OT: - Official Sports Media Thread XII: WEEI has narrowed the gap with 98.5 | Page 12 | HFBoards - NHL Message Board and Forum for National Hockey League

OT: Official Sports Media Thread XII: WEEI has narrowed the gap with 98.5

Last edited:
  • Like
Reactions: BMC and GordonHowe
I had no idea he had played in the NHL.

Craig Hartsburg?

Just the same, I really like him and Sam Rosen and now both of them are gone.
Yep Craig Hartsburg. They had similar moves. Joe was a bit slower lol.

His career was shorter than I thought.
 
  • Like
Reactions: GordonHowe
Yep Craig Hartsburg. They had similar moves. Joe was a bit slower lol.

His career was shorter than I thought.
The only thing I remember about Craig Harrtsburg r is that he was a coach. Isn't that right? Too lazy to look it up.

Maybe it was a general manager. I think he has something to do with to Detroit. where I grew up. Watching the red wings. Or rather, at the time, the Dead wings.
 
The only thing I remember about Craig Harrtsburg r is that he was a coach. Isn't that right? Too lazy to look it up.

Maybe it was a general manager. I think he has something to do with to Detroit. where I grew up. Watching the red wings. Or rather, at the time, the Dead wings.
Yep, he coached, I am a lazy too, but think he coached the Ducks. He was very talented but hurt his knee during or just after his first season. Otherwise, think he had a Norris in him.

 
  • Like
Reactions: GordonHowe
Yep, he coached, I am a lazy too, but think he coached the Ducks. He was very talented but hurt his knee during or just after his first season. Otherwise, think he had a Norris in him.

He coached Hawks, Ducks and Sens. I barely remember the Hawks and he spent three years there. I do not remember him coaching the Sens at all. He is in hockey ops with the Jackets. I too think he had some tie to the Wings in his junior days but can't find it.
 
T

MoneyCall Newsletter
ESPN’s Pat McAfee alludes to false rumors involving Mary Kate Cornett, hopes for ‘silver lining’

ESPN’s Pat McAfee and others amplified a false rumor. A teenager’s life was ‘destroyed’
ESPN’s Pat McAfee and others amplified a false rumor. A teenager’s life was ‘destroyed’

Original article and 10 April, 2025 update, below,

April 1, 2025


It is Feb. 26, and “The Pat McAfee Show” is filming in Indianapolis the week of the NFL Scouting Combine. McAfee sits behind a desk. Before him is an arc of chairs, occupied by a few of what he describes as his “stooges” and a featured guest: Adam Schefter, ESPN’s NFL insider.

Schefter’s presence and the 2025 NFL Scouting Combine logo behind the chairs seemingly previews the day’s subject matter. However, McAfee has a different topic on his mind.

He teases the subject, asking Schefter: “Have you heard about Ole Miss?” One of his cohorts says, “There is a ménage à trois …” that, McAfee adds, “has really captivated the internet.” After some more buildup, McAfee dives in.

“Some Ole Miss frat bro, k? Had a K-D (Kappa Delta) girlfriend,” McAfee says, and then he stresses the word “allegedly.”

“At this exact moment, this is what is being reported by … everybody on the internet: Dad had sex with son’s girlfriend.” Another person on set chimes in – “Not great” – and then McAfee adds: “And then it was made public … that’s the absolute worst-case situation.”

Schefter, looking befuddled and uncomfortable in the chair closest to McAfee, tries to redirect the conversation: “So where is (Ole Miss quarterback) Jaxson Dart in all this?”

McAfee never names the 18-year-old college freshman at the center of the rumor, but he jokes about shoehorning Ole Miss fathers into NFL Draft analysis — “We’re just wondering. His dad … We’re just trying to combine evaluate …” Then another person on set interjects: “Ole Miss dads are slinging meat right now.”

The segment lasts roughly two minutes. McAfee worked an unsubstantiated internet rumor into his show, then transitioned to analyzing Dart’s draft stock and moved on.

Mary Kate Cornett, the college freshman at the center of the rumor, wishes she could do the same.

Five weeks ago, she was a first-year business major dating another Ole Miss student. Happy. Confident. Outgoing. Then her idyllic freshman experience was pierced on Feb. 25 when a spurious claim about her and her boyfriend’s father spread on YikYak, an anonymous message-based app popular among college students. It then gained traction on X and collided with the sports talk ecosystem to become a top trending topic that day. Many posts featured a picture of Cornett pulled from her Instagram account.

The following day, McAfee became the most influential sports personality to address the rumor when he shared it with his ESPN viewers. (His show also has 2.8 million subscribers on YouTube.) But he was not alone. Former NFL receiver Antonio Brown posted a meme about Cornett on X. Two Barstool personalities — KFC Barstool and Jack Mac — referenced the rumor on their personal social media accounts (the former posted a video that was later deleted, and Mac promoted a memecoin with Cornett’s name on X). ESPN radio hosts in St. Louis eagerly dissected the “saga” on their morning show, with Doug Vaughn, a longtime local sportscaster-turned-host, doing a dramatic reading of a purported Snapchat message that accompanied one of the original posts. The station then promoted the clip on YouTube, Facebook, TikTok and Instagram as part of an “Infidelity Alley” segment.

“When the more popular people started posting, that’s when it really, really changed,” Cornett said, adding that they brought legitimacy to “something completely false.”

As the rumor spread, Cornett removed her name from outside her dorm room, but she still had vile messages slipped under her door. Campus police told her she was a target, and she moved into emergency housing and switched to online courses.

Houston police showed up to her mother’s house, guns drawn, in the early hours of Feb. 27, in an apparent instance of “swatting” – when someone falsely reports a crime in hopes of dispatching emergency responders to a residence. According to security camera footage and a police report reviewed by The Athletic, the homicide division responded to the call.

After her phone number was posted online, Cornett’s voicemail was filled with degrading messages. In one, a man laughs as he says that she’s been a “naughty girl” and cheerfully asks her to give him a call. Another male caller says that he has a son, too, in case she’s interested. Several people texted her obscene messages, calling her a “whore” and a “slut” and advised her to kill herself.

“The only way I could describe it is it’s like you’re walking with your daughter on the street, holding her hand, and a car mirror snags her shirt and starts dragging her down the road. And all you can do is watch,” Cornett’s father, Justin, said. “You can’t catch the car. You can’t stop it from happening. You just have to sit there and watch your kid be destroyed.”

Cornett eventually released a statement on Instagram calling the accusations “false,” “inexcusable” and “disturbing.” Her boyfriend labeled the rumor “unequivocally false” in his own post. Justin Cornett posted on Facebook that he had enlisted a private investigator to probe the “defamatory” cyberattack; he also said the family had contacted Oxford police, Ole Miss campus security and the FBI about the matter. (The Oxford police department is investigating the matter.)

Cornett engaged legal representation and said she intends to take action against McAfee and ESPN, which airs his show, and potentially others involved in spreading the rumor. “I would like people to be held accountable for what they’ve done,” she said. “You’re ruining my life by talking about it on your show for nothing but attention, but here I am staying up until 5 in the morning, every night, throwing up, not eating because I’m so anxious about what’s going to happen for the rest of my life.”

An ESPN spokesperson declined to comment. McAfee, KFC Barstool and Jack Mac did not respond to messages seeking comment.

Monica Uddin, Cornett’s Houston-based attorney, said her legal team may also explore action against those who may have promoted the rumor in an attempt to profit from a cryptocurrency play. According to GeckoTerminal, a cryptocurrency tracking website, the memecoin with Cornett’s name was created on Feb. 25 and surged at around 11 a.m. on Feb. 26.

“This is just a Wild West version of a very familiar problem,” Uddin said. “It’s just that it’s even worse because it’s not a company. It’s an 18-year-old girl.”

Sitting in a conference room at a hotel about 90 miles from Oxford — a location she chose because of its distance from the Ole Miss campus — Cornett expressed bewilderment as to why McAfee and other sports media personalities would amplify a false claim that has nothing to do with sports. She is also angry that they would be so callous.

“They don’t think it matters, because they don’t know who I am and they think that I deserve it,” Cornett said. “But I don’t.”

Added Uddin: “They elevated a lie from the worst corners of (X) to millions of general sports fans just to get a few more clicks and ultimately a few more dollars. While they don’t have to deal with it after it airs, the lie is chained to Mary Kate for the rest of her life.”

Since his show began airing on ESPN in 2023, McAfee described WNBA player Caitlin Clark as a “White bitch.” (He later apologized.) On X, he made a joke about former Michigan State and USA Gymnastics doctor Larry Nassar, who sexually abused hundreds of young girls and women. (He defended the reference in the midst of what he described as an “all-out onslaught” of backlash.) Aaron Rodgers, the NFL quarterback, used a paid appearance on McAfee’s show to falsely suggest that talk show host Jimmy Kimmel was linked to pedophile Jeffrey Epstein. McAfee apologized “for being a part of it.”

McAfee, his sidekicks and some of his guests are proud provocateurs, well aware of the line they toe. Consider the disclaimer that runs at the opening of McAfee’s show:

Even Vaughn in St. Louis, who occupies a lower rung on the sports media ladder, nods to the places he may go. His bio on X states: “Opinions are my own except for the ones that could get me in legal trouble.” (Vaughn did not respond to a request for comment.)

But their embrace of a falsehood about a non-public figure in the pursuit of internet clout or a bigger audience or, as the disclaimer says, to be “comedic informative,” carries a human cost.

In recent weeks, Cornett has remained mostly holed up in her room. She no longer dines at her sorority house or the student union. On the rare occasion she goes out, she wears sunglasses and a hat. “I (can’t) even walk on campus without people taking pictures of me or screaming my name or saying super vulgar, disgusting things to me,” she said.

She hoped that isolating would allow the storm to pass, but it persisted. During a recent writing prompt in an online class, one of her classmates took a screenshot of her entry and posted it online. “I just feel defeated, honestly,” Cornett said.

She has turned to her family, friends and her boyfriend for comfort, but they have been impacted as well. Her boyfriend has also been bullied online and tormented on campus. Cornett’s 89-year-old grandfather received a call in the middle of the night; the caller taunted him about his granddaughter.

Cornett doesn’t know if the false accusation will one day cost her a job she wants. She worries that the children she hopes to have someday will go online and read about something she never did. And those that care for her feel equally helpless.

“These folks … they can just say whatever they want and destroy a young girl’s life forever,” said Justin Cornett. “When you begin to have a following like (they do), you have a responsibility to society and to the people you speak about. You have to know the impact of what you might be saying and how it might affect them. And to not consider that is ignorant and naive at best, and malicious and deceitful and hurtful at worst.

“No one’s safe from this sort of attack. It could happen to you, it could happen to someone you love.”

Before he broadcast the rumor about Cornett to his masses, McAfee opened his Feb. 26 show talking about his young daughter, how he took her to Disney World (Disney is ESPN’s parent company) and how witnessing his daughter’s “pure joy” brought tears to his eyes.

“Am I a big, sappy softy now that I have a daughter?” he asked his stooges. “I think so.”

— The Athletic’s Carson Kessler contributed to this report.

(Illustration: John Bradford, Dan Goldfarb / The Athletic; Sean Gardner / Getty Images)

Katie Strang is a senior enterprise and investigative writer for The Athletic, specializing in covering the intersection of sports and social issues, with a focus on sexual abuse and gendered violence. She previously worked at ESPN. You can contact her at [email protected]. Follow Katie on Twitter @KatieJStran


April 10, 2025Updated 12:29 pm EDT
Weeks after amplifying an unsubstantiated internet rumor about Ole Miss freshman Mary Kate Cornett, Pat McAfee briefly alluded to the situation during a live event in Pittsburgh on Wednesday night, saying he “didn’t want to add any more negativity as it was taking place” and will try to “make some sort of silver lining in a very terrible situation.”

McAfee did not specifically name Cornett in his original comments on ESPN’s “The Pat McAfee Show” in February in which he brought up the false story, nor did he mention her by name during his comments at PPG Paints Arena during his “Big Night Aht” show in Pittsburgh.

In the wake of the rumor, which started on an anonymous message board and spread throughout social media before being picked up by media personalities, Cornett received vile and degrading messages, as reported by The Athletic earlier this month. Campus police told Cornett she was a target, and the harassment prompted her to move into emergency housing and switch to online courses. The situation also affected her family, friends and boyfriend.

McAfee’s comments came Wednesday after he brought up a separate defamation lawsuit he previously faced from Brett Favre, which was later dropped.

“I’m cool with Brett, just like the current situation that is happening, where I have a lot of people saying that I should be sued,” McAfee said. “I want to say this: I never, ever want to be a part of anything negative in anybody’s life, ever. That is not what I want to do.

“For all of these events, you f—ing know it that my lawyers are Pittsburgh lawyers and they’re in here tonight. I do believe they have a suite here that I have certainly contributed to. Certainly. They have the same mindset as me — empathy but understanding reality.”

He continued: “And for that whole thing that’s happening, I didn’t want to add any more negativity as it was taking place, like I did. We will try to figure that out and make some sort of silver lining in a very terrible situation. You can have that promise from me. It won’t be as impossible to be a fan of mine going forward.”



Cornett previously said she intends to take legal action against McAfee and ESPN, but no lawsuit has been filed as of Thursday. She told NBC News that McAfee “never once reached out to ask me if this was true or for me to give any sort of statement to him.”

“I would like people to be held accountable for what they’ve done,” Cornett previously told The Athletic. “You’re ruining my life by talking about it on your show for nothing but attention, but here I am staying up until 5 in the morning, every night, throwing up, not eating because I’m so anxious about what’s going to happen for the rest of my life.”

ESPN did not immediately respond to a request for comment





Alex Andrejev is a staff editor on the news team. Before joining The Athletic, she covered NASCAR and Charlotte FC for The Charlotte Observer and was a reporting intern on the sports desk for The Washington Post. She grew up near Washington, D.C

McAfee and everyone else who perpetuated this are scum. Actually they are lower than scum

I doubt if a lawsuit would succeed (First Amendment & needing to prove McAfee knew it wasn't true but went with it anyway) & that's too bad because I'd love for her to destroy this asshole.😡
 
McAfee and everyone else who perpetuated this are scum. Actually they are lower than scum

I doubt if a lawsuit would succeed (First Amendment & needing to prove McAfee knew it wasn't true but went with it anyway) & that's too bad because I'd love for her to destroy this asshole.😡
💯👈
 
McAfee and everyone else who perpetuated this are scum. Actually they are lower than scum

I doubt if a lawsuit would succeed (First Amendment & needing to prove McAfee knew it wasn't true but went with it anyway) & that's too bad because I'd love for her to destroy this asshole.😡

Oh she's going to win, bigtime. The "actual malice" clause in NYT v. Sullivan applies to public figures, not private citizens.
 

BSJ Live Q&A: Haggerty on Bruins offseason, NHL playoffs - 2 p.m. Friday 05.09.25​


 
I didn’t know that. I hope she cleans all of them out.


The constitutional guarantees require, we think, a federal rule that prohibits a public official from recovering damages for a defamatory falsehood relating to his official conduct unless he proves that the statement was made with "actual malice" – that is, with knowledge that it was false or with reckless disregard of whether it was false or not.

Later cases expanded the "public official" stipulation to "public figure".
 
  • Like
Reactions: Bocephus86 and BMC

BSJ Live Q&A: Haggerty on Bruins offseason, NHL playoffs - 11 a.m. Thursday 05.15.25​


 
I always liked Joe. He has a very natural style. I also thought he was a pretty talented defenseman, despite being a journeyman. He reminded me of a poor man's Hartsburg

At best a poor mans Hartsburg, Richie Dunn and Mike O'Connell beat him out
for a d spot on the 1981 US Canada Cup Team. O'Connell was better than him for certain but Dunn was younger and a bit of a surprise.

Joe grew up in Hibbing, Minnesota with Celtics great Kevin McHale and must have crossed paths with McHale at the rink when McHale was still a hockey player. Don't think Joe crossed paths with Bob Dylan at the rink though...lol.
 
  • Like
Reactions: quietbruinfan
At best a poor mans Hartsburg, Richie Dunn and Mike O'Connell beat him out
for a d spot on the 1981 US Canada Cup Team. O'Connell was better than him for certain but Dunn was younger and a bit of a surprise.

Joe grew up in Hibbing, Minnesota with Celtics great Kevin McHale and must have crossed paths with McHale at the rink when McHale was still a hockey player. Don't think Joe crossed paths with Bob Dylan at the rink though...lol.
Meh, Dunn was kind of underrated. Ask Middleton, who says Dunn was the one player who really messed him up.
As far as OC was concerned, yes he was a two time CHL d of the year and had a few moments with the Bruins, but I plead the fifth. I did not mind OC, but my Father hated him beyond all rationality. Other than outsmarting himself now and then, and losing Secord for him, I could not figure why. (Dad was kind of a homer. He even liked Reg Fleming.) However, if you were a d and were slow or a finesse guy, he was not a fan. See also McCrimmon. Eventually, Wideman almost replaced OC in his pantheon of hatred-almost.
Looking back I see his point though. OC was a decent skater with a bag of tricks and when the tricks did not work.......look out. Larson for him was a very good trade.


The Hibbing thing is interesting. I did not make the connection with Joe. I knew about those other guys lol
 
Meh, Dunn was kind of underrated. Ask Middleton, who says Dunn was the one player who really messed him up.
As far as OC was concerned, yes he was a two time CHL d of the year and had a few moments with the Bruins, but I plead the fifth. I did not mind OC, but my Father hated him beyond all rationality. Other than outsmarting himself now and then, and losing Secord for him, I could not figure why. (Dad was kind of a homer. He even liked Reg Fleming.) However, if you were a d and were slow or a finesse guy, he was not a fan. See also McCrimmon. Eventually, Wideman almost replaced OC in his pantheon of hatred-almost.
Looking back I see his point though. OC was a decent skater with a bag of tricks and when the tricks did not work.......look out. Larson for him was a very good trade.


The Hibbing thing is interesting. I did not make the connection with Joe. I knew about those other guys lol

Not trying to denigrate Dunn at all but he was 2-3 years younger than Joe. Dunn was not drafted coming out of the OHA but made himself an NHL player. Had good puck skills. Still remember Fred Cusick saying "Richie Dunn from Canton-Stoughton"...lol.

The US-USSR game from '81 is on YT and it was a sort of revenge game for the
USSR. Tony O was in net and he let in a brutal goal. Langway and Dunn played along with Robbie Ftorek and Bobby Miller in that game, O'Connell wasn't dressed. Only time I saw Mark Howe play for a US Team while in the NHL.
 
  • Like
Reactions: quietbruinfan
WEEI inching closer to 98.5

 
WEEI inching closer to 98.5

Sports Hub problem is Marc Bertrand and Joe Murray are brutal
 
Sports Hub problem is Marc Bertrand and Joe Murray are brutal
This 100%! Beattle is insufferable with his snark & contrarian schtick. It works well for that putz Felger but not Beattle. Joe Murray wants to talk anything but sports (Kawloon specials menu!) and he wings it most days (pun intended). I hope EEI catches them and forces them to make changes.

Jim Murray & Chris Gasper would make their mid day show fantastic. Too bad J Murray has stated he has no interest. They are great on Saturdays at 11. I’m not a huge Gasper fan but together they work.
 

Users who are viewing this thread

Latest posts

Ad

Ad