Jaw Breaker wrote:
Maybe Dan is carrying more water for Theo and senses Joe is vulnerable.
ding ding ding. Read the piece he wrote last week:
https://670thescore.radio.com/bernstein ... tive-leaveQuote:
Epstein did his best to defer to the league's jurisdiction in his comments to reporters, but there were some notable aspects to his press conference alongside owner Tom Ricketts. It was as troubled as the usually unflappable Epstein has appeared publicly, for one, with more self-editing of his words than usual as he navigated difficult rhetorical territory. He undid the word "encouraged" when he answered a question about the Cubs' role in cooperating with the MLB investigation, not wanting to make it seem as if they actively invited the examination of Russell. Later, he similarly retracted the term "balanced" regarding whom to believe, so as not to appear dismissive of the accuser's veracity. He rarely shows us the wires like this.
Another telling response came when he was given the opportunity to vouch for Russell's character, and replied only with "I would say that I know him in a baseball context." That left a great deal of space for obvious reasons and did so in dramatic fashion.
But he fared far better than manager Joe Maddon, who gave lip-service to the disciplinary process but claimed to have not read Reidy-Russell's description of events that's the reason for all of this. Yet multiple times he said that he wanted to "hear everything before I draw a conclusion" and wanted all available information to evaluate both sides. It would seem that the actual post by the woman who says she was victimized would be the single most important source of information available to him, but he seems to disagree for some reason, content to snap back to the reporter asking him if he thought he should read it with a flippant "Should I?"
Yes, Joe. You should.
It was a rough turn for Maddon on a rough day for the Cubs, as a team that has enjoyed its fair share of party time was forced into difficult conversations about something disturbing and deeply serious.
"All things considered, Theo handled the difficult situation as bravely and as deftly as he could. Meanwhile, bad decision maker Joe Maddon made another bad decision by disrespecting members of the media and Literally All Women by being ignorant of the situation. It makes one wonder what else he could prove to be ignorant of." And now if the Cubs dick-trip their way out of a pennant, you have a loftier cause for firing him than just "dumbass let Pedro Strop hit for himself."
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Molly Lambert wrote:
The future holds the possibility to be great or terrible, and since it has not yet occurred it remains simultaneously both.