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Ex-Washington State coach Nick Rolovich back in college football after firing over vaccine mandate

Former Washington State head football coach Nick Rolovich is returning to major college football for the first time in three years after being fired for refusing to comply with the Washington state vaccine mandate in 2021.

California announced his hiring Friday, saying he is being added to the staff as a senior offensive assistant.

Cal also has COVID-19 policy requirements for faculty, staff and students, but they can opt out of vaccination and submit a declination statement despite the university's recommendation that they stay up to date on vaccination.

Rolovich, 45, sought a religious exemption from the mandate at Washington State but was terminated after the athletics department determined it couldn’t accommodate his unvaccinated status.

He then sued Washington State in 2022, accusing the university of discriminating against his religious beliefs. Part of his lawsuit was dismissed last year by a federal judge, but the case remains active and pending in federal court in Spokane, Washington.

A spokesperson for California did not immediately respond to a message seeking comment. An attorney for Rolovich, 45, also didn't immediately respond.

Washington State fired head coach Nick Rolovich, along with four other coaches, after they refused to get vaccinated against COVID-19. Washington required state employees to be fully vaccinated by Monday.
Washington State fired head coach Nick Rolovich, along with four other coaches, after they refused to get vaccinated against COVID-19. Washington required state employees to be fully vaccinated by Monday.

What was the religious issue?

Rolovich is Catholic.

Pope Francis and other Catholic organizations have supported COVID-19 vaccines. However, some conservative Catholics have opposed them on religious grounds, believing they are tied to abortion, which they oppose.

No aborted fetal cells are in those vaccines. The cell lines that were used to develop or test them were derived from fetal tissue from decades ago and have been used to develop other medicine as well.

Rolovich’s lawsuit stated that before his firing, he was "uncomfortable because he did not know how WSU would react to him sharing his religious opposition to medical research based on aborted fetal tissue, given that WSU professors have in the past publicly defended such research."

In response, attorneys for the WSU defendants said Rolovich’s objections were a crock based on junk science, conspiracy theories and secular opinions instead of "any truly religious beliefs." They said he never claimed a religious reason for his refusal to get vaccinated until he applied for a religious exemption and accommodation less than one week before the deadline.

Nick Rolovich's record

Rolovich coached 11 games at Washington State, including the shortened season of 2020 during the COVID-19 pandemic. His record there was 5-6.

He previously served as head coach at Hawaii for three seasons, where he compiled a 28-27 record.

After his firing at Washington State, he resurfaced as an assistant at San Marin High School in Novato, California.

At California, he joins the staff of head coach Justin Wilcox and will work under new offensive coordinator Bryan Harsin, the former coach at Boise State and Auburn.

"The world is healing," Rolovich wrote on the social media site X. "Honored to work for Coach Wilcox, grateful for the opportunity."

Follow reporter Brent Schrotenboer @Schrotenboer. Email: bschrotenb@usatoday.com

(This story was updated to add new information.)

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Nick Rolovich back in college football at California after 2021 firing