
MLB analyst Dan Clark ripped Dianna Russini’s husband, Kevin Goldschmidt, after new public photos of the couple surfaced following the alleged Mike Vrabel scandal.
The reaction was not aimed at the photos in isolation. Clark was responding to the image of Russini and Goldschmidt appearing affectionate in public after weeks of scrutiny around her alleged connection to Vrabel.
That context matters because Clark’s post turned the Mother’s Day sighting into a much harsher judgment on Goldschmidt’s decision to stand by her publicly. His criticism was personal, direct, and built around the belief that the photos sent the wrong message.
As Dan Clark wrote after the new images spread online, the MLB analyst made it clear he could not understand Goldschmidt’s public show of support for Dianna Russini.
“What a moron. Why would you stay with her? It makes me sick. She has completely disrespected him on air countless times, allegedly had a prolonged affair behind his back, embarrassed herself, him, and their family, etc,” Clark tweeted.
He added, “Some things are forgivable – but not this. She is putrid.”
The language was extreme, but the target was clear. Clark was not breaking new reporting, he was reacting to the latest public image of Russini and Goldschmidt together.
The alleged Vrabel situation has created heavy online speculation, but Clark’s post was a commentary on the optics of Goldschmidt appearing affectionate with Russini after the scandal.
His view was that the photos made Goldschmidt look too accepting of public embarrassment. That is why the response landed as both a criticism of Russini and a direct shot at her husband.
As Page Six reported, the images showed Russini and Goldschmidt kissing on Mother’s Day in their first public sighting since the Mike Vrabel scandal became a major talking point.
“Dianna Russini and her husband, Kevin Goldschmidt, were photographed kissing on Mother’s Day in their first public sighting since her scandal with Mike Vrabel,” Page Six revealed.
That was the post Clark was responding to. The photos presented a united front, while his reaction rejected that image completely.
The sighting also came after weeks of attention around Russini, Vrabel, and previously surfaced photos that intensified scrutiny of the situation. That made a simple public kiss feel loaded.
For supporters, the images could be read as a private couple refusing to hide. For critics like Clark, they looked like a moment that demanded pushback.
That is why his post went viral. It took a carefully framed public appearance and answered it with blunt outrage.
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