Former SAU Football Coach Howard Feggins Files Lawsuit Against University After Firing

RALEIGH, N.C. — Former Saint Augustine’s University (SAU) football coach Howard Feggins has filed a lawsuit against the university months after his firing.

The lawsuit is seeking $50,000 in a complaint that was filed on Dec. 19. Feggins alleges he was intimidated into silence when bringing up concerns with how the football program was run and eventually fired unlawfully, according to the lawsuit.

Feggins was fired in October for playing ineligible players, according to the university. Days after his firing, he held a news conference where he scalded the university to local media, alleging the program didn’t have adequate support from SAU and had to operate under unacceptable conditions. The complaint said Feggins was told “to keep his mouth shut” in no uncertain terms when he raised concerns to SAU leadership and he would face “swift repercussions” otherwise.

His attorney claimed Feggins was terminated under “the most bogus of circumstances.” SAU offered no comment to WRAL News on the situation.

“The individual defendants collectively and individually fostered a personal, unjustified animus towards Coach Feggins and the individual defendants’ personal animus towards coach Feggins intensified when he reported and/or refused to engage in potentially wrongful conduct,” the lawsuit describes.

The complaint goes into detail about Feggins’ grievances with how the university failed to provide for the football program. Some of his complaints included:

The university’s inability to reimburse football recruits for campus visits. The university refusing to pay laundry bills for football player’s uniforms. The university risking the health of its student-athletes by refusing to provide the football team with full-time athletic trainer and/or necessary medical treatments. The university refusing to provide adequate meals for its student-athletes. The university’s failure to obtain Certificate of Insurance for its football players until September 15, 2023, a day before the program’s third game of the season.

One passage in the complaint states “Instead of working with Coach Feggins and supporting the University’s student-athletes, the University and the Individual Defendants advised Coach Feggins in no uncertain terms that he needed to stop publicly raising his concerns and keep his mouth shut; otherwise, there would swift repercussions.”

Feggins did not deny that there were two players on the roster that he knew were ineligible to play. But Feggins said the university overestimated how much the two – Cameron Page and Nyron Campbell-Adams – actually played. Feggins said Page only played three snaps of one game.

Feggins became coach in 2023 and went 0-7 before his firing. Several Saint Augustine’s players showed up to his post-firing news conference on Oct. 16 and said they were caught off guard by the decision.

At the time, wide receiver Kevin Brewington said Feggins tried to address cafeteria issues beginning in the spring. Players told their coach that they went hungry or spent their money for meals off campus because the university didn’t provide enough food to fuel football practices and games.

The Falcons finished the 2023 season 0-10 after going 1-9 in 2022.

2023-12-27 03:21:00
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