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Sunday, June 15
Updated: June 16, 9:09 AM ET
 
Settlement could cost Washington up to $3.6M

Associated Press

SEATTLE -- University of Washington officials have met with lawyers for embattled football coach Rick Neuheisel, though neither side disclosed the nature of discussions.

Athletic director Barbara Hedges issued a statement confirming the meeting Sunday, but school officials would say nothing more.

"There is a process in place, as required by the contract," Hedges said. "Conversations have occurred in the context of this process, and we will allow the process to proceed without any further comment."

On Saturday, Neuheisel made a plea for his job but appeared to be laying the groundwork for a possible settlement when he summoned reporters to his home for a brief statement.

Jerry Crawford, one of Neuheisel's attorneys, wouldn't say whether a possible settlement was discussed. A settlement could cost the university as much as $3.6 million.

Neuheisel said he wanted to keep his job and predicted he wouldn't be found guilty of any major NCAA rules violations. If he is, he promised to resign immediately and pay the university's legal fees for defending itself against the NCAA.

NCAA officials have refused to comment on the Neuheisel matter.

Neuheisel earns $1.2 million a year and has five years remaining on his current contract. If he is fired with cause, he would be required to repay a $1.5 million loan the university gave him when he signed an extension last fall.

The situation got even more cloudy this weekend when Hedges confirmed that offensive coordinator Keith Gilbertson, considered the leading candidate to succeed Neuheisel as interim coach, took part in a $3 NCAA basketball tournament pool within the Washington football office in 1999.

Hedges announced Thursday she had made an initial determination that "just cause" existed to fire Neuheisel.

Crawford said he didn't believe Sunday's meeting constituted the coach's formal response to his termination letter. Neuheisel has until June 26 to respond.

"You'd have to check with the university to see how they characterized it," Crawford said.

An athletic department spokesman declined comment on the question.

When Hedges began the process to fire Neuheisel, she cited his participation in a neighborhood gambling pool involving the past two NCAA basketball tournaments. Coaches aren't allowed to gamble on college sports under NCAA rules.

Hedges also said Neuheisel wasn't forthcoming with NCAA investigators when initially questioned.

Since her announcement, though, Neuheisel has hired a trial attorney and another lawyer, Crawford, who specializes in NCAA matters. They held a news conference Friday to protest the firing, outlining grounds for Neuheisel's possible appeal.

They also suggested they were ready to take legal action if necessary.




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