ESPNâs “Inside the NBA” didnât just acknowledge the ongoing Mike Vrabel situation â it put it front and center.
During Sunday nightâs playoff coverage, the show used its signature âGone Fishingâ segment to take a clear shot at the New England Patriots head coach, inserting him into a graphic tied directly to the controversy involving NFL reporter Dianna Russini.
The moment came after the Boston Celtics were eliminated from the playoffs, triggering the segment typically reserved for lighthearted offseason sendoffs. This time, the tone shifted.
âGone Fishingâ graphic quickly turns viral
The âGone Fishingâ segment traditionally features eliminated players and celebrities placed on a fishing boat as a humorous end-of-season visual. In this version, the boat included a Boston-heavy group â Celtics stars Jayson Tatum and Jaylen Brown, actors Matt Damon and Ben Affleck, and sports personality Bill Simmons.
But the most talked-about addition was Vrabel â alongside Russini.
The two were placed at the front of the boat in a pose that closely mirrored the iconic âTitanicâ scene, with Vrabel positioned behind Russini, holding her at the hips. The reference was unmistakable, and it immediately shifted the focus of the segment.
The TNT crew â Ernie Johnson, Charles Barkley, Shaquille OâNeal, and Kenny Smith â acknowledged the image on air, but stopped short of diving into it directly.
âWho are the two people at the front?â Smith asked before Barkley quickly shut it down: âStop it, stop it.â
Johnson then pivoted back to naming the rest of the figures on the boat, effectively letting the visual carry the moment.
Graphic lands amid ongoing VrabelâRussini fallout
The segment comes as Vrabel and Russini remain at the center of a widely discussed situation that has unfolded over the past several weeks.
Photos that surfaced in early April showed the two together at an Arizona resort during the NFLâs annual meetings. Additional images later circulated, including older photos reportedly dating back to 2020, intensifying attention around their relationship.
Russini, who recently left The Athletic, addressed the situation in a public statement, defending her work and criticizing what she described as âself-feeding speculation.â
Vrabel initially downplayed the situation, calling it âlaughable.â However, as coverage escalated, he stepped away from the Patriots temporarily to attend counseling, citing a need to address the situation internally.
Different approaches: ESPN vs. ‘Inside the NBA’
While ESPNâs NFL coverage has largely avoided directly addressing the situation, “Inside the NBA” â produced by TNT Sports but currently licensed to ESPN â took a much more direct approach.
The show has built its identity on blending humor with commentary, often pushing boundaries. Still, inserting active NFL figures into a segment tied to an ongoing controversy represents a notable editorial choice.
ESPN declined to comment on the segment.
Moment built for social media
The graphic spread rapidly across social platforms within minutes of airing, with clips and screenshots gaining traction across both sports and entertainment audiences.
Itâs a rare crossover moment â one that pulled an NFL storyline into the NBA playoff spotlight, amplifying it beyond its original scope.
Whether viewed as satire or something more pointed, the segment ensured the story remains in circulation â and now, tied to one of the most widely watched studio shows in sports.
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