A former female basketball player from the University of Wisconsin is accusing his former threat coach, manipulation and manipulation of his mental health while he was with the program.
Tessa Towers, who spent two seasons with Wisconsin and transferred to Ball State University, recently published a Slide -style video to Tiktok detailing the accusations against Badgers chief coach, Marisa Moseley.
The Athletics Department of the University of Wisconsin did not immediately respond to a request for comments on this issue of Dailymail.com.
In the video, which has 14 slides, Towers alleges that Wisconsin's coaching staff violated his privacy by signing a liberation form to access my therapy sessions, or I started the team '.
Towers also says that the coaching staff told him that, “if I said something remotely close to the thoughts of his!
The player also states that the coaching staff, “excluded me from traveling to the virgin islands and multiple trips outside the trips with the team without any good reason.”
The former female basketball player at the University of Wisconsin, Tessa Towers, published a Tiktok slide presentation accusing her former abuse coach and creating a toxic atmosphere
Wisconsin is currently led by the main women's basketball coach Marisa Moseley
Towers also says that the coaching staff “threatened me” by removing opportunities.
A more worrying accusation of Towers says that “my coach and my staff made me try autism (I already have ADD). I told them that I did not want to do it, but they still forced me.”
He also detailed a situation in which a coach threw it out of practice after another teammate began a discussion with her.
Towers also says that his coach threatened to kick the team if it was not admitted in a mental hospital.
In addition, Towers says that the staff put it in a 'three strike rule' and that he was the only person in the team with this policy. He adds that he obtained his first attack when he forgot to deliver a 'goal sheet' on time.
Towers also says he was “forced to leave the team mid -season by my coach and staff,” he added that “my coaches office would leave me getting caught every time.”
She says: 'My first year of university, I felt like a laboratory rat for my coaches and personnel because they would put me with new medications every two weeks. I was 17 years old.
In addition, Towers states that he was “forced to sign multiple” agreements “that only apply to me, and they were not official rules of the NCAA rather things that the coaches and the staff invented. They told me that I had to sign these or The opposite would start with the team.
A selection of accusations that the towers made against Wisconsin staff in their Tiktok publication
Towers took an absence permission of the team in his first year in 2022, and Moseley said at that time: 'Our program fully supports Tessa while taking this time. We will always make sure that people arrive first before basketball.
Under the initial publication of Tiktok, multiple comments were left for accounts that seem to belong to former players of the Wisconsin women's basketball team.
That included a comment of multiple emojis that seem to belong to Sydney Hilliard, a player who left the Wisconsin program citing mental health reasons.
Tessa Gray, a player currently injured in the Wisconsin women's team who has been “remarkably absent from the bank in recent weeks” according to the Wisconsin Sports Badgernotes Published, 'Now this sounds familiar! I'm glad I left that shit hole!
Krystyna Ellew left multiple comments, a former Badgers player who transferred the University of Ilinois -chicago, including one that said 'but then I thought he waits (through) that too'.
Another former Badgers player, Imbie Jones, commented: “I'm glad we are far from that.”
In his career in Wisconsin, Towers played four games in total, with an average of 2.3 minutes and 1.7 points per game. Since he moved to Ball State, he has played in four games this season, with an average of 5.8 minutes and 3.5 points per game, According to the website of the Athletics Department.
Moseley has put a 48-68 record while in Wisconsin. Before this, she was the chief coach at Boston University.
Moseley has compiled a 48-68 record since he took over the Badgers in 2021
Moseley has made controversial statements previously, including a press conference at Big Ten Basketball Media Day last season Where she referred to some of her players as 'white' children.
'If you look at my team, we are practically the United Nations. I have the first Indian woman to play at the Power 5. I have Nigerian children and children who are Dominicans and children who are Mexicans and children who go to the Blanco factory because they are still there, “Moseley said.
Then he added: 'My mother is white, just for anyone to be offended. My mom is a white woman from the Berkshires. Very white.
In a statement after those comments, Moseley apologized saying: 'Those words do not reflect my thought or my values. I apologize for the impact they have had.