Current:Home > InvestLSU coach Kim Mulkey lashes out at Washington Post, threatens legal action -Horizon Finance School
LSU coach Kim Mulkey lashes out at Washington Post, threatens legal action
View
Date:2025-04-15 13:02:48
BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) — LSU coach Kim Mulkey lashed out at and threatened legal action against The Washington Post on Saturday, saying the paper has spent two years pursuing a “hit piece” about her and that it gave her a deadline to answer questions this past week while the defending national champion Tigers were preparing for the women’s NCAA Tournament.
“The lengths he has gone to try to put a hit piece together,” Mulkey said of award-winning Post reporter Kent Babb, whom she did not mention by name. “After two years of trying to get me to sit with him for an interview, he contacts LSU on Tuesday as we were getting ready for the first-round game of this tournament with more than a dozen questions, demanding a response by Thursday, right before we’re scheduled to tip off. Are you kidding me?
“This was a ridiculous deadline that LSU and I could not possibly meet, and the reporter knew it,” Mulkey continued. “It was just an attempt to prevent me from commenting and an attempt to distract us from this tournament. It ain’t going to work, buddy.”
Babb confirmed to The Associated Press that he is working on a profile of Mulkey, but declined further comment. The Post also declined comment.
Babb has been working for The Washington Post for 14 years. Three times, his features have been named best in the nation by The Associated Press Sports Editors. Babb also has written two books: “Across the River: Life, Death, and Football in an American City,” and “Not A Game: The Incredible Rise and Unthinkable Fall of Allen Iverson.”
Mulkey is in her third season at LSU, which signed her to a 10-year, $36 million extension after she won her fourth national title as a coach last season. She also won three with Baylor, along with two as a player at Louisiana Tech and a gold medal as a player for Team USA at the 1984 Olympic Games.
Mulkey said she told Babb two years ago that she wouldn’t be interviewed by him because she “didn’t appreciate the hit job he wrote on Brian Kelly,” the current LSU and former Notre Dame football coach.
“I’m fed up, and I’m not going to let The Washington Post attack this university, this awesome team of young women I have, or me without a fight,” Mulkey added. “I’ve hired the best defamation law firm in the country, and I will sue The Washington Post if they publish a false story about me.
“Not many people are in a position to hold these kinds of journalists accountable, but I am, and I’ll do it,” Mulkey said.
Mulkey accused Babb of trying to trick her former assistant coaches into speaking with him by giving them the false impression that Mulkey had acquiesced to being interviewed.
“When my former coaches spoke to him and found out that I wasn’t talking with the reporter, they were just distraught, and they felt completely misled,” Mulkey said.
Mulkey added that former players have told her that the Post “contacted them and offered to let them be anonymous in a story if they’ll say negative things about me.”
“The Washington Post has called former disgruntled players to get negative quotes to include in their story,” Mulkey said. “They’re ignoring the 40-plus years of positive stories.
“But you see, reporters who give a megaphone to a one-sided, embellished version of things aren’t trying to tell the truth. They’re trying to sell newspapers and feed the click machine,” Mukley continued. “This is exactly why people don’t trust journalists and the media anymore. It’s these kinds of sleazy tactics and hatchet jobs that people are just tired of.”
___
AP March Madness bracket: https://apnews.com/hub/ncaa-womens-bracket/ and coverage: https://apnews.com/hub/march-madness
veryGood! (64499)
Related
- Realtor group picks top 10 housing hot spots for 2025: Did your city make the list?
- Music Review: Neil Young caught in his 1970s prime with yet another ‘lost’ album, ‘Chrome Dreams’
- The UK government moves asylum-seekers to a barge moored off southern England in a bid to cut costs
- The UK government moves asylum-seekers to a barge moored off southern England in a bid to cut costs
- Working Well: When holidays present rude customers, taking breaks and the high road preserve peace
- Louis Cato, TV late night bandleader, offers ‘Reflections,’ a new album of ‘laid bare, honest’ songs
- New national monument comes after more than a decade of advocacy by Native nations
- Half a million without power in US after severe storms slam East Coast, killing 2
- The Daily Money: Spending more on holiday travel?
- Boater missing for day and a half rescued off Florida coast in half-submerged boat
Ranking
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Georgia's greatest obstacle in elusive college football three-peat might be itself
- Boston man files lawsuit seeking to bankrupt white supremacist group he says assaulted him
- Australian police charge 19 men with child sex abuse after FBI tips about dark web sharing
- Pregnant Kylie Kelce Shares Hilarious Question Her Daughter Asked Jason Kelce Amid Rising Fame
- Busta Rhymes says asthma scare after 'intimate' act with an ex pushed him to lose 100 pounds
- Yellow trucking company that got $700 million pandemic bailout files for bankruptcy
- 'Claim to Fame' castoff Hugo talks grandpa Jimmy Carter's health and dating a castmate
Recommendation
Why we love Bear Pond Books, a ski town bookstore with a French bulldog 'Staff Pup'
Kia, Hyundai among more than 200,000 vehicles recalled last week: Check car recalls here.
Harris will announce a new rule that raises worker pay on federal construction projects
Thousands of Los Angeles city workers walk off job for 24 hours alleging unfair labor practices
Head of the Federal Aviation Administration to resign, allowing Trump to pick his successor
Biden heads west for a policy victory lap, drawing an implicit contrast with Trump
Belarus begins military drills near its border with Poland and Lithuania as tensions heighten
Former Georgia lieutenant governor says he received grand jury subpoena