TMZSPN just rescinded that report... SMH. Just out for the night now according to them
"Just out for the night according to them?"
The error was made in a game that didn't involve Arizona. It was made by a color-commentator in the AZ St. versus Oregon St. when the commentator said he'd been relieved of his duties.
ESPN reported, and here's the quote, āWe apologize for the regrettable error. The information was not properly vetted via our news and reporting standards, and the production team worked quickly to correct the mistake.ā
I'm lost trying to find the "out for the night." I'm not lost when I read this:
Via
USA TODAY Sports:
āI believe it is in the best interest of our team that I not coach the game tonight,ā Miller said in a statement. āI continue to fully support the Universityās efforts to fully investigate this matter and am confident that I will be vindicated.ā
He sat a night because all of this isn't accurate? To me, that flies in the face of simple logic if we're being asked to assume there's nothing to see there.
TMZSPN standing by their report from an unnamed source... This could get fun
Am I reading this right? It reads as if you're choosing to believe Miller here--versus ESPN--just because it's an "unnamed source?"
I'm seeing an assistant coach in the custody of the FBI. I"m seeing a player who just served another suspension for failing a drug test. I'm seeing a program that's not arguable out of control, but IS out of control.
What really deserves angest from collegiate basketball fans
is this quote from an article on Deadspin:
Since the report came out, Millerās been suspended from team activities, both practices and games, while the school looks into the matter; Ayton, meanwhile, has stayed with the team, and put up 28 points and 18 boards in a Saturday loss to unranked Oregon. The rest of the college sports realm has largely reacted the same way it has to every development of this caseāsome decried the backdoor payments as a direct act against God and bemoaned their black mark on a pure game; other, more reasonable people kept calling out the NCAA for being the corrupt institution that forces coaches and athletes to work out these deals with seedy characters in an unregulated black market. Miller, meanwhile, has receded from public life, while pundits discuss his actions as being ācareer-ending.ā
"...that forces coaches and athletes to work out these deals with seedy characters." Forces?
"...backdoor payments as a direct act against God and bemoaned their black mark on a pure game?" A pure game? We've known that NOT to be true for years.
Is it possible that ESPN has been forced into the role of protagonist in this story simply because a lot don't care for some of their commentary on social issues? If so, I suppose I can wrap my mind around that: but only momentarily.
The elephant, or two elephants, in the room here are Forde and Thamel--both of whom are reporting things very similar to Schlabach and more importantly have viewed documents substantiating their stories.