Alabama A&M coach Connell Maynor said the Bulldogs won’t play North Alabama again while he’s the school’s head coach, saying his team endured poor hospitality and aggression during Saturday’s game.

At his weekly Monday news conference, according to the Flroence TimesDaily, Maynor listed a number of issues, saying Alabama A&M received no complimentary tickets or tickets to sell to the public for the game, players were not allowed on the field until two hours before the game, and that his assistant coaches were held back so that fans could use the elevator to access to press box right before kickoff.

“I’m disappointed in the way they treated us in every aspect,” Maynor said.

Maynor also said there was a heated exchange involving an assistant coach and a police officer in which the officer “his hand on his gun” and said, “Did you hear what he said?,” according to the TimesDaily.

Florence Police Chief Ron Tyler told the Florence newspaper that he was unaware of any confrontation between a coach and a Florence police officer.

Immediate efforts to reach Maynor through Alabama A&M’s sports information office failed.

Video of Maynor’s news conference is not available on Alabama A&M’s athletic website or its Facebook page. The TimesDaily reported the video was available on Monday on Facebook and has since been removed.

UNA released a response Monday:

UNA’s athletic department also released a prepared statement to the Florence newspaper and said the schools’ athletic directors -- UNA’s Mark Linder and A&M’s Bryan Hicks -- will likely discuss the situation.

Alabama A&M earned a 31-24 victory over UNA on Saturday, rallying from a 18-0 halftime deficit to earn its first victory over the Lions in 31 years.

The two teams played the last two years – the first meetings since playing every year but one from 1975-97 – but there are no future games scheduled. UNA men’s basketball basketball team is scheduled to play at Alabama A&M on Dec. 20.

At the 2018 game, during the UNA band’s halftime introduction, the reference to Dixie was dropped in apparent homage connotations to the word’s link to slavery and racist ideals. The UNA band’s official name is “Marching Pride of North Alabama."

Updated, Sept. 18. 2019, 10:26 a.m.: To fix the official name of UNA’s band.

READ THE FULL REPORT IN THE TIMESDAILY

This post will be updated.