A woman who accused two University of Florida football players of sexual assault skipped a school code of conduct hearing Friday because a Gators sports booster was assigned to adjudicate the case, her attorney said in a letter to the school.Receiver Antonio Callaway and quarterback Treon Harris were suspended by the university in January for conduct code violations. There are no police records of a complaint against Callaway and Harris, who is in the process of transferring from Florida.Callaway, who led Florida with 35 catches for 678 yards and returned two punts for touchdowns last season, returned to campus for classes in June after missing spring practice. He practiced with the team this week, but coach Jim McElwain said the sophomore has not been cleared to play.Boulder, Colorado-based attorney John Clune wrote in email to the universitys general counsel that the woman making the allegations against Callaway and Harris, along with her family members and five witnesses were boycotting the scheduled hearing at the Gainesville campus. The email, first reported by ESPN and provided to The Associated Press, was dated Aug. 5.Callaways Gainesville attorney, Amy Osteryoung, said the hearing took place Friday without the complainant.Clune wrote that his client remains very willing to participate in a fair and unbiased disciplinary process. Clune wrote that he first reached out to the university earlier this week to express his concerns with Jacksonville attorney Jake Schickel being assigned to the hearing. Schickel is a former member of the Florida track and field team. ESPN reported he donated thousands of dollars to Gators football and basketball during the 2014-15 school year.I have done everything in my power to try to address this with your office since learning of Mr. (Jake) Schickels conflicts and suggest reasonable alternatives, Clune wrote.University spokeswoman Janine Sikes said in a statement that student conduct hearing officers could be a university employee or an outside professional, or a committee of faculty and students.Any hearing officer and all committee members are trained and vetted for their impartiality, Sikes said. A hearing officer or committee member would not be disqualified or lack objectivity simply because he or she had been a student athlete decades earlier or purchases athletic tickets as more than 90,000 people do each year.Osteryoung criticized Clune in a statement for going to the media with his letter, calling his actions inappropriate and an attempt at intimidation.We are not going to besmirch his client in the press. The totality of the investigation which is over one thousand (1,000) pages will do that for us, Osteryoung said.In his letter, Clune also accused the university of entering materials into the hearing about his clients sexual history.I renew my request to continue the hearing, assign an impartial hearing officer, and remove the materials regarding prior sexual history or at a minimum give (my client) the time to actually prepare to address those unrelated issues, he wrote. 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SAN MARTIN, Calif. -- When Michelle Wie won the 2014 U.S. Womens Open at Pinehurst No. 2 Course, overcoming a hiccup on the 70th hole to become a major champion after plenty of chances, the conventional wisdom was that her victory would not only be a highlight, but a booster rocket to a new career orbit.The conventional wisdom was wrong.Two years later, on the eve of another U.S. Womens Open, after multiple injuries and missed cuts, Wie is a struggling golfer merely looking for a peek of good form.Wie doing well this week at CordeValle, located about 45 minutes south of her alma mater, Stanford University, would be a feel-good story. But there arent many reasons to feel good that such a plot will develop.Sure, she is inspired by a return to the Bay Area. Yes, she says her health is better. True, she was 11th in last years Open despite having to limp around Lancaster Country Club because of a bad ankle and hip. Any upsides, though, are offset by cold, hard golf facts.Wie hasnt had a top-10 finish in her past 40 tournaments, since the final event of 2014, a year in which she not only won twice but had 11 other top-10s. Her ball-striking and putting have been poor. In 2016, Wie has broken 70 only twice, which goes a long way toward explaining why she is 113th on the LPGA money list with $50,767.Since withdrawing after 15 holes of the final round when she was 11 over for the day at the Swinging Skirts LPGA Classic in April, citing neck spasms, Wie has missed the cut in five events and finished outside the top 40 in two others.The list goes on, Wie said of her litany of health issues. Its just been tough, you know, last year with my hip and everything. I had to change my swing so many times. And thats just been the main thing with me -- I just havent had a consistent swing that I can [use] and play pain free. Ive been tinkering so much to try to figure out how I can play without pain.Wies breakout season is seeming more mirage than harbinger. At 26, even Wie needs something to jog her memory of the way she was.I look back at clips on YouTube, Wie said. I think its definitely very important. You forget. You definitely forget how good you are. And I just would be like, Oh, Im not that good. But your friends say youre amazing. You forget that when you have a tough year. But it really does help to look back at clips. Oh, I actually did that, I remember that. More distant memories of Wies talent exist, of course. This is the 10th anniversary of her rookie season as a professional when she was only 16 and had top-5 finishes in three majors, including the U.S. Womens OOpen.dddddddddddd Those results would have been more stunning had Wie not had two top-3 major finishes the previous year, a fourth place the year before and a tie for ninth the year before that, when she teed off in the final group on the final day at the Kraft Nabisco Championship.There was always commotion and controversy around Wie as she was steered toward competing in mens tournaments, a belief that approach was more stunt than smart strategy in her development. There was also no doubt how that early promise showed a gift for the game.Thats just life in general, I think, when youre a kid. Everything seems easy, Wie said. You havent had the failures yet. You havent come across obstacles. And I think every adult can say, Oh, I remember when I was back in middle school or in kindergarten or something, I was so fearless. Thats just the nature of life, I think, that you learn to come across obstacles, you come across hard times, you come across lows.Golfers lives are full of ebb and flow, Wies perhaps being fuller than most and certainly more visible. Even as stars like Lydia Ko, 19, and Brooke Henderson, 18, establish themselves with winning ways and personalities, Wie remains popular and recognizable to lots of fans who would welcome another successful act.Im very grateful for my win at the U.S. Open, Wie said. It was really a dream come true for me. To win another U.S. Open would mean absolutely the world to me. I definitely still feel that I can build momentum on 2014. I dont think two years is too long of a period. I think that everything comes in waves.Wie contends that she is working hard, and that hard work will pay off if she can stay fit.I know the results are going to come, she said. Ive put in the long hours. My coach believes in me. My family believes in me. Its one foot forward at a time. Confidence definitely takes a hit when you dont play as well as you know you can, and youre just going out there and its a grind. Its a brutal game. But at the same time, its still fun. I enjoy the challenge -- thats what brings me back to the game every single time, no matter how hard [Im] struggling.If Wie is able to turn the corner -- whether this week or some other time -- it still makes sense that it will happen when the game seems to her more of a dance than a day shift, even if it is a job she loves. Winning encompasses a bunch of things, including a little magic, which lately for Wie has been harder to find than a fairway. ' ' '