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Jesse Palmer: College Football on ABC and ESPN College Football Thursday Primetime; Jeff Passan (2019—present): MLB; Kendrick Perkins (2019–present): NBA on ESPN, NBA Today; David Pollack: ESPNU College Football and College GameDay (football) Derek Rae (1994–present): Champions League coverage; Jordan Rodgers (2016–present): ESPN ...
According to Marchand, Buck's deal with ESPN is also for five years and worth $60-75 million in March 2022. The "Monday Night Football" play-by-play commentator makes between $12 and $15 million ...
Scott Van Pelt (born 1966 or 1967) [1] is an American sportscaster and sports talk show host employed by ESPN.He is a long time anchor of key editions of SportsCenter on ESPN, served as the co-host of SVP & Russillo alongside Ryen Russillo on ESPN Radio, and hosts various major golf events for the network.
Bill Seward: (1984, 1996–2000), now a sports anchor at NBC Sports and CBS Radio; Jaymee Sire: (2013–2017), among the 100 staffers who were let go by ESPN on April 26, 2017; she is now with the Food Network; Michael Smith: (2017–2018), now with NBC Sports and Amazon Prime Video [2] Sage Steele: (2007–2023) [2]
Hall is perhaps best known for being the winner of the first season of ESPN's reality television show Dream Job. For his efforts, Hall won a one-year contract to be an anchor on ESPN's popular sports news program SportsCenter and a new Mazda 3. On the night that he won, March 28, 2004, Hall also took a sports quiz to raise his salary.
He then joined now-former NBC affiliate WHDH in Boston, Massachusetts from 2012–2013, as a sports anchor and reporter. He also was a sports anchor at Al Jazeera America in New York, New York in 2013. Haynes then joined ESPN and debuted on March 13, 2014, on the 3:00 p.m. ET edition of SportsCenter. He created segments such as "Suit-it or Boot ...
Bob Picozzi: 1998–2017 (ESPN Radio SportsCenter) Andy Pollin: 1998–2004 (The Tony Kornheiser Show and ESPN Radio College GameDay) Dave Revsine: 2005–2007 (ESPN Radio College GameDay) Dr. Jack Ramsay: 1992–2005 (NBA on ESPN Radio) Jeff Rickard: 2006–2009 ; John Rooke: 1999–2011 (ESPN Radio College GameDay and GameNight)
The deal made him the highest-paid ESPN sportscaster, surpassing Mike Greenberg’s reported $6.5 million per year deal. More from Yahoo Sports: