Oher’s Former Football Coach – He Knows What He “Witnessed” With Tuohys

Michael Oher’s former football coach is weighing in on his “sad” family feud.

Coach Hugh Freeze told The Athletic Aug. 17 that he thinks the “facts will come out” after Oher filed a legal petition claiming Memphis couple Sean and Leigh Anne Tuohy lied about adopting him and actually became his conservators after he turned 18. Oher, a retired NFL player, alleged the Tuohy family profited off of his life story through the 2009 movie The Blind Side, per the documents obtained by E! News.

Freeze—who worked with Oher as the coach at Briarcrest Christian School in Memphis and then as assistant coach at Ole Miss—noted, “I think it’s sad.”

“I certainly don’t claim to understand all the ins and outs of adoption, conservatory, all of that. I know what I witnessed,” he continued. “I witnessed a family that totally took in a young man and I think without that, there is no story.”

In response to the lawsuit, Sean Tuohy told the Daily Memphian Aug. 14 he was “devastated” by the allegations, adding, “It’s upsetting to think we would make money off any of our children.”

He said the only funds they made from The Blind Side came from original book author Michael Lewis, who “gave us half of his share” after selling the film rights to his book.

“Everybody in the family got an equal share, including Michael. It was about $14,000, each,” Sean said. “We were never offered money; we never asked for money.”

Since the filing, the family has shared their plans to voluntarily terminate Oher’s conservatorship after nearly 20 years.

Yet, their lawyer Marty Singer also blasted the athlete’s claims about financial gain as “absurd” and “transparently ridiculous.”

“The Tuohys opened their home to Mr. Oher, offered him structure, support and, most of all, unconditional love,” he said. “They have consistently treated him like a son and one of their three children.”

Oher, who is now 37 and married with four children, expressed in a statement that he was “disheartened by the revelation shared in the lawsuit,” alleging in the filing he only learned in February 2023 that agreeing to the conservatorship back in 2004 did not give him familial ties to the Tuohys.

“This is a difficult situation for my family and me,” Oher said in a statement to E! News through his attorney Aug. 15. “I want to ask everyone to please respect our privacy at this time. For now, I will let the lawsuit speak for itself and will offer no further comment.”

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