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Chicago Sun Times
Chicago Sun-Times
27 Jul 2023
https://chicago.suntimes.com/authors/david-struett


NextImg:Hazing led former Northwestern football player to self-harm, lawsuit alleges

A former Northwestern University football player was hazed so badly that he harmed himself and was hospitalized, according to a lawsuit filed Wednesday.

Simba Short, who played defense for Northwestern from 2015-2016, filed with suit with civil rights attorney Ben Crump and Chicago firm Levin & Perconti.

At least four other lawsuits have been filed against the university over alleged abusive behavior in its sports program. Lawyers have said the culture of abuse and hazing extended to other sports at the university, including volleyball.

The new lawsuit describes how Short was allegedly bullied by coaches and other players after he underwent surgery to repair an injured shoulder as a freshman.

Short was a standout football player when he was recruited in 2015 from De La Salle High School in Concord, California. But the injury kept him from playing as a freshman, making him a target of abuse, the lawsuit states.

Players and coaches sometimes called him an “eater and sh-tter” because “his value to the team was nothing but consuming food and toilet space until he was healthy,” the lawsuit states.

When he recovered enough to practice with the team in the spring of 2016, players threatened him with a hazing ritual known as “running,” saying he was “healthy enough to be ran,” the lawsuit states.

Short tried to avoid the upperclassmen who had threatened him, but he was finally confronted in a locker room by four or five players who held him down on a bench as a teammate rubbed his genitals against him, the suit states.

He was also subjected to “dredging,” where freshmen were forced to drink alcohol until they threw up, the lawsuit states. Coaches also made racist comments to Short and other players who are Black, the suit states.

The abuse led Short to a “mental health crisis that culminated in his attempting self-harm in the spring [of] 2016 and an emergency hospitalization,” the lawsuit states.

After that, head coach Pat Fitzgerald sat down with Short and suggested he could medically retire from the football program, which he did shortly thereafter, the suit states.

This is the second lawsuit filed by Crump. Last week, he filed a suit on behalf of Lloyd Yates, a former quarterback, who was also subjected to alleged abuse.

Northwestern’s hazing scandal broke July 7 when the university published the summary of an internal investigation into allegations of hazing on the football team.

The school suspended Fitzgerald, then fired him after the student newspaper published accounts of hazing from two players. The school has said it is implementing reporting tools, locker room monitoring and anti-hazing training.