The Sentinel-Record

Ohio State suspends Meyer for 3 games

- MITCH STACY

COLUMBUS, Ohio — Ohio State suspended coach Urban Meyer for three games on Wednesday night for mishandlin­g repeated profession­al and behavioral problems of an assistant coach, with investigat­ors finding Meyer protected his protege for years through domestic violence allegation­s, a drug problem and poor job performanc­e.

The superstar coach’s treatment of his now-fired assistant was also clouded by his abiding devotion to the legacy of former Ohio State coach Earle Bruce, the grandfathe­r of former wide receivers coach Zach Smith and an early coaching mentor for Meyer.

“I gave Zach Smith the benefit of the doubt,” Meyer said.

The investigat­ion turned up “a pattern of troubling behavior by Zach Smith: promiscuou­s and embarrassi­ng sexual behavior, drug abuse, truancy, dishonesty, financial irresponsi­bility, a possible NCAA violation, and a lengthy police investigat­ion into allegation­s of criminal domestic violence and cybercrime­s,” according to summary investigat­ive findings released by the university on Wednesday night.

Meyer knew about at least some of the issues. The report and punishment culminated a twoweek investigat­ion of how Meyer reacted to allegation­s that Smith abused his ex-wife, Courtney Smith. Zach Smith was fired last month after she asked a judge for a protective order.

Courtney Smith alleged her husband shoved her against a wall and put his hands around her neck in 2015. Zach Smith has never been criminally charged with domestic violence. The university put Meyer on paid leave and began investigat­ing after Courtney Smith spoke out publicly, sharing text messages and photos she traded in 2015 with Meyer’s wife, Shelley Meyer. Shelley Meyer is a registered nurse and instructor at Ohio State.

“I followed my heart and not my head,” Meyer said, quickly reading a written statement during a news conference after his punishment was announced. “I should have demanded more from him and recognized red flags.”

Investigat­ors said Meyer and athletic director Gene Smith mismanaged Zach Smith’s misconduct and kept him even though he was not an appropriat­e role model for OSU student-athletes. The review found neither Meyer nor Gene Smith condoned or covered up alleged abuse, but raised red flags of their own:

— Meyer, the athletic director and others throughout Ohio State thought it wasn’t their place to do anything about allegation­s against Zach Smith unless law enforcemen­t took more action like making an arrest or filing charges. Investigat­ors called that a widespread misunderst­anding of their reporting obligation­s.

— Meyer responded to Courtney Smith coming forward to a reporter by asking one of his staffers about changing the settings on his phone to delete text messages more than a year old. Investigat­ors didn’t find older messages on Meyer’s phone but couldn’t determine whether he deleted them before or after the media report.

— Meyer and his wife, Shelley, doubted the veracity of Courtney Smith’s allegation­s of violence and abuse. Urban Meyer called the Smith situation a “he said she said” last month in a text with a former player. He also insisted to investigat­ors he met with Courtney Smith after Zach Smith’s 2009 arrest and that she recanted her original story to authoritie­s. Courtney Smith told investigat­ors she never met with Meyer or recanted any allegation­s.

— In June 2016 at Meyer’s urging, Zach Smith was admitted to a drug treatment facility for addiction to an unspecifie­d stimulant prescripti­on drug, the report said, adding that Gene Smith was never told about it.

— Zach Smith ran up a big strip club bill in

2014 with a high school coach in Florida and spent

$600 in personal funds. Meyer reprimande­d Zach Smith but didn’t report the issue to compliance officers or the athletic director. Investigat­ors said they told the NCAA about the incident.

Trustees discussed how to punish Meyer in a marathon meeting of more than 12 hours Wednesday while Meyer waited in the building. Athletic director Gene Smith — who is not related to Zach or Courtney Smith — was suspended without pay from Aug. 31 through Sept. 16.

Both the athletic director and Meyer apologized and said they accepted the punishment­s, though Meyer said repeatedly that he did not fully know what was happening with the Smiths. “I should have been aware of it,” Meyer said. Meyer said he was not aware of the text messages Courtney Smith sent to his wife. When asked if he had a message for Courtney Smith, Meyer said: “I have a message for everyone involved in this: I’m sorry we’re in this situation.”

Meyer, 54, will miss Ohio State’s first three games against Oregon State, Rutgers and No. 16 TCU, though he will be allowed to coach practices leading into the Rutgers and TCU games. Co-offensive coordinato­r and quarterbac­ks coach Ryan Day is serving as acting coach while Meyer is absent.

Meyer insisted as the investigat­ion began he followed proper protocols after learning of the 2015 accusation­s. But he also acknowledg­ed lying to reporters a week earlier when he said he hadn’t heard of the incident until shortly before he fired Zach Smith.

Investigat­ors found that Meyer was determined to not disclose Zach Smith’s issues to the media and went too far in his denials.

Zach Smith’s attorney Brad Koffel said in a statement to USA Today that Meyer, Ohio State and Gene Smith were “collateral damage” for Courtney Smith’s desire to seek revenge her ex-husband.

“Zach Smith married a woman he should not have married,” Koffel said.

Mary Jo White, a former federal prosecutor, led the investigat­ion that cost the university

$500,000. She said more than 40 witnesses were interviewe­d, some several times, and more than

60,000 electronic documents were reviewed. Investigat­ors reviewed 10,000 text messages of Meyer’s and text messages and photos provided by Courtney Smith.

Meyer is heading into his seventh season at Ohio State, where he is 73-8 with a national title in

2014 and two Big Ten Conference championsh­ips. His contract was extended in April by two years through 2022, increasing Meyer’s salary to

$7.6 million in 2018 with annual 6 percent raises. Meyer has about $38 million left on his contract.

In 2009, Zach Smith was accused of aggravated battery on his pregnant wife while he was working a graduate assistant for Meyer at Florida. The charge was dropped because of insufficie­nt evidence.

The Smiths separated in June 2015 and divorced in 2016.

Ohio State began investigat­ing Meyer while also facing three federal lawsuits about its response to allegation­s of groping, leering and other misconduct by a deceased athletic department doctor who treated wrestlers and other students for two decades. The lawsuits alleging sexual abuse by Dr. Richard Strauss say Ohio State facilitate­d the abuse by ignoring complaints.

Since Ohio State announced an independen­t investigat­ion in April, more than 100 former students have come forward with accounts of sexual misconduct by Strauss. The allegation­s range from 1979 to 1997 and involve male athletes from

14 sports, as well as his work at the student health center and his off-campus medical office.

 ?? The Associated Press ?? MEYER SUSPENDED: Ohio State University President Michael Drake offers words to football coach Urban Meyer, who leaves the stage following a news conference in Columbus, Ohio, Wednesday. Athletic director Gene Smith was also suspended from Aug. 31 through Sept. 16.
The Associated Press MEYER SUSPENDED: Ohio State University President Michael Drake offers words to football coach Urban Meyer, who leaves the stage following a news conference in Columbus, Ohio, Wednesday. Athletic director Gene Smith was also suspended from Aug. 31 through Sept. 16.

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