MANKATO - The lowest moments in his two-year battle are still painful for Minnesota State Mankato football coach Todd Hoffner.
"We were down to very little money," Hoffner said, sitting in his dining room with his wife, Melodee. The family, he said, came perilously close to losing their home.
Hoffner tried to answer, at first uncomfortably, the many questions that still surround his legal and emotional roller coaster after officials at Minnesota State Mankato found naked pictures of his children on his school cellphone in August 2012. He was escorted off the practice field, and subsequently removed from his job.
"The goal always was for Todd to get his job back. [We] never wavered," said Melodee, who still flashed her emotions as she recapped what had happened. "More people said, 'You need to stay.' [There were] a few that said, 'What do you think about starting fresh?' "
The coach said that questions about what transpired might linger "only if you leave.''
"There is no choice," he said, "but to come back and face anyone and everyone."
In court and on the field, Hoffner has been vindicated. He has his team back — the Mavericks began practice this week in preparation for their first game against St. Cloud State on Sept. 4 — and the abandonment of last April when his players briefly refused to play for him when he returned appears to be in the past. But an awkwardness remains.
The Hoffner saga went viral nationally in the wake of the sex scandal at Penn State involving a former assistant coach. Child pornography charges were filed against Hoffner, and then dismissed when a judge determined the pictures simply showed children at innocent play. But instead of reinstating him, school officials fired him, a decision reversed only when Hoffner won a sweeping arbitrator's ruling last spring after he had accepted the coaching job at Minot State.