Texas Tech defensive coordinator Tim DeRuyter gestures during a drill during football practice, Wednesday, Aug. 14, 2024, at the Sports Performance Center.

Texas Tech fires DC DeRuyter, secondary coach Yates

After Texas Tech allowed the second-most passing yards in the country this season, it cost defensive coordinator Tim DeRuyter and secondary coach Marcel Yates their jobs on Sunday.

The Red Raiders (8-4, 6-3 Big 12) beat West Virginia 52-14 on Saturday to close their regular season but finished last in the conference in passing yards allowed (305.3).

DeRuyter, 61, had been Texas Tech’s defensive coordinator since 2022 following a season in the same role at Oregon. Among many collegiate coaching jobs since 1989, he served as Fresno State’s head coach from 2012-16.

Yates, 47, has been a college assistant coach since 2001, joining the Red Raiders’ staff in 2022 as passing coordinator. This was his first season as Texas Tech’s secondary coach.

“I appreciate the work Coach DeRuyter and Coach Yates have provided our program the past three seasons,” Texas Tech coach Joey McGuire said in a statement. “This was a difficult but necessary decision as we continue to elevate this program to competing annually at the highest levels of college football.”

Texas Tech will name an interim defensive coordinator for its bowl game, McGuire said.

–Field Level Media

Jul 20, 2022; Charlotte, NC, USA; ACC commissioner Jim Phillips speaks to the media during ACC Media Days at the Westin Hotel in Charlotte.   Mandatory Credit: Jim Dedmon-USA TODAY Sports

ACC commissioner named defendant in lawsuit by ex-Northwestern player

Atlantic Coast Conference commissioner Jim Phillips has been named as a defendant in a lawsuit against Northwestern in connection with a hazing scandal that has rocked the football program, ESPN reported Wednesday.

Phillips was the Wildcats’ athletic director from 2008-21, which covers part of the time when the alleged hazing occurred.

A second former Northwestern football player filed a lawsuit against the university, school officials and former head coach Pat Fitzgerald. Per ESPN, the player — identified as John Doe 2 — played for the Wildcats from 2018-22.

That lawsuit comes on the heels of another one that had been filed against the university, Northwestern president Michael Schill, Fitzgerald and other university trustees alleging they were negligent in allowing a culture of hazing in the football program.

A growing group of 12 former players — including former quarterback Lloyd Yates — have retained attorney Ben Crump to pursue legal action. Yates became the first Northwestern player to publicly speak up about alleged sexualized hazing, telling the Chicago Tribune that he experienced a “very degrading, dehumanizing, embarrassing act.”

“This is a civil rights issue for me,” Crump said at a news conference Wednesday. “Because I think these players have the right to be respected and valued and not hazed, intimidated and retaliated.”

Fitzgerald was fired for cause July 10 after initially being suspended for two weeks without pay. Fitzgerald is also mulling legal action against the school for breach of contract.

In announcing Fitzgerald’s termination, Schill said players were exposed to “forced participation, nudity and sexualized acts of a degrading nature, in clear violation of Northwestern policies and values.”

–Field Level Media