Patriots Face Vrabel-Russini Dilemma At Worst Time

As NFL figures remain silent on the Russini-Vrabel scandal, analyst Tony Farmer questions what's keeping major sports networks from breaking their silence.

The Dianna Russini-Mike Vrabel scandal has mostly settled into the background for everyone involved, but not for Tony Farmer.

On Saturday, Farmer took to X and rattled off a long list of people and organizations he says have gone quiet as the story drags on. His point was blunt: the silence itself is the story.

He wrote, in part:

"Associated Press - won’t release ballots. ESPN - mostly silent.

Mike Vrabel - silent for weeks. Dianna Russini - haven’t heard from her since resignation.

NFL - one very small statement. Adam Schefter - hasn’t tweeted “Russini” since pre-April.

Mike Silver - See Adam Schefter."

He kept going from there.

"Athletic - Still no findings. Robert Kraft - silence.

Steve Levy - won’t address Russini tweet. Jets - won’t address Russini’s Morgan Moses tweet.

Eagles - won’t address AJ Brown tampering concern. Daboll, KOC, Jj - won’t address bodycam footage.

Pats beat writers - won’t ask tough questions. What is everyone so afraid of?"

Farmer’s post landed at a time when the rest of the NFL is already moving on. Russini was recently seen on a cruise with her family while she continues life without a job in journalism. Vrabel, meanwhile, has largely returned to normal operations after missing part of the NFL draft in April.

Training camp is less than two weeks away for much of the league, which means this story is about to run headfirst into the usual flood of NFL news. That’s the backdrop as Farmer keeps pressing for answers from the Patriots, the Jets, and anyone else he thinks should be speaking up.

The reaction on X came fast, and it split cleanly.

Some fans latched onto the silence and treated it like proof that there’s more here than the public knows. One wrote, "I don’t know if I’m just not getting something or what, but the NFLPA should be furious about this st and they should be all over it," while another said, "There's the Epstein files, and then, on a lesser level, I believe there's a Russini list, and the NFL absolutely doesn't want it revealed because of the st storm it'll cause, so they act like there's nothing to all this,".

A third added, "That means they're covering up the story. As long as you keep bringing it up it won't go away we'll make sure of that,".

Others pushed back hard on Farmer’s framing. One reply argued, "Vrabel had a presser after every mini camp practice , hardly silent," while another said, "I get it, they opened themselves up to questioning.

But answers will not change anything, it will just lead to more questions. People have formed their opinions and no answer is going to make a difference,".

Another user was even more direct: "DIANNA is never gonna talk,".

For now, the story sits in that awkward stretch before camp, when there’s still enough quiet for speculation to breathe but not enough to force a resolution. Farmer clearly isn’t letting it go. Whether the coming wave of NFL headlines buries it or gives it new life is the next question.

In Other News...

Titans Receiver Battle Could Force An Early Saleh Daboll Decision

The Titans receiver room has taken shape quickly under Robert Saleh and Brian Daboll, with Wan'Dale Robinson, 2026 draft pick Carnell Tate and veteran Calvin Ridley giving the offense a clear top end heading into camp. Beyond that core, the rest of the group is fighting for attention, and the competition has already narrowed enough that every practice rep matters for the players trying to stay in the picture.

Bryce Oliver, Xavier Restrepo and K.J. Osborn are among the names still pushing for a place on the roster, and there is enough history and offseason promise in the mix to keep the battle interesting. Even so, the Titans are moving toward a decision point quickly, and the question now is which receiver can separate himself before Saleh and Daboll have to make the call that shapes the rest of the depth chart. [Read more 🡒]

A Shocking Number Of Titans Fans Still Miss This Team Detail

One of the more overlooked parts of the Titans game-day identity has been around long enough to feel like part of the furniture in Nashville. The teams mascot was introduced in 1999, right after the franchises move and rebrand, and it was built around a familiar Tennessee symbol, the state wild animal that gave the character its name and look. Since then, it has become a steady presence at home games and around the league, with multiple Pro Bowl trips on the NFL mascot circuit.

For Titans fans, that matters more than it might seem, because not every NFL franchise has an official mascot at all. In a league where some teams lean on tradition alone, Tennessee has had a visible, family-friendly figure attached to its identity for years, and that helps explain why the character remains part of the conversation whenever the franchises branding comes up. The surprising part is not just that the mascot exists, but how many fans still seem to forget how long it has been there. [Read more 🡒]

Titans Camp Is About To Decide A Line Question Fans Hate

When veterans report to training camp on July 28, one of the more important jobs on the Titans offensive line will be up for grabs. Tennessee signed Cordell Volson in free agency after he missed the previous season because of an injury, and he will be competing with Jackson Slater, a second-year player who has yet to make a start, for a spot that could shape how the line settles in front of the offense.

The coaching staff plans to spend camp sorting out the competition before naming a starter, which means this is not the kind of question that gets answered quickly. Volson brings experience and a fresh start, while Slater offers the appeal of a younger option still trying to establish himself, and the Titans will spend much of camp figuring out which one gives them the better fit on the right side. [Read more 🡒]