Updated

Two former basketball players have accused Amateur Athletic Union president Robert "Bobby" Dodd of molesting them as children, according to an ESPN report.

The network reported Friday that the AAU is investigating the claims, which date from the 1980s. One of the players, 43-year-old Ralph West, told ESPN's "Outside the Lines" he was assaulted in Memphis in 1984.

Both West and a second unidentified man said news reports about the Penn State child sex abuse case prompted them to independently confront Dodd in November. The player who spoke to ESPN on the condition of anonymity said he called Dodd on Nov. 11 and that Dodd apologized for the alleged abuse.

ESPN confirmed an 8-minute call to Dodd by examining telephone records.

The AAU did not immediately return a call to its Orlando, Fla., headquarters seeking comment.

ESPN quoted from an AAU statement that said it has opened an independent investigation into the allegations and has contacted local law enforcement in Memphis.

The AAU also told ESPN the 63-year-old Dodd has colon cancer and will not return to his post.

AAU first vice president Louis Stout will serve as interim president.

Both accusers said they never went to police and only recently told their families.

West said Dodd fondled him, tried to fondle him or masturbated in front of him at Dodd's home in Memphis, the AAU Junior Olympics in South Bend, Ind., and tournaments in Florida, Louisiana and Tennessee.

He told ESPN there were a half-dozen times from 1983-85 in which Dodd either molested or attempted to molest him and that in each incident Dodd would sneak into his room "in the middle of the night and you don't hear anything ... and he's trying to reach his hand in your underwear, basically."

Dodd did not respond to ESPN's requests for comments. His assistant told the network in an email that he had cancer and had retired from the AAU on Nov. 29 for health reasons.

Robin Brown-Beamon, national chairwoman for the AAU athletics executive committee, was surprised by the allegations.

"That's the first I've heard of any of it," Brown-Beamon told ESPN.