Principal: Texas football coach says he ordered hit on ref

SAN ANTONIO (AP) — A Texas high school football coach has acknowledged he directed two of his players to hit a referee during a game earlier this month, according to the school’s principal.

In an internal school district statement, John Jay High School principal Robert Harris said that assistant coach Mack Breed told him he directed the students to hit the referee because the ref had used racial slurs and had missed calls. Details from the statement were first reported on Wednesday by ESPN (http://es.pn/1OuBule ).

The referee, Robert Watts, has denied using any slurs.

The coach “wanted to take full responsibility for his actions. Mr. Breed at one point during our conversation stated that he should have handled the referee himself,” Harris wrote in his statement.

- FWBP Digital Partners -

The two suspended students, Michael Moreno and Victor Rojas, appeared Wednesday at separate disciplinary hearings, which were closed to the public. A decision is pending from the Northside school district on the students’ possible punishment, which could range from assignment to an alternative school to expulsion.

After Wednesday’s disciplinary hearing, Jesse Hernandez, the players’ attorney, cited the statement when speaking with reporters and said that if the two players hadn’t been directed by the coach and if the referee hadn’t used such language, “they wouldn’t have done this and they regret it.”

Hernandez and Breed, who remains suspended from the district, did not immediately return phone calls seeking comment.

During an appearance earlier this month on ABC’s “Good Morning, America,” Moreno said he regrets hitting Watts and wants to apologize. Rojas said he was just doing what he was told.

- Advertisement -

The two were suspended from the John Jay High School football team in San Antonio in the aftermath of the game early this month at Marble Falls. The Northside school district moved them to an alternative school pending a final decision in the case.

Video from the Sept. 4 game shows Rojas blindsiding Watts and Moreno diving on top of him. Watts was the umpire on the defensive side watching a play along the line of scrimmage.

Northside was scheduled to present the findings from its investigation at a meeting on Thursday in Round Rock of the state executive committee of the University Interscholastic League, which oversees Texas high school sports, said school district spokesman Pascual Gonzalez.