July 24, 2025

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ESPN is betting big on “Chapel Bill.” With Bill Belichick taking over at North Carolina, the network has locked in the bulk of the Tar Heels’ 2025 schedule, banking on the Super Bowl–winning head coach to deliver the kind of ratings boost Deion Sanders once brought to Colorado.

—Michael McCarthy, David Rumsey, and Ryan Glasspiegel

ESPN Locks in Bulk of Bill Belichick’s First UNC Season

Jim Dedmon-Imagn Images

CHARLOTTE — The rich keep getting richer. ESPN is already the dominant player in televising college football. And as a result of Bill Belichick’s decision to coach North Carolina in the ACC, its platforms will be the place to watch most of the Tar Heels’ action this year.

ESPN networks are poised to show 8, if not 10, of Belichick’s first games as UNC coach, sources tell Front Office Sports. 

In 2023, ESPN and Fox Sports fell over each other to televise Colorado games when former NFL superstar Deion Sanders took over as head coach. With Coach Prime prowling the sidelines, TV ratings for his Buffaloes games soared.

As the ACC’s primary rights holder, ESPN is hoping for a similar impact from Chapel Bill, but it isn’t ready—yet—to crown him.

“We have to wait and see. The potential is there,” ESPN senior director of programming and acquisitions Kurt Dargis told FOS. “There’s definitely interest in him outside the typical college football fan. Deion was such a phenomenon. I still can’t believe some of the numbers we got that first year he was there. It’s too early to say.”

Before even coaching a game, though, Belichick is already bringing more exposure to UNC. The six-time Super Bowl–winning head coach has been the story of the offseason, due to his decision to return to the sidelines at age 73—and his May-December romance with 24-year-old girlfriend Jordon Hudson.

Last season, no Tar Heel games appeared on the flagship ESPN channel. But this season, ESPN has already slotted UNC into primetime matchups to open the season on Labor Day against TCU, and two midseason Friday night ACC matchups (Oct. 17 vs. Cal and Oct. 31 vs. Syracuse).

ESPN+ will exclusively stream The Hoodie’s first road game Sept. 6 at Charlotte. Meanwhile, ESPN-owned ACC Network will show UNC-Richmond on Sept. 13.

That’s 5 out of 12 games spoken for by ESPN platforms already. The rest of UNC’s TV schedule will be determined 12 or 6 days before each game, as is standard for college football. But most of those games are likely to also appear on ESPN platforms since the four letters just picked up its option to continue broadcasting ACC sports through 2036. ESPN and the ACC didn’t disclose terms when they reached a new contract in January. Their previous deal was worth $3.6 billion over 15 years. (ESPN has also owned and operated the ACC Network since 2019.)

But ESPN will have competition. Fox Sports could pick off the Sept. 20 matchup at UCF, since both Fox and ESPN are Big 12 media-rights holders. The CW network has a sublicensing deal to air some ACC games. So, a couple of Belichick’s Tar Heels telecasts could air on The CW as well. UNC doesn’t play at any Big Ten schools, so NBC and CBS won’t have a chance for any Tar Heel games.

In 2024, as UNC went 6–6 during the regular season, it played in just one game that drew more than 1 million viewers. That will certainly change in 2025. 

Looking at the fall schedule, ESPN has its “hopes and fingers crossed,” Dargis said, that the Oct. 4 Clemson-UNC game will be a big one. That could be an attractive spot for ABC to put Belichick on broadcast TV, and ESPN would surely love to take College GameDay to Chapel Hill that Saturday, if the competition warrants it.

At the box office, UNC has already sold out all season and single home game tickets, according to Brett McMurphy of On3. It’s the earliest sellout in school history. 

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Parkins Joins Expanded ‘First Things First’ As FS1 Completes Transition

Troy Taormina-Imagn Images

Fox Sports 1’s transition plans are set.

Danny Parkins is joining First Things First as a daily presence and the show is expanding to three hours, sources told Front Office Sports. Parkins joins Nick Wright, Chris Broussard, and Kevin Wildes as fixtures on the program, and Eric Mangini and Greg Jennings will also remain regular contributors. First Things First will now air from 3 p.m. to 6 p.m. ET, and Parkins’s role will be on the new third hour.

Fox Sports later confirmed the move. 

It is the final domino in a revamped lineup after Breakfast Ball, The Facility, and Speak were all canceled last week. Parkins previously appeared alongside Craig Carton and Mark Schlereth on Breakfast Ball and before that he was a host in the afternoon drive on 670 The Score in Chicago. He is close friends with Wright, dating back to their time at Syracuse together. 

As FOS reported last week, a Barstool Sports program will air in the morning. Barstool founder Dave Portnoy revealed the show will air live from 8 a.m. to 10 a.m. ET. A replay of the show is expected to air from 10 a.m. to noon, leading into The Herd with Colin Cowherd and Jason McIntyre.

Why Stephen A. Smith Could Succeed in Dwindling Late-Night TV Era

Jan 20, 2025; Atlanta, GA, USA; Sports personality Stephen A. Smith arrives before the CFP National Championship college football game between the Notre Dame Fighting Irish and the Ohio State Buckeyes at Mercedes-Benz Stadium.

Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

Stephen A. Smith has spoken publicly about running for U.S. president and exploring other possible careers if he ever leaves ESPN. One of those options—a pivot to late-night TV host—is still plausible, even if the network talk-show model is decaying.

CBS’s cancellation of The Late Show With Stephen Colbert could mark the death rattle for the 75-year-old talk-show genre, which premiered in the 1950s, peaked with Johnny Carson and David Letterman in the ’80s and is now ruled by Colbert, ABC’s Jimmy Kimmel, NBC’s Jimmy Fallon, and Comedy Central’s Jon Stewart.

Smith guest-hosted fellow Disney star Kimmel’s late show with Snoop Dogg, Allyson Felix, and Nelly in 2021. He impressed critics, too. The featured commentator and executive producer of ESPN’s weekday morning powerhouse First Take told me last year he’d be “very interested” in succeeding Kimmel if his bosses at ESPN and Disney approved. 

CBS’s shocking decision to shut down Colbert spurred Hollywood insider Matthew Belloni of Puck News to warn the “dam is bursting” for the formerly profitable late-night TV talk-show business. The economics for these shows don’t add up these days. As CBS Mornings cohost Tony Dokoupil warned this week: “The business is broken.” 

But underestimating Smith is a fool’s game. After getting fired by ESPN in 2007, he’s rebounded to become the network’s highest-paid star, with a new $100 million contract worth $20 million per year. With his own production company already working on several Hollywood projects, Smith has the talent and money to call his own shots.

For more on Michael McCarthy’s thoughts on Smith’s next chapter and the decline of late-night TV, read his full column here.

Steinberg Leaves ‘Washington Post’ for ‘The Athletic’ After 25 Years

New York Times

Jens Schott Knudsen

Earlier this week, Dan Steinberg announced he had left The Washington Post after 25 years. After founding the popular D.C. Sports Bog, one of the influential sites of the early blogosphere, he became a columnist in 2014 and an editor in 2018. Steinberg was one of a few members of The Post’s sports department who took a buyout. 

It will be a short transition period—he is heading to The Athletic to be The New York Times–owned outlet’s NFL managing editor, both Steinberg and reps for The Athletic confirmed to Front Office Sports. 

“The Athletic has incredible ambition and depth in its NFL coverage and I’m very excited to be a part of it,” Steinberg told FOS. “The Post will always be part of me, but this was an opportunity to do something different after 25 years.”

“Dan will be working with Dianna Russini, Michael Silver and Jourdan Rodrigue and overseeing our Washington Commanders coverage when he joins us starting on Monday. We are thrilled to have him on our growing team,” Alison Cotsonika, The Athletic’s senior managing editor, NFL, said in a letter to staff. Read her full note here.

EVENT

Sept. 16 will feature the biggest sports-media event of the year. Join us in New York for a day full of conversations with the most important executives and biggest newsmakers in sports media. Our incredible lineup includes:

  • NBA commissioner Adam Silver
  • MLB commissioner Rob Manfred
  • ESPN chairman Jimmy Pitaro
  • Fox Sports CEO Eric Shanks
  • TNT Sports CEO Luis Silberwasser
  • Amazon Prime Video global head of sports Jay Marine
  • NBC Sports’s Maria Taylor
  • CBS Sports announcer Ian Eagle
  • NBC Sports announcer Noah Eagle
Learn more and get your tickets here.
AROUND THE DIAL

Scheffler Still Moves Needles

Mike Frey-Imagn Images

  • Maybe we should dial back on the “Scottie Scheffler doesn’t draw TV ratings” narrative. Despite Scheffler’s lopsided win, NBC Sports’s coverage of Sunday’s final round of the 2025 British Open was up 21% in viewership. The media giant pulled a total audience delivery of 4.1 million across NBC/Peacock, peaking at 6.1 million viewers. The Open’s total four-day coverage averaged more than 2 million viewers on NBC/USA Network. That was up 16% vs. 2024 and the best figure since 2022.
  • The respected Ian Baker-Finch is retiring from CBS Sports’s golf coverage after 19 years with the network and 30 years as an analyst. 
  • Viral clip of the week has to be the video of a Browns photographer falling into Lake Erie during the helmet reveal for the new “Alpha Dawg” alternate helmet. Never change, Browns.
  • The CW added TKO-owned Professional Bull Riders (PBR) to its live sports portfolio, announcing it will be the home to the league’s Saturday and Sunday events beginning Aug. 9. FOS previously covered The CW’s growing collection of sports rights, including hopes to land more college football bowl games.
LOUD AND CLEAR

Happy to Be at Fox

Tommy Gilligan-Imagn Images

“I never liked ESPN. I should have never done a deal with ESPN. I hate ESPN. So, I’m very happy that we’re with Fox Sports.”

—Barstool Sports founder Dave Portnoy to Fox News on his previous short-lived partnership with ESPN, which canceled Barstool Van Talk after only one episode in 2017.

ONE BIG FIG

When Clark Sits, Numbers Dip

The Indianapolis Star

36

The percentage drop in TV viewership for the 2025 WNBA All-Star Game due to superstar Caitlin Clark sitting out with an injury. Disney’s ABC averaged 2.19 million viewers vs. 3.44 million last year when Clark and her teammates played on the Olympic team. In short: When Clark goes dark, WNBA TV ratings go down.

Question of the Day

With Bill Belichick now at the helm, do you plan on watching any UNC football games this season?

 YES   NO 

Tuesday’s result: 51% of respondents think NFL Media’s integration into ESPN platforms would be a good idea.

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Written by Michael McCarthy, David Rumsey, Ryan Glasspiegel
Edited by Matthew Tabeek, Catherine Chen, Peter Richman

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