Albert F. Gordon ’59, a significant donor to the Murr Center and self-described “business friend” of Bajwa, said that alumni have leveraged their financial influence to engineer the end of Bajwa’s tenure at Harvard.
Bajwa refused to comment on these allegations, and players interviewed for this article said they did not believe them to be true. An e-mail sent by Dean of the College Evelynn M. Hammonds and Vice President for Human Resources Marilyn Hausammann to Gordon said that the decision not to renew Bajwa’s contract was not discriminatory.
But Bajwa has not been bashful in his ties to the Indian subcontinent. In January, he took the women’s team on a trip—subsidized by Gordon—to India, where, in addition to playing matches, team members helped underprivileged children and trained them in squash.
Gertler believes that all of these efforts were just the beginning of creating international ties between Harvard and the larger squash community.
“Baj was leaving the program just as it was getting started, just as we were building a relationship with India, just as we were starting to do these humanitarian efforts,” Gertler said. “They’re more interested in having someone who gets along with people in the office than they [are] someone who wins championships and does humanitarian efforts.”
THE RECORD
A previous individual winner of the U.S. National Championships, Bajwa led the Crimson to six women’s and five men’s Ivy League titles during his tenure. This past season, the women’s team took the Howe Cup—the team national championship—while co-captain Colin West and Gemmell won individual national titles.
But these successes came as part of a general downward trend on the part of the men’s team, sliding from second at the beginning of Bajwa’s tenure to fifth this year.
Despite the noticeable drop in Harvard’s national standing, Bajwa called the trend a “cycle.”
“Three years ago my women were number five, and we had an amazing moment, and I felt that the men are in that same moment because right now they’re number five,” he said. “And the way the women three years ago went from number five to undefeated, I really felt that the men were headed in that direction.”
Team members were no less optimistic about Harvard’s prospects, but added that what Bajwa provided was more than just statistics and rankings.
“It’s hard to understand in a sport that sometimes people have to win and people have to lose, and it can’t be about the winning and losing,” junior Alisha Mashruwala said. “The coach is there to be more than just a coach. He’s a teacher. He’s a parent. He’s someone who brings the team together, and looking at the men’s and women’s team to see how bonded the teams are, you realize Baj has done great things for us.”
—Staff writer Brian A. Campos can be reached at bcampos@fas.harvard.edu.
—Staff writer Alex Sopko can be reached at sopko@fas.harvard.edu.
—Staff writer Naveen N. Srivatsa can be reached at srivatsa@fas.harvard.edu.