November 13, 2024

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Michael Strahan has largely steered clear of controversy through a Hall of Fame NFL career, as well as a high-profile media tenure that featuring roles as anchor of Good Morning America and NFL analyst at Fox Sports. That changed this week, however, as he became the center of a controversy he and executives at Fox believed to be completely contrived and misinterpreted.

How should media stars deal with negative scrutiny around actions they believe are innocuous? We examine that question through Strahan’s spectrum.

—Michael McCarthy

Michael Strahan Responds to National Anthem Controversy

Rob Kinnan-Imagn Images

How do you handle a growing story you don’t believe should be one? That was the conundrum facing Michael Strahan and Fox Sports over the backlash to his actions during a rendition of the national anthem on Sunday.

Strahan, whose father served with the 82nd Airborne, declined to put his hand over his heart during the playing of the anthem. While Strahan stood respectfully with his hands folded at his waist, all six of his Fox NFL Sunday colleagues put their hands over their hearts. 

I spoke with several sources about what happened during Fox NFL Sunday’s telecast from Naval Base San Diego on Sunday. They say Strahan meant zero disrespect. 

“This whole thing is so ridiculous,” says one source. “If Michael wanted to go full [Colin] Kaepernick he would have come up with something better than just holding his hands together.”

Strahan hadn’t directly addressed the controversy for days, and neither had Fox, as both Strahan and the network didn’t want to pump oxygen into a media brushfire. As criticism intensified, however, that changed on Wednesday with a video Strahan released through his Instagram account.

“The only statement that should be made and I want to make is that I love the military, I’ve always loved the military, and I’ll always love the military,” Strahan said.

“I was caught up in the moment. I’m looking at all these young sailors, standing at attention before the National Anthem plays, and I’m thinking how incredible. … And by the time I looked up from that moment, I panicked.”

Fox executives felt the “cowardly Strahan disrespects veterans” theme is a crock ginned up by social media critics. As one of the few networks broadcasting from military bases every year, Fox is angered by accusations it acted unpatriotically—on the eve of Veterans Day, no less.

Fox’s Jay Glazer offered a full-throated defense of his friend on X/Twitter. If Strahan was protesting some issue, he would say so loud and clear, according to Glazer. The NFL insider said that before forming an “angry mob,” his critics should learn about the donations he’s made to veteran charities over the years.

“Let me tell you this, I don’t know if I have a friend who is more proud of his military roots than Michael, growing up on an army base constantly talking about what he learned from his dad Major Gene Strahan and how his time there shaped him. I heard it CONSTANTLY, still do!” Glazer tweeted.

I agree that people need to lighten up and stop looking for insults where there aren’t any. I believe Strahan meant no disrespect toward veterans. Stories like this love a vacuum, however. As FOS editor-in-chief Daniel Roberts laid out Sunday, with President-elect Donald Trump returning to the White House, sports and politics will be intertwined once again. Strahan is one of the savviest media personalities on Earth, rising from a Hall of Fame playing career to cohost of GMA. It took too long, but it appears he realized that if you don’t define the narrative, the narrative defines you.

Will Drew Brees Get a Second Chance on TV?

Matthew Hinton-Imagn Images

Failed sports TV analysts rarely get second chances. Just ask Jason Witten, who’s been in a veritable TV Witness Protection program since his disastrous single season on ESPN’s Monday Night Football in 2018.

But Drew Brees has overcome doubters before. The former Saints quarterback flopped in his sole season as an NBC Sports analyst in 2021 covering the NFL and Notre Dame. But ESPN raised eyebrows by having Brees appear as a guest analyst on Monday Night Countdown before the Dolphins’ 23–15 win over the Rams on Monday. The Super Bowl champion looked comfortable as he chatted with Scott Van Pelt & Co. 

Brees (who has thrown the second-most touchdown passes in NFL history, behind only Tom Brady) wasn’t shy, stating that Rams quarterback Matthew Stafford has the second-best arm in the league behind Patrick Mahomes of the Chiefs. “His arm talent isn’t going anywhere,” said Brees.

I checked with my sources at ESPN about the Super Bowl winner. No, Brees isn’t being hired full-time by ESPN. No, Monday night was not an audition for a bigger role. 

But never say never, they cautioned. Some NBC executives saw the 45-year-old Brees as a potential successor to Cris Collinsworth as the network’s lead NFL analyst on Sunday Night Football. After mangling his call of a Bengals vs. Raiders playoff game, it will be a long time before anybody sees Brees as capable of calling another playoff game, much less a Super Bowl.

But the future Pro Football Hall of Famer told Front Office Sports Today back in September he wants another crack at the broadcast booth. Don’t be surprised if he gets it.

“I think I could be the absolute best at it, if given the opportunity. I valued my time at NBC so much, for that year after I played, I spent most of that time in-studio on Sunday Night Football, having to work with some incredible people. … But I didn’t really get the chance to broadcast NFL games,” Brees told my colleague Owen Poindexter in an interview before the start of the 2024 NFL season. “And that’s what I feel like I’m most qualified to do. That’s what I feel like I’m most passionate about. And certainly where my knowledge base lies, right? Telling the story of the game, getting you inside the huddle, getting you inside the quarterback’s head, letting you know how we’re attacking this defense. … That to me is something I’d love to do down the road when the time is right.”

Given the frequent turnover of NFL TV talent, I could see Brees getting another shot. ESPN is always adding and subtracting big names. But I think Brees would be better off joining CBS or Fox as a No. 2 or No. 3 game analyst, and learning his new craft, before reaching for a No. 1 job.

Mike’s Mailbag

Brett Favre and Donald Trump

Tia Dufour/Official White House Photo

FOS reader David Marcus agreed with President-elect Donald Trump that sports leagues are pricing out middle-class fans with high ticket prices. “In this case he’s absolutely right. Price gouging for both sporting events and concerts has gotten crazy,” he tweeted.

Another reader named Doug Tanney had no problem with Jason Kelce smashing a loudmouthed heckler’s cellphone after hearing homophobic remarks about his brother, Travis Kelce, and Taylor Swift. “Good for Jason Kelce. People have to tone down their rhetoric. This was instant Karma in action!” But Scott Engstrom thought Kelce went way too far: “He should be fired[—]he is in the spotlight[,] needs to be bigger then that[—]but with his attitude he needs knocked down a peg or two.”

Mike Drops

Caitlin Goes Golfing, the Netflix Sports Push

Indiana Fever guard Caitlin Clark (22) smiles while answering a question Tuesday, Sept. 17, 2024, after an Indiana Fever practice at Gainbridge Fieldhouse in Indianapolis.

Grace Smith/IndyStar/Imagn Images

  • Miss watching Caitlin Clark on TV? On Wednesday, the Golf Channel will provide live coverage of the WNBA Rookie of the Year playing alongside Annika Sörenstam and Nelly Korda in a golf pro-am in Florida.
  • Netflix is continuing its inexorable move into live sports. Friday night’s Mike Tyson vs. Jake Paul boxing match will stream live globally on all Netflix plans at no additional costs to subscribers. Then on Christmas Day, Netflix will stream not one but two NFL games: the Super Bowl champion Chiefs vs. the Steelers, then the Ravens vs. Texans.
  • How the mighty have fallen. The Cowboys have been the NFL’s premier TV draw for decades, with networks literally fighting over the chance to televise their games. But my FOS colleague Eric Fisher just reported the unthinkable: The league could flex out America’s Team from one or more national broadcast windows due to their disappointing 3–6 record and dysfunction under owner Jerry Jones. I bet the NFL keeps Cowboys-Eagles in the Fox America’s Game of the Week slot on Dec. 29 at 4:25 p.m. ET. But I could see the league flexing out their games against the Bengals on Dec. 9 and Buccaneers on Dec. 29. As the Cowboys struggle, don’t be surprised if Jones makes a media splash by hiring a high-profile coach this offseason—like Bill Belichick or Deion Sanders.

Question of the Day

Did Michael Strahan do the right thing in addressing his posture during the National Anthem?

 Yes, best to get in front of the story   No, don't give critics the time of day 
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Written by Michael McCarthy
Edited by Or Moyal, Catherine Chen

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