GAINESVILLE, Fla. (AP) β Florida coach Jim McElwain can handle the heat, the hate and even the harassment.
He gets paid to deal with it.
But he would like his players, coaches and all their families, including his own, to be left alone.
McElwain said Monday that Florida players and families have received death threats amid the teamβs struggles. McElwain acknowledged the allegation while responding to a question about whether the team deserves credit for staying competitive despite missing more than 20 scholarship players because of injuries and suspensions.
βCredit in this business is internal; itβs never external,β McElwain said. βItβs a good lesson for the way things are. Thereβs a lot of hate in this world and a lot of anger and yet (thereβs) freedom to show it. The hard part is obviously when the threats against your own players, death threats to your families, the ill will thatβs brought upon out there.
βItβs really one of those deals that really is a pretty good testament to whatβs going on out there nationally. A lot of angry people. In in this business, weβre the ones they take the shots at and thatβs the way it is.β
McElwain declined to say whether he personally received death threats. He added that he has not contacted police.
When pressed for details, he said, βLetβs move.β
The universityβs athletic department released a statement hours later saying officials met with McElwain and that the coach βoffered no additional details.β
βThe University Athletic Association takes the safety of our student-athletes, coaches, staff and families very seriously,β a spokesman said. βOur administration met with Coach McElwain this afternoon and he offered no additional details.β
McElwain is 22-11 in three seasons in Gainesville. The Gators (3-3, 3-2 Southeastern Conference) have lost two in a row as they prepare to play third-ranked Georgia (7-0, 4-0) in nearby Jacksonville on Saturday. Florida opened as a 14 Β½-point underdog.
The Gators rank 102nd in the nation in total offense, showing little progress from McElwainβs first two years. Despite the injuries and suspensions, there is cause for criticism, and McElwain has acknowledged the teamβs shortcomings. It also should be no surprise that someone would take it too far in an era in which coaches, players and families are easily accessible via social media.
Texas A&M coach Kevin Sumlin said last month his family received a racist and threatening letter at their home. Sumlinβs wife posted a picture of the letter on Twitter. The handwritten letter read: βYou suck as a coach! Youβre a (racial epithet) and canβt win! Please get lost! Or else.β
McElwain said the threats donβt surprise him.
βYouβre in the business, thatβs all part of it,β he said. βWhen itβs directed toward your players, when itβs directed to families, wives, that kind of thing. And yet at the same time they know what they signed up for as well. Thatβs part of the business.β
Players said all the negativity is impossible to ignore.
βWeβre just going to keep moving forward,β linebacker Kylan Johnson said. βWeβve got Coach Macβs back. Weβre just going to continue to be positive moving forward.β
Added safety Chauncey Gardner: βWhatβs the point of us paying attention to someone threatening one of our family members? I mean, he didnβt put his hands on him or his wifeβs, so were not really focused on anything they have to say or what their opinion is.
βLet βem talk. Thatβs all theyβve been doing. Thatβs all theyβre going to keep doing.β
