Former Mets GM Steve Phillips Fired by ESPN

by

Oct 25, 2009

Baseball analyst Steve Phillips was
fired by ESPN on Sunday night, less than a week after he admitted
having an affair with a production assistant at the cable network.

A representative for Phillips also
announced the former Mets general manager was entering a treatment
facility "to address his personal issues."

Phillips' acknowledgment Wednesday of
his relationship with 22-year-old Brooke Hundley was splashed across
the New York tabloids for days, embarrassing the Bristol, Conn.-based
sports giant.

"Steve Phillips is no longer working
for ESPN," network spokesman Josh Krulewitz said in a statement. "His
ability to be an effective representative for ESPN has been
significantly and irreparably damaged, and it became evident it was
time to part ways."

Phillips had taken a leave of absence
after the affair became public. Krulewitz declined comment when asked
Sunday night about Hundley's status with the company.

Steve Lefkowitz, Phillips'
representative, said in an e-mail that his client "is voluntarily
admitting himself to an inpatient treatment facility to address his
personal issues, and informed ESPN of his plans Friday."

According to a police report filed in
Wilton, Conn., Hundley began calling Phillips' wife, Marni, on Aug. 5
after he broke off the affair and sent her a letter graphically
describing their relationship and the 46-year-old Phillips' birthmarks.

Marni Phillips called police Aug. 19
when she came home to find Hundley in her driveway. "I knew
instinctively that this was the woman Steve was involved with and I was
terrified," she wrote in a statement to police.

Hundley also contacted Phillips' 16-year-old son through his Facebook account, according to the police report.

"This woman has clearly displayed erratic behavior and delusional tendencies," Steve Phillips said in a statement to police.

Phillips signed a statement to
police that he would not press charges. The status of the police
investigation was unclear Sunday. The report indicated a detective
planned to interview Hundley this week when she returned from vacation.

Marni Phillips filed for divorce Sept. 14, according to court records.

In 1998, Steve Phillips admitted
having sex with a Mets employee, who sued for sexual harassment. That
case was settled out of court. Phillips was fired by the Mets in 2003.

Messages seeking comment were left Sunday for Phillips and Hundley.

ESPN has been troubled by a series of workplace issues involving alleged misconduct by its television personalities.

In 2006, baseball analyst Harold
Reynolds
was fired after a female intern complained about what he
called a "brief and innocuous hug." Reynolds sued and settled with the
network last year.

Last year, a judge dismissed a
lawsuit filed by a makeup artist who accused hosts Jay Crawford and
sports writer Woody Paige of groping and propositioning her on the set
of the now-defunct show Cold Pizza.

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