Yahoo's Miami Investigation Is Their One Shining Moment
Yahoo Sports and Charles Robinson broke the most important story to hit college sports in a long time on Tuesday, dropping this on The U and also indirectly, the NCAA. The entire report links to documented allegations against over 70 Miami Hurricanes players and coaches. It is the most thorough takedown of a program I've ever seen. As I tweeted last night, this Miami case is OSU, GT, UNC, and every scandal from the past year combined, multiplied by infinity, and exploded with a nuclear bomb. There were whispers the last few days about something big coming down at Miami, but nobody expected anything this big. That said, the real stars of this story are Robinson and Yahoo, who have delivered again with true investigative reporting rarely seen anymore in the sports media. Ryan and I got together over Skype and chatted about the Miami story, the troubles facing the NCAA, and Yahoo's journalistic dominance over their rivals in Bristol...
Matt: Ok Ryan, Yahoo Sports has done it once again. Intrepid investigative reporter Charles Robinson broke the incredible news that The U and booster Nevin Shapiro gave millions of extra benefits to over 70 Miami players. This seems to make USC, Ohio State, and any scandal broken in the last couple years look like tiddliewinks. Am I getting lost in the moment or is this story that huge?
Ryan: Definitely not, especially because we can put this story up directly against those other two. As much as ESPN and SI would have you believe, the Ohio St. scandal isn't the reincarnation of SMU... this Miami story is. It's a fantasitc job of old-school reporting by Charles Robinson and Yahoo Sports, which I think is the first angle of this story we should focus on, the rise of Yahoo as the premier source for sports journalism going today. Agree?
Matt: Yep. Yahoo has solidified themselves as the #1 source for sports journalism and breaking huge stories, especially with college athletics scandals. UConn, Reggie Bush, and now this bombshell. What impresses me most about this particular job by Robinson and Yahoo is the massive scope of it. 100+ interviews, 20,000 pages of financial records, 5,000 pages of cell phone records, 1,000 photos, and over 100 hours of talking to Shapiro himself. An 11 month investigation! This is the kind of reporting that Outside the Lines or SI could only dream of.
Ryan: Just look at the difference in journalistic standards between the stories Yahoo is running versus their competitors in ESPN and SI. As I wrote about yesterday, ESPN and OTL have done their best to tear down Ohio St. with unnamed sources and shadowy figures. Meanwhile, George Dohrmann's much hyped SI piece on Ohio St. was more dud than bombshell. Honestly, it was like SI fired a gun only to have a flag that said BANG come out of the barrel. Meanwhile, Yahoo Sports (and Charles Robinson specifically) has been doing legit reporting with sources and documentation to back up their allegations. Comparing Yahoo's reporting with Dohrmann's dud at SI and what we've learned about people like Joe Schad at ESPN, this is a proud day for the folks at Yahoo...







