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Colleen Dominguez: 2004–2014 (SportsCenter reporter); now with Fox Sports 1; Jeannine Edwards: 1995–2017 (primary horse racing reporter) (retired) Alex Flanagan: 1998–2006 (SportsCenter and college football reporter); now with NFL Network and Notre Dame Football on NBC; Pedro Gomez: 2003–2021 (SportsCenter reporter) (deceased)
Peter Gammons: (1990–2009), MLB reporter for ESPN, now in same capacity for the MLB Network; Hank Goldberg: (1993–2022) Miami-based bureau reporter; died on July 4, 2022; Pedro Gomez: (2003–2021) West Coast based reporter; died on February 7, 2021; Ann Kreiter (formerly Ann Werner): (1990–2000), now an anchor and studio host at BTN
Shaun Assael: 1998–present (Outside the Lines reporter, E:60 reporter) Bonnie Bernstein : 1995–1998, 2006–present ( SportsCenter correspondent, Wednesday Night Baseball , college football, NFL, substitute host for NFL Live and Jim Rome Is Burning , co-host The Michael Kay Show on 1050 ESPN Radio (New York))
ESPN Radio: Sean Kelley (play-by-play), Kelly Stouffer (analyst), and Ian Fitzsimmons (sideline reporter) American Athletic Conference Football Championship Game < 2023
The 2024 Army Black Knights football team represented the United States Military Academy in the American Athletic Conference (The American or AAC) during the 2024 NCAA Division I FBS football season.
In the show's later years, Selena Roberts of The New York Times and ESPN's Jemele Hill had made regular appearances on the show. The August 28, 2016, episode of the show made history with an all female edition of The Sports Reporters , with Hill as the moderator and fellow ESPN reporters Sarah Spain , Kate Fagan , and Jane McManus on the panel.
On November 27, Trey Wingo, host of NFL Live and ESPN's SportsCenter, became Golic's new morning show co-host, and the duo hosted Mike & Mike's successor show, Golic and Wingo from 2017 to 2020. [5] Greenberg joined a new ESPN morning show, Get Up!, which premiered April 2, 2018. [6] He also returned to ESPN Radio with a new show, called Greeny ...
He was also a frequent contributor to the network's SportsCenter, ESPN Radio, and ESPN.com packages. Early life Chris Mortensen was born November 7, 1951, in Torrance, California , [ 1 ] Mortensen attended North Torrance High School in Torrance, California , and El Camino College before serving two years in the U.S. Army during the Vietnam War .