Buzz Brazeau used to be the athletic director and then an assistant principal at North Medford HS. Now, he's the principal at Hermiston HS. Mike Kaye, the AD there, also used to be an AD at North Medford. Both well acquainted with the man who was just hired to be their new football coach.
(Mark) Hodges has spent the last three seasons as the head coach at Fernley High School in Fernley, Nevada, but has previous assistant coaching experience in Oregon at North Medford High School (1999-2004), South Medford High School (1993-1998) and Southern Oregon University (1991-1993).
Hodges had a good run at the Medford schools (including as the track coach at North), but his time in Nevada has been plagued with scandal. The highest profile of these was evidently not of his doing...though one has to wonder how a coach could be that disengaged from the recruiting of his players.
First there were offers, then there weren't. Then there was a crooked third-party recruiter, and finally Wednesday it was discovered he didn't exist, either.
In a one-paragraph statement issued by the Lyon County School District, Fernley senior Kevin Hart, who made national news this week as the recruit who committed without a scholarship offer and then as the victim of a cruel hoax, admitted the entire process was a fraud.
"I wanted to play D-I ball more than anything. When I realized that wasn't going to happen, I made up what I wanted to be reality," he said. "I am sorry for disappointing and embarrassing my family, coaches, Fernley High School, the involved universities and reporters covering the story."
Five days after Fernley coach Mark Hodges proclaimed it "a great day for Fernley High School," the admission was an abrupt outcome to a story which had ultimately reached ESPN, national radio shows and countless Internet message board since the day Hart said he chose California over Oregon in a momentous announcement ceremony that had Hart's father, Richard, holding back tears.
Hermiston had begun recruiting Hodges in December. Officials there must know that Hodges isn't leaving Fernley on good terms.
A promised lawsuit by Fernley High School teacher and football coach Mark Hodges against the Lyon County School District and others, including the Board of Trustees, was filed with the Third Judicial District Court in Yerington Tuesday afternoon.
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Citing a report first aired by KRNV TV, Reno, on Friday, Feb. 8, Hodges' suit, which McKenna's office sent copies of to the Fernley Leader and other media outlets last week, charges the coach was libeled, defamed and/or slandered by the Lyon County School District because the district supplied information for that report, which, in part, said, "News 4 has confirmed that it is going to be recommended to the Lyon County School District board that Fernley head football coach Mark Hodges not be offered another contract as coach. The grounds for the decision are unprofessional conduct and fiscal irresponsibility."
The TV station also reported that Fernley coaches had been alerted by an email from University of California three days before Hart's announcement that there had been a misunderstanding and Hart wasn't going to be offered a scholarship; and the report also charged that when Hodges was approached, he said "everything was still in order." In addition, the KRNV report said it learned of "unauthorized funds" allegedly being spent by the football program on uniforms.
Hodges wants $20,000 in general and future damages, plus "past loss of benefits, future loss of earnings and/or loss of earning capacity, punitive damages, reasonable attorney fees and costs of the suit, and additional damages as deemed by the court."
Hodges had already had problems at Fernley before the above occurred. From a July '06 article in the Medford Mail-Tribune...
Former North Medford High head track and assistant football coach Mark Hodges has come under scrutiny for using two ineligible players while serving as the head football coach at Fernley High in Nevada last fall.
Fernley was forced to forfeit all five of its 2005 football victories after then-seniors Jori Kaeser and James Oppelt were declared ineligible. Kaeser, Oppelt and Colin Hodges, the son of the coach, moved to Fernley last summer from Medford after Hodges got the Fernley job.
All three players returned to Oregon shortly after the football season ended. Colin Hodges and Kaeser graduated from North Medford last month while Oppelt, another former Black Tornado football player, graduated early and joined the Army Rangers.
Hodges also violated Nevada Interscholastic Activities Association rules by conducting practices on Sundays throughout last season, NIAA executive director Jerry Hughes told NevadaPrep.com, a high school sports Web site.
The Sunday practices were supposedly voluntary film sessions.
Hodges claimed that his son and Kaeser moved back to Medford to avoid college out-of-state tuition costs. Evidently there was no problem though with his son playing quarterback in an all-star game in Nevada--representing Fernley HS--the same month he graduated from North Medford.
Hodges, reached earlier this week, said the violations were a misunderstanding caused in large part by Fernley High administrators failing to inform the NIAA of his actions.
Kaeser had been living with the Hodges family for six months in Oregon and made the move to Nevada. Hodges considered it a hardship arrangement but since the case was never forwarded to the NIAA, Kaeser wasn't granted a hardship eligibility waiver, Hughes said.
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"This turned into a real ugly deal, but after you wade through the muck and the mire, we really didn't do anything wrong," Hodges said. "Jori (Kaeser) had been living with me for six months before I ever talked to anyone in Nevada about the job down there."
Hughes, after meeting with Hodges, Kribs and Lyon County School District administrators last week, said he wouldn't pursue recruiting violations against Hodges but warned all Nevada schools that violating eligibility rules in the future could lead to severe sanctions.
But the third kid was living with a Fernley assistant coach, meaning he was ineligible with no possible waiver. That's a no-brainer in Nevada. All three were impact players.
Lucky for Hodges that his old buddies from North Medford have given him another opportunity. Hope nobody ends up regretting that.
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