A person described how he was bullied for years by NHL prospect Mitchell Miller, three days after Boston Bruins president Cam Neely mentioned the workforce failed by signing Miller to an entry-level contract. The Bruins have since rescinded the supply.
The assertion by Isaiah Meyer-Crothers acknowledged that Miller had repeatedly reached out to him final month by textual content and social media platforms. However Meyer-Crothers’ account contradicted Miller’s agent, who mentioned the hockey participant had obtained Meyer-Crothers’ “blessing” and assist earlier than signing the now-rescinded contract.
Within the prolonged assertion, launched via the Hockey Variety Alliance (HDA) on Wednesday via Twitter, Meyer-Crothers detailed alleged abuse by Miller that Meyer-Crothers says lasted for years starting in elementary faculty.
Advertisement
Meyer-Crothers, who’s Black, said: “Mitchell used to ask me to sit down with him on the bus after which he and his mates would punch me within the head. This occurred my complete time at school.”
In his assertion, Meyer-Crothers alleges that Miller would spit in his face and name him the N-word. “He threw meals in my face. I used to be known as ‘n—–’ day by day,” the assertion says.
CNN has reached out to the HDA for remark.
Miller was convicted at 14 years outdated of a bullying incident by which he and one other teenager have been accused of tricking Meyers-Crothers into consuming sweet that had been positioned in a urinal, a report from The Arizona Republic revealed.
Miller and one other teen admitted to the bullying in an Ohio juvenile court docket and have been sentenced to group service, in response to The Republic.
Advertisement
Earlier than being drafted by the Coyotes in 2020, Miller despatched a letter to all 31 groups on the time, expressing regret for his actions.
“After I was in eighth grade, I made a particularly poor resolution and acted very immaturely,” Miller mentioned in an announcement. “I bullied one among my classmates. I deeply remorse the incident and have apologized to the person. Because the incident, I’ve come to raised perceive the far-reaching penalties of my actions that I failed to acknowledge and perceive almost seven years in the past.”
The Coyotes would later resign the rights to Miller following the draft.
CNN has reached out to Miller via his agent for remark.
Advertisement
Miller’s consultant, long-time hockey agent Eustace King, appeared on The Cam & Strick podcast on Monday and mentioned: “He did what he did to a schoolmate and it’s not proper. So on the finish of the day, its reprehensible.
“There’s nothing that I wanna say that’s going to have the ability to make what Mitch did okay … Mitchell additionally ultimately had a dialogue with Isaiah earlier than he signed his contract. And he wished to verify, and so they spoke on the cellphone, that he had Isaiah’s blessing.
“And Isaiah mentioned, what I mentioned earlier than: ‘You will be huge time, God’s going to look over you. You should proceed to do the work that we talked about.’ And so they talked about even working collectively.”
Meyer-Crothers described their interplay otherwise.
“Mitchell isn’t my pal,” his assertion mentioned. “It hurts my coronary heart what he did to me. So I simply wished to inform everybody – when Mitchell says we’re mates it isn’t true.”
Advertisement
Meyer-Crothers additionally added within the assertion that he’s been getting racist and degrading messages on social media, saying: “I can’t take extra of this.”
CNN has additionally reached out to Meyer-Crothers and his household for remark.
Neely apologized on Monday and mentioned the Bruins “failed” after the franchise walked again their contract with Miller.
Neely additionally apologized to Meyers-Crothers and his household.
“I’ll say it once more. I wish to apologize to Isaiah and his household,” he mentioned. “It’s one thing that they shouldn’t proceed to undergo.”
Columnist Chad Finn dives into the details of how his new book, “The Boston Globe Story of the Celtics,” came together.
Last month, “The Boston Globe Story of the Celtics,” a comprehensive book of nearly every recorded moment in Celtics history, was released. The book’s editor Chad Finn, a sports columnist for The Boston Globe and Boston.com, collected hundreds of Celtics stories written by renowned sports reporters, such as Bob Ryan and Jackie MacMullan, since the team’s inception in 1946.
For Boston.com’s Book Club, Finn joined Boston.com sports writer Hayden Bird to discuss his process and insights in editing his book. Watch the full video, or read highlights of the discussion below.
Advertisement
Below is an abbreviated version of the discussion, which has been edited and condensed for clarity.
How did you approach creating this book?
With something like this, where it’s a compilation of the Globe‘s coverage of the Celtics throughout their mutual histories, the one thing you’re really wondering about is: Was everything covered?
I think it was a little bit more complicated, a little bit more reason to worry about it, with the Celtics book because of the race element with Bill Russell. Did they cover some of the stuff that players endured back then? Not being able to eat with their teammates when they would go to North Carolina for an exhibition game or something like that. So it was very satisfying, and also a bit of a relief, to find out that the Globe … had covered every single step, every single significant story along the way with the Celtics, from their launch in 1946 until putting out banner No. 18 a couple of weeks ago.
How daunting was the research process?
The first thing you have to do is sit down and make a thorough list of every significant thing chronologically that happened in Celtics history. Once you have that list of 450 different things that happened in Celtics lore, then you go into the archives and you say, “Do we have this?”
A lot of it is also our researcher, Jerry Manion, who’s just an absolute expert at finding what you’re looking for. I can’t tell you how many times in putting this book together where I would message Jerry and say, “Can you find that?” and I’d have it five minutes later. To be able to have that kind of support when you’re putting together a project that could be overwhelming is incredible. I’m incredibly grateful for that.
How did a game recap from 70-80 years ago compare to today?
The game stories and the stories from the coverage tended to be play by play, whereas nowadays, it’s a little bit of a look ahead, or a little bit of context on what you just saw, because you know about Jayson Tatum’s dunk and Jaylen Brown’s three-pointer that tied the game. Back then, that was news to you in the morning. You didn’t see it yourself.
Advertisement
What’s your favorite lead or passage?
One is Bob Ryan’s lead when they drafted Larry Bird. Red Auerbach took him while he still had a year left of college in Indiana State because back then there was a loophole … where you could draft a player if his college class had graduated.
Bob Ryan had seen Larry Bird play in person. He knew what Red had just pulled off, and his lead basically said Red didn’t just look like he swallowed the canary, it looked like he swallowed the whole aviary — perfect lead for Larry Bird. The whole column turned out to be prescient about how Larry’s career would go. I have some favorite stories in the book, but that one would be right up there in the top five just because of how he started it, how he wrote it, and how right he was.
What’s something you learned about the Celtics or the Globe’s coverage that stuck out to you?
I learned that the quality of writing really elevated in the late ‘60s. People took more chances with their writing.
In 1969, Leigh Montville got hired at the Globe, and I think if you asked every Globe columnist that has worked here the last 50 years, they would tell you Leigh Montville was the best columnist of all in terms of pure writing ability. He was lyrical, and he joined the beat covering the Celtics in Bill Russell’s last year.
There was another writer at the same time named Bob Sales. His style was very easy to read and thoughtful, and did not shy away from opinions that probably were considered pretty progressive at the time. He was very supportive of the Black players on the Celtics. I thought Bob Sales, even more than Leigh Montville because he came before him, was somebody who really changed the style of writing about the Celtics and the approach that people took to it.
Then a whole different topic, but Bob Ryan came around. He started the Globe the same day as [Peter] Gammons in 1968 as interns. When he took over the NBA beat in the early ‘70s, it changed everything.
Advertisement
Celtics history is so intertwined with integration in basketball. How did the Globe cover that at the time?
If there was an incident, or if they were not treated as equals — which happened a lot — to their white teammates, the Globe wrote about it. And I wasn’t sure going into the book if that was going to be the case, and it was.
There are still misconceptions about how the Celtics handled race, and a big part of that is because their team — that a certain generation remembers so well — is Bird, McHale, Danny Ainge. There was a perception: Oh yeah, Celtics, Boston, White. I mean they had the best white players, but it had nothing to do with race why they were here, and Celtics history tells you that.
Look at Celtics history, and Red just wanted to win. He didn’t care about the race or color of his players. He just wanted the best players, and that was well ahead of its time back then.
You lived through much of this history as a fan. How was looking at it different from the standpoint as editor of this book?
You get into the eighties, and Magic and Bird change the game in a bunch of different ways — saying they save the league really isn’t an exaggeration. To have grown up watching that, it was really cool to be able to get into that phase of the book where we are doing things that I remember and that I witnessed.
But it was the hardest chapter in the book to edit, and it’s by far the biggest chapter in the book, for two reasons. Obviously they accomplished a lot, and they won the three titles in that era, and there were so many memorable games, the Lakers and the rivalry, the Sixers, and later on the Pistons. And with a book like this, you can’t just put the championships in it. There were so many games that resonated with people along the way.
The other thing was the quality of the writing was mind-blowing. It was Bob Ryan at the peak of his powers; it was Dan Shaughnessy, Montville; Jackie MacMullan came along in the late ‘80s. So the hardest thing I had to do with this book was pick which story to use without being redundant when two or three of them wrote about the same subject. Which one do I use?
Advertisement
What does this book mean to you and your connection to the team?
I dedicated the book to my daughter who’s the biggest Celtics fan I know. I also dedicated to Bob Ryan, who is my writing hero.
I also think just writing about the family aspect of it — that’s become a really big thing with the Celtics themselves. I’ve never seen a team that was as connected and as willing to allow people around the players, their kids, their wives, to be as big a part of things as the 2024 Celtics were.
I think it bonded them together even more where they’ve developed this culture, where it’s just greater than what they have on the court.
What is your favorite memory of being a Celtics fan?
Kelly Chan
Content Producer
Kelly Chan is a content producer at Boston.com. She designs multimedia content on-site and across social media platforms, and experiments with new ways to engage readers.
Advertisement
📚 Stay up-to-date on the Book Club
Catch up on the latest Boston.com Book Club pick and join the virtual author discussions.
Boston Mayor Michelle Wu spoke to a joint committee on Beacon Hill Wednesday to advance her revised tax proposal.
The mayor urged lawmakers to approve it in time for Gov. Maura Healey’s signature. Wu called the revised plan, with more protections for small businesses, a compromise, balancing the needs of residents and the business community.
Boston’s commissioner of assessing used a paperclip as a visual aid during the presentation to lawmakers to illustrate a new balance: An effort to offset revenue losses caused by vacant business space by shifting and increasing the tax burden onto commercial properties.
“We need residents to have enough money in their pockets at the end of every month to go out and support our businesses,” Wu said.
Advertisement
She warned that homeowners could face steep property tax increases without the plan, which would likely be passed on to renters.
Lawmakers, however, pushed back, questioning the city’s financial needs.
“We all have to think about tightening our belts,” said Massachusetts State Sen. Susan Moran.
Wu countered, citing the need to address long-overdue salary adjustments for municipal workers.
“We had to sort of adjust the salaries after about four years of not having cost-of-living increases for municipal workers — the police contract, for example,” she explained.
Advertisement
Mayor Michelle Wu announced that she’s reached a deal to temporarily raise tax rates for local businesses amid a revenue shortfall.
The revised proposal includes measures to protect small businesses, such as raising the personal property tax exemption threshold from $10,000 to $30,000.
Still, some critics remain unconvinced. Business owner Lou Murray argued the tax hike would ultimately trickle down to consumers.
“You tax somebody, they pass on the cost down the ladder,” Murray said.
Supporters like Boston resident Chaton Green said the tax proposal is critical for those already struggling on fixed incomes.
Advertisement
“I was sitting next to a 90-year-old woman, and she said, ‘I still have to work.’ And that broke me,” Green shared.
Because the proposal would temporarily raise Boston’s commercial property tax rate above the state limit, the mayor needs legislative approval to pass it on to the governor.
Boston University (BU) has suspended admissions for various Humanities and Social Sciences PhD tracks, including its art history program, for the 2025–2026 academic year. The news was first reported yesterday, November 19, by Inside Higher Ed.
BU did not make a public announcement, but an undated update to the PhD information page on the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences’s website indicates that admissions to its PhD programs in History of Art and Architecture, American and New England Studies, Anthropology, Classical Studies, English, History, Linguistics, Philosophy, Political Science, Religion, Romance Studies, and Sociology were temporarily suspended.
Inside Higher Ed’s report references emails between school administrators suggesting that the move was due in part to the financial implications of a recently ratified contract with the Boston University Graduate Workers Union (BUGWU). The contract, which ended a seven-month strike in October, ensured that the university’s PhD candidates are afforded a minimum yearly stipend of $45,000 with an annual 3% raise in addition to the school covering tuition throughout the agreement’s three-year lifespan. Additional contract points include expanded healthcare coverage, commuter benefits, and subsidized dental insurance among other benefits. Though the $45,ooo minimum was a significant raise, the university did not concede to BUGWU’s demands for a $17,000 increase in yearly stipends and 7% annual cost-of-living adjustments — a conflict that led to the longest strike in the university’s history.
As reported by Inside Higher Ed, emails between Stan Sclaroff, dean of BU’s College of Arts and Sciences (CAS), and Malika Jeffries-EL, associate dean of the university’s Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, implied that the financial requirements of the ratified contract were points of concern for meeting the needs of existing doctoral student cohorts.
Advertisement
However, Colin Riley, a spokesperson for the university, told Hyperallergic that the school “initiated [its] review of PhD programs through a task force in 2022 and began implementation of the recommendations this fall.”
BU also decided to reduce doctoral cohort sizes for the 2025–2026 academic year, Riley said, citing factors including“student success; job prospects and placements; the recommendations of the 2022 PhD Task Force on PhD Education; and ensuring we can honor the five-year funding commitments we have made to our currently enrolled doctoral students.”
A spokesperson for the Service Employees International Union Local 509 in Massachusetts, under which BUGWU organizes, did not immediately respond to Hyperallergic‘s inquiry.