COLLEGE STATION,  Texas — Texas A&M quarterback Johnny Manziel pleaded guilty  Monday to a misdemeanor stemming from a 2012 bar fight near campus,  closing a case that had dogged his Heisman Trophy-winning season. Manziel  admitted he failed to identify himself to police following the  altercation. As part of a plea deal, other charges against the  20-year-old, including disorderly conduct, were dismissed. Brazos  County Attorney Rod Anderson says Manziel was ordered to pay a $2,000  fine, about $230 in court costs and was credited with the overnight jail  time he served following his arrest. He had faced up to 180 days in  jail for the June 2012 incident. Police said an officer on bike  patrol had intervened to break up a fight between Manziel and Marvin  McKinney just after 2 a.m. in a street in the Northgate entertainment  district.  McKinney told police that a friend of Manziel’s had called  him a racial slur. He said Manziel shoved McKinney as he approved the  two, and then they exchanged punches. When officers asked Manziel  for an ID, he produced a phony Louisiana driver’s license that showed  his birthday as Dec. 6, 1990. Police checked Manziel’s wallet and found  two more ID cards — a fake Texas driver’s license and Manziel’s real  driver’s license that listed his date of birth as Dec. 6, 1992. The  quarterback dubbed Johnny Football piled up 4,600 total yards last  season and helped the Aggies knock off No. 1 Alabama on the road. He  became the first freshman to win the Heisman Trophy and has continued to  garner headlines in the offseason. He has been famously  photographed partying and gambling, and even his decision to take  classes online last semester became controversial. Manziel said his  decision to limit himself exclusively to the virtual classroom was a  reaction to the attention he was receiving on campus, though he expects  to return to regular classes this summer and next fall. Not long ago, he tweeted that he “can’t wait to leave college station… whenever it may be.” “Don’t ever forget that I love A&M with all of my heart, but please please walk a day in my shoes,” he added. Manziel  even drew attention this weekend after leaving the Manning family’s  football camp in Louisiana a day early, citing illness. “After  missing and being late for some practice assignments, Johnny explained  that he had been feeling ill. Consequently, we agreed that it was in  everyone’s best interest for him to go home a day early,” camp spokesman  Greg Blackwell said Sunday. The headlines won’t end any time soon: SEC media days are this week in Alabama, as are ESPN’s ESPY Awards.
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