Brook Heike v. Sue Guevara

519 F. App'x 911
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedMarch 18, 2013
Docket10-1728
StatusUnpublished
Cited by182 cases

This text of 519 F. App'x 911 (Brook Heike v. Sue Guevara) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brook Heike v. Sue Guevara, 519 F. App'x 911 (6th Cir. 2013).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

Brooke Elizabeth Heike appeals a district-court decision dismissing her equal-protection, substantive-due-process, procedural-due-process, and state-law defamation claims against her former basketball coach, Sue Guevara, and a number of other Central Michigan University officials. 1 Her lawsuit raises the perhaps commonly contemplated, but seldom actually litigated, question: what legal recourse is available to an athlete who believes that her coach has treated her unfairly? In this ease, the answer is: none. The district court properly disposed of Heike’s claims, and we affirm its decision.

I

Brooke Elizabeth Heike was a star basketball player at Romeo, Michigan’s Romeo High School. She served as team co-captain, was named to all-league and all-conference teams, and earned honorable mention on Michigan’s all-state team. A number of National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I schools recruited Heike to play on their women’s basketball teams.

Ultimately, Heike committed to Central Michigan University. She accepted an athletic grant for the 2006-07 academic year, which comprised: “In-State Tuition/Fees, Room and Board, and Book Loan.” The NCAA only allows institutions to grant athletic scholarships on a year-to-year basis. Thus, Heike’s commitment letter expressly stated that the grant was subject to yearly renewal.

During recruitment, then-Head Women’s Basketball Coach Eileen Kleinfelter told Heike: “I can’t guarantee how much playing time you’ll receive, but I can guarantee you an education.” Heike’s first season of Division I basketball bore out at least the first part of Coach Kleinfelter’s statement. She received little playing time and grew frustrated. Nevertheless, Heike recognized that she “was a freshman and ... needed to wait [her] turn.” She felt that Coach Kleinfelter was “up front and very honest with [her] about that” and treated her fairly. Heike ultimately appeared in eleven games her freshman season. She played for an average of 5.4 minutes per game — the fewest of anyone on the team, nearly by a factor of two — scored a team-low average of 1.5 points per game, 2 and had the lowest *914 shooting percentage on the team. 3

After the 2006-07 season, Coach Klein-felter and her staff left Central Michigan University. The University replaced her with Coach Guevara and Assistant Coaches Bill Ferrara, Kathy McGee, and Ayesha Whitfield. Heike’s first encounter with the new coaching staff was a meeting with Ferrara in the spring of 2007. During the meeting, Heike suggested that she deserved to play more than she had her freshman year. In response, Ferrara said: “You can transfer to Saginaw Valley [State University] if .you’re not happy.”

Heike did not transfer and Central Michigan University renewed her scholarship. She signed a financial-aid form, which provided that her grant would not “be increased, reduced or canceled during the period of its award on the basis of ... athletics ability, performance or contribution to [the] team’s success ... or for any other athletics reason.” (emphasis added). The period of the award was the 2007-08 academic year.

Heike spent the summer of 2007 working with professional trainers to improve her basketball skills. During her sophomore year she played in only six games and scored only two points — both on free-throws. The only player to appear in fewer games or score fewer points was Freshman Beth Brown, who also lost her scholarship after the 2007-08 season. Heike believed that the coaching staff refused to give her or Brown as much playing time as the rest of the team because they “were too girly,” and “happened to be white.” She claimed that Coach Guevara criticized her for tanning, wearing tight pants, and wearing makeup. Heike also alleged that African-American players had more opportunities to play because “Sue Guevara ... wanted a tough-looking, thug-looking team and that’s what the African Americans displayed.” “They [the African-American players] brought on this thug theme that they were thugs and they were this tough ... [the African-American players wore] baggy boy’s pants below their butt and wore shorts underneath, and wore men’s boots and men’s shoes, men’s hats.” Coach Guevara, Heike explained, repeatedly told her to “toughen up,” even suggesting that she “get some [tattoos of] C’s on her arm.”

In December 2007, Coach Guevara kicked Heike out of practice and suggested that she “go back to her apartment and think about whether CMU [was] where she wanted to be.” At the same time, Coach Guevara “also specifically told ... Heike that she should think about going to another program where she would be happy, ... reminded her that her scholarship at CMU was only for one year,” and told her that, if she was unhappy, she should “take her scholarship and leave.” 4 After this incident, Heike’s morale declined, and she finished near the bottom of the team in a peer evaluation measuring team spirit.

At the end of the season, Guevara determined that “Ms. Heike did not adequately improve during the 2007/2008 season ... [that she] lack[ed] the necessary athletic basketball skills to be competitive at the Division I level and that during the 2007/2008 season, she lacked the initiative and discipline for self improvement.” Guevara, therefore, decided not to renew Heike’s scholarship for the 2008-09 season. She informed Heike of her decision in a formal year-end evaluation meeting, where she said: “You can play basketball and you’re an athlete but you’ll never play *915 here. You’ll never play for me. You’re not my type.” Patricia Pickier, an assistant director in the Office of Scholarships and Financial Aid, sent Heike a letter, dated March 27, 2008, advising her of Guevara’s decision, and explaining that she could appeal by requesting a hearing.

Heike submitted such a request on April 7, 2008, along with a written statement, which explained why she believed the decision not to renew her scholarship was unfair. She suggested that, over the course of the 2007-08 season, Guevara “was trying to get [her] to quit.” Heike’s statement suggested that Guevara had decided not to renew her scholarship because she wanted to develop a winning team quickly. Heike contended: “[Guevara] should have to go through the normal process and time period to build the ‘type’ of team she wants like any other [coach].... To allow her to dispose of people without just cause in hopes to improve her team at a quicker pace is morally and ethically wrong.”

On June 5, 2008, Pickier sent a letter advising Heike and Guvara that an appeals hearing had been set for June 11, 2008. The letter explained:

The purpose of this appeal hearing is to determine if the action to not renew Ms. Heike’s athletics aid for the 2008-2009 academic year was a substantial injustice. If the committee decides that it was more likely than not that Coach Guevara’s decision was reasonable, it will uphold the decision. If it decides that it was more likely than not that her decision was unreasonable, it will ask that Ms. Heike’s athletics aid be reinstated.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
519 F. App'x 911, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brook-heike-v-sue-guevara-ca6-2013.