Dan Dakich departed ESPN in 2021, at the time saying it was “as much my choice as their choice.”
However, Dakich noted Tuesday during his show on OutKick that he felt under a tight leash when he was at the network, but it appears Kendrick Perkins isn’t under the same scrutiny.
After discussing Shaquille O’Neal agreeing with Deion Sanders’ comments about his recruiting philosophy regarding single-parent or two-parent homes, Dakich lamented the rise of single-parent homes in the Black community, saying “that’s not right”, before adding “You can get mad at me, Tony Dungy me all you want, but I stand by that”.
Dakich then said he wouldn’t have been able to have that discussion while employed at ESPN.
“This is the reason I left ESPN. Right here. So I can talk about this stuff,” Dakich said. “It used to be when I send a tweet, I’d get called in. I remember having to call Norby Williamson, the head of ESPN, about a tweet that had no sexual innuendo, nothing, but they thought it did, and I had to answer for it before an Ohio State game.
“‘Norby, I don’t know what to tell you. This is a friend of mine…I insulted him through Dane Fife.’ Yesterday, you know what I saw? I saw our friend Kendrick Perkins dropping f-bombs on Twitter. I cannot help you, people.”
Perkins has been under fire after insinuating that NBA MVP voters select the award on race, noting that 80% of voters are white. On Tuesday, he had a heated disagreement with ESPN NBA analyst JJ Redick on the subject during an appearance on First Take.