Katie Brenny was just weeks into her new job as coach of the University of Minnesota women's golf team when her role drastically changed. Suddenly, she says, she wasn't allowed to travel to tournaments and became little more than an administrative assistant to John Harris, then director of the university's golf program.
She appealed to former athletic director Joel Maturi. But 58 days after she was hired, the university told her to resign or to go sell premium tickets and suites for campus events. She decided to quit.
Now, three years later, Brenny's lawsuit against the university's regents, which claims she was pushed out because Harris and others learned she was a lesbian, is being heard in Hennepin County District Court. The verdict in the nonjury bench trial, now in its second week, is likely to depend on which side comes across as more credible, because several key university employees have testified that they didn't know Brenny's sexual orientation until she filed a lawsuit in late 2010.
Harris, a well-known local golfer who was dropped as a defendant early on, and Maturi are expected to testify. Elizabeth Eull, deputy chief of staff of policy and initiatives for university President Eric Kaler, has sat at counsel's table for the entire trial.
Brenny, a Little Falls native and a former state high school golf champ, worked as a club professional in North Carolina and as a staff member on the PGA Tour's Developmental Nationwide Tour, as well as playing professionally, before taking her "dream job" at the U in August 2010. Now 33, she works for the First Tee in New York City, a youth program that uses golf to teach life skills. She went public with her discrimination claim after leaving the university.
David Crum, former associate athletic director for athletic development and supervisor of the golf program, said in court that Harris had an ego and was bad at communicating with staff.
Crum testified that Brenny did a great job during the U's interview process and that the hiring committee was impressed with her. But after she was hired, he said, Harris moved her to what she considered menial tasks, such as creating a Facebook page for the team, driving players to the airport and making a flier for Harris' golf camp. She was allowed to observe her players, but not to offer instruction.
"She lost John's trust, and we worked together to figure out how she could gain it back," Crum said. "They agreed to a fresh start."