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Colin Cowherd Pulled At ESPN After Tone Deaf Comments About The Dominican Republic
ESPN radio host Colin Cowherd has been removed from ESPN programming following controversial comments he made on Thursday regarding MLB players from the Dominican Republic. “Colin Cowherd’s comments over the past two days do not reflect the values of ESPN or our employees. Colin will no longer appear on ESPN," a statement from ESPN read. Cowherd, who is reportedly leaving ESPN to join Fox Sports after his contract with the network expires this year, also took to Twitter to address his premature departure. I did not intend to offend anyone w my comments. I realize my choice of words was poor and not reflective of who I am. I am sorry. Cowherd recently spoke about his upcoming "amicable" departure from ESPN, however, Sports Business Journal reported that his recent comments accelerated his final day. A source tells SBJ that Colin Cowherd's last day was supposed to be next Friday. The current scandal made ESPN move the date up to today. The fallout started Thursday after Cowherd made comments on his radio program, "The Herd," in which he essentially questioned how complicated baseball actually is, absurdly noting "a third of the sport is from the Dominican Republic." So many people were upset, in fact, that Cowherd felt compelled to address the comments on his radio show on Friday. But he didn't exactly apologize. Instead, he said that his remarks were taken out of context. For a refresher, this is the line that was published by Deadspin following Thursday's show, which Cowherd specifically took to task for misrepresenting him: Naturally, the reaction was not good. Dear Mr. @ESPN_Colin before i rip you a new one i would like for you to explain what u meant to say about baseball and dominicans, please But, don't worry everyone. Cowherd played the rest of the transcript, hopeful that the full context would make his offensive comments seem less offensive (it didn't): If you're confused as to how this at all makes the original clip sound better, so are we. In full, Cowherd was basically saying that not only do these Dominican MLB players not have a great education, but that they don't need one to play baseball. He therefore insulted not just Dominican citizens, but every baseball player and all athletes at once when he said it's "mostly instincts," rather than requiring any intellect or strategy. That is, except for football, which Cowherd said would be impossible if everyone didn't speak the same language. (It apparently "doesn't matter" for soccer and baseball.) The premise of Cowherd's defense, or clarification, or justification or whatever you want to call it, is totally off base, as well: Thanks for that non-apology, Colin. "Was I clunky? Perhaps. Did people not like my tone? I get it. Sometimes my tone stinks," he said. Earlier on Friday, ESPN released a statement regarding Cowherd's remarks and his response: "It wasn't a shot at them. It was data," he said. Although, it's exactly a shot at the Dominican Republic -- that educational rankings determine how smart a person, or nation, is. The MLB's players' union still isn't pleased with the host, per a statement by the union's head, Tony Clark.
What's worse is that Cowherd rambles on and on and expects listeners to believe this is the point he was actually trying to make: "I'm not saying there's not intelligent, educated people from the Dominican Republic. I cringe at the data, too. Do we understand how lucky we are in America? That was the take," he said. Sure, Colin. Sure. -- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website. ![]() More... |
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