Dennis Young: ESPN’s Adam Schefter can’t stop embarrassing himself

Adam Schefter exists as a stooge for NFL power brokers. That’s less of a criticism than it is a straightforward description of what it means to be ESPN’s top voice of a sport. But what we’ve learned in recent weeks is that Schefter is not merely a stooge, but a dangerously incompetent one.

The latest fiasco centers around a lawsuit from a woman who says Vikings running back Dalvin Cook physically abused her. Schefter, in trademark fashion, introduced the story to the world, and in the process mangled it horrifically.

“Cook is the victim of domestic abuse and extortion,” Schefter tweeted Tuesday night, if that were definitively the case, before adding that, oh yeah, his agent says there’s “pending litigation.”

Cook is countersuing the woman, alleging she pepper sprayed and beat him, before holding him and his guests hostage at gunpoint for several hours. However, referring to “pending litigation” is beyond misleading. News was about to break — handled professionally by the Minneapolis Star-Tribune — that the woman accused Cook of beating her, and had text messages and photos to back up her claims in the lawsuit.

The complicated facts of one particular case do not exculpate Schefter’s sheer inability to carry out the basic tasks of journalism expected of any junior reporter in the country, much less the most senior practitioner in the field. By rushing to publicize a single side of a complicated story, Schefter potentially poisoned the well in a domestic violence case. Haphazard forced apologies can’t put that particular toothpaste back in the tube.

Reporters like Robert Klemko, who would know about carefully handling serious allegations against an NFL player, spent Wednesday ripping Schefter, laying out the incentives for cutting the corners that he did. (Cook’s agent, Zac Hiller, has seemingly fed Schefter multiple scoops across the years, and would presumably continue to do so in return for the odd favor.) The woman’s lawyer put out a scorched-Earth statement to USA Today, accurately accusing him of “journalistic malpractice.”

“ESPN’s journalistic malpractice yesterday sends a painfully clear message to billions of girls and women around the world, that they should be afraid to come forward because media companies like ESPN are more interested in protecting the powerful celebrities that make them money, rather than engaging in honest reporting and competent journalism,” the lawyer, Daniel Cragg, said.

After yet another full day of being raked over the coals, Schefter went on SportsCenter early Wednesday evening to belatedly apologize. “In a case like this, it’s important to reach out to all sides for information and comment,” he said. “When I got the information the other night, I didn’t do that. I could have done a better job reaching out to the other people, especially on a story as sensitive and significant as this. Didn’t do that properly, and it’s a reminder to slow down in this world.”

What Schefter is describing here is the absolute bare minimum. Simply getting what two people say happened isn’t adequate, and yet it’s twice as much work as Schefter did. Not reaching out to the woman or her lawyers is such a basic failure that it gives credence to Mike Florio’s farfetched report that “Some in the industry think Adam Schefter is trying to get fired by ESPN so that he can cash in one of the cash-rich sports books.”

ESPN wouldn’t answer questions about its editorial process, like if Schefter was supposed to run “tips” like this by an editor before tweeting them, or if it would have been able to report its own story on the Cook case if Schefter hadn’t tweeted. “Adam acknowledged what happened and we are addressing the matter with him directly,” the company said. It’s a statement that ESPN is increasingly used to putting out.

It hasn’t even been a month since Schefter was forced to admit that he does know another basic rule of journalism: Don’t email full drafts of stories to powerful sources. But it’s worth noting that while it was reported in October of this year, Schefter called Washington president Bruce Allen “Mr. Editor” back in 2015. He’s been doing his job this way for a long time.

Categories: Sports