Adam Schefter Twitter



On Monday, news began to circulate around Twitter about the Miami Dolphins firing offensive coordinator Chan Gailey. Various outlets credited ESPN’s Adam Schefter, including ESPN.

The latest tweets from @AdamSchefter. Adam Schefter gets it right 99% of the time, which makes his rare misses that much.

Report: Chan Gailey out in Miami https://t.co/2VwEOlQgbC

49ers

— ProFootballTalk (@ProFootballTalk) January 4, 2021

Well, according to a ESPN story @AdamSchefter claims Chan Gailey and Miami Dolphins are ending their relationship.https://t.co/DIBCqUMRXN

— Omar Kelly (@OmarKelly) January 4, 2021

The #Dolphins have fired Offensive Coordinator Chan Gailey #PatMcAfeeShowLIVEpic.twitter.com/MYtlTI0oaO

Adam schefter twitter bears

— Pat McAfee (@PatMcAfeeShow) January 4, 2021

But it turns out that Schefter never reported that Gailey was fired, and it appears ESPN fell for a fake account.

We've seen it all. ESPN got duped by a fake Adam Schefter account.

Chan Gailey has not been fired. pic.twitter.com/h5DTGyjmTK

— Pro Football Network (@PFN365) January 4, 2021

This came after the 1 p.m. ET SportsCenter even mentioned the “report” on air:

Even made it onto live air. Very out of character breakdown here by ESPN. https://t.co/q7HWGOidcepic.twitter.com/meGgEKEnS8

Adam Schefter Twitter Handle

— Ben Koo (@bkoo) January 4, 2021

The tweet about Gailey being fired seems to originally come from an account (now deleted) with the handle @TuaNeedsHelp, featuring Schefter’s name and avatar.

This was the tweet pic.twitter.com/ZQlEBuvi2X

— Patrick1406 (@Patrick140606) January 4, 2021

ESPN retracted and corrected the story.

Adam Schefter Tweet

Adam

ESPN published an incorrect story on Monday involving Miami Dolphins offensive coordinator Chan Gailey.

Adam schefter twitter picture

The story has been removed from ESPN.com, and replaced with this correction. The story was also mentioned on the 1 p.m. ET edition of SportsCenter.

No ESPN reporters reported on Gailey or the Dolphins, or were involved in the error, which was made internally. It was on ESPN.com for about 20 minutes. It also ran on social channels.

ESPN regrets the error.

I get it – mistakes happen. But if you’re ESPN, you need to have better practices in place to ensure that your online and TV outlets aren’t crediting one of your reporters for reporting a news story that they didn’t report and hasn’t happened. It’s a horrible look all around, especially in the era of everyone screaming “fake news!” every ten seconds. It’s better to be correct than first, and while ESPN was first, they sure as hell weren’t correct in this instance.