And the N.F.L., which once again has shown that it is ready to put profit and winning above all else, will face yet another reckoning.
It’s well known that claims of sexual abuse are difficult to prove in the criminal courts, particularly when there is little to no physical evidence and the alleged acts took place in private. But once Watson’s criminal case ended, plenty of N.F.L. teams were ready to move on as if his accusers hadn’t spoken with troubling consistency about what happened to them.
With Watson’s longtime team, the Houston Texans, looking to trade away its star quarterback the moment the criminal case concluded, the Atlanta Falcons, Carolina Panthers and New Orleans Saints all jumped into the recruiting mix with Cleveland.
These teams were eager to discuss trading their integrity for a chance to build a winner with Watson. They couldn’t help themselves, couldn’t wait to see what would become of the civil cases. They disregarded victims and their accounts.
Yes, Cleveland got him. But if you are a fan, an employee or an owner of a team that went after Watson, well, remember the old saying: Sometimes the best prayers are those that go unanswered. That now applies to you.
In Cleveland, it will be a different story. Watson initially spurned the Browns, but the team beckoned with a deal so lavish it seemed intended to coat him in a patina of respectability: five years, $230 million, every dollar guaranteed.
Roger Goodell, the league commissioner, could have looked at all of the publicly known allegations and decided enough was enough. He could have sent a strong message by putting Watson on leave for violating the N.F.L.’s conduct policy — no matter what happens in the legal fight.