September 5, 2025

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Front Office Sports

Tom Brady’s first season at Fox drew a lot of criticism, from his performance as a broadcaster to the conflict of interest created by his ownership role with the Raiders. The NFL, however, is undeterred, showing the usual rules don’t apply to superstars.

—Daniel Roberts, Michael McCarthy, and Ryan Glasspiegel

Brady Still Has Conflict of Interest. NFL Is Clearly Unconcerned

Tim Heitman-USA TODAY Sports

Tom Brady will return to the play-by-play booth for his second season as a Fox broadcaster Sunday to call the Week 1 Giants-Commanders game. Once again, his performance as an analyst will get scrutinized and picked apart by critics who say he isn’t good enough at the job to deserve his 10-year, $375 million deal and the top spot that previously belonged to Greg Olsen. Of course, Brady is used to ignoring critics—and proving them wrong on the field. 

But any critics focused on the possible conflict of interest in Brady calling games when he is also part-owner of the Raiders have been answered: The league doesn’t see an issue. 

The immediate loosening of the so-called “Brady Rules” proves it. 

The NFL last week confirmed Brady will be able to join the production meetings with players and teams that he was barred from joining last season due to the conflict of being a part-owner. He simply can’t join in person at team facilities or hotels, only remotely. It’s worth noting that most production meetings happen remotely, so Brady will miss very little.

“We evaluated the policy after his first year and believed it was fine for him to participate remotely in a production meeting,” an NFL spokesperson said.

So there you have it: “This is fine.”

That is a common take when you ask people in and around the NFL, though just over a year ago, even Chiefs owner Clark Hunt said before Brady’s ownership stake was approved, “I think a lot of owners around the league felt that was a potential conflict.” Oh well.

The defense I keep hearing is: He’s the GOAT. He’s earned the right. And his stature is so great that everyone shrugs off the conflict. 

Two fellow NFL TV personalities I asked about the conflict had a similar reasoning.

Logan Ryan, who won two Super Bowls playing with Brady and is now a CBS analyst, told me on an episode of Portfolio Players, “What Tom is doing, it’s never been done, having the GOAT of their sport commentate game to game. … I thought he got better throughout the year. I know everybody was blown away by his work ethic and just his personality. I enjoyed him doing the Super Bowl. And if I know Tom, I know he’s going to put the work in to improve.” (One retort to Ryan’s rave: Joe Montana, considered by many to be the greatest QB before Brady, was an NBC analyst for just one season.)

ESPN analyst Ryan Clark, speaking at our Huddle in the Hamptons event in August, told me, “If the greatest of all time can’t find a way to do both things … then nobody gets that opportunity. … If you’re the Las Vegas Raiders, absolutely you want a man who’s been there, done that, experienced everything, and also seen every single level of being a player. … And to be able to give that knowledge to a team, and then also the viewers who are watching the game, in my opinion, Tom Brady is entitled to that because he earned that.”

If you ask me, Brady being a team owner and a broadcaster is an obvious conflict. 

Raiders owner Mark Davis last September said Brady “is the one now to take this organization into the future, on the football side,” and then in January said Brady is “somebody on the football side that I had been lacking having here in the organization.” That sounds like Brady is far from a passive stakeholder. 

And in an appearance on Front Office Sports Today last month, Brady’s comments appeared to suggest the same: He said he views his stakes in the Raiders and Birmingham City FC not “from a business standpoint,” but “from a purpose-driven standpoint. … I enjoy the process and the product that happens on the field.” That sounds like getting involved in gameplay. Is it right for a broadcaster to be analyzing on-field performance of teams when he’s advising one team on theirs?

But NFL fans I’ve asked simply do not seem to care. I thought at the very least he wouldn’t be allowed to call Raiders games—but nope, no restriction there, either. The league has made its stance clear: There are different rules for Tom Brady.

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.

NFL RedZone Changes Have Nothing to Do With ESPN Deal

YouTube/ESPN

Critics erupted in fury after Scott Hanson confirmed during an appearance on The Pat McAfee Show that NFL RedZone will include commercials this season.

As Hanson told McAfee: “We’re not going to sacrifice any great football for any of the business side of things. … We will not miss a touchdown.” 

But suspicions were only heightened when McAfee, who licenses his show to ESPN for $15 million a year, casually opined, “I don’t think anybody is upset about the commercials.” (By Thursday, he had apologized.)

Anger over ESPN’s alleged plans for NFL Network’s beloved whip-around channel was the top trending topic on X/Twitter on Wednesday. There were calls to boycott or cancel RedZone, with one Twitter critic hissing: “Nice work ESPN & Disney. Don’t charge for RedZone if you’re putting commercials back in.”

Even politicians wanted a piece of ESPN. New York Gov. Kathy Hochul tweeted blasting the network, the NFL, and President Donald Trump for good measure: “More commercials, less football. Trump’s America. @NFL and @espn: You have time to fix this!” 

Here’s the problem with the narrative of “ESPN inflicting commercials” on RedZone: It has no basis in reality. 

ESPN doesn’t own RedZone and has zero to do with whether it will air commercials this season. Under the NFL’s blockbuster deal to swap NFL Network and other key media properties in exchange for a 10% stake in ESPN, the league will still own and operate RedZone. ESPN will simply get distribution and trademark rights to the RedZone brand. 

Front Office Sports editor-in-chief Dan Roberts noted the NFL-ESPN deal is still months away from approval by regulatory authorities. So anything that does or doesn’t happen with RedZone is up to the league. Not to mention, NFLN already experimented with RedZone ads last season, prompting Hanson to alter his signature “seven hours of commercial-free football” tagline.

“Lotta apparent confusion on this after misleading viral tweet accusing McAfee of stumping for Disney (LOL),” tweeted Roberts. “Disney did not *acquire* RedZone. Got distribution rights and rights to RZ brand. NFL will still own and produce RedZone. And deal hasn’t closed.”

The commercials are also very limited. Only four 15-second spots will air over the seven hours of RedZone in Week 1, and they will be part of a split-screen alongside game coverage, a source told FOS.  

But hey, why let the facts get in the way of a good story? 

ESPN has certainly annoyed sports fans over the years, whether it was breaking up the popular NBA announce team of Jeff Van Gundy, Mark Jackson, and Mike Breen or airing LeBron James’s free-agency special, “The Decision.” But ESPN is innocent on this one.

For whatever reason, many critics believe ESPN wants to instantly make changes to whatever properties they lay their hands on, noted president of content Burke Magnus, during a preview of the new direct-to-consumer platform in New York City. The reality is different. 

ESPN has taken a strictly hands-off attitude with McAfee’s show, noted Magnus. And no, it won’t tinker with Charles Barkley’s Inside the NBA, either, when TNT Sports licenses the show to ESPN in exchange for a package of Big 12 college football and basketball games. The reason why ESPN wants the iconic studio show is its cast and chemistry, he added. Why would it change it?

“Our track record is quite the opposite. Look at McAfee,” Magnus told me. “I’m not sure where this whole notion came from. Today’s world is a lot different—because we’re licensing stuff.”

The Death of Streameast Has Been Greatly Exaggerated

Bill Streicher-Imagn Images

On the eve of the NFL season, authorities emphatically declared victory over Streameast, a pirated streaming site that has long been a thorn in the side of professional sports leagues and their multibillion-dollar rights holders. 

“ACE scored a resounding victory in its fight to detect, deter, and dismantle criminal perpetrators of digital piracy: by taking down the largest illegal live sports platform anywhere,” Charles Rivkin, a former U.S. diplomat who now leads the Alliance for Creativity and Entertainment (ACE) and the Motion Picture Association (MPA), said in a statement to The Athletic. “With this landmark action, we have put more points on the board for sports leagues, entertainment companies, and fans worldwide — and our global alliance will stay on the field as long as it takes to identify and target the biggest piracy rings across the globe.”

However, in the words of recently retired ESPN legend Lee Corso: 

Not so fast.

The anti-piracy fight effectively amounts to a global game of whack-a-mole. Front Office Sports has identified a “mirror” site for Streameast that remains in active operation as of Thursday. There are also numerous other similar platforms that either already exist or will inevitably pop up to fill the void. 

In the Streameast sting, two men were arrested in Egypt, and authorities reportedly uncovered a shell company in the United Arab Emirates that allegedly laundered more than $6 million in advertising proceeds since 2010.

Last year, the pirate sites MethStreams and CrackStreams went dark in a regulatory crackdown. 

As media has grown more fragmented, requiring an increasing number of paid streaming services to watch games, a large cohort of sports fans has grown to rely on piracy sites to either supplement their subscriptions or bypass them entirely. The Streameast network had more than 1.6 billion visits in the past year, according to The Athletic. 

The illegal sites can be annoying to navigate, with endless pop-up ads and streams that cut out at important times. But they can save fans thousands of dollars.

Leagues, networks, and streaming services want fans to be spending that money on their services, obviously, and they are paying to support the anti-piracy efforts. But there is clear fan demand for the free sites, and as the Streameast case shows, financial incentive to operate them. The Athletic reported that, in addition to the UAE shell company, authorities uncovered $200,000 in cryptocurrency and “multiple real estate properties in Egypt” were tied to the illegal sites. 

Around the Dial

Kayla Freeman/ESPN Images

  • NFL reporter Jeff Darlington was in the right place at the right time for ESPN during the arrests of Scottie Scheffler and Tyreek Hill in 2024, breaking huge exclusive stories. ESPN has awarded the aggressive Darlington with a new, multiyear contract that will see him continue to cover the NFL while officially adding coverage of The Masters, PGA tournament, and Wimbledon. The 43-year-old will also be part of ESPN’s coverage team for its first Super Bowl telecast in 2027.
  • Jay Marine, Amazon’s global head of sports and advertising, is adding oversight of the company’s U.S. Prime Video business to his duties, according to an internal memo obtained by Deadline. Marine has been leading Prime’s charge into sports, including deals with the NBA and NFL. Marine will be among the all-star list of speakers at Front Office Sports’s second-annual Tuned In event in New York City on Sept. 16. Get your tickets here.
  • Mike McCarthy (no relation), the former Cowboys and Packers coach, will make weekly appearances on The Pat McAfee Show every Thursday during football season. Our own Michael McCarthy will get ready for another avalanche of furious tweets saying he knows nothing about football, offense, or clock management.
  • NBCUniversal said it’s already sold out of commercial time for its telecast of Super Bowl LX on Feb. 8. NBC is believed to be charging advertisers $8 million for 30-second spots.
  • Connor Stalions, the former Michigan staffer who was accused of masterminding a sign-stealing scheme, is doing a weekly breakdown podcast of the Wolverines football program called The Manifesto.
  • Fox settled the lawsuit brought by former FS1 hairstylist Noushin Faraji that accused ex-network boss Charlie Dixon of sexual misconduct. Skip Bayless and Joy Taylor were also named in the suit.
  • Former ESPN president John Skipper is joining the board of CSI Sports.

Loud and Clear

YouTube/Dan Patrick Show

The fact that the Chargers and Chiefs, a divisional rivalry game, is going to be played in Brazil is malpractice. I mean, that’s terrible.”

—Dan Patrick blasting the NFL’s decision to have the Chiefs and Chargers kick off their season in São Paulo, Brazil.

One Big Fig

The Columbus Dispatch

20 billion (plus)

That was the total number of minutes of college football games and pregame shows watched by viewers during Week 1 of the new season across all networks, according to Flora Kelly, ESPN’s SVP of research. That’s up 44% year-over-year, she tweeted. ESPN platforms had their most-watched college football Week 1 on record, with three games averaging more than 10 million viewers on sister Disney network ABC.

Question of the Day

Does the idea of ads on “NFL RedZone” bother you?

 Yes   No 

Tuesday’s result: 8.1% of respondents plan to check out Stan Verrett and Neil Everett on Twitch.

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

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