According to M Athletics Chantel Jennings and Brian Hamilton, Ohio women’s basketball coach Deunna Hendricks’ Iami, who is an athlete. The university first suspended Hendricks on April 20. Thirty reported messages were considered intimate. I love you, you are my baby, and I am. can’t wait Squeeze. Contains phrases like you. Hendricks resigned Wednesday after intimate text messages revealed an affair.
However, instead of going to trial, Hendricks resigned. I cannot express enough the gratitude I have for this prestigious organization and its leadership. I would also like to thank the Oxford community for their continued love and support. I look forward to the next phase of my career and continue to root for it. RedHawks. My good name or reputation could be considered insulting or harmful.
The university initially suspended Hendricks on April 20 — the day after it found 180 texts over an 11-day period between Hendricks, 38, and an unnamed player — according to a statement provided to The Athletic. In a text exchange with Player, Hendrix referred to the couple, who have been married for many years, and said: ‘It’s more than ideal to do this with you in public.
In the April 9 text, Hendricks wrote that ‘my girl would have returned to me today’ and then added that ‘the airport will be away from Miami WBB employees.’ “I want to thank the University of Miami and its administration for allowing me to lead this program for the past four years,” Hendricks said in a statement on the university’s athletics website.
In Hendricks’ resignation letter, also obtained by The Athletic, the university will only disclose her employment dates and the positions she has held to prospective employers. provides an athletic director David Saylor “not to disparage me or make any statements to others. The player made intimate comments during text exchanges, including professing his love for Hendricks.
The university determined that Hendricks’ actions “did not violate Title IX or the university’s sexual misconduct protocol,” according to The Athletic. However, Hendricks’ staff members it violated the school’s policy on consensual relationships between undergraduate students. The university did not disclose Hendrix’s reason for resigning because it wanted to “protect their rights to privacy under FERPA,” according to The Athletic.
Hendricks went 35-80 in four years in Miami after going 125-93 in seven seasons at High Point.