New York Daily News

Some burners linked to wife of Colangelo

- BY EVAN GROSSMAN BY STEFAN BONDY warriorS CavaLierS 124 114

BEHIND EVERY POWERFUL man there may also be a powerful, and social-media-savvy woman.

For that may be the case in the crazy saga unfolding in Philadelph­ia, where the Sixers are investigat­ing if GM Bryan Colangelo was operating up to five fake “burner” Twitter accounts that defended him while ripping players and revealing sensitive team informatio­n. In the latest wild twist, Internet sleuths connected some of those accounts to a phone number used by Colangelo’s wife, Barbara Bottini.

One Twitter user found the evidence, “When you type Bryan Colangelo’s wife’s # into the Twitter reset form,” according to a Barstool Sports blogger.

Crossing Broad blogger Kyle Scott backed that up with a screenshot taken by another user that shows an account recovery prompt with Bottini’s email address and a similar phone number ending in “91.”

Bryan Colangelo admitted to owning one of the Twitter accounts in question, but that one never posted anything. He has denied knowing about the other more vociferous accounts that have defended him, from his basketball moves to the collars he prefers on his shirts.

“Like many of my colleagues in sports, I have used social media as a means to keep up with the news,” Colangelo said in a statement to The Ringer, which broke the story Tuesday night. “While I have never posted anything whatsoever on social media, I have used the @Phila12345­67 Twitter account referenced in this story to monitor our industry and other current events. This storyline is disturbing to me on many levels, as I am not familiar with any of the other accounts that have been brought to my attention, nor do I know who is behind them or what their motives may be in using them.”

Colangelo indicated to Yahoo Sports Wednesday that he may be the target of a scam, texting reporter Jordan Schultz that “Someone’s out to get me … This is clearly not me.”

Deeper digging found that some tweets posted by one of the accounts were published at the same time Colangelo conducted a press conference in February 2017, which backs up Colangelo’s claim that he’s innocent.

The Sixers are in the process, no pun intended, of conducting an internal investigat­ion into the matter. Whoever was posting on those burner accounts criticized players like Joel Embiid, Markelle Fultz and Nerlens Noel, and insinuated Jahlil Okafor failed a physical ahead of a trade that fell apart. They also ripped Sixers coach Brett Brown and former GM Sam Hinkie.

If indeed Colangelo’s wife was behind those burner accounts, it would not be the first time an executive’s better half anonymousl­y defended her husband online.

Last year, NFL Commission­er Roger Goodell’s wife admitted to running a fake Twitter account that defended her husband, challengin­g trolls and reporters who were critical of him. Jane Skinner Goodell fessed up when the Wall Street Journal made the connection and the burner account was shut down.

“It was a REALLY silly thing to do and done out of frustratio­n — and love,” she said. “As a former media member, I’m always bothered when the coverage doesn’t provide a complete and accurate picture of a story. I’m also a wife and a mom. I have always passionate­ly defended the hard-working guy I love — and I always will. I just may not use Twitter to do so in the future!”

That might be sound advice for more than just Mrs. Goodell.

There are only going to be small windows in this series for the Cavs, and one was open in Game 1 on Thursday – wide open – until they turned into Plaxico Burress at the nightclub.

J.R. Smith will be ridiculed for a long time for his latest gaffe — unquestion­ably the worst on his long list of boneheaded plays — when he dribbled out the clock in. ….wait for it. …a tie game.

After an exasperate­d LeBron James asked for an explanatio­n, Smith very clearly mouthed this: “I thought we were ahead.”

This isn’t J.R. Smith on the Knicks, who didn’t know the score in a regular-season game against Houston (that was a doozy in 2014), or getting fined for untying an opponent’s shoelaces. Nope, this was in the NBA Finals and perhaps Cleveland’s only chance to make it a compelling series against the Warriors.

Smith grabbed an offensive rebound and could have, a) put back a lay-up for the game-winner, or b) passed it to a wide open James at the top of the key for the game-winner, or even c) called a timeout to set up a play. Instead, Smith thought he was John Havlicek killing out the clock and the Cavs never recovered from his alltime brain cramp, falling in OT to the Warriors, 124-114.

For critical moments, players should always

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