Current:Home > StocksRavens coach John Harbaugh sounds off about social media: `It’s a death spiral’ -MarketPoint
Ravens coach John Harbaugh sounds off about social media: `It’s a death spiral’
View
Date:2025-04-16 21:19:17
Baltimore Ravens head coach John Harbaugh has a personal policy when it comes to social media:
He wants no part of it.
He doesn’t have an account and said he never will.
“It’s a death spiral,” he told USA TODAY Sports in a recent interview. “You only get so many days to your life, you know? Like every day we're granted is a gift, man. I'm not gonna turn over my days, my well-being, my peace of mind over to social media and all the traps that come with it.”
Harbaugh, 61, spoke about this with USA TODAY Sports recently in the context of a new nonprofit organization he founded called the Harbaugh Coaching Academy. It’s a family legacy project being announced today that aims to boost the coaching profession with lessons and insight from the best in the business.
All things Ravens: Latest Baltimore Ravens news, schedule, roster, stats, injury updates and more.
But there’s also another feature of this project that appeals to him: He can use the academy website and its related platforms to communicate with the public directly instead of wading into the negative muck that often comes up on Instagram, Facebook or X, formerly Twitter.
He called it an alternate universe
As a digital content enterprise, the Harbaugh Coaching Academy still will use social media channels to promote engagement. It just won’t be John Harbaugh running those social channels. It’ll be a member of his marketing team instead.
And if he wants to make a public comment, he also could convey it through them.
“This is an opportunity now to reach out also in real time, just like if I was gonna do an Instagram post or X thing or whatever,’ said Harbaugh, who won a Super Bowl in 2013 and now has the second-longest tenure among NFL head coaches (16 seasons). “If I had something I want to say like that, I'm going to do it through this in the future.”
Harbaugh reached his conclusion about social media after seeing what it often offers – a cesspool of trolling and anonymous vitriol. He has scrolled through social media posts before, and sometimes certain posts are brought to his attention.
“The social media world to me, it's like a world that I just haven't wanted to live there because it's not a real world,” Harbaugh said. “And you could get sucked into that vortex, you know? The next thing you know it becomes like an alternate universe that I'm not interested in living in. So I've kind of made it a point to say that I haven't had to use it. I’m a pro coach. I'm not a college coach. So with this, this is an opportunity now to reach out also in real time.”
NFL coaches on social media
To his point, an NFL coach doesn’t really “need” to be on social media the way a college coach does. NFL coaches don’t recruit players. College coaches do and use social media to enhance their efforts.
But some NFL head coaches still have developed big followings on social media accounts in large part because of their fame in the NFL. Those social media accounts in turn have given these coaches their own audience with which to engage or share information on their terms.
For example, Denver Broncos coach Sean Payton has more than 420,000 followers on X and uses it to promote his own nonprofit foundation.
By contrast, there also are NFL coaches like Harbaugh who want no part of it, though few have articulated the reason for it quite like him.
“I'm not on social media — thank God,” Cleveland Browns head coach Kevin Stefanski said in 2020.
Harbaugh’s brother Jim, the head coach of the Los Angeles Chargers, also has nearly two million followers on X but hasn’t posted there since 2020.
‘Smarter, stronger, better’
John Harbaugh’s opinion about social media almost sounds like coaching advice that belongs on his academy website. It also tracks with other advice from mental health experts who cite research linking social media use with isolation, anxiety and depression among young adults and children.
Then there’s that time in 2022 when the Ravens coach had a talk with his star quarterback, Lamar Jackson, about his own social media flare-up. It happened when Jackson made a profane remark on X, in response to a critical remark about him there after a 28-27 loss to Jacksonville. Harbaugh said then that he begs “guys not to get into the Twitter world right after the game, especially after a loss.”
Jackson deleted the post.
“It’s just not a place where I need to be,” John Harbaugh said of social media in general. “I don't really need to know what like every single person is thinking about every single thing. If there are things I want to read that are gonna be edifying and uplifting and are gonna make me smarter, stronger, better − I want to choose to read those things.”
Follow reporter Brent Schrotenboer @Schrotenboer. Email: [email protected]
veryGood! (49834)
Related
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Arizona county elections leader who promoted voter fraud conspiracies resigns
- Why is the UAW on strike? These are their contract demands as they negotiate with the Big Three
- Deion Sanders condemns death threats against player whose late hit left Hunter with lacerated liver
- Taylor Swift makes surprise visit to Kansas City children’s hospital
- Video shows high school band director arrested, shocked with stun gun after he refused to stop music
- Some Virginia Democrats say livestreamed sex acts a distraction from election’s real stakes
- MLB playoff picture: Wild-card standings, tiebreakers and scenarios for 2023 postseason
- Backstage at New York's Jingle Ball with Jimmy Fallon, 'Queer Eye' and Meghan Trainor
- Video shows high school band director arrested, shocked with stun gun after he refused to stop music
Ranking
- Backstage at New York's Jingle Ball with Jimmy Fallon, 'Queer Eye' and Meghan Trainor
- Utah therapist charged with child abuse agrees not to see patients pending potential discipline
- The video game industry is in uproar over a software pricing change. Here's why
- Minnesota professor dismissed over showing Islamic art can proceed with lawsuit, judge rules
- The city of Chicago is ordered to pay nearly $80M for a police chase that killed a 10
- An artist took $84,000 in cash from a museum and handed in blank canvases titled Take the Money and Run. He's been ordered to return some of it
- Kevin Costner and Estranged Wife Christine Baumgartner Settle Divorce After Months-Long Battle
- Shohei Ohtani has elbow surgery, with 'eye on big picture' as free-agent stakes near
Recommendation
FACT FOCUS: Inspector general’s Jan. 6 report misrepresented as proof of FBI setup
Utah therapist charged with child abuse agrees not to see patients pending potential discipline
Actor Bijou Phillips files for divorce from Danny Masterson after rape convictions
California law restricting companies’ use of information from kids online is halted by federal judge
This was the average Social Security benefit in 2004, and here's what it is now
Thai king’s estranged son urges open discussion of monarchy, in rejection of anti-defamation law
Southern Baptists expel Oklahoma church after pastor defends his blackface and Native caricatures
Ohtani has elbow surgery. His doctor expects hitting return by opening day ’24 and pitching by ’25