We’ve seen newspapers mixing up very different athletes with the same last name before, perhaps most notably with The Brandon Sun writing “Keith Hernandez Hangs Himself In Prison” this April. (They meant Aaron.) However, it’s rare to see one of the athletes in question be the main person to notice it. That’s what appears to have happened with Washington Redskins’ quarterback Kirk Cousins, though, who tweeted a newspaper clipping Tuesday that confused him with New Orleans Pelicans’ forward DeMarcus Cousins.
Glad to see my fighting skills are getting proper recognition. @boogiecousins #cousins pic.twitter.com/2qQYtTm9gp
— Kirk Cousins (@KirkCousins8) November 21, 2017
It’s not clear what newspaper that comes from, as there don’t appear to be any other tweets with that photo, and a reverse Google Images search produces no useful results. So it seems like Cousins either took this photo himself or was sent it via e-mail, text or some other non-public method. And the specific text here is interesting; it appears to be from an Associated Press story, one we can find published at USA Today at 10:03 p.m. Eastern Monday night, but it’s not exact because it’s combining the first and second paragraphs together. That’s of course a common practice with sports briefs, especially where space is limited, but that does suggest that whichever editor was involved here did more than just a straight copy and paste, and thus, that the Kirk-for-DeMarcus mistake was on the editor’s end rather than the wire. It is remarkable that no one else appears to have tweeted a photo of this, though. Perhaps Kirk is the only one reading the sports briefs of that particular paper?
It’s understandable how one might make this mistake, especially considering that Kirk Cousins and the Redskins were also in New Orleans, losing 34-31 to the Saints Sunday. And this isn’t as bad as many other newspaper errors we’ve seen over the years, including the aforementioned Hernandez mixup or an accidentally-run paragraph that ruined careers. This is more along the lines of Michigan papers forgetting which team the Lions lost to, or the phrasing used by Florida Times-Union‘s editors. It’s a funny moment, and it’s cool to see Cousins have some fun with it. If only he’d inserted a “You like that!”
About Andrew Bucholtz
Andrew Bucholtz has been covering sports media for Awful Announcing since 2012. He is also a staff writer for The Comeback. His previous work includes time at Yahoo! Sports Canada and Black Press.
Recent Posts
ESPN reveals announcers for 2025-26 College Football Playoff
The CFP begins on Friday, Dec. 19, at 8 p.m. ET on ABC and ESPN with No. 9 Alabama at No. 8 Oklahoma.
Despite criticism, CFP chair Hunter Yurachek doesn’t see need to change weekly ranking shows
"You're always going to have controversy, and that's why we debated for so long..."
It’s inevitable that the college football bowl system will die
Blame it on whatever you want, college football and it's power brokers have already started killing the bowl system.
Notre Dame throws tantrum after playoff spot ‘stolen from our student-athletes,’ will skip bowl game
"Overwhelming shock and sadness. Like a collective feeling that we were all just punched in the stomach."
Chris Fowler on CFP: ‘This is a bracket that’s going to be talked about forever’
"There's going to be something more than a tweak, I think, going forward."
Joey Galloway unloads on CFP committee over ‘very strange’ Miami-Notre Dame flip
"The résumé hasn't changed a lick."