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  2. SportsCentury - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SportsCentury

    SportsCentury is an ESPN biography television program that reviews the people and events that defined sports in North America throughout the 20th and 21st centuries. Using stock footage, on-camera interviews, and photographs of their athletic lives, who grew up.

  3. Charissa Thompson - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charissa_Thompson

    Charissa Jean Thompson [1] (born May 4, 1982) is an American television host and sportscaster working for Fox Sports and Amazon Prime Video. Previously, Thompson worked for ESPN, Versus, as well as for GSN and the Big Ten Network. She was the co-host of SportsNation along with Marcellus Wiley until departing ESPN for Fox Sports in June 2013. [2]

  4. List of past ESPN personalities - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_past_ESPN...

    Andy Petree: 2007–2014 (NASCAR on ESPN), now analyst for Fox Sports; Digger Phelps: 1993–2014 College Gameday and College GameNight; Steve Phillips: 2005–2009 (Baseball Tonight and MLB coverage) Bill Raftery: 1980–2010: ESPN College Basketball; now with Fox Sports; J.P. Ricciardi: Baseball Tonight; Paul Silas: NBA analyst (deceased)

  5. Linda Cohn - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linda_Cohn

    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 ...

  6. List of ESPN personalities - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_ESPN_personalities

    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)

  7. Victoria Arlen - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Victoria_Arlen

    In April 2015, Arlen made the transition from professional athlete to sportscaster and joined ESPN as one of the youngest on-air talents hired by the company. [8] By April 2016, she had learned to walk after spending nearly a decade paralyzed from the waist down. [5] In 2017, she reported having no sensation in her legs. [9]

  8. Ashley Brewer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ashley_Brewer

    Ashley Brewer (born December 13, 1991) is best known for being a sports anchor/reporter for ESPN, a sports channel in the United States. She was hired to be one of the hosts of The Replay on Quibi and a part of the rotation of SportsCenter. [1] In 2021, she became a co-host on SportsNation on ESPN+. [2]

  9. Elle Duncan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elle_Duncan

    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 ...