Michigan interim head football coach Biff Poggi said Monday that his players feel a sense of “betrayal” following the firing of coach Sherrone Moore over what the school said was an inappropriate relationship with a female staffer in the program.
Moore, 39, was fired Wednesday after allegedly confronting the woman and threatening suicide after she disclosed the relationship to investigators. Moore was arrested and arraigned Friday on charges of third-degree home invasion, breaking and entering and stalking at the staffer’s home. He was released from Washtenaw County Jail Friday afternoon.
Michigan athletic director Warde Manuel elevated Poggi to interim head coach from his associate head coach role after Moore’s firing. It is the latest chapter in the career of a man considered by some as “the most interesting man in coaching.”
But Poggi is wading in very emotional waters as he tries to prepare the Wolverines for their game against Texas in the Cheez-It Citrus Bowl on Dec. 31 at Camping World Stadium in Orlando, Fla.
“It has been a tumultuous time,” Poggi said during media availability for the bowl game. “A lot of anger and, at first, disbelief. The kids quite frankly feel very betrayed, and we’re trying to work through that.”
Poggi was asked how preparation has been going for him and the players.
“Unique and complex, obviously,” Poggi responded. “Multiple levels of complexity that our young people are dealing with and our university is dealing with, our athletic director, Warde Manuel, is dealing with. And our team, our coaches and our kids. I don’t know that you can prepare for something like this.”
In addition to developing a game plan for his team, Poggi has also had to be an ad hoc counselor.
“I’ve met individually with all of the players multiple times, and with the parents, Zoomed with the parents multiple times,” he said. “The message has been listening. I want to listen to them. I want to understand how the kids are feeling and what their parents are feeling. There’s been a wide range of emotions, as you can imagine. We are going through those steps. They’re not over yet, and I don’t expect them to be over for a while.
“But our main message is, the mandate that Warde Manuel gave me was to love and take care of the kids. So that’s what I’m spending all of my time doing is loving kids.”