Chicago Tribune

Paul Sullivan: Former Northwestern players speak up about a ‘rampant’ hazing culture that has tarnished the university

“All we wanted to do was play ball,” Simba Short said Wednesday morning as he stood behind a lectern with three other former Northwestern football players. It was a reasonable request. They had been recruited to Northwestern to do just that, after all, and were sold on the program by the coaches who brought them in. But here they stood in solidarity, describing the psychological and emotional ...
Former Northwestern football player Lloyd Yates speaks Wednesday, July 19, 2023, alongside other former players, from left, Warren Miles Long, Tom Carnifax and Simba Short about the abuse and hazing they say occurred in the program.

“All we wanted to do was play ball,” Simba Short said Wednesday morning as he stood behind a lectern with three other former Northwestern football players.

It was a reasonable request.

They had been recruited to Northwestern to do just that, after all, and were sold on the program by the coaches who brought them in.

But here they stood in solidarity, describing the psychological and emotional pain they endured from entering a football culture described Wednesday as “toxic” and “systemic.” A game they’d played as little kids was now a reminder of a traumatic experience they couldn’t forget.

Short joined former Wildcats players Lloyd Yates, Warren Miles Long and Tom Carnifax at a downtown news conference held by attorneys Benjamin Crump, Steven Levin

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Chicago Tribune

Chicago Tribune3 min read
Sky Players Voice Confidence In New Team Identity Under Teresa Weatherspoon: ‘She’s Allowing Us To Be Ourselves’
CHICAGO — There’s just one week until Teresa Weatherspoon makes her mark on the WNBA — for the second time in her Hall of Fame career. The Chicago Sky’s new head coach will make her debut at the helm of a professional team next week with the Sky’s se
Chicago Tribune6 min read
Tiny Pieces Of Plastic Pose One Of The Biggest Threats To Chicago River Wildlife And Water Quality
CHICAGO — Wendella engineer Miguel Chavez climbed down a ladder and over a small dock Wednesday to pull up a trap floating in the Chicago River near the Michigan Avenue Bridge. The size of a standard garbage can, the trap is designed to collect trash
Chicago Tribune4 min read
New COVID ‘FLiRT’ Variants Are Spreading Nationwide. Chicago Health Experts Urge Up To Date Vaccination
CHICAGO — A new family of COVID variants nicknamed “FLiRT” is spreading across the country, as vaccination rates in Chicago — as well as nationwide — remain concerningly low for some public health experts. While symptoms and severity seem to be abou

Related Books & Audiobooks