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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. Neil Everett: 2000–2023 (SportsCenter) Robert Flores: 2005–2016 (SportsCenter, ESPNews); now with MLB Network.
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)
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 ...
In 1987, Cohn made sportscasting history by becoming the first full-time U.S. female sports anchor on a national radio network when she was hired by ABC. She anchored WABC TalkRadio from 1987 to 1989. In 1988, Cohn got her first television break, after being hired by what was at the time one of ESPN's top competitors, SportsChannel America. In ...
On January 27, 2020, the evening after the Kobe Bryant helicopter crash, Elle Duncan hosted ESPN's flagship program SportsCenter and gave an emotional account of a conversation she had with Bryant two years earlier at an ESPN event in New York City, where Bryant told her: "I'm a girl dad". It started a national trend for the hashtag "Girl Dad ...
Jon Passantino and Jacob Lev, CNN. August 16, 2024 at 7:35 AM. ESPN has fired football analyst Robert Griffin III and host Samantha Ponder, a person familiar with the situation told CNN on ...
Children. 1. Suzy Kolber (/ ˈkoʊlbər /; born 1963 or 1964 [1]) is an American football sideline reporter, co- producer, and a former ESPN sports anchor and reporter. She was one of the original anchors of ESPN2 when it launched in 1993. Three years later, she left ESPN2 to join Fox Sports, but returned to ESPN in late 1999.
Malika Rose Andrews McMenamin (born January 27, 1995) is an American sports journalist and reporter. She is the host of NBA Today, which replaced The Jump. [1] She joined ESPN in October 2018 as an online NBA writer and debuted as its youngest sideline reporter for a broadcast during the 2020 NBA Bubble. [2][3] Andrews was named one of the ...