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Herbstreit to officially apologise to LSU & BCS !!

Posted on 12/17/07 at 4:51 pm
Posted by TigerTerrorist
Member since Nov 2006
2623 posts
Posted on 12/17/07 at 4:51 pm
ESPN just announced!!

Hell he ought to pay a damn fine for that sh't!
Posted by NASA_ISS_Tiger
Huntsville, Al via Sulphur, LA
Member since Sep 2005
7985 posts
Posted on 12/17/07 at 4:53 pm to
Gonna be posted on the web?
Posted by BamaScoop
Panama City Beach, Florida
Member since May 2007
53874 posts
Posted on 12/17/07 at 4:53 pm to
He should publically appologize and he should have done it weeks ago. Better lat e than never I guess. I guess they were waiting to make sure it wasn't true.
Posted by SaintLSUnAtl
THE REAL MJ
Member since Jan 2007
22129 posts
Posted on 12/17/07 at 6:29 pm to
quote:

Hell he ought to pay a damn fine for that sh't!




get over it already
Posted by mtemplet
Baton Rouge
Member since Sep 2006
1622 posts
Posted on 12/17/07 at 6:35 pm to
When??????
Posted by LSU5803
Lafayette, La
Member since Jul 2004
1124 posts
Posted on 12/17/07 at 6:41 pm to
I emailed them last night wondering if they were going to apologize publicly.

Some of ESPN' s commentators/analysts have recently bashed Les Miles. They publicly challenged his honesty and integrity, calling him a liar when he claimed he was not leaving to take the coaching position at the University of Michigan. Now that Rich Rodriguez has accepted that position, will ESPN' s commentators/analyst be as quick with their apologies to coach Miles. Hopefully, ESPN is big enough to admit when it has made a mistake.


LSU5803
Lafayette, Louisiana
Posted by lsusportsman2
Member since Oct 2007
27232 posts
Posted on 12/17/07 at 6:56 pm to
i don't care what he does, he didn't hurt me, we won even with that distraction, which most teams don't do, i really don't care.
Posted by KCinDC
Baton Rouge, LA
Member since Jan 2007
1520 posts
Posted on 12/18/07 at 9:55 pm to
ESPN's Ombudsman weighed in on this one.

I know, I know, it's the first time I've ever read an ombudsman column too. Not the same as on the air, but it's something.

quote:

Les Miles: Reporting the future

On the morning of Saturday, Dec. 1, Louisiana State University's football team was readying itself for the Southeastern Conference title game against Tennessee, a game that would determine whether LSU went on to play for the BCS national championship. Rumors that LSU coach Les Miles might leave to take the coaching job at his alma mater, the University of Michigan, had been widely circulating since the day, two weeks earlier, when Michigan coach Lloyd Carr had announced his retirement. To avoid distraction before the title game, all directly concerned parties at LSU and Michigan had reportedly agreed to avoid any job-change maneuvering until the week after the game.

But early that Saturday, on ESPN and ESPNEWS and later ESPN.com, the word was out: "Sources have told ESPN's Kirk Herbstreit that, barring any unforeseen circumstances, Michigan will announce early next week it has reached an agreement with LSU coach Les Miles to be its next head football coach." As Herbstreit's later remarks would make clear, that information came not from "sources," but from a single, anonymous, uncorroborated source. Miles called a short news conference two hours before the game to angrily label the report "misinformation."

Herbstreit stood by his source, despite Miles' continued emphatic assertion that he was staying at LSU, until the ESPN college football analyst finally was forced by circumstances to concede his error the next day. By the end of the week, LSU, the SEC champion, announced that Miles had signed an amended contract that extends his stay at LSU through 2012.

Given an anonymous source, who to judge by repeated on-the-record denials was not Miles, his agent or Michigan athletic director Bill Martin, and given the degree of at least slight doubt implied by "barring any unforeseen circumstances," why did ESPN go with a story that risked affecting outcomes -- the championship game and the job negotiations -- by itself becoming an unforeseen circumstance?

"As to how breaking a story might impact events," Doria said, "unless those events are life-threatening or equally monumental -- we don't consider coaching job negotiations or preparation for a football game in either category -- we wouldn't withhold information."

That is fine, but only if ESPN consistently holds its sports journalism to the same standards applied in good non-sports journalism when using anonymous sources. To my mind, Herbstreit, a former Ohio State quarterback and not an experienced reporter, was less to blame for this ill-founded scoop than the senior College GameDay producers who should have advised him against going on air with such shaky information instead of convincing him it was his journalistic obligation to share with viewers what "a source" had told him.

"Given that no deal is done until an agreement is signed, we could have tempered this one more than it was," Doria said. "In hindsight, we should have said something like, 'A source has told ESPN that Miles and Michigan have agreed on money and length of term, but no contract is signed, and Miles has to go to Michigan for a face-to-face interview with AD Bill Martin.' "

That would have been better, but we have been given no reason to believe it would have been any more true. All we know for sure is that ESPN's reputation as a reliable source of "scoops" has taken another blow. When viewers respond to the phrase "a source has told ESPN" with a "we'll see" attitude, as many who write me say they now do, it undermines the efforts of ESPN's entire staff of producers, editors and reporters.


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