January 17, 2025

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Front Office Sports

Pat McAfee wasn’t sure he wanted to return to College GameDay after his first season, but his most recent campaign has been the highest rated in the show’s history—and the network’s president of content, Burke Magnus, told FOS young men regard McAfee as “the voice of their generation.” We tell you how McAfee went from doubt to domination, and break down the hold he has on his audience.

—Ryan Glasspiegel and Michael McCarthy

Pat McAfee Was Unsure About ESPN’s ‘College GameDay’ Return. It Broke Records

The Columbus Dispatch

Late into his first season on ESPN’s College GameDay, Pat McAfee reacted to a negative-skewing poll of the program’s viewers in a way that cast doubt on whether he’d be back the following year, tweeting in part that we’ll “see what the future holds.” 

By late December, he’d committed to a return to the iconic college football pregame show with Rece Davis, Kirk Herbstreit, Desmond Howard, Lee Corso, and ultimately, legendary coach Nick Saban. 

In 2024, GameDay averaged 2.2 million viewers, the most in the show’s 38-year history despite coming in the era of cord-cutting, albeit with the benefit of out-of-home viewership. There were marked gains in the elusive younger demographics. 

McAfee is a pied piper of college-age young men and recent graduates, and every entity involved with sports is strategizing on how to replenish this well in an age where content and attention are so fragmented.

In a conversation with Front Office Sports, ESPN president of content Burke Magnus was effusive in his praise of how McAfee delivers the young demo.

“I don’t know about galvanizing college students to show up in person for the show—the crowds seemed enormous across the board, but that’s hard to quantify. I would credit Pat and his appeal with the college-aged fan,” Magnus said.

“But the easiest way to quantify it is we were up 34 percent year over year in the 18-to-24 demo. That just doesn’t happen in our business without something remarkable. To me, that’s the appeal of Pat. I have kids who are 23 and 25. He’s the guy. He’s the voice of their generation and their fandom. He represents them. He’s the guy like Chris Berman was for me.”

Viewership in the 18-to-34 demographic was also up double digits at 14 percent compared to 2023. 

The chemistry on the show was noticeably excellent. Rece Davis is a gold-standard host at facilitating among all of the analysts. Herbstreit and Howard are stalwarts of the show and have continued to keep it fresh. When Corso, 89, is present, it is evident that everybody has a profound reverence for him. 

Furthermore, McAfee has been able to cultivate something resembling a nephew-uncle relationship with immortal football men like Bill Belichick (on McAfee’s eponymous talk show) and Saban. 

“It was a remarkable year in a lot of ways,” Magnus said. 

“Much of it had to do with really finding the absolute perfect chemistry between the team. I give a lot of that credit to Pat and to Coach Saban and to Rece as the ringleader of this crew. The big difference this year was the introduction of Coach Saban. He and Pat forged this fun and unique relationship. Pat had this way of dragging Coach out of his shell. It made Coach more comfortable that Pat was in the center square.” 

In addition to his talk show and GameDay, McAfee also is a color commentator for WWE’s Raw on Netflix during the football offseason.

In the conversation, Magnus also pointed to a couple of extra elements McAfee brought to the table. 

“Pat elevated his game in unbelievable ways with two things that I now feel like are franchise elements of a franchise show: (1) His opening monologue about the campus where they are with the traditions and songs and chants, and (2) the field-goal kicking contest which was 100 percent Pat’s idea and has become every bit as anticipated, in my opinion, as Corso’s headgear bit has been over the years,” Magnus said.

“It was a fantastic season.”

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How NBC Is Capitalizing on Notre Dame’s CFP Success

NBC Sports

Timing is everything. NBC Sports hoped Notre Dame would have a strong season when it began filming the Peacock docuseries Here Come the Irish, chronicling the team’s 2024 season. But NBC executives are thrilled to see the Fighting Irish advance all the way to the College Football Playoff national championship. Given a gift from the sporting gods, NBC is extending the Peacock series to eight episodes from the original six. The filmmakers will be embedded with Notre Dame as they face off against the Ohio State Buckeyes in Atlanta. 

The series explores the lives of Notre Dame players on and off the field, from on-field training to their personal journeys. 

The seventh episode, which debuted Thursday night, covered the school’s win against Indiana in the opening round of the CFP as well as head coach Marcus Freeman’s contract extension. The newly added Episode 8 will be released Feb. 6, and cover Notre Dame’s Sugar Bowl win over Georgia, its Orange Bowl victory over Penn State, and the CFP versus Ohio State. Previous episodes covered the team’s 11–1 regular season—including a stunning upset loss to Northern Illinois on Sept. 7.

NBC’s president of acquisition and partnership Jon Miller says the series is generating an “outstanding” reaction from viewers. 

“Even if you’re not a Notre Dame fan, it’s fascinating to see the ebbs and flows of a college season. I mean you can’t imagine a more depressed or down time than they were after the Northern Illinois loss. To Coach [Marcus] Freeman’s credit, he’s used that as fuel and inspiration,” Miller tells FOS. “He reminds his players every week. That’s been a great motivation for them to continue to perform at such a high level.”

On Monday night, the Fighting Irish will be gunning for their first national title since 1988. NBC extended its media deal with Notre Dame (which dates back to 1991) in 2023. The current contract runs through the 2029 season. ESPN will kick off its “MegaCast” coverage of Notre Dame–Ohio State at 7:30 p.m. ET.

Around the Dial

Shaq’s Status, Another WWE Deal

David Butler II-Imagn Images

  • We’re hearing Shaquille O’Neal and TNT Sports are close to a contract extension that would keep The Diesel on the Emmy Award–winning Inside the NBA. But just in case, commissioner Adam Silver is urging O’Neal to keep the band together. During an appearance on The Big Podcast with Shaq, the commissioner talked about the value the show brings to the league. Even if the cast’s brutally honest opinions (hello, Sir Charles) tick off some star players.

    “The greatest form of caring is honesty,” Silver told O’Neal, according to Awful Announcing. “And I think there is that sense from you and your crew, Inside the NBA, that you’re in the family and the things you’re saying are coming from the heart. So, I love the show and I appreciate the fact that you guys are willing to be direct. It doesn’t necessarily mean that everybody has to agree all the time either. But it’s an honest point of view.”
  • WWE and TNA announced an expansive, multiyear talent-sharing agreement that will see a number of each promotion’s wrestlers appearing for the other.
  • Legendary MLB broadcaster and pop culture dynamo Bob Uecker passed away at 90 years old.
  • Memo to sports media executives heading to Super Bowl LIX in New Orleans: Expect long lines and an enormous level of security following the deadly Bourbon Street terror attack that killed 14 people. The NFL and the federal government are both taking precautions, with 125,000 people expected to descend on the city for the Big Game. “I’d like to say it doesn’t change a lot in our security planning, but it does change things,” the NFL’s chief security officer Cathy Lanier told ESPN. “Are we doing anything differently? Of course.”
  • Amazon is nearing an agreement with Kevin Harlan to be an NBA broadcaster when Prime Video becomes a league-rights partner next season. Harlan would join fellow soon-to-be-former TNT announcer Ian Eagle in the role.
  • Barstool Sports’ Big Cat (Dan Katz) wrote a lengthy explanation of how he became a diehard Chicago sports fan despite growing up outside Boston, a topic that has consumed listeners of his popular Pardon My Take podcast.

Reader Response

Kyle Terada-Imagn Images

We got plenty of reaction to our scoop that Draymond Green is talking to NBA networks about media jobs once he retires. Grant joked on X/Twitter: “Going to be hilarious when he kicks another anchor and then looks at the production staff like he did nothing wrong.”

But Upton Bell is not buying Green as the next Sir Charles on TV. “No one is going to replace Barkley,” he tweeted.

We also saw rich response to our exclusive on Clinton Yates succeeding Mike Greenberg in ESPN Radio’s national 10 a.m. ET time slot. “Not gonna lie, if it’s two hours of @clintonyates doing snag, grab, or stab I wouldn’t be disappointed. Im aware there’d be no video, I’m fine with vivid descriptions,” Matt Carroll tweeted.

Robert Smith countered on X: “Nothing against Yates -but ESPN radio has never been less relevant-just completely lacking the star power from a decade ago.”

Question of the Day

Have you watched “College GameDay” more often since Pat McAfee joined the show?

 More often   Less often   He hasn’t influenced my viewing habits one way or another 

Tuesday’s answer: 34% of respondents think the lawsuit against Fox will cause issues for the company as it prepares for the Super Bowl.

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

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