• Loading stock data...
Thursday, September 4, 2025
Fox Analyst and Media Entrepreneur Greg Olsen to Speak at Tuned In Get your ticket now!
exclusive
Tuned In

Greg Olsen: Fox Relationship Is Positive, but ‘My Aspirations Have Not Changed’

“My relationship with Fox is positive. They know where I stand. They’ve encouraged me to have high aspirations,” Olsen told FOS at Radio Row before the Super Bowl.

Jeremy O’Brien—Front Office Sports

NEW ORLEANS — Greg Olsen told Front Office Sports on Thursday his comments to The Charlotte Observer about wanting to call great games have been “manipulated and misconstrued.” He says he’s grateful for the opportunities given him by Fox.

At the same time, he is not retreating or apologizing for wanting to be the top dog.

“I’ve called a Super Bowl once, I want to call them again. That should not be earth-shattering, headline news for anyone,” Olsen said. “My aspirations of taking this from Day One back in 2021 when I started to today have not changed. I want to call great games.”

But he continued, “My personal aspirations are completely independent and disconnected from my relationship with Fox. My relationship with Fox, and Tom [Brady], and Erin [Burnett], and [Kevin Burkhardt], those are my friends and I want to see them succeed.”

As for Fox, he said, “My relationship with Fox is positive. They know where I stand. They’ve encouraged me to have high aspirations. They’ve encouraged me to try to be as good as I possibly can. So I think some of my comments about wanting to call top games, wherever that is and however that plays out, come across that I want to leave Fox and I hate Fox. That is not true. I’m on the record right now, and I probably need to do a better job communicating … no resentment or animosity towards the people at Fox.”

Olsen had a meteoric rise after his playing career ended, becoming Fox’s No. 1 analyst in just two seasons. The former tight end earned rave reviews for his call of Super Bowl LVII between the Chiefs and Eagles in 2023. But when Tom Brady began his broadcast career with Fox this season, Olsen was dropped to the No. 2 role, where he called lesser games and lost his chance at calling another NFC championship game and Super Bowl.  

The situation is a blessing and a curse for Fox Sports CEO Eric Shanks. There’s no other NFL TV partner that could boast a one-two TV punch of the winningest player in NFL history—and one of the most talented young game analysts in all sports. 

On the other hand, Shanks has to keep a frustrated Olsen from possibly jumping ship to Amazon Prime Video, Netflix, or another network. Or returning to the league as a coach or front-office executive.

The 39-year-old Olsen’s recent interview with The Charlotte Observer set off alarm bells that he was looking to move on to greener pastures. As Olsen told the paper: “In my mind, I’m going to call big-time games again. I’m going to call Super Bowl games again. I just don’t know the timeline or the venue.”

I spoke to Shanks Thursday at Fox’s media day presser. The CEO said he’s delighted with Brady’s public statement that he wants to return to the Fox broadcast booth for Year 2. And that the 47-year-old football legend plans to serve the rest of his contract if not beyond.

“Clearly coming back. We kind of had to put our stake in the ground after some people were doubting the outcome there,” said Shanks. “Look, he’s an incredible teammate and leader. Inspirational to get us fired up about the game that we all love. We want to create new fans. He’s a rookie. But we’re also rookies with him. Figuring out the incredible way he sees the game—and simplifies it.”

Shanks said that during the Fox telecasts that mattered most this season, Brady was at his best.

Meanwhile, the veteran CEO told me he wants to keep Olsen at Fox. Especially since he’s a homegrown talent who was given big opportunities despite limited TV experience. 

“100%, want to stay with Greg. Greg’s an incredible teammate. We talked this week. He and I talked about how people kind of blew that comment out of proportion. I said to him, ‘I would actually be upset if you said you didn’t want to do big games,” Shanks said.

How will this sports soap opera play out? If Brady leaves the Fox booth to focus on his ownership role with the Raiders, Olsen could just slide back in next to his longtime friend Burkhardt. 

But if Brady continues, it’s hard to see a competitive personality like Olsen staying happy. That’s when I see suitors come knocking. Olsen called one of Netflix’s two Christmas Day games with Noah Eagle. If they get more games, Olsen could be target No. 1.

Olsen’s analytical style would also mesh perfectly with Prime’s coverage of Thursday Night Football. If Kirk Herbstreit gives up his gig to focus on college football, Olsen would be a natural for Jeff Bezos’s company.

Linkedin
Whatsapp
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

Eagles

The Death of Streameast Has Been Greatly Exaggerated

Mirror sites began popping up Thursday, the day the NFL season begins.
Scott Hanson

NFL Says ‘RedZone’ Will Have ‘Incredibly Small Ad Load’ Amid Furor

Ads on “RedZone” will match the two-box format of last December’s test.
Arch Manning

NIL Go Says It Has Cleared $80 Million in NIL Deals So..

NIL collectives, however, say the majority of their deals are in limbo.
Aug 21, 2025; East Rutherford, New Jersey, USA; New York Giants quarterback Jaxson Dart (6) throws a pass during the first quarter against the New England Patriots at MetLife Stadium.

Giants Sell Minority Stake to Kochs At Reported $10B Valuation

It’s the latest in a flurry of minority stake deals for NFL teams.

Featured Today

Oct 13, 2024; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA; Philadelphia Eagles quarterback Jalen Hurts (1) and wide receiver A.J. Brown (11) celebrate their touchdown pass during the second quarter against the Cleveland Browns at Lincoln Financial Field.

TV Ratings Just Changed Again. The NFL Will Be the Big Winner

Nielsen’s new viewership system will have a big impact on sports.
Ohio State Buckeyes wide receiver Jeremiah Smith (4) celebrates with offensive lineman Donovan Jackson (74) after a touchdown catch against Notre Dame Fighting Irish in the first quarter during the College Football Playoff National Championship at Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta on January 20, 2025.
August 30, 2025

The Most Expensive Roster Year in College Football History

The House settlement created revenue-sharing—and a big NIL loophole.
August 26, 2025

‘You’re Going to Get Beat Up’: The Liberty’s All-Male Practice Squad

A select group suits up weekly to take on the defending champs.
August 24, 2025

The Honey Deuce Effect: How Tennis Perfected the Signature Cocktail

Sold every 1.5 seconds, they total more than $12 million in sales.
exclusive

ESPN Signs NFL, Golf Reporter Jeff Darlington to Multi-Year Extension

Darlington will cover the NFL, Masters, PGA Championship, and Wimbledon
September 3, 2025

Frontloaded NFL Schedule Makes TV Ratings Surge Very Likely

The season’s first month is filled with high-profile national games.
September 3, 2025

Charles Barkley Says NBA Doesn’t Care About Fans, Slams TNT Execs

Barkley said he nearly signed with NBC.
Sponsored

Trailblazer Cal Calamia Is Racing for ‘Advocacy, Storytelling, and Performance’

The marathoner wants excellence—not just inclusion—to be the goal for non-binary athletes.
opinion
September 3, 2025

Bill and Jordon’s Excellent Adventure Already Unraveling

Belichick’s debut was a humiliation rather than a coronation.
exclusive
September 3, 2025

The Volume Replaces DraftKings With Hard Rock in Multimillion-Dollar Deal

The Volume was previously partnered with DraftKings.
Stan Verrett and Neil Everett
September 2, 2025

Stan Verrett and Neil Everett Have Uphill Climb to Succeed on Twitch

The former ESPN anchors’ new show will also be distributed on YouTube.
Aug 21, 2021; Charlotte, North Carolina, USA; Former Panthers wide receiver and now commentator Steve Smith Sr. before the game between the Carolina Panthers and Baltimore Ravens at Bank of America Stadium.
exclusive
September 2, 2025

Steve Smith Moves His Podcast, ‘The 89 Show,’ to Blue Wire

The show is co-hosted by Smith and NFL insider James Palmer.