Sankey: SEC little role in Freeze, Petrino hires

NCAAF

LOS ANGELES — Two recent high-profile coaching hires in the SEC have received public backlash and raised questions about the optics they present, but SEC commissioner Greg Sankey said Sunday the conference played a limited role in the processes, and the hiring decisions were made at the campus level.

Auburn hired Hugh Freeze as its head coach in November, while Texas A&M hired offensive coordinator Bobby Petrino last week, two decisions that received scrutiny given both coaches’ history.

Sankey said the SEC has a specific bylaw that defines whether he needs to speak with a university president about a hire, and while that occurred with Freeze, it did not rise to that level with Petrino because his behavior wasn’t an NCAA violation. Petrino was fired from Arkansas in April 2012 after school officials said he lied about a motorcycle accident while riding with a female football staffer whom Petrino had hired and with whom he was having an affair.

Freeze resigned from Ole Miss in 2017 after school officials found a pattern that included phone calls to a number associated with a female escort service. Later in 2017, Ole Miss was placed on NCAA probation for violations that occurred in part under Freeze, and the sanctions included a two-year bowl ban. Freeze was charged individually by the NCAA Division I Committee on Infractions of a Level 1 violation and found guilty of failing to adequately monitor his football staff and its interaction with boosters.

“Our campuses, despite whatever mythology may exist, make their own personnel decisions, but we provide for any hiring decision, here’s the background from a compliance standpoint,” Sankey said. “Bobby’s situation was public, so there aren’t any secrets there, but it wasn’t an NCAA violation that would create a bylaw review. Our campuses with any hire are going to check to see if there’s any issues that create a trigger for our bylaw that result in a conversation between me and your university president.

“I’ve been open that Hugh did, so Hugh had an outcome of an infractions case,” he said. “We informed the Auburn University leadership, and they make those decisions, so it’s not an approval or disapproval. It’s actually compliance with the bylaw that’s been established so there’s transparency. There’s a clear understanding of the track record, and there’s an oversight plan so that we don’t have those problems moving forward.”

Sankey spoke to a small group of reporters on Sunday morning following the final media availability for TCU coach Sonny Dykes and Georgia coach Kirby Smart before the College Football Playoff National Championship on Monday evening at SoFi Stadium (7:30 p.m. ET, ESPN/ESPN App). When asked whether he had concerns about the public perception of those hires, Sankey was clear in his expectations for both coaches.

“I want the people leading and participating in our programs to meet the expectations of the rules, and how they conduct themselves, period,” he said, “and to represent their university and this conference well. Period.”

In a separate interview with ESPN, Sankey said the SEC is focused on its growth to 16 members, which includes the arrival of Big 12 co-founders Oklahoma and Texas in 2025, but he remains “keenly aware of conversations” around him regarding conference realignment.

“I tried to take a responsible approach knowing that we created disruption in the summer of ’21,” he said. “So we’re focused on the move of Oklahoma and Texas into the SEC in ’25. It’s clear to me the issues around conference-membership movement haven’t just settled. I’m going to be fully attentive and engaged knowing what’s going on around me. That doesn’t predict that we’re going to go beyond 16, but I’m also keenly aware of conversations.”

Sankey reiterated that the eventual arrival of Oklahoma and Texas into the SEC remains between those schools and the Big 12.

“That’s really for them to speak of,” Sankey said. “This is about contractual relationships between the Big 12 conference and Big 12 members, period. We would have to go back through an adjustment to our invitation. That’s us, but that is likely much less complex than the issue the Big 12 has to deal with. I just have to figure out a football schedule, but we’ve known that.”

Sankey was also asked about a recent proposal by the LEAD1 group that there should be one person in charge of college football. LEAD1, which represents the 131 athletic directors in the FBS, in November proposed appointing a chief operating officer of college football who would report to a proposed FBS football governing board.

“The observation that’s been made doesn’t acknowledge the reality of differences and disparities and diversity that are present in Division I college football,” Sankey said, “So what you’re asking is, is the Southeastern Conference willing to submit its decision-making fully to some individual that’s unknown and undefined without any discussion of how that happens, and the answer is no.”

Last month, the NCAA announced that former Massachusetts Gov. Charlie Baker will become the organization’s next president in March. Sankey said the job description of the next NCAA president was six pages long. (“I mean, literally,” he said with a laugh, “I had to take a nap in the middle of it.”) Sankey said there’s not one specific topic for Baker to address “that will solve all the problems” because the NCAA and its organization is complex, and there are external expectations and pressures that are different from what faces the government.

“I would say for Gov. Baker it’s obviously to pivot quickly from leading a state to leading an incredibly diverse association at its most challenging time, at least in modern history, and to help bring people together to find solutions that make certain we have a breadth of support for college athletics while providing great opportunities.”

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