Wednesday, April 15, 2026

‘Have to Pinch Myself’: Chris Berman Marvels at ESPN Getting Super Bowl

Berman kicked off ESPN’s “Year of the Super Bowl” fanfare by symbolically handing off to Scott Van Pelt. He talked to FOS about how thrilled he is ESPN finally has Super Bowl rights.

Courtesy: ESPN Images

SAN FRANCISCO — Chris Berman is the living embodiment of ESPN history. He’s worked there for 46 years. But even he is blown away by the fact that ESPN will televise its first Super Bowl next year.

“I still have to pinch myself,” Berman told Front Office Sports on Radio Row ahead of Super Bowl LX about ESPN scoring Super Bowls in 2027 and 2031. “The only thing I can compare it to was the first time the Rose Bowl appeared on ESPN [in 2011]. Not the Orange Bowl, not the Fiesta Bowl, there’s nothing wrong with them. But the Rose Bowl …” 

The 70-year-old anchor’s specific role for ESPN’s first Super Bowl on Feb. 14, 2027, is not yet decided. But you can be sure it will be prominent. After covering his 44th straight Super Bowl, the broadcast icon symbolically handed the baton to Scott Van Pelt down at SoFi Stadium to kick off ESPN’s loud-and-proud “Year of the Super Bowl” initiative with parent Walt Disney Co. for Super Bowl LXI. 

This is not Berman’s first Big Game rodeo. In 2000, 2003, and 2006, he anchored the old ABC Sports Super Bowl pregame shows. But that was a different time and place. The yellow blazers at the late Roone Arledge’s ABC Sports looked down on ESPN as their inferior cable cousin. But ESPN subsumed ABC Sports in 2006. 

Twenty years later, this will be ESPN’s show all the way.

When Berman joined ESPN just after its Sept. 7, 1979, launch, he was 24 years old. He hosted the 2:30 a.m. ET SportsCenter. The 24/7 sports cable network, headquartered in the hinterlands of Bristol, Conn., had fewer than 100 employees.

Nearly five decades later, Berman’s a six-time National Sportscaster of the Year and a member of multiple halls of fame. He can’t stand still for 10 seconds on Radio Row without being mobbed by fans and journos asking for pictures or an autograph. So we conducted our interview as a walk-and-talk, behind the scenes.

In May 2024, chairman Jimmy Pitaro and president of content Burke Magnus extended Berman’s deal through ESPN’s 50th anniversary in 2029. That will make “The Swami” (his longtime alter-ego when predicting games) the first ESPN employee to serve 50 years. 

Berman still has his fastball. Consider his recent humorous narration of NFL Live anchor Laura Rutledge’s madcap sprint across the field at the Sugar Bowl, complete with his patented “Whoop!” and “You … could … go … all … the … way.” 

Berman, or “Boomer” as he’s affectionately nicknamed, is famous for the hundreds of nicknames he has bestowed on players, including personal favorites Bert “Be Home” Blyleven and Andre “Bad Moon” Rison. 

And nobody’s more closely associated with NFL coverage at ESPN than Berman. Just don’t get him started on some of the new ideas, like the NFL shifting conference championships to neutral fields. That’s O.K. for the Super Bowl, said Berman. But it’s not fair to take away the home field advantage from big physical teams in favor of track teams in a domed stadium.  

“Championship games need to stay where they are,” he said.  

Starting in 1981, Berman helped turn the once-sleepy NFL Draft into must-watch TV. When ESPN first landed NFL media rights in 1987, Berman and Tom Jackson joined forces for NFL PrimeTime. Before the internet, before cellphones and social media, before NFL RedZone, NFL PrimeTime was the place where addicted football fans went for their highlights. Put it up there with TNT Sports’s Inside the NBA and ESPN’s SportsCenter as the top studio shows in TV history.

As Awful Announcing wrote back in 2017: “You can’t measure the impact PrimeTime had on fans, fantasy, and yes, gamblers. Similar to the impact that The NFL Today had in the late 1970s for the pregame show, NFL PrimeTime had it for wrapping up the day in football.”

Then disaster struck. When NBC Sports gained the rights to Sunday Night Football in 2006, wily chairman Dick Ebersol wangled exclusive highlight rights to the TV window following the conclusion of late Sunday afternoon games. The reason? He didn’t want his new Football Night in America to get run over by Berman’s NFL PrimeTime freight train. 

ESPN brass thought the trade was worth it because they got Monday Night Football. But after 19 successful years, the show was toast in its longtime time slot. Berman was furious, dubbing it a “fuck-up of the tenth magnitude” in James Andrew Miller and Tom Shales’s ESPN book.

NFL PrimeTime labored on at different times in different forms. But it wasn’t the same. Jackson retired in 2016. Then Berman turned over his stewardship of Sunday NFL Countdown to Samantha Ponder after 31 years in 2017. But Berman kept at NFL PrimeTime, his labor of love, with new partner Booger McFarland. And 39 years later the iconic show still lives on ESPN+. 

Berman still marvels at some of the emotional letters he’d get from football fans. As he recalled, one read: “I don’t have a great relationship with my Dad. But one hour every week, I would watch NFL PrimeTime with my father. It helped me stay somewhat in touch with him. Now we’re really good.” 

Female fans wrote Berman saying the show introduced them to pro football. The late Don Shula told Berman he picked up a scouting wrinkle or two from the show. Bill Belichick, the winningest coach in Super Bowl history, who won eight rings with the Patriots and Giants, was also a fan.

“Belichick said, ‘You don’t understand. My boys were young. I was defensive coordinator of the Giants. We always played at 1. We would go home at 7:30 and watch as a family, because we didn’t know anything else about what happened in the league. I’d watch it with my kids—who then became coaches,’” Berman recalled. “It blew me away. It still blows me away. Look, on my professional tombstone, that’s the first sentence: He did NFL PrimeTime.”

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Sign up for the
Tuned In Newsletter

Get the latest insights & ongoings around sports media straight to your inbox once a week.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Linkedin
Whatsapp
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

Amazon Prime Crashes in Final Minute of Its Biggest NBA Game Yet

Viewers missed 22 critical seconds of the Hornets–Heat game.
Feb 10, 2022; Los Angeles, CA, USA; Dianna Russini appears on the red carpet prior to the NFL Honors awards presentation at YouTube Theater. Mandatory Credit:

Dianna Russini Resigns From The Athletic After Mike Vrabel Photos

The Athletic previously sidelined Russini from reporting as it investigated.
exclusive

Louisiana Tech to Pay Record Exit Fee to End 20-Game Schedule Mess

The school had been scheduled to play 20 games by CUSA and the Sun Belt.

Featured Today

blake griffin

Inside Blake Griffin’s Rookie Season at Prime Video

The six-time All-Star was initially hesitant to enter the media space.
Matthew Schaefer/Front Office Sports
April 10, 2026

Matthew Schaefer Has the Hockey World in His Thrall

The teenage Islanders defenseman cannon-balled into the NHL.
April 9, 2026

College Athletes Are Ignoring NCAA Gambling Bans

“We were going to bet regardless,” says one former D-I athlete.
April 8, 2026

Why Did FIFA Do a Deal With an Obscure Prediction Market?

The product is scheduled to launch on Thursday.

Rory Triumph Delivers 14M Masters Viewers for CBS, Most Since 2015

CBS peaked with more than 20 million viewers Sunday.
April 13, 2026

NBA Playoffs Set to Leave Local TV Behind in Streaming-Heavy Shift

The league’s new TV deals introduce a stark reality.
ESPN's Jay Bilas speaks during ESPN's 'College GameDay' broadcast ahead of No. 4 Tennessee's basketball game against No. 10 Texas at Thompson-Boling Arena in Knoxville, Tenn., on Saturday, Jan. 28, 2023.
exclusive
April 13, 2026

Bilas to Fill Malone’s Role on ESPN NBA Playoff Coverage

Bilas will call playoff games alongside Ryan Ruocco.
Sponsored

From Gold Medalist to Business Founder

Allyson Felix on investing in women’s sports and what comes next for track & LA28.
opinion
April 12, 2026

Masters Sunday Was Rare Golf Stumble for CBS

Viewers were left hanging on the most important shot of the tournament.
Feb 10, 2022; Los Angeles, CA, USA; Dianna Russini appears on the red carpet prior to the NFL Honors awards presentation at YouTube Theater. Mandatory Credit:
exclusive
April 10, 2026

The Athletic Probing Dianna Russini Over Mike Vrabel Photos

The Athletic previously released a statement defending the NFL reporter.
Feb 8, 2026; Santa Clara, CA, USA; New England Patriots head coach Mike Vrabel walks on field before Super Bowl LX against the Seattle Seahawks at Levi's Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images
exclusive
April 9, 2026

Vrabel-Russini Photos Were Shopped to Multiple Outlets

The New York Post published the now-viral photos on Tuesday.
Apr 9, 2026; Augusta, Georgia, USA; Rory McIlroy tees off on the eighth hole during the first round of the Masters Tournament at Augusta National Golf Club. Mandatory Credit: Kyle Terada-Imagn Images
opinion
April 9, 2026

Why Prime Video Was Wise to Lay Up During Masters Debut

Amazon’s modern broadcast still felt traditional.