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THE BAY AREA IS BACK !
New York Post writer Phil Mushnick on Saturday reported that Doug Gottlieb would be moving from CBS Sports to FS1 and Fox Sports Radio. Gottlieb came to CBS from ESPN in 2012.
CBS Sports Radio said Jim Rome signed a multi-year contract to remain with the network.
ESPN has hired Mark Teixeira to work as an MLB analyst. He will contribute to ESPN’s MLB studio coverage, SportsCenter and additional ESPN platforms, including ESPN Radio.
NBC has announced that Mike Tirico will take over the network’s biggest role: primetime host duties at the Olympics, which NBC has the rights to through 2032.
Tirico takes over the role previously held by Bob Costas. Costas had hosted every NBC Olympics broadcast since Barcelona in 1992.
Tirico’s first night as host will be Feb. 8, 2018, when the Winter Olympic Games begin in PyeongChang, South Korea.
Showtime has announced the upcoming release of Disgraced, a documentary focusing on the 2003 murder of Baylor basketball player Patrick Dennehy.
Disgraced examines the tragic events surrounding the 2003 murder of Dennehy, to which fellow teammate and friend Carlton Dotson pled guilty in the only known instance in the history of the NCAA where one student-athlete was convicted of murdering another. Through first-hand accounts from students, investigators, family and friends, Disgraced calls into question the plea and conviction of Dotson.
The film also includes exclusive and revealing interviews with former head coach Dave Bliss, who directly addresses the attempted cover-up and secretly recorded statements he made in 2003 that implicated him in NCAA rule violations.
Steve Young says he works for ESPN because his private equity partners want him to
On Tuesday, Bloomberg published a profile of Steve Young, focusing mostly on the Hall of Fame quarterback and current ESPN analyst’s private equity firm. And from a sports fan’s perspective, there’s really only one takeaway from the piece: Steve Young does not care very much about his job at ESPN.
The lead of the story, written by Alex Sherman, is about how Young ducks from the Monday Night Countdown set to glad-hand with people involved with HGGC, the private equity firm he launched in 2007. HGGC, Sherman reports, “uses Monday Night Football games as marketing events.”
Then there’s this incredible passage:
Young says he may have quit ESPN years ago if not for his private equity partners, who like him to keep a high profile. When he works a Monday Night game for the network, he spends no more than an hour or two at the stadium preparing his commentary, he says; the rest of the time, he’s holed up in HGGC’s suite, cramming for deals. Once the game starts, he barely watches the action. A couple of transactions, he notes, have even been agreed to with handshakes in the suites.
“My wife hates football, and my kids don’t really care,” Young says. “I see myself as a deal guy first. I’ve put football behind me. Roger Staubach once told me—and I’ll never forget it: ‘When you retire, run. Never look back.’ ”
HBO and The Ringer's Bill Simmons is joined by Warriors forward Kevin Durant to discuss his favorite thing about his new team (6:00), LeBron-Barkley beef (12:00), James Harden's leap (19:00), Durant's rivalry with LeBron (29:00), and what Thunder teammate he misses the most (38:00). Then, Roc Nation Sports agent Rich Kleiman joins to talk the 2012 Finals (54:00), "Waiters Island" (61:00), and his most comparable player (68:00).
Ep. 174: Kevin Durant by The Bill Simmons Podcast | Free Listening on SoundCloud
Here you go. Listen to it, it was hilarious.I missed that pfpi gala stuff but did get to hear stugotz's newest reservation phone call. That guy is too slick. They need to make dan, mike, and the other guys call and try to make reservations too. See if they got the skills.
no damnsSteve Young says he works for ESPN because his private equity partners want him to
On Tuesday, Bloomberg published a profile of Steve Young, focusing mostly on the Hall of Fame quarterback and current ESPN analyst’s private equity firm. And from a sports fan’s perspective, there’s really only one takeaway from the piece: Steve Young does not care very much about his job at ESPN.
The lead of the story, written by Alex Sherman, is about how Young ducks from the Monday Night Countdown set to glad-hand with people involved with HGGC, the private equity firm he launched in 2007. HGGC, Sherman reports, “uses Monday Night Football games as marketing events.”
Then there’s this incredible passage:
Young says he may have quit ESPN years ago if not for his private equity partners, who like him to keep a high profile. When he works a Monday Night game for the network, he spends no more than an hour or two at the stadium preparing his commentary, he says; the rest of the time, he’s holed up in HGGC’s suite, cramming for deals. Once the game starts, he barely watches the action. A couple of transactions, he notes, have even been agreed to with handshakes in the suites.
“My wife hates football, and my kids don’t really care,” Young says. “I see myself as a deal guy first. I’ve put football behind me. Roger Staubach once told me—and I’ll never forget it: ‘When you retire, run. Never look back.’ ”
http://deadspin.com/steve-young-insists-he-gives-a-crap-about-his-espn-job-1792338336Naturally, this didn’t make ESPN happy and didn’t make anyone look good. ESPN would prefer you think its analysts do more than an “hour or two” of preparation before showtime, and actually watch football throughout the week. An ESPN spokesperson gave a statement to the Sporting News insisting that Young works hard and knows what he’s talking about.
Young is trying to defuse this too. He sent a statement to Bloomberg Businessweek, which has been appended to the bottom of the story, insisting that he takes his TV job seriously. Then he went on television Monday, and gently criticized the story’s author for portraying football as a distraction for Young.“Steve is one of the most respected analysts in football and he remains committed to his job at ESPN. His producers and colleagues have noted his work ethic internally, his level of preparation and the effort he brings each week. In addition to analyzing ‘Monday Night Football,’ he watches games, actively participates in production meetings and contributes weekly analysis to our studio shows using a camera that ESPN installed in his office. He is one of the veterans of our analyst team and he’s constantly making fans smarter about the game.”
“I certainly think it’s a little disservice in the article about my passion and expertise at ESPN and for football. I mean the truth is I spend an inordinate amount of time in the fall preparing for my job. I don’t want to do a disservice to my family at ESPN, who I’ve been with longer than the 49ers, so there are so many rich relationships there. I feel like they’re not in conflict, the two jobs, at all, and I’m really lucky to have them both.”