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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.
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.
Craig Melvin is following in Hoda Kotb’s legendary footsteps and the Today show staff couldn’t be more thrilled for him. “Craig is so awesome, people were cheering when they got the staff ...
Craig Delano Melvin [1] (born May 20, 1979) is an American broadcast journalist and anchor at NBC News and MSNBC.From August 2018 until January 2025, he was a news anchor on NBC's Today, in October 2018, a co-host of Today Third Hour before being made permanent host in January 2019, and in January 2025, he became a co-anchor for the first and second hours of Today.
One of the top play-by-play commentators for ESPN is sticking around for the long haul. On Friday, the network announced a multi-year contract extension for Mark Jones. Jones has been at ESPN for ...
Rachel Nichols: (2004–2013, 2016–2022) NBA reporter, now with Monumental Sports Network Wendi Nix : (2006–2023) Boston -based bureau reporter; she is also one of the hosts of College Football Live , an in-studio contributor on Sunday NFL Countdown (since 2014) and anchors SportsCenter on occasion
According to the New York Post’s Andrew Marchand, Herbstreit will join Michaels in the booth to the tune of an eight-figure annual salary. NEWS: Al Michaels will partner with Kirk Herbstreit.
Eric Clemons: 1987-1991 (Sports Center, NBA Today and Heavyweight Boxing Coverage; Jonathan Coachman: 2008–2017 (ESPNews and SportsCenter) Jay Crawford: 2003–2017 (co-host of Cold Pizza/ESPN First Take and 1st & 10) Lindsay Czarniak: 2011–2017 (SportsCenter) Rich Eisen: 1996–2003 (SportsCenter anchor); now NFL Network anchor [1]