• Loading stock data...
Tuesday, July 1, 2025
opinion
Tuned In

From Jordan to Brady and ESPN Pivot, Sports Took Over Upfronts

As Jimmy Fallon cracked on Monday, “Good morning. I’m glad to be at the NBA upfront—I mean, the NBC upfront.”

The Record

NEW YORK — During NBCUniversal’s upfront presentation, Jimmy Fallon joked about the sheer amount of hoopla about NBC Sports airing NBA games for the first time in more than 20 years. 

Composer John Tesh was live onstage performing his signature “Roundball Rock” with a full orchestra Monday morning. The GOAT himself—Michael Jordan—announced via video he’ll serve as a special contributor to NBC’s hoops coverage.

As Fallon cracked, “Good morning. I’m glad to be at the NBA upfront—I mean, the NBC upfront.”

After watching decades of upfront presentations made to ad buyers, I have never seen sports play a more vital role.

The upfront is a glitzy annual Madison Avenue event where TV networks and streamers try to sell the bulk of their advertising inventory—worth tens of billions of dollars—to marketers in advance. The sellers go all out to communicate that viewers will, in fact, be watching their commercials. That’s why the value of live sports—the last bastion of appointment viewing—was stressed over and over in their pitches. Once upon a time, the new dramas, sitcoms, and reality shows took center stage as networks hawked their wares. Sports came last. Not anymore.

Sure, NBC touted important new shows such as a live Wicked musical set for this fall. But for the most part, it focused on sports. And why not? 

The era of the NBA on NBC is regarded by many fans as the golden era for TV hoops. Jordan’s dynastic Bulls won all six of their titles on NBC airwaves. 

NBC is barreling toward a historic February, when it will televise Super Bowl LX, the Milan-Cortina Winter Olympics, and the NBA All-Star Game over a frenetic 17-day span. NBC modestly described it as “the greatest collection of content that has ever been assembled by one media company.”

Meanwhile, the NFL has turned its formerly mundane schedule release into a huge part of the upfronts. Over the course of three days, the league’s media partners are thumping their chests about opening games. It started Monday morning, with NBC announcing it will telecast the kickoff game between the defending champion Eagles and ratings-magnet Cowboys on Sept. 4.

Not to be outdone, Fox Sports rolled out the largest collection of superstar sports speakers I’ve ever seen at an upfront. They started with Yankees legend Derek Jeter, followed up by Alex Rodriguez, David Ortiz, Michael Strahan, and Erin Andrews, and then closed out the presentation with the NFL’s own GOAT—Tom Brady—throwing passes to old teammate Rob Gronkowski in the audience. Fox announced it will air a record 16 NFL doubleheaders this season. And, of course, Fox reminded the audience that its telecast of Super Bowl LIX was the most-watched Big Game of all time, averaging 127.7 million viewers across all platforms.

Meanwhile, ESPN made waves Monday morning by confirming a contract extension with Chris Berman to Front Office Sports that will take the legendary sportscaster through the network’s first Super Bowl in 2027, as well as his historic 50th anniversary shortly after ESPN’s own 50th anniversary in 2029. 

On Tuesday, ESPN announced details on its long-awaited direct-to-consumer streaming platform dubbed—surprise—ESPN. Chairman Jimmy Pitaro said it wasn’t worth coming up with a new name when the four letters already represent the most respected brand in sports. “There’s power in our name. There’s trust in our name,” said Pitaro.

ESPN will offer two pricing plans for the platform. The higher tier will run $29.99 per month or, bundled with Disney+ and Hulu,  cost $35.99. At launch, however, consumers can get all three for $29.99. The lower-tier plan, including everything now on ESPN+, will run $11.99. Fresh off signing his new five-year $100 million contract, ESPN superstar Stephen A. Smith is expected to star at Disney’s upfront on Tuesday afternoon.

During its Monday evening presentation, Amazon Prime Video touted a Black Friday NFL-NBA tripleheader. The giant streamer will show Eagles- Bears in the afternoon, followed by an NBA doubleheader. “This is going to be the greatest Friday in sports,” said Prime’s Charissa Thompson. Won’t the brick-and-mortar retailers like Walmart and Target love that? 

It’s been said that sports is the last Jenga block holding up the TV ecosystem. After this year, the same might be said for the upfronts themselves.

Linkedin
Whatsapp
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

Nov 29, 2024; Indianapolis, Indiana, USA; Detroit Pistons guard Malik Beasley (5) celebrates a shot in the second half against the Indiana Pacers at Gainbridge Fieldhouse.

Malik Beasley’s Messy Offseason Includes $2.25M Suit From Ex-Agency

The former Pistons player is not having a good summer.
Dewanna Bonner
exclusive

WNBA Cutdown Deadline Could Spur Deals for DeWanna Bonner, Emma Meesseman

The two big-name free agents could find their WNBA homes in July.
Ohio State

Collectives Funnel $20 Million to College Athletes on Last Day Before Revenue..

Collectives frontloaded payments just before the revenue sharing era begins July 1.

Featured Today

The Battle Over Wimbledon’s Ambitious Expansion Plan

A classic NIMBY standoff on one of the most hallowed grounds in sports.
Seattle Rough & Tumble
June 28, 2025

Women’s Sports Bars Are on the Rise. Survival Isn’t Guaranteed

Some women’s sports bars are cashing in. Others are clawing for funding.
June 27, 2025

Shitposters Have Taken the Reins of Pro Sports’ Official Voices

Meet the social media pros turning sports teams into internet trolls.
Jun 17, 2025; Sunrise, Florida, USA; Florida Panthers center Sam Reinhart (13) hoists the Stanley Cup after winning game six of the 2025 Stanley Cup Final against the Edmonton Oilers at Amerant Bank Arena
June 26, 2025

Stanley Cup’s International Summer Tour: Rules, Repairs, and Raucousness

No pro trophy tour compares to the NHL’s three-month global victory lap.
exclusive

ESPN, Fox Reluctant to Share Talent With Netflix for Christmas NFL Games

ESPN talents who worked last year’s games include Laura Rutledge and Mina Kimes.
Jun 10, 2025; Pittsburgh, PA, USA; Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback Aaron Rodgers (8) drops back to pass during minicamp at their South Side facility.
opinion
June 30, 2025

Steelers Win-Now Mode Is Good News for NFL Media Partners

The conservative “Steeler Way” has finally adapted—and media partners are happy.
June 30, 2025

ESPN, MLB Relationship May Not Be Over After All

The parties restart rights talks amid a high-profile divorce in February.
Sponsored

Hottest Matchups Following NFL Schedule Release

The NFL released the 2025 regular-season schedule, and anticipation is already building in the ticket marketplace with four months to go.
exclusive
June 27, 2025

TNT Will No Longer Operate NBA TV, NBA.com, Signaling Another Shift

TNT had operated NBA TV and NBA.com since 2008.
June 26, 2025

NBA Draft Ratings Fall 14.5% Despite Early Cooper Flagg Lift

3.77 million viewers watched across ESPN and ABC.
Bristol, CT - October 3, 2023 - Studio X: Kevin Negandhi on the set of SportsCenter.
June 26, 2025

From NBA Draft to Rubik’s Championship: Negandhi’s Whirlwind Summer With ESPN

Negandhi recently anchored the NBA draft lottery and NBA draft.
opinion
June 25, 2025

From Woj Bombs to Shams Calm: ESPN Insider Avoids Draft Spoilers

Charania’s presence was fairly muted both on ESPN and social media.