
ThatCrazyMF
6.8K posts

ThatCrazyMF
@Jdlakin84
Gamer and family man



Day 15 of no apology from Dianna Russini. That's legit crazy. Meanwhile, the story just keeps getting worse and worse. It has been 2 weeks since Page Six published photographs of Dianna Russini and Mike Vrabel at a luxury resort in Sedona, Arizona. In that time, Vrabel has addressed his team, spoken to his coaching staff, had what he described as "difficult conversations" with his family, and stood at a podium at the Patriots facility in Foxborough to address the media. He promised the organization would get "the best version of me going forward." He did not hide. He did not deflect. He did not blame the media for covering a story that the media had every right to cover. He showed up, stood in front of reporters, and took ownership like an adult. Dianna Russini has not apologized for anything. She has not taken ownership of anything. She has not directly addressed the readers who trusted her reporting. She has not addressed the profession she spent more than 15 years building a career in. What she has done is resign before The Athletic could finish investigating her, post a resignation letter on X in which she described herself as a victim of "self-feeding speculation that is simply unmoored from the facts," and declared that she "stands behind every story I have ever published." That is not accountability. That is reputation management. And now, on Day 15, the New York Post has published new photos. These photos show Russini and Vrabel having breakfast alone at the Arizona resort. Just the two of them. At a table. No group. No friends. No hiking buddies. No mystery fourth, fifth, or sixth person from the "group of six" that Russini claimed was hanging out with them that day. This matters because Russini's entire defense was built on the idea that the original photos were misleading. Her statement to Page Six was: "The photos don't represent the group of six people who were hanging out during the day." A source described as close to Russini told Page Six she was on "a hiking trip with two female pals." The implication was clear: the photos only captured part of a larger, innocent gathering, and the framing made it look like something it was not. That explanation had problems from the start. Three eyewitnesses at the resort told Page Six they did not see anyone else with Russini and Vrabel. One witness, when asked if Vrabel was with a group of friends, responded: "No, he was with a girl." When the New York Post gave both Russini and Vrabel the opportunity to provide evidence supporting the "group of six" claim before publication, neither could produce anything. No text messages about planning the trip. No screenshots of coordinating arrivals. No photos from a group hike. Nothing. The Athletic reportedly asked Russini for the same kind of evidence internally, and she could not provide it there either. Now there are photos of the two of them eating breakfast alone at the resort. Not with a group. Not with friends. Alone. Every new piece of evidence that surfaces makes the "group of six" defense look worse. At some point, the question stops being whether the original photos were misleading and becomes whether Russini's response to the original photos was misleading. Vrabel has not tried to claim the situation was something it was not. His initial statement, issued the day after the photos were published, called the interaction "completely innocent" and said "any suggestion otherwise is laughable." That is a denial of wrongdoing, but it is not a denial of being there with her. He did not invent a group of people who were supposedly present. He did not claim the photos were taken out of context. He showed up on April 21 and talked about it publicly. He owned the fact that the situation created problems for his family, his staff, and his players. Russini's approach has been the opposite at every step. When the photos dropped, she and Vrabel reportedly coordinated their public response before either issued a statement. She reportedly contacted a crisis communications expert. She offered the "group of six" explanation. When The Athletic launched an investigation on April 10 into the nature of her relationship with Vrabel and whether she had been honest about it, she resigned four days later on April 14, before the investigation could reach a conclusion. Her resignation letter blamed the media for "repeated leaks" and described the coverage as a "public inquiry that has already caused far more damage than I am willing to accept." She wrote that she was stepping down "not because I accept the narrative that has been constructed around this episode, but because I refuse to lend it further oxygen or to let it define me or my career." Nowhere in that letter is an apology. Nowhere is there an acknowledgment that her explanation did not hold up. Nowhere is there a recognition that every NFL story she filed during the years she covered Mike Vrabel's teams now carries a question mark. She covered the Tennessee Titans for ESPN during Vrabel's entire six-season tenure as head coach from 2018 to 2023. She moved to The Athletic and continued covering the NFL, including the Patriots after Vrabel was hired in January 2025. Every scoop she broke, every source she cited, every piece of insider information she reported during that stretch now comes with a question the audience cannot answer: was this journalism, or was this access granted through a personal relationship with the head coach? That is not speculation. That is the professional consequence of a journalist being photographed in what appeared to be an intimate setting with a source she actively covered, failing to provide evidence for her explanation, and resigning before her employer could finish looking into it. Those are her choices. Those are her actions. And she has not taken responsibility for any of them. Vrabel is a football coach. His job does not require editorial independence. His job does not depend on the audience trusting that his relationships with people in the industry are professional. He does not owe anyone objectivity. And yet he is the one who stood up and addressed the situation publicly, multiple times, while the person whose entire career was built on credibility has said nothing beyond a carefully worded resignation letter that reads like it was drafted by a publicist. Multiple outlets have reported that Russini's husband, Kevin Goldschmidt, may have hired a private investigator to follow her. If that reporting is accurate, it suggests this was not a one-time meeting that happened to get photographed. It suggests a pattern that someone close to her suspected and wanted documented. Some have framed this as a gender issue. Jemele Hill argued that male reporters have broken "cardinal rules" without losing their careers, and there is a real conversation to be had about double standards in sports media. But that conversation does not apply here. The issue is not that Russini was photographed with a source. The issue is that she was photographed in what appeared to be an intimate setting with a source she covered, that eyewitnesses contradicted her explanation, that she could not produce evidence supporting her version of events, that she coordinated her response with the person she was photographed with, and that she resigned before her employer's investigation could conclude. Male reporters would face the same scrutiny for the same set of facts. Adam Schefter was criticized for years after emailing a draft story to a Washington front office executive for approval in 2011, and that involved far less than what has surfaced here. It has been 15 days. Mike Vrabel has taken more public accountability for this situation than Dianna Russini has. He has spoken to his family. He has spoken to his players. He has spoken to the media. She has spoken to nobody except through a resignation letter that blamed everyone but herself. And now there are new photos of the two of them having breakfast alone at the resort, and the "group of six" defense is looking less credible by the day. If Russini wants the public to believe she did nothing wrong, she can start by explaining why every piece of evidence that surfaces contradicts the story she told.



Book got a foul called on him for an unatural shooting motion. This shot by Chet, though, very natural! Free throws!







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