• Loading stock data...
Thursday September 19, 2024

Sage Steele Sues ESPN Over Alleged Suspension; Network Denies It

  • Steele claims the network forced her to apologize and temporarily benched her, according to WSJ.
  • ESPN contends that Steele ‘was never suspended.’
Kirby Lee-USA TODAY Sports

ESPN is contesting the narrative that it temporarily suspended anchor Sage Steele over her alleged criticism of former President Barack Obama and COVID-19 vaccine mandates.

On Wednesday, ESPN was served with a lawsuit that alleged the network and parent Walt Disney Co. violated Steele’s First Amendment rights and Connecticut’s free speech protections in the aftermath of comments she made on former NFL quarterback Jay Cutler’s podcast in September.

Steele alleged in the lawsuit, first reported by The Wall Street Journal, she was suspended two days after recovering from COVID-19 and “under threat of losing her job, was forced to issue” an apology over statements made to Cutler.

In the podcast that was published Sept. 29, Steele described Disney’s vaccine mandate as “sick and scary” and questioned Obama’s choice to identify as Black on the U.S. Census.

“ESPN violated her free speech rights, retaliated against her, reprimanded her, scapegoated her, allowed the media and her peers to excoriate her and forced her to apologize simply because her personal opinions did not align with Disney’s corporate philosophy of the moment,” Bryan Freedman, Steele’s attorney, said in a statement to Front Office Sports. “Sage is standing up to corporate America to ensure employees don’t get their rights trampled on or their opinions silenced.”

While ESPN was served with the lawsuit, it has not yet been filed in a Connecticut court. That’s expected to occur within days.

An ESPN spokesman pointed to Steele’s recent high-profile hosting role on Masters Tournament coverage earlier this month as an indicator she was and is a valued employee.

“Sage remains a valued contributor on some of ESPN’s highest-profile content, including the recent Masters telecasts and anchoring our noon ‘SportsCenter.’ As a point of fact, she was never suspended,” said the ESPN spokesperson.

In the lawsuit obtained by FOS, Steele alleged she only got the Masters assignment after a complaint filed with ESPN’s human resources department and a subsequent letter to the company from her attorney.

“[ESPN] suddenly offered Steele the opportunity to co-host ESPN’s coverage of the Masters Tournament, in a blatant admission of their culpability and prior misconduct and in an attempt to cover up their violation of her rights and to avoid liability,” the lawsuit states.

To work The Masters, the lawsuit claims Steele had “no choice but to get the [COVID-19 vaccine] booster,” a requirement for all employees covering on-site events. She received the booster in the March, although missed the deadline set by ESPN by two days. ESPN gave Steele “a one-time exemption to the booster mandate,” according to the lawsuit.

ESPN draft analyst Mel Kiper Jr. will miss this week’s NFL Draft and will contribute from home since he’s unvaccinated.

ESPN has suspended other on-air talents over the years, including Bill Simmons, Jemele Hill, Tony Kornhesier and Curt Schilling.

Linkedin
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

Commanders Sale Could Hit $7B, Durant Wants In

A Washington Commanders sale could be wrapped up by the spring.
Sponsored

Big 12 Could Add Another Basketball Powerhouse

The Big 12 could bolster its membership by adding a mid-major.

How the Astros Won the World Series Without Breaking the Bank

The Astros won the World Series with underpriced talent.

ESPN College GameDay Means More to Schools Than a Saturday Morning Spotlight

Schools reap ‘immeasurable’ benefits when the ESPN bus rolls into town.

Featured Today

kyrie-irving-nike

Nike Suspends Relationship With Kyrie Irving Over Antisemitism

After several days of silence, the brand has dropped Irving.
Washington-Commanders
November 4, 2022

Bezos, Jay-Z Reportedly Teaming Up on Commanders Bid

Jeff Bezos and Jay-Z are frontrunners to be the next NFL owners.
Jeff-Bezos
November 4, 2022

The Next Washington Commanders Owner May Not Be The Highest Bidder

Bezos could be the strongest candidate, but money isn't the only factor.
November 3, 2022

Brooklyn Nets Suspend Kyrie Irving for Five Games Without Pay

The Brooklyn Nets have suspended Kyrie Irving without pay for at least five games for "failure to disavow antisemitism."

Careers

Powered By

Careers in Sports

Looking for a new job? Check out these featured listings and search for openings all over the world with Jobbio.
Sr. Account Manager
Miami Heat
Miami, FL
Director of Ads
Nike
Portland, OR – Hybrid
Sports Journalist
CBS Sports
New York City, NY

How MLB and Fox’s World Series Strategy Is Paying Off

Emphasis on more aggressive camera angles and in-the-moment interviews.
November 4, 2022

ESPN’s Chris Fowler Could Test Free Agency In 2023

If ESPN doesn't pay to retain him, Fox Sports could swoop in.
NASCAR-Cup-Series
November 3, 2022

NASCAR Races Back With 4% TV Growth in 2022

NASCAR has bounced back in 2022, averaging more than 3 million viewers over 37 races this season. That's a 4% increase over last year.
November 3, 2022

MLB, NFL Poised To Make Sports TV History Thursday Night

For first time, teams from same opposing cities play on same night.
November 2, 2022

Becky Hammon to Join ESPN as Studio Analyst for 2022-23 NBA Season

Hammon will contribute to a large variety of ESPN shows.
Women's-Sports-Network-logo-athlete
November 2, 2022

A Network Dedicated to Just Women’s Sports Launches

The network has support from 12 professional women's sports leagues.
November 2, 2022

New Big 12 Media Deal To Pay Schools $31.6M Average Annual Value

The average annual value per school is comparable.
November 2, 2022

Report: Women’s Sports Viewership, Interest Continue to Surge

The increased interest is at least in part due to broadcaster investment.