Las Vegas Review-Journal

All on Twitter is not gold, as athletes learn after triumph

Social media past reveals itself when spotlight is bright

- By Cliff Brunt The Associated Press

As major league pitchers Sean Newcomb and Josh Hader face up to racist, sexist and homophobic tweets they sent as teenagers, publicist Lauren Walsh recalls how she dealt with a football player who had offensive Facebook posts years before he prepared for the NFL draft.

She went through his whole social media history, taking down any posts that even raised an eyebrow.

Scrubbing tweets, Instagram posts and other comments, captions and status updates has grown into a top priority for Walsh’s company, LW Branding, which she said has helped 40 NFL athletes with image control in the past 3½ years.

“Any client that we take on, that’s generally the first step we do in the process,” Walsh said. “This can take someone down in an instant. All it takes is one tweet. Now, he’s going to be known for this. This is what people are talking about.”

Newcomb, of the Atlanta Braves, is just the latest high-profile athlete to burn himself with reckless posts from years past.

The 25-year-old nearly threw a no-hitter against the Dodgers on Sunday — a career-defining moment that took a turn when he called reporters back into the clubhouse to apologize for offensive tweets sent in 2011 and 2012, when he was 18.

Hader, who pitches for the Milwaukee Brewers, is still in apology mode after tweets from his past surfaced during the All-star Game this month.

He was given a standing ovation in his first game back in Milwaukee, then booed when the Brewers made their first road trip of the second half of the season in San Francisco.

The trend touches many young athletes, with millions of posts from thousands of players who’ve been online since they were kids.

Former Wyoming quarterbac­k Josh Allen apologized for a series of offensive tweets he sent while in high school that were revealed right before the NFL draft, when the Buffalo Bills selected him seventh overall.

As Villanova’s Donte Divincenzo was celebratin­g being named most outstandin­g player of the

Final Four, some of his old tweets that included racially insensitiv­e and homophobic comments made headlines.

“This stuff happens all the time and it happens when they get their shining moment,” Walsh said. “When all of us were 17, we weren’t thinking about where we were going to be in our lives seven years down the road.”

But athletes should start thinking about the bigger picture, as damage from slip-ups can be critical to coaches and executives, Walsh said.

The mistakes by Hader and Newcomb will be discussed by athletic department­s, profession­al teams, agents and handlers looking to protect themselves and their players.

As higher-ups grow more aware of the damage social media mistakes can cause, vetting could become more rigid as a key part of evaluating a multimilli­on-dollar investment.

“In light of recent events, that’s definitely something our staff will discuss to potentiall­y eliminate the chance of a negative situation that puts a student-athlete in a bad light,” said Creighton spokesman Rob Anderson, who said he doesn’t know of any staffer going through a player’s entire social media history.

Walsh suggests athletes and average Joes alike scrub their accounts once a year like a spring cleaning, leaving nothing to chance.

And use social media in a positive way, she said.

“Be authentic,” Walsh said. “Define your brand and values. And then, you put out your content.”

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