Alex Cooper posing in the desertAlex Cooper (Photo via Instagram)
Alex Cooper has come forward with allegations of s3xual harassment against her former college soccer coach.

Cooper, host of the popular podcast “Call Her Daddy,” has accused her former Boston University soccer coach, Nancy Feldman, of uncomfortable encounters that Cooper characterizes as s3xual harassment.

Cooper shocked everyone when she made the allegation in her new Hulu documentary “Call Her Alex,” which premiered on Sunday at the Tribeca Film Festival in New York City.

According to Cooper, she and Feldman had a “normal relationship” during her freshman year, but things started to change in her sophomore year when Feldman began demanding to hear about her dating life.

“I started to notice her really starting to fixate on me way more than any other teammate of mine,” Cooper says in the docuseries.

“And it was confusing because the focus wasn’t like, ‘You’re doing so well, let’s get you on the field. You’re going to be a starter.’ It was all based in her wanting to know who I was dating, her making comments about my body and her always wanting to be alone with me.”

Alex Cooper attended and played soccer for Boston University from 2013 to 2015.

Cooper’s college roommate and soccer teammate, Alex Schlobohm, also appears in the docuseries, as she recalls witnessing some of the alleged harassment herself.

Schlobohm says: “There was a film session where Alex didn’t play a ton in the game, but for whatever reason, every minute that Alex played was highlighted during that film session. It was all based off of her appearance, whereas I felt like when she made comments about other players, it was about their performance.” Cooper adds: “We’re gonna rewind my tape every five seconds, and we’re gonna talk about my hair and my body. ‘Look at those legs. Everybody look at Alex in her uniform.’”

Things really became terrible during her junior year.

“One morning, my coach found out that I got dropped off on campus by a guy I was seeing, and she called for a private meeting between us,” Cooper says on screen. “She asks me, ‘Did you have s3x last night?’ And I’m like, ‘I’m sorry, what?’ And she’s like, ‘I don’t know if you should be sleeping off campus.’ And I’m like, ‘All of the other girls on my team sleep off campus.’ I didn’t know what to do, and every time I tried to resist her, she would say, ‘There could be consequences.’ And there were.”

According to Cooper, when the team went to an NCAA tournament, Feldman wouldn’t let Cooper play during an important game.

“She was trying to punish me, and it made no sense to everyone else. My teammates were so confused why I wasn’t playing,” Cooper says.

“It was this psychotic game of, ‘You want to play? Tell me about your s3x life. I have to drive you to your night class. Get in the car with me alone,’” Cooper says. I started trying to spend as little time as possible with her, taking different routes to practice where I knew I wouldn’t run into her during meetings. I would try to sit as far away from her as possible, literally anything, to not be alone with this woman.”

Feldman allegedly kicked Schlobohm off of the team at the end of her and Cooper’s junior year without giving a reason.

“The coach brought me in the next day and said, ‘You see what I just did to your friend? You’re not gonna live with her. You’re gonna live with who I want you to live with, and you will not be seeing her anymore,’” Cooper says.

South Carolina Congressman Threatens To Sue Over Alex Cooper’s Allegation


Social media influencer and podcaster Alex Cooper is accusing her former Boston University soccer coach of s3xual harassment.

She said the alleged harassment led to her departure from the team her senior year. The coach, Nancy Feldman, retired in 2022.

Her allegations have some unattended consequences.

South Carolina congresswoman Nancy Mace threatened to sue New York Magazine over a social media post misidentifying the Republican as the soccer coach accused of s3xually harassing ‘Call Her Daddy’ host Alex Cooper at Boston University over a decade ago.

‘@NYMag, and anyone repeating this lie: Take it down or lawyer up,’ Mace wrote in a response to the erroneous and since-deleted New York Magazine post. ‘We are demanding an immediate retraction and full correction.’

The post used Mace’s last name instead of Feldman’s.

‘You don’t get to smear me with a lazy, dangerous typo,’ read Mace’s post.

Mace made it perfectly clear she ‘never met,’ ‘never coached,’ and ‘never—ever—s3xually harassed’ Alex Cooper.

Houston Texans star Azeez Al-Shaair has admitted regrets over his illegal hit to Jacksonville Jaguars quarterback Trevor Lawrence and the ensuing brawl between the teams in a lengthy statement on social media.  

Al-Shaair’s statement comes as his three-game suspension as a result of the incident has ended and he is slated to return to the field for the Texans on Sunday against the Tennessee Titans.

On December 1, an Al-Shaair hit to the head of a sliding and defenseless Lawrence caused chaos in Jacksonville. The defensive back needed to be restrained by several coaches and Lawrence has not played since taking the barbaric contact.

‘While so many jumped at the first opportunity to hop on the false narrative – that l’m a dirty player or bad person – the messages from all who stood by me were the only things keeping me mentally afloat during a time of isolation,’ Al-Shaair said on social media.

‘I’ve learned so much from this entire experience. Seeing myself on video – letting my emotions get the best of me to the point where I completely lost it – was an embarrassing and eye-opening moment for me.’

‘I’ve had to earn everything in my life. I never want to allow anyone to get me to a point where I jeopardize everything that I’ve worked all my life to obtain. That was not the way I want to represent myself or my family and I will continue to learn and grow from that moment.’

Azeez Al-Shaair has admitted regrets over his hit to Jaguars quarterback Trevor Lawrence
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Azeez Al-Shaair has admitted regrets over his hit to Jaguars quarterback Trevor Lawrence

The Texans defensive back was suspended for three games as a result of the hit to Lawrence
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The Texans defensive back was suspended for three games as a result of the hit to Lawrence

Al-Shaair said during his three-game ban, he met with NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell and other league executives for the first time, taking issue with how he was characterized in the official announcement of his suspension.

The defender said he thought his character and integrity were ‘unjustifiably smeared’ in the release but the meeting with Goodell and others was ‘productive’ and gave him hope it would not happen again.

‘In that conversation – man-to-man – I owned and acknowledged that my actions following my ejection were careless and, in that moment, I didn’t think about the responsibility I have been blessed with to represent the shield,’ Al-Shaair continued.

‘I also stated that the letter, and specifically the language used in the letter, was equally as careless and conveyed that the context of the words used were not a reflection of my character, nor my career, as I have not been warned multiple times for my play on the field.’

Al-Shaair’s hit on Lawrence was not the only controversial incident he was involved in this season.

During the Texans’ game against the Bears in September, he punched Roschon Johnson, who wasn’t even in the game at the time of another sideline confrontation.

Al-Shaair ended his statement by saying his view is that everyone in the league office and on the field are on the same team to represent the NFL in the best nature possible, something he failed to do earlier this month.

‘Lastly, I’ll say that this world is full of negative people who can’t wait to tear you down, but if you move with love and compassion, the seeds of good you planted in others’ lives can grow into the very tree that shades you with comfort and compassion when you need it most,’ Al-Shaair concluded.

‘I am a man of God, I am a leader, a warrior and a lover. I am also a hell of a football player and I’m grateful to be back doing what I love.’