July 18, 2025

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Front Office Sports broke the story that Barstool Sports was near a wide-spanning deal with Fox that would involve Barstool founder Dave Portnoy joining Big Noon Kickoff and Barstool content being featured on FS1. On Thursday, the news became official. A new era for Fox, Barstool, and the NFL’s relationship with the digital media company has begun.

—Ryan Glasspiegel and Michael McCarthy

Barstool’s Dave Portnoy Announces Fox Sports Deal

Imagn Images

It’s officially official—Fox Sports announced Thursday afternoon that it has entered into an expansive deal with Barstool Sports.

“We are joining Big Noon Kickoff,” Barstool founder Dave Portnoy said in a video Thursday in which he characteristically touted Michigan’s pedigree, at the comedic expense of its competitors in the conference. Dan “Big Cat” Katz will also make some appearances on Big Noon Kickoff, Fox said.

FOS first reported Thursday that a deal was near for Portnoy to appear on Fox’s college football pregame show, and for Barstool content to air on FS1. The Athletic reported there will also be select editions of Barstool’s own college football show that air on Fox platforms. 

“We’re excited to welcome Dave Portnoy and Barstool Sports to the Fox Sports family. Dave has built a one-of-a-kind brand that connects with a new generation of sports fans – authentic, bold, and original. Their unique voice and loyal fanbase makes them a natural fit for our evolving multiplatform content strategy,” Fox Sports CEO Eric Shanks said in a statement.

One expects Portnoy, a Michigan grad, to have entertaining banter with former Ohio State head coach Urban Meyer on the program. 

Another area of potential synergy for Portnoy and Fox is horse racing. Portnoy owns racehorses and has an affinity for the sport, while Fox has rights to a number of races, including the NYRA’s Belmont Stakes and races at Saratoga. 

Sports leagues and networks have sought to reach younger demographics, and in many ways Fox’s co-opting of Portnoy and Barstool is a decade-plus in the making. It is somewhat of a counterpunch to Pat McAfee, who got his start in media at Barstool, having great success on ESPN’s College GameDay. 

Earlier this week, FS1 canceled Breakfast Ball, The Facility, and Speak—three of its five daily programs. 

On the Unnamed show, Portnoy said that Barstool will have a daily show from 8–10 a.m. ET on FS1, with a rotating cast of characters from the digital outlet. “They want our audience. … It’s a wide-ranging relationship,” Portnoy said, adding that a studio will be built in Barstool’s Chicago office for the show.

Fox Sports’s announcement also said there would be digital synergies between the two companies to be revealed at a later date.

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Barstool-Fox Deal Shows NFL’s Portnoy Cold War Is Thawing

YouTube / Barstool Sports

Dave Portnoy and Barstool Sports have feuded with the NFL for years, famously selling T-shirts and hoodies with a drawing of commissioner Roger Goodell wearing a clown nose.

But in a surprising development, sources tell Front Office Sports the NFL likely blessed Fox’s deal with Barstool, first reported by Ryan Glasspiegel of FOS. 

The nation’s richest, most powerful sports league has been known to punish media partners that incur its wrath. ESPN was in the NFL’s doghouse for years over its 2003 scripted drama, Playmakers, which the league believed painted NFL players in a bad light. The league also demands that networks only use their top talents on game telecasts. 

The NFL is Fox’s most valuable sports property by far, with the network’s telecast of Super Bowl LIX in February ranking as the most-watched U.S. game broadcast of all time with 127.7 million viewers. The network is also very protective of its relationship with leagues. In other words, Fox wouldn’t make the deal if the NFL had a problem with it. It would be very surprising if Fox had not briefed the NFL in advance. 

The Barstool-Fox alliance is also a signal of how times have changed. Just eight years ago, ESPN canceled Barstool Van Talk with Dan “Big Cat” Katz and PFT Commenter after only one episode. ESPN host Sam Ponder led an internal revolt against the network getting into bed with the controversial Barstool brand. “I erred in assuming we could distance our efforts from the Barstool site and its content,” said then-ESPN president John Skipper in a statement.

But that was then, this is now. Donald Trump is president. Comic Shane Gillis, who was fired from Saturday Night Live for jokes seen as racist and homophobic, just hosted the ESPY Awards. Cancel culture appears to be in retreat. And, like it or not, Portnoy and Barstool have gone mainstream.

Portnoy, self-styled as “El Presidente,” is a darling of the Murdoch media empire, appearing frequently on various Fox News shows. He helped rehabilitate his image by raising more than $40 million for hundreds of small businesses devastated by COVID-19 via The Barstool Fund. His “One Bite” Pizza reviews are so famous that Walmart sought him out to create a frozen pizza brand. Portnoy and his dog, Miss Peaches, just appeared on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon. His once-scrappy start-up has turned into a multimedia empire. 

Katz and PFT Commenter’s Pardon My Take has ranked among the top sports podcasts for years, with 630,000 subscribers on YouTube alone. Portnoy, Katz & Co. host the Barstool College Football Show, which will join Big Noon Kickoff for select games this fall, according to Portnoy and Fox boss Eric Shanks. Barstool previously sponsored the Arizona Bowl for three seasons before splitting in 2024. Mainstream sports media personalities like Dianna Russini of The Athletic and Boomer Esiason of WFAN have joined underdog Frank “The Tank” Fleming for walks on his weight-loss journey.

The feud between Barstool and the NFL dates back to the Tom Brady Deflategate controversy in 2015. Portnoy, a rabid Patriots fan, led a sit-in at NFL headquarters in New York. He and three employees were arrested and taken away in handcuffs. Thereafter, Portnoy was reportedly banned from NFL events. In 2019, he was ejected from both Super Bowl Media Night and Super Bowl LIII itself.  

In short, the NFL doesn’t play around. But it doesn’t stick its nose where it doesn’t belong. As long as Barstool doesn’t go out of its way to antagonize the league on Fox’s air, their renewed bond should hold. 

Fox declined to comment on this story.

Clint Dempsey on New Job, USMNT's 'Once in a Lifetime' World Cup

Men in Blazers Media Network

Clint Dempsey has joined the Men in Blazers Media Network, where he’ll host a new podcast/YouTube show called The Deuce. 

The former captain of the U.S. men’s national team also cohosted last month’s USMNT alt-cast on TNT Sports. (In its first acquisition since raising $15 million in financing, MIBMN acquired the fan site USMNT Only earlier this year.) 

Front Office Sports talked to the American soccer legend about joining MIBMN, as well as next year’s North American men’s World Cup. 

This interview has been edited for length and clarity.

Front Office Sports: Why are you joining Men in Blazers?

Clint Dempsey: They’ve become a voice to the true American soccer fan. I wanted to be a part of it and lend my voice to that platform. To share my experiences of playing the game. Hopefully, the fans that tune in will get a sense of what it’s like to be in the locker room. So that’s why I’m excited about joining up with the Men in Blazers.

FOS: Who helped their stock heading into the World Cup?

CD: Chris Richards. I thought he had a great tournament. Probably the player of the tournament for us. 

FOS: What are the biggest storylines heading into next year’s World Cup?

CD: Are they going to take advantage of this once-in-a-lifetime opportunity of playing a World Cup on home soil? Can’t think of anything more special than that. I remember the ’94 World Cup. Being a kid, going to one of the games at the Cotton Bowl. Seeing the game up close got me believing maybe one day that could be me playing on that stage. With these types of moments, if you’re able to capitalize on them, it can do so much for the growth of the game in the States. 

For more on why Dempsey joined the Men in Blazers Media Network and his appraisal of the U.S. men’s national team, read Michael McCarthy’s full story here.

Around the Dial

Brett Davis-Imagn Images

  • Breaking up is hard to do. Incumbent ESPN has reversed field and is back in the bidding for Sunday Night Baseball rights along with NBC Sports and Apple, MLB commissioner Rob Manfred said. ESPN’s current MLB rights are set to expire after this season, but the SNB audience is up 11% this season. Several baseball sources told FOS that ESPN hopes to retain a reworked package that includes SNB and some local rights.
  • TV viewership for ESPN/ESPN2’s coverage of the 2025 MLB Home Run Derby on Monday rose 5% to 5.73 million.
  • Mark Schlereth expects to still call NFL games for Fox after the cancellation of Breakfast Ball on FS1, which Schlereth cohosted with Craig Carton and Danny Parkins.
  • Legendary Chicago sports-talk radio host Harry Teinowitz died at 64 years old. He had been suffering from heart and liver problems. Teinowitz cohosted an afternoon drive show on ESPN 1000 with Dan McNeil and John Jurkovic, and later Jurkovic and Carmen DeFalco.
  • NBC Sports announced that Terry Gannon will be a play-by-play broadcaster for its NBA coverage. Gannon joins Mike Tirico and Noah Eagle.

One Big Fig

Jul 15, 2025; Cumberland, Georgia, USA; National League designated hitter Kyle Schwarber (12) of the Philadelphia Phillies hits a home run in the swing off of after the 2025 MLB All Star Game ended in a tie at Truist Park.

Jordan Godfree-Imagn Images

7.2 million

Average viewership for the Fox Sports telecast of the 2025 MLB All-Star Game on Tuesday night. It was down 3% from last year’s 7.4 million viewers. MLB’s Midsummer Classic still ranks as the most-watched All-Star Game across pro sports. It was Fox’s most-watched telecast since the record-breaking 127.7 million viewers for Super Bowl LIX in February.

Loud and Clear

Kim Klement-Imagn Images

“I do not believe, nor have I ever believed, that I was solely fired for this [her critical social media post about Algerian boxer Imane Khelif]. I think the model of my career at that point, of only working Sundays in the fall on [Sunday NFL] Countdown, was not what ESPN wanted. They felt like they were paying me too much money to just do one thing.”

—Former ESPN host Sam Ponder on The Sage Steele Show about why she was fired in 2024.

Question of the Day

Are you more or less interested in watching Fox’s “Big Noon Kickoff” with Dave Portnoy involved?

 More interested   Less interested 

Monday’s result: 89.7% of respondents said Fox made a good decision by canceling “Breakfast Ball,” “The Facility,” and “Speak.”

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Written by Ryan Glasspiegel, Michael McCarthy
Edited by Or Moyal, Catherine Chen, Lisa Scherzer

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