August 19, 2025

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Buzz around an overseas Super Bowl is picking up steam after a passionate pitch by the British ambassador to the United States. Sources tell FOS the NFL could use the Big Game as the centerpiece of a new rights package built around international games, adding billions of dollars more to its existing deals.

—Michael McCarthy, Ryan Glasspiegel, and Alex Schiffer

International Super Bowl Could Anchor Multibillion-Dollar NFL Rights Deal

Kirby Lee-USA TODAY Sports

The NFL could use the first Big Game outside American soil as the cherry on top of a new international-rights package that could fetch billions, multiple sources told Front Office Sports on Monday. This follows the news that the British ambassador to the U.S. has made a “big pitch” to host the event.

“I want that Super Bowl in Britain,” Ambassador Lord Peter Mandelson told the Chicago Council on Global Affairs last Thursday. “I don’t care when it takes place, but I want it announced while I’m ambassador. We love it, we love it.”

At first glance, moving the Super Bowl across the pond seems far-fetched. The Super Bowl is a quintessentially American event. London is five hours ahead of Eastern Time, and eight hours ahead of Pacific Time. That would almost certainly necessitate a major change in the game’s kickoff time. The Big Game reportedly generates an economic impact of $500 million to $1 billion for host cities such as New Orleans and Las Vegas. It would be tough for an American sports league to take that away. Plus, the NFL likes to grant Super Bowls to franchises that build new multibillion-dollar stadiums for their teams. 

But the stars could align for the NFL to finally take America’s biggest sporting event to another country. Commissioner Roger Goodell has launched an aggressive international growth plan to reach his stated goal of $25 billion in revenue by 2027. The commissioner even floated the idea of an international Super Bowl during a fan forum in London last fall.

“We’ve always traditionally tried to play a Super Bowl in an NFL city—that was always sort of a reward for the cities that have NFL franchises,” said Goodell. “But things change. It wouldn’t surprise me at all if that happens one day.”

If the NFL expands to an 18-game season, the league could carve out a lucrative new rights package of 16 international games per season. Media consultant John Kosner told FOS the NFL could launch a weekly, 9:30 a.m. ET game package in the U.S. TV market that would take place in the late afternoons in Europe. Toss in a Super Bowl and the package becomes extremely valuable. But the NFL and millions of TV viewers would have to adjust to an earlier game time in the U.S., where the Big Game typically kicks off at 6:30 p.m. ET.

“London is as good a bet as any to host that first game,” Kosner tells FOS. “It would be a 7 p.m. local kickoff. The NFL would have to be O.K. with an afternoon ET Super Bowl.”

This isn’t new territory for Kosner. Back in December 2023, he predicted the league would eventually create a Sunday package of international games. That would effectively create a fourth TV window on Sunday, with games airing from early morning to almost midnight ET.

This season, the NFL will play seven international games, including three in London, and one apiece in Berlin, Madrid, Dublin, and São Paulo. The league’s always been the smartest when it comes to conjuring new media rights out of thin air. If and when the NFL shops an international-rights package, it’s sure to draw interest from existing rights partners ESPN, NBC, Fox, CBS, Amazon Prime Video, Netflix, and Google/YouTube. The added lure of breaking into the lucrative Super Bowl rotation could also spur a global tech giant like Apple to splurge on its first NFL game package. 

Meanwhile, sports TV executives believe it’s a virtual lock that the NFL will opt out early from its current 11-year cycle of rights deals worth $110 billion in 2029 and 2030—especially after the NFL watched the rival NBA score a $77 billion windfall for its long-term rights from ESPN, NBC, and Prime.

The NFL declined to comment for this story, pointing to Goodell’s previous comments about international expansion.

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Former ESPN NBA Reporter Nick Friedell to Join The Athletic Warriors Beat

YouTube/NBA on ESPN

The Athletic and ESPN have completed a nonlinear switcheroo of Warriors beat writers.

Former ESPN NBA reporter Nick Friedell will join The Athletic to cover the Warriors, sources told Front Office Sports. Friedell will start at the New York Times–owned outlet at the end of September, when his ESPN contract officially expires. Friedell declined to comment, as did a spokesperson for The Athletic. 

Earlier this summer, FOS first reported that Anthony Slater was joining ESPN as a national reporter with an emphasis on the Warriors. 

Friedell primarily covered the Bulls, Warriors, and Nets at ESPN, and appeared regularly on studio shows including NBA Today, Get Up, and SportsCenter. He came up at ESPN through its Chicago pipeline at a time when it had satellite city sites, and was also a fixture on the ESPN 1000 radio station in Chicago.

Friedell was laid off from ESPN during the summer of 2023. It was a round of cuts in which 20 front-facing talents were let go, including Jeff Van Gundy, Mark Jackson, Suzy Kolber, Max Kellerman, and Steve Young. 

Sources said Friedell has spent more than two years collecting a paycheck worth several hundred thousand dollars annually.

The Bay Area has historically been a stronghold for The Athletic, as reporters including Tim Kawakami, Ethan Strauss, Marcus Thompson, and Slater drove thousands of subscriptions in the outlet’s early years. Thompson remains with The Athletic as a columnist focused on the NBA and the Bay Area. 

The Warriors have maintained national relevance despite no longer being an annual title contender, as Stephen Curry, Draymond Green, and coach Steve Kerr remain from the team that won four NBA championships in eight years. The team acquired Jimmy Butler earlier this year and signed him to a two-year, $121 million contract extension in an effort to make one last run.

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.

Spiked Kaepernick Documentary Has Complicated Future

Mike DiNovo-Imagn Images

A Colin Kaepernick documentary directed by Spike Lee has been scrapped at ESPN. But that doesn’t mean the film can’t eventually find a home elsewhere.

Lee and Kaepernick are free to shop the proposed doc around, sources tell Front Office Sports. The question is, to whom? And how much interest would there be among other sports media companies, since nearly a decade has passed since the former 49ers QB began his protest for racial justice? 

Lee confirmed this week that the project was not happening. But he declined to comment further, citing a nondisclosure agreement.

ESPN confirmed the decision in a statement, citing “creative” differences. 

“ESPN, Colin Kaepernick and Spike Lee have collectively decided to no longer proceed with this project as a result of certain creative differences,” said ESPN. “Despite not reaching finality, we appreciate all the hard work and collaboration that went into this film.”

The network’s decision raised eyebrows for several reasons. First, it seems the project was in progress. Mike Freeman of USA Today said he conducted an interview with Lee’s production company last year. “A number of people were interviewed for the doc. I was likely one of many dozens if not hundreds,” he wrote.

Then there’s the NFL’s proposed mega-deal to acquire a 10% equity stake in Disney’s ESPN. Some think that deal factored into the project’s end. But Mike Florio of ProFootballTalk disagreed. 

“The recent news that the Spike Lee/Colin Kaepernick collaboration won’t be televised by ESPN has prompted a knee-jerk reaction that the NFL put the kibosh on the Kaepernick docuseries,” he wrote. “Based on things I’ve separately heard and sensed, I believe the project was destined to die without the NFL on deck to own a piece of ESPN. But the NFL-ESPN relationship will make reasonable people believe the seeds for the scrapping of the show were planted the moment it appeared the NFL would end up owning part of ESPN.”

In 2016, Kaepernick ignited what eventually became a league-wide protest by taking a knee during the pregame playing of the U.S. national anthem. President Donald Trump excoriated the league and its owners for allowing “son of a bitch” players to “disrespect” the American flag. Eventually, the protests petered out. Kaepernick has not played in the NFL since January 2017.

Around the Dial

Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

  • Google announced that Rich Eisen, Kurt Warner, and Stacey Dales will be on the call for the YouTube NFL game between the Chiefs and Chargers from Brazil on Sept. 5. YouTube star Donald De La Haye, known as Deestroying, will also be a “sideline creator.”
  • The NBA will increase the number of nationally televised and streamed games by 44% this season. The number of national games across ESPN, NBC Sports, and Amazon Prime Video will jump to 247 from 172 as The Association tips off the first year of a $77 billion media deal with three partners.
  • NFL games will be streamed on no fewer than five streaming platforms in 2025: Amazon, ESPN+, Peacock, Netflix, and YouTube. Here’s a handy guide to every streaming NFL game this season.
  • Author Rich Podolsky has a new book coming out Sept. 30, entitled Madden & Summerall: How They Revolutionized NFL Broadcasting.
  • If you haven’t seen it, here’s NBC’s call of Scottie Scheffler’s miraculous chip-in at the BMW Championship that generated comparisons to Tiger Woods’s iconic chip at the 2005 Masters.
  • Salute to sports media reporter Neil Best, who is celebrating his 40th anniversary of working at Newsday.

One Big Fig

Bob Donnan-Imagn Images

2.1 million

That was the all-time-high viewership for NFL Network’s eight live games in Week 1 of the 2025 preseason. It was up 44% from last year’s Week 1 preseason games. The biggest audiences were drawn by the Dolphins-Bears and Browns-Panthers games, respectively.

Loud and Clear

YouTube/Bill Simmons

“I’d say some of the bigger shows lying publicly about their deals, lying about their podcast numbers, and lying about their YouTube subs (by paying for those subs). I can’t believe how many people are dishonest about this stuff.”

—Ringer founder Bill Simmons, discussing the challenges of the podcast industry with The Hollywood Reporter. 

Question of the Day

Do you think there will be an international Super Bowl by 2035?

 Yes   No 

Thursday’s result: 20.7% of respondents believe Roger Goodell’s statement that the NFL will not interfere with ESPN’s journalism.

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

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