Dianna Russini has resigned from The Athletic after days of public fallout tied to photos showing her with Patriots coach Mike Vrabel at a resort in Arizona, ending one of the more bizarre NFL media controversies the league has produced in an offseason already addicted to side stories.
The resignation was confirmed Tuesday, April 14, after an internal review had already put Russini’s work under scrutiny.
The photos that triggered the storm were taken in late March at a resort in Sedona, Arizona, shortly before the NFL owners meetings. Images published publicly showed Russini and Vrabel together at the property, and the story quickly moved from a personal optics issue into a professional one because Russini covered the NFL as one of The Athletic’s top insiders while Vrabel is one of the league’s most prominent coaches. Both are married.
Russini, in her resignation letter to executive editor Steven Ginsberg, pushed back on the narrative that had taken hold around the photos and defended her professional conduct. She wrote that she was stepping away because the situation had become a “self-feeding cycle of speculation” and said the story around her had drifted away from facts and into something more damaging. Reports describing the letter said she made clear she did not accept the public narrative built around the images and maintained that her work had been professional.
That position is consistent with what Russini and Vrabel had already said publicly after the photos surfaced. Russini said the images lacked context and said there had been other groups present during the day. Vrabel called the suggestion of wrongdoing “laughable” and described the interaction as innocent. Early on, The Athletic publicly backed Russini too, saying the photos were misleading and lacked important context.
But the situation did not stop there. As more reporting and public speculation spread, the internal review widened. Public reporting from multiple outlets said The Athletic and its parent company, The New York Times, were examining Russini’s coverage involving Vrabel and whether any professional lines had been crossed. Ginsberg later said new questions had been raised during the process, even as no public finding of misconduct had been announced before Russini’s resignation.
That is the part that turned this from tabloid material into an actual sports media story. This was never just about whether two married public figures were photographed together at a hotel. It became a question of journalistic standards, source relationships and whether one of the NFL’s most plugged-in insiders could continue covering the league cleanly with that kind of cloud hanging over her work. The Athletic reportedly sidelined Russini while the review continued, and she had not published new reporting after the photos emerged.
Russini’s resignation also ends a relatively short run at The Athletic. She joined the outlet in 2023 after nearly a decade at ESPN and had become one of its most visible NFL voices across stories, podcasts and video. Her exit leaves a significant opening at one of the sport’s biggest media operations and adds another ugly chapter to a story that neither she nor Vrabel seemed able to contain once the images became public.