Sports Blotter: "Not Just for Bengals Anymore" Edition
By MATT TAIBBI | October 11, 2006
 IT'S ALL BETTER NOW: Brett Myers's domestic assault charges were dropped last week. |

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Not so fast, Cincinnati Bengals. The San Diego Chargers are making a belated run at this season’s NFL arrest title. Moreover, they’re doing it in a fashion reminiscent of the great Indianapolis Colts defensive backfield arrest wave of 2005, one on-field unit at a time.Phoenix readers may recall reading last week about starting Charger safety Terrence Kiel, who was arrested for the thoroughly lame charge of shipping codeine-based cough syrup to a PO Box in Texas. Well, Kiel played last week against the Steelers, but another Charger defensive back was put out on the streets after being busted in a domestic-violence rap. The player was Markus Curry, another Charger defensive back, who was picked up following a routine traffic stop and charged with inflicting bodily injury to a spousal cohabitant. Apparently a complaint had been phoned in to San Diego police. Curry had been on the Chargers’ practice squad but was released in the wake of the arrest.
Curry, who was suspended for domestic-violence issues while a student at Michigan, was the fifth Charger to be arrested since April. Like Kiel, he was also shot once — although Curry was shot in college, while Kiel was shot after being drafted. Linebackers Steve Foley and Shaun Phillips were both arrested this summer following altercations with police officers. Foley was subsequently shot by police in highly ambiguous circumstances.
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Propriety demands
This newspaper make a point of mentioning that Philadelphia Phillies pitcher Brett Myers, arrested this summer in a highly publicized domestic-violence incident here in Boston, had the charges dropped last week after his wife signed an “affidavit of accord and satisfaction” indicating she did not want to press charges.
The agreement officially makes it impossible and improper for sportswriters and radio personalities to bust Myers’s balls for being a wife-beating jackass. Facts such as Myers’s wife being found by police in tears and with a swollen face, and witnesses seeing the pitcher striking his wife and pulling her hair will no longer be the subject of smart-alecky commentary in the sports sections of America.
On a serious note, there is something unpleasant about this court decision. It’s true that athletes who are exonerated of crimes very often fail to receive even close to the same amount of attention after being pronounced innocent as they did following their arrests. But in this case, there were several eyewitnesses to the war of the Myerses, and Myers himself issued a public apology for his “improper” behavior. Moreover, reporters covering the latest court proceeding noted that court officers treated the pitcher like a celebrity. According to the Associated Press, one told him, “Good luck, it will be all right,” while another said, “Nice seeing you again.”



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Illegal use of hands
In a week where Markus Curry joined the ranks of arrested NFL defensive backs, Sylvester Croom’s Mississippi State Bulldogs donated one of their cornerbacks to this summer’s shocking wave of college defensive-backfield arrests.
Related:
Skell of the year, Do mess with Texas, Jaws, More
- Skell of the year
Much less funny than usual, was 2007.
- Do mess with Texas
The Houston Texans are like the soy cheese of the sporting world.
- Jaws
Strangely — and who knows why this is — there are fewer in-season arrests in baseball than in either football or basketball.
- Recession busters
It was only a matter of time before the plummeting real-estate market began to claim its first sports-related arrests.
- Zip line
There was an extraordinary incident in Akron, Ohio, this past week involving 20-year-old Rydell Brooks, a sophomore guard on the UA Zips basketball team.
- More fun with the Bengals
It was weird, wasn’t it, that brief period when the Bengals didn’t suck?
- Goal rush!
Get two journalists in a room these days, and before the conversation is five minutes old they'll probably be kvetching about the grim state of the news business. Unless, that is, they happen to be sports journalists, in which case the conversation will likely focus on how absurdly bright the future looks. Especially here in Boston.
- Pugilism sound
It’s been a while since we heard much from the Washington Huskies.
- Squish the fish
Hey New England, can I get a “Sucks to be you, you got a DWI, you LOSER!”
- Groundhog Day
It’s actually getting boring.
- Choosing our religion
It’s all about the coffee.
- Less

Topics:
Sports
, Sports, Major League Baseball, AFC North Division, More
, Sports, Major League Baseball, AFC North Division, Cincinnati Bengals, Domestic Violence, Philadelphia Phillies, San Diego Chargers, Brett Myers, Tarell Brown, Tyrell Gatewood, Less