WTF??? Daily News beat writer Manish Mehta allegedly tailed Jets GM’s son, kept covering team after ban from facilities

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Daily News beat writer allegedly tailed Jets GM’s son, kept covering team after ban from facilities

Jesse Spector
11/25/20 4:58PM

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Manish MehtaScreenshot: New York Daily News
There was never an official proclamation that the Jets banned New York Daily News reporter Manish Mehta from their facilities, just the word of ESPN Radio host Chris Carlin that it happened, with a follow-up two months later that, “There were clearly reasons not related to negative coverage.” A story in Jets Confidential in October explicitly said Mehta is “not allowed at One Jets Drive.”



Today, the apparent reason for his ban surfaced. (Disclosure: My time at the Daily News overlapped with Mehta’s, but we did not know one another.)
Erika Esola-Imburgio, a producer at EA Sports who formerly was a sports journalist for the Seminole Chronicle and Florida Today, shared the story, which was repeated independently Wednesday afternoon by Craig Carton on WFAN, that Mehta crossed a line by tailing Jets general manager Joe Douglas’ family.



When that story was repeated on WFAN, Esola-Imburgio cheered it as “confirming everything,” It would be of a piece with the speculation last year that Mehta created an Adam Gase burner account on Twitter, using Gase’s son’s name.


Charles McDonald, who has been covering the Jets for the Daily News, is leaving the paper for USA Today’s For The Win. On his way out the door, he tweeted that he’s looking forward to “getting back into more national coverage now that i’m not being used to hold up the facade that a certain jets writer still has access to the team.”

McDonald called Mehta a “freak” and shared an August piece under Mehta’s sole byline, which he said contained McDonald’s own observations from training camp.

And then the floodgates opened with others in the industry sharing their issues with Mehta over the years.



McDonald told Deadspin he was happy to let his tweets speak for themselves and did not want to comment further. Meanwhile, Rich Cimini, who preceded Mehta on the Daily News’ Jets beat before leaving for ESPN, voiced his support for McDonald and called it “an illuminating day.”

It’s illuminating not only for Mehta’s conduct, but for the Daily News’ operation under sports editor Kyle Wagner.

Mehta sending an email to McDonald with questions to ask at a press conference isn’t, by itself, an out-of-line thing. Reporters often collaborate on their questions to coordinate coverage, especially if one of those reporters won’t be at a press availability for whatever reason. Mehta’s email is absurd in the regard that such communications are usually, “hey, can you ask about Sam Darnold?” and not scripting follow-ups, but maybe that’s just how Mehta rolls — again, in line with the abrasive personality being depicted by colleagues.

What’s inexcusable from the Daily News is taking a story with McDonald’s reporting, even if Mehta is the one writing it, and putting Mehta’s name and face on it with no notice of McDonald’s contribution. Standard practice would be to add a “— With Charles McDonald” tag at the end of the piece, as might happen if one reporter had a byline on a piece, but had another reporter feed them a quote. The fact that Mehta wasn’t even there, and the paper made it appear that he was, is a much bigger breach of ethics, and one that’s not on Mehta, but the paper’s editors who make those calls.

Mehta declined Deadspin’s request for comment. The Daily News has not yet responded.

It’s all a rare let-off for the Jets in 2020, a huge story about them where they’re not the most embarrassing part of it, by a longshot. Alas, Sunday is just a few days away.
 

Manish Mehta fired by New York Daily News, after being removed from Jets beat
Several reporters who previously worked on the Jets beat with Mehta complained of his behavior.
NEWSPAPERSNFLBy Ian Casselberry on 12/11/2020
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Manish Mehta’s curious, contentious, and controversial tenure covering the New York Jets for the New York Daily News has ended. A day after the paper pulled him off the Jets beat, he’s now been fired by the publication, according to the Washington Post‘s Ben Strauss.
Mehta has become infamous during the past couple of years for erroneous reporting, unusual behavior, and unethical practices on the job. His tactics in using a fellow Daily News reporter to get quotes and ask questions during Zoom calls with the Jets after the team pulled his credential appears to be what ultimately compelled the paper to fire him.




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Yet Strauss’s report uncovers a pattern of confrontational, aggressive interactions with other media covering the Jets, in addition to threatening players and team officials for not giving him information.

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Jenny Vrentas of Sports Illustrated and The MMQB told Strauss about Mehta becoming unhinged after she asked him not to barge in on a one-on-one interview she was conducting with a Jets player.
“Afterward, in a hallway outside the media room, Mehta screamed at her, according to multiple people who were there, cursing repeatedly: ‘F— you! F— you! F— you!’ The tirade lasted several minutes, these people said, and two other writers had to calm Mehta down.”
ESPN’s Kimberley A. Martin is another alum from the Jets beat who has unpleasant experiences with Mehta to share.
But Charles McDonald (now with For The Win, formerly of the Daily News) revealing that Mehta would take quotes and observations that he didn’t gather to use in his articles without proper attribution, or have McDonald ask dubious questions during media sessions, caused an uproar that the newspaper could no longer ignore.
Never mind that we’re talking about a reporter who allegedly created an Adam Gase burner account, approached general manager Joe Douglas’s 11-year-old son at a baseball game, and threatened bad coverage for a player whose wife criticized Mehta on Twitter.

There is so much more in Strauss’s piece that’s worth reading. He takes a deep dive on this story. In the meantime, where Mehta goes from here will be a story to follow. His success with the Daily News on a very competitive beat is notable, but will other outlets — especially those less inclined toward tabloid coverage — tolerate the kind of behavior now attributed to Mehta?
 
Sports reporter Manish Mehta out at Daily News amid bizarre ‘stalking’ scandal
By Keith J. Kelly
December 10, 2020 | 6:00pm | Updated



The New York Daily News sports writer who reportedly had his New York Jets press credentials yanked for ‘stalking’ the general manager’s son has been cut from the team, The Post has learned.

“Manish Mehta is no longer with New York Daily News. Coverage of the Jets will continue uninterrupted,” said a spokesperson for the Tribune Publishing, which owns the Daily News.

Mehta could not be reached for comment. His @mmehtanydn twitter account, which had been working Thursday afternoon, no longer exists, according to Twitter.

Earlier this year, Mehta was banned from the New York Jets team’s facility and had his credentials revoked, leading to speculation that he was being punished for his harsh criticism of the team.

But Craig Carton of WFAN caused a stir last month when he said on his show that Mehta was banished for stalking Jets general manager’s Joe Douglas son.

Adding the intrigue, stories by Mehta with quotes from Jets press conferences continued to appear during the time he was reportedly banned.
And when writer Charles McDonald left the Daily News for USA Today last month he added to the mystery with a tweet suggesting he was being forced to do Mehta’s reporting. “USA today/for the win. getting back into more national coverage now that i’m not being used to hold up the façade that a certain jets writer still has access to the team.”

Sources told The Post McDonald’s tweet was a direct reference to Mehta.

Word of the separation started bubbling up Thursday afternoon. By early evening, the Daily News tweeted via its sports account that Mehta had been “removed” from covering the Jets.




“Manish Mehta has been removed from the New York Jets beat. Coverage of the team will continue uninterrupted,” according to the tweet.


 

Washington Post takes a closer look at Manish Mehta’s departure from the New York Daily News
Posted by Mike Florio on December 11, 2020, 12:30 PM EST


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Some wondered whether the New York Daily News announced on Thursday that Manish Mehta had left the Jets beat in order to get ahead of a Washington Post story expected to be published on Friday. Regardless of the motivation for the timing, the Washington Post published its story on Friday.
The article from Ben Strauss makes it clear that Mehta no longer is employed by the Daily News. It’s unclear whether he resigned or was fired.
The story explores various allegations that went unreported at the time. For example, former Jets guard Matt Slauson contends that Mehta twisted quotes to fit the narrative that unnamed Jets players were ripping former Jets quarterback Tim Tebow.
“It was sloppy reporting and I had to pay for it and get up in front of the team to explain it,” Slauson told Strauss.
Then there’s this. Strauss reports that, in 2011, Jenny Vrentas (now of SI.com, then of the Newark Star-Ledger) “asked Mehta not to encroach” as she conducted a one-on-one interview with a player in the Jets locker room. Later that day, Mehta reportedly yelled “F–k you!” multiple times at Vrentas.
“While this incident happened nearly 10 years ago, it’s still a clear, and unpleasant, memory,” Vrentas told Strauss via email. (Mehta denied cursing at Vrentas.)
Kimberly Martin, who previously covered the Jets for Newsday and now works at ESPN, said this to Strauss, regarding Mehta: “A lot of people enabled this guy. And a lot of people shrugged off questionable behavior.”
The catalyst for Mehta’s departure isn’t specified, but it appears that the snowball began to roll when the Jets terminated his access, and that it continued when the Daily News assigned now-former Daily News employee Charles McDonald to assist with the newspaper’s apparent perpetration of the ruse that Mehta still covered the team.
According to Strauss, Mehta demanded that McDonald hold his phone up to the computer during video press conferences conducted by the Jets; Mehta then tweeted quotes in real time. That practice stopped after the Jets complained.
McDonald, who presumably tolerated the indignity of covering the Jets beat without getting credit for covering the Jets beat while he looked for another job, reportedly blocked Mehta’s phone number after “McDonald didn’t attend a news conference with the Jets’ owner and Mehta began calling and texting about his whereabouts.”
As to the decision to strip Mehta of his credentials, Strauss explains that the Jets hired a law firm that created a dossier of incidents involving Mehta. For example, the investigation revealed that Mehta allegedly “approached the 11-year-old son of Jets General Manager Joe Douglas at a baseball game and, later, threatened Douglas with bad coverage if he didn’t grant an interview.”
Mehta defended himself in a statement to the Post, insisting that he has “behaved professionally and ethically throughout my career.”
“I’ve respected my peers and colleagues, though I’ve had disagreements with some of them in the past, as is common in a competitive environment,” Mehta told the Post. “I’m looking forward to the opportunities ahead.”
Although, if these allegations are accurate, Mehta gave the Jets good reason to rescind his credentials and, eventually, the Daily News good reason to end the relationship, there’s an element of this story that should be a little alarming to those who independently cover sports teams and leagues. If Mehta had been praising the Jets, the Jets never would have lit the fuse that eventually resulted in Mehta leaving the Daily News. It was his criticism of the Jets that caused the Jets to target him.
None of this excuses his alleged misconduct. But the chain of dropping dominoes that ended with Mehta out of a job got started because he wrote things that the entity he covered didn’t like. The Jets have potentially pulled pro sports onto a slippery slope, one that may encourage other teams and leagues that have become spoiled by the non-controversial remarks of the reporters they directly employ to go on the offensive whenever an independent reporter becomes a little too independent for their liking.
Again, in this case, it’s hard to say the Jets were in the wrong. It will be interesting to see whether the next case of a team or a league targeting a media member who dares to consistently criticize will be supported by cold, hard facts — or whether it will in any way be embellished, exaggerated, and/or fabricated.
 
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