Some media reports, including those written by The Post, have listed Cooley’s comments — and the team’s lack of any public response — as among the precipitating factors in the front-office divorce. Cooley has steered clear of the topic in the past three weeks. But he addressed it during an impassioned segment Friday that is probably best listened-to.

“No one told us to do the [original] segment, told me to do the segment,” he said. “Can I be more clear on that? We threw out a lot of possible reasons that he could have been silenced. That was one of them. … I used Scot McCloughan’s name and alcohol in the same sentence, and I was wrong. I regret that. I have regretted that. This blew up to be way bigger than I expected it to be, and by the way, it blew up in a report that was in no way shape or form the context that we had suggested. … I’ve apologized to Scot; I feel very sorry that my name’s associated with this. I feel regret that my name’s associated with this. I’ve apologized to the organization.

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“You can call me an idiot, you can call me naive, you can call me ignorant, but I didn’t see this entire firestorm that was created,” he said. “I didn’t. It happened, though. I shouldn’t have mentioned his name and alcohol in any context, especially not me, because of the perception that I have some special access to this team, which by the way, is entirely overrated. … But accusing me of being told to float something is like telling me I’m a stupid idiot. … I wouldn’t create a sinister plan. I was not part of any of this. I swear on anything you want to swear on.”

Now time for some awkward first-person backstory.

1. Cooley, on the morning of Feb. 14, made brief remarks about McCloughan and alcohol, in the middle of a wide-ranging segment about the muzzling of the general manager.

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2. A friend of mine tweeted something that morning after hearing Cooley make those remarks. It seemed intriguing. I was busy, though, and didn’t listen to the segment until late that afternoon.

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3. When I listened, I was somewhat flabbergasted by Cooley’s comments, especially coming from someone who has ties to the organization. But I also didn’t think this was breaking news. After chatting with an editor, I went home, planning to write something up the next morning, which I did.

4. In that item, I used the word “relapse” to describe Cooley’s speculation, which is a word that Cooley never used. I also repeatedly referred to Cooley as a Redskins team employee, which he disputes. He says he is paid by the radio network he works for, which is owned by Daniel Snyder and has offices in Redskins Park, but that he does not work for the team.

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“To all of those who keep saying it and writing it, I am not a team employee, okay?” he said Friday. “I was, from 2004-2012, when I played tight end for the Washington Redskins. But after I was cut in camp in 2013, and not brought back, I have not been a team employee since. ESPN 980, this radio station, pays me. They pay me for this radio show. They pay me for the game-day broadcast. I receive all payment through a radio station. In fact, I have a boss named Chris Johnson, who I respond to when I’m sick, when I have vacation days, when I have something going on. I respond to no one at Redskins Park. I do the show every day. They pay me to be an analyst. I am not a team employee in any way shape or form.”

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5. Cooley is absolutely correct that he introduced the original segment by saying he had no inside knowledge or information, and that he listed potential alcohol consumption as just one of several possible reasons for McCloughan’s muzzling. I included some of that context in my item. Many subsequent reports did not.

“I made it really clear when we did that show, really clear that I knew nothing in terms of real information,” Cooley said on Friday. “That I had no sources, that I had no insight whatsoever. I made it really clear that the discussion was a discussion about what a fan might think as to why the general manager was not being allowed to talk. … We also [listed] multiple possibilities and took calls on multiple other possibilities. We mentioned it could be an innocent situation where Bruce just wanted to focus on free agency, he wanted Scot to focus on free agency and to focus on the draft without worrying about responsibilities of communicating with the media. We considered the possibility that Bruce didn’t want Scot to answer all the questions about Kirk Cousins. We discussed several possible reasons as to why Scot McCloughan was being muzzled. …

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“We also discussed the following: We discussed that it would be crazy as a fan if you didn’t think of his track record and his history of alcohol issues,” Cooley said. “Here’s the deal. When it comes to the idea that I was the mouthpiece, I’ll swear on anything you want to swear on that no one put me up to this. I’ll swear on my daughter. I’ll swear on my unborn son. You want to give me a bible, I’ll swear on a bible. You want to give me a lie detector test; I’ll take a lie detector test.

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“NO ONE TOLD ME TO DO THIS. You can be mad at anyone you want to be mad at for this happening, but let me be really clear on something: Bruce Allen, Larry Michael, Jay Gruden, anybody involved in this organization that I know, no one came to me and said, ‘Hey Chris, can you float some information out there so three weeks from now we can fire the general manager.’ No. It’s insanity. And if it were the truth, they’re insane, because it’s hurt everybody to have my name associated with this.”

6. The speculative comments Cooley made in the original segment about possible drinking ran a total of 64 words. The segment soon transitioned into phone calls, which went in other directions.

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7. And yet that segment seemed to free other media members to bring up this issue — an issue some media members had been whispering about behind the scenes for quite a while. Perhaps more significantly, the team never commented on the remarks, neither disciplining Cooley — which would have raised questions about the independence of the radio station — nor publicly defending McCloughan.

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8. Turning radio segments into blog posts involves editorial judgments: what’s worth transcribing, what’s the headline, what’s the lede, how much context is necessary. Those are editorial judgments that were made by me, not by Cooley. I think that is worth remembering, at least.

“I’m not going to blame anybody in the media,” Cooley said Friday. “This is the media’s job: to take whatever they want to take and make whatever they want to make out of it, and it’s a headline-grabbing media. That’s what we have. That’s how you get a big story. You make a big headline. You speculate. And what I did was also speculative, so it would be hypocritical of me to blame anybody out there.

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“What I will say is that not one person that has put this into print has reached out to me, once, ever. Not one person that put this in The Post, not one person that put this in Pro Football [Talk], not one person that put this anywhere out there in print has once reached out to me. They all know how to get a hold of me. They all have my number. To some extent, I believe that most of them were friends of mine.

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“And again, I’m not going to say shame on you,” Cooley said. “But I’m going to tell everybody that’s listening: no one that’s printed my name has asked me anything about this, which in my opinion would be due diligence … I’m accessible here. I’m not the team. You don’t have to go through a team PR guy to get a hold of me. I despise that this has become a story that involves me. Okay? For what we did, of course I’ll take responsibility for what we did. And you can call me ignorant or you can call me naive, but I’ll take responsibility for the part that we played in this.”

9. You can’t accurately turn a radio segment into printed text without losing some tone, and context, and the weeks of shows that came before, and the weeks that came after. But to give you as much context as possible, here are Cooley’s full comments from Friday morning. They are long.

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“There’s a narrative right now going around by a lot of people that I floated something through our show, because I was given something to float. I was creating some spark for the Redskins to fire Scot McCloughan. Good God, if you believe that, you’re insane. I did not do that in any way shape or form. Now here’s the deal, before we get into all this, I’m not going to blame anybody in the media. This is the media’s job: to take whatever they want to take and make whatever they want to make out of it, and it’s a headline-grabbing media. That’s what we have. That’s how you get a big story. You make a big headline. You speculate. And what I did was also speculative, so it would be hypocritical of me to blame anybody out there.

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“What I will say is that not one person that has put this into print has reached out to me, once, ever. Not one person that put this in The Post, not one person that put this in Pro Football [Talk], not one person that put this anywhere out there in print has once reached out to me. They all know how to get a hold of me. They all have my number. To some extent, I believe that most of them were friends of mine.

“And again, I’m not going to say shame on you. But I’m going to tell everybody that’s listening: no one that’s printed my name has asked me anything about this, which in my opinion would be due diligence … I’m accessible here. I’m not the team. You don’t have to go through a team PR guy to get a hold of me. I despise that this has become a story that involves me. Ok? For what we did, of course I’ll take responsibility for what we did. And you can call me ignorant or you can call me naive, but I’ll take responsibility for the part that we played in this.

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“But the part was not sinister, it was not accusatory, it was not anything that we chose to create in a true negative fashion. We did a radio segment in a four-hour radio show based on a story that was already out there. So if you think this timing is to so curious, look at every report that was out there that said Bruce Allen has muzzled Scot McCloughan. And we did a speculative segment on just that, where we took calls as well.

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“Here’s what I want to say. The stories about Scot McCloughan — whether they’re printed, on TV, radio, blog, wherever they’ve been — with the recurring theme that these stories truly involved me, a team employee who has accused Scot McCloughan of an alcohol relapse. By the way relapse is an interesting word, a word that I never once used. That was editorialized into everyone of these articles. I never once used that word, relapsed. Never once. The word relapse was used over and over: I never used that word one time.

“But in many of the stories this goes further, and that’s where this becomes a problem to me. The segment is the segment, but where it goes further is that I’m the mouthpiece, and that’s incredible. That I was asked by the team to float the accusation about Scot McCloughan, float it out there to lay some sort of public relations groundwork so they could perhaps dismiss him from the organization and look like they had a reason to do so.

“I’ve chosen not to respond to any of these until right now. And I will. Let me be very clear. To all of those who keep saying it and writing it, I am not a team employee, ok? I was, from 2004-2012, when I played tight end for the Washington Redskins. But after I was cut in camp in 2013, and not brought back, I have not been a team employee since. ESPN 980, this radio station, pays me. They pay me for this radio show. They pay me for the game day broadcast. I receive all payment through a radio station. In fact, I have a boss named Chris Johnson who I respond to when I’m sick, when I have vacation days, when I have something going on. I respond to no one at Redskins Park. I do the show every day. They pay me to be an analyst. I am NOT a team employee in any way shape or form.

“Second, I never accused Scot McCloughan on this radio show of relapsing. It never happened. Never. I did mention Scot’s past history of alcohol issues in San Francisco and Seattle. I mentioned it on this show. But I never accused him of relapsing. That never happened. Again, let me be very clear. I never accused him. What we did was not accusatory.

“The timing of this really isn’t as curious as everyone wants to make it. What I said on the radio program with Kevin was a response to one of the big stories of the day, which I had already mentioned. At the time, Bruce Allen had muzzled Scot McCloughan. We had a segment in response to that story that was already out there. I made it REALLY clear when we did that show, REALLY clear that I knew NOTHING in terms of real information, that I had NO sources, that I had NO insight whatsoever. I made it REALLY clear that the discussion was a discussion about what a fan might think as to why the general manager was not being allowed to talk. As a part of that discussion …

“We also had multiple possibilities and took calls on multiple other possibilities. We mentioned it could be an innocent situation where Bruce just wanted to focus on free agency, he wanted Scot to focus on free agency and to focus on the draft without worrying about responsibilities of communicating with the media. We considered the possibility that Bruce didn’t want Scot to answer all the questions about Kirk Cousins. We discussed several possible reasons as to why Scot McCloughan was being muzzled.

“We also discussed the following: we discussed that it would be crazy as a fan if you didn’t think of his track record and his history of alcohol issues. Here’s the deal. When it comes to the idea that I was the mouthpiece, I’ll swear on anything you want to swear on that no one put me up to this. I’ll swear on my daughter. I’ll swear on my unborn son. You want to give me a bible, I’ll swear on a bible. You want to give me a lie detector test; I’ll take a lie detector test. NO ONE TOLD ME TO DO THIS.

“You can be mad at anyone you want to be mad at for this happening, but let me be REALLY clear on something: Bruce Allen, Larry Michael, Jay Gruden, anybody involved in this organization that I know, NO ONE came to me and said Hey Chris, can you float some information out there so three weeks from now we can fire the general manager. No. It’s insanity. And if it were the truth, they’re insane, because it’s HURT EVERYBODY to have my name associated with this.

“I will swear on anything you want to swear on. You can wire me up. NO ONE told us to do the segment, told me to do the segment. Can I be more clear on that? We threw out a lot of possible reasons that he could have been silenced. That was one of them. It was written later in the day that I had accused him of relapsing. It was never used. It was never even suggested that I accused him of relapsing. We actually said maybe he’s had a few pops, maybe that was one of the cases.

“Then it was written that Chris Cooley, team employee, has accused Scot McCloughan of relapsing, and Scot McCloughan is incensed by this. Here’s what’s true: I used Scot McCloughan’s name and alcohol in the same sentence, and I was wrong. I regret that. I have regretted that. This blew up to be WAY bigger than I expected it to be, and by the way, it blew up in a report that was in no way shape or form the context that we had suggested. We didn’t report anything. I’ve apologized to Scot, I feel very sorry that my name’s associated with this. I feel regret that my name’s associated with this. I’ve apologized to the organization.

“You can call me an idiot, you can call me naive, you can call me ignorant, but I didn’t see this entire firestorm that was created. I didn’t. It happened, though. I shouldn’t have mentioned his name and alcohol in any context, especially not me, because of the perception that I have some special access to this team, which by the way, is entirely overrated. Yeah, I’ve worked with many of these people and I know many of these people but I’m not fed stories.

“And here’s what I said that day and here’s what I’ll say again: I don’t ask them questions about football, because I don’t want to know the answers, so in fact I can have a speculative segment on the radio show. I don’t want to know, so we can have our show, because I like working with you and I like doing what we do and at times I like acting like a fan. I watch film, and I know a lot of things because I’m able to make up my mind on a lot of these things, but accusing me of being told to float something is like telling me I’m a stupid idiot.

“Challenging my integrity on this situation is ridiculous. I’m smart enough to understand a lot of things that are going on with the Washington Redskins. Without someone coming and running to me and saying hey can you do something for us. Let’s create this sinister plan. I wouldn’t create a sinister plan. I was not part of any of this. I swear on anything you want to swear on. I shouldn’t have done it, ok? Shouldn’t have done the segment. You and I both know that. I know that more than anybody else.