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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. Teams listed under local broadcasts for them are 2024 broadcast teams.
Brian Custer: 2021–present (ESPN CFB, ESPN College Basketball and NBA on ESPN) Ian Darke: 2010–present (MLS and World Cup coverage) Dan Shulman: 1995–present (MLB and college basketball play-by-play announcer) Joe Tessitore: 2003–present (boxing and college football coverage) [1]
The following is a list of programs currently, formerly, or soon to be broadcast on either ESPN, ESPN2 or ESPN on ABC Further information: ESPNews , ESPN Classic , and ESPNU Currently broadcast by ESPN
[27] [28] The 5 game 2016 Finals broadcast on ABC, ESPN and ESPN2 averaged a 0.3 rating and 487,000 viewers. [29] Average viewership in 2016 was 224,000 viewers. [30] 2017 viewership hit an all-time low with 171,000 average regular season viewers. [31] 2018 regular season viewership across ESPN and ABC increased 35% over 2017 to 231,000.
She has been the network's lead voice on softball coverage, including the Women's College World Series. Mowins was paired with Cat Whitehill on ESPN's tertiary broadcast team for the telecasts of the 2011 FIFA Women's World Cup. [10] In 2015, Mowins became the play-by-play voice for Oakland and later Las Vegas Raiders pre-season TV broadcasts. [11]
The new television deal runs from 2009 to 2016. A minimum of 18 games will be broadcast on ABC, ESPN, and ESPN2 each season; the rights to broadcast the first regular-season game and the All-Star Game are held by ABC. Additionally, a minimum of 11 postseason games will be broadcast on any of the three stations. [62]
Mark Gottfried: College Basketball on ESPN; Mike Gottfried: 1990–2007 Analyst and NCAA commentator; Doug Gottlieb: 2003–2012College Basketball on ESPN, now with CBS Sports; Bob Griese: ESPN College Football; Merril Hoge (1996–2017): NFL Live and NFL Matchup; Lou Holtz 2005–2015: ESPN College Football; Brock Huard: ESPN College Football
Game 2 of the 2012 WNBA Finals between the Indiana Fever and Minnesota Lynx was broadcast on ESPN (games 1,3 and 4 were on ESPN2) and received 778,000 viewers and a .6 household rating. This was the highest rated WNBA broadcast on ESPN since a 1999 Western Conference Finals game between the Houston Comets and Los Angeles Sparks received ...