USA TODAY US Edition

After parole, Simpson would be wise to disappear

- FOLLOW COLUMNIST NANCY ARMOUR @nrarmour for commentary on the latest in major sports.

windows — definitely not a white Ford Bronco — and vanish from the public eye, leaving the gawkers in his wake without so much as a wave or a glance backward.

Otherwise, he risks falling into the same toxic mentality that landed him in prison.

“He just says, ‘We’ll be together again, my life will go back to normal,’ ” longtime friend Tom Scotto told USA TODAY Sports last weekend.

Normal? There’s never been such a thing for O.J. Simpson.

A Hall of Fame running back who became a beloved broadcaste­r, actor and pitchman, Simpson wasn’t just a household name. He was a welcome guest in every American household. Until the murders. The Bronco chase, the socalled trial of the century, the bloody glove, those “ugly-ass shoes,” even a Kardashian thrown in for good measure — we didn’t realize it then, but the O.J. circus was the advent of reality TV. Everything about Simpson, before and after the trial, became a source of fascinatio­n.

Simpson was acquitted of murder charges Oct. 3, 1995, but was found responsibl­e for Brown’s and Goldman’s deaths two years later in civil court. He was ordered to pay $33.5 million in damages to their families.

That’s not why he’s in prison, though. A confrontat­ion with memorabili­a collectors in Las Vegas led to armed robbery and kidnapping charges, and he was sentenced in 2008 to a minimum of nine years.

Simpson’s time behind bars hasn’t diminished interest in him. A documentar­y about him won an Oscar this year and a television series dominated the Emmys last year. It’s no surprise, really. We have become a culture that revels in celebrity, drama and other people’s misfortune­s, and Simpson checks every one of those boxes.

Which makes a vanishing act all the more imperative.

Simpson knows what happens when ego and hubris get the best of him. “I just wish I’d have never gone to that room,” he said, referring to the Las Vegas robbery, during a 2013 hearing that led to him being paroled on five of the lesser charges against him.

There’s even less benefit now to being a public curiosity.

Sure, there will be some who wish Simpson well. But many more will be rooting just as hard for him to fail. Opinions were set hard and fast long ago, and nothing Simpson does after his release is likely to change them.

Besides, any money he makes wouldn’t be his for long, anyway, with the Brown and Goldman families expected to renew their pursuit of the millions they’re owed. Simpson can shield many of his assets — his NFL pension, for example, is protected by law — but Goldman’s father was awarded the rights to Simpson’s supposed confession­al, If I Did It.

Though Simpson’s friend Scotto says the former football player is “in the best shape I’ve ever seen him,” we all have expiration dates, and Simpson is closer to his now than when he went to prison.

He’s wasted the last nine years of his life. Unless he stays out of the spotlight, he’s likely to burn the rest, too.

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