The Official "Espn First Take , FS1 Undisputed, Sportscenter , Sports Radio, Podcasts etc" Thread.

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This means ESPN is going to swing back to center-right. Jemele's days are numbered (now more so then yesterday). Bomani, Stephen A., and everyone at The Undefeated are walking on eggshells.
 
elgato;c-10151021 said:
This means ESPN is going to swing back to center-right. Jemele's days are numbered (now more so then yesterday). Bomani, Stephen A., and everyone at The Undefeated are walking on eggshells.

Thats what I got out of his resignation also.....Disney probably told him to get down or lay down.......its going to be interesting when an NBA player with progressive views claps back at an ESPN personality with a center-right view who was talking reckless about social issues, etc

 

http://awfulannouncing.com/espn/dan-le-batard-brought-rob-manfred-onto-show-tore-marlins-mess.html

Dan Le Batard brought Rob Manfred onto his show and tore into him over the Marlins mess

It’s not a great time to be a baseball fan in South Florida. The Miami Marlins’ new ownership group — fronted by Derek Jeter and backed by billionaire Bruce Sherman — announced its desire to slash pay and got right to work, trading Giancarlo Stanton and Marcell Ozuna. For a fanbase that has endured numerous fire-sales over its 25-year existence, this teardown is understandably frustrating.

On Wednesday, ESPN Radio host Dan Le Batard brought MLB commissioner Rob Manfred on air to grill him on baseball in South Florida. It got very explosive, very quickly.

After Le Batard welcomed Manfred by saying baseball didn’t deserve a single fan in South Florida, Manfred pointed out the Marlins have won two World Series titles since being founded in 1993. Then Le Batard cut to the chase:

Le Batard: Rob, were you aware of Jeter’s plan to trade players and slash payroll?

Manfred: You know, it’s interesting. We—

Le Batard: Yes or no, please.

Manfred: You know, I’m happy to do yes or nos—

Le Batard: You can elaborate afterward, I just want to know if you were aware of the plan. Did you approve a plan that had “slash payroll” again for South Florida?

Manfred: We do not approve operating decisions by any ownership. New owner, current owners or not. And as a result the answer to your question is no.

Le Batard: Rob, Rob—

Manfred: I’m not gonna be deposed like this is some adversary thing. You want me to ask me questions, I’ll answer them the way I want to answer them. If that’s not good enough, we’ll move on.

Le Batard: No, that’s fine, but you’re coming on here and saying you weren’t aware of Jeter’s plan to trade players and slash payroll? We’re starting with a lie, Rob. That’s where we’re starting. You can’t tell me you’re not aware of that.

Manfred: I’m not going to sit here and have you call me a liar. I explained to you that we do not get involved in operating-level decisions in the ownership process, the ownership approval process. Clubs make those local decisions by themselves.

Le Batard: Were you aware of his plan though? Were you aware of it?

Manfred: No. No. We did not have player-specific plans from the Miami Marlins or any other team that were approved in the ownership process. Those are decisions individual owners make, and they do not have to be cleared by us or approved by us.
http://www.miamiherald.com/sports/spt-columns-blogs/barry-jackson/article190802589.html

Two people directly involved in the sales process said that Jeter and Sherman were required to tell other owners their intentions with payroll during the approval process, and that they informed the other owners that payroll would be cut from $115 million to the $85 million to $90 million range, with $85 million used at times and $90 million other times in those discussions.



A source directly involved in the Marlins sales process, after hearing the Le Batard interview, said, via text: “Commissioner said was not aware of [Jeter] plan to slash payroll. Absolutely not true. They request and receive the operating plan from all bidders.

“Project Wolverine [the name for Jeter’s plan] called on his group to reduce payroll to $85 million. This was vetted and approved by MLB prior to approval by MLB. Every [Jeter] investor and non investor has the Wolverine financial plan of slashing payroll to $85 million. Widely circulated.”
 

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