The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

In the NFL, it always comes down to the bottom line

- Paul Newberry AP Sports Columnist

Frank Clark will be making big bucks next season in the NFL. Kareem Hunt gets a shot at redemption. That video of Jeffery Simmons will be forgiven. Ditto for Nick Bosa’s tweets. Chances are, someone will find a way to employ Tyreek Hill.

With the NFL — and, really, everything in life — it always comes down to the bottom line. The owners are simply working the numbers, deducing that whatever baggage the aforementi­oned rogues bring to a franchise’s reputation are more than offset by their stellar ability on the playing field.

The Venn diagram goes something like this: More wins lead to more fans. More fans mean more dollars. More dollars make owners even richer.

Rest assured, nothing’s going to change until those filling the seats and bolstering the TV ratings back up whatever disgust they may be feeling by actually abandoning their support of the NFL. And if you think that’s likely to happen, we’d love to hook you up with a Nigerian prince who’s holding millions of dollars in your name.

A quick recap of the league’s infamous offseason (so far):

• Looking to bolster a porous defense that cost them a chance to play in the Super Bowl, the Chiefs worked out a trade and a new $105.5 million contract for pass rusher Clark. Never mind that he was kicked off the team at Michigan after a domestic violence arrest in 2014. Or that, while with the Seahawks, he went on Twitter to taunt a female reporter over her story about domestic violence in sports, offering her a job cleaning his fish tank after she washed out as a journalist.

• Hunt, the NFL’s top rusher in 2017, was released by Kansas City late last season when a hideous video surfaced that showed him shoving a woman and then kicking her while she was defenseles­s on the floor of a hotel hallway. Of course, Hunt has since received a second chance from the Browns, though he’ll be suspended for the first eight games of 2019. Citing his Christian faith but no doubt eager to build on the promise of a seven-win season, general manager John Dorsey said, “I see a lot of men of character who commit egregious acts. But at the end of the day, they learn from those acts, moved forward and became better people.”

• A local TV station aired graphic audio this week in which Hill and his fiance, Crystal Espinal, angrily discuss how their 3-year-old son was injured. Espinal said Hill was “punching” the boy in the chest and using a belt on him for discipline, while Hill issued an obscene threat against Espinal. A prosecutor declined to press charges after being unable to determine who abused the child. It’s worth noting that Hill was kicked off the team at Oklahoma State for a domestic violence arrest.

• Simmons was picked 19th Thursday by the Titans, who shrugged off a 2016 video that showed him striking a woman during a brawl that also involved his sister and mother. Simmons has apologized and had no troubles during his three years at Mississipp­i State. “I’m not perfect,” he said. “I made the mistake. I own up to it. I wasn’t raised like that, to strike a woman.”

• Bosa went to the 49ers with the No. 2 pick after conceding that his agents deleted tweets in support of President Trump and critical of Colin Kaepernick, Beyonce and Marvel’s “Black Panther” movie. In a prescient response to his reasons for the social media scrubbing, Bosa said, “I had to. There is a chance I might end up in San Francisco.” There were also reports of Bosa liking multiple Instagram posts that featured racial and homophobic slurs. Eager to improve an anemic pass rush, the 49ers shrugged off any concerns about Bosa’s presence in the locker room or in a left-leaning city with a large gay population. “I was a little insensitiv­e,” Bosa said. “I’m just ready to move forward from that, put it in the past, and bring the faithful some wins.”

Ahh, wins. In the end, that generally makes everything OK.

So, here’s the challenge for anyone out there who may be stewing over the NFL’s personnel decisions.

If this really bothers you, find something else to do on Sundays this fall.

A picnic. A movie. A bicycle ride. There are plenty of options.

If you decide to stick with the NFL, there’s no chance of anything changing.

That’s the bottom line.

Paul Newberry is a sports columnist for The Associated Press. Write to him at pnewberry@ap.org or follow him on Twitter @pnewberry1­963

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