Current:Home > NewsElite gymnast Kara Eaker announces retirement, alleges abuse while training at Utah -InvestTomorrow
Elite gymnast Kara Eaker announces retirement, alleges abuse while training at Utah
View
Date:2025-04-27 13:01:24
Gymnast Kara Eaker announced Friday on Instagram her retirement from the University of Utah women’s gymnastics team and withdrawal as a student, citing verbal and emotional abuse from a coach and lack of support from the administration.
“For two years, while training with the Utah Gymnastics team, I was a victim of verbal and emotional abuse,” Eaker wrote in a post. “As a result, my physical, mental and emotional health has rapidly declined. I had been seeing a university athletics psychologist for a year and a half and I’m now seeing a new provider twice a week because of suicidal and self-harm ideation and being unable to care for myself properly. I have recently been diagnosed with severe anxiety and depression, anxiety induced insomnia, and I suffer from panic attacks, PTSD and night terrors. …
“I have now reached a turning point and I’m speaking out for all of the women who can’t because they are mentally debilitated and paralyzed by fear.”
Eaker, 20, is an elite American gymnast who was part of U.S. gold-medal teams at the 2018 and 2019 world championships. She was named an alternate at the Tokyo Olympics in 2021 and was a member of Utah’s teams that finished third at the NCAA championships in 2022 and 2023. Utah is one of the top programs in women’s college gymnastics.
USA TODAY Sports has reached out to the University of Utah for comment.
“I was a promised a ‘family’ within this program and a ‘sisterhood’ with my teammates, who would accept me, care for me, and support,” Eaker wrote. “But instead, as I entered as a freshman, I was heartbroken to find the opposite in that I was training in an unhealthy, unsafe and toxic environment."
She alleged “loud and angry outbursts” that involved cursing from a coach.
Eaker said the abuse “often happened in individual coach-athlete meetings. I would be isolated in an office with an overpowering coach, door closed, sitting quietly, hardly able to speak because of the condescending, sarcastic and manipulative tactics."
When Eaker went to university officials with her allegations, she wrote, "One administrator denied there was any abuse and said, 'You two are like oil and water, you just don't get along.' To say I was shocked would be an understatement and this is a prime example of gaslighting. So therein lies the problem − the surrounding people and system are complicit."
Eaker does not name any coach in her post. Tom Farden has been coaching at Utah since 2011, a co-head coach from 2016-2019 and sole head coach from 2020. Last month, an investigation into Farden by Husch Blackwell concluded Farden, “did not engage in any severe, pervasive or egregious acts of emotional or verbal abuse of student-athletes” and “did not engage in any acts of physical abuse, emotional abuse or harassment as defined by SafeSport Code.”
However, the investigation found Farden “made a derogatory comment to a student-athlete that if she was not at the University she would be a ‘nobody working at a gas station’ in her hometown” and “a few student-athletes alleged that Coach Farden made comments to student-athletes that, if corroborated, would have likely resulted in a finding that they violated the Athletics’ Well Being Policy’s prohibition on degrading language. The comments as alleged were isolated occurrences that could not be independently corroborated and were denied by Coach Farden.”
In her Instagram post, Eaker called the investigation “incomplete at best, and I disagree with their findings. I don’t believe it has credibility because the report omits crucial evidence and information and the few descriptions used are inaccurate.”
veryGood! (33)
Related
- Gen. Mark Milley's security detail and security clearance revoked, Pentagon says
- Jade Cargill signs deal with WWE; former AEW champion reporting to training center
- Report: Teen driver held in Vegas bicyclist hit-and-run killing case expected ‘slap on the wrist’
- Public to weigh in on whether wild horses that roam Theodore Roosevelt National Park should stay
- How to watch new prequel series 'Dexter: Original Sin': Premiere date, cast, streaming
- Film academy gifts a replacement of Hattie McDaniel’s historic Oscar to Howard University
- Phoebe Dynevor Reveals What She Learned From Past Romance With Pete Davidson
- A history of government shutdowns: The 14 times funding has lapsed since 1980
- Trump invites nearly all federal workers to quit now, get paid through September
- Police fatally shoot man in Indianapolis after pursuit as part of operation to get guns off streets
Ranking
- Finally, good retirement news! Southwest pilots' plan is a bright spot, experts say
- How Ariana Grande's Inner Circle Feels About Ethan Slater Romance
- A Dominican immigration agent is accused of raping a Haitian woman who was detained at an airport
- Exasperated residents flee Nagorno-Karabakh after Azerbaijan seizes control of breakaway region
- Selena Gomez's "Weird Uncles" Steve Martin and Martin Short React to Her Engagement
- Historic Venezuelan refugee crisis tests U.S. border policies
- Defendant in Michigan fake elector case seeks dismissal of charges over attorney general’s comments
- A woman died after falling from a cliff at a Blue Ridge Parkway scenic overlook in North Carolina
Recommendation
Federal appeals court upholds $14.25 million fine against Exxon for pollution in Texas
Brazil’s Amazon rainforest faces a severe drought that may affect around 500,000 people
With spying charges behind him, NYPD officer now fighting to be reinstated
Kim Kardashian Reveals Her Ultimate Celebrity Crush
Could Bill Belichick, Robert Kraft reunite? Maybe in Pro Football Hall of Fame's 2026 class
5 workers picketing in UAW strike hit by vehicle outside Flint-area plant
'They can't buy into that American Dream': How younger workers are redefining success
California governor signs law raising taxes on guns and ammunition to pay for school safety