FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. — Bobby Petrino talked time and again about
winning a national championship at Arkansas. From the day he was hired
in 2007, Petrino never wavered in that goal or belief.
Petrino won't have that chance now, felled by scandal, and he blamed no one but himself for being fired.
"The simplest response I have is: I'm sorry," he said. "These two words seem very inadequate. But that is my heart."
Athletic
director Jeff Long dumped Petrino on Tuesday and laid out a stunning
laundry list of misdeeds against the man he hired away from the Atlanta
Falcons four years ago.
He ripped Petrino for hiring his mistress and for intentionally misleading him about the secret relationship that was laid bare following their April 1 motorcycle ride together that ended in a crash. He said Petrino missed multiple chances over the past 10 days to come clean about an affair that had crossed the line from infidelity into workplace favoritism.
"He made
the decision, a conscious decision, to mislead the public on Tuesday,
and in doing so negatively and adversely affected the reputation of the
University of Arkansas and our football program," Long said, choking up
as he discussed telling players that their coach was gone. "In short,
coach Petrino engaged in a pattern of misleading and manipulative
behavior designed to deceive me and members of the athletic staff, both
before and after the motorcycle accident."
The 51-year-old
Petrino, a married father of four, maintained an inappropriate
relationship with 25-year-old Jessica Dorrell for a "significant" amount
of time and at one point gave her $20,000, Long said.
Long
would not disclose details of the payment, or when the money changed
hands, but said both parties confirmed the "gift." Kevin Trainor, a
spokesman for Long, said the money came from Petrino, not university
funds.
Petrino issued a lengthy apology and said he was focused on trying to make amends to his family.
"All
I have been able to think about is the number of people I've let down
by making selfish decisions," he said. "I chose to engage in an improper
relationship. I also made several poor decisions following the end of
that relationship and in the aftermath of the accident. I accept full
responsibility for what has happened."
Dorrell, a former
Razorbacks volleyball player, worked for the Razorbacks Foundation
before she was hired by Petrino on March 28, four days before the
accident on a rural road 20 miles outside Fayetteville. Long said she
was one of three finalists out of 159 applicants and got the job after
an unusually short time frame.
Petrino never disclosed his
conflict of interest in hiring Dorrell or the payment and she clearly
had an unfair advantage over the other candidates, Long said.
"Coach
Petrino abused his authority when over the past few weeks he made a
staff decision and personal choices that benefited himself and
jeopardized the integrity of the football program," Long said.
Petrino
has built Arkansas into a national power over four seasons, including a
21-5 record the past two years, and he was in the middle of a
seven-year contract under which his salary averaged $3.53 million per
year. A clause gave Long the right to suspend or fire the coach for
conduct that "negatively or adversely affects the reputation of the
(university's) athletics programs in any way."
Long said
Petrino was fired "with cause" — meaning he will not receive the $18
million buyout detailed in the contract — and there were no discussions
about ways to keep Petrino at Arkansas. Long met with Petrino on Tuesday
morning to inform him there were grounds for termination and that the
coach was "concerned" about that. Long sent Petrino a letter that
afternoon to formally notify him he had been fired.
"I chose to do it in writing because that's the terms of his contract," he said.
Long
declined to comment when asked about Dorrell's job status. She was
hired as the student-athlete development coordinator for Arkansas
football, paid $55,735 annually to organize on-campus recruiting visits
for the team and assist with initial eligibility for each incoming
player
Petrino finishes his tenure at Arkansas with a 34-17
record in four seasons, leading the Razorbacks to a No. 5 final ranking
last season and a Cotton Bowl win over Kansas State. With quarterback
Tyler Wilson, running back Knile Davis and others coming back, there is
talk of Arkansas challenging the two powerhouses in the SEC West,
national champion Alabama and national runner-up LSU.
And maybe the Hogs will. But they won't do it with Petrino.
The beginning of the end came on April 1, which Petrino at first described as a Sunday spent with his wife at an area lake.
Instead,
he and Dorrell went for an evening ride and skidded off the road in an
accident that left him with four broken ribs, a cracked vertebra in his
neck and abrasions on his face. The avid motorcycle rider said the sun
and wind caused him to lose control.
What he failed to
mention, at a news conference two days later and to Long for two more
days, was the presence of Dorrell other than a vague reference to "a
lady" who had flagged down a passing motorist. That changed when the
state police released the accident report. Petrino, tipped off by the
state trooper who usually provides security for him during the season,
informed Long 20 minutes before the report was released, and he admitted
to what he called a previous inappropriate relationship with Dorrell.
Long put him on paid leave.
It didn't get any better for
Petrino. Audio of the 911 call reporting the accident revealed he and
Dorrell didn't want police called following the crash, and a subsequent
police report showed he asked if he was required to give the name of the
passenger during the accident.
Petrino was forthcoming
about Dorrell's name and presence with investigators, but only after
misleading both Long and the public during his news conference. The
school even released a statement from Petrino's family the day after the
accident that said "no other individuals" were involved.
The deception and the way Dorrell was hired were too much for Long.
"Our
expectations of character and integrity in our employees can be no less
than what we expect of our students," Long said. "No single individual
is bigger than the team, the Razorback football program of the
University of Arkansas."
The coach's tenure with the
Razorbacks began under a cloud of second-guessing following his abrupt
departure from Atlanta 13 games into the 2007 season.
Petrino
left farewell notes in the lockers of the Atlanta players rather than
telling them of his resignation in person. He was introduced later that
night as the new coach of the Razorbacks, carrying with him a vagabond
image after holding 15 jobs for 11 different programs/organizations in
24 seasons. He infamously met with Auburn officials in 2003 to talk
about taking the Tigers' head coaching job while Tommy Tuberville still
had it.
Yet he was welcomed in Arkansas and took the school
to its first BCS bowl game following the 2010 season, losing in the
Sugar Bowl to Ohio State. He improved his win total in every year.
Arkansas was 5-7 his first season in 2008, 8-5 the second before
finishing 10-3 and 11-2 during his last two seasons.
In his statement, Petrino said he and his staff had left Arkansas in better shape and wished for its success.
"As
a result of my personal mistakes, we will not get to finish our goal of
building a championship program," he said. "My sole focus at this point
is trying to repair the damage I've done to my family. They did not ask
for any of this and deserve better. I am committed to being a better
husband, father and human being as a result of this and will work each
and every day to prove that to my family, friends and others.
"I
love football. I love coaching. I of course hope I can find my way back
to the profession I love. In the meantime, I will do everything I can
to heal the wounds I have created."
Assistant head coach
Taver Johnson will continue to lead the program through spring practice,
which ends with the school's spring game on April 21. Long said he has
asked the rest of the staff, including offensive coordinator Paul
Petrino, Petrino's brother, to remain at least through then.
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