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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)
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)
Duncan hosted an afternoon show at the station in 2009 before moving to handle sports reporting for the morning Frank and Wanda show. During her time with V-103, Duncan also was a contributor with the Atlanta Falcons radio network pre- and post-game shows, the Atlanta Hawks sideline reporter, and a freelance sideline reporter for SEC and ACC ...
Mario Lopez: (ESPN Hollywood); now hosts Extra, MTV's Top Pop Group, and America's Best Dance Crew; Mike Macfarlane: (Baseball Tonight analyst) Rick Majerus: 2004–2007 (College GameNight and college basketball coverage); (deceased) Mark Malone: (NFL Matchup and NFL Live host) Dave Marash: (Baseball Tonight host)
The following is a list of sportscasters who have served as commentators for Monday Night Football broadcasts on various networks, along with each commentator's period of tenure on the show (beginning years of each season shown, as the NFL season ends in the calendar year after it begins). Game announcers used in #2 games usually come from ESPN ...
Chris Fowler: (1989–1993), now a studio host for the network, including ESPN's College GameDay (1993–2014); he is also a lead play-by-play commentator for ESPN's college football coverage, including ABC's Saturday Night Football [2] Kevin Frazier: (2002–2004), now with Entertainment Tonight; Gayle Gardner: (1983–1988), retired from ...
This article was nominated for deletion. The discussion was closed on 18 May 2024 with a consensus to merge the content into the article College Football on ABC#Personalities.
Born in Charleston, South Carolina, her parents were Pam and Bryan Riggs.She first got the broadcasting bug by reading the news announcement during Elementary School. She went to James Island Charter High School where she was named to the school's Hall of Fame in 2023 [3] and Charleston Southern University where she graduated majoring in communications and played on the soccer team. [4]