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Nzoner's Game Room>If the Chiefs care about honor and decency, Tyreek Hill can’t be part of this team
Eleazar 09:58 PM 04-25-2019
If the Chiefs care about honor and decency, Tyreek Hill can’t be part of this team

BY VAHE GREGORIAN
April 25, 2019 10:31 PM,
Updated 20 minutes ago

https://www.kansascity.com/sports/sp...229705219.html


The instantly infamous audio clip of Tyreek Hill and Crystal Espinal that KCTV-5 aired on Thursday night stood for many things at once.

It was a lens onto a chilling side of Hill, whose response to being told their 3-year-old son is terrified of him was, “You need to be terrified of me, too, bitch.” It was an appalling glimpse at what several sources have told The Star is a toxic relationship.

And her disturbing reference to covering for him with authorities (“I rode for you,” as she put it) was a window into the sorts of obstacles to which Johnson County district attorney Steve Howe seemed to be alluding on Thursday. That’s when he said a crime had been committed when it came their son, who The Star reported had suffered a broken arm among other injuries, but suggested he couldn’t bring charges because the couple had conspired to stonewall a month-long investigation.

Perhaps most of all, the excerpt from a recording Espinal reportedly made while the couple was walking in the Dubai International Airport also was a moment of tangible clarity and, in fact, a favor to the Chiefs.

Unless they are morally bankrupt, it’s easy now.

If they care about what they stand for, if they care about the community, if they care about victims of abuse and their families who already had to be conflicted watching this previously convicted man cavort on the field, Hill can’t be part of this team.

It’s that simple: If they care about honor and decency, Hill can’t be part of this team.

Even after Howe’s extraordinary news conference, there was scant room for equivocation or rationalization about Hill unless they were bent on denial or creating smokescreens around the real issue.

Which they could well have been, given that Hill is their second-most dynamic offensive player behind Patrick Mahomes and arguably fundamental to their ambitions of playing in the Super Bowl for the first time in half a century.

Sure, the Chiefs are in business to compete, not be a pillar of virtue. Those worlds can collide, and it can be complicated. Or as reader Dan Curry eloquently put it in an email on Thursday: “We want them to be a beacon of honor, but they’re also a business where that beacon shines on winning from the thousands of fans who follow them.”

But the spotlight now is on what looms as a trend for this franchise, which cut running back Kareem Hunt last fall only after video surfaced of him knocking over and shoving a woman months before and emphasized it was for lying.

Earlier this week, the Chiefs traded for Seattle defensive end Frank Clark, who was involved in a domestic violence incident in 2014 that led to him being dismissed from the Michigan football team.

Sure, it’s hard to have a one-size-fits-all policy. And we can’t be so cynical that we don’t believe in second chances, can we?

Just the same, this is a franchise that should feel more duty-bound than most to be sensitive to domestic violence in the wake of the 2012 murder of Kasandra Perkins by linebacker Jovan Belcher, who then killed himself in the parking lot outside the Chiefs’ training facility.

When the Chiefs drafted Hill in 2016, a few months after he pleaded guilty to domestic assault and battery by strangulation of the then-pregnant Espinal, I touched base with Perkins’ mother, Becky Gonzalez.

“I heard the story: It’s disheartening to see another case of money over morals,” Becky Gonzalez, the grandmother to orphaned baby Zoey, said via text message. “They (the NFL) do whatever damage control is necessary at the time to appease (the) public but never take a stance.

“I hope they don’t end up regretting their decision.”

For a while, their decision looked good. While Hill was emerging as a human blur and one of the most exciting players anyone has ever seen, he also by all accounts was conducting himself with exemplary behavior.

When his three-year deferred sentence ended last August and Hill had completed all of his court-mandated requirements, Hill’s conviction in Payne County, Okla., was expunged. And it was heartening to hear what county assistant DA for domestic violence Debra Vincent said.

“Who’s to say that this wasn’t life-changing in how he looked at that part of his life?” she said in a phone interview at the time.

But Vincent also reminded me of the truth that was always lurking: She warned that the work he’d done to date was no guarantee of future behavior. Because his progress could only be measured over a lifetime, not a few years — just as concerned local domestic abuse experts warned when the Chiefs drafted Hill and trumpeted their vetting and urged us all to trust them.

And that’s the other favor this sad situation has done for the Chiefs. It stands as a statement that they need to change their attitude about this, not to mention their system.

When they said “trust us” and implied they knew better than the experts and said they had thoroughly vetted him and that they have their own in-house ways of working with these situations, they didn’t know what they didn’t know.

Now they need to own up to that and revisit how they do this part of the business, perhaps with a dose of transparency involved, lest they continue to go down this path and have reason to regret it again.

Vahe Gregorian has been a sports columnist for The Kansas City Star since 2013 after 25 years at the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. He has covered a wide spectrum of sports, including 10 Olympics. Vahe was an English major at the University of Pennsylvania and earned his master’s degree at Mizzou.
[Reply]
Hammock Parties 10:00 PM 04-25-2019
Vahe is an old fart and no one gives a fuck about his rancid columns.
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kcpasco 10:01 PM 04-25-2019
He’s cool as a Brown though.
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Dayze 10:01 PM 04-25-2019
Sadly, if the Chiefs were to exhibit honor, another team would just pick him up and claim they will rehabiliatate him.

That said, they need to suspend him tonight,.
[Reply]
Mecca 10:03 PM 04-25-2019
There is no honor in the NFL, seriously does anyone seem to care about what Hunt did today? No that's right they don't cause none of those teams care about domestic violence.
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Bump 10:03 PM 04-25-2019
Oh yay so some other team can pick him up cheap while we get some good PR that nobody will care about in a few weeks! Fuck that, just keep him. If we release him there is a 100% chance he will be on another team. What the NFL does with a suspension or what is yet to be seen. If he gets 8 games or something, then some other team gets him for the most important part of the season. Or maybe franchise him as many times as you can, he gonna complain after what he did?
[Reply]
Eleazar 10:04 PM 04-25-2019
Frankly it's embarrassing to the franchise that he hasn't been cut yet. They shouldn't have dithered long enough for the local newspaper to print this column, draft or no draft.
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007 10:04 PM 04-25-2019
I'm so sick of this shit. Thanks to Andy for always being the second chance coach. Peters, Hunt(while he didn't do anything to be in trouble with the law, did have a past), Hill, who is next?

While I do want the Chiefs to win at all costs, this is starting to stack up now.

For the record, I'd just bench him until his contract is up. I don't trust the NFL not to just let another team have him cheap and be a thorn in our side.
[Reply]
Mecca 10:06 PM 04-25-2019
Hey guys guess what if domestic violence really matters to you...don't watch the NFL cause none of those teams care at all.

The same day of this story a guy with a video of him using a girls head as a speed bag in a street fight was picked 19 overall.

NFL TEAMS DO NOT CARE ABOUT DOMESTIC VIOLENCE.
[Reply]
kcpasco 10:07 PM 04-25-2019
Originally Posted by Eleazar:
Frankly it's embarrassing to the franchise that he hasn't been cut yet. They shouldn't have dithered long enough for the local newspaper to print this column, draft or no draft.
They aren’t cutting him now because of the draft. You will get your wish after the draft though. Because positive draft coverage is more important than child abuse.
[Reply]
BlackOp 10:08 PM 04-25-2019
Honor and decency have netted this team exactly ZERO Superbowl appearances in 50 years...

I just remembered what drew me to becoming a football fan...the private lives of the players!

I was SOOO interested in what they did in the off-season, who they dated, their relationship spats...what they ate. What they wore when they got off the plane...

The NFL took DOD under the table money to force patriotic displays before games...what honor is he referencing again...the fake one that the media has created? The one that ignores that Big Ben raped a woman while his security watched the door? Oh I get it...it happened long enough ago that it doesn't matter...

A bunch of double standard horseshit....

The Patriots and Broncos have won SBs while cheating...did I inadvertently just join the Boy Scouts...the media tells me I did.
[Reply]
MMXcalibur 10:09 PM 04-25-2019
The Patriots are behind the dismantling of our offensive juggernaut.
I am 98.4% certain.
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Prison Bitch 10:12 PM 04-25-2019
Honor and decency means shitting on due process. Yeah ok, whatever.
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kcclone 10:12 PM 04-25-2019
LOL the defensive darling of the NFL for the 2000’s was indicted for murdering two people. He now works for ESPN.

Let’s not pretend the NFL is about honor.
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Fishpicker 10:12 PM 04-25-2019
I'll be fine with whatever C Hunt decides. I just hope it isn't a hasty decision. measure twice, cut once. I'm about sick of social justice mobs attempting to ruin every form of entertainment
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