas runs for 183 yards in KSU's 17-10 victory over KU November 7, 2009 · 53 comments
- Poll: Would you vote the same way today as you did for president in 2008? November 6, 2009 · 61 comments
- CritiTech leader has stake in lab building November 7, 2009 · 34 comments
- Mass shooting worst ever at U.S. military base; 12 killed November 6, 2009 · 188 comments
- Blog: I Am A Stripper. November 3, 2009 · 318 comments
- Former members of the military encouraged to file papers with county November 6, 2009 · 25 comments
- House narrowly passes health care bill November 7, 2009 · 2 comments
- On the street: Do you have good penmanship? November 7, 2009 · 28 comments
- Sacred landmark: Capital campaign drives changes at ECM in its 50th year at KU November 7, 2009
- Role reversal November 7, 2009
- Woman passes driver’s exam on 950th try November 7, 2009
- KU graduate student in critical but stable condition after chemical contamination November 5, 2009
- Smooth clinics November 7, 2009
- FINAL: Daniel Thomas runs for 183 yards in KSU's 17-10 victory over KU November 7, 2009
- New traffic plan for sand facility proposed November 7, 2009
- Regents Chairwoman asks legislators to put away the budget knife November 6, 2009
- Former House speaker has vital message for America November 7, 2009
- Conference on Kansas tourism slated for later this month October 5, 2009


Post a comment
Comments are disabled on this story.
Post a blog entry
You have to be logged in to blog on LJWorld.com. Please log in or sign up.
Learn more about blogging on LJWorld.com.