• Loading stock data...
Thursday, September 4, 2025
Fox Analyst and Media Entrepreneur Greg Olsen to Speak at Tuned In Get your ticket now!

Next Star Up? NFL TV Networks Eyeing Rams Coach Sean McVay

  • Networks see young Super Bowl-winning coach as a promising TV analyst.
  • Could McVay succeed Tom Brady if the QB keeps playing in 2023?
Kirby Lee-USA TODAY Sports

The billion-dollar spending spree for NFL TV announcers might continue.

NFL TV partners are again eying Los Angeles Rams head coach Sean McVay as a possible game or studio analyst for the 2023 season, sources told Front Office Sports.

McVay led his Los Angeles Rams to victory over the Cincinnati Bengals in Super Bowl LVI on Feb. 13, 2022. 

But McVay’s 5-11 Rams were eliminated from playoff contention in Week 15 this season: the second-earliest tap-out for a defending Super Bowl champ in 30 years. 

The 36-year-old McVay admitted the 2022 season was “humbling” for him and his team. TV is a logical next step if he decides to take a break. 

McVay became the youngest head coach in modern NFL history when he was hired at age 30 by the Rams in 2017. 

He quickly turned the struggling franchise around. In his relatively brief head coaching career, he led the Rams to two Super Bowls, beating the Bengals last year but losing to Tom Brady’s New England Patriots at Super Bowl LIII in 2019.

But the Rams’ aging stars like quarterback Matthew Stafford and defensive tackle Aaron Donald are recovering from injuries. 

The trade-happy Rams haven’t had a first-round pick since 2016. They won’t have another until 2024 due to their blockbuster deal with the Detroit Lions for Stafford in 2021. 

“The (Rams) just had an abysmal year. I don’t know how optimistic that team is about the future. It could be an ominous situation,” warned one source. “I would expect networks to call (McVay) and gauge his interest again. I’m sure some already have.”

The source added that networks would roll out the red carpet for him even if McVay wants to take it slow as part of a three-person booth or as a part-time studio analyst.

“A guy like that you find a spot for. Even trial him out. I just know how coveted he was last year.” 

Fox ‘Definitely’ Wants Tom Brady For Super Bowl 57 Coverage

With his future uncertain, Fox wants Brady, sources tell Front Office Sports.
October 27, 2022

Where could McVay land on sports TV? 

Start with Fox Sports, which is always in the middle of free-agent TV talks. 

If Tom Brady – who signed a 10-year, $375 million deal to become Fox’s No. 1 game analyst – decides to keep playing in 2023, that will open a big fat hole behind No. 1 analyst Greg Olsen.

Fox broadcasts the NFC package. As an NFC coach, McVay knows Fox and vice versa. Fox Sports’ studios are based in the Rams’ home turf of Los Angeles.

Then there’s ESPN, which has a decades-long history of hiring ex-coaches from Rex Ryan and Bill Parcells to college basketball’s Tom Crean and Bob Knight.

And who knows how long Kirk Herbstreit will call “Thursday Night Football” for Amazon Prime Video, given his loaded college football schedule with ESPN’s “College GameDay” and ABC’s “Saturday Night Football.”

TV networks have been interested in the charismatic, eloquent McVay for years. 

Last January, ESPN’s Jeremy Fowler pinpointed McVay, Sean Payton and Pete Carroll as NFL coaches who could easily transition to TV.

After winning the Lombardi Trophy, NFL media partners like Amazon were interested in hiring McVay this off-season.

According to the New York Post, the young coach reportedly passed on Amazon’s $20 million-a-year offer before returning to the sidelines with the Rams.

McVay tried to put the TV talk to rest by telling ESPN’s Adam Schefter he was not pursuing TV opportunities. 

But football coaches are famous for saying one thing and doing another. McVay wouldn’t be the first coach in the prime of his career to give up the coaching headset for broadcasting. 

At age 46, Super Bowl-winning Jon Gruden joined ESPN as a game analyst for “Monday Night Football.” 

Gruden lasted nine years in the ESPN booth before returning to the NFL, and eventually scandal, as head coach of the Las Vegas Raiders. 

The late great John Madden was 43 years old when he retired from the Oakland Raiders only two seasons after winning the Super Bowl. On a lark, Madden joined CBS sports – and became the greatest NFL TV analyst in history.

The Billion-Dollar Spending Spree for NFL TV Talent

Over the last 27 months, networks that broadcast the NFL have thrown…
June 11, 2022

McVay doesn’t need TV money. He signed a contract extension with the Rams through 2026 that pays him a reported $14 million a year. 

That makes him the third-highest-paid coach in U.S. sports, after Bill Belichick of the Patriots ($20 million) and Seattle Seahawks head coach Pete Carroll ($15 million). But there’s more to life than coaching.

McVay married his longtime fiancee Veronika Khomyn in 2022. 

He’s said he wants kids and to find a “balance” between work and family. He doesn’t see himself coaching into his 60’s or 70’s like Belichick and Carroll.

Would a cushy TV gig suit him more than the 24/7 grind of an NFL head coach? We’ll find out. 

Your move, Coach.

Linkedin
Whatsapp
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

Feb 9, 2025; New Orleans, LA, USA; Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes (15) reacts on the field after the coin toss prior to the Chiefs' game against the Philadelphia Eagles in Super Bowl LIX at Caesars Superdome.

Chiefs Enter Brazil Game With Eye on Becoming ‘World’s Team’

The Chiefs are playing in a record fourth foreign country.
Eagles

The Death of Streameast Has Been Greatly Exaggerated

Mirror sites began popping up Thursday, the day the NFL season begins.
Scott Hanson

NFL Says ‘RedZone’ Will Have ‘Incredibly Small Ad Load’ Amid Furor

Ads on “RedZone” will match the two-box format of last December’s test.

3 ABC Games Top 10M Viewers Each in ESPN’s Record CFB Weekend

Miami–Notre Dame led the way with 10.8 million viewers.

Featured Today

Oct 13, 2024; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA; Philadelphia Eagles quarterback Jalen Hurts (1) and wide receiver A.J. Brown (11) celebrate their touchdown pass during the second quarter against the Cleveland Browns at Lincoln Financial Field.

TV Ratings Just Changed Again. The NFL Will Be the Big Winner

Nielsen’s new viewership system will have a big impact on sports.
Ohio State Buckeyes wide receiver Jeremiah Smith (4) celebrates with offensive lineman Donovan Jackson (74) after a touchdown catch against Notre Dame Fighting Irish in the first quarter during the College Football Playoff National Championship at Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta on January 20, 2025.
August 30, 2025

The Most Expensive Roster Year in College Football History

The House settlement created revenue-sharing—and a big NIL loophole.
August 26, 2025

‘You’re Going to Get Beat Up’: The Liberty’s All-Male Practice Squad

A select group suits up weekly to take on the defending champs.
August 24, 2025

The Honey Deuce Effect: How Tennis Perfected the Signature Cocktail

Sold every 1.5 seconds, they total more than $12 million in sales.

TNT Sports to Try Its Own Streaming App After WBD Split

TNT Sports will have its own app as a corporate split approaches.
September 3, 2025

Ohio State–Texas Showdown Was Most-Watched Week 1 CFB Game Ever

Fox drew 16.62 million viewers on Saturday afternoon.
September 4, 2025

Bill Belichick’s UNC Debut Draws More Than 6M Viewers on ESPN

TCU-UNC was the fifth-most-watched college football game of Week 1.
Sponsored

Trailblazer Cal Calamia Is Racing for ‘Advocacy, Storytelling, and Performance’

The marathoner wants excellence—not just inclusion—to be the goal for non-binary athletes.
September 2, 2025

NFL on Nielsen’s Latest Measurement Upgrade: ‘More Work to Be Done’

The league calls its relationship with the agency a “protracted journey.”
September 1, 2025

Lee Corso’s Farewell Delivers Record ‘College GameDay’ Viewership

ESPN averaged 3.5 million viewers, per preliminary figures.
August 28, 2025

NFL Preseason Sees 17% Jump in TV Ratings, Best Since 2018

Average audiences for the exhibition games increase sharply from last year.
Tom Brady
August 27, 2025

NFL Continues to Loosen Tom Brady Restrictions

Brady will be able to attend production meetings–remotely–this season.