January 6, 2026

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Front Office Sports

ESPN reporter Laura Rutledge went viral last Thursday after TV cameras caught her sprinting across the field at the Sugar Bowl in a madcap dash to host the halftime show. She speaks to Front Office Sports about why she didn’t run faster and her postgame interviews with Sam Darnold and Justin Herbert.

—Michael McCarthy and Ryan Glasspiegel

Laura Rutledge Opens Up on Justin Herbert and Viral Sugar Bowl Sprint

Dec 8, 2025; Inglewood, California, USA; ESPN sideline reporter Laura Rutledge (left) interviews Los Angeles Chargers quarterback Justin Herbert (10) after the game against the Philadelphia Eagles at SoFi Stadium.

Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

Laura Rutledge has been everywhere on ESPN’s college football and NFL coverage this season. She’s serving as a sideline reporter for ESPN’s coverage of the College Football Playoff and Monday Night Football—while still juggling her hosting duties on NFL Live and SEC Nation.

The star reporter went viral last Thursday after TV cameras caught her sprinting across the field at the Sugar Bowl in a madcap dash to host the halftime show. She also quickly shut down rumors Seahawks QB Sam Darnold snubbed her postgame on Saturday. She’s still getting kudos for respectfully, but firmly, getting boorish Chargers QB Justin Herbert to answer her questions in December.

Front Office Sports talked to the 37-year-old star about her wild month on the gridiron. Below is an edited excerpt of our interview: 

Front Office Sports: Let’s talk about the viral reaction to your 100-yard dash at the Sugar Bowl. I loved how the legendary Chris Berman sang your praises with his signature “WOOP!” narration. Your reaction?

Laura Rutledge: I am sort of embarrassed because I did not know that anybody was going to be filming that. Had I known I might have tried to run even a little faster. I was actually upset with myself because I’d been on a long trip, and sometimes it’s hard to think about all the packing, and all the things that you would need, for the different roles and the different games and shows. And what I had brought to wear was not my best option for running—because my pants were too big and baggy and the heels on my boots were kind of slowing me down. So I think it would have been a little faster had I had a little bit better of a setup. 

But it’s so nice, the people that have been positive, I’m just really thankful to get to do this. And it’s pretty funny, [ESPN EVP of sports production] Mike McQuade, actually it was last year, because we started doing this last year at the Sugar Bowl. He asked me, “Do you think you can make it? Do you think you’d be able to get there in time?” I’m like, “Sure, give me a chance. Let’s see if I can do it.” And to just have the faith of the leadership here back me up and to be able to pull it off has been so much fun, but it really doesn’t happen without a great crew helping me. And in that video, you see it, you know, I sit down, we’re changing mics out. It’s like a NASCAR pit stop. 

FOS: Besides hosting NFL Live and SEC Nation, you do sideline reporting for the CFP and primetime college football games. And this season, you were promoted to the cast of Monday Night Football. How do you juggle all these assignments?

LR: It’s been really fun, to be honest. … But I think, when it comes down to juggling all of it, it’s a matter of compartmentalizing time. So a lot of times, I’ll be at the SEC Nation site and then I’ll have to switch gears really fast to do something for Monday Night Football. I’ll be doing an interview for Monday Night Football. And it’s just like being right where your feet are in that moment to make sure that you’re super-dialed-in on whatever it may be, I think is the most important thing. And then trusting yourself, too. I’m a big over-preparer. I’m a big self-doubter at times. And so for me, it’s been constantly reminding myself like, “No, you’ve got this, you are prepared, you can show up.” Because inevitably with all these different roles, I can’t do the level of prep that was probably too much, to be totally honest. I can’t really do that every single time like I want to.

But I think what’s been interesting about that is in some ways it’s made me a better host. It made me more curious. It’s made me not be somebody who’s trying to force a stat in, or force things in that maybe I would have in the past, just because I had done so much work on it.

For Michael McCarthy’s full interview with Laura Rutledge, click here.

Jason Benetti Is Leading Candidate to Be NBC’s Top MLB Voice

Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

Jason Benetti has emerged as the leading candidate to be the top MLB play-by-play voice on NBC, sources told Front Office Sports. Benetti previously called MLB for Sunday morning games on NBC’s Peacock streaming service. 

Benetti currently calls MLB, college football, and college basketball for Fox Sports. His contract is not up until later this year, and Fox would have to grant permission for him to take the NBC job, sources said. 

Benetti, who is known for his sharp wit, is also the play-by-play broadcaster for the Detroit Tigers. At Fox, he is behind Joe Davis and Adam Amin on the MLB depth chart. 

Spokespeople for NBC and Fox declined to comment.

The two networks have struck a talent-sharing agreement recently, as NBC is loaning host Rebecca Lowe to Fox for the upcoming FIFA men’s World Cup this summer. (Fox will also have analyst Thierry Henry, on loan from his primary job at CBS.) 

MLB recently finalized a deal with NBC to air games on Sunday mornings on Peacock and Sunday nights on NBC—when it is not airing the NFL or NBA—after ESPN opted out of its 35-year Sunday Night Baseball relationship. NBC will also have the exclusive rights to the wild-card round, which ESPN relinquished in its opt-out. The deal with NBC runs for the 2026–28 seasons. 

Potential TV ‘Bidding War’ for Mike Tomlin

Barry Reeger-Imagn Images

Networks and streamers may get an early gift for 2026: Mike Tomlin could be heading to TV.

The charismatic Steelers coach has long been No. 1 on the wish list of NFL media partners looking to hire the next great analyst. Despite the 10–7 Steelers’ playoff-clinching win over the Ravens on Sunday night, there’s a growing drumbeat that Tomlin’s considering a media career. 

During NBC’s Football Night in America, insider Mike Florio noted “there’s a lot of steam about Tomlin maybe heading to TV.” Earlier, the NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport warned “there’s a possibility” the Super Bowl–winning coach could leave the Steelers in favor of a lucrative media position. “Step back, do some TV, maybe reassess his coaching future at another date,” mused the NFL insider.

But ESPN’s Adam Schefter reported the 53-year-old Tomlin is likely to remain in Pittsburgh for his 20th season as head coach. By beating the Ravens, Tomlin tied Steelers coaching legend Chuck Noll with 193 regular-season wins. After winning the AFC North for the first time since 2020, who would argue with Tomlin’s decision to stay? “He’s got one year left on his contract. There’s a feeling, from many, that he will fulfill what he started,” Schefter said. “He’s the longest-tenured coach in the National Football League.”

Fellow ESPN insider Peter Schrager noted Tomlin is a natural for TV. “Having worked at Fox, having worked at NFL Network, and now here at ESPN, there’s is a chair waiting, whether it be in the booth or one of these wonderful, warm, weather-controlled sets for Mike Tomlin to make a lot of money talking football if he so wishes for a year,” Schrager noted. “Or he can pick his spot of open, vacant jobs.”

Tomlin makes $17 million a year as the Steelers coach. Given recent salary bumps for top NFL analysts, he might not have to take that much of a haircut. Tom Brady pockets $37.5 million a year at Fox, while Troy Aikman and Tony Romo earn $18 million, respectively, at ESPN and CBS.

Tomlin’s salary would depend on his position. With No. 1 NFL game analysts now serving as the face of their networks, those jobs pay the most. He’d earn far less as a once-a-week studio analyst, experts say.

“It depends on his role and whether there is a bidding war for him. Tony Romo raised the financial bar for No. 1 analysts—and Tom Brady doubled it,” notes Gary Myers, author of Brady vs. Belichick: The Dynasty Debate. “Tomlin makes about $17 million a year with the Steelers. If he’s hired for a studio show, my guess is the bidding starts at $5 million to $8 million.”

Where could Tomlin go? A natural landing spot would be CBS Sports. Matt Ryan of The NFL Today has had talks with Falcons owner Arthur Blank about returning to his former franchise in a “significant front office role,” according to insider Jay Glazer of Fox. 

CBS has found success with Bill Cowher, Tomlin’s Steelers predecessor, who’s been a mainstay of the pregame show since 2007, notes LeslieAnne Wade, the former CBS PR maven turned consultant. Could TV lightning strike twice?

“CBS has proven history with a great hire from the Steelers,” she says. “[Tomlin] sure has the DNA and real-world knowledge. He is charismatic, engaged, and personable. His delivery is unique, clear, and recognizable—and his style is his own.”

Adds Myers: “Tomlin’s press conferences are must-watch and he is so articulate and insightful that he immediately would be a television star. He’s the perfect replacement on The NFL Today if Matt Ryan takes a front office job with the Falcons. The only issue is whether CBS would want two former Steelers coaches on the set. I could also see Tomlin fitting in seamlessly on ESPN’s Sunday or Monday night countdown shows.”

Then there are the deep-pocketed streamers like Amazon Prime Video, Netflix, and YouTube, which are all adding more live NFL games.

Handing Tomlin a hefty paycheck would amount to loose quarters in the couch cushions for Amazon. With its Thursday Night Football success, Prime could be in the hunt for a second NFL rights package once the league opts out early from its current cycle of 11-year deals worth $111 billion. Jay Marine, Prime’s U.S. boss, told Front Office Sports last fall he’s “optimistic” about one day landing the Super Bowl. Who better to call or analyze that game than Tomlin, who led the Steelers to their sixth Lombardi Trophy in 2009.

Don’t forget about Netflix, which just hired Elle Duncan away from ESPN for a wide-ranging sports hosting role.  Both Fox and ESPN have shut the door on streamers like Netflix borrowing their on-air talent. So look for Netflix to hire more full-time sports media talents like Duncan. The company helped the NFL set a new streaming record on Christmas Day by averaging 27.5 million viewers for the late-afternoon Vikings vs. Lions game. 

Over the decades, many NFL coaches have left for TV before returning to the sidelines. Tomlin could follow in the path of field generals like Bruce Arians and Sean Payton, both of whom took a TV break to recharge their batteries, before returning to the league. After retiring from the Cardinals, Arians called games for CBS for one season, before un-retiring and leading Brady’s Buccaneers to a Super Bowl championship. Payton served as a Fox studio analyst in 2022 before returning to the NFL. His 14–3 Broncos just ended the Chiefs’ nine-year reign atop the AFC West.

Tomlin might not be alone when it comes to seeking media opportunities. Following his brief return to the NFL with the Colts, Philip Rivers left the door open to a future in broadcasting, noted Awful Announcing. Many TV executives have told me over the years that Rivers has a folksy, home-spun quality similar to the late Dandy Don Meredith. “I’ve not ruled it out,” the 44-year-old QB told Kay Adams. Then there’s John Harbaugh, whose 18 years in Baltimore might be ending.

But Tomlin wouldn’t need a bidding war to make a killing in the media, notes Wade. All it takes is one eager suitor. “It’s like art,” she says. “If someone wants it, they’re happy to pay.” 

Around the Dial

Jan 4, 2026; Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA; Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback Aaron Rodgers (8) drops back to pass against the Baltimore Ravens during the first half at Acrisure Stadium.

Barry Reeger-Imagn Images

  • How much does the NFL like Jeff Bezos’s Amazon Prime Video? This much. Prime arguably scored the best matchup of the wild-card weekend schedule, noted Sports Media Watch, with Packers-Bears in prime time on Saturday (8 p.m. ET). ABC/ESPN also hit the jackpot, with Steelers-Texans on Monday Night Football. It could be the last Steelers game for coach Mike Tomlin and QB Aaron Rodgers.
  • ESPN legend Chris Berman provided his own distinctive soundtrack to a replay of Laura Rutledge’s madcap, 100-yard dash at the Sugar Bowl. Along with the NFL music, this whole NFL Live bit on Monday was a chef’s kiss. “You … could … go … all … the … way,” narrated Boomer, followed by his trademark, “WOOP!” Rutledge posted on X/Twitter: “My idol Boomer. Love him so.”
  • Mike Tirico and Cris Collinsworth of NBC earned some well-earned critical plaudits for their call of the Steelers’ wild win over the Ravens on Sunday Night Football. The broadcast duo “matched the energy of insane Ravens-Steelers finish,” wrote Awful Announcing. You can listen to Tirico’s thrilling call of Ravens kicker Tyler Loop missing the last-second field goal here.
  • Hey, Chris Canty, tell us how you feel about kickers after a missed Ravens field goal handed the AFC North crown—and last playoff spot—to the Steelers? “That was a disgusting football game last night, yuck,” said Canty on ESPN Radio’s UnSportsmanLike. “Now you all understand why I feel the way I feel about kickers. They’re not football players and they’re barely even people.” 
  • Crystal ball: Richard Greenfield & Co. at LightShed Partners predict Josh D’Amaro will be appointed the next CEO of the Walt Disney Co., succeeding Bob Iger. He currently serves as chairman of Disney Experiences. They also predict Conor McGregor will headline the White House’s UFC card and the Main Street Sports/FanDuel Sports Network RSNs will return to bankruptcy.
  • NBC got an unexpected bonus when guest announcer Snoop Dogg called an agitated Warriors coach Steve Kerr getting kicked out of a game Monday night.

One Big Fig

Dec 18, 2025; Seattle, Washington, USA; Seattle Seahawks quarterback Sam Darnold (14) throws a pass against the Los Angeles Rams in the second half at Lumen Field.

Kevin Ng-Imagn Images

15.33 million

That was the all-time best average viewership for Amazon Prime Video’s coverage of Thursday Night Football this season. Prime’s viewership grew 16% from last season. It marked the most-watched season for the primetime package’s 20-year history. And Prime’s third straight season of double-digit, year-over-year viewership growth.

Question of the Day

Do you think Mike Tomlin will stay a coach or become an analyst?

 Coach   Analyst 

Wednesday’s result: 33% of respondents think Pat McAfee was the biggest sports media winner, 26% of respondents think it was Stephen A. Smith, 19% think it was Rob Manfred, and 22% think it was someone else.

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