A detailed look at the last year in sports media free agency

Written by Matt Yoder on .

In the few years I’ve been closely following sports media (back to the olden days of AA 1.0 in 2006), I can’t remember a time when there were so many major talent shakeups.  In just over the past year, Gus Johnson, Erin Andrews, Michelle Beadle, Jim Rome, Darren Rovell, Bruce Feldman, and many others have traded places.  The past year has been like watching the famous NBA Summer of 2010 play out… except without Michelle Beadle holding a one hour primetime special to announce her move to NBC.  I’d have to think she’d at least handle it better than LeBron did… and include fancy hats.

With all these moves taking place and Erin Andrews signing with Fox on the weekend, it’s time to reset and take stock of how each network (ESPN, CBS, NBC, Fox) has changed and the overall analysis in this season of transformation.  Let’s take a closer look at each network - who’s in, who’s out, and in some cases, who stayed.  (Keep in mind, this won’t be a complete list by any means, but the biggest names that have been in the news in the past year.  Also, it's a shame the networks don't make trades with one another because that woud disrupt the space-time continuum.)

Fox

Who’s In: Gus Johnson (CBS), Rob Stone (ESPN), Erin Andrews (ESPN)
Who’s Out: Nobody

erinandrews

Analysis: Fox has certainly made the two glitziest moves in the past year - adding Gus Johnson and Erin Andrews to headline their college football coverage. Even though they don’t have a huge selection of must-see games, Fox is putting both feet back into college football game once again. The team of GuJo and Charles Davis was great last year, but they lacked relevant, important games until the Pac 12 and Big 10 title games rolled around. Furthermore, Gus was only used for 1 NFL game and has been off the Fox radar since the winter. With EA being touted for not just a new college studio show, but a role in MLB and NFL coverage, expect her to be right behind Joe Buck as one of the faces of Fox Sports throughout the year.

The much quieter move I’m as interested in is former AA Podcast guest Rob Stone. Fox shocked the world in winning the rights to the 2018 and 2022 World Cups. The network desperately needed to improve on 2011’s Champions League Final abomination to show they can televise international soccer like adults and did a much better job with the tournament this year. Having a solid, full-time studio host is step one of that commitment. Adding your own announcers and more studio analysts are the next steps.

Fox has made the biggest acquisitions in the last year, and for good reason - their bench just isn’t that deep. Dick Stockton and Tim McCarver called a primetime MLB game together this weekend for cripes sake! Adding luminaries like Gus Johnson and Erin Andrews is a start, but Fox still has a long way to go across the board to rejuvenate their on-air stable.

CBS

Who’s In: Bruce Feldman (ESPN), Jim Rome (ESPN)
Who’s Out: Gus Johnson (Fox)

feldman

Analysis: CBS lost just a little bit of its soul when it let Gus Johnson walk to Fox. March Madness wasn’t quite the same without Gus, but the truth is CBS has perhaps the deepest rotation of play by play men in television. Just look at their NCAA Tournament lineup – Jim Nantz, Marv Albert, Kevin Harlan, Verne Lundquist, Ian Eagle, and Brian Anderson were the top six. You can add in Greg Gumbel on the NFL side, too. The loss of Gus Johnson hurt, but it hurt his fans more than CBS because he could never be the #1 guy there. Jim Nantz’s shadow is too large and there were too many places in the pecking order to try to climb.

Elsewhere, CBS was able to land Jim Rome to throw a bone to the fledgling CBS Sports Network. Although Rome is a big name and has been an afternoon institution for many years, his reported ratings at CBS Sports Network are abysmal. But it's not Rome's fault.  There are no games worth any value whatsoever on the network.  The only sports events scheduled for today on CBSSN are Army-Navy replays… and that’s it! ESPN Classic thinks that’s weak!

But where CBS has grown in the past year is online. The Free Bruce situation led to respected college football writer Bruce Feldman joining CBSSports.com, but he hasn’t been the only addition. Jeff Goodman and Brett McMurphy have also been stellar additions, with McMurphy owning realignment. In fact, CBS’s talent acquisitions in the online realm may be the most underrated of all the major networks.

NBC

Who’s In: Erik Kuselias (Golf Channel), Michelle Beadle (ESPN), Arlo White (Seattle Sounders), Hines Ward (Free Agent)
Who’s Out: Darren Rovell (ESPN)

beadle

Analysis: NBC has been the much balleyhooed future challenger to ESPN, but they were unable to make any real talent or rights acquisitions since rebranding at the beginning of the year… until hiring Michelle Beadle. The NBC network is full of top talent – Costas, Michaels, Patrick, Collinsworth, and Mayock working football alone. Doc Emrick is the best play by play man in sports. Dan Hicks is very underrated at golf and as one of the voices you’ll hear most in London calling swimming. But NBC needed someone, anyone, to be one of the faces of NBC Sports Network. That person can very well be Michelle Beadle.

Beadle will be working for Access Hollywood and major events for the NBC mothership, but she’ll be an Olympic host for NBCSN. There has also been talk of a future show on the network for Beadle eventually. NBCSN has to start somewhere, and Beadle is it. (Similar to CBSSN and Jim Rome, although NBCSN is not just miles ahead, but astronomical units ahead of CBSSN at present time.)

NBC’s other moves have been hit and miss. Erik Kuselias’ recycling as NBC Sports Talk host was met with collective lamentations. On the flip side, Arlo White has been magisterial as the network’s MLS voice. He has that gift of making a game sound more important than it should be and sounds like he was born to call a football match. However, for NBC and NBCSN, it isn’t so much about talent as it is the games that talent will cover. MLS, the NHL, and Tour de France coverage can only take you so far. Once NBCSN is finally able to add some more in-demand live events, say MLB for example, then a real, viable plan can come together.

ESPN

Who’s In: Darren Rovell (NBC), Bill Polian (Free Agent), Jerry Rice (Free Agent), etc.
Who’s Out: Bruce Feldman (CBS), Brian Kenny (MLB Network), Dana Jacobson (free agent), Pat Forde (Yahoo), Amy K. Nelson (SB Nation), Michelle Beadle (NBC), Rob Stone (Fox), Erin Andrews (Fox)… Craig James (saving America), Sarah Phillips (Parts Unknown)
Who Stayed: Scott Van Pelt, John Buccigross

svp

Analysis: Is it safe to call it a mass exodus from Bristol in the past year?  The sheer amount of talented individuals to leave ESPN in the past year is staggering.  It would severely damage any one of the sports departments above, but let’s be real here, this is ESPN we’re talking about.  The worldwide leader.  They could lose a hundred talented individuals tomorrow and it’d be little more than a bb bouncing off Godzilla’s chest.

Ask yourself this, is ESPN going to be noticeably hurt by losing any one of those individuals?  Michelle Beadle made SportsNation, but now Charissa Thompson has arrived.  Even if that show fails, Colin Cowherd is widely reported to be getting his own show.  Erin Andrews gone?  Thanks for your service, but we have Jenn Brown on standby, and she’s just as popular in the 18-22 male demographic.  And so on.  What has hurt ESPN more than anything in the past year is valuing bluster and ego and ridiculous hyperbole (Berman/Bayless/Tebowmania) above quality and insight and putting viewers first.  Also, stupefying behavior in the entire Craig James situation and Free Bruce.  (In some cases, the network got better via addition by subtraction.)

With ESPN’s additions, way too many to contain above, only a few are memorable.  Honestly, you probably forgot ESPN added Jerry Rice to its NFL coverage because there is a battalion of NFL analysts at the network already.  What you will notice are the additions that bring something different, compelling, and interesting to the table – like former Colts GM Bill Polian.  For every six Jerry Rices, there is one Bill Polian that makes it all worthwhile.  And, love him or hate him, Darren Rovell is going to fit that Polian mold for the network because he brings a unique perspective and creates buzz.  (And as ESPN has more than proved in the past year, it values buzz and trends perhaps more than anything else.)

With all the shakeups at ESPN though, their best move was keeping one of their own – Scott Van Pelt. SVP’s brand has grown more than anyone in the media in the last year with his SportsCenter anchoring and popular radio show. His guest hosting spot on PTI Friday was met with near-unanimous approval on the web. Ultimately, he proved to be the least replaceable of all the individuals that left ESPN in the last year, and that’s why Bristol pulled the necessary strings to keep him.

In this last cycle, we learned plenty about ESPN. We learned their position at the top of the sports world is perhaps as entrenched and stronger than ever because they continue to thrive despite losing some of their biggest stars.  It’s unimaginable in the real sports world.  It’s like some sort of Reverse Yankees Effect.  Instead of signing the biggest stars from elsewhere because they have the most money, ESPN can allow their homegrown stars to leave because they know they can create new stars.  For ESPN, the talent that go through the Bristol turnstiles is just a brushstroke on the canvas of the worldwide leader in sports.

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31 comments
CUbsfan
CUbsfan

Didn't Brett Mcmurphy move to working for ESPN not long after this article???

kentatm
kentatm

lol.  Hockey doesn't translate well to TV but baseball does?  I love MLB and all but everyone knows watching it on TV is snoozville 95% of the time.   Also, what a load of crap saying baseball fans care what Pujols is doing but NHL fans don't care what stars in hockey have going on. 

morganwick
morganwick

Anyone remember the "you can't see the puck" meme? Wasn't that why Fox put in the infamous glow-puck?

Talkin2myself
Talkin2myself

@Qommie Wonder how he would explain me in Arkansas being Blackhawk crazy? LOL. This kind of thinking is why I get to see so few games on tv.

Qommie
Qommie

@Talkin2myself I'm not sure I heard the word 'hockey' during that time. I blame the closed-mindedness of ppl like this ESPN exec.

Talkin2myself
Talkin2myself

@Qommie When I wear my Hawks jersey, people stare at me. Lol! You can tell they're trying to figure out what football team that is. Lmao!

Talkin2myself
Talkin2myself

@Qommie I said I WISH!!!! After getting hooked on the Hawks I have gotten to visit Chicago 3 times. Never wanna leave. Another co-worker...

Talkin2myself
Talkin2myself

@Qommie i know! Thats exactly what I say! My proudest moment came one day at work when a co-worker asked, "you're from Chicago, right?" ...

Qommie
Qommie

@Talkin2myself lol you're an anomaly. Maybe it's better than everyone latching onto the Stars like they do with the Cowboys. Yuck.

Qommie
Qommie

@Talkin2myself oh man, I feel you. I was a Blackhawks fan living in AR for 6 years. This was before the amt. of coverage you see today.

Talkin2myself
Talkin2myself

@Qommie wow! If you still lived here that would make three of us - you, me, and my son. Lmao!

Qommie
Qommie

@Talkin2myself lol I'm actually shocked to find out there are others down there! I don't think a lot of ppl really understand how hard...

LordCalvert
LordCalvert

 This gives me the idea for a tv commercial. (text) ESPN's Senior Vice President Vince Doria says that hockey never transferred well to television (highlight clips roll from 1952 to 2012, ending with the "Miracle on Ice" call) (text) History disagrees (displays NHLonNBC logo)

Bob Williams
Bob Williams

ESPN itself doesn't translate to a national discussion. Rarely watched in my home. My tube is glued to the NHL playoffs on NBC-networks and mlb.tv. Can't recall the last full hour I viewed on the alleged sports leader.

Drofdarb23
Drofdarb23

@Bradyboy2121 Thanks. That guys guy is a damn idiot but so is @espn for the most part. @awfulannouncing

RGEEZY
RGEEZY

yeah sure ESPN thats why hockey ratings go up every year huh

chriswurst
chriswurst like.author.displayName like.author.displayName 2 Like

It's laughable that he somehow thinks national NBA fans care more about LeBron (or national NFL fans care more about Tebow, for that matter), than national NHL fans care about meaningful issues in the league. Guess what - we don't care about that garbage 99% of the time. But ESPN has no trouble ramming that garbage down our throats 24/7. What an asinine interview.

PezDOY
PezDOY like.author.displayName 1 Like

The reason that ESPN won't show hockey is because they don't have rights to the sport, which means they generate no revenue from it. NBA, MLB, NFL, MLS and NASCAR? All have sold rights to ESPN so ESPN may broadcast their product. It's all about the all might dollar with the four letter bastard, which is why they don't care about the NHL....

 

Which is actually a good thing for us hockey fans. I don't think ESPN can give the proper attention to the NHL like NBC can. ESPN would never play ever playoff game on their network. Instead of Emerik and Eddie O, we'd get Thorne and Clemment (or Melrose *shudders*). 

 

NBC cares about the NHL and they do a great job broadcasting games. No terrible glow puck, no side-stepping the game for another sport, just straight up NHL games every day in April on channels like CNBC. 

 

I love it. ESPN can bite it, I rarely watch them as it is. 

cazzball
cazzball

@TimRyan83 ps, congrats on the weight loss and everything. Extremely impressed!

TimRyan83
TimRyan83

@cazzball Thank you sir, much appreciated

CharlesMorton
CharlesMorton

I'm an LA native and a 30+ year Kings fan living in Boston in my sixth year of having a Center Ice Package subscription so that I can watch every LA game with Bob & Jim on the call, most Boston games on NESN, and when those teams are off, the Dallas feeds to hear Ralph & Razor, the funniest broadcast duo in perhaps all of sports, even though I'm usually not rooting for the Stars.  

 

I stopped watching ESPN regularly when they dropped the NHL.  None of their (overwhelmingly Atlantic Division-skewed) coverage on TV or online has been anything worth consuming for many years.  It's not surprising that they only analyze their own data and conclude that hockey doesn't "translate."  It does; it's just that millions of fans don't need ESPN to make it happen.

ThomasStetsonElliott
ThomasStetsonElliott like.author.displayName 1 Like

I'm glad NBC and Fox are entering the sports network arena. As ESPN's grown more confident in its supposed dominance, the quality of its programming has gotten worse. It's a network that oozes elitism while feigning street cred.

cazzball
cazzball

@TimRyan83 if their reasoning for keeping the sport of hockey of the air is that, then they wouldn't broadcast the NCAA Tourney. Total BS

Bill Adlhoch
Bill Adlhoch

I'm surprised that ESPN still has the NHL on its bottom line. Their coverage is deplorable

Rich Goranson
Rich Goranson

And the argument that hockey doesn't translate well to television flies in the face of HNIC's overwhelming success in televising the sport over the past sixty years.

Rich Goranson
Rich Goranson

Considering how much they cover NASCAR, I don't think I'm buying ESPN's argument that hockey doesn't transfer to a national discussion.

Mikeytri
Mikeytri like.author.displayName 1 Like

Now 12 hours a day of poker on the other hand....

LordCalvert
LordCalvert like.author.displayName 1 Like

And the comment that "[hockey] never transferred well to television" flies in the face of HNIC successfully televising hockey for the past sixty years. I'm sorry. Vince Doria is absolutely full of crap. 

JonNiehaus
JonNiehaus like.author.displayName 1 Like

'Doesn't generate national discussion' is absurd. NASCAR doesn't create national discussion either, but it gets more coverage than the NHL does on ESPN. And has he watched an NHL playoff game recently? I catch as many games as I can regardless of who is playing. It's exciting stuff! Out of touch indeed.

morganwick
morganwick

 @JonNiehaus NASCAR can't help but generate a "national" (well, Confederacy-wide*) discussion, it doesn't have teams tied to specific regions of the country. If NASCAR doesn't have a national discussion, it's for the same reason the NHL supposedly doesn't: because ESPN doesn't cover it even though they're in bed with them. (*no racism implied or accused)

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