The Commercial Appeal

Bottom line: Urban Meyer didn’t do what’s right

- Nancy Armour

Doing what’s required doesn’t necessaril­y mean you’ve done the right thing.

Ohio State is in the process of determinin­g whether Urban Meyer met the school’s reporting requiremen­ts after learning in 2015 about more domestic violence allegation­s against then-assistant Zach Smith. Regardless of what the school finds, however, it’s clear Meyer fell far short of the moral high ground he likes to claim.

When Meyer found out Courtney Smith had again accused her husband of abuse – she provided former ESPN reporter Brett McMurphy with photos and text messages supporting the 2015 allegation­s – he should have alerted athletic director Gene Smith. Then Meyer should have fired Zach Smith.

This was now a pattern, and Meyer damn well knew it. Smith had been arrested for beating his pregnant wife in 2009, when he was a graduate assistant on Meyer’s staff at Florida. In fact, Meyer said he and his wife Shelley had even counseled the young couple.

You can debate whether giving Smith a second chance in 2009 was the right thing to do. But when Meyer learned of additional allegation­s, it should have brought an immediate end to his benevolenc­e. A man who hits, chokes and terrorizes his wife is not someone you want to associate with, let alone hold up as a role model for young men. Especially in a program where “respect for women” is trumpeted as one of your core values.

Meyer issued a statement Friday saying he had followed Ohio State’s reporting procedures in 2015, an assertion that has the convenient advantage of both absolving himself and putting the blame on someone else. But Meyer’s excuse is the same one Joe Paterno gave for not reporting Jerry Sandusky to the authoritie­s, and it’s as repugnant now as it was then.

Sure, they might have fulfilled their legal obligation­s. But what good is that if they also ignored the greater, moral one? Meyer’s apologists will say policing the personal lives of his assistants is not his job, that he can’t control what someone does when he’s away from the Woody Hayes Athletic Center. You can’t have it both ways. If Meyer is going to tout his program as a model of accountabi­lity and responsibi­lity, then he’d better make sure everyone is practicing what he’s preaching.

And don’t tell me about “university procedure.” Meyer has a provision in his contract that gives him great latitude when it comes to hiring and firing his assistants. With one national title and a 73-8 record at Ohio State, if Meyer said he wanted Zach Smith gone, Gene Smith wouldn’t have tried to dissuade him.

 ?? Columnist USA TODAY ??
Columnist USA TODAY

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