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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.
Quint Kessenich (2005–present): lacrosse and ESPN College Football and ESPN College Basketball; Mel Kiper, Jr. (1984–present): NFL Draft and scouting; Hilary Knight (2021-present): NHL on ESPN; Tim Kurkjian (1998–present): Baseball Tonight; Tim Legler (2000–present): NBA on ESPN, NBA Shootaround and NBA Fastbreak; Trevor Matich: ESPN ...
College Football Live (since 2007) College Football Scoreboard (since 1999) College GameDay basketball (since 2005) College GameDay football (since 1987) College Football Final (since 2005) E:60 (since 2007) ESPN Bet Live (since 2019) ESPN FC (since 2013) Monday Night Countdown (since 1993) NBA Countdown (since 2002) NBA Today (since 2021) NFL ...
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)
Mack Brown (2015–2018): ESPN College Football; Ric Bucher: NBA Fastbreak; Rick Carlisle: 2007–2008 (NBA coverage analyst); now Indiana Pacers head coach; Chris Chelios: 2021-2023 (NHL on ESPN) John Clayton (1995–2017): Sunday NFL Countdown and NFL Live (deceased) Bill Clement: (ESPN National Hockey Night analyst) now on NBC
Today's Latest NBA News Story Gilgeous-Alexander scores 39 as Thunder beat Mavericks 118-104, advance to NBA Cup semifinals Shai Gilgeous-Alexander scored 39 points, and the Oklahoma City Thunder beat the Dallas Mavericks 118-104 on Tuesday night in an NBA Cup quarterfinal More »
The brothers have held forth for 10 Monday nights during the 2021 NFL season, offering live banter and crosstalk alongside the same feed of the game being broadcast on ESPN and sometimes ABC.
Reaction from media sources hit the internet by storm. Many webpages, blogs and news media outlets speculated on the reasons for Patrick's departure and his possible future. On July 10, 2007, The Dan Patrick Show, Keith Olbermann and Dan Patrick himself put some of the rumors and comments to rest.