
Winthrop University Esports collegiate programme under fire after treatment of student
Overwatch 2 brings over 152 perks to 38 different heroes. Image credit: Blizzard Entertainment via Steam
Winthrop University Esportsâ collegiate programme is being criticised by sections of the esports community for its management and student treatment.
The wave of criticism was caused by several posts on X (formerly Twitter) revealing screenshots of a conversation between the programmeâs Assistant Director Sheldon Williams and collegiate Overwatch player âToad.â
On March 5th, the first set of screenshots were shared by esports coach Christian âWoodsâ Woods with the caption: âNever seen a director refuse to talk with someone before a paid application than subsequently poor shame them for asking for information on the school.
âBut considering how many of these staff donât even pretend to care about their players educations I canât say Iâm surprised.â
As Woodsâ post had censored all names, numerous X users encouraged the coach to reveal the identities of the involved individuals as well as the name of the university. Today, Toad posted uncensored screenshots of the conversation between themselves and Winthrop Universityâs esports programme Assistant Director Sheldon Williams.
Toad competes for Alvernia University Esports, a collegiate Overwatch team that Woods coaches.
After being approached by Williams, Toad showed interest in the universityâs collegiate esports programme. However, the student was unable to pay the upfront $50 application fee due to their current financial situation.
Williams then listed the numerous achievements of the universityâs collegiate teams, urging Toad to apply before all spots are taken. In return, the student politely inquired about a possible waiver of the application fee.
Image credit: Toad via x
Image credit: Toad via X
However, the director insisted on the fee, claiming that âCollege is expensive anywhereâ and that â$50 is a drop in the bucket.â
Image credit: Toad via X
Toad commented on the incident in the caption of their post: âUnacceptable behavior from what is supposed to be a leader in collegiate esports. If we want our competitions to be taken seriously, we need to start acting like professionals. A football coach would never speak to a recruit like this. Remember that YOU reached out to ME.â
Reaction of the Collegiate and Esports Community
The reaction of the collegiate esports community to Toadâs post has been overwhelmingly supportive of the studentâs situation. Moreover, several notable esports figures criticised Williamsâ behaviour as well as Winthrop University for their choice of staff and player recruitment practices.
â$50 is a drop in a bucket to avoid this kind of PR,â commented NACL caster Matt Samuelson.
Esports personality Ovilee May expressed her critique in a repost: âBreaks my heart to see the state of some collegiate esports programs.
âThere were so many fantastic programs ran by people who wholeheartedly cared about seeing college students succeed in both their studies as well as building a career in esports and most are just gone.â
While there has been no official statement from Winthrop University since, Sheldon Williams has publicly apologised to Toad via a post on his X account: âI want to apologize to [Toad]. I understand that this is not the correct way to speak to students/recruits. I promise to be better moving forward.â
Interestingly, Eric âWheatsâ Perez, the coach of Winthropâs Overwatch roster, also reached out under Toadâs post: âSorry that this is the experience you had with Winthrop Overwatch. Feel free to reach out if you wanna talk about the academy team, although I understand if you are put off.â
Winthrop Universityâs Esports Programme
Winthrop Universityâs esports programme was launched in 2019 with Josh Sides, currently the projectâs Director, at the helm. Since then, Winthrop Esports has competed in Overwatch, Fortnite, Rocket League and more.
The universityâs VALORANT team won the Collegiate Invitational at Dreamhack Atlanta 2024. In the same year, the squad participated in the gameâs tier-2 Challengers circuit.
Furthermore, Sides and Winthropâs Connor Doyle have won a Scholastic Esports Award in the categories Director of the Year (4-YR) and Coach of the Year, respectively.
According to an article by NECCâs Caleb Glube from August 2024, the universityâs esports roster is expected to grow from 80 to 120 varsity or club members this year. The article further states: âSides says the budget heâs working with currently is 10 times more than what it was when he started. That increase in budget allows Sides to recruit nationally and internationally renowned playersâŠâ