Former Buckeye Spence faces up to his past at Senior Bowl


Associated Press

MOBILE, ALA.

Noah Spence has to repeatedly address the troubled past that took him from Ohio State to college football exile and then to Eastern Kentucky.

Like every other Senior Bowl player, Spence is trying to answer any questions potential NFL employers might have about his game during the weeklong proving session. Then, there are the team interviews, during which Spence must explain those past misdeeds.

A rising star as a pass rusher, he was banned from the Big Ten Conference after two failed drug tests, later admitting he used Ecstasy.

Thus the questions, and Spence said there’s only one way to face them.

“Just tell them the truth,” he said. “You can’t make up any stories. You can’t lie about it. It feels better just telling the truth and letting them know everything and to get past it and start talking about football again.”

He said that transition comes pretty quickly and that he’s met with too many teams to name. The New Orleans Saints were among them. General manager Mickey Loomis said such meetings are about collecting information and forming a “first impression.”

“Every guy you have questions about,” Loomis said. “Obviously, there are things that they have to answer, in terms of an event that may have happened. But the process really is the same, I think, for each player.”

Past troubles can be the factor that drops a first-round talent in the draft, but Spence feels like he has put his problems behind him.

Now the challenge is convincing prospective employers.

Spence was suspended for the entire 2014 season when the Buckeyes won the national championship. The Big Ten permanently banned him, denying his appeal in November 2014.

On the field, the 2013 all-conference pick didn’t miss a beat after transferring to FCS Eastern Kentucky. He was a first-team All-American after collecting 11 1/2 sacks.

“I’ve grown up a lot,” Spence said. “I’ve matured like no other. It’s been a great experience just going through all this and feeling how it feels to be at the bottom and then having to work my way back up. It feels great.”

Spence said he has changed a great deal since the behavior that led to his ouster from the Big Ten. He said he wallowed for a couple of days after the league’s decision before getting back to training for his next destination, at the encouragement of his father, Greg.

“I’m not the same as I was,” Spence said. “I don’t think the same. I’ve got a better focus about me. I know what I want in life now. Football’s at the top after God and my family. That’s basically where I’m at right now in my head.”