Tuesday, February 8
Wadsworth's departure largely about image
 
Associated Press

 SOUTH BEND, Ind. -- Perception is everything at Notre Dame. And the prevailing perception is that there's a problem in the athletic department.

So athletics director Mike Wadsworth knows his departure is as much about image as anything else.

"There is a broad perception out there that's a problem, and perception is very important," Wadsworth said Tuesday. "Notre Dame has an outstanding reputation nationally and internationally. Anything that threatens that, it's the responsibility of the board of trustees and the officers of the university to look at it.

"The best way of dealing with that is turn the page and start fresh."

After a series of embarrassing incidents the last several years, including being put on probation by the NCAA, Notre Dame cleaned house as part of a "restructuring" of the athletic department. Wadsworth will step down after a tumultuous five years, and executive vice president E. William Beauchamp will no longer oversee the department, ending a decades-old practice.

Wadsworth said Tuesday he would've preferred to stay on another year after his contract is up this summer, but that wasn't part of the university's plan.

"They knew I'd been contemplating leaving sometime in the near future, and they obviously had had some discussion about what they wanted to do in terms of starting with a fresh page," said Wadsworth, reached at a hotel in Philadelphia, where the men's basketball team was to play Villanova on Tuesday.

The more surprising move was university president the Rev. Edward A. Malloy's decision to assume control of the athletic department, stripping Beauchamp of responsibilities he'd had for 13 years.

After more than 50 years in which the university vice president oversaw athletics, the athletic director will now report directly to Malloy. The university president will be in charge of every major decision, including chairing the committee that will look for Wadsworth's successor.

"I've always been involved in the major decisions," Malloy said. "But it will be a clearer line of reporting."

Wadsworth's departure could mark the end of a sometimes embarrassing period in the university's storied history that includes Lou Holtz's departure, former assistant Joe Moore's age discrimination suit and Notre Dame's discussion with the Big Ten about joining the conference and ending football's independent status, which outraged many alumni.

Wadsworth will also forever be linked to former booster Kimberly Dunbar, whose relationship with more than a dozen players eventually led to the university's first major NCAA rules violation and probation.

Malloy said the university has been considering the changes in the athletic department for sometime, but the NCAA probation accelerated the decision.

Though the university escaped any penalty for institutional control, the report still chided some football coaches for not doing enough to investigate the relationship between Dunbar and more than a dozen players over a five-year period.

"When you have some of the problems that we've talked about that are particularly damaging to this broad perception, sometimes you want to take steps because you feel it's necessary to change the perception," Wadsworth said.

Beauchamp did not return a call seeking comment Tuesday. But Wadsworth said he always felt the university had appropriate control over the athletic department under the old system.

"I have always felt that I could speak with him (Beauchamp) about different decisions and he always had time for me," said Wadsworth, who will stay on until a new athletic director is selected or his contract is up. "He knew what was going on and as a result of that, I always felt that the athletic department had the support that we needed. That has worked very well for many, many years."
 


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