Crime & Safety

Former Player Shocked By Charges Against Norwalk Resident, Staples Coach

A former player talks about Michael Pickering, a former coach at Staples High School who was arrested on Thursday.

DJ Sixsmith is a 2011 Staples grad who played for Michael Pickering, a Norwalk resident and former assistant coach at the Westport school. He says he was shocked to hear about the accusations made against a coach whom he remembers to be inspiring and supportive. Sixsmith is sure  Staples High School will rise above one coaches bad decision.

Pickering is accused of allegedly providing members of the freshman team with passwords to a pornographic website, and was charged with three counts of risk of injury to a minor after he turned himself in to the Westport Police Department on Thursday. Pickering was issued a court-set $50,000 bond.

Sixsmith, who now attends Fordham University on a path to a broadcast career, said Pickering was his favorite coach when he played football his freshman and sophomore year at Staples High School.

Find out what's happening in Norwalkwith free, real-time updates from Patch.

“He was a type of guy you could rely on for encouragement and advise,” Sixsmith said “I wasn’t the biggest guy on the team, but it didn’t matter, really, how big or strong I was. It was how much heart I had, and coach Pickering was someone who really inspired me by saying that.”

Sixsmith explained there was nothing of inappropriate nature occuring while Pickering was his coach. “Me and the rest of the guys on the team just had a friendly relationship with Coach Pick, nothing away from the school. He was a professional guy and a good coach,” Sixsmith said. “The story becomes even bigger now that this whole Penn State dilemma has been going on,” Sixsmith said. “

Find out what's happening in Norwalkwith free, real-time updates from Patch.

So people will now associate the two together, but 'No,' they are two very different situations.” Although Sixsmith called it a sad day for Staples football, he is sure Staples will move past this mishap because of how it was properly handled by Staples' administration.

He believes the administration will not let it become an issue in the future. Board of Education Chair Don O’Day agreed, and was pleased with how the administration and the Westport Police Department reacted.

“The speed at which the administration and the police department had begun their discussion underscores the school’s commitment for the safety and the loyalty of our students,” O’Day said.

As soon as the information was discovered, the administration worked well into the evening Tuesday and was prepared to deal with the authorities Wednesday morning, according to O’Day.

Prior to this incident, Pickering had been a Wreckers football coach for nine seasons in addition to being a freshman lacrosse coach, according to the Staples High School website. Pickering, who also worked for the Westport Public Schools Maintenance Department, graduated from Brien McMahon High School in 1989.

“It is a shame a great coach made a mistake, and unfortunately it had to become so big like this,” Sixsmith said. “I hope the best for him in the future.” As far as the future for Staples football, Pickering's mistake may be a topic of conversation, but that’s it. “The team is going to be able to rise above it,” Sixsmith said. “I think coach P. (Head Coach Marce Petroccio) and the rest of the staff have been there long enough and they will be able to deal with this controversy and not let it affect what is happening on the field.”

 


Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.

We’ve removed the ability to reply as we work to make improvements. Learn more here

To request removal of your name from an arrest report, submit these required items to arrestreports@patch.com.