Texas assistant coach gets leniency after hit on referee
ROUND ROCK, Texas (AP) — Texas high school sports officials showed leniency today after a former assistant football coach denied ordering two players to blindside a referee but acknowledged making comments that may have unintentionally instigated the hit.
In doling out final penalties for the Sept. 4 incident, the University Interscholastic League suspended Mack Breed, former San Antonio John Jay assistant coach, for the rest of the school year and placed him on two years' probation. Breed could have been suspended for up to three years, but UIL officials said his willingness to testify helped reduce the sanctions.
Breed said he wanted to "clear my name" and got choked up when defending himself.
Head coach Gary Guttierez was given a public reprimand and two years' probation and the two players involved were suspended from all sports or extracurricular activities for the rest of the academic year.
The suspensions will end the career of one player who is a senior. The other, a sophomore, must agree to speak with UIL officials about the Sept. 4 incident before he'll be reinstated.
The hit on umpire Robert Watts came near the end of a heated game that included multiple unsportsmanlike conduct penalties and a player ejection. Video of the hit, which Watts has said caused a concussion, created a national stir when it was posted online.
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