USA TODAY US Edition

Rodgers won’t recover junking legacy

- Nancy Armour Columnist USA TODAY

As shocking as it is to see one of the greatest players of his generation, one of the greatest quarterbac­ks the game has ever seen, become the subject of latenight punchlines, it’s even more sad.

The epitaph of Aaron Rodgers’ career will no longer be limited to his one Super Bowl title, four NFL MVP awards and countless superlativ­e stats. It will also have to include his descent into conspiracy theories and misinforma­tion, and a baseless attack on Jimmy Kimmel he tried – badly – to excuse as a misunderst­anding.

It wasn’t the “woke establishm­ent” that did this. “The mainstream media” isn’t to blame.

This is all Rodgers’ own doing, with help from some of his “friends” on “The Pat McAfee Show,” and he won’t be able to outrun it no matter how many more seasons he plays.

“This is the game plan of the media. This is what they do. They try and cancel – and it’s not just me. It’s nowhere near just me,” Rodgers said Tuesday as he tried, unsuccessf­ully, to extricate himself from the hole he dug by suggesting Kimmel was a pedophile who would be linked to Jeffrey Epstein.

“This is their game plan,” he continued. “They use these words to cancel people and they went and ran with this because it’s the crazy, anti-vaxxer whacko again talking about, accusing somebody of being a pedophile? Of course. This is the game plan they use. Incorrect, but that’s the environmen­t that we’re in.”

No, this is the environmen­t Rodgers created.

Star athletes, like all of us, are the sum of all their parts, good and bad. But society is usually willing to give our heroes a pass on their flaws and mistakes – until those shortcomin­gs overshadow that which makes them great.

Pete Rose can never separate himself from his gambling on baseball. Barry Bonds’ records are forever tainted by the question of how much performanc­e-enhancing drugs contribute­d to them. Lance Armstrong was undone by both his cheating and his scorched earth campaign to keep it hidden.

Rodgers now joins their ranks, someone whose failings are as noteworthy as his triumphs.

He’s become the kooky, cringey relative at family holidays, demanding to be taken seriously as a deep thinker “challengin­g the establishm­ent” when what he’s parroting is both nonsensica­l and easily debunked. It’s a far cry from the days when Rodgers acted as something of a conscience for the league, offering thoughtful and measured responses to thorny issues that went even beyond football.

Had Rodgers simply not gotten vaccinated, even been caught lying about it, it would have been a blip on his glittering résumé. A footnote at the bottom of stories about him. But he has made his fight for truth the central theme of his narrative, and you can no longer separate Rodgers the star quarterbac­k from Rodgers the quack. Especially when his misinforma­tion, his snide remarks about those he disagrees with or those who call him on his BS go from being simply unfunny to dangerous.

“When you hear a guy who won a Super Bowl and did all the State Farm commercial­s say something like this, a lot of people believe it,” Kimmel said Monday night in a devastatin­g response to Rodgers. “A lot of delusional people honestly believe I am meeting up with Tom Hanks and Oprah at Shakey’s once a week to eat pizza and drink the blood of children.

“And I know this because I hear from these people often, my wife hears from them. My kids hear from them. My poor mailman hears from these people. And now we’re hearing from lots more of them thanks to Aaron Rodgers.”

Rodgers tried to say Tuesday he was not suggesting Kimmel’s name would be on a list of people associated with Epstein, who trafficked young women to the rich and famous. But his explanatio­n – that he only wants corruption and corrupt people exposed – was as bogus as his repeated claim India and Japan successful­ly used ivermectin to treat COVID. Anyone who heard Rodgers last week, and saw the smug look on his face, knew he thought he was delivering a savage takedown of Kimmel.

But the only person Rodgers is taking down is himself.

Rodgers is intelligen­t, and his curiosity about the world outside of football used to be one of his most admirable qualities. But he somehow got lost in a vortex of misinforma­tion and mistruths, and can no longer see what everyone else does.

Rodgers is a terrific quarterbac­k and an utter fool, and it’s impossible to separate one from the other.

 ?? VINCENT CARCHIETTA/USA TODAY ?? Columnist Nancy Armour writes that Aaron Rodgers has joined the ranks of stars whose failings are as noteworthy as their triumphs.
VINCENT CARCHIETTA/USA TODAY Columnist Nancy Armour writes that Aaron Rodgers has joined the ranks of stars whose failings are as noteworthy as their triumphs.
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