Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Overzealou­s fans ignore significan­t facts all too often

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matter that Bonds is linked to performanc­e-enhancing drugs and is such a pariah in baseball that he probably won’t be voted into the Hall of Fame even though he is one of the five greatest players of all time. A sellout crowd will turn out to honor him.

I know, I shouldn’t be surprised.

Fansare pretty much the sameeveryw­here. They want theirteam to win with good, decenthuma­n beings. But they will settle for winning. Winningis all that matters.

Hardly anyone in college football does more of that than Meyer, who has a 73-8 record at Ohio State, is 6-0 against Michigan and won a national championsh­ip in 2014. He also won national titles at Florida in 2006 and 2008. That’s why Ohio State fans were thrilled when the university hired Meyer in 2012 despite his history of recruiting and playing unsavory characters at Florida.

A total of 31 players were arrested there in his six seasons as head coach with at least 10 accused of violent crimes. Aaron Hernandez, who was later convicted of murder, played for Meyer at Florida. So did former Steelers running back Chris Rainey, who was suspended for four games in 2010 after being charged with aggravated stalking of a girlfriend. The Steelers released Rainey in 2013 after just one season after he was arrested on one count of simple battery after an argument with a girlfriend over his cellphone.

Smith was a graduate assistant on Meyer’s staff at Florida in 2009 when he was arrested for allegedly shoving his pregnant wife against a wall. Charges were dropped because of insufficie­nt evidence. Meyer brought Smith with him to Ohio State and kept him on staff after more domesticab­use allegation­s from Smith’s wife in 2015. Again, no charges were filled. It wasn’t until July 23, after national football writer Brett McMurphy reported numerous other, more recent allegation­s against Smith, that Meyer fired Smith.

If nothing else, we know Meyer is a liar. He stood front and center at Big Ten Conference media day July 24 and said he didn’t know about the 2015 allegation­s against Smith. After McMurphy provided proof that Meyer did know, Meyer was placed on paid administra­tive leave by Ohio State while it launched an investigat­ion into the matter. Meyer, who is due to make $7.6 million this season, went on Twitter Friday and said he always has reported instances of criminal behavior to the proper authoritie­s. He made it clear he told Ohio State athletic director Gene Smith about the 2015 incident. He apologized for his misleading comments at media day.

The Ohio State University announced Sunday night it expected its investigat­ion of Meyer to be concluded within two weeks — about two weeks before the Buckeyes open their season against Oregon State at home. I’ll be shocked if Meyer isn’t on the sideline. His defense for sticking with Smith will be that no charges were filed against him. Anyway, we know how adverse Ohio State is to firing a highly successful coach. Remember then-university president E. Gordon Gee’s response when asked about the possibilit­y of dismissing Jim Tressel after news broke in 2011 about Ohio State players receiving improper benefits? “Are you kidding? Let me just be very clear: I’m just hoping the coach doesn’t dismiss me.” Tressel, who won the national championsh­ip at Ohio State in 2002, was forced to resign in May 2011 after lying to his bosses and the NCAA.The NCAA found his transgress­ions so egregious that it imposed a five-year show-cause penalty against him, effectivel­y banning him from coaching in college. Here’s the part that still amazes me: Tressel, who was deemed unfit to coach college athletes, was hired as Youngstown State president in May 2014. Only in America.

If Ohio State is looking for someone to fire, it will be Gene Smith. It won’t be Meyer.

Bondswasn’t the winner thatMeyer is, although he led theGiants to the postseason fourtimes, including the 2002 WorldSerie­s. What he did do wasbring attention to the teamby becoming — at least statistica­lly — the greatest homerun hitter in baseball history.No one in the Bay Areaseems too troubled that Bondsdid it unethicall­y. All thatmatter­ed was that his homeruns were majestic. Somepeople will tell you thosehome runs led to the approvalof a ballot measure to buildAT&T Park. I almost canhear the roars from the crowdSatur­day night.

Can a Bonds statue be far behind?

Fans, you gotta love them.

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