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"Rodriguez,
Michigan to pay WVU $4 million"
MORGANTOWN, W.Va. (AP)—Former
West Virginia University football
coach Rich Rodriguez and the
University of Michigan have
agreed to pay a $4 million buyout
and settle a lawsuit that WVU
filed after he broke his contract
in December. Rodriguez will
pay $1.5 million in three annual
payments beginning January 2010.
The Wolverines athletic department,
his new employer, will pay $2.5
million by the end of July and
cover Rodriguez’s legal
fees, the University of Michigan
said in a statement Wednesday. |
“To help Rich focus on the
challenges ahead, we have worked with
him to resolve the dispute between
him and West Virginia University over
the terms of his buyout,” Michigan
athletic director Bill Martin said.
“Although he continues to disagree
with the validity of the terms, Rich
and the rest of us at Michigan felt
that it would be best to get this
distracting issue behind us.”
The WVU Board of Governors held a
special meeting Wednesday and approved
the agreement, settling a case attorneys
Tom Flaherty and Jeff Wakefield were
set to try this fall.
“It’s a case that should
have settled a long time ago and could
have settled a long time ago. It’s
in the best interest of everyone to
resolve it,” Flaherty said.
WVU will be responsible for its own
legal bills, which Wakefield said
“will be very reasonable.”
A call to Ohio attorney Marv Robon,
representing Rodriguez, and WVU athletic
director Ed Pastilong were not immediately
returned. Rodriguez’s agent,
Mike Brown, declined comment.
Gov. Joe Manchin, meanwhile, issued
a statement urging an end to the acrimony.
“I am happy that this seems
to be coming to a conclusion and believe,
as I’m sure many other West
Virginians do, that with this agreement
in place, it’s now time to move
on,” he said.
Rodriguez quit the Mountaineers in
December for the head coaching job
at Michigan, only a year after extending
his contract with WVU. He had argued
that WVU broke the contract first
by failing to honor certain promises—a
charge WVU denied.
The settlement was reached on what
had been a key deadline in the case.
As part of the discovery process,
a judge had given Rodriguez until
the end of Tuesday to reveal whether
the University of Michigan or anyone
else had agreed to pay WVU on his
behalf.
Flaherty said a document was produced,
but he could not immediately divulge
its contents.
Adding pressure to Rodriguez was a
lawsuit WVU filed in a Michigan court
last week, asking a judge to order
Bill Martin and president Mary Sue
Coleman to testify in depositions.
A hearing on that request had been
set for Wednesday afternoon.
WVU also recently got an Ohio court
to issue a subpoena for testimony
and records from Mike Wilcox, Rodriguez’s
financial adviser.
The Rodriguez camp approached the
university with a “significant
and serious offer” within the
past few days, and WVU responded with
a counterproposal Tuesday, Flaherty
said. That set off a series of meetings
with a court-appointed mediator, Frank
Fragale.
WVU President Mike Garrison said he
was pleased the matter was resolved.
“It was a valid contract. We
entered the contract in very good
faith. We worked very hard to create
an experience here for our former
coach that was a very good one, but
he made a decision and I respect his
decision,” Garrison said.
Garrison is stepping down as WVU’s
president Sept. 1 over an unrelated
scandal involving a master’s
degree the university wrongly awarded
to the governor’s daughter last
fall.
The $4 million liquidated damages
clause was suggested by an attorney
on the WVU Board of Governors in December
2006, after Rodriguez turned down
an offer from Alabama.
It was double the amount of the previous
contract, but a number attorney Steve
Farmer said he believed would protect
WVU from lost marketing, merchandising
and other opportunities if Rodriguez
left early.
Though Rodriguez initially balked,
he ultimately signed a contract with
that figure in August 2007. He resigned
Dec. 16, taking recruits and assistant
coaches with him, and leaving the
Mountaineers just before the Fiesta
Bowl game against Oklahoma. Bill Stewart
replaced Rodriguez after a 48-28 victory
over the Sooners.
Stewart has a five-year contract worth
$800,000 a year, plus incentives.
The base salary totals $4 million,
the same amount WVU aimed to recover
with its lawsuit.
Rodriguez testified recently in a
deposition that he signed his contract
under pressure from board members
and Manchin. He argued that WVU failed
to honor some of his demands and Garrison
assured him the buyout clause would
be reduced or eliminated if he were
to resign—a promise Garrison
denies making.
Rodriguez also testified that while
he considered the amount “excessive”
and “unfair,” he acquiesced
when he was told a major WVU donor
had insisted on it.
WVU booster Ken Kendrick, managing
general partner of the Arizona Diamondbacks,
had insisted on the $4 million.
“I don’t think that anybody
wins in litigation,” he said.
“The university needs to get
on with its business and Rich Rodriguez
needs to get on with his business
at Michigan.”
Rodriguez has agreed to a similar
$4 million damages clause at Michigan.
Associated Press writer John Raby
in Charleston contributed to this
report.
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