This morning, PrezBo sent out the following email, announcing the resignation of M. Dianne Murphy—who, according to PrezBo, oversaw “an unprecedented record of success”—from her position as Director of Intercollegiate Athletics and Physical Education. She will remain in her position until the end of the academic year.
This comes almost a year after the heated debate in Spec between student leaders and PrezBo concerning Murphy’s employment. In November of last year, the Spec Editorial Board wrote an editorial urging PrezBo to fire Murphy, and PrezBo responded with a letter to the editor in which he defended Murphy and linked her employment to “progress in the athletic department.” It didn’t end there: in response to that, then CCSC president Daphne Chen, CC ’14 wrote of her “disappointment that, of all the turmoil your undergraduates have faced in recent years, a call for M. Dianne Murphy’s termination was the first issue important enough to prompt [PrezBo’s] only published message to students in a student space”—that is, Spec.
You can read PrezBo’s full email below.
Dear fellow members of the Columbia community:
I write to inform you that earlier this summer Dr. M. Dianne Murphy shared with me that she will be stepping down from her role as Columbia’s Director of Intercollegiate Athletics and Physical Education at the end of this academic year. She will then have completed a decade of remarkable service to the University, a period during which she has led the transformation of our athletics program and overseen an unprecedented record of success in the modern history of Columbia Athletics.
When I appointed Dianne as our Athletics Director, it was with the understanding that Columbia expects excellence in all that we do, whether in the classroom, the research lab, or our athletic competitions. Her dedication has enabled our student-athletes to meet that high standard consistent with the demanding academic and competitive values of the Ivy League. Since the 2004-05 academic year, Columbia Athletics has won 26 Ivy League team championships in 11 different sports, the most in any single decade in the University’s history.
This decade of achievement was capped in emphatic fashion throughout the 2013-14 seasons, which were filled with team and individual Ivy championships. Last spring alone, Columbia won a second straight baseball crown, had an undefeated Ivy League record in Men’s Tennis (an Ivy champion that only fell in the NCAA tournament to the nation’s top-ranked team), won several Men’s Golf championships, and won a national championship in Lightweight Rowing. Those successes followed fall and winter seasons highlighted by the Women’s Swimming team’s undefeated run of Ivy League dual meets and a Men’s Basketball team that won the most games in nearly half a century, including its first two post-season tournament games since 1968. Completing this past year’s remarkable record, Columbia also claimed Ivy League titles in Men’s Cross Country and Men’s Fencing.
These team victories were mirrored by our student-athletes who competed in individual events, winning ten Ivy League individual and relay event championships in swimming and track and field. Over the past ten years, Columbia athletes have won 128 individual championships, the fourth most in the Ivy League during that period. Overall, Columbia finished in the top 21 percent of 292 Division 1 schools in the NACDA Learfield Sports Director’s Cup standings for 2013-14, the highest finish for Columbia since the competition was launched in 1993. Dianne has spearheaded upgrades to Baker Athletics Complex, helped realize the new Campbell Sports Center, initiated the Columbia Athletics Hall of Fame, and added Men’s and Women’s Squash as Columbia’s 30th and 31st varsity sports programs, while leading a historic fundraising campaign to support Columbia Athletics. Dianne’s commitment to recruiting talented coaches in all areas has been essential to our progress. And in sports that have not yet achieved up to their potential, she has continued to recruit exceptional coaches with a mandate to improve.
In the year ahead we will have many opportunities to honor Dianne for her service to Columbia and to intercollegiate athletics nationally. We will also have ample time for a search committee to work with me on finding a successor who can build on the extraordinary foundation she has established. At a fundamental level, Dianne’s impact has been to change our collective expectations for Columbia Athletics. And you can’t ask for more than that.
Sincerely,
Lee C. Bollinger
Portrait via Columbia
20 Comments
@above poster hates women Stop being such a rape enabler. People like you are why we need bwog to get more activist.
#RapeCulture #Ablist #RiggerWarning #Mattress2012
@Goal Post This is bullshit. I love Diane Murphy. I’m going to carry around a goal post until Diane Murphy decides to not step down.
@IneedFeminismBecause PrezBo would never be asking her to step down if she were a man. This is just another example of Columbia not taking sexual assault seriously.
#NoRedTape #TriggerWarning #Rape #Kony2012
@Anonymous You are joking right? If she were a man, she would have been fired yeras ago. The only reason why she stayed is because of her sex and orientation.
@athlete good riddance
@Muffy Murphy But will we ever find out what the “M” stands for???
@Murphy Diane Murphy I’m taking that one to the grave with me.
@Found it Margaret
openlibrary.org/search?author_key=OL4284095A&subject_facet=African+American+athletes
@Anonymous I think our President is starting to understand that we want winning teams. If we are going to compete we should do it well!
@jwick She should step down immediately. Why delay it? Disgraceful
@26 Ivy Championships 32 total Ivy sports/8 Ivy schools = 4 championships per school per year.
x10 years is 40.
yet we have 26.
@uh That’ll teach her for not winning the Ivies in ice hockey and men’s lacrosse!
@Anonymous 1down, 99 to go.
If we keep bullying administrators, they’ll step down.
@Anonymous 2edgy4me
@dead babies 69edgy420me
@Kyle I like the part where she gets credit for doing anything productive. She was toxic, and everything she touched would turn to shit. The anti-Midas.
@Yup. As a former work-study dude in the DFC, I can only remember negative interactions with her. Management and coaches alike seemed to dislike her. Athletes were, from what I can remember, unimpressed.
Also, she used to make work-study students run personal errands for her on the clock. Who does that shit?
@Anonymous um almost every single administrator here makes students run stupid, personal errands on the clock
@i especially like the part where he talks about football
@athlete bye felicia *waves*