Mike Vrabel emerges unscathed, for now, after resignation of Dianna Russini
One week ago, no one knew what would happen regarding the photos published by the New York Post of Patriots coach Mike Vrabel and The Athletic reporter Dianna Russini. Many didn't even know what to make of the situation. The photos were what they were.
The statements from Vrabel, Russini, and The Athletic were what they were. And the general public concluded whatever it concluded regarding whether the photos meshed with the statements. Now that Russini has resigned from The Athletic amid an investigation that will nevertheless continue in the form of a " standards review ," the attention may turn to the other person in the photos, who has emerged from the imbroglio unscathed for now.
Vrabel made one and only one comment about the photos. Based on his comment, he seems to be intent on making no further comment. โThese photos show a completely innocent interaction and any suggestion otherwise is laughable ,โ Vrabel told the Post .
โThis doesnโt deserve any further response. โ The mere fact that The Athletic launched an investigation shows its belief that "any suggestion otherwise" was not "laughable. " Which makes sense, given the high bar that The New York Times and, by extension, The Athletic apply to its reporters to " avoid even the appearance of a conflict of interest .
" No such standard applies to Vrabel in his job as an NFL football coach. There are other rules that potentially impact Vrabel based on the position he holds, but neither the league nor the Patriots seem to be inclined to explore whether the situation potentially implicates those less obvious and more nuanced standards. When Vrabel next meets with reporters, he likely will be asked about the situation.