May 6, 2025

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Front Office Sports Alert

A disastrous CBS interview exposed Bill Belichick to jokes and real concerns. Three crisis PR experts gave FOS their recommendations for his next steps.

What do you think Belichick should do next? Reply to this email and your response may be featured in a future edition.

—Michael McCarthy, Ryan Glasspiegel, and Eric Fisher

Bill Belichick’s 7-Step Plan: Crisis PR Experts on His Way Back

Bob Donnan-Imagn Images

Crisis PR experts warn reputations that take decades to build can be destroyed in seconds. That’s the stark challenge facing Bill Belichick.

Ever since 24-year-old Jordon Hudson crashed his interview with CBS News Sunday Morning, the legendary coach has found himself in the eye of a media storm. Right or wrong, the picture is coalescing of Belichick as a besotted old man meekly taking orders from a bossy girlfriend 49 years his junior.  

Belichick can’t undo the brand damage from the cringey interview that was supposed to promote his new book, The Art of Winning: Lessons from My Life in Football. Ex-players like Ted Johnson are already saying he may not be fit to coach at UNC. Comedy shows like Saturday Night Live are savagely roasting the couple’s age gap. But the six-time Super Bowl winner can try to mitigate the fallout on Bill Belichick Inc. I talked to three top crisis PR experts for their advice, and emerged from those conversations with seven ways Belichick can try to rebuild his fraying reputation—and legacy.

1. Stick to football: For decades, the former Patriots coach brusquely dismissed all non-football questions as distractions. His curt “We’re on to Cincinnati” answer was a perfect summation of his single-minded focus. Ari Fleischer, the former White House press secretary to George W. Bush and current media consultant, tells Front Office Sports the coach should follow his own advice.

“He blew it and now he’s stuck. If he had prepared for an obvious question with a halfway-decent answer, this would now be a non-issue,” says Fleischer, who’s consulted for the NFL, MLB, NBA, and U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Committee. “All he can do now is say, ‘Ask me football questions. My private life is private.’ And hope for this to fade away.”

2. Cancel book tour interviews: The damage has been done. But the 73-year-old Belichick could make it worse by doing more national interviews for Simon & Schuster, warns Josh Culling, president of Dezenhall Resources. Unless Belichick is being interviewed by his own literary team, news organizations will ask about his beauty-pageant girlfriend, whether they like it or not. Especially since Belichick invited that scrutiny by describing the former cheerleader as his “idea mill and creative muse” in the book. Instead, Belichick should hit pause and return to what he does best.

“The No. 1 thing he can do is shut down the entire PR operation that’s been set up around [him]—and focus on coaching football,” says the crisis management consultant. “There’s no quick fix to things like this. Reputations can be lit on fire in an instant. But rebuilding them takes time. Generally, the first thing to do is stop doing harm. Stop digging.”

3. Realize his predicament: Belichick and Hudson are kidding themselves if they think this story will blow over, warns Mike Paul, branded as “The Reputation Doctor.” Instead, it’s become a “feeding frenzy” for virtually all media outlets, ranging from ESPN and Sports Illustrated to People, TMZ, and Page Six. Comedy shows like SNL and Netflix’s Everybody’s Live with John Mulaney are licking their chops because they have new stereotypes to lampoon.

“This is not just sports. This is sports, entertainment, and lifestyle news, plus social media, all combined. It’s a huge difference between somebody following the Patriots, for example,” says Paul. “We’ve already heard whispers he’s been advised by the university, ‘We’re concerned about this.’”

For the rest of the PR experts’ recommendations, check out Michael McCarthy’s full story.

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Ted Cruz: ‘Why Is It So Hard Just to Watch the Game?’

Imagn Images

The U.S. Senate held a hearing Tuesday regarding the future of sports broadcasting. In his opening remarks, Sen. Ted Cruz (R., Texas), who led the hearing, said that “in an era of deep partisan division, sports might be the most powerful cultural unifier that we have.”

“Whether on the couch or in the stands, Americans come together to cheer, hope, and believe. But those millions of fans are asking a simple question—why does it seem to be getting harder and more expensive to just watch the game?” he asked. 

Cruz said sports viewing has become “more splintered” and requires multiple subscriptions and apps just to follow one team.

“It’s frustrating and it’s annoying to the dedicated sports fan,” Cruz said. “It’s not just frustrating—it can be expensive. … It can cost hundreds of dollars per year for a hardcore fan wanting to watch all of the league’s games.”

The senator said he doesn’t “blame” fans for spending money to watch all their team’s games, but questioned whether the regulation on the matter is outdated.  

“Given that sports can get special treatment under the law, whether it’s antitrust protection, nonprofit status, or taxpayer financing of stadiums, what do fans deserve in return?” he asked.

Cruz questioned whether the Sports Broadcasting Act (SBA) of 1961, which grants professional leagues antitrust exemption to let them sell their national packages as a consortium as opposed to team-by-team, continues to benefit fans. The SBA was enacted when there were just three channels—media has fragmented exponentially since then, via cable/satellite packages and streaming services. 

Senator Cruz called out the NFL for encroaching on the elements of the SBA that stipulated it not compete with high school and college football, by airing a Black Friday game on Amazon Prime Video during the past two seasons. 

“Streaming may well be the future, but it shouldn’t sideline the fans,” Cruz said. 

MLB executive Kenny Gersh, NBA executive William Koenig, and NHL executive David Proper attended the hearing. The NFL did not send a representative. Earlier this week, NFL commissioner Roger Goodell appeared with President Donald Trump in a show of force to announce that the 2027 draft will be held in Washington, D.C., at the National Mall. 

In prepared remarks, Koenig said the new NBA deal will have significantly more games available on broadcast TV—between games with existing partner Disney’s ABC, as well as a new pact with NBC—and that league studies indicate 90% of existing fans already watch programming on Amazon’s Prime Video streaming service.  

Gersh said MLB is looking to “eliminate territorial restrictions” so that fans can watch games wherever they are and not worry about being blacked out. 

“The predominant way that MLB clubs have distributed live games to their local markets has been through the pay-TV ecosystem through the regional sports networks. The system worked well for baseball fans for many years when most households subscribed to a pay-TV service,” Gersh said. “However, over the last decade, as more and more entertainment content migrated to streaming services, fewer households subscribed to pay-TV packages. To make matters worse, as the number of pay-TV subscribers continues to decline, distributors have begun to relegate the RSNs to more expensive tiers or not carry them at all. As a result, the RSN model has begun to crumble.”

The Future of TV Ratings Is Here, and Sports Is the Big Winner

James Lang-Imagn Images

The next big wave in television audience measurement is beginning in earnest and is poised to deliver another sizable jolt to sports programming.

Nielsen received accreditation in January for its new Big Data + Panel measurement, a method that combines viewership data from set-top boxes and smart TVs with the company’s usual panel-based tabulation. As each of the major broadcast networks and streaming services this spring hold their upfronts for the forthcoming year—with sports content standing at the center of many of them—the expanding methodology will be a focal point as it becomes more established.

“This year, as part of the upfronts and going forward, we pretty much know that all our clients will be using Big Data + Panel for the upcoming [television] season,” Nielsen CEO Karthik Rao said Thursday. “It’s such a massive change in measurement, at scale.”

Sports programming dominates the entire U.S. media landscape, and this new measurement will, in many instances, produce bigger audience totals. For the NFL in particular, the league delivered 70 of the top 100 broadcasts across all genres in 2024, and the league has publicly cheered the introduction of Big Data + Panel, calling it a move to “modernize measurement.”

Amazon has been among the early adopters of Big Data + Panel, and said its 2024 audience for Thursday Night Football with it amounted to an average viewership of 14.2 million, 8% higher than the traditional, panel-based audience count of 13.2 million. The methodology was also the basis of an expanded unique reach of 182.8 million for February’s Super Bowl LIX, which built on the game’s record-setting average audience of 127.7 million.

Those types of lifts are likely to be frequently seen as Big Data + Panel could become the industry standard in short order.

You can read Eric Fisher’s full story on how Nielsen’s new measurements have led to increases in sports TV ratings here.

Around the Dial

Katie Stratman-Imagn Images

  • The Ravens’ positioning of cutting kicker Justin Tucker as a “football decision” drew plenty of snark. The most accurate kicker in NFL history has been accused of sexually inappropriate behavior by 16 massage therapists. Oh, did we mention the 35-year-old is coming off the worst season of his 13-year career? On X/Twitter, ESPN’s Mina Kimes wrote she didn’t like the fawning “tone” in the Ravens’ statement about their five-time Pro Bowler. She followed that up by tweeting: “Hey maybe don’t bend over backwards to praise the incredible resilience of a guy accused by 16 different women of sexual misconduct.” Legendary NFL writer John McClain tweeted: “Ravens made a ‘football decision’ (wink, nod) about Justin Tucker.” And former Packers executive Andrew Brandt tweeted: “For many years here: Greater talent = Greater tolerance. Now: Not enough talent = Lesser tolerance.”
  • Amazon Prime Video continued its hiring spree of talent for its coverage of the NBA starting with the 2025–2026 season. The giant streamer announced the hiring of Steve Nash, Candace Parker, Udonis Haslem, and Dwyane Wade.
  • Meanwhile, Carmelo Anthony made his debut as a hoops analyst during NBC Sports’s coverage of the 151st Kentucky Derby on Saturday. NBC also aired a star-studded promo heralding the return of John Tesh’s driving “Roundball Rock” anthem to its hoops coverage.
  • Colin Cowherd’s Volume podcast network added a new show hosted by rappers Fat Joe and Jadakiss.

One Big Fig

Jeremy O'Brien/FOS

17.7 million

NBC Sports and Peacock’s average viewership for Saturday’s telecast of the 151st Kentucky Derby, marking the biggest TV audience the Run for the Roses has drawn since 18.5 million watched in 1989. Saturday’s viewership, which peaked at 21.8 million, was up 6% from last year. It was NBC’s 25th consecutive Derby telecast.

Loud and Clear

The Courier-Journal

“Add the Derby to the list of events that have hit multi-year highs this year on linear+streaming: Super Bowl, Final 4, Masters, NFL Draft, Derby. Haven’t heard much lately about viewership for events exclusively on streaming. Where are those numbers?”

—Mike Mulvihill, Fox Sports president of insights and analytics, on X/Twitter once again touting the power of broadcast TV for big sporting events. Fox is the only traditional TV sports power that does not have its own streaming network. The closest it came was the Venu Sports project with Disney and Warner Bros. Discovery, which never launched after a lawsuit from Fubo.

Question of the Day

Should the NFL be worried about Ted Cruz's Senate comments?

 Yes   No 

Friday’s result: 9.8% of respondents said they are taking Stephen A. Smith’s presidential ambitions seriously.

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Written by Michael McCarthy, Ryan Glasspiegel, Eric Fisher
Edited by Or Moyal, Catherine Chen

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