Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Outburst will follow Garrett forever

- BOB GLAUBER

Pro football is one of the most violent sports on earth, an NFL that often is defined by brutal hits and the astonishin­g determinat­ion by its participan­ts to overcome the sheer force of collisions that occur on every single play.

But there never has been anything quite like what we saw late Thursday night when Cleveland Browns defensive end Myles Garrett committed one of the most grievous acts in NFL history.

In sports history, for that matter.

Garrett is one of the most physically gifted players ever to put on a uniform, but his cowardly move to rip off Pittsburgh Steelers quarterbac­k Mason Rudolph’s helmet and then wind up and strike Rudolph’s head with it places him at or near the top of the list of cheap shot artists.

Despicable. Heinous. Choose your negative connotatio­n to describe the moment. They all apply.

Garrett is lucky no serious harm was done to Rudolph. The situation could have been much worse had the blow caused an injury. Honestly, given Garrett’s strength and the fact that Rudolph was left without protection on his head, we might have been having a different conversati­on.

Thankfully, Rudolph was able to walk away and say afterward what he truly felt about the incident.

“It was bush league and a total coward move on his part,” Rudolph said after the Browns’ 21-7 victory at First Energy Stadium. “It’s OK, I’ll take it. I’m not going to back down from any bully out there.”

Garrett cannot walk away from the fallout of his moment of temper. His reputation is forever tainted, his legacy now frozen in the memory of his outlandish reaction. Rudolph initially tugged on Garrett’s helmet as the two wrestled on the ground with just seconds to play in the game, but Garrett’s response of grabbing Rudolph’s facemask and then ripping his helmet off was an overreacti­on.

His decision to club Rudolph in the head with the helmet — a potentiall­y deadly weapon, in this case — was execrable to a level we’ve never witnessed. Even in a league where violent collisions within the rules are as common as the forward pass.

“Last night, I made a terrible mistake,” he said. “I lost my cool and what I did was selfish and unacceptab­le. I know that we are all responsibl­e for our actions and I can only prove my true character through my actions moving forward.”

Garrett won’t have the chance to prove his true character in a game for quite some time. He has been suspended indefinite­ly and won’t be allowed to play until at least next season. And even then he must appear before commission­er Roger Goodell to gain the opportunit­y to play another football game.

The NFL got it right by taking Garrett off the field for the rest of this season and taking away his remaining pay, because what he did on Thursday night was unworthy of anyone who puts on a helmet and shoulder pads. It was a shameful moment for which he must be held to account. Goodell has every reason to keep him away from his league for the foreseeabl­e future.

Garrett will have plenty of time to reflect on his misdeeds now that he’s no longer permitted to play. But nothing he can say or do will completely remove the disgrace he brought upon himself.

For that he will be held to account the rest of his life.

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