Current:Home > InvestUtah places gymnastics coach Tom Farden on administrative leave after abuse complaints -Financium
Utah places gymnastics coach Tom Farden on administrative leave after abuse complaints
View
Date:2025-04-19 17:27:10
Less than a month after Tokyo Olympic alternate Kara Eaker and another gymnast said they'd been subjected to abusive coaching while at Utah, the school put head coach Tom Farden on administrative leave, effective immediately.
The decision is "not related to student-athlete welfare," Utah said in a statement issued late Sunday.
"This action comes after recent conduct and actions by Coach Farden ... which simply do not align with our values and expectations," the statement said, offering no other details.
Eaker, who helped the U.S. women win team titles at the 2018 and 2019 world championships, announced her retirement and withdrawal from school in a lengthy Instagram post on Oct. 20, citing verbal and emotional abuse and a lack of support from the university.
"For two years, while training with the Utah Gymnastics team, I was a victim of verbal and emotional abuse,” Eaker wrote. “As a result, my physical, mental and emotional health has rapidly declined. I had been seeing a university athletics psychologist for a year and a half and I’m now seeing a new provider twice a week because of suicidal and self-harm ideation and being unable to care for myself properly."
More:Elite gymnast Kara Eaker announces retirement, alleges abuse while training at Utah
Eaker did not name the coach. But four days later, former Utes gymnast Kim Tessen echoed Eaker's complaints about the "abusive and toxic environment" at Utah and specifically named Farden.
“Absolutely nothing ever justifies abusive behavior,” Tessen, a captain her senior year, wrote. “None of those coaching tactics are normal or healthy. It is not normal or healthy for your coach to make you feel physically unsafe. It is not normal or healthy to be broken down to the point where you don’t believe your life is worth living. Success is possible without being degraded and humiliated.”
More:Another University of Utah gymnast details abusive environment and names head coach
Utah did not address the complaints of either Eaker or Tessen, instead referring back to what it had said after an independent investigator had cleared Farden of abusive coaching.
In a report issued in September, Husch Blackwell concluded Farden "did not engage in any severe, pervasive or egregious acts of emotional or verbal abuse.” Nor did he “engage in any acts of physical abuse, emotional abuse or harassment as defined by SafeSport Code,” the report said.
Farden did, however, make at least one comment Husch Blackwell investigators classified as degrading. There were reports of others, but they could not be corroborated. Farden also “more likely than not threw a stopwatch and a cellular telephone in frustration in the presence of student-athletes,” the report said, but the incidents weren’t deemed abusive because they were isolated and not severe.
Farden has coached at Utah since 2011, becoming a co-head coach in 2016. He’s been the Utes’ sole head coach since 2020. Utah said associate head coach Carly Dockendorf will be the interim coach while Farden is on leave.
veryGood! (131)
Related
- DeepSeek: Did a little known Chinese startup cause a 'Sputnik moment' for AI?
- Hundreds of ready-to-eat foods are recalled over possible listeria contamination
- Warming Trends: Best-Smelling Vegan Burgers, the Benefits of Short Buildings and Better Habitats for Pollinators
- Can you drink too much water? Here's what experts say
- New data highlights 'achievement gap' for students in the US
- Alabama Public Service Commission Upholds and Increases ‘Sun Tax’ on Solar Power Users
- Shoppers Are Ditching Foundation for a Tarte BB Cream: Don’t Miss This 55% Off Deal
- Groundhog Day 2023
- 'Survivor' 47 finale, part one recap: 2 players were sent home. Who's left in the game?
- Surface Water Vulnerable to Widespread Pollution From Fracking, a New Study Finds
Ranking
- SFO's new sensory room helps neurodivergent travelers fight flying jitters
- The Senate’s New Point Man on Climate Has Been the Democrats’ Most Fossil Fuel-Friendly Senator
- Shoppers Are Ditching Foundation for a Tarte BB Cream: Don’t Miss This 55% Off Deal
- How Asia's ex-richest man lost nearly $50 billion in just over a week
- Meet the volunteers risking their lives to deliver Christmas gifts to children in Haiti
- Warming Trends: Shakespeare, Dogs and Climate Change on British TV; Less Crowded Hiking Trails; and Toilet Paper Flunks Out
- Rumer Willis Shares Photo of Bruce Willis Holding First Grandchild
- US Forest Fires Threaten Carbon Offsets as Company-Linked Trees Burn
Recommendation
NHL in ASL returns, delivering American Sign Language analysis for Deaf community at Winter Classic
Texas woman fatally shot in head during road rage incident
Biden’s Pause of New Federal Oil and Gas Leases May Not Reduce Production, but It Signals a Reckoning With Fossil Fuels
Tom Brady ends his football playing days, but he's not done with the sport
Federal hiring is about to get the Trump treatment
Twitter's new data access rules will make social media research harder
Gas stove makers have a pollution solution. They're just not using it
AMC Theatres will soon charge according to where you choose to sit