Connect with us
Jim Cutler Demos

Sports TV News

10 Most Powerful In Sports Media

Jason Barrett

Published

on

Sports drives the best arguments. Not just the usual ones ­(Who is No. 1 in college hoops? Is Serena the best women’s tennis player ever?), but the real drama that unfolds outside the locker room: Did the NFL go easy on Ray Rice in his domestic abuse case? What is the state of race in America? And while there are lots of voices — the sports networks have wall-to-wall programming, and every major market has 24/7 talk radio — only a handful really lead the conversation. Looking at ratings, social media footprint, influence and the quality of commentary, THR paused the shouting long enough to pick the most powerful sports pundits right now. The unranked list reflects the power of ESPN and ascendance of women, the rise of digital and the pivotal nature of social and cultural issues in sports.

CHARLES BARKLEY and KENNY SMITH, TNT’s Inside the NBA

Thanks to this odd couple, Inside the NBA is one of the highest-rated shows on cable. Not surprisingly, Turner just signed the pair (and co-host Shaquille O’Neal) to five-year extensions. Barkley, 52, and Smith, 50, have been friends since their NBA days, but they rarely agree, leading to such moments as when Barkley kissed a donkey’s rear after losing a bet about Yao Ming’s scoring. But sometimes the banter turns serious, as it did when Smith objected to Barkley calling protesters in Ferguson, Mo., “looters” and “scumbags,” which led to a powerful on-air conversation about race in America.

Power stat Inside the NBA‘s 2015 conference finals postgame show averaged 3.2 million viewers.

MICHELLE BEADLE, ESPN

Hosting the afternoon show SportsNation, Beadle effortlessly goes from commenting on Kim Kardashian‘s booty (“Are we done talking about giant, greasy poo-makers yet?”) to who’s going to win the Super Bowl. But this year, Beadle, who returned to ESPN in 2014, solidified her place as one of the most powerful female voices in sports. She hammered Florida State for its easy treatment of Jameis Winston(accused of sexual battery), colleague Stephen A. Smith for his suggestion that women bring violence on themselves and Floyd Mayweather Jr. for banning her from the Manny Pacquiao fight after she talked about his record of domestic abuse. Beadle, 39, says the biggest personal surprise was that “I had a voice. I think I’m just a girl who hosts a funny, goofy sports show.”

Power stat Those 1.1 million Twitter followers.

JAY BILAS, ESPN

The Duke grad, 52, who played on Mike Krzyzewski‘s first Final Four team 30 years ago (and still calls him “Coach”), long has been popular for his ability to make the complexities of college hoops understandable to casual fans, elegantly diagramming plays onscreen. As ESPN’s lead college basketball analyst, he hosts the network’s NCAA Tournament studio show and does NBA Draft commentary. Since 2013, Bilashas become a prominent champion of change in college athletics, arguing on every available platform that student athletes should be paid. Says Krzyzewski about his former player, “He can go in-depth, and he’s not afraid to tackle any issue.”

Power stat What’s taking on the NCAA worth? In social media currency, a doubling of Twitter followers to nearly 1 million.

BOB COSTAS, NBC

The dean of pundits, Costas, 63, has covered every major sport, hosted a late-night talk show, daytime radio show, called games on MLB Network, contributed to NBC’sRock Center (where his Jerry Sandusky interview made national headlines) and anchored 10 Olympics (2012’s London Games drew a record 219 million viewers). Don’t look for him on Twitter (Costas refuses to use social media because “it is just vitriol and ignorance”), but his role as NBC’s go-to sports guy for Today and Nightly News means that when he does speak (like criticizing the NFL for its handling of Deflategate or calling ESPN exploitative for giving Caitlyn Jenner an ESPY), his comments reverberate like those of few others.

Power stat The 2016 Rio Olympics will be the 11th games he has hosted, one short of the record held by the legendary Jim McKay.

COLIN COWHERD, Fox Sports

Cowherd, 53, has charmed fans with his smarts and impatience for sports figures who cough up platitudes, but his ugly July 23 comments implying that Dominicans are intellectually inferior earned him an early release from ESPN, where he had been since 2003 and most recently hosted a midday radio show. In truth, ESPN did not have much to lose by jettisoning Cowherd, who already had told the network he was leaving. Despite an aggressive offer to keep him at the cable sports leader, Cowherd will defect to Fox Sports, where he’s expected to host a daily show on Fox Sports 1. His radio show will move from ESPN Radio to Premiere, and it will be simulcast on FS1.

Power stat His radio show averaged more than 2.5 million listeners, a big number for a non-drive-time slot.

RACHEL NICHOLS, CNN

Nichols’ 2013 move from ESPN to CNN, where she now is the network’s sole sports host, arguably has amplified her influence. Celebrated for asking tough questions, she has won respect (and legions of fans on Twitter) for grilling Roger Goodell on multiple occasions over conflict-of-interest issues. Nichols, 41, the daughter-in-law of the late Mike Nichols and Diane Sawyer, has used her new soapbox to challenge Floyd Mayweather Jr. about his history of domestic abuse as well as NBA commissioner Adam Silver about former L.A. Clippers owner Donald Sterling. On the aspirational front, she also has spoken out to draw attention to the San Antonio Spurs making Becky Harmon the league’s first full-time female assistant coach. Last year, Sports Illustrated called Nichols “the most impactful and prominent female sports journalist.”

Power stat 739,000 Twitter followers and counting.

JIM ROME, CBS Sports Radio

Rome has managed to make his high-octane CBS show, which airs live for three hours on 224 stations nationwide, the rare national program that feels local. His mantra is “have a take and don’t suck,” and he’s merciless to weak callers, but fans (“clones” in Rome-speak) love him anyway, especially when he turns his acerbic wit to deflating big sports egos — NFL quarterback Jim Everett famously threw a table at Rome after repeatedly being called “Chris” (as in Chris Evert), and former NBA commissioner David Stern got so frustrated at Rome’s grilling about whether the draft was fixed that he snapped, “Do you still beat your wife?” (Rome never has been accused of domestic abuse.) The show draws millions of listeners, and the 50-year-old host has more than 1.38 million Twitter followers. As part of the deal he signed with CBS when he jumped to the network from ESPN in 2012, Rome, who has a thriving side career as a horse breeder, also hosts a monthly show on Showtime.

Power stat His radio show draws 3.3 million viewers a week.

BILL SIMMONS, HBO

With Simmons, HBO, which signed the 45-year-old host to a new contract July 22 after ESPN dropped him 11 weeks earlier, is betting it gets a one-man sports division. Since he made the jump from being a local Boston blogger to an ESPN columnist in 2001, few have had as much influence in as many different areas as Simmons — whether its via Twitter (he has 4.43 million followers), podcast (32 million downloads for The BS Report), in his role as 30 for 30 executive producer (the sports documentary series has won an Emmy and a Peabody) and Grantland creator, or even his deep-dive history tome, The Book of Basketball. Still, it’s his blistering attacks on Roger Goodell for his handling of everything from the Ray Rice case to the Tom Brady suspension that show the strength of Simmons’ voice and the breadth of his influence.

Power stat Simmons’ The Book of Basketball debuted at No. 1 atop The New York Times best-seller list and sold more than 200,000 copies in its first three months.

STEPHEN A. SMITH, ESPN

Smith, 47, relishes his role as sports talk’s reigning provocateur — whether it’s onESPN2’s First Take (where highlights of his debates with Skip Bayless always end up on YouTube), his SiriusXM radio show or Twitter, where he has 2.4 million followers. He pushes the envelope, defending Dallas Mavericks owner Mark Cuban after he said he would cross the street if he saw a black kid in a hoodie and criticizing Tom Brady for skipping the White House ceremony in April honoring the New England Patriots for their Super Bowl victory to celebrate his parents’ anniversary. Said Smith to The New York Times, “I have opinions that are based on the facts that are presented to me. I don’t apologize. I stand by it. If I’m hated, so what? If I’m loved, so what?”

Power stat First Take is ESPN2’s most watched studio show.

MICHAEL WILBON and TONY KORNHEISER, ESPN’s Pardon the Interruption

“I know we play people on television, but we’re still just sportswriters,” says Wilbon of himself and his friend of 35 years (and longtime colleague at the Washington Post), who together co-host Pardon the Interruption, among the most influential 30 minutes on sports television. In its 14th year, the show’s rundown of the day’s most important stories (displayed in a right-hand scroll) sets the agenda as the lead-in to ESPN’s flagship 6 p.m. SportsCenter, capable of debating the frivolous (Was a tweet from Mark Cuban about makeup sex TMI?) as well as the serious (Gary Player‘s call for more black champions in golf). The program often is light and combative, but it hosts sophisticated conversations about topics like violence in sports (“We grew up in a world where we weren’t partners with the leagues,” says Wilbon) and race (“It helps that one of us is white and the other is black,” jokes Kornheiser). Few A-list guests turn down an opportunity to do “Five Good Minutes,” a midshow interview, despite being bashed by Wilbon and Kornheiser. Each retains a powerful individual brand: Wilbon, 56, as co-host of ABC/ESPN’s NBA halftime show and on social media (1.81 million Twitter followers), and Kornheiser, 67, via a radio show on ESPN’s D.C. station (and popular podcast) that is known for its smart conversation — he favors such sportswriters as Bob Ryan,Sally Jenkins and Richard Justice over athletes (“I hate people who are prone to cliches”) — and passionate fans.

Credit to the Hollywood Reporter which originally published this article

Sign up for the BSM 8@8

The Top 8 Sports Media Stories of the Day, sent directly to your inbox, every morning at 8am ET.

Invalid email address
We promise not to spam you. You can unsubscribe at any time.

Sports TV News

NBA TV Announces Playoff Coverage, Gus Johnson to Call Game 2 of Pacers-Bucks

Coverage of games throughout the NBA Playoffs on NBA TV will include pregame, halftime and studio coverage as well.

Published

on

NBA TV Logo
(Illustration) Courtesy: National Basketball Association, Warner Bros. Discovery

Warner Bros. Discovery has announced coverage plans for the first round of the National Basketball Association Playoffs on NBA TV, which includes back-to-back nights of live game broadcasts beginning on Monday, April 22. The Orlando Magic and Cleveland Cavaliers will face off from Rocket Mortgage FieldHouse in Cleveland, Ohio featuring play-by-play announcer Kevin Calabro, analyst Brendan Haywood and sideline reporter Lauren Jbara. This will mark Jbara’s playoff debut with NBA TV, which comes after officially joining TNT Sports last fall. Calabro, Haywood and Jbara will also return on Thursday, April 25 at 7 p.m. EST for Game 3 between the Magic and Cavaliers from Kia Center in Orlando, Fla.

The second game of the series between the Indiana Pacers and Milwaukee Bucks will be presented on NBA TV at 8:30 p.m. EST and features the return of Gus Johnson behind the microphone for playoff action. Johnson, who serves as the lead play-by-play voice for college football and college basketball coverage for FOX Sports, will work with Jim Jackson and Dennis Scott on the call from Fiserv Forum in Milwaukee, Wisc.

Over the course of the 2023-24 NBA season, Johnson filled in on select New York Knicks game telecasts on MSG Networks, where he previously served as an announcer and studio host for 16 years. Coverage of games throughout the NBA Playoffs on NBA TV will include pregame, halftime and studio coverage as well.

NBA TV could televise up to nine games throughout the 2024 NBA Playoffs depending on the outcomes of the individual series. Star players such as Paolo Banchero, Damian Lillard, Tyrese Haliburton and Donovan Mitchell are expected to participate across the matchups. The league-owned broadcast entity jointly managed by the NBA and Warner Bros. Discovery is coming off its most-viewed season since 2015-16.

TNT Sports will also present playoff games on TNT and available to stream utilizing the B/R Sports Add-On through Max. Coverage will conclude with the Western Conference Finals with a spot to compete for the Larry O’Brien Trophy in the balance.

Sign up for the BSM 8@8

The Top 8 Sports Media Stories of the Day, sent directly to your inbox, every morning at 8am ET.

Invalid email address
We promise not to spam you. You can unsubscribe at any time.
Continue Reading

Sports TV News

ESPN Averages 3.25 Million Viewers for NBA Play-In Tournament Doubleheader

The matchup between the Philadelphia 76ers and Miami Heat is the most-watched Eastern Conference Play-In game of all time.

Published

on

ESPN Logo
(Illustration) | ESPN Logo – Courtesy: The Walt Disney Company

Four Eastern Conference teams took the court on Wednesday night for the first two games within the 2024 National Basketball Association Play-In Tournament, both of which were broadcast by ESPN. The network’s NBA on ESPN broadcast property began its live game coverage with a matchup between the No. 7 Philadelphia 76ers and No. 8 Miami Heat, which featured stars such as Joel Embiid, Jimmy Butler and Tyrese Maxey.

A dramatic late-game comeback secured a one-point victory for the 76ers and attained an average of 3.40 million viewers on ESPN and ESPN2, which is up 52% over last year’s matchup between the regular-season seven and eight seeds in the conference. Additionally, the game peaked with 5.49 million viewers at 9:30 p.m. EST on ESPN. Play-by-play announcer Mike Breen, analysts Doris Burke and JJ Redick and reporter Lisa Salters were on the call for the game, averaging 3.31 million viewers on the network. An alternate broadcast – NBA Unplugged with Kevin Hart – was broadcast on ESPN2 and co-produced by ESPN, Omaha Productions and Hartbeat and averaged 98,000 viewers.

The 76ers-Heat game attained the spot for the most-watched Eastern Conference Play-In Tournament game of all time and the sixth-largest audience among the 23 telecasts of matchups in the round, which was introduced in 2021. Jon Lewis of Sports Media Watch reported that it was also the most-watched Play-In Tournament game that did not include the Los Angeles Lakers or Golden State Warriors.

The second game of the night featured the No. 9 Chicago Bulls against the No. 10 Atlanta Hawks with Ryan Ruocco, Richard Jefferson and Cassidy Hubbarth on the call. The Bulls ended up winning the game by a final score of 131-116, which attained an average of 3.07 million viewers. This metric is up 31% from the matchup between the regular-season ninth and 10th seeds in the conference last year and is now the second-most watched Eastern Conference Play-In Tournament game ever.

As a whole, ESPN averaged 3.25 million viewers for its broadcasts of the Play-In Tournament across ESPN and ESPN2, which is up 25% from last year. NBA Countdown, which was hosted by Malika Andrews and included analysts Stephen A. Smith, Michael Wilbon and Bob Myers, averaged 591,000 leading into the doubleheader of games. This edition of the studio program was up 52% from the comparable broadcast last year that preceded NBA Play-In Tournament coverage on the network.

ESPN will resume its NBA broadcasts when the Miami Heat and Chicago Bulls battle to attain the final spot in the Eastern Conference playoffs. The winner of that matchup will face the Boston Celtics, starting on Sunday, April 21 at 1 p.m. EST on ABC. ESPN recently announced its Game 1 coverage of the NBA Playoffs, which includes a six-game slate across network platforms over the weekend. David Roberts, ESPN Head of Event & Studio Production, also discussed the coverage earlier this week with members of the media.

Sign up for the BSM 8@8

The Top 8 Sports Media Stories of the Day, sent directly to your inbox, every morning at 8am ET.

Invalid email address
We promise not to spam you. You can unsubscribe at any time.
Continue Reading

Sports TV News

Report: No New NBA Media Rights Deal Expected Within Exclusive Negotiating Window

“Starting next week, the NBA will have the ability to engage in negotiations with other companies interested in the media rights package.”

Published

on

NBA Logo
Courtesy: Nic Antaya, Getty Images

The NBA is currently in the penultimate season of its existing national television media rights deals with The Walt Disney Company and Warner Bros. Discovery, collectively worth a reported $24 billion over the eight-year contracts. The league entered into an exclusive negotiating window with both broadcasting partners starting on Saturday, March 9, but is reportedly unlikely to reach a new deal before its expiration on Monday, according to Alex Sherman of CNBC.

Even if no deal ends up being reached by the deadline, both companies are in discussions about new media rights contracts with the NBA, as confirmed by the league. These discussions follow a 2023-24 season that garnered an average of 1.09 million viewers across ABC, ESPN, TNT and NBA TV, which is up 1% over last year and represents the highest average across networks in four years, according to Jon Lewis of Sports Media Watch. Both networks will begin broadcasting the NBA Playoffs on Saturday, April 20.

“We continue to have productive discussions with Disney and Warner Bros. Discovery on a renewal of our media deals,” an NBA spokesperson said in a statement to CNBC.

Starting next week, the NBA will have the ability to engage in negotiations with other companies interested in the media rights package. As reported by CNBC, Amazon, Apple, YouTube TV, Comcast (NBCUniversal/Peacock) and Netflix have all expressed potential interest through conversations with the league. Numerous reports have indicated that the league is looking to add a streaming element into its next deal and is looking for an increase in rights fees. The NBA could reportedly look to sell games within the In-Season Tournament to a separate media company, potentially adding a fourth partner in the deal.

Warner Bros. Discovery linear network TBS began airing NBA games in 1984, with TNT following four years later. The Walt Disney Company has presented the league since 2002 across ABC and ESPN, which includes broadcasts of the NBA Finals. Both companies are aiming to launch a new joint streaming venture with FOX Corporation in the fall that would grant subscribers access to games and networks from all three companies.

Sign up for the BSM 8@8

The Top 8 Sports Media Stories of the Day, sent directly to your inbox, every morning at 8am ET.

Invalid email address
We promise not to spam you. You can unsubscribe at any time.
Continue Reading
Advertisement

Advertisement

Upcoming Events

Barrett Media Writers

Copyright © 2024 Barrett Media.