October 18, 2024

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Front Office Sports Alert

Jerry Jones threatened radio hosts on the Cowboys’ flagship station this week, saying “I’ll get somebody else to ask these questions” after being asked about the team’s offseason decisions following a blowout home loss on his 82nd birthday. He then doubled down, saying he’d forced out legendary broadcasters Brad Sham and Dale Hansen in the past.

We caught up with Hansen, a duPont- and Peabody Award–winning anchor and reporter, to talk about his challenges of Jones and the Cowboys owner’s ability to influence media organizations. He did not mince words.

—Michael McCarthy

Jerry Jones’s Threats Aren’t Empty. A Legend Who Defied Him Knows

Geoff Burke-Imagn Images

Jerry Jones doubled down on his threats to fire local radio hosts by noting he’d previously forced Dallas–Fort Worth legends Dale Hansen and Brad Sham off the air when angered by their coverage.

To get a read on the mercurial Cowboys owner, I talked with the 76-year-old Hansen, who retired in 2021. Why would Jones morph from the NFL’s most accessible owner to a billionaire bully? 

Jones’s media friendliness is a bit of a myth, noted the duPont- and Peabody Award–winning sportscaster. Yes, Jones loves the spotlight. Yes, he conducts more interviews than 10 other NFL owners put together. But Jones has always demanded local Dallas press toes the line. 

Even during the heyday of America’s Team in the mid-1990s, Jones forced out Hansen due to his criticism of him and then-coach Barry Switzer. The difference: The younger Jones worked more sneakily behind the scenes. This time, he’s publicly threatening people’s jobs.

Jones and Hansen had a love-hate relationship. During one interview, Jones became so incensed he slapped Hansen’s hand rather than shaking it. But they always made up a few weeks later.

“Jerry stormed out of the studio because I said to him, ‘Name me one team, in any sport, that would hire you to be their general manager.’ I said, ‘I’ll wait.’”

Hansen admires embattled hosts Shan Shariff and RJ Choppy of 105.3 The Fan for standing up for themselves. But if Jones threatens to move the Cowboys’ rights to another station, he thinks their bosses will fold like a banquet chair.

“I don’t know very many owners—of any organization—who would value their employees over the Dallas Cowboys. That’s a disgusting thought. But it’s absolutely true.”

Jones is a marketing genius, admitted Hansen. Even though the Cowboys haven’t sniffed the Super Bowl for 29 years, they rank as the most valuable NFL franchise at $11 billion, according to CNBC. (Hansen wouldn’t put it past the wily owner to pick a media fight to deflect attention from the team’s brutal 47–9 home loss to the Lions.) But he believes the decades of criticism over Jones’s questionable decisions as GM are taking their toll.

As the late John Madden said: “Winning’s the great deodorant, and conversely, when you have a bad record, everything stinks, and everything starts to unravel, and everything falls apart.”

It was easy for Jones to make peace with Hansen during the ’90s when he was collecting three Lombardi Trophies. Now he’s 82 years old—and his window is closing. With the stench of failure hanging over his beloved Cowboys, Jones is lashing out. 

As Hansen told me: “Jerry is going to go out as one of the most incredible money-makers in the history of sports. But he’s also going to go out as a loser. As an absolute football loser.”

Unrivaled Preparing ‘Full-Court Press’ to Recruit Caitlin Clark

Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images

The new Unrivaled women’s basketball league is thinking big. Caitlin Clark big.

Fresh off agreeing to an inaugural TV deal with TNT Sports, the new league will try to recruit Clark in the coming weeks, sources with knowledge of the strategy tell Front Office Sports.

The women’s 3-on-3 basketball league, cofounded by WNBA stars Napheesa Collier and Breanna Stewart, has been playing the long game with Clark. The fledgling league didn’t want to rush its approach to the 22-year-old after her rookie season in the WNBA, a standout campaign in which she became the first rookie since Candace Parker to be named to the All-WNBA First Team. Instead, the new league wanted to give the Indiana Fever star time to recover and golf in her offseason. But with a national TV contract under its belt, sources say Unrivaled plans to approach Clark sometime in the next several weeks.

Clark doesn’t need the money. Her eight-year deal with Nike will be worth $28 million over eight years, according to The Wall Street Journal. Unrivaled is hoping the lure of a financial stake, and the challenge of hooping against the world’s top 30 players, will be enough to tempt the phenomenon, who can otherwise spend her offseasons training, playing golf, and shooting commercials for her growing list of corporate sponsors that also includes Gatorade and State Farm. 

“Get ready for the full-court press,” predicted one source.

Clark moves the TV needle for her sport more than any athlete since Tiger Woods. Adding her ratings power would be a huge boon to TNT, which could lose NBA game rights after this season for the first time in 40 years.

TNT, which is investing an undisclosed amount in the league, plans to show 45 regular-season games during Unrivaled’s inaugural season. They will be telecast on TNT and truTV, with all games also being screened on Warner Bros. Discovery’s Max streaming platform.

Sports media executives David Levy (the co-CEO of Horizon Sports & Experiences) and John Skipper (former ESPN president), led the league’s media-rights negotiations. (Both HS&E and Skipper are also investing in the league.) During his prior 30-year stint at Turner Sports, Levy oversaw the league’s award-winning NBA coverage and helped turn Charles Barkley’s Inside the NBA into the gold standard for studio shows.

The WNBA, which Unrivaled president Alex Bazzell says has been “extremely supportive” of the new league, signed a $2.2 billion media-rights deal this year with ESPN, NBC, and Amazon Prime that will start in the 2026 season and total $200 million annually. 

In an interview with Front Office Sports, Levy openly fantasized about what adding Clark would mean for the nascent league. He mentioned Paige Bueckers—contracted to join in 2026—and Angel Reese, and said he could see future editions of the league leaving Miami for a handful of games to cater to specific fan bases.

“If we’re lucky enough to get Caitlin Clark, are we going to travel to Iowa?” Levy said.

Collier was coy about Clark when asked directly about her on FanDuel’s Run It Back on Thursday. “I think we might have a couple more rookies in there. That might be a hint,” the Lynx superstar said.

The WNBA Defensive Player of the Year noted the growth that Clark has brought to the league and the money she’s made teams, all while making a base salary of roughly $75,000. “Definitely we want to be a part of that change and that’s what we’re doing,” she said. “I think she deserves that. I think she should be one of the top players in the world just for the sheer numbers she’s bringing, so I think that’s something that needs to change and that’s what we’re trying to do.”

Luis Silberwasser, chairman and CEO of TNT Sports, added in a statement: “Our TNT Sports portfolio centers on premium live sports and our media and equity partnership with Unrivaled deepens our commitment to further expanding the depth of top-tier women’s sports programming we offer our fans and presents an opportunity for us to shape and amplify the continued growth of women’s basketball.”

Margaret Fleming contributed to this story.

Reader Feedback

There was a great deal of reaction to our Thursday scoop that Unrivaled is planning a “full-court press” to recruit Caitlin Clark. “I hope she plays. This would be a nice step in the right direction in her relationship with non-Fever pro hoopers,”  a reader tweeted.

Another reader posted he hopes Clark turns down the overture. “For her sake, I hope she declines and focuses on #WNBA. She has to deal with so much noise and so many expectations. Only Clark knows how she feels about that but it would seem like a true off-season would be the healthiest choice for her to maximize her WNBA career.”

A third advised Clark to just say no—unless Unrivaled matches Ice Cube’s previous two-year, $10 million offer to play in the Big3.

Following Up

An International Super Bowl?

Our story on the NFL laying the groundwork to sell an international package of games that could fetch up to $1.5 billion got picked up by ProFootballTalk, CNBC, Awful Announcing, and LinkedIn. I asked Dan Cohen, EVP of global media rights at Octagon, for his take. 

“The NFL could most certainly create an international package for both U.S. broadcasters and international broadcasters. It would make most sense to do this in Europe where they have some [limited still] volume of matchups—and perhaps Mexico where they can get to three games in-market per season sooner than later,” he told me. “The rights value to broadcasters for the local game is much greater than the rights value of regular-season NFL games because of the additional advertising a local market game can bring to the broadcaster, plus hospitality opportunities and lead-up programming, too. In Brazil, for example, I imagine the one regular-season game played in São Paulo generates three times the ad sales than selling all of the rest of the regular-season games combined [that are played in the U.S.].”

But when it comes to dangling the possibility of an international Super Bowl, the league has to be careful, Cohen warned. The Super Bowl typically kicks off in the U.S. around 6:30 p.m. ET. Similar to the challenge facing NBC Sports with the Olympics, the league should prioritize playing an overseas Super Bowl in a convenient time zone for U.S. viewers. Even if the game kicks off in London at 3 p.m. ET and noon PT, the host network would lose hours of valuable pregame programming leading up to the game.

“So think of Canada, Mexico, Brazil first,” Cohen says. “But [the] Super Bowl is almost always sold as a simulcast internationally so the pay-TV partner and a free-to-air partner can expose the game and reach the widest audience. I don’t expect this would change wherever the game would be played, hypothetically.”

Mike Drops

TNT As Seinfeld, New Projects

Hosts of Inside the NBA on TNT

Inside the NBA

  • Quote of the Week: This one goes to TNT’s Kenny Smith, talking to Sports Illustrated about potential employers “courting” the cast and crew of Inside the NBA: “I look at our show as Seinfeld. It’s the four of us, together, that have made really great television that people watch and not just for basketball. We’ve individually created monster possibilities for each other.”
  • I’m looking forward to NFL Network’s premiere of The Duke: The Giant Life of Wellington Mara on Oct. 25 (8 p.m. ET). The longtime Giants owner was the “Forrest Gump of the NFL” over his 80-year career, notes Michael Strahan in the documentary, pioneering scouting and TV revenue-sharing as well as discovering the late Pete Rozelle as commissioner. (Watch the trailer from NFL Films here.) “When I attended my first @NFL owners’ meeting, I was the only woman in the room,” recalled former Raiders executive Amy Trask on X/Twitter. “When he saw me, Wellington immediately stood up and strode over, he welcomed me and offered me his support and encouragement as he did from that moment on.”
  • Naming rights sponsors typically slap their brands on one team or venue at a time. So I was intrigued when Campbell Soup Company formed a marketing partnership with four Harris Blitzer Sports & Entertainment teams Thursday: the NFL’s Commanders, the NBA’s 76ers, the NHL’s Devils as well as the Prudential Center in Newark, N.J., and NASCAR’s Joe Gibbs Racing. Could it be the wave of the future as groups of investors and private equity firms invest in teams across sports?
  • Around the Dial: Former ESPNer Jemele Hill has launched a new podcast dubbed Spolitics (sports and politics). Meanwhile, Fox Sports NFL commentators Rob Gronkowski and Julian Edelman are joining Nuthouse Sports, where they will collaborate on a new weekly show dubbed Dudes on Dudes with Gronk and Jules. And TNT announced a long-term contract extension with 20-year veteran Brian Anderson.
  • ESPN’s The Pat McAfee Show had its most-watched day ever on Oct. 15, drawing 50 million total views, most of them for his interview with Jets quarterback Aaron Rodgers.
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Written by Michael McCarthy
Edited by Or Moyal, Catherine Chen

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