A New York high school basketball coach, Jim Zullo, has been fired after a video of him pulling a female player by the hair after a championship loss went viral this week.
Zullo, 81, was the coach at Northville High School, which is a little over an hour away from Albany, and committed the despicable act moments after falling 43-37 in the New York State Class D championship.
The player who has her hair pulled has been identified as Hailey Monroe, who appears to be in tears at the time of the incident.
Zullo makes the hair tug with and starts yelling at Monroe before another player, who appears to be Ahmya Tompkins gets in between her Northville teammate and head coach.
Zullo then begins to yell at both of them, with both Tompkins and her head coach pointing fingers at one another. None of what was said in the sequence can be heard in the video.
Northville quickly moved to fire Zullo after the incident.
A New York high school basketball coach, Jim Zullo, has been fired after pulling a player's hair
Zullo was the coach at Northville High School, which is a little over an hour away from Albany
NEW: High school basketball coach fired after yanking a girl's ponytail following their loss in the New York Class D state championship game.
Good job on the girl standing next to the victim (number 24?) for standing up to this thug.
The Northville Central School District says… pic.twitter.com/we5XA7k5Ty
'We hold our coaches to the highest standards of professionalism, sportsmanship, and respect for our student-athletes,' the district said in a statement. 'This behavior is completely unacceptable. This individual will no longer be coaching for Northville Central School District.'
The Northville school district also said it would follow up with the affected people involved from its community.
Zullo reportedly told News10 ABC that Monroe swore at him after he instructed her to shake hands with the other team. Her response is what allegedly preceded the hair-pulling.
Zullo had been a longtime high school basketball coach in upstate New York, initially retiring in 1999 after a 34-year career on the bench.
He came out of retirement in 2023 to lead the Northville girls program, leading the team to back-to-back state-championship appearances. The end of the latter of those two games is when Monroe's hair was pulled.