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Imago

It started in 2024 when Stephen A. Smith went on air and said an NBA source had told him a Finals MVP wasn’t “marketable” because of his attitude. The player told him to “state your source.” Two years later, that dispute has escalated into one of the most public player-media feuds in recent memory, and now a fellow journalist has stepped forward to say the whole thing is an embarrassment to the profession.

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Nick Wright, on What’s Wright with Nick Wright, on Wednesday, did not take Jaylen Brown’s side. He made a more damaging argument. “Once upon a time, Stephen A. was a legitimately great reporter,” Wright said. “Put every level of work in imaginable to where he’s the biggest name in the space, and still works as much as anybody in the business at all times.” Wright was not dismissing Smith. He indicted him from a position of respect. “But talking to these guys like you’re a mob boss and they better watch what they say, there’s harm in it.”

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The specific behaviour Wright targeted was Smith’s implicit threat to deploy information as a weapon rather than report it. “I know stuff. I know technically it’s my job to report the things I know, but I know it, and I was keeping it in my back pocket in case I ever have to use it, like the big joker in a spades game,” Wright said, characterising Smith’s posture. “Give me a break. If you have real information about Jayson Tatum’s feelings about Jaylen Brown, you should report it. If you have real information about how the Celtics organisation feels about Jaylen Brown that you’re just sitting on, yes, you should report it. The answer is not: go to the mattresses and escalate.” He landed on the line that gives this article its headline: “It makes all of us look bad. And also, you’re the only guy who does it.”

The timeline that produced Wright’s intervention is well-documented. After Boston’s playoff loss to Philadelphia, Jaylen Brown said the 2025-26 season, played largely without an injured Jayson Tatum, was the “favorite” of his career. Smith criticised the comments on First Take on, telling Brown that he needed to “be quiet” unless he wanted to be traded. Brown responded on his Twitch stream with an expletive-laced counter, where he called Smith “the face of clickbait media” and repeated his standing offer: “You want me to be quiet and stop streaming? Well, I want you to be quiet and get off these networks, because you’re not using your platform to do real journalism.”

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Smith then doubled down, insinuating that Tatum had not appeared on Brown’s stream because he was upset by things Brown had said, a claim that Brown challenged: “What type of journalism is this? Jayson Tatum hasn’t been on my stream, and this is what we’re talking about on First Take?” Wright’s point is that at every escalation, the professional obligation was the same: if Smith had the information, report it. Using it as leverage is not journalism. It is leverage.

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“The Only Guy Who Does It”: What Wright’s Critique Reveals About the State of Sports Media

Wright’s most pointed observation was also his simplest. Not that Smith is wrong to cover Brown. Not that Brown is above scrutiny. But the specific behaviour of holding information hostage as a threat, rather than reporting it, sitting on it, or declining to confirm it, is something no other journalist in the sport does publicly. “You’re the only guy who does it.” That sentence carried its own verdict. If the behaviour were standard practice, it would be invisible. The fact that it stands out means it is an outlier, and outliers in a profession governed by sourcing ethics tend to stand out for a reason.

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The feud’s roots stretch back to 2024, when Smith’s “not marketable” comment, sourced to an unnamed NBA contact, prompted Brown to challenge him publicly to name the source. Smith declined. Brown was subsequently fined $50,000 by the NBA for criticising officials after the Game 7 loss to Philadelphia, a real professional consequence that arrived in the middle of a media dispute, which further blurred the line between legitimate accountability and targeted pressure.

Boston Globe national basketball writer Gary Washburn offered the most pragmatic read on the situation: Jaylen Brown should move on, because engaging with Stephen A. Smith professionally is a fight with no exit ramp. Wright’s intervention suggested a third option, one that neither Brown nor Smith has reached for yet. Stop using information as a weapon. Report it or don’t. But the mob boss routine, as Wright put it, ends the same way for everyone watching: badly.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​

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Ubong Richard

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Ubong Archibong is an NBA writer at EssentiallySports, bringing over two years of experience in basketball coverage. Having previously worked with Sportskeeda and FirstSportz, he has developed a strong foundation in delivering timely and engaging content around the league. His coverage focuses on game analysis, player performances, and evolving narratives across the National Basketball Association. Blending statistical insight with storytelling, Ubong aims to go beyond the immediate headline by placing performances and moments within a broader context, helping readers better understand the dynamics shaping the game. His work prioritizes clarity, accessibility, and a fan-first approach that connects audiences to both the action and the personalities behind it. Before joining EssentiallySports, Ubong covered the NBA and WNBA across multiple platforms, building experience in fast-paced reporting and deadline-driven publishing. His background in content writing has strengthened his ability to balance speed with accuracy, ensuring consistent and reliable coverage for a global audience.

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