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The following people were commentators for ESPN's NBA coverage: Adam Amin (play by play 2016–2020) Greg Anthony (analyst) Michelle Beadle (studio host 2014–2019) Chauncey Billups (analyst 2018–2020) Rick Carlisle (game analyst 2007–2008) Doug Collins (basketball analyst 2014–2017) Ariel Helwani (sidleine reporter 2019–2021)
Quint Kessenich (2005–present): lacrosse and ESPN College Football and ESPN College Basketball; Mel Kiper, Jr. (1984–present): NFL Draft and scouting; Hilary Knight (2021-present): NHL on ESPN; Tim Kurkjian (1998–present): Baseball Tonight; Tim Legler (2000–present): NBA on ESPN, NBA Shootaround and NBA Fastbreak; Trevor Matich: ESPN ...
Eric Clemons: 1987-1991 (Sports Center, NBA Today and Heavyweight Boxing Coverage; Jonathan Coachman: 2008–2017 (ESPNews and SportsCenter) Jay Crawford: 2003–2017 (co-host of Cold Pizza/ESPN First Take and 1st & 10) Lindsay Czarniak: 2011–2017 (SportsCenter) Rich Eisen: 1996–2003 (SportsCenter anchor); now NFL Network anchor [1]
Rachel Nichols: (2004–2013, 2016–2022) NBA reporter, now with Monumental Sports Network; Wendi Nix: (2006–2023) Boston-based bureau reporter; she is also one of the hosts of College Football Live, an in-studio contributor on Sunday NFL Countdown (since 2014) and anchors SportsCenter on occasion; Pam Oliver: (1993–1995), now with Fox Sports
SportsCenter In 2004, ESPN contributed to the ESPN25 project by counting down the 100 most significant sports events and news stories of the previous 25 years. In 2007, ESPN aired "Ultimate NASCAR", a series of one-minute features of significant events in the history of NASCAR. It celebrated the return of coverage rights to the network.
NBA Today is an American television sports talk program on ESPN (or on rare occasions ESPN2, however ESPN2 will rebroadcast the program daily after ESPN airs it as long as it doesn't air the program live), hosted by Malika Andrews, featuring Kendrick Perkins, Chiney Ogwumike and Richard Jefferson as panelists.
Along with ESPN, Hulu+ With Live TV also comes with more than 75 channels, including live sports networks like CBS Sports Network, FS1, FS2, Golf Channel, NFL Network and Olympic Channel, as well ...
One of television’s most respected journalists, Al Michaels has covered more major sports events than any sportscaster, including 20 years as the play-by-play voice of Monday Night Football. He is the only commentator to call the Super Bowl, World Series, NBA Finals and host the Stanley Cup Finals for network television.