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NO WINNERS IN CIVIL
WAR AT UGA
Wasn’t
it just a few months ago that the University of Georgia was enjoying a
reputation as one of the finest public universities in the nation while
celebrating its first SEC football championship in 20 years? My alma mater
seemed to have the best of both worlds — academics and athletics. Now look
at us. We are in the middle of a nasty civil war in Athens. Friend against
friend. Brother against brother. Adams supporter against Dooley supporter.
The only thing unifying the Bulldog Nation these days is that everybody is
mad at somebody.
No matter whose side you happen to be on,
no winners will remain when the smoke clears.
The biggest loser will be UGA President Michael Adams. This war started on
his watch and the buck stops at his desk. Adams’ decision not to extend
Athletic Director Vince Dooley’s contract ignited the controversy. While
his supporters have tried to spin the issue as a stand against the
“football crowd,” the issues are more complicated than that. The football
crowd may be making the most noise, but a growing number of influential
alumni are disenchanted with Adams’ management style and have questions
about how he spends donors’ money.
Adam's supporters
don’t seem to appreciate that his job is in jeopardy. His friends have
talked about a “two month controversy” that will “run out of steam” and
about the rightness of his decision not to extend Dooley’s contract,
ignoring the predictable firestorm that a first-year PR student could have
told him would occur as a result of that decision. In short, his
supporters have been giving Adams bad advice — assuming he is taking any
advice — and as a result, he finds himself squarely on the defensive, not
a good place to be in a political fight.
Another loser in this war may well be Vince Dooley. While he enjoys
extraordinary popularity in the state as a Hall of Fame coach and
administrator, Dooley is going to finish his glorious 40-year career on a
sour note. This wasn’t the way he intended to go out. In addition, if Mike
Adams is forced to resign, a lot of people — even some who would not be
unhappy to see Adams go — will say that this is irrefutable proof that
Georgia is still a “Southern football school” and that athletics, not
academics, run the University of Georgia. Rightly or wrongly, they are
going to hold Vince Dooley responsible.
The University of Georgia
Foundation, which I served as a trustee for 14 years, is also a loser. The
foundation raises and manages the private funds that supplement state
funding. Without private dollars, UGA could not keep its doors open. Right
now, the foundation looks like Adams’ private piggy bank. Decisions to
supplement the president’s pay and that of certain staff members, the
president’s travel expenses and several real estate purchases have been
made by a select few of Adam’s hand-picked friends and without the
knowledge of the full board. That is poor stewardship. Hopefully, the
foundation trustees will institute some long-overdue reforms to assure
UGA’s alumni and friends that someone is watching over their money in a
responsible and businesslike fashion.
The biggest losers, of course,
are
the students and faculty at my beloved University of Georgia. UGA has made
enormous progress as an academic institution, thanks to the HOPE
scholarship and to the hard work of a lot of dedicated people over the
years. The University of Georgia has become one of the finest public
universities in the country. The students and the faculty do not deserve
to be caught in the middle of this firefight, and they certainly don’t
deserve having money withheld from them, whatever the rationale. This
isn’t their fault, folks.
There
is still a chance for somebody to step in and negotiate a truce. If that
doesn’t happen, Mike Adams will not survive the controversy and will have
to resign. Vince Dooley won’t get his contract extension and will have to
retire. I wish both men would understand that no one is coming out as
winners in this war. Only losers.
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