Tag Archives: Herbstreit

Ohio State TE Zak Herbstreit, son of Kirk Herbstreit, recovering from heart issue: ‘He’s in good spirits’ – CBS Sports

  1. Ohio State TE Zak Herbstreit, son of Kirk Herbstreit, recovering from heart issue: ‘He’s in good spirits’ CBS Sports
  2. Ohio State Tight End Zak Herbstreit Facing “Long Process” After Doctors Found Heart Issue, Per His Father Eleven Warriors
  3. ‘He’s going to get better’: Ohio State TE Zak Herbstreit faces 3-4 month recovery due to heart issues 10TV
  4. Zak Herbstreit faces long road after leaving hospital, Kirk Herbstreit says ABC6OnYourSide.com
  5. Kirk Herbstreit says son Zak dealing with heart issues: ‘He’s in good spirits’ USA TODAY
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Kirk Herbstreit advocates for heart testing after illness of his Ohio State football player son – cleveland.com

  1. Kirk Herbstreit advocates for heart testing after illness of his Ohio State football player son cleveland.com
  2. Ohio State Tight End Zak Herbstreit Facing “Long Process” After Doctors Found Heart Issue, Per His Father Eleven Warriors
  3. Ohio State TE Zak Herbstreit, son of Kirk Herbstreit, recovering from heart issue: ‘He’s in good spirits’ CBS Sports
  4. Kirk Herbstreit’s Son Zak Released From Hospital, Faces Lengthy Recovery msnNOW
  5. ‘A long process:’ Kirk Herbstreit updates son Zak’s recovery timeline NBC4 WCMH-TV
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ESPN’s Kirk Herbstreit gets very angry arguing about the Reds with The Athletic reporters on Twitter – Yahoo Sports

  1. ESPN’s Kirk Herbstreit gets very angry arguing about the Reds with The Athletic reporters on Twitter Yahoo Sports
  2. Kirk Herbstreit Gets Into It With Baseball Writers Over Cincinnati Reds, Top Prospect Elly De La Cruz OutKick
  3. Kirk Herbstreit Gets Heated in Twitter Feud for the Strangest Reason Sports Illustrated
  4. Former Buckeye Kirk Herbstreit seems agitated by Ohio State Football fans Scarlet and Game
  5. Twitter Wars: ESPN’s Kirk Herbstreit vs. The Athletic’s Ken Rosenthal & C. Trent Rosecrans Awful Announcing
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Kirk Herbstreit updates top-six with an interesting team at No. 4

ESPN college football analyst Kirk Herbstreit updated his top-six rankings following a crazy Week 10. (Rankings below).

Saturday included Georgia’s victory over Tennessee, LSU’s 32-31 overtime win against Alabama, and Notre Dame’s absolute beat down of the Clemson Tigers.

In Herbstreit’s top-six, I don’t expect anyone to have any questions about teams 1-3. But it’s at No. 4 that people will have questions. Herbstreit has Oregon sitting in the fourth spot, meaning if the College Football Playoff were to start today the 8-1 Ducks would make the tournament. Oregon’s only loss this season was a 49-3 defeat to Georgia in the season opener.

If we’re ranking one-loss teams, is Oregon better than Tennessee? I doubt it. Both have one loss: to Georgia.

Take a look at Herbstreit’s top-six, plus each team’s national title odds (courtesy of BetMGM), following Week 10:

6

Tennessee Volunteers (8-1)

Todd Kirkland/Getty Images

Week 10: Lost to Georgia, 27-13

National title odds: +2,000

5

TCU Horned Frogs (9-0)

Syndication: Lubbock Avalanche-Journal

Week 10: Beat Texas Tech, 34-24

National title odds: +3,000

4

Oregon Ducks (8-1)

Ron Chenoy-USA TODAY Sports

Week 10: Beat Colorado, 49-10 (Ducks Wire)

National title odds: +3,000

3

Michigan Wolverines (9-0)

Vincent Carchietta-USA TODAY Sports

Week 10: Beat Rutgers, 52-17 (Wolverines Wire)

National title odds: +900

2

Ohio State Buckeyes (9-0)

Michael Reaves/Getty Images

Week 10: Beat Northwestern, 21-7 (Buckeyes Wire)

National title odds: +200

1

Georgia Bulldogs (9-0)

Todd Kirkland/Getty Images

Week 10: Beat Tennessee, 27-13

National title odds: +110

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ESPN’s Kirk Herbstreit under fire for remarks on college football players not loving the sport

ESPN college football analyst Kirk Herbstreit came under fire Saturday for remarks on the state of the sport amid players opting out of bowl games.

Herbstreit appeared on “College Gameday” to preview New Year’s Day bowl games at the Rose Bowl when he made the remarks to former Michigan Heisman Trophy winner Desmond Howard.

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Kentucky quarterback Will Levis (7) scrambles for yardage between Iowa defensive linemen Noah Shannon (99), Zach VanValkenburg (97) and Logan Lee (85) during the second half of the Citrus Bowl Saturday, Jan. 1, 2022, in Orlando, Fla.
(AP Photo/Phelan M. Ebenhack)

“What’s the difference as a player when saying these games are ‘meaningless’ when, Des, we played in ‘meaningless’ games,” Herbstreit said. “I mean I know you guys were here a lot. I just don’t understand. If you don’t make it to the playoff, how is it meaningless to play football and compete? Isn’t that what we do as football players? We compete?

“I don’t know if changing it or expanding it is going to change anything. I really don’t. I just think this era of player just doesn’t love football.”

Washington State wide receiver De’Zhaun Stribling (88) catches a pass in the end zone to score a touchdown as he’s defended by Central Michigan defensive back Rolliann Sturkey (37) during the second half of the Sun Bowl in El Paso, Texas, Friday, Dec. 31, 2021.
(AP Photo/Andres Leighton)

Howard agreed with Herbstreit and said going to a bowl game was a “huge reward for a fantastic season.”

Herbstreit came under fire over his remarks. Green Bay Packers defensive back Adrian Amos and Chicago Bears wide receiver Allen Robinson II were among those taking Herbstreit to task.

The former Ohio State quarterback later tried to clarify his remarks on Twitter.

Kirk Herbstreit at ESPN College Game Day during a game between the Georgia Bulldogs and LSU Tigers at Mercedes Benz Stadium Dec. 7, 2019 in Atlanta, Ga. (Steve Limentani/ISI Photos/Getty Images)
(Getty Images)

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“Just wanted to clarify some of my comments from earlier today. Of course some players love the game the same today as ever,” he wrote. “But some don’t. I’ll always love the players of this game and sorry if people thought I generalized or lumped them all into one category.”

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Kirk Herbstreit fires back at Dan Orlovsky’s comments on Justin Fields

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There’s an unwritten rule among network colleagues to not call coworkers out publicly. (Some in the business would say that this also applies to employees at competing networks.) Recently, ESPN’s Kirk Herbstreit deviated from that convention regarding comments made by ESPN’s Dan Orlovsky about Ohio State quarterback Justin Fields.

It started when Orlovsky shared with Pat McAfee some things Orlovsky had been hearing in an effort to explain the perception that Fields’ draft stock is sliding. Said Orlovsky, via Jeremy Layton of the New York Post: “One, I have heard that he is a last-guy-in, first-guy-out type of quarterback. Like, not the maniacal work ethic. I’ve even heard it compared to Justin Herbert, where it was like, ‘Dude, when Justin Herbert showed up, he was like a psychopath when it came to working and get ready for the draft.’ Or even at school, like, ‘Give me more, I want to work non-stop.’ And I’ve heard that there are issues with Justin Fields’ work ethic. . . . The second thing is . . . where is his desire to go be a great quarterback? I think that there’s a desire to be a big-time athlete, from what is expressed to me, but where is his desire to be a great quarterback? And to be great, you gotta be willing to find the things that you are not good at and just freaking grind on them.”

Orlovsky faced a backlash for the racial stereotypes embedded within his comments. He posted a video on Thursday aimed at putting out the fire by passing along positive opinions on Fields that Orlovsky subsequently secured from an assistant coach at Ohio State and from former NFL quarterback John Beck, who’s helping Fields prepare for the draft.

Still, Orlovsky reiterated the negative opinions: “The reality is that I have heard those things from teams. And they might feel that way.”

Herbstreit wasn’t buying any of it. “Absolutely RIDICULOUS,” Herbstreit tweeted in response to the video, via Jimmy Traina of SI.com. “Even if YOU aren’t saying it… to pass that along from ‘people in the know’ is reckless and absurd!! Embarrassing!!”

Herbstreit, who’ll serve as one of the analysts for ABC’s coverage of the draft, is right. In many respects, the pre-draft mumbo-jumbo has evolved to the point where most people who get paid to talk about it should realize that there’s an abundance of bullshit. Teams that secretly love a player will push negative narratives and opinions under the cover of anonymity in order to fuel a free fall that will cause the player to be available when the team is on the clock.

As Dwight Scrute would say, “It’s like Machiavelli meets . . . football.”

Orlovsky eventually mentions that dynamic as an oh-by-the-way in his cleanup video. It’s hardly a collateral point. Scouts and coaches actively prey on naive and/or recklessly ambitious media members with platforms for the purposes of lighting these fuses. That dynamic should never be a P.S.; it should always be the lede.

Indeed, that’s what Orlovsky should have said when McAfee asked why Fields seems to be falling.

“Well, Pat, here’s what happens this time of year,” Orlovsky should have explained. “Teams that love a player will try to create the impression that the player is falling, by spreading unflattering views about him. They actually do it so that the player will be available when they’re on the clock. So it’s best to treat any opinions that come from anonymous scouts and sources with teams — especially negative ones — as bogus and unreliable. Besides, unless we know what all 32 teams are thinking, we never know which team will be the one to draft a guy in a much higher spot than anyone would have expected, like the 49ers will do be by trading from No. 12 to No. 3 to get Mac Jones, Trey Lance, or maybe Fields.”

All of us who cover the NFL in the weeks leading up to the draft need to understand this, and we need to refuse to be manipulated in the name of satisfying producers/editors or seeming to be “in the know.” Put simply, if a scout or a coach or any other team employee refuses to attach a name to a negative opinion about a player in the weeks prior to the draft, we shouldn’t repeat it — even with the caveat that it may have originated with the goal of sparking a slide. (This doesn’t mean the sources are consciously lying. Some coaches and General Managers surely say things like that in the presence of subordinates who have a reputation for being chatty, hopeful that those employees will spread to the media the phony assessment in a way that will be true, as far as the source knows.)

Whether Orlovsky has cause to be miffed at Herbstreit for taking their squabble public is a different issue. ESPN surely prefers that everyone with a Mickey Mouse logo on their paychecks behave among each other like Chip and Dale. But even if Herbstreit was out of line, Orlovsky’s failure to realize that he quite possibly had been played by someone who wants to see Fields fall is the major teachable moment that comes from this incident.



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