November 5, 2024

Read in Browser

Front Office Sports

Joel Embiid recently shoved a columnist who evoked his son and dead brother, while Jason Kelce smashed the phone of a heckler who used an epithet to insult his brother, Travis. Both crossed the proverbial line, but it’s easy for me to understand why they did. In today’s column, I wanted to explore both altercations and the dynamics at play for high-profile athletes and media members.

—Michael McCarthy

McCarthy: Embiid, Kelce May Have Overreacted, but Hard to Blame Them

Brad Penner-Imagn Images

It’s easy to condemn high-profile athletes when they target members of the press for doing their jobs, or when they act churlishly with fans. With that said, I think Joel Embiid and Jason Kelce were in the right during two profanity-laced altercations this weekend.

Let’s start with Embiid. The 76ers center allegedly shoved Philadelphia Inquirer columnist Marcus Hayes Saturday night after a 124–107 loss to the Grizzlies. 

Embiid was seething about Hayes’s Oct. 23 column questioning his professionalism and physical conditioning. What set the 30-year-old superstar off, though, was that Hayes cited Embiid’s son and late brother, both named Arthur, in his piece. 

Big mistake. When Hayes entered the locker room after the game a week later, Embiid confronted him. According to ESPN, he said, “The next time you bring up my dead brother and my son again, you are going to see what I’m going to do to you and I’m going to have to … live with the consequences,” Embiid warned. Hayes tried to apologize—but the NBA star wouldn’t hear it. “That’s not the fucking first time,” Embiid said.

As things escalated, Embiid’s “open hand made contact with Hayes’ neck and collarbone area,” according to the Inquirer. When 76ers security asked other reporters not to report on the incident, Embiid would have none of it. “They can do whatever they want,” he declared. “I don’t give a shit.”

Hayes had previously edited out the portion of his lede that set Embiid off. But here was the offending passage according to Adam Aaronson of PhillyVoice: “Joel Embiid consistently points to the birth of his son, Arthur, as the major inflection point in his basketball career. … He often says that he wants to be great to leave a legacy for the boy named after his little brother, who tragically died in an automobile accident when Embiid was in his first year as a 76er. Well, in order to be great at your job, you first have to show up for work. Embiid has been great at just the opposite.”

Embiid and other athletes should never lay their hands on the press—or anybody, for that matter. They have zero to gain, and everything to lose. Embiid deserves a suspension and fine the NBA is very likely to hand down. But it was Hayes who crossed the line more in my book. Do you want to rip Embiid in a column? Go for it. But do not bring up his family—especially his beloved son and dead little brother—to make your case.

As you would expect, the Inquirer is taking the incident seriously. Yes, Hayes has been critical of the 76ers. But that’s what columnists are supposed to do—as long as they do it fairly. “Marcus is an experienced and accomplished columnist who offers sharp and illuminating commentary grounded in his observations. You are free to disagree with what he says, but a physical assault is unwarranted and untenable and we are taking this matter very seriously,” said Inquirer editor Gabriel Escobar in a statement. 

The NBA said in a statement: “We are aware of reports of an incident in the Sixers locker room and are commencing an investigation.” The 76ers declined to comment. But a source with direct knowledge said the team is fully cooperating with the investigation.

As Zach Harper of The Athletic said on SiriusXM NBA Radio, what Hayes wrote was “inappropriate.” But Embiid also went beyond the pale when he laid hands on the columnist. 

“Is it possible that everybody is wrong in this scenario?” asked Harper. (Answer? You betcha.)

Kelce Confrontation

Meanwhile, I had no problem with Kelce smashing the cellphone of the punk fan who called his brother, Travis, a “f****t” for dating Taylor Swift. 

Yes, Jason Kelce lost his cool outside Beaver Stadium after the Ohio State–Penn State game. Yes, the retired Eagles center should not have gotten violent. And I’m sure ESPN’s PR team became queasy over video of Kelce repeating the same anti-gay slur when he demanded, “Who’s the f****t now?” But this is a situation where a heckler deliberately insulted Kelce’s brother to get a reaction on camera. Well, you got what you wanted, Tiger. How does it taste?

Kelce was one of ESPN’s biggest new hires this year. The likely future Hall of Famer opened Monday Night Countdown with an explanation, pledging to be better in the future. Translation: There will be no fine or suspension from his bosses at ESPN.

“Listen, I’m not happy with anything that took place. I’m not proud of it. In a heated moment, I chose to greet hate with hate and I just don’t think that’s a productive thing. I really don’t.”

As fantasy analyst Matthew Berry tweeted: “My reaction is the stupid kid is lucky it was only his phone that got smashed. Don’t blame Jason Kelce one bit.” 

I feel the same way.

Trump Says Leagues Set ‘Impossible’ Ticket Prices

John David Mercer-Imagn Images

During his time in the White House, former U.S. President Donald Trump attacked NFL owners for letting their players kneel in protest of systemic racism. Just ahead of Election Day, Trump was asked about the issues he feels sports fans face by Bill Belichick and Jim Gray on SiriusXM’s Let’s Go! podcast.  

The former president believes leagues are pricing out middle-class sports fans with high ticket prices. “The leagues are not taking care of their fans. They really aren’t. They’re making it impossible.” Trump said he would “work on” high ticket prices if he won the election, without providing any specifics. (The cost for a family of four to attend an NFL game was $631.63 in 2023, up 7.1%, according to Team Marketing Report.) 

Unsurprisingly, Trump says he still has beef with the NFL. “They don’t treat people well. And they don’t treat their fans well.”

Trump also predicted he could solve the PGA Tour–LIV Golf feud in “the better part of 15 minutes.” (Recent reports indicate a deal is close.) He called MLB keeping the late Pete Rose out of the Hall of Fame a “ridiculous” decision. Trump thinks the NFL’s new kickoff rule looks “weird.” Belichick agreed.

[Related: The NFL, MLB, NBA Owners That Donated to Trump or Harris]

World Series vs. NBA Finals

Brad Penner-Imagn Images

The dominant narrative in recent years is that MLB is spent as a national TV ratings force, that it’s primarily a local media draw. But narratives are often inaccurate. Especially when MLB can pit its two most storied teams from the two largest TV markets—along with superstars like Freddie Freeman, Shohei Ohtani, Aaron Judge, and Juan Soto—against one another in the Fall Classic. Let’s look at Fox Sports’ audiences for the 2024 Dodgers-Yankees World Series. 

The Fall Classic airs during the most crowded portion of the sports schedule. The Dodgers won in five games, robbing Fox of huge TV audiences and ad revenue from Games 6 and 7.  But this year’s five-game World Series still outdrew audiences for the comparable five-game NBA Finals between the Celtics and Mavericks in June. Consider:

FOS illustration/Colin Salao

The World Series averaged 15.2 million viewers on Fox, up 35% from the 11.2 million average for the NBA Finals on ABC.

Mike’s Mailbag

Jerry’s Threat, Caitlin’s Choice

Tim Heitman-USA TODAY Sports

Reader James Braswell commented via LinkedIn on our story about Cowboys owner Jerry Jones threatening the jobs of local radio hosts in Dallas: “Only if Jerry would force himself to retire!! It’s easy to point fingers and divert from the root cause of the problems.”

Another reader wasn’t happy about our scoop that Unrivaled was planning a “Lionel Messi–like” offer to entice Caitin Clark to join the start-up 3-on-3 women’s basketball league this January. “I hope it succeeds. In the WNBA, tho, opponents brutalized Clark on a regular basis, w/out any accountability from the front office. What’s the upside for her to play in an offseason league where she could face the same thing & risk injury that jeopardizes her career & earnings?”

Mike Drops

  • Fox Corp. says it has sold out its advertising inventory for Super Bowl LIX at “record pricing.” Thirty-second commercials for the Big Game are selling for around $7 million a pop. Fox reaped nearly $600 million in ad revenue when it last hosted the Super Bowl in 2023.
  • Remember Skip Bayless? The guy who drove Shannon Sharpe off FS1’s Undisputed due to his Tom Brady worship? Well, the worm has turned. Bayless still thinks Tom Terrific is the greatest NFL player in history. But Bayless also thinks Brady is so mediocre on TV that he’s the “Daniel Jones” of NFL analysts, reported Awful Announcing. “He just talks and talks and talks some more about what is so clichédly obvious. So annoyingly obvious, so Patriots-Brady talking to the media is obvious. So eager to be a nice guy,” said Bayless on his podcast. “So little insight, so many words. So many close-ups. ‘Hi, I’m Tom Brady.’ Yeah, we know, unfortunately, we know, Tom.”
  • Some rare good news in the struggling media industry: The Athletic posted a quarterly profit for the first time since The New York Times bought the sports media company for $550 million in 2022.
Advertise Awards Learning Events Video Shows
Written by Michael McCarthy
Edited by Or Moyal, Catherine Chen

If this email was forwarded to you, you can subscribe here.

Update your preferences / Unsubscribe

Copyright © 2024 Front Office Sports. All rights reserved.
460 Park Avenue South, 7th Floor, New York NY, 10016

Subscribe To Our Daily Newsletters

  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.