It seems Gavilan Community College officials ignored multiple
penalty flags in the mishap-laden hiring of Fred McGrew.
McGrew claimed to be a former NFL linebacker named Larry McGrew,
who played for the New England Patriots from 1980 to 1989 and for
the New York Giants in 1990. The fact that a former professional
football player was interested in a part-time assistant coaching
job at a two-year community college was penalty flag number one.
Apparently, the if it’s-too-good-to-be-true-it-probably-is flag
slipped by Gavilan’s Head Football Coach John Longo and Athletic
Director Ron Hannon.
It seems Gavilan Community College officials ignored multiple penalty flags in the mishap-laden hiring of Fred McGrew.

McGrew claimed to be a former NFL linebacker named Larry McGrew, who played for the New England Patriots from 1980 to 1989 and for the New York Giants in 1990. The fact that a former professional football player was interested in a part-time assistant coaching job at a two-year community college was penalty flag number one. Apparently, the if it’s-too-good-to-be-true-it-probably-is flag slipped by Gavilan’s Head Football Coach John Longo and Athletic Director Ron Hannon.

Then there was the matter of McGrew’s birthdate. On application forms, he listed July 23, 1957, as his date of birth, but his driver’s license lists his birthdate as June 1, 1965. A simple check of McGrew’s driver’s license against his application would have revealed another penalty flag. Either officials failed to make this basic check, or did so but ignored the discrepancy.

McGrew was allowed to start working even though he had not submitted a hard copy of his Social Security card. Although this failure apparently would have held up McGrew’s pay check, it didn’t hold up his hiring. It should have. McGrew’s failure to produce his Social Security card was the third penalty flag Gavilan officials ignored.

McGrew misspelled “Lawrence” on every form he submitted, writing “Lawrance” instead. The fact that their too-good-to-be-true applicant with the mismatched birthdates and missing Social Security card couldn’t spell his own first name correctly was the fourth penalty flag to go undetected or unheeded by Gavilan College officials.

McGrew claimed to be a 1978 high school graduate and a 1980 University of Southern California graduate with 16 years of education, implying four years of college. That’s penalty flag number five.

McGrew embellished and invented NFL career achievements for the real Larry McGrew, including Pro Bowl selections. These easy-to-check claims were the sixth penalty flag to sail right over Gavilan officials’ heads.

This attempted hoax was so inept that McGrew might as well have written “I’m a fake” on the top of his application – and yet, we’re left wondering if that would have been enough for Gavilan College officials to note the problems.

It’s too bad that at a time when Gavilan should be rebuilding its athletic program after Title IX troubles, at a time when the college is likely to be seeking voter approval for a multi-million-dollar bond measure, this easily avoidable mess has to steal the limelight.

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A staff member wrote, edited or posted this article, which may include information provided by one or more third parties.

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