His career - in effect - revolves around protecting the reputation of his sources. All he has to do is take what his sources tell him and report (selectively) that to the media, without criticism or serious questioning. His sources do not have to be honest with him, he does not have to call into question what they are telling him, and both are incentivized to maintain this dynamic (the team gets to leak info that puts a favorable spin on reality, Tony gets to have his scoops). The cherry on top is that if Tony knows unsavory information that he knows explicitly or assumes implicitly hurts his relationship with his team sources, then he can choose what to share and what not to.Well we could just ask Tony if this list is coming several months after the fact or if it was based on things he learned at the time of the draft. @Tony Jones?
That's a rational thing to do in his position, but I don't really trust Tony to do something that runs contrary to the aforementioned.
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