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Katie Nolan: 2017–present (Sports? with Katie Nolan podcast) Wendi Nix: 2006–2023 (SportsCenter reporter, college football coverage) Sal Paolantonio: 1995–present (SportsCenter reporter) Tom Rinaldi: 2003–2020 (SportsCenter reporter) Holly Rowe: 1998–present (college football sideline reporter, women's college basketball play-by-play)
Andrews was born in Lewiston, Maine, to Paula Andrews, a teacher, and Steven Andrews, a broadcast journalist. [3] [4] Her family moved to San Antonio, Texas when she was 5 years old, and then to Valrico, Florida [5] 18 months later, [6] when her father, a six-time Emmy Award winner, began working as an investigative reporter for the local NBC affiliate, WFLA-TV.
After graduating from USC, Brewer became a college football sideline reporter for Cox 7 Arizona. She then became the weekend sports anchor at KGUN-TV in Tucson, Arizona. [4] She was the weekend sports anchor and reporter at KABC-TV in Los Angeles, where she started as an intern in college. [5] She was hired by ESPN in 2020.
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Mike Tirico: 1991–2016 (SportsCenter anchor); now with NBC Sports; Adnan Virk: 2010–2019 (Sportscenter anchor ESPN College Football host, and ESPN College Basketball host); now with MLB Network [2] Sara Walsh: 2010–2017 (SportsCenter anchor, NFL Insiders host, NFL Live host, and Fantasy Football Now host)
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 1989, she hosted a call-in radio sports show in New York. [10] Cohn was a reporter at the SportsChannel America Network before being hired by KIRO-TV in Seattle, Washington to work as a sports anchor ...
Bonnie Lynn Bernstein (born August 16, 1970) is an American sports journalist and media executive. She has been named one of the most accomplished female sportscasters in history by the American Sportscasters Association, spending nearly 20 years as a reporter and studio host at ESPN, ABC and CBS Sports, covering the NFL, NBA, MLB and college football and basketball. [1]
She has worked for ESPN's college football coverage since 2023, and has worked as an ESPN Radio NBA postseason reporter, covering the Minnesota/Dallas playoff series during the 2023–24 NBA season. She covered the Charlotte Hornets for six years with FanDuel Sports Network Southeast before leaving in 2024. [1] She was replaced by Shannon Spake ...