Sheffield United let Maddy Cusack down and the womenâs teamâs transition from part-time to full-time status in the summer of 2023 was not âmanaged in the way that it should have beenâ, an inquest into Cusackâs death has been told.
Ian McCallum, general manager of the womenâs team between February 2023 and the end of the 2022-23 season on a short-term basis, also told the court that the club had been âslightly naive about what needed to be in placeâ for full-time womenâs football and that a âtalented group of players deserved betterâ. McCallum said his frustration at the clubâs approach to the womenâs game had âplayed a partâ in his decision to leave the role in the summer of 2023.
Lawyers representing the Cusack family, when asking McCallum about written evidence he had submitted before the hearing, asked him to confirm that he had said âthe club let people downâ, to which he replied: âOn some levels, yes,â adding: âThe club let a number of people down.â Asked specifically: âDid they let Maddy down on some areas?â, McCallum said: âYes.â Cusack died on 20 September 2023, aged 27.
Sheffield United announced on 16 February 2023 that McCallum had âtaken up the position of womenâs team general manager until the end of the 2022-23 seasonâ after the departure of Zoe Johnson, who had moved to become the Brighton womenâs and girlsâ managing director.
On Tuesday, the court was read part of an email sent by Johnson to Carl Shieber, Sheffield Unitedâs head of football administration, and Vicki Anderson, the clubâs head of human resources, during the process that led ultimately to the appointment of Jonathan Morgan as the clubâs new manager in February 2023. In that email, Johnson was advising on the managerial candidates: âI know [Morgan] the best out of the three of them and he doesnât have the greatest reputation in the game but he has a good CVâ, before adding that she was ânot sure it would be a great fitâ but that âheâd certainly be better than the applicants weâd gotâ.
McCallum, who was involved the process to appoint Morgan, was asked in court what he had been aware of Morganâs reputation prior to his appointment. He replied: âFrom what Iâd heard, his reputation was that he was strong-minded in what he wanted a football team to do, he wanted to win [and] he was prepared to make difficult decisions to make that happen.â He added: âAway from that I had no more knowledge [of his reputation].â
When being questioned by Morgan â who was representing himself in court â McCallum said he had never witnessed Morgan shout at Cusack, nor did he ever see him mistreat the midfielder, nor did he ever hear him talk negatively about her.
McCallum was also asked by the coroner to clarify an earlier statement he had provided, in which he had said it felt like Sheffield United saw the womenâs side going full time as âa box-ticking exerciseâ, to which McCallum said: âOutwardly, looking in, it probably seemed like the right thing.â He said the âsuccess of the England womenâs team probably acceleratedâ the move, but he was ânot sure the resources were in place to do that to the best of its abilityâ. He said he got the feeling that going full time was something that âneeded to happen but was not a âwantââ.
Asked to name individuals who had given him that impression, McCallum stopped short of doing so and said: âIt was a feeling I got from a number of people,â adding, when probed, that it was âvarious execs â I canât remember the names off the top of my headâ. Senior staff at Sheffield United, including Shieber and the chief executive, Stephen Bettis, are scheduled to give evidence to the inquest on Wednesday.
On Tuesday, the court also heard further evidence from Morgan, continuing his evidence session which had lasted for the full duration of the hearing on Monday. Morgan was questioned extensively by the coroner over what he knew of the clubâs handbook and the responsibilities for a line manager to report any concerns about an employeeâs mental wellbeing to HR. Asked if he had consulted HR about Cusack, Morgan said: âNo, because I escalated it up to [Dr Subhashis Basu, the club doctor] who I thought was the right person at the time.â
The clubâs head of safeguarding, Cheryl Anderson, told the court that she was not made aware Cusack was struggling with her mental health and that no concerns about Cusack had been raised with her. The inquest resumes on Wednesday.






