Tingey placed on paid administrative leave: Removal was made to “change direction” in athletics

Photo-Credit: Idaho State Journal

UPDATED

Logan Ramsey

Associate Editor

ISU athletic director Jeff Tingey was placed on administrative leave last Friday. The Idaho State Journal reported Wednesday that Tingey will not return to ISU and that the move was made in an effort to change the direction of ISU athletics.

“Jeff Tingey’s removal was not over any scandal or violation, but was about changing the direction of the athletic department,” ISU President Kevin Satterlee told the Idaho State Journal.

Tingey’s dismissal was announced one week before the ISU football season was set to kickoff. The university said it will continue to pay Tingey’s $150,467 annual salary until his contract expires in June 2019.

“During the course of an operational review of the Idaho State athletic department, President Kevin Satterlee felt that it was in the best interest of the university to place Tingey on administrative leave,” read a Friday press release from Stuart Summers, Associate Vice President for Marketing and Communications.

Summers previously declined to comment on the reasoning behind Tingey being placed on administrative leave.

ISU has now sprung a nationwide search to find Tingey’s replacement.  Summers said over the weekend that they would make their selection “soon.”

The Idaho State Journal reported that the interim athletic director will not be a candidate to fill Tingey’s old position full-time.

“ISU is committed to the success of its athletic teams and student-athletes,” Summers’ Friday release said. “The university will provide continued support and oversight to the department during this period.”

This is the first significant administration change Satterlee has made since he took over as ISU’s president in June.

During the Arthur Vailas Administration, ISU was subject to infighting between faculty and administrators, as well as a number of other scandals to hit the university, which was not limited to athletics.

One of the big questions facing ISU faculty when Satterlee was hired was if he would make any major shakeups to the administration. Summers declined to comment if there will be any other major changes in the near future.

Tingey and the ISU Football Alumni Team (F.A.T.) have had disagreements in the past. In August 2017, F.A.T. threatened to withhold $80,000 in booster money until Vailas and Tingey were removed from their positions. It turned out that F.A.T. didn’t have the $80,000 to withhold and they eventually transferred the $58,500 to the university in the form of an endowment fund.

Don Neves, F.A.T. President declined to make any comments on Tingey specifically, but said he feels “bad for anyone that loses their job.”

“Mr. Satterlee is educated, and he makes decisions based on fact, and I have a lot of faith in his decision making,” Neves said.

Jason Whitmer, a F.A.T. board member, said that he didn’t have any ill-feelings towards Tingey, but that he had full faith in Satterlee.

“In the last month Satterlee’s garnered more ISU support in the community and in the fans and boosters than there has been in the last eight or nine years,” Whitmer said. “I’m optimistic that the changes that are going to be made are going to benefit ISU athletics.”

(Editor’s note: This article was updated from when it was first posted online as we received further information on the subject.)

Logan Ramsey - News Editor

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