August 28, 2025

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Front Office Sports has learned Ryen Russillo is leaving The Ringer to start a new media company. In another twist, Dave Portnoy and Barstool Sports are investing in the company—and distributing and monetizing Russillo’s show.

—Ryan Glasspiegel, Amanda Christovich, and Michael McCarthy

Ryen Russillo Leaving Ringer, Dave Portnoy Expected to Invest in New Business

YouTube/Ryen Russillo

Ryen Russillo’s time with The Ringer is coming to an end.

Russillo, one of the best-regarded sports-talk hosts in the business, is poised to launch a new digital production company when his deal expires, sources told Front Office Sports. Dave Portnoy and Barstool Sports are expected to invest in the company, which will host his new show.

The sides are closing in on a commercial deal for a strategic multi-year partnership with Barstool for distribution, monetization, merch, and other infrastructure in Russillo’s new company. Sources said the deal is “inside the five-yard line” but has not been finalized.

Representatives for Russillo and Portnoy could not immediately be reached for comment. 

Russillo has said on The Ryen Russillo Podcast recently that he is a looming free agent, with his contract at The Ringer expiring soon. The exact date of the end of his deal was not immediately known. 

Russillo joined The Ringer, which was founded by Bill Simmons and is owned by Spotify, after leaving ESPN in 2019. In that time, his show has consistently been one of the top-ranked sports podcasts on Apple and Spotify. 

EVENT
The biggest names in sports media will be at Tuned In 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
  • 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.

The Next Chapter in the Network Battle for College Football Dominance

Adam Cairns/Imagn Images

The biggest rivalry in college football arguably isn’t between two schools. It’s between Fox and ESPN—college football’s broadcast duopoly—and the two super-conferences they back, the Big Ten and SEC.

The next chapter of that rivalry commences this Saturday, when the SEC’s newest crown jewel, the No. 1 Texas Longhorns, take on the reigning national champions hailing from the Big Ten, the No. 3 Ohio State Buckeyes. Both leagues want bragging rights as their teams go head-to-head. But the battle commences long before kickoff. Fox has broadcast rights to the game, but Big Noon Kickoff and College GameDay will be outside Ohio Stadium, jockeying for viewers and fan attention.

The rivalry heated up five years ago, when the SEC announced it had signed an exclusive $3 billion deal with Disney, giving ESPN and ABC all of its college football rights. The following summer, the SEC announced it would add Texas and Oklahoma—entrenching its status as a super league and setting off a domino of conference realignment. 

The Big Ten responded by adding USC and UCLA the following summer, as well as signing a multi-network deal worth at least $7 billion led by Fox after ESPN walked away from the network for the first time in four decades. When the Pac-12 was picked apart due to conference realignment, Fox bankrolled the Big Ten’s additions of Oregon and Washington, Front Office Sports reported at the time.

As things stand now, Fox owns most of the rights to the Big Ten, and ESPN has none. Meanwhile, ESPN owns all of the rights to the SEC. 

Each network’s Saturday morning pregame show has also become a major component of the battle for supremacy. ESPN’s traveling roadshow is commencing its 39th season—arguably dominating the early-morning window for years. But in 2019, Fox launched its own traveling pregame show, the aforementioned Big Noon Kickoff, that has been chasing GameDay ever since.

ESPN continued to own the pregame time slot, but the network wasn’t complacent. In 2022, the network made the controversial decision to add Pat McAfee to the show, in the hopes that he could appeal to a younger audience. Then, this past offseason, FOS broke the news of a Fox Sports partnership with Barstool Sports that would include founder Dave Portnoy appearing on Big Noon. (Longtime GameDay analyst Desmond Howard has said he believes the move was a direct reaction to ESPN’s hiring of McAfee.)

Both pregame shows have compelling storylines of their own heading into this weekend.

Legendary coach and analyst Lee Corso will make his final appearance on GameDay before he retires, giving the analyst famous for his wacky headgear-wearing antics his swan song. 

Meanwhile, Big Noon will debut Portnoy—a storyline that got even juicier this week when FOS reported that the Buckeyes had banned the Barstool founder, an outspoken Michigan fan, from entering the stadium (Portnoy confirmed the report, while Ohio State denied it). 

GameDay has, overall, been the ratings favorite. Last season, for example, GameDay said it averaged 2.2 million viewers, while Fox averaged just under 1 million. The question is whether Big Noon can make up ground—and how that might affect the greater war between the two networks to own college football.

Neither ESPN nor Fox provided comment for this story.

Shannon Sharpe Adds James Harrison, Joe Haden Show to Media Empire

Trevor Ruszkowski-Imagn Images

Shannon Sharpe is expanding his Shay Shay Media platform in time for football season, Front Office Sports has learned.

Sharpe’s company is hiring former NFL stars James Harrison and Joe Haden to headline a new podcast/YouTube show dubbed Deebo & Joe. Debuting Sept. 1, the program will drop new episodes every Monday, Tuesday, and Friday at 11 a.m. ET.

The 47-year-old Harrison rose from undrafted free agency to become a two-time Super Bowl champion with the Steelers. He was the 2008 Defensive Player of the Year, and his 100-yard interception return in Super Bowl XLIII is one of the most memorable plays in NFL history. The 36-year-old Haden was a three-time Pro Bowl cornerback for the Steelers and Browns.

“We’re not here to sugarcoat anything,” Harrison said in a statement to FOS. “We’re bringing fans into the locker room, into our lives and into the game in a way they’ve never experienced.”

The news indicates Sharpe is getting back to business after two multimillion-dollar lawsuits. A $20 million defamation suit by a Chicago woman named Jimalita Tillman against Sharpe, his Nightcap costar Chad Ochocinco, and Shay Shay Media was dismissed with prejudice by a U.S. District Court in Illinois. That came only a few weeks after Sharpe settled an explosive $50 million sexual assault lawsuit from an accuser on July 18.

In the wake of the lawsuits, Sharpe lost his part-time gig on ESPN’s First Take with Stephen A. Smith. His former role will be filled by Cam Newton this season, according to Ryan Glasspiegel of FOS. 

Cam Newton to Expand ESPN ‘First Take’ Role After Shannon Sharpe Exit

Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

Cam Newton is spreading his wings on First Take. 

The former MVP quarterback is expanding his role on ESPN’s daily morning debate show hosted by Molly Qerim and Stephen A. Smith, sources told Front Office Sports. Newton began appearing regularly on Fridays during football season last October. Now, he has signed a multi-year deal, and the network expects to have him on more than once a week. 

The situation will be “fluid” as Newton has other responsibilities, including his 4th and 1 podcast with Blue Wire and 106 and Park on BET. 

An ESPN spokesperson declined to comment when asked about Newton’s role. 

Newton was the first overall pick in the 2011 NFL Draft after starring at Auburn during an undefeated national championship season and winning the Heisman Trophy. He played the vast majority of his NFL career, which spanned until 2021, for the Panthers, except for the 2020 season, which was spent in New England. 

Newton’s past appearances on ESPN have demonstrated that he has an ability coveted by many media executives: getting under people’s skin in a way that they feel they must react to him, as opposed to ignoring his opinions and moving on with their day. 

Elsewhere in the First Take universe, Shannon Sharpe was dismissed from the program this offseason. Sharpe recently settled a sexual assault lawsuit brought by his former girlfriend. 

Interestingly, Sharpe’s Nightcap podcast cohost, Chad Ochocinco, has also been lobbying for the job of joining First Take.

Around the Dial

The Columbus Dispatch

  • FCC chairman Brendan Carr urged Google to make a deal in the Fox–YouTube TV carriage dispute that had threatened to disrupt the start of the college football season. The two sides reached a short-term extension as they attempt to hammer out a final contract.
  • Nick Kostos has completed a new deal with Audacy to remain the host of You Better You Bet, sponsored by BetMGM.
  • Blue Wire podcasts are busy with events in the coming weeks. NBA guard D’Angelo Russell is hosting the Backyard Cup celebrity golf tournament at Sunriver Resort in Oregon this week. Guests include Devin Booker and Jordan Clarkson, while Johnnie Walker is the presenting sponsor. Additionally, Cam Newton will do a live podcast tour this fall, beginning Oct. 9 at Auburn, where he won a national championship and the Heisman Trophy.
  • Bussin’ With the Boys hosts Taylor Lewan and Will Compton will make regular appearances on ESPN’s Get Up and SportsCenter this football season. As Front Office Sports first reported, Bussin’ left Barstool Sports for a wide-ranging deal with FanDuel earlier this year.
  • John Fanta is joining NBC Sports full-time to call Big East, Big Ten, and Big 12 basketball. He will also do studio updates for Big Ten and Notre Dame football. The Athletic reported he is expected to be “in the mix” for NBA sidelines as well.
  • MLB Network’s “Showcase” telecast of Braves-Phillies on Thursday night will have an interesting set of announcers—Mark DeRosa, Lauren Shehadi, and Robert Flores from their MLB Central program.

Loud and Clear

Tommy Gilligan-Imagn Images

“There was so much pressure coming from Ohio State. They [Fox] were broken.”

—Dave Portnoy, refuting remarks from Ohio State AD Ross Bjork, who said that it was Fox’s decision not to have Portnoy in Ohio Stadium for Big Noon Kickoff. FOS previously reported that Ohio State barred Portnoy from the stadium and The Barstool College Football Show from leading into BNK on campus.  

Question of the Day

Are you surprised Ryen Russillo is leaving "The Ringer"?

 Yes   No 

Tuesday’s result: 54.5% of respondents think Dave Portnoy should be included on Fox’s show inside Big Ten stadiums.

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Written by Ryan Glasspiegel, Amanda Christovich, Michael McCarthy
Edited by Or Moyal, Catherine Chen

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