Tom Bowles' response:
https://medium.com/@bowles66/as-any...in-harvick-didnt-like-13eecbc4b7d0#.mbe8fthad
I'll post my rebuttal to each point below.
I know Mike Neff very well and have worked with him multiple times, so it pains me to see him getting thrown under the bus by Tom Bowles. Tom could have just as easily said "another reporter". But, apparently, he can name names when it's convenient to him.
Tom Bowles knew exactly what he was writing when he wrote it. As a journalist, the way I read this is that he knew he was implying that Kevin Harvick was going to Hendrick and he knew that's how people would read it, but he was not confident enough in his "four sources" to come right out and say it. In other words, he was on shaky ground, but wanted to be the first to break the big news.
We've all been wrong before. But, we've all learned from it. Tom Bowles can't admit he was wrong in this case. He's decided, as the editor-in-chief of Frontstretch.com, to shift blame elsewhere. A managing editor is supposed to be a leader. Passing blame to others is not being a leader.
I would rather have my facts right than have a story first. I can't even count how many times I've had some big stories in my fingertips and had to sit on them because I didn't have my ducks in a row. In some instances, it's a matter of calling the main subject of a story and them not calling back. In other instances, I haven't had confidence in the sources that have given me a scoop. In rare instances, sources have completely backpedaled before or even after I published a story. It's okay to get beat to the punch.
On a few occasions, someone else had published a story that I elected not to publish because I wasn't confident enough to publish it, and their whole story has fallen apart.
This is not the first time Tom Bowles has put the integrity of the media center as a whole in question. When he cheered as Trevor Bayne won the Daytona 500, it was younger "citizen journalists" who got beat up over it. Bowles was fired from his job at Sports Illustrated after that -- but it was others who had to bear the brunt of his mistake.
The wording of a rumor in an article was designed to imply that Kevin Harvick was going to Hendrick Motorsports. Which takes me back to my earlier points about this article.
In my opinion, which is a pretty experienced opinion, Bowles knew he was on shaky ground journalistically. He clearly didn't have enough confidence to report definitively that Kevin Harvick was going to Hendrick Motorsports so he, instead, took a "reporting on rumors" approach.
Now, allow me to re-write Tom Bowles' column for him with what he should have said.