The Ohio State University Board of Trustees was in a marathon meeting Wednesday talking about the activity status of football mentor and three-time national title champ Urban Meyer

Ohio State put Meyer on paid leave August 1, saying it needed to examine precisely what he thought about spousal mishandle affirmations leveled against previous colleague mentor Zach Smith
By Wednesday evening, the executive gathering was in its tenth hour. Meyer, his better half, Shelley, and the school's athletic executive, Gene Smith, were seen at the graduated class lobby, where the gathering is occurring

Ohio State terminated Smith on July 23, three days after he was presented with a common insurance arrange for the benefit of his ex, Courtney Smith. She has blamed her previous spouse for manhandle, incorporating abusive behavior at home in 2009 and 2015

The day after Smith's terminating, Meyer informed columnists that he knew regarding the 2009 charge, yet didn't think about the 2015 claim

At that point Courtney Smith told Stadium, a games organize, that she disclosed to Shelley Meyer about the charged 2015 occurrence that year - prompting theory about whether the mentor knew

Ohio State, officially entangled in partitioned embarrassments including charged sex manhandle by a now-perished sports specialist and a jumping mentor, put Meyer on leave and shaped a gathering driven by a previous Securities and Exchange Commission administrator to lead an examination
Meyer later said that he had been insufficiently arranged to examine the issue in late July, and that he had "took after revealing conventions and strategies ... as to Zach Smith episode in 2015

Urban Meyer, one of school football's best mentors, was put on paid leave August 1
Zach Smith told ESPN on August 3 that he without a doubt talked about the 2015 occurrence with Meyer as police examined the issue. Meyer disclosed to him that "in the event that I discover you hit her, you're done," Smith reviewed to ESPN

Meyer has extraordinary compared to other school football winning rates ever, with 188 wins and just 34 misfortunes in 17 years
CNN's Steve Almasy, Jill Martin and Jay Croft added to this report. Elizabeth Joseph announced from Columbus, Ohio


Some sources of cnn.com