The Columbus Dispatch

Police shootings concern OSU football recruit

- JESSICA JOHNSON Jessica A. Johnson is a columnist for The Athens (Ga.) Banner-Herald. johnson.503@osu.edu @JjSmojc

make a difference. With the Buckeyes and other powerhouse programs such as Georgia, Alabama, Texas, and Michigan recruiting him, Tyreke will certainly have a captive audience.

For those with the “why can’t we leave politics out of sports” attitude, the current strain between law enforcemen­t and communitie­s of color, along with increased calls for criminal justice reform, will only cause more African-American athletes to speak out. Many are refusing to ignore these issues and are using their elite status in profession­al sports for civic engagement.

Le’Veon Bell, Chris Paul, Jason Richardson, and Colin Kaepernick have all tweeted about high-profile police shootings, including the death of Philando Castile in Saint Paul, Minnesota, last summer. The recent acquittal of the police officer who shot Castile, in addition to officers not being charged in other cases making national news like Cincinnati’s Samuel DuBose, has intensifie­d the debate on police brutality.

Former Buckeye football players Malcolm Jenkins, Chris “Beanie” Wells, and Raekwon McMillan, along with Cleveland Browns’ Ibraheim Campbell, signed a letter addressed to Ohio senators that supports the Targeted Community Alternativ­es to Prison plan, which advocates for rehabilita­tion for short-term nonviolent offenders using options such as substance-abuse treatment and mental-health support.

Approximat­ely 57 percent of college football players are African-American, so racial issues concerning “community policing,” as Tyreke mentioned, cannot be sidelined, and it is extremely unfair and unrealisti­c to expect young black men coming from similar background­s not to talk about what they have witnessed growing up.

Ohio State football coach Urban Meyer has created an enriching culture for this type of constructi­ve dialogue with his Real Life Wednesdays program. This year, OSU football tweeted that race was incorporat­ed as a major topic for players to tackle, which will no doubt help them deal with many of the tragedies and sensitive incidents that shape our national discussion. Real life is real hard for many black males, and Tyreke expressed to Lind that seeing “senseless killings” takes a toll. Playing football cannot shield Tyreke from this troubling reality, but it is clear that he is a young visionary who will take advantage of the educationa­l opportunit­y provided for him due to his athletic talents.

Tyreke Smith showed a lot of courage wearing that shirt to Ohio State’s camp, and he has demonstrat­ed that he has the maturity to handle the message behind it. That’s the intellect you want in a student and the moxie you want in an athlete.

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