Tracy Claeys had a football team to coach again Sunday.
After a week unlike any other in University of Minnesota history, the head coach was back on the practice field while dealing with the continued fallout from an alleged Sept. 2 sexual assault, a two-day boycott that left lingering player tension with the University's administration, and his own uncertain status with his bosses.
The Gophers football facility has been Turmoil Central for nearly a week, and these difficult days gave Sunday's first practice after the boycott a different vibe. Supporting sexual assault victims remained a top talking point. Players had to call another meeting Sunday, sources told the Star Tribune, to address simmering frustration with the administration. And the media grilled Claeys about his future.
Claeys told WCCO (830-AM) that when players were headed toward a boycott last week, he told them, "There's a great chance I could lose my job over this."
He also knows he took a giant risk by tweeting support for the players during the boycott, positioning himself against the administration.
After Sunday's practice, Claeys said it's one thing to support players publicly and another to do it behind closed doors. "You are going to have a group of them that don't believe you," he said. "I needed to do that in a public way, and I tried to do it as short as possible. There are probably different ways to word it."
University President Eric Kaler and Board of Regents chairman Dean Johnson both acknowledged that Claeys was in a difficult situation.
"If he doesn't support his players and you go to the Holiday Bowl, guess what? I don't think they're going to play too hard for you," Johnson said. "It's just human nature. On the other hand, he has a boss, like I have a boss. You have to subscribe to what your boss wants you to do."