The Boston Celtics held a pointless press conference on Friday that didnât do a damn thing to fill in the blanks on its decision to suspend Ime Udoka, the head coach who three months ago took the most successful franchise in NBA history to within two games of its 18th NBA title. The team needs to say more.
Udoka wonât be allowed to coach the Celtics until at least the 2023-24 season, the result of an internal investigation into his allegedly consensualâbut nonetheless inappropriateârelationship with an unnamed woman who also works with the team. To be clear, most companies have policies that preclude executives from having undisclosed romantic relationships with subordinatesâthe idea being that the power imbalance is inherently problematic. If the person youâre involved with has the power to affect your employment, itâs kinda hard to characterize that relationship as entirely consensual.
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But thatâs where the whole thing goes left for the Celtics, who keep telling us that Udokaâs relationship, was, in fact, consensual, but wonât offer any more details. Privacy concerns notwithstanding, the story has too many holes. Udoka is far from the first coach in any sport to have such a relationship, but none has ever been so publicly outed for it or had their job stripped from them for a full season. The team also said Udoka will suffer a âheavy financial penalty,â and refused to commit to bringing him back as coach next season. Allow me to forget my grammar, but ainât no team doing all that to a head coach of a team thatâs favored to win it all this year, and just a month before the season starts, if thereâs not more to the story. Team co-owner Wyc Grousbeck said Udoka broke a team rule, which we can assume is one against fraternization, but his vagueness around the suspension says that the Celtics know a lot more than theyâre disclosing.
âFor privacy reasons, I wonât be able to offer many facts or circumstances around what occurred or why the suspension is in place,â Grousbeck said. Itâs an unusual position for him to be in because as even he noted, Grousbeck likes to talk and is generally forthcoming about whatâs going on with the team or whatâs on his mind. I can personally attest to that, because as a reporter in Boston years ago, I had multiple conversations with him and he never hid much. The Celticsâ investigation over the summer âhad some twists and turns,â he said. Maybe one of which was the idea that at least some of what went on wasnât all that consensual.
Some members of the Celtics organization first became aware of the relationship in July, sources said. At that time, team leadership was led to believe by both parties that the relationship was consensual. But sources said that the woman recently accused Udoka of making unwanted comments toward herâleading the team to launch a set of internal interviews.
Grousbeck and president of basketball operations Brad Stevens both said that the most regrettable part of the whole fiasco was that women inside the Celticsâ organization had had their names and images dragged through Twitter as idiots on that platform fished for clues about who Udoka was involved with. That included a Black woman Celtics exec who I wonât further traumatize by naming here. The Celtics are right for being concerned about damage to her reputation and about the damage to other women inside their offices. But so far, their public handling of Udokaâs suspension hasnât exactly been fair to anyoneânot the women whoâve had their names tarnished in the information vacuum that the team created, and not even their suspended head coach who, as of this moment, may not have much of a career left to come back to.
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