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Gary Thorne: 1992–present (play-by-play announcer for various events) Scott Van Pelt: 2001–present (SportsCenter and golf coverage) Stan Verrett: 2000–present (SportsCenter) Pam Ward: 1996–present (college football and women's basketball coverage) Michael Wilbon: 2001–present (co-host of Pardon the Interruption)
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.
Dave Revsine: 2005–2007 (ESPN Radio College GameDay) Dr. Jack Ramsay: 1992–2005 (NBA on ESPN Radio) Jeff Rickard: 2006–2009 ; John Rooke: 1999–2011 (ESPN Radio College GameDay and GameNight) Jalen Rose: 2015–2022 (Jalen & Jacoby) Ryen Russillo: 2007–2017 (The Baseball Show, ESPN Radio College GameDay and The Scott Van Pelt Show)
Will Selva: (2007–2011), now an anchor for NFL Network; Bill Seward: (1984, 1996–2000), now a sports anchor at NBC Sports and CBS Radio; Jaymee Sire: (2013–2017), among the 100 staffers who were let go by ESPN on April 26, 2017; she is now with the Food Network; Michael Smith: (2017–2018), now with NBC Sports and Amazon Prime Video [2]
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]
Charley Steiner: 1988–2002 (SportsCenter anchor, MLB, ESPN2 College football play-by-play, and boxing host); now with Los Angeles Dodgers [1] 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]
Cindy Brunson is a sports anchor and reporter, most known for ESPN's SportsCenter. She is currently working as part of the Pac-12 Networks broadcast team as a football and men's basketball sideline reporter and women's basketball play-by-play announcer.
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 ...