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University of Mary Washington Forfeits Season Opener After Hazing Bust

CAC powerhouse University of Mary Washington will forfeit its first dual meet of the 2016-2017 season after the team was caught having a party that included underage drinking and alleged hazing, according to school newspaper The Blue and Gray Press.

The Blue and Gray Press reports that police responded to a noise complaint earlier this month and discovered underage members of the swimming & diving team consuming alcohol. Mary Washington’s Athletic Director Ken Tyler said the event was “largely a freshman welcome tradition/party,” and The Blue and Gray Press quotes anonymous sources who say the event was a hazing ritual for underclassmen.

Police notified Tyler and the program’s head coach, Abby Brethauer, and Tyler now says the tradition has been permanently ended.

The school paper says that Tyler met with both teams, which were not together on the night of the incident, but at separate off-campus locations. The report also says both teams will forfeit what would have been their season-opening dual meets against Washington & Lee.

UMW no longer lists a dual meet on October 14, but Washington & Lee’s schedule still includes the dual, suggesting it has been recently pulled from the UMW website.

UMW is coming off of 26 straight women’s titles and 16 straight men’s titles in the Capital Athletic Conference (CAC) and competes in the NCAA’s Division III.

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Kim M
8 years ago

It was lit

Kim M
8 years ago

Honestly it wasn’t that bad. Free booze. And good team bonding

College Parent
8 years ago

I am very familiar with UMW and this situation. UMW has very strict academic honor code and varsity athlete code of conduct, The athlete code requires that athletes, regardless of age, do not drink within 24-hours of school organized training and 48-hours of representing the school. This is not a party school or program, and should no way reflect on the athletic dedication and hours of community service this program does every year. This party did occur prior to the athletes training under the coach and students did or can opt out without ridicule from their team. However, these parties did occur with the police responding to one of the parties. It was reported to the administration and swift appropriate… Read more »

Pennsylvania Tuxedo
Reply to  College Parent
8 years ago

Which sounds like a great thing.

I try every day to teach my team that it is ok to make a mistake, just never the same mistake twice. Looking forward to seeing them in positive articles very soon.

Scott Morgan
8 years ago

Amazing that teams still think they can keep their “traditions” somehow hidden. And what a great tradition: athletic team-building through drunkenness and humiliation of your teammates. I would have hoped for a season ban.

Kaez
Reply to  Scott Morgan
8 years ago

Are you kidding? Almost every college freshmen group drinks as intitiation, they were just unfortunately caught. You would be foolish to think that the college swimmers do not drink at parties, its college.

DutchWomen
Reply to  Kaez
8 years ago

And that mindset is unfortunate. Binge drinking in college – proof that we haven’t evolved to a level much higher than the chimps. You are a part of the problem, dismissing this behavior as “kids being kids” and so forth.

Maverick
Reply to  DutchWomen
8 years ago

Lol obviously you did not partake in college athletics.

Pennsylvania Tuxedo
Reply to  Maverick
8 years ago

The “kids will be kids” mentality is dangerous in this situation. That’s how things go too far and programs get cut for five years.

Education is super important here. I get your point of don’t throw the baby out with the bath water, but it’s important for athletes to understand what hazing is, and how different people react in different ways. What you see as tradition could be making someone uncomfortable. The easiest way to be 100% sure is to just not.

DutchWomen
Reply to  Maverick
8 years ago

I certainly did. But with a 130 IQ and a mind stimulated by things other than low info college binge drinking tomfoolery – I did not partake in freshman hazing activities. The seniors tried – I told them no thanks – it was that easy. Looking back, I didn’t miss a thing.

Kim M
Reply to  DutchWomen
8 years ago

Dutchwomen… you were that kid… you missed so much

Kim M
Reply to  DutchWomen
8 years ago

I very much disagree.. when’s the last time you saw a chimp binge drink? I mean.. Did you go to college? It’s a rather common (and enjoyable) weekend activity

Scott Morgan
Reply to  Kaez
8 years ago

Kaez: this story is about hazing and team-organized “bonding” with alcohol served to minors. I am not saying anything about drinking at parties in the general.

NONA
8 years ago

If it’s a forfeit shouldn’t it stay on schedule as a loss? Otherwise it’s just a cancelled meet. Or just call it a cancellation.

CBswims
Reply to  NONA
8 years ago

A forfeit is a loss even if it has been pulled off the schedule

About Jared Anderson

Jared Anderson

Jared Anderson swam for nearly twenty years. Then, Jared Anderson stopped swimming and started writing about swimming. He's not sick of swimming yet. Swimming might be sick of him, though. Jared was a YMCA and high school swimmer in northern Minnesota, and spent his college years swimming breaststroke and occasionally pretending …

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