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Sunday NFL Countdown (branded as Sunday NFL Countdown presented by Snickers for sponsorship reasons) is an American pre-game show broadcast by ESPN as part of the network's coverage of the National Football League. The program is broadcast on Sunday mornings throughout the regular season, featuring segments highlighting news from around the ...
Andrea Kremer: 1989–2006 (SportsCenter, NFL Countdown, Monday Night Countdown reporter); now reporter for NBC Sports and Real Sports; Bill Laimbeer: 2004–2005 (NBA Shootaround) Matt Lauer: (Stanley Cup Finals reporter) Lee Leonard: (first SportsCenter anchor) (deceased) Rush Limbaugh: (NFL Countdown); now hosts The Rush Limbaugh Show (deceased)
Jeff Darlington: 2016–present (SportsCenter NFL reporter) Dan Graziano: 2011–present (NFL Live, SportsCenter and Get Up) Tina Dixon: 2006–present (college football coverage) Jeannine Edwards: 1995–present (primary horse racing reporter) Gary Gerould 1980–present (NHRA coverage) Bob Holtzman: 2000–present (SportsCenter reporter)
"Sunday NFL Countdown" will open its 40th season on Sept. 8 and conclude Super Bowl Sunday in New Orleans on Feb. 9. The now three-hour pregame show, originally named "NFL GameDay," debuted in 1985.
Kay Adams: (2016–2022) host of Good Morning Football; Ernie Accorsi: (2008) analyst; Jennifer Allen: (2004–2012) features reporter; Marcus Allen: (2005–2006) analyst; LaVar Arrington: (2014–2018) analyst
ESPN has made a change for its two main NFL programs, Sunday NFL Countdown and Monday Night Countdown. Sam Ponder replaced Chris Berman as the host of Sunday NFL Countdown in 2017, after a long ...
For its 40th iteration, ESPN's "Sunday NFL Countdown" show has its official new look. Amid the news last week that former host Sam Ponder had been fired, ESPN announced Tuesday that Mike Greenberg ...
BRISTOL, Conn. (AP) — Mike Greenberg will be the host of ESPN's “Sunday NFL Countdown” when the show begins its 40th season on Sept. 8. Greenberg becomes the fourth host in the show's history. Bob Ley hosted the first year in 1985, when it was called “NFL GameDay,” followed by Chris Berman (1986-2016) and Samantha Ponder (2017-23).