Northwestern university president released a second statement, implying that the university “may have erred” in the severity of the punishment on Pat Fitzgerald. The statement comes the day after the university imposed a two-week suspension for football coach Fitzgerald due to hazing charges.

In a message to the Northwestern community that was delivered late on Saturday, university president Michael Schill acknowledged that he and the institution may not have gone far enough in suspending the longstanding program face for two weeks without pay.

“I may have erred in weighing the appropriate sanction. In determining an appropriate penalty for the head coach, I focused too much on what the report concluded he didn’t know and not enough on what he should have known,” said University President Michael Schill.

Schill claimed that after visiting with the family of the former athlete who had made the original accusations of wrongdoing, he had a change of heart. According to ESPN, the player and school had a direct conversation on Sunday as well.

The Northwestern board of trustees and other university officials will discuss a new punishment. The initial suspension of Fitzgerald started on Friday.

Fitzgerald, 48, was a two-time consensus All-American linebacker at the school before becoming the Big Ten team’s head coach in 2006.

A complaint regarding hazing that allegedly took place in the team’s locker room and at an off-campus practice in Kenosha, Wisconsin, was submitted to the university in late November. According to the executive summary of the investigation, investigators interviewed more than 50 people who are currently or were formerly associated with the program and looked through emails and player survey data going back to 2014.