Advertisement

Northwestern said interim football coach David Braun has a master’s degree. He doesn’t, school says after questions from Tribune.

David Braun in a Northwestern University news release image where he was named interim head football coach on July 14, 2023.

A July 14 Northwestern University news release announcing David Braun’s ascension from defensive coordinator to interim head coach of a football team rocked by a hazing scandal included a line about him having a master’s degree in sports management and educational leadership.

Except he doesn’t.

Advertisement

The Chicago Tribune discovered the inaccuracy while fact-checking information about Braun for a short profile. A reporter emailed staff at Winona State University, where Braun played football and began his coaching career in 2008. Andrea Northam, spokesperson for the southeast Minnesota school, responded to say that while Braun did declare a major in the university’s graduate program, they have no record of him obtaining any degree beyond his bachelor’s in social science history teaching.

When presented with the discrepancy, Northwestern associate athletic director Paul Kennedy issued a statement that read:

Advertisement

“In drafting the recent press release announcing David Braun’s appointment as Interim Head Coach, the University’s communications staff sourced information from a publicly available biography of Coach Braun that contained factual inaccuracies. Coach Braun did not misrepresent his educational experience to the University at any point, including on his resume or application materials. We apologize to Coach Braun and the public for the error.”

The Tribune reviewed Braun’s online biographies for his past university gigs. His biography at North Dakota State University, where he worked as defensive coordinator from 2019 to 2022, says nothing of a master’s degree. But his bio on the University of California at Davis website does say he earned a master’s degree from Winona State.

Braun’s bio on the University of Northern Iowa’s website — where he worked as an assistant coach in 2017 and 2018 — gives conflicting information about his academic career. A paragraph that begins with him having “received his undergraduate and graduate degrees from Winona State” ends with Braun “working on his master’s in sports management.”

And his online profile for Winona State also said he held a master’s degree in sports management and educational leadership. Northam said the university updated Braun’s biography on its website “once the misinformation was discovered.” But, she could not answer how it got there in the first place.

Chicago Tribune Sports

Weekdays

A daily sports newsletter delivered to your inbox for your morning commute.

It’s also unclear whether athletics communications staff at Northwestern, or Braun’s other employers, gave him an opportunity to review any news releases or biographical information about him prior to public dissemination. That practice became more common after 2001, when newly hired Notre Dame head football coach George O’Leary resigned days after he was hired following the discovery that his resume included false information about his playing career at the University of New Hampshire and about his earning a master’s from New York University.

Braun did not return a phone message Thursday seeking comment, and did not answer when called again Friday. Kennedy did not respond to a Tribune request to interview Braun for this story.

Meanwhile, the July 14 news release on Northwestern’s website appears to have been updated to remove the line about Braun’s master’s degree.

Nathan Miller, founder and CEO of the communications and public relations firm Miller Ink, said Northwestern communications staff should have checked every detail of the release given the intense scrutiny the university has faced amid hazing allegations on the football team and the firing of longtime head coach Fitzgerald, looming lawsuits and a controversy on the baseball program that led to the dismissal of that team’s first-year head coach Jim Foster.

Advertisement

“A good communications professional is thorough, pays attention to detail, checks every fact before it gets issued, especially in the wake of a crisis like Northwestern has experienced,” Miller said. “At the same time, people are people. And sometimes as a result, I do believe people get sloppy, unfocused, and they make mistakes.”

tgreer@chicagotribune.com

jbullington@chicagotribune.com


Advertisement