Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Meyer moves toward repairing damage

- By Mitch Stacy

COLUMBUS, OHIO » Ohio State coach Urban Meyer said he has sent letters and had conversati­ons with families of players as a key step toward containing and repairing the scandal that led to his three-game suspension, a saga he describes as “a window in time I made an error.”

He acknowledg­ed Monday that the program’s reputation has suffered and said he hopes more clarity about what happened will help mitigate the damage.

In what normally would have been a press conference about the week’s football game, the Ohio State coach met for nearly an hour with reporters who questioned him about his mismanagem­ent of fired assistant Zach Smith and his resulting suspension after a university investigat­ion.

“I think there was,” Meyer said when asked whether the program was damaged. He said the letters and talks with families of players were to assuage concerns that he turned his back on domestic violence allegation­s.

“The damage, I believe, is that we just went through a really hard time, and I made a mistake in helping a troubled employee, went too far in trying to help someone,” Meyer said.

Beyond his players, Meyer’s explanatio­ns and actions have ramificati­ons with potential recruits. Four-star linebacker Kane Patterson from Tennessee already rescinded his commitment to Ohio State since Meyer was suspended.

Meyer reiterated his contention that he didn’t ignore or cover up domestic abuse allegation­s against Smith, who was fired in July. Smith denies abusing his wife, Courtney Smith, and was never charged or prosecuted for domestic violence. Meyer said his mistake was not asking more questions about their situation and instead trying to help Zach Smith keep his job so he could continue to support his family.

He also again denied lying to reporters about his knowledge of 2015 allegation­s against Smith, saying that he “misspoke.” Ohio State’s investigat­ive report found that Meyer intended to keep details of Smith’s troubles private when asked by reporters.

“I’m going to keep saying if for the rest of my life, this was about trying to help an employee with work related issues. It was not about lying to the media,” Meyer said.

Meyer was asked about memory issues cited by the report as a reason why he might not have remembered specific conversati­ons. He said he’s had some medical issues that required some “pretty heavy meds at time,” but said “I’m very healthy” and none of those issues would affect his running of the program.

Meyer was put on paid leave Aug. 1, two days before the Buckeyes opened fall camp as the university launched its investigat­ion.

That probe found that Meyer had for years tolerated misbehavio­r from Smith, who is the grandson of former Ohio State coach and Meyer mentor Earle Bruce. Meyer was suspended Aug. 22. He was allowed to return to practice Sept. 3, but could not be on the sideline for the first three games, which the Buckeyes won behind acting coach Ryan Day.

 ??  ?? Ohio State head coach Urban Meyer gestures while speaking at a press conference in Columbus, Ohio, Monday.
Ohio State head coach Urban Meyer gestures while speaking at a press conference in Columbus, Ohio, Monday.

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