Category: Television (Page 6 of 73)

Couch Potato Alert: 3/12

The conference tourneys are heating up. Here’s a snapshot of the bigger games today. (All times ET.)

12 PM: #4 Duke / Virginia – ESPN2
12 PM: #7 Ohio St / Michigan – ESPN
2 PM: #18 Wisconsin / Illinois – ESPN
3:15 PM: #13 Tennessee / Mississippi – ESPN360
7 PM: #22 Georgetown / Marquette – ESPN
7 PM: #1 Kansas / #24 Texas A&M – ESPN360
7 PM: #19 Maryland / Georgia Tech – ESPN2
7:30 PM: Florida / Mississippi State – ESPN360
9 PM: #8 New Mexico / San Diego St – CBS CS
9 PM: #6 West Virginia / Notre Dame – ESPN
9:30 PM: #9 Kansas St. / #20 Baylor – ESPN360
11:30 PM: #15 BYU / UNLV – CBS CS

Why ESPN isn’t utilizing ESPNU to broadcast these ESPN360 games and the Minnesota/Michigan St. game (in which the Gophers are fighting for a bid) is beyond me. Instead of Kansas/A&M, we’re getting women’s college bowling. Seriously, look it up.

ESPN drops the ball with lack of KU/KSU coverage

The #2 Kansas/#5 Kansas State game wasn’t on ESPN, ESPN2, ESPN News or ESPNU. It was on ESPN360, which allows certain internet subscribers to watch the game on their computers.

I’m sorry — but it really bothers me anytime there’s a top 5 matchup that isn’t on national television. And it’s not like ESPN didn’t have the rights — they did. They just elected to broadcast the game on ESPN360 instead one of the four networks that I get in high defnition.

Oh, by the way, Kansas won, 82-65, but I can’t tell you anything about the game because I didn’t get to watch it.

NFL Network pursuing Chris Berman…why?

According to the Big Lead, the NFL Network is heavily pursuing ESPN talking head Chris Berman, whose contract expires at the “World Wide Leader” in three months.

If Berman were to move to the NFL Network, it would reunite him with longtime ESPN associate Steve Bornstein, who rose in the ranks alongside Berman in the 80s. A separate source says that Berman and Bornstein – currently President of the NFL Network – are very close, having known each other for almost 30 year.

The question for Berman is simple: Will the lure of more money for less work trump Berman’s love for baseball and the significantly broader audience at ESPN? In addition to Berman’s NFL duties at ESPN, he’s been calling the Home Run Derby for over 20 years and occasionally calls baseball games for the network as well as hosts Baseball Tonight from time-to-time. Two years ago, ESPN VP of production Norby Williamson said of Berman, “He is our most important person, he is the face of ESPN.”

Berman stopped being funny in the late 90s and his shtick is old. He’s a shell of his former self and I don’t know why any network would fork over tons of dough in order to woo him into their broadcasting chair. But hey, that’s just me.

The kicker is that DirecTV is also rumored to be hot and heavy for Berman, too. Apparently neither network has watched ESPN since 1998. That’s the only reason I can think of as to why both the NFL Network and DirecTV would fight (if you can even call it that) over Chris Berman.


Photo from fOTOGLIF

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