No, I don't want Meyer back. Are you high? Don't you remember that this death spiral started thanks to the way he left last time? Hard pass.
Should OSU fire him? Well, yes if:
1. The allegations against the assistant coach are true. We've got one side of the story, which is hers, and there are a couple of inconsistencies in it from the reporter's tweets that broke the story. The most likely scenario is that there was mutual violence in that relationship but the larger more physically dominate husband obviously did more damage. As even the accusation of physical or sexual violence against a man is a potential career-ender I think a lot of care needs to made to ensure he's actually guilty.
2. The allegations that he knew about it can be verified to be true. Right now we have the assumption that he knew and didn't report because she texted his wife. There may be messages that I haven't seen, but the ones that I do could also be talking about infidelity - it wasn't clear. Even if there are clear messages you can't just assume that she told him. People should have the right to due process and the presumption of innocence and employers shouldn't give in to mob rule.
OR
1. They can prove that he knew about an allegation of abuse and his contract requires him to report any
potential Title IX violations.