Ottawa Citizen

TAKING A ‘DEEP DIVE’ INTO SOCIAL MEDIA

Pro athletes digging into personal accounts in search of any skeletons

- RICK MAESE

As old social media posts have resurfaced and prominent athletes have been forced into public soul-baring in recent weeks, sports agents have undertaken emergency Twitter work, carefully excavating, scrutinizi­ng and, if need be, deleting youthful indiscreti­ons and ignorance.

Agents across multiple sports say recent headlines have prompted athletes to delve into their Twitter histories, searching for anything offensive or controvers­ial that might have been sitting forgotten and unnoticed.

One NBA team even reached out to representa­tives of all its players this week, according to an agent, urging them “to do a deep dive” through social media histories.

“If you told someone a month ago they need to look into this stuff, they’d say OK, whatever,” one agent said. “But you tell them right now, I think it has everyone’s attention.”

That reaction was prompted by headlines surroundin­g a trio of young baseball players.

The Milwaukee Brewers’ Josh Hader, Atlanta Braves’ Sean Newcomb and Washington Nationals’ Trea Turner all used offensive language in posts made during their teen years, unnoticed at the time but belatedly bandied across the Twitterver­se after they were exhumed by internet sleuths. Such scrutiny is not new. But Hader’s transgress­ions, especially — discovered during baseball’s All-Star Game last month — caught the attention of athletes across the sports world.

Nick Chanock, senior vice president of baseball with the Wasserman agency, said the revelation­s of the past two weeks have sparked “a lot of dialogue” within the agency and among its clients.

“We’re having active discussion­s with all our players,” said Chanock, whose clients include Chicago Cubs infielder Javy Baez, Colorado Rockies third baseman Nolan Arenado and New York Yankees designated hitter Giancarlo Stanton. The examples of Hader, Newcomb and Turner were unfortunat­e, Chanock said, but “we have to use them as an educationa­l tool for our players.”

In interviews, several agents described both their vetting process for potential clients — “We’re looking at stuff before they sign,” one said — and their responsibi­lity once they ’re formally representi­ng an athlete.

Some requested anonymity so they could discuss the matter freely.

Agents said it’s not unusual to root out ill-considered and immature social media posts and that they’ve often cleaned up the accounts themselves, often erring on the side of caution.

“The problem if we didn’t scrub anything, I don’t think it would be an issue, but as you know in this day and age, words are powerful,” said one agent.

After the latest round of bad Tweets, Cubs pitcher Jon Lester — via his own Twitter account — urged athletes to “please spend the 5 minutes it takes to scrub your account of anything you wouldn’t want plastered next to your face on the front page of a newspaper.” But it’s not that easy, agents said. Scrolling through thousands of old tweets could be tedious and cumbersome. An advanced search is required for older tweets, and relying solely on keywords could be incomplete.

There are third-party companies that specialize in hunting out and deleting offensive old posts, but players might be hesitant to turn over the keys — and password — for their account.

“It’s not a five-minute process and Twitter makes it hard for you to do,” said a representa­tive from one prominent agency.

“I think there’s some misconcept­ions out there. That’s not to excuse any offensive tweet, but the process is not as easy as people think.”

And social media outlets can be a double-edged sword, the agents said: an essential brandbuild­ing tool for their clients, valued by sponsors, but also a particular­ly precarious platform.

“Whenever we actually are looking to recruit a client, we take a deep dive into what their social platforms are,” said one prominent NBA agent, “and frankly, with everything going on right now, we’ve gone deeper and deeper to things that might even be construed as any negative connotatio­n.”

When the Chicago Bulls draft- ed Bobby Portis in 2015, an old tweet resurfaced in which he was critical of new teammates Derrick Rose and Pau Gasol.

Portis huddled with his agents immediatel­y after the draft, according to Rachel Stein, who runs public relations for Priority Sports, and they quickly came up with a response: a humble apology in which the young player asked his new teammates what kind of doughnuts they preferred. Then he brought doughnuts to his introducto­ry news conference “and a bad situation quickly became a running joke,” Stein recalled.

“Since then, we have taken precaution­ary measures to monitor players’ accounts before they become profession­als,” said Stein, who works with athletes specifical­ly on their social media habits (Priority’s clients include Kirk Cousins, Gordon Hayward and Bradley Beal).

“As soon as we sign a prospect, we access their Twitter account and sweep through all of their old posts,” she said. “We’ve also been in touch with all of our veteran clients about this issue now as well.”

Indeed, agents have used the recent headlines as a teaching opportunit­y, particular­ly for younger clients who were active on social media long before the spotlight ever found them.

“Our job is to help these guys and advise them,” said a representa­tive of an agency that works across multiple sports. “The responsibi­lity is theirs, but we’re here as a resource for them. In the end, it’s the player, it’s his timeline, it’s his responsibi­lity.”

And the unearthing of potentiall­y offensive tweets has become a recurring storyline, as a generation raised with social media accounts enters pro sports.

In April — one day before the NFL draft — racially insensitiv­e tweets from quarterbac­k Josh Allen resurfaced, many using the N-word and dating back Allen’s high school years. He was still drafted No. 7 overall by the Bills, but not before a frenzied day of consternat­ion, criticism and scrutiny.

Before last year’s NBA draft, prospects Zach Collins and Dennis Smith Jr., both had to answer for social media activity from their high school days. They were drafted in the first round, but Mavericks owner Mark Cuban said “one of the first things after we drafted Dennis, and I’m talking to him on the phone, I’m like, ‘Dude, I went through your Twitter account. It’s time to get on there and delete.’ ”

“And so he went through it. And to his credit, they were gone,” Cuban said last year during a Summer League broadcast. “He had a lot of stupid stuff on there.”

More recently, the Colorado Rockies selected Ole Miss sophomore Ryan Rolison in the first round of June’s draft, even though the team was aware of something Rolison tweeted the day Barack Obama was re-elected as president in 2012: “well we have one hope left ... if someone shoots him during his speech.”

“If there was some sort of pattern of behaviour, then we’d be talking about a whole different sort of topic,” Rockies general manager Jeff Bridich told reporters at the time, “but in this world we live in, in this Twitterver­se and Twitter world, and all this social media, these sorts of things are going to happen.”

Which is why the monitoring starts before the profession­al level; at the University of Maryland, for example, the football recruiting office makes it a point to scroll through social media timelines.

“If we find something that doesn’t really line up, or it causes you to ask more questions, find out more, dig around a little more,” said Terrapins coach DJ Durkin.

“If it’s something absolutely heinous in what it is, we may make a decision to stop recruiting a guy, which in our time has happened. But not very often. I think guys are more educated on that nowadays.”

Chanock frequently deals with teenage amateurs who are potential future clients and said he always tells them they should assume their social media accounts are constantly “under a microscope,” with everyone from fans to internet trolls to MLB teams themselves monitoring what they are writing.

“I try to explain to these kids that there’s a responsibi­lity required,” he said.

“Clubs are researchin­g (social media posts) extensivel­y. It’s really about education. Once something is out there, it’s hard to get back.”

The problem if we didn’t scrub anything, I don’t think it would be an issue, but as you know in this day and age, words are powerful.

 ?? STACY REVERE/GETTY IMAGES ?? Brewers pitcher Josh Hader’s transgress­ions, discovered during the All-Star Game in July, caught the attention of athletes across the sports world.
STACY REVERE/GETTY IMAGES Brewers pitcher Josh Hader’s transgress­ions, discovered during the All-Star Game in July, caught the attention of athletes across the sports world.
 ?? JEFFREY T. BARNES/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS/FILES ?? One day before this year’s NFL draft, racially insensitiv­e tweets from quarterbac­k Josh Allen resurfaced, dating back to Allen’s high school years.
JEFFREY T. BARNES/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS/FILES One day before this year’s NFL draft, racially insensitiv­e tweets from quarterbac­k Josh Allen resurfaced, dating back to Allen’s high school years.

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