Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Shaun Assael: 2003–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))
Jimmy Roberts: (SportsCenter reporter); now NBC Sports reporter; Robin Roberts: 1990–2005 (SportsCenter anchor and NFL PrimeTime co-host); now a co-anchor on Good Morning America [2] Sam Rosen: (NHL coverage) Sam Ryan: (Sunday Night Baseball and NHL reporter); now with WABC-TV in New York City; Lyn St. James: (auto racing coverage)
The following is a list of sportscasters who have served as commentators for Monday Night Football broadcasts on various networks, along with each commentator's period of tenure on the show (beginning years of each season shown, as the NFL season ends in the calendar year after it begins).
During the latest episode of the ESPN podcast This Is Football with Kevin Clark, host Clark asked the NFL insider, 57, where was the “weirdest place” he ever broke a news story.
ESPN had some significant departures this week, including a longtime senior writer who announced he’s been let go by the company. Ian O’Connor, one of the best longform writers at the ...
Adam Schefter: (2009–present) NFL reporter/insider; Shelley Smith: (1992–present) Los Angeles-based bureau reporter; Ed Werder: (1998–2017, 2019–present), rejoined ESPN on August 12, 2019, as a Dallas-based bureau reporter; he was previously an NFL reporter for ESPN during his first stint with the network until he was laid off on April ...
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.
Mark May was once one of ESPN’s most well-known college football analysts, but seemingly vanished from the spotlight years ago. What happened to the two-time Super Bowl winner and former ESPN ...