HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) — Former UConn basketball coach Kevin Ollie filed a lawsuit against former assistant Glenn Miller, contending Miller slandered him in comments to the NCAA.
Miller told the governing body during its recent investigation of UConn that he had learned about an alleged $30,000 payment Ollie made to the mother of a recruit.
Ollie is joined in the suit by Stephanie Garrett, mother of former UConn player Shonn Miller. Miller played at UConn in 2015-16 after transferring from Cornell and is the player in question.
The university fired Ollie after a 14-18 season in 2017-18 amid allegations of recruiting violations.
The NCAA notified UConn that it found numerous violations, but the payment mentioned by Miller was not among them.
Ollie’s lawsuit, which was dated April 22, but filed Monday in Connecticut Superior Court, says that accusation was false and damaged his reputation. It allegedly was part of a vendetta against Ollie, who had fired Miller after the 2016-17 season. It seeks unspecified monetary damages.
“Glen Miller stated to at least one other person that coach Ollie would pay and would get what’s coming to him,” Ollie’s attorney, Jacques Parenteau, wrote in the lawsuit.
The lawyer added that Miller also referred to Ollie with an expletive and said: “I was three years away from retiring. He has ruined my life. I don’t know what I’m going to do. I can’t even get a job on campus. I’m going to get him.'”
Miller’s wife, Yvonne, from whom he said he learned of the allegation, also is named as a defendant.
A message seeking comment was left Tuesday for Miller. He is now an associate director of men’s basketball at Division III University of Saint Joseph in Connecticut, where former UConn coach Jim Calhoun is the coach.
UConn and Ollie are currently in arbitration over more than $10 million, which the coach says he is owed, but the school says was forfeited as part of his contract when he was fired “for cause” because of the NCAA violations.
Those violations, outlined by the NCAA last fall, included such things as a video call to recruits from two former UConn stars, Hall of Famer Ray Allen and San Antonio Spurs guard Rudy Gay.
UConn announced in January it was self-imposing penalties, including the loss of a scholarship for the 2019-20 season. The NCAA has yet to rule on whether it will impose additional penalties.