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Former Bucknell Coach Charged in Freshman Football Player's Death

Created at 7 Jul · 2:05 AM1 source↑ Market-relevant
IN SHORT

A former strength and conditioning coach at Bucknell University, Mark Kulbis, has been charged with aggravated hazing and involuntary manslaughter in the death of freshman football player Calvin Dickey Jr. Dickey collapsed during an intense training session in July 2024 and died two days later.

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Key Numbers

100number of "up-downs" ordered
10,000bail amount for Kulbis

Who's Involved

Calvin “CJ” Dickey Jr.
Freshman football player at Bucknell University who died during training
Mark Kulbis
Former Bucknell University strength and conditioning coach charged in Dickey's death
Pennsylvania Attorney General’s office
Investigated the death and filed charges against Kulbis
Dave Sunday
Pennsylvania Attorney General
Bucknell University
University where the incident occurred and is cooperating with the investigation

↳ Why This Matters

The charges highlight the critical importance of understanding and accommodating student-athletes' medical conditions during strenuous training, particularly when coaches are aware of pre-existing health risks.

Key facts

  • Former Bucknell University strength and conditioning coach Mark Kulbis has been charged in the death of freshman football player Calvin Dickey Jr.
  • Dickey collapsed during an intense training session in July 2024 and died two days later.
  • The autopsy cited exercises, sickle-cell trait, body weight, and exertional rhabdomyolysis as causes of death.
  • Kulbis was aware of Dickey's sickle-cell trait and received training on anti-hazing standards.
  • Kulbis faces charges including felony aggravated hazing and misdemeanor involuntary manslaughter.

A former strength and conditioning coach at Bucknell University has been charged in connection with the death of a freshman football player who collapsed during a training session. Mark Kulbis faces felony aggravated hazing and misdemeanor counts of involuntary manslaughter, reckless endangerment, and hazing.

Calvin “CJ” Dickey Jr. was training in July 2024 when Kulbis allegedly instructed him and other players to perform 100 “up-downs” and plank drills. Dickey, who had sickle-cell trait, began to struggle and passed out. He was taken to the hospital and died two days later.

An autopsy found that the exercises, combined with Dickey's sickle-cell trait, body weight, and exertional rhabdomyolysis, caused his death. The Pennsylvania Attorney General’s office stated that Kulbis was aware of Dickey’s medical condition and had received training on NCAA anti-hazing standards, but disregarded this information.

Kulbis, who served as the head football strength and conditioning coach for about six years, left the university in January 2025, approximately six months after Dickey's death. Bucknell University has stated it is cooperating with the investigation but will not comment further due to the active criminal matter and pending civil litigation.

Frequently asked questions

Sickle-cell trait is a medical condition diagnosed through a blood test that doesn't usually affect daily life but can cause decreased blood flow and muscle breakdown after intense exertion, dehydration, or high body temperatures, potentially leading to collapse and death in rare cases.

Exertional rhabdomyolysis is a rare but life-threatening condition where muscles break down from overexertion or other causes, which was cited as a factor in Dickey's death.

Mark Kulbis has been charged with felony aggravated hazing and misdemeanor counts of involuntary manslaughter, reckless endangerment, and hazing.

What Happens Next

01Kulbis will face legal proceedings for the charges of aggravated hazing, involuntary manslaughter, reckless endangerment, and hazing.
02Related civil litigation is pending.

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Cadence

How It Developed

Calvin Dickey Jr., a freshman football player at Bucknell University, collapsed during a training session in July 2024.
Dickey, who had sickle-cell trait, was instructed to perform 100 "up-downs" and plank drills by coach Mark Kulbis.
Dickey was hospitalized and died two days later.
An autopsy determined Dickey's death was caused by the exercises combined with his sickle-cell trait, body weight, and exertional rhabdomyolysis.
Kulbis was aware of Dickey's medical condition and had received training on NCAA anti-hazing standards.
Kulbis was charged with felony aggravated hazing and misdemeanor counts of involuntary manslaughter, reckless endangerment, and hazing.
Pennsylvania Attorney General Dave Sunday stated the actions were deliberate hazing by a coach who knew Dickey's health condition made him vulnerable.
Bucknell University is cooperating with the attorney general's office but will not comment on the active criminal matter or pending civil litigation.

Sources

T1
Former coach at Bucknell University charged in death of freshman football playerAP News

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