April 22, 2025

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Front Office Sports Alert

Shannon Sharpe has been accused of rape in a lawsuit by a woman he dated in Los Angeles. On Tuesday, her lawyer released audio purportedly recorded during a phone conversation between the two, in which Sharpe threatens to choke her.

—Ryan Glasspiegel, Michael McCarthy, and Dennis Young

Lawyers for Shannon Sharpe Accuser Release Alleged Audio of Choking Threats

Jason Parkhurst/Imagn Images

The attorney for the woman accusing Shannon Sharpe of rape has released an audio file of Sharpe threatening to “choke the shit” out of her.

Sunday, the lawyer Tony Buzbee filed a lawsuit on behalf of a woman going by the pseudonym “Jane Doe” in which Sharpe was accused of anally raping her. The suit claimed the two met at a gym in Los Angeles in 2023 and that the relationship grew tense when Sharpe went on Instagram Live while apparently having sex with another woman. 

In the aftermath of the incident, the suit alleged, Sharpe anally raped the plaintiff twice. 

“Mr. Sharpe categorically denies all allegations of coercion or misconduct—especially the gross lie of ‘rape’—and will not submit to what he sees as an egregious attempt at blackmail,” wrote Lanny Davis, Sharpe’s attorney. “He stands firmly by the truth and is prepared to fight these false claims vigorously in court. He looks forward to vindication through due process and a judgment based on the facts and the law.”

Davis told Front Office Sports on Monday night that Sharpe and his legal team decided to respond immediately and publicly rather than letting what he calls a false charge of rape stand in the court of public opinion. 

“This lawsuit, filed by [Jane Doe] and orchestrated by her attorney Tony Buzbee, is a blatant and cynical attempt to shake down Mr. Sharpe for millions of dollars,” said Davis in his statement. “It is filled with lies, distortions, and misrepresentations—and it will not succeed.” Davis named the woman in his statement; Sharpe denies raping her.

On Tuesday, Buzbee emailed media outlets, including FOS, an audio file purporting to include a conversation between Sharpe and the plaintiff. In the recording, the plaintiff said she thought Sharpe was going to get mad and hang up on her. Sharpe said he would not and that “it is what it is.”

She asked what that meant. Sharpe responded, “Nothing. … You want to be a dick to me now, so …”

“I don’t want to be. Don’t manipulate me,” the plaintiff said.

This is where Sharpe allegedly threatened violence. “Ah, lord have mercy. If you say that word one more time, I’m gonna fucking choke the shit out of you when I see you,” he said. “Thank you.”

There were several long pauses. 

“I don’t … want to be choked,” the plaintiff said. 

Sharpe allegedly responded, “Yes, you do. I don’t think you have a choice in the matter.”

In an email to reporters, Buzbee said, “The attached audio reveals the nature of Sharpe’s relationship with Jane Doe immediately prior to the alleged assault.” It’s not clear whether the audio represents a complete conversation between her and Sharpe, or in what context the conversation occurred.

In a Tuesday afternoon press conference, Davis said the released audio was “edited in a warped and distorted way.” He challenged Buzbee to send the recording to a neutral third party who could determine if it was edited or tampered with.

Earlier this week, Davis, Sharpe’s attorney, released a series of lurid text messages from the accuser to Sharpe. Buzbee said that these messages “occurred before the alleged rape at issue in the case.”

Davis referenced those texts again Tuesday, including one that mentioned a “dog collar.” But he admitted that the audio recording released by Buzbee was from an “argument” and that “Mr. Sharpe spoke in the heat of the moment” in a way that was “not intended.”

Sharpe is a Pro Football Hall of Famer and one of the top stars in sports media. His Shay Shay Media podcast group had been expected to reach a nine-figure deal in the coming months, FOS reported last week. Sharpe also regularly appears on ESPN’s First Take alongside Stephen A. Smith, and he was on the program Monday and Tuesday this week amid the litigation. 

Sharpe is not expected to appear on First Take from Wednesday through Friday. Sources close to ESPN described those as previously scheduled days off. 

ESPN declined to comment on the lawsuit.

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Shannon Sharpe Offered Accuser ‘At Least’ $10 Million to Settle

Derek White / ESPN Images

Shannon Sharpe and his legal team are aggressively contesting rape allegations from a woman in a Nevada civil suit.

On Tuesday, lawyers for the woman released audio of what appeared to be Sharpe threatening to choke her.

Sharpe and his lawyer, Lanny Davis, responded by accusing the woman’s lawyer of racism, outing the woman as an adult-content creator, and saying they would be suing the pair for defamation.

The ESPN commentator and Pro Football Hall of Famer released a video on Instagram calling the suit a “shakedown” on Tuesday. 

Davis, a longtime political operative, said the accuser turned down a settlement offer of up to $10 million in mediation before suddenly filing suit on Sunday night. The former advisor to President George W. Bush and Bill Clinton challenged Buzbee to hand over the tape to a third-party expert of their choice to discover if it was edited or doctored in any way. 

But he did say Sharpe and the plaintiff engaged in sexual “role-playing.” He admitted his client used the word “choking” in the “heat of the moment,” but Davis said it was not intended literally.

Previously, Davis released salacious text messages which he said reinforced that the couple were in a consensual sexual relationship. By the end of their relationship, Sharpe was paying the plaintiff for sex, according to Davis.

“It is our opinion, this is a classic case of blackmail. The plaintiff demanded tens of millions of dollars in a proceeding that’s called mediation. In return for her not publishing this tape, which she showed the lawyers for Mr. Sharpe,” said Davis.

The lawyer for the woman, Tony Buzbee, told reporters Tuesday morning that the texts are from “PRIOR to the alleged brutal assault.”

Buzbee represented dozens of women who settled sexual assault allegations against then-Texans quarterback Deshaun Watson in 2024. He also represented a woman who accused Jay-Z of raping her; that case has since been dropped, but the rapper is now suing Buzbee for extortion and defamation. Sharpe referenced that suit in his address Tuesday. “Tony Buzbee targets Black men,” Sharpe said in a one-minute video posted to his social media accounts. 

Both sides have referenced a video of Sharpe and the woman. “I believe he is going to release a 30-second clip of a sex tape that tries to make me look guilty and play into every stereotype you could possibly imagine,” Sharpe said. 

Sharpe then challenged Buzbee to post the full “10 minutes or so” of the video and accused the lawyer of “trying to manipulate the media.” Sharpe said the woman’s recording of the encounter was a “setup,” and then he mentioned the alias he says the woman used on the adult content site OnlyFans. 

Davis and Sharpe have repeatedly named the woman. In an email to Front Office Sports, Buzbee wrote that the pair have “doxed this young woman and tried to discredit her by releasing private text messages that have no relation to the claims she has made.”

Sharpe said he planned to sue Buzbee and the woman for “defamation.”

Buzbee also mentioned the alleged video in his message to reporters Tuesday morning. “An incredibly damning video does exist,” Buzbee wrote. “That video, which will be played to the jury, is extremely problematic for Mr. Sharpe.” Buzbee said he never planned to discuss the video, which is not mentioned in the lawsuit. “It is Sharpe who keeps bringing it up,” Buzbee wrote to FOS.

Sharpe has said the encounter depicted in the video was part of a consensual relationship that ended last year. Davis and Sharpe have accused the woman’s legal team of editing it to be misleading.

He appeared on First Take on Monday and Tuesday but did not address the lawsuit; he is scheduled to be off Wednesday through Friday. ESPN has thus far declined to comment.

Around the Dial

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  • He’s baaack. Former Cowboys and Packers coach Mike McCarthy (no relation) will join Pat McAfee’s coverage of the 2025 NFL Draft from Green Bay. McCarthy will join McAfee, Darius Butler, Connor Campbell, Tone Digs, A.J. Hawk, and Ty Schmit on The Pat McAfee Show Draft Spectacular streaming on ESPN+ and TikTok.
  • Logan Ryan told FOS that what Tom Brady is attempting, in going from the greatest to ever play the game into broadcasting, has “never been done.”
  • “I knew Luka was important to the fan base,” admitted Mavericks GM Nico Harrison this week. “I didn’t quite know it to what level.” That clueless quote indicates Harrison’s media relations skills may be as bad as his trade of Luka Dončić to the Lakers.
  • ESPN’s exclusive negotiating window with UFC has officially ended. This means the promotion is free to talk to streamers like Netflix, Amazon Prime Video, Apple TV, and Google/YouTube TV. ESPN’s five-year deal with UFC started in 2019. The streaming giant to watch is Netflix, which now has a deal with UFC parent TKO Group Holdings’s WWE. Netflix’s chief content officer Bela Bajaria was spotted sitting next to UFC boss Dana White and TKO president and COO Mark Shapiro at WrestleMania over the weekend.
  • The NHL had a rough season of viewership on ESPN and TNT, with double-digit declines.

Loud and Clear

Kirby Lee-USA TODAY Sports

“The great Marv Albert. The greatest basketball play-by-play voice in history.”

—ESPN top NBA announcer Mike Breen giving a respectful shout-out to the legendary Albert, the longtime “voice of basketball,” as Albert sat courtside during the network’s telecast of the Pistons-Knicks playoff game Saturday night.

One Big Fig

WWE

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114%

Viewership increase for WrestleMania 41 in Las Vegas compared to last year’s event in Philadelphia, WWE announced. One of the largest factors in the spike is that WWE struck a global distribution deal with Netflix, and the premium live event aired on the streaming service in several dozen countries. WrestleMania remained on Peacock in the United States.

Question of the Day

Do you agree with Mike Breen that Marv Albert is the greatest play-by-play announcer in history?

 Yes   No 

Friday’s result: 76% of respondents said they planned to watch Lee Corso’s final “College GameDay” appearance.

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Written by Ryan Glasspiegel, Michael McCarthy, Dennis Young
Edited by Or Moyal, Catherine Chen

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