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Kevin Frazier: (SportsCenter anchor and NBA Shootaround host); now co-anchor of The Insider and host of The T.Ocho Show; Gayle Gardner: 1982–1987 (SportsCenter anchor) [3] George Grande: (first SportsCenter anchor; now with the Cincinnati Reds) [3] [4] Greg Gumbel: 1979–1988 (SportsCenter anchor and NBA play-by-play); [3] now at CBS Sports [5]
Pages in category "1990s American television news shows" The following 146 pages are in this category, out of 146 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Rex Chapman (2013 NCAA Tournament) Mateen Cleaves (2014–2015) Mike Francesca (1989–1993) Mike Krzyzewski (1993 and 1995 NCAA Tournaments) Grant Hill (2014 NCAA Tournament) Rick Majerus (1999 NCAA Tournament) Digger Phelps (1992–1993) Rick Pitino (1994 NCAA Tournament, 2000–2001) Bill Raftery; Dean Smith (1998 NCAA Tournament)
Bonnie Bernstein: 1995–1998, 2006–present (SportsCenter correspondent, Wednesday Night Baseball, college football, NFL, substitute host for NFL Live and Jim Rome Is Burning, co-host The Michael Kay Show on 1050 ESPN Radio (New York)) Georgie Bingham 2007–present (co-host of SportsCenter for ESPN non-domestic market and Soccernet SportsCenter)
Since 2010, the NCAA has had a joint contract with CBS and Warner Bros. Discovery.The coverage of the tournament is split between CBS, TNT, TBS, and truTV. [1]Broadcasters from CBS, TBS, and TNT's sports coverage are shared across all four networks, with CBS' college basketball teams supplemented with TNT's NBA teams, while studio segments take place at the CBS Broadcast Center in New York ...
Dan Pollard – SportsCentre anchor; David Pratt – Last Call host; Blake Price - anchor; Dave Randorf - SportsCentre anchor, CFL on TSN studio host; Lorne Rubenstein – Acura World of Golf host; Natasha Staniszewski – SportsCentre anchor; Mike Toth – SportsDesk anchor and Baseball Tonight host; Jim Van Horne – SportsDesk anchor and NHL ...
Kim Jones, a former collegiate tennis star and co-founder of ICONS, appeared on "Fox & Friends" to talk about loopholes in the NCAA's new trans-athlete policy.
Sports Tonight is an American sports news television program that aired on CNN from 1980 to 2001, and on CNN/SI from December 12, 1996 to the channel's demise on May 15, 2002. It normally aired at 11 p.m. ET/10 p.m. CT.