Las Vegas Review-Journal

Juice still popular menu item at Southern Cal’s sports table

- By Bill Plaschke Los Angeles Times

ILOS ANGELES past is any indication, O.J. Simpson soon will be paroled into a world of questionab­le friends, nasty onlookers and only one consistent­ly reliable and historical­ly deep outside connection.

The most notorious athlete in U.S. history can count on the fact that he’ll always be a USC Trojan.

USC promotes it. Simpson embraces it. And when he is finally set free from his prison cell at Lovelock Correction­al Center in Northern Nevada as early as Oct. 1, with this year’s celebrated Trojans football team in the middle of national title and Heisman Trophy chases, he again will be bonded to it.

Simpson, 70, was granted parole Thursday after serving more than eight years for a robbery in a hotel room at Palace Station. He told four members of the Nevada Parole Commission that he intended to move to Florida and live a quiet life with his family. But even in the years following his controvers­ial acquittal of the 1994 slayings of his ex-wife, Nicole Brown Simpson, and her friend Ronald Goldman, Simpson never has been far from USC.

Simpson is still honored in the campus’ Heritage Hall with a glittering display of a copy of his 1968 Heisman Trophy.

Simpson is still remembered in the Coliseum with the giant display of his No. 32 jersey draped across end zone seats.

Then, last month, thanks to a $15 million anonymous private donation, USC named a residentia­l college after Al Cowlings, who infamously drove then-fugitive Simpson in a white Ford Bronco that led police on a nationally televised low-speed chase through Los Angeles and Orange counties in June 1994.

Cowlings claimed that his close friend Simpson held a gun to his own head and threatened to kill himself unless Cowlings drove him to Simpson’s Brentwood estate. It was during this chase that Cowlings screamed through a cellphone to police with one of the legendary quotes of the Simpson saga, “My name is AC! You know who I am, goddammit!”

Cowlings was eventually charged with a felony for aiding a fugitive, but the charges were subsequent­ly dropped due to lack of evidence.

And now, in the new USC Village project, there is Cowlings Residentia­l College.

“This remarkably generous gift enhances USC’S world-class living and learning environmen­t and will carry Mr. Cowlings name, in tribute to his tremendous passion for his alma mater and for our students,” USC President Max Nikias said in a statement.

Simpson not only has been remembered through artifacts and old friends, but once he was also personally welcomed by the Trojans football team.

Fifteen years ago in Miami, before the 2003 Orange Bowl, Simpson suddenly showed up at USC’S first contact practice at the request of running back Justin Fargas.

He was not turned away at the gate. In fact, he was welcomed by coach Pete Carroll and his players with handshakes and hugs. It was Simpson’s first appearance at a USC event in the nearly 10 years since his murder trial.

“It’s good to have him out here,” Carroll said at the time. “At SC, our guys hold a Heisman Trophy winner in the highest regard. For them to get a chance to see him and visit with him was very special for them.”

It was even more special for Simpson, who seemed to revel in the attention.

“I don’t think I could ever feel disconnect­ed from SC, I really don’t,” Simpson said at the time.

Carroll was widely criticized for allowing Simpson access to his team, and rightfully so. These days it’s hard to imagine USC coach Clay Helton would even dream of opening his doors to that sort of mayhem.

But Carroll never backed down from his opinion that, to USC folks, Simpson represente­d only football. Since then, even though Simpson has become a convicted felon, USC also has remained firm in its belief that this connection should at least symbolical­ly remain. Even though all signs of former Trojans great Reggie Bush have been scrubbed from the university as an NCAA punishment for crimes against that governing body, Simpson’s honors will continue to be displayed.

“USC recognizes O.J’S accomplish­ments as a football player,” a university spokespers­on said Thursday. “What happened after USC is beyond our scope.”

Is it? Shouldn’t the entire portrait of O.J. Simpson compromise the entirety of their scope? The Heisman Trophy and the jersey cover only two years of a narrative that long since has been transforme­d into a saga of murder and robbery and madness.

Does USC really still want that in its end zone?

Simpson was paroled despite showing little remorse during the nationally televised proceeding­s. He was at times combative, dismissive and seemingly unaware that his freedom was on the line.

He still doesn’t get it. When he leaves that prison in a couple of months, he will again stumble his way through the darkness of a ruined life, looking for any friendly face, perhaps taking comfort in one of the last places that stubbornly insists on rememberin­g him as he briefly once was.

Leaving the light on for him will be USC.

 ??  ?? Associated Press File O.J. Simpson chats with then-southern Cal quarterbac­k Carson Palmer in December 2002 at a team practice in Davie, Fla., before the Orange Bowl.
Associated Press File O.J. Simpson chats with then-southern Cal quarterbac­k Carson Palmer in December 2002 at a team practice in Davie, Fla., before the Orange Bowl.

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