A vice president for Baylor University is saying that the school's failure to quickly respond to a reported 2013 gang rape involving football players was "a significant failure."

In a recent interview with Showtime's 60 Minutes Sports, Baylor VP Reagan Ramsower, whose office over saw campus police, admitted the failure but denied that it was part of a ploy to keep the football players named in the report on the field when presented with the report.

The following short clip is part of a preview for Showtime's full 60 Minutes Sports episode set to air at 7 p.m. Tuesday.

Interviewer: Here it is, and you'll notice here Baylor University was contacted as part and parcel of the investigation of this incident report. Nothing ever happened for well over a year. I'm just wondering what happened there? Was there an investigation? And if not, why not? You have a police report.

Ramsower: There was a police report. I suppose it stayed with the police department. It never came outt of the police department. That was a significant failure to respond by the police department. There's no doubt about it.

Tre'von Armstead went on to play for the Baylor football team in the 2014 season as nothing happened with the report. He was later dismissed from the team, with little explanation given at the time. Shaymichael Chatman, who was also named in the report, transferred to Sam Houston State. Neither had criminal charges brought against them.

"There was a Title IX case that was opened up -- we opened that up. And that was when I learned about it," Ramsower said. "And at that time we took the appropriate actions and eventually [Armstead] was found responsible."

The show also interviewed recently resigned Baylor Title IX coordinator Patty Crawford, who described Baylor's actions in such cases as institutional acts.

"There were a lot of people like me at the university that did not want these things happening and were fighting for it, but they didn't have the power or the authority, and they were not heard. That is institutional. What drives a culture? It's the top. And that was the hardest thing for me to come to grips with. After all of this -- the report's released, after all of this the discrimination became so clear even against me. That's power and that's control. What is rape about? Power and control."