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Jeff Agrest: ‘Michael Wilbon Sounds Like Northwestern Athletic Director’

ESPN personality and NBA Countdown personality Michael Wilbon was duly featured throughout the NBA Playoffs as one of the network’s preeminent basketball voices. Now, he is evidently the only person associated with Northwestern University speaking outside of carefully-written statements about the firing of football coach Pat Fitzgerald after allegations of malfeasance pertaining to hazing disseminated by The Daily Northwestern cost him his job. Wilbon, who serves on The Board of Trustees at Northwestern University, addressed the institution and setbacks he believes it will face in various public appearances, including on his show, Pardon the Interruption

“We have to have a young, ambitious, energetic, charismatic coach who can rally this,” Wilbon said during an appearance on Waddle & Silvy on ESPN 1000. “I’ve gotten the phone calls. I will know; I will make it my business to know who the best candidates are for this in the next few days. That’s what I’m going to be obsessed with, and we’ll find that person.”

In an article written in the Chicago Sun-Times, author Jeff Agrest wonders why Wilbon is discussing the incident in the manner that university athletic director Derrick Gragg should be doing instead. Along with Wilbon, Christine Brennan, who was an award-winning journalist for The Washington Post and currently writes for USA Today, also serves on the Board of Trustees. She has yet to comment on the scandal and the potential enduring effects it could have on the school. Both Brennan and Wilbon declined to be interviewed for Agrest’s column, leading him to ponder how journalism graduates are neglecting to contribute to what has become a caustic narrative.

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“But doesn’t all this seem strange?,” Agrest asked. “Michael Wilbon, award-winning journalist, essentially is playing the role of a flack for his alma mater. As genuine as he is, the man was trained to be a reporter and to hold authority accountable. He might not consider himself a journalist anymore, but he works for ESPN, parts of which still adhere to journalistic principles.”

Wilbon conveys his respect towards the program Fitzgerald helped build and is a proud alumnus of the school. Nonetheless, he wonders whether this situation will prove insurmountable. On Tuesday’s edition of Pardon the Interruption, he expressed how he wants to turn the page and focus on the future rather than looking back at the past.

The reality of the situation is that the university has lost an extensive amount of trust that could impact college decisions and the transfer portal for years to come. As a result, it will be up to the university to demonstrate that it is an institution that will act in the best interests of its students and ensure their safety while promoting an environment of inclusivity, research and academic vigor.

“I have received hundreds and hundreds of emails describing how [Fitzgerald] has transformed the lives of current and former student-athletes,” Northwestern University President Michael Schill said in a statement. “However, as much as Coach Fitzgerald has meant to our institution and to our student-athletes, we have an obligation – in fact a responsibility – to live by our values, even when it means making difficult and painful decision such as this one. We must move forward.”

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