December 24, 2024

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Front Office Sports

As 2024 draws to a close, we’re thinking ahead. What can you expect to see in 2025? We made seven predictions, ranging from media interest in LeBron James to Tom Brady’s status at Fox and who ESPN could promote to its No. 1 NBA announcing team. Read on, and feel free to reply to this email with your own predictions for the year ahead.

One more thing: Tuned In will take a brief hiatus for the holidays, but will return in early January with more reporting and insight on everything in the sports media world. 

—Michael McCarthy and David Rumsey

7 Sports Media Predictions for 2025, Including Interest in LeBron James

Brett Davis-Imagn Images

Happy Holidays! It’s time for an annual tradition: My Sports Media Predictions. We nailed some big calls last year, but completely whiffed on Netflix not entering sports in a big way. (Yes, I will eat crow along with my turkey while watching the streamer’s NFL Christmas doubleheader.)

1: NBA Media Partners Chase LeBron James 

King James turns 40 years old on Dec. 30. He hasn’t put a timetable on his NBA retirement, but the face of the NBA certainly raised the antennas of sports TV executives when he addressed retirement last month. 

“I’m not going to play that much longer, to be completely honest,” James said following a Lakers win over the Grizzlies. “I don’t know how many years that is. If it’s one year or two years, whatever the case may be. I said the other night, I’m not playing until the wheels fall off. I’m not going to be that guy. I’m not going to be the guy who is disrespecting the game because I just wanted to be out on the floor. That won’t be me.” 

The timing is perfect for James to consider a future on TV. NBC Sports and Amazon Prime Video will join ABC/ESPN as the NBA’s U.S. media partners starting in the 2025-2026 season. Even if the Chosen One does hoop for another year or two, media companies will likely start bidding for his services next year—and try to sign him while he’s still an active player. “After Tom Brady, LeBron’s the next big get,” predicts one sports TV executive.

2: NFL Auctions International Game Package

The NFL is masterful at creating new, lucrative rights packages out of thin air. Look for the league to take its first steps toward selling U.S. media rights to a package of international games in the UK, Germany, and other countries that could fetch $1 billion to $1.5 billion a year. Amazon Prime Video is on such a roll with Thursday Night Football that it would probably be a contender. However, this could also provide a golden opportunity for other tech companies with streaming platforms—like Netflix, Apple, and Google—to expand their NFL business. Will commissioner Roger Goodell dangle the first international Super Bowl as a carrot to drive up bidding?

3: Stephen A. Smith Joins Monday Night Countdown

The Queens, N.Y. native grew up idolizing Howard Cosell. And there are similarities between the two. The 56-year-old Smith is known more for his NBA analysis than football. Likewise, the late Cosell was known more as a boxing announcer—before becoming a household name at age 52 on Monday Night Football. Smith already told me at our live ‘Tuned In’ event that he’s eying a role on Monday Night Countdown. I’ve heard that such a gig might be part of his contract negotiations with ESPN bosses Jimmy Pitaro and Burke Magnus. With Inside the NBA headed to ESPN and the fate of NBA Countdown uncertain, look for Smith to talk football with Scott Van Pelt & Co. on Countdown.

4: Tom Brady Returns for Year 2

Tom Terrific might be the most competitive person on Earth. How do you think he won seven Super Bowls? Despite many negative reviews of his performance as Fox Sports’ No. 1 NFL game analyst, my bet is Brady returns for Year 2 on the air in 2025. Calling Super Bowl LIX in New Orleans on Feb. 9 will energize him. The Big Easy was the site of his first Super Bowl win in 2002. There’s also the little matter of Brady’s monster 10-year, $375 million contract. Who walks away from $37.5 million annually after one year?

5: Donald Trump Picks Fight With NBA/WNBA Players

During his first term as U.S. President, Donald Trump blasted the NFL and ESPN for their players’ and personalities’ outspoken support of social and racial justice.  Caitlin Clark and other WNBA players are already taking heat from conservative media. Trump lives by the feud. He hasn’t forgotten both King James and Steph Curry endorsed Kamala Harris. Or that James called him a “bum” on X/Twitter back in 2017. Get your popcorn ready.

6: Richard Jefferson Promoted To ESPN’s No. 1 NBA team

I think the most shocking decision from ESPN’s 2023 budget cuts was the media giant’s decision to dump both Jeff Van Gundy and Mark Jackson, two-thirds of its lead NBA announcing team, while keeping Mike Breen. In the space of six months in 2024, ESPN tried to replace them with Doc Rivers and JJ Redick, only to have both decamp to the NBA for high-paying coaching jobs. I think ESPN is looking for stability now. It’s time for them to promote the promising Jefferson to the No. 1 team full-time alongside Breen and Doris Burke.

7: Colin Cowherd Stays with Fox 

There’s been plenty of coverage over Smith’s contract negotiations. But Cowherd’s future is almost as important. Like Smith at ESPN, Cowherd could become a free agent next year. This is an important negotiation for Fox. Cowherd’s eponymous weekday show is the glue holding FS1’s weekday lineup together. Within Bristol, the ultimate innings-eater is regarded as an instant solution to ESPN Radio’s problems. But I see Fox ultimately winning the bidding war for Cowherd’s services—especially if they pay to move his show to Chicago.

EVENT

Like what you see? Join us in September 2025 as we bring this newsletter to life at our Tuned In summit in New York. You can catch up on what our big 2024 event looked like and sign up for updates here.

A New Christmas Tradition: Netflix Set to Make NFL Debut

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The debut of live NFL games on Netflix is almost here, as the streamer is now on the clock for its groundbreaking Christmas Day doubleheader.

Chiefs-Steelers (1 p.m. ET) and Ravens-Texans (4:30 p.m. ET) will mark the first game broadcasts on yet another NFL media-rights partner, and a pair of ultra-rare Wednesday matchups.

TV ratings success on Christmas Day in recent years pushed the NFL to think outside the box this spring as it crafted the 2024 regular-season schedule. Scheduling games on Wednesday wasn’t a guarantee, but once Netflix agreed to pay $150 million for two exclusive streams, the league went to work. Eventually, schedule-makers came up with what has now been dubbed the “NFL Holiday Remix,” as Week 16 included Texans-Chiefs and Steelers-Ravens on Saturday, allowing the four teams to play again just four days later on Christmas. They’ve all clinched playoff spots but are still fighting for seeding—and Patrick Mahomes remains in Kansas City’s starting lineup despite lingering injuries. 

NFL in the Queue

Netflix’s NFL deal is for three years, and in 2025, it will have some Christmas company from Amazon Prime Video, which will get a holiday game as part of its Thursday Night Football streaming package. 

Last season, CBS, Fox, and ABC had games as part of the NFL’s Christmas Day tripleheader, when the holiday fell on a Monday. Those games each averaged nearly 30 million viewers, so Netflix should be expecting big audiences. 

After buffering issues tainted Netflix’s live stream of last month’s Jake Paul–Mike Tyson boxing match, sources told Front Office Sports that the NFL took notice of the problems, but ultimately it stood by its new streaming partner.

But unlike the Paul-Tyson fight, which reported viewership numbers that some have questioned, Netflix’s NFL games will be tracked by Nielsen, which is the industry standard for TV ratings.

Netflix’s Top Picks

Aside from the star power on the field Wednesday—two multiple-time MVP winners (Mahomes, Lamar Jackson) and the reigning Rookie of the Year (C.J. Stroud)—Netflix is pulling out all the stops it can off the field, too.

The biggest headliner is Beyoncé, who will perform the halftime show during the Ravens-Texans game. The artist headlined the Super Bowl XLVII halftime show in 2013 and also appeared in the Super Bowl 50 halftime show in 2016 alongside Coldplay. Mariah Carey will also have a short performance before the first game kicks off.

Since Netflix doesn’t have a week-to-week NFL package, it struck deals to use on-air talent from multiple other league media partners, including Greg Olsen (Fox), Ian Eagle (CBS), Mina Kimes (ESPN), Ian Rapaport (NFL Network), and Devin McCourty (NBC), in addition to current free agents like Drew Brees and Robert Griffin III.

A Wolf in Chiefs Clothing

Jasen Vinlove-Imagn Images

I’m looking forward to Amazon Prime Video’s truth-is stranger-than-fiction documentary, ChiefsAholic: A Wolf in Chiefs Clothing, on Dec. 24. The film tells the chilling story of real-life Chiefs super fan Xaviar Babudar—dubbed “ChiefsAholic”—who moonlighted as a bank robber to fund his sports betting addiction.

Dressed in a gray wolf suit, the superfan was adored by his peers at Arrowhead Stadium. But his double life was exposed after he was arrested in Bixby, Okla. in December of 2022. In September, he was sentenced to 17 and a half years in prison for 11 bank robberies across the Midwest that netted him nearly $1 million. Many of the institutions he robbed were on his way to Chiefs away games, according to Amazon.

Director/producer Dylan Sires shot interviews with Babudar before he cut off his GPS ankle monitor and went on the run from the law. It turns out Babudar desperately needed the money to support his homeless mother and brother while he was in prison. That footage will be part of the documentary. 

“We were able to connect with his bail bondsman. So our interviews were more of a verite style following him as he got out of jail awning trial for his Bixby bank robbery,” Siles recalls. “He had these two really big bets. One was for Patrick Mahomes to win the MVP. Then another large bet for the Chiefs to win the Super Bowl.” 

As part of his investigation, Sires also became fascinated by the sub-culture of super-fandom and tailgating that comes with its own costumes, rituals, and expectations. “They do see themselves as having a job during the game. They do have goals of disrupting the other team’s communication. I thought that was really interesting.” 

You can watch the trailer here.

Mike’s Mailbag

hanson_smiling

Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

The zeal that fans have for NFL RedZone and host Scott Hanson never ceases to amaze me. Many readers were frustrated to read that NFL Network is still “undecided” about bringing back the hated double-box ads that caused a fan furor in Week 15. 

“The second that they have advertisements, I stop watching,” warned AJ Roland on X/Twitter. RY Guy tweeted: “Hey @NFL the answer is don’t put freaking ads on Redzone unless you start charging us less for it.” Harley Reed added: “I’d say boycott until they reach firm decision. Which, based off the negative feedback from the consumers, might have already happened. If not, YouTubeTV is good.”

Meanwhile, @jsteezyfbaby wasn’t buying the idea that the back-and-forth jabs between Stephen A. Smith and Kirk Herbestreit over Ohio State’s Ryan Day will become a serious beef. “People would understand the world better if they watched wrestling,” he tweeted.

Question of the Day

Will LeBron James work for an NBA rights-holder within his first year after retirement?

 Yes   No 

83% of respondents believe the NFL is intentionally giving Amazon a stronger slate to induce streaming giants to bid on NFL rights in 2029.

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Written by Michael McCarthy, David Rumsey
Edited by Or Moyal

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