Vindication for Fitz

PURPLEBookCat

Freshman
Jul 7, 2025
42
56
17
The settlement between Northwestern University and Pat Fitzgerald is nothing short of a full vindication for the longtime head football coach. After months of being smeared and scapegoated, Fitzgerald emerges with his reputation intact and the university forced to quietly cut a massive check.

This outcome underscores what many of us suspected from the beginning: Northwestern’s case for terminating Fitzgerald was flimsy, rushed, and based more on public relations panic than on substantive evidence. In the end, the university essentially admitted its blunder by choosing settlement over trial, sparing itself the humiliation of having its weak decision-making laid bare in court.

At the heart of this fiasco lies the gross incompetence of Northwestern’s president, Michael Schill. Rather than exercising patience, leadership, and fairness, Schill caved to pressure and abandoned due process. His hasty choice to fire Fitzgerald was not only ill-conceived but emblematic of a leader who prioritizes optics over integrity. Instead of standing firm, conducting a thorough investigation, and supporting a man who had given decades of service to the school, Schill tossed aside a decorated alumnus and coach in a cowardly attempt to appease outrage. It was a catastrophic lapse in judgment that has now cost the university dearly in both dollars and credibility.

The damage Schill has inflicted on Northwestern goes far beyond this settlement. Alumni, athletes, and fans alike now see an administration adrift, guided by fear and political expediency rather than principle. Schill’s decision has fractured trust in leadership and diminished Northwestern’s national reputation, all while strengthening Fitzgerald’s standing as the wronged party.

In the end, Fitzgerald walks away vindicated, compensated, and respected—while Schill is left exposed as a weak, reckless president whose legacy will be forever tied to one of the most embarrassing leadership failures in the university’s history.
 

CatManTrue

All-American
Oct 4, 2008
16,541
5,696
97
The settlement between Northwestern University and Pat Fitzgerald is nothing short of a full vindication for the longtime head football coach. After months of being smeared and scapegoated, Fitzgerald emerges with his reputation intact and the university forced to quietly cut a massive check.

This outcome underscores what many of us suspected from the beginning: Northwestern’s case for terminating Fitzgerald was flimsy, rushed, and based more on public relations panic than on substantive evidence. In the end, the university essentially admitted its blunder by choosing settlement over trial, sparing itself the humiliation of having its weak decision-making laid bare in court.

At the heart of this fiasco lies the gross incompetence of Northwestern’s president, Michael Schill. Rather than exercising patience, leadership, and fairness, Schill caved to pressure and abandoned due process. His hasty choice to fire Fitzgerald was not only ill-conceived but emblematic of a leader who prioritizes optics over integrity. Instead of standing firm, conducting a thorough investigation, and supporting a man who had given decades of service to the school, Schill tossed aside a decorated alumnus and coach in a cowardly attempt to appease outrage. It was a catastrophic lapse in judgment that has now cost the university dearly in both dollars and credibility.

The damage Schill has inflicted on Northwestern goes far beyond this settlement. Alumni, athletes, and fans alike now see an administration adrift, guided by fear and political expediency rather than principle. Schill’s decision has fractured trust in leadership and diminished Northwestern’s national reputation, all while strengthening Fitzgerald’s standing as the wronged party.

In the end, Fitzgerald walks away vindicated, compensated, and respected—while Schill is left exposed as a weak, reckless president whose legacy will be forever tied to one of the most embarrassing leadership failures in the university’s history.
TL;DR.

Fitz deserved to get fired for lack of institutional control and lack of results on the field. But his contract was a gift from Jimmy Phillips so NU had to pay him Jimbo Fisher bucks.
 

1830 Sherman

Redshirt
May 29, 2001
464
28
28
Head coach David Braun is focused on Northwestern’s season opener at Tulane on Saturday, so he’s glad that former head coach Pat Fitzgerald‘s lawsuit against the university was settled last week and is a thing of the past.

“I think it’s good for all parties,” Braun said. “It’s an opportunity to look to the future. That’s where my focus is and our team’s focus is. We’re making sure we’re positioned for a great day on Saturday.”
 

NuCat2018

Redshirt
Aug 23, 2025
2
2
3
Fitz should have been fired for poor performance. A real university would have done it earlier.

He'll be great on BTN, though.
 
  • Like
Reactions: CatManTrue

Hail To Purple

Redshirt
Jul 11, 2023
251
25
28
Fitz should have been fired for poor performance. A real university would have done it earlier.
It's a shame you don't think of our Alma Mater as a real university. I believe that most of us here do.

From your handle I assume that you were in the Class of 2018. If that is the case you have absolutely no idea what the full history is with Fitz and the incredible things he accomplished over the years while he was head coach, not only for football, but for all athletics in general.
 
Last edited:

Hail To Purple

Redshirt
Jul 11, 2023
251
25
28
TL;DR.

Fitz deserved to get fired for lack of institutional control and lack of results on the field. But his contract was a gift from Jimmy Phillips so NU had to pay him Jimbo Fisher bucks.
Here is Fitz's overall record, because you don't seem to really know it.

Career Record: 17 Years, 110-101, .521 Win% (at major schools)

Bowl Record: 10 Games, 5-5, .500 Win% (at major schools)

Given the difficult a small private university such as ours has in attracting top coaches and players in the face of competition from Ohio State and other large Big Ten schools we were extremely fortunate to have Fitz for those 17 years.

He made a big mistake in 2020 by hiring Jim O'Neil, and it cost us dearly for two years. But Fitz had corrected that by replacing him with David Braun, who we now know is very capable.

We will never know what the Fitz-Braun combination would have accomplished, but it could have been very successful if not for the knee-jerk reaction from a school president who was only interested in saving his own hide without regard to what was best for the university overall.

And your obvious distain for Jim Phillips by referring to him as "Jimmy", that no one else ever did, just shows how biased you are about this matter.
 
Last edited:
  • Love
Reactions: Purple Pile Driver

CatManTrue

All-American
Oct 4, 2008
16,541
5,696
97
Here is Fitz's overall record, because you don't seem to really know it.

Career Record: 17 Years, 110-101, .521 Win% (at major schools)

Bowl Record: 10 Games, 5-5, .500 Win% (at major schools)

Given the difficult a small private university such as ours has in attracting top coaches and players in the face of competition from Ohio State and other large Big Ten schools we were extremely fortunate to have Fitz for those 17 years.

He made a big mistake in 2020 by hiring Jim O'Neil, and it cost us dearly for two years. But Fitz had corrected that by replacing him with David Braun, who we now know is very capable.

We will never know what the Fitz-Braun combination would have accomplished, but it could have been very successful if not for the knee-jerk reaction from a school president who was only interested in saving his own hide without regard to what was best for the university overall.

And your obvious distain for Jim Phillips by referring to him as "Jimmy", that no one else ever did, just shows how biased you are about this matter.
Counterpoints:

* Fitz’s record without Hankwitz as his DC was 15-23. His best year without Hank was 2007 when the team went 6-6 and missed a bowl.

* Fitz’s record would have been a lot better if he hadn’t blown a number of games with poor decisions. Yes, he had some great victories but an equal number of terrible losses that would have gotten any other Big Ten coach fired years ago.

* Fitz didn’t just settle for the money. He was going to look very bad (unemployable with this generation) if all the evidence came out even if NU’s statement is true (I doubt it). It was an open secret that his ego got the best of him. One poster on the Rock shared how he got drunk at a basketball event and started badmouthing leadership at NU in 2023. He wasn’t long for Evanston.

* Jimmy Phillips screwed us with his cronyism to Fitz. And now the ACC is screwed with him. He was overrated. Good riddance
 

CatManTrue

All-American
Oct 4, 2008
16,541
5,696
97
They is a small subset of folks that clearly have FDS. Only show up to bash Fitz. I guess he must have snarled at their youngsters while walking off the bus. Shows a complete lack of knowledge on the obstacles and history of this program.
No hatred here. Fitz had some great seasons at NU and proved we could win bowl games. But his low moments were jarring and, on the whole, his record was an average one (110-101).

Unfortunately it was time for him to go. His contract guaranteed he would get paid, and he did - now his kids will have generational wealth.

He’ll land somewhere likely as an assistant LB coach, but I doubt he’ll be a head coach again.
 

Purple Pile Driver

All-Conference
May 14, 2014
27,665
2,991
113
No hatred here. Fitz had some great seasons at NU and proved we could win bowl games. But his low moments were jarring and, on the whole, his record was an average one (110-101).

Unfortunately it was time for him to go. His contract guaranteed he would get paid, and he did - now his kids will have generational wealth.

He’ll land somewhere likely as an assistant LB coach, but I doubt he’ll be a head coach again.
No one is disputing he had underperformed those last few years Jeff. The point is he was NOT fired for performance and the “powers to be” clearly were giving him at least one more season to right the ship. You are moving the goal posts in your posts about the settlement.
 

NU'06er

Sophomore
May 2, 2024
176
115
43
I doubt he’ll be a head coach again.
Not predicting one way or the other, but the "Fitz didn't know" part of the hazing story gives him a fighting chance. If I was a hiring AD, I'd still have some concerns about the loss of institutional control, but the lack of direct implication in wrongdoing lets him try to spin a "here's what I learned" yarn -- and America does love a redemption arc.

Maybe has to re-start either as a DC somewhere, or as a head coach at a lower level to work his way up. But I wouldn't be shocked if he gets a second act at some point.
 

CatManTrue

All-American
Oct 4, 2008
16,541
5,696
97
Not predicting one way or the other, but the "Fitz didn't know" part of the hazing story gives him a fighting chance. If I was a hiring AD, I'd still have some concerns about the loss of institutional control, but the lack of direct implication in wrongdoing lets him try to spin a "here's what I learned" yarn -- and America does love a redemption arc.

Maybe has to re-start either as a DC somewhere, or as a head coach at a lower level to work his way up. But I wouldn't be shocked if he gets a second act at some point.
He’s never been a DC before. This was a huge gap in his development as a coach.

Good luck to him unless he coaches against NU
 
  • Like
Reactions: rmndcat

PURPLEBookCat

Freshman
Jul 7, 2025
42
56
17
Fitz should have been fired for poor performance. A real university would have done it earlier.

He'll be great on BTN, though.
This take ignores the almost incomparable futility of Northwestern's football program historically, the sustained competitiveness and success that Fitz and no-one else was able to achieve at Northwestern, and the special importance of Fitz as an icon of football at Northwestern.
 

TheC

All-Conference
May 29, 2001
19,217
1,305
62
This take ignores the almost incomparable futility of Northwestern's football program historically, the sustained competitiveness and success that Fitz and no-one else was able to achieve at Northwestern, and the special importance of Fitz as an icon of football at Northwestern.
The Fitz legacy is an emotionally confusing one. There is no question, he is an all-time NU great. Maybe THE all-time NU great. Both his role as a player on the Barnett miracle teams and then his success in elevating the NU football program as a coach to a regular, and even winning, bowl team puts him at the top. He was Mr. Rah Rah Go Northwestern for most of those years and if he had gotten hired away by someone after the 2018 season or earlier, his legacy as a legend here would have been cemented. But.... the last four years of his tenure here really darkened this fairytale. The record was abominable, save the weird Covid year. Some decisions were just maddening. On top of that, his personality went from cheerful warrior to... I hate to say it... arrogant prick. The whole hazing story just added another layer of complexity and confusion and disappointment, no matter whether you think he knew anything or not.

It is why these Fitz threads get so heated. He is clearly an NU legend who did things no one else ever did at NU. But he ended on such a bad run, it taints the image we wish we could have of him. I imagine that as time passes, some of the negative things will fade out a little and he'll be thought of more positively. This isn't even close to a Ped State situation here, so any comparisons are ridiculous. But right now, the bad times were more recent than the good ones with Fitz and it will take some time for many fans to move on.
 

Hail To Purple

Redshirt
Jul 11, 2023
251
25
28
I think what pisses me off more than anything is you referring to Jim Phillips as “Jimmy’. No one else has ever done that. Only you. And it is obviously your way of showing a great amount of distain for a person who made a major contribution to our athletic programs during his years of service to us. The wording of your comments says more about you, than it does about him.

The trio of Morty Schapiro, Jim Phillips, and Pat Fitzgerald was instrumental in changing the whole face of student athletics at our school. And not just football. Those people along with a great deal of financial help from Pat Ryan and others changed the entire face of the athletic programs with outstanding new facilities.