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Fired journalist raises fresh questions about Mike Vrabel and Dianna Russini with new revelation tease

Photo By Winslow Townson/Getty Images
Photo By Winslow Townson/Getty Images
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Crissy Froyd’s return to the Mike Vrabel and Dianna Russini story has pushed an uncomfortable NFL media controversy back into public view.

The former USA Today Sports reporter was fired in April after publicly criticizing Russini following the wave of photos involving the NFL insider and the Patriots head coach.

Froyd has now resurfaced with a Daily Mail column that does more than revisit the old dispute. It teases more names and asks why Vrabel was not pressed harder when he returned to reporters.

ESPN reporter Dianna Russini looks on during the NFL football game between the Kansas City Chiefs and Pittsburgh Steelers on September 16, 2018 at Heinz Field.
Photo by Mark Alberti/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

Crissy Froyd revelation puts Mike Vrabel scrutiny back on Patriots

In her Daily Mail column, Froyd framed Vrabel’s Wednesday media session as a missed chance to ask the direct question still sitting over the controversy.

“When the NFL’s Mike Vrabel, head coach of the New England Patriots, stepped up to the microphones to face reporters on Wednesday, I held my breath,” she wrote.

Froyd’s argument was clear. She felt reporters circled the topic by asking Vrabel about family, leadership and whether he expected to miss more spring activities.

That is where the renewed tension sits. Vrabel and Russini have denied an affair, but Froyd’s column claims the wider industry has avoided a deeper conversation about access, power and professional boundaries.

Dianna Russini controversy still shadows Vrabel’s reset

The timeline explains why this has not disappeared. Photos of Vrabel and Russini together surfaced in April, and Russini later left The Athletic amid scrutiny around the situation.

Vrabel also stepped away from the Patriots during NFL Draft weekend for counseling. He later returned to work and tried to shift the focus back toward his family, players and team.

The football angle matters because Vrabel is trying to build his first Patriots team around Drake Maye. Any outside controversy that follows him into organized team activities becomes a distraction.

Froyd’s column goes beyond Vrabel and Russini. That is serious territory, and it needs evidence before anyone treats it as proven. Still, the reason her piece is gaining attention is because she tied her firing to a larger ethics debate.