LA CANFORA ACCUSES CERRATO OF SLANDER
Posted by Mike Florio on September 23, 2008, 9:21 a.m. EDT
It’s not yet quite as interesting as Herrera-Kawakami I, but the verbal slugfest between Jason La Canfora of the Washington Post and Redskins Executive Vice President Vinny Cerrato is nevertheless entertaining.
By way of background (for those of you who didn’t check the site last night and prefer to get the story without having to exert the effort of, you know, scrolling down the page), Cerrato said during his Monday radio show that La Canfora had called the league office regarding comments Cerrato made on Friday about Raiders coach (for now) Lane Kiffin.
“Jason La Canfora, he called the NFL to ask them, are they not gonna charge the Washington Redskins with tampering,” Cerrato said on Monday.
At one point on Monday, Cerrato was imprecise (inadvertently or otherwise) in his description of the situation, and he suggested that La Canfora had actually “charged” the Redskins with tampering.
Later on Monday, the Post responded to Cerrato’s accusation via an entry from sports editor Emilio Garcia-Ruiz.
Garcia-Ruiz explained that La Canfora called the league office only to generally ask whether tampering rules could be implicated if Cerrato were to answer questions about persons under contract with other NFL teams, and that the Kiffin situation was mentioned only to “provide context.”
But then Garcia-Ruiz offered a quote from a league spokesman, which painted a somewhat different picture, in our view: “Jason LaCanfora called our office and said that Vinny Cerrato was talking in specifics on his radio show about the Raiders’ coaching position. Jason wanted to know if that could possibly be a tampering issue.”
Despite the tap-dancing from Garcia-Ruiz, the reality is that La Canfora specifically called about the Kiffin comments, and not part of a general inquiry into what Cerrato can and can’t say about persons under contract with other teams. The reasonable inference that can be drawn from this is that La Canfora was hoping to blow the whistle on Cerrato and the Redskins.
And now that we’ve fully summarized the situation via ten minutes of typing in order to save our fine audience from two seconds of scrolling, here’s the latest. In an e-mail sent by La Canfora on Monday afternoon regarding the situation, La Canfora offered this stinging assessment of Cerrato: “He is a making a mockery of fact and reality and trying to play people for fools. . . . Its [a] pathetic attempt to slander me, but not surprising in the least given who it is coming from.”
Ouch.
On one hand, we’d love to see this thing further disintegrate into allegations of pot-smoking and threats of litigation and/or physical violence. On the other hand, it needs to end.
We think that La Canfora had every right to ask the question that he posed to the league office, but he should not be surprised that Cerrato reacted negatively. And Garcia-Ruiz shouldn’t try to apply D.C.-style political spin to the apparent fact that La Canfora was trying to agitate.
That’s what we do. We look for ways to legitimately stir things up. But when an effort to do so requires us to pick eggshells out of our eyebrows, the better approach is to move on.
And if we choose not to move on, we need to at least acknowledge that, yeah, we were thinking that maybe we’d get someone in trouble for doing something they shouldn’t have been doing, and thus fully deserve to get into trouble for. If the media declined to take such chances for fear of periodically being incorrect, then lots of wrongdoing would never be exposed.
In this specific case, however, we’re still a bit troubled by La Canfora’s apparent personal bias against Cerrato. It’s an issue that surely will affect La Canfora’s relationship with Cerrato, and possibly others in the franchise, and it’s something about which the readers of the Post should be aware as they assess La Canfora’s reports and opinions about the team.