I didn't view myself as attacking the boss. I viewed my boss at ESPN as the publisher and president of ESPN.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
And then ESPN fired me. I did not think that was a fitting punishment.
People always think the coach is the strongest person at a club, the boss, but in truth, he's the weakest link. We're there, vulnerable, undermined by those who don't play, by the media, by the fans. They all have the same objective: to undermine the manager.
I mean, I didn't - I should have demanded attention of the boss maybe, or something like that that might have backfired. This I would just take as it came.
A baseball manager is a necessary evil.
Don't blame the boss. He has enough problems.
I watch ESPN all day long.
The first step to stringing the boss up from a lamppost is saying the boss is a moron.
My worst boss was a departmental chair who never learned to appreciate new developments in the field. He had contempt for students and younger researchers, and he saw the job of running the department as a nuisance.
The reporter claimed he was going to write the article from my point of view. Instead, he made me sound like a little idiot. It made me never want to do another interview again.
I would hate people to think bossy is all I can do.
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