September 12, 2025

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Front Office Sports

The biggest sports media stars are A-listers who are foundational to their networks. But every media company knows it’s essential to develop its next wave.

Front Office Sports has identified 19 of the brightest rising stars in the world of sports media, from play-by-play announcers to reporters and hosts. That list is below.

—Michael McCarthy and Ryan Glasspiegel

19 Rising Stars in Sports Media

FOS illustration

The sports media landscape is dominated by superstars like Stephen A. Smith, Colin Cowherd, Pat McAfee, and Erin Andrews—A-listers who are the faces of their media companies or networks. But networks know that just like the teams on their air, they need to develop talent. That’s why rising stars are so important.

They represent the future of their platforms, and can set off bidding wars between the companies that discovered them and those that want to poach them.

Some are play-by-play announcers. Some are color commentators. Some are studio analysts. And some are sideline reporters. But they all have one thing in common: We think you will be seeing and hearing their names a lot in the coming years. 

Maria Taylor, Greg Olsen, and Noah Eagle would have been on this list in the past. Who will be next? 

The inaugural Front Office Sports list of the top rising stars in sports media gives you an inside look at who’s coming up fast in the world of sports media.

This list is not ranked and is arranged in alphabetical order.

MJ Acosta-Ruiz (NFLN and ESPN): One of the few bilingual female talents in sports media, the former Dolphins cheerleader was the first Afro-Latina to host a show on NFL Network. She added ESPN to her résumé in 2024, serving as a SportsCenter anchor and sideline reporter for the ESPN Deportes coverage of Monday Night Football.  

Jon Anik (UFC): This former ESPNer turned UFC play-by-play announcer has quickly become one of the strongest voices in combat sports. He’s one of UFC’s lead play-by-play commentators. He’s poised to call Saturday’s mega-fight between Canelo Álvarez and Terence Crawford on Netflix, alongside analysts Max Kellerman and Andre Ward.

Kenny Beecham (ESPN): The network recently added this influencer and his Numbers on the Board podcast crew to its digital coverage of the NBA draft. He describes his group’s approach as “friendship packaged as sports.” He boasts more than 1.4 million YouTube subscribers.

Andraya Carter (ESPN): She jumps off the screen during her coverage of the WNBA and college basketball at ESPN. The former Tennessee star is teaming up with Elle Duncan and Chiney Ogwumike for the new women-led Vibe Check on Disney+. She’s also been a key player covering the rise of WNBA stars such as Caitlin Clark and Angel Reese.

Mike Coppinger (Ring): Coppinger, who has worked for USA Today, The Athletic, and ESPN, is a boxing reporter who works closely with Saudi official Turki Alalshikh. Coppinger will be a part of Netflix’s broadcast of Canelo Álvarez vs. Terence Crawford—a fight promoted by Alalshikh, TKO, and Riyadh Season—this Saturday night from Las Vegas. He is also cohosting Inside the Ring, a new weekly boxing show on DAZN, with Max Kellerman and LeSean McCoy. 

Jordan Cornette (NBC): Like Stephenson, Cornette will be a courtside reporter for NBC’s NBA coverage this fall. New NBA jobs from NBC and Amazon were some of the most sought-after positions in sports media in recent months, with hundreds applying for those jobs. The former basketball star and two-time captain at Notre Dame cut his teeth at ESPN’s ACC Network before jumping to NBC in 2023 where he’s also been doing studio shows at Golf Channel. He’s a veritable Swiss Army knife who can work as host, analyst, and reporter.

John Fanta (NBC Sports): The ebullient play-by-play broadcaster recently joined NBC full-time after splitting time last season between NBC and Fox Sports. He will be the lead voice of Big East hoops on NBC and Peacock, in addition to calling Big Ten and Big 12 games. He is also doing studio updates on Big Ten and Notre Dame football this season. 

Katie Feeney (ESPN): The 22-year-old Feeney was recently hired by ESPN as a short-form video influencer. She boasts 7.6 million followers on TikTok and more than a million on Instagram. She also has a role on Sunday NFL Countdown and Monday Night Countdown, among the network’s most high-profile shows.

Michael Grady (Amazon and NBC): Grady is migrating from ESPN to calling NBA games for both of the league’s new rights partners. He is also slated to be Amazon’s top play-by-play voice on WNBA coverage. He first made his name calling Timberwolves games.

Bobby Joseph “T-Bob” Hebert (Barstool Sports): Hebert is emerging as a star on FS1’s Wake Up Barstool, with a sharp wit and ability to steer the conversation among a rotating cast of characters. He played center at LSU and hosted a radio show on 104.5 ESPN Baton Rouge before joining Barstool earlier this year.

Jason McIntyre (Fox Sports and iHeart): McIntyre has high energy, and his chemistry with Colin Cowherd on The Herd has helped him break through. His Straight Fire podcast is also an entertaining listen. In his past life, McIntyre was the founder of the influential sports blog “The Big Lead” (where Ryan Glasspiegel worked for several years). 

Brock Osweiler (ESPN): Network brass is very high so far on this former NFL quarterback, best known for signing a $72 million deal with the Texans and then being traded to the Browns. He’s made an impression as a college football analyst. 

Josh Pate (ESPN): He’s been touted as the next Paul Finebaum. Pate owns and operates his eponymous YouTube show, which boasts 396,000 subscribers. Known as the “Mouth of the South,” Pate offers college football diehards an intriguing mixture of opinion, analysis, and interviews with top coaches such as Ryan Day of Ohio State and Steve Sarkisian of Texas during his “Pate State” speaker series. ESPN added him last month as a contributor for the 2025 season.

Jackie Redmond (WWE and TNT): Redmond distinguished herself as a grinder this past spring, criss-crossing the continent in her dual roles as a backstage interviewer for WWE. Whether in sports or sports entertainment, she has a unique ability to draw personality out of her interview subjects and make for engaging TV. 

Ashley ShahAhmadi: This young sideline reporter went viral after her coverage of Texas-Georgia on Dec. 7. “Everybody wanted to hire her after that,” says one source. While she’s focused on SEC football coverage during her young career, the Georgia grad is returning to her first love, basketball, as a sideline reporter for NBC’s NBA coverage this fall.

Michelle Smallmon (ESPN): Smallmon cohosts Unsportsmanlike with Evan Cohen and Chris Canty in morning drive on ESPN Radio. The show has fun chemistry, as none of the three take themselves too seriously. Smallmon previously hosted a popular morning show on 101 ESPN in St. Louis. 

Zora Stephenson (NBC): A versatile sideline reporter for NBC’s upcoming NBA coverage and Notre Dame football, as well as a play-by-play voice for Peacock’s Big Ten women’s basketball coverage. The former basketball star at Elon University was the first female announcer to handle play-by-play for a Bucks game. 

P.K. Subban (ESPN): One of the few hockey analysts who can bring a hockey conversation to Stephen A. Smith’s First Take, the three-time All-Star is a key part of ESPN’s NHL coverage. He stood out for studio analysis during the Stanley Cup playoffs, along with veterans Mark Messier, Steve Levy, and John Buccigross.

Manti Te’o (NFL Network): Te’o, the former NFL and Notre Dame linebacker, is making a name for himself as a new cohost on Good Morning Football. He has brought positive energy to the daily program, which is no small task considering it starts at 5 a.m. local time in Los Angeles. 

EVENT
The biggest names in sports media will be at Tuned In presented by Elevate on Sept. 16 in New York. The incredible speaker lineup includes:
  • NBA commissioner Adam Silver
  • MLB commissioner Rob Manfred
  • AUSL commissioner Kim Ng
  • ESPN chairman Jimmy Pitaro
  • Fox Sports CEO Eric Shanks
  • Fox Sports analyst Greg Olsen
  • NBC Sports host Maria Taylor
  • NBC Sports executives Rick Cordella and Betsy Riley
  • NBC Sports announcer Noah Eagle
  • CBS Sports announcer Ian Eagle
  • ESPN host Stephen A. Smith and OutKick founder Clay Travis debating sports, politics, and the business of both

Learn more and get your tickets here.

Around the Dial

YouTube/ESPN

  • Michael Eaves has signed a multiyear extension with ESPN, the network announced Friday. Eaves will continue to work as a SportsCenter anchor and contribute to coverage of golf majors. “I can’t believe it’s already been 10 years since I signed my first ESPN contract. Time flies when you are having fun, and I have been doing that during my time here,” Eaves said in a statement. 
  • ESPN has also signed college basketball analyst Randolph Childress to a multiyear extension.
  • Chris Long was not a fan of YouTube employing influencers during the Chiefs-Chargers game in Brazil to court younger viewers. “I watched the YouTube broadcast of the game in São Paulo, and I felt immediately like somebody who was being ushered to, like, an early grave. Like, it just felt like, ‘Time to die, Boomer. You don’t know who Deestroying is? Time to die,” the 40-year-old Long said on his Green Light podcast. The approach was “jarring” for older viewers who are still the bedrock of NFL viewership, Long added. “I understand what old people feel like when programming changes because I just don’t get it. I’m old. And nobody wants to be the guy that’s shitting on streamers. I don’t wanna shit on young people. But man, I really felt it the other night.”
  • What’s the plan for Inside the NBA on ESPN this fall? Charles Barkley told Smylie Kaufman on The Smylie Show that the cast will meet with TNT Sports and ESPN later this month to get answers.
  • No. 18 USF plays at No. 5 Miami on Saturday afternoon, in what is an enormous game for The CW. FOS previously covered how The CW is growing its live sports footprint.

Question of the Day

Ron Chenoy-Imagn Images

Who do you think bears inclusion for next year’s list of the top rising sports media talents? Respond to this email and your answer may be featured on a future edition!

Tuesday’s answer: 57% of respondents think Tom Brady has improved as a broadcaster from last season to this one.

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Written by Michael McCarthy, Ryan Glasspiegel
Edited by Or Moyal, Daniel Roberts, Catherine Chen

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