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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.
Team Play-by-play Color commentator(s) Flagship Station Boston: Sean Grande: Cedric Maxwell (Primary) Abby Chin (When Cedric Maxwell is off): WBZ-FM WROR-FM (will carry games that are in conflict with Boston Bruins hockey games or New England Patriots football games; WBZ-FM also being the Bruins' flagship)
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.
Marc Stein: 2002–present (NBA Fastbreak) Rick Sutcliffe: 2002–present (MLB coverage) Gary Thorne: 1992–present (play-by-play announcer for various events) Scott Van Pelt: 2001–present (SportsCenter and golf coverage) Stan Verrett: 2000–present (SportsCenter) Pam Ward: 1996–present (college football and women's basketball coverage)
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)
The following is a list of current (entering the 2024 WNBA season) Women's National Basketball Association broadcasters for each individual team. The announcers who call the television broadcasts also call the WNBA League Pass Production broadcasts unless noted otherwise.
4× NBA champion (2015, 2017, 2018, 2022) NBA Finals MVP NBA All-Star NBA All-Defensive First Team NBA All-Defensive Second Team NBA All-Rookie First Team [13] October 30: Amir Johnson: Detroit Pistons (2005–2009) Toronto Raptors (2009–2015) Boston Celtics (2015–2017) Philadelphia 76ers (2017–2019) 36 NBA Hustle Award
Marv Albert/Matt Guokas/Bill Walton (All-Star Game, one reg game, and NBA Finals)/Ahmad Rashad; Greg Gumbel/Bill Walton/Steve Jones/Jim Gray; Tom Hammond/Dan Issel; Greg Gumbel or Dick Enberg/Steve Jones; Don Criqui or Greg Gumbel/Bill Walton; Don Criqui/John Andariese; Dick Enberg/Ann Meyers; Source: [16]