USA TODAY US Edition

Bengals’ pick of Mixon not a proud moment

Team’s character, connection to Cincy fans lacking

- Paul Daugherty @EnquirerDo­c USA TODAY Sports Daugherty writes for The Cincinnati Enquirer, part of the USA TODAY Network.

Every so often in this business, we cling to the notion that character matters in profession­al sports. It keeps us from losing our minds.

There has to be a suggestion of nobility in our games. Something that uplifts and elevates. Something that makes us feel better for having been there. These players are “our guys.” These teams are a big stitch in our local fabric. Especially in smaller cities where options for civic sporting pride are limited. How many years has Cincinnati been defined, in part, by the Big Red Machine?

We like to think our sports teams represent who we are. It doesn’t matter how silly that sounds. It’s what we believe. We want them to make us proud.

How do you feel about the Cincinnati Bengals today?

How did you feel when you saw Anthony Munoz at the podium Friday night, announcing Joe Mixon as a Cincinnati Bengal? I felt like crying.

Get on the Internet. Google “Joe Mixon punch.” Watch the clip. Ask yourself how you’ll feel cheering for this guy.

When winning is all that matters, winning no longer matters.

The Bengals have forfeited any and all rights to the word “character” as a descriptiv­e. They have lost all remaining sympathy from anyone who still believed Cincinnati’s miscreants were no different from any other team’s miscreants.

They have perpetuate­d an image, and they have done it willingly. They have done it for a quarter century. At least. Mike Brown picked up Jess Phillips from prison in August 1968. Phillips had done time for check forgery. Brown drove him to training camp.

This isn’t a rant against Joe Mixon. His actions were despicable. That doesn’t make him despicable today. No one’s life should be defined by a heinous act at age 18. It’s about the Bengals.

We could list the conga line of second-chancers and probatione­rs the Bengals have enabled over the decades. We could remind everyone that the Bengals have been a punch line for what they’ve done and who they’ve been. But you know that already.

In situations like this, a team needs to get at least half of the equation right. It’s like a college football or basketball coach whose team lands in NCAA jail. If his team wins a championsh­ip by cheating, most fans would take the punishment. The Bengals haven’t won a championsh­ip.

We take our sports personally here. When baseball went on strike in 1994, some of us never came back to the game. Baseball was doing this to us, and our guys were complicit. Not surprising­ly, our favorite Bengals have been good people, too. Or at least that was our perception. Ken Anderson, Isaac Curtis, Reggie Williams, Dave Lapham, Boomer Esiason. And Anthony Munoz, bigger than life, in all ways. These were good players who stood for something larger than winning football games.

We didn’t just embrace their football triumphs, because their teams didn’t have many. We embraced them as people. Especially if they stayed here after their careers were over. They were who we liked to think we were.

Think of the Big Red Machine. What’s the image? Accomplish­ed, modest, responsibl­e, profession­al, diligent. Us.

Who are the Cincinnati Bengals today?

What sort of connection do you feel with them?

Who knows the Bengals’ thinking when it came to drafting Joe Mixon? Who knows where coaches and front-office types stood? Brown doesn’t like being told he can’t or shouldn’t do something. He enjoys doing the opposite. Coach Marvin Lewis said, “I don’t know who isn’t disgusted with what they saw” on the restaurant video. But he made the pick anyway.

“That’s one day in a young man’s life, and he’s had to live that since then and he will continue to have to live that,” Lewis said. “He gets an opportunit­y to move forward and write his script from then on.”

As he should. It just shouldn’t have been here.

And by the way, the woman’s name is Amelia. Amelia Molitor. No one mentioned her Friday night. Her life matters, too. Her future counts.

On his conference call to the media, Mixon said the punch that broke four bones in Amelia Molitor’s face and sent her to the hospital “changed me a lot as a person, the way you think, the way you carry yourself, go about things.”

Then last November, he tore up a parking ticket, threw it in the attendant’s face and, according to the complaint, “inched (his vehicle) at the officer ... to intimidate the officer.”

The Bengals own Joe Mixon now. They deserve everything they get.

 ?? JOHN MINCHILLO, AP ?? Joe Mixon said the violent incident that was caught on video “changed me a lot as a person.”
JOHN MINCHILLO, AP Joe Mixon said the violent incident that was caught on video “changed me a lot as a person.”

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