March 4, 2026

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Front Office Sports


NBC Sports confirmed Front Office Sports’s reporting that it’s hiring
Jason Benetti as the play-by-play voice for its coverage of Major League Baseball. His first game will be March 26, when the defending World Series champion Dodgers host the Diamondbacks. 

—Michael McCarthy

First Up

  • WNBA star Caitlin Clark is a “gateway drug for some people to women’s sports,” Susie Piotrkowski, ESPN’s VP of women’s sports programming and espnW, said onstage at a Front Office Sports event in Nashville last week. Read the story.
  • Three major photo services refused to send photographers to a top men’s college basketball matchup between Duke and Michigan last month. Read the story.
  • As part of Paramount’s takeover of Warner Bros. Discovery, the company plans to merge its own Paramount+ with HBO Max. Read the story.
  • Analysts at Guggenheim wrote in a note this week that the NFL is well positioned to increase its rights fees significantly beyond the more than $10 billion it currently gets annually. Read the story.

Sources: NBC Taps Jason Benetti As Top MLB Announcer

Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

Jason Benetti’s inspiring journey has already included roles as a top play-by-play announcer for Fox Sports, ESPN, the Tigers, and White Sox. For his next act, Benetti is landing the choice gig of lead play-by-play announcer for NBC Sports’s coverage of Major League Baseball, Front Office Sports has learned. 

According to sources, Benetti will call NBC/Peacock’s return to live baseball coverage on March 26 when the defending World Series champion Dodgers host the Diamondbacks. As NBC’s top Sunday Night Baseball announcer, he’s expected to call games with a rotating cast of color commentators culled from local broadcast teams.

In addition to MLB, Benetti is expected to call other sports for NBC. Although the Chicago native was still under contract with Fox, his former network let him out early to join NBC, say sources. While Benetti is officially leaving Fox, he’ll retain his role as the Tigers’ lead play-by-play announcer. FOS previously reported that Benetti was the lead candidate for the NBC gig.

Benetti is no stranger to calling MLB games for NBC/Peacock. He announced the 18-game MLB Sunday Leadoff package for Peacock in 2022. The previous summer, he called NBC’s Olympic Games from Tokyo.

As NBC returns to baseball coverage for the first time in 25 years, Benetti will join an all-star cast that includes studio analysts Joey Votto, Clayton Kershaw, and Anthony Rizzo, with Bob Costas hosting. The recently retired Votto, Kershaw, and Rizzo will serve as pregame studio analysts for all MLB wild-card telecasts on NBC and Peacock. They’ll also work some pregame shows before select regular-season games alongside Costas and Ahmed Fareed.

Costas, one of the most famous baseball announcers of all time, will return to NBC as host of the Sunday Night Baseball pregame show. He previously served as host and play-by-play announcer for NBC’s MLB coverage for 15 seasons.

The 42-year-old Benetti is one of the best stories in sports TV. He was born 10 weeks premature with cerebral palsy, a neurological condition caused by damage to the brain during fetal development. He had to overcome a limp and drifting eye. But that didn’t stop him from quickly rising to the top of his profession.

“The hurdles are not physical for me,” he told Hoops HQ earlier this year. “They are because I don’t look the same as everybody.”

How Fox’s Jamie Little Became the Michael Jordan Whisperer

Fox Sports

Call Jamie Little the Michael Jordan whisperer. The Fox Sports veteran has become MJ’s favorite motorsports reporter. 

In recent weeks, NASCAR viewers have become accustomed to seeing Little interview the co-team owner of 23XI. Fox’s pit reporter has gotten so much access to the hoops legend that multiple outlets have noted she’s interviewed His Airness more about racing than Mike Tirico has about basketball this season, despite the five-time MVP’s role as a “special contributor” to NBC’s NBA coverage.   

During his legendary playing career, Jordan liked to pick out one team reporter as his go-to. He appears to be doing the same thing with Little. 

This kind of access doesn’t happen overnight. It goes back to June 2021 at Sonoma Raceway, when Little overheard Jordan mention her name as a reporter who “knows everything about NASCAR.” It was an opening too good to pass up. Little introduced herself and shook the living legend’s hand. Next thing you know, they were chitchatting about racing. 

Fast-forward to 2026, and Little has done more than half a dozen TV interviews with the elusive Jordan. Plus, the 63-year-old specifically asks Fox producers for Little to conduct his interviews. With his star driver, Tyler Reddick, ripping off his own three-peat to open NASCAR’s new season, MJ looks happier than he has in years. 

Front Office Sports recently caught up with Little to discuss her experience interviewing Jordan and his growing impact in motorsports.

Front Office Sports: At the Daytona 500, you asked MJ about watching NASCAR with his family while growing up in Wilmington, North Carolina. Do people know the greatest basketball player of all time grew up a race fan in the heart of NASCAR country?

Jamie Little: He is genuinely so happy. The thing I try to convey to the fans when I talk to him: This didn’t just start. This isn’t just a business decision. Growing up in North Carolina, his parents would put him in the car. They would drive to racetracks and watch races when he was a kid. NASCAR has been ingrained in him forever. Now that he’s at the level where he’s a team owner, and not just an owner but a winning owner, it’s incredible. It’s one of those stories you can’t script. He’s reaping the fruits of his labor.

FOS: When I watch your interviews, he looks so happy. Are these victories reigniting his competitive fire? Or does he just love the sport?

JL: A little bit of everything. Each time I’ve talked to him, he’s always talked about how it reminds him of the mindset of when he played. The happy times, the winning times, the competitive times. This brings it out in him. Now that he’s won three weeks in a row, I steer clear of mentioning basketball. Because we’re in NASCAR. This is something totally different. When he feels like it, he compares it to those feelings. Which I think is really neat.

"I'm so hyped I don't even feel the cold right now."

Michel Jordan has a chance to visit Victory Lane two weekends in a row.@JamieLittleTV | https://t.co/kIpAkwq3Do pic.twitter.com/0T3dx2Jks1

— FOX: NASCAR (@NASCARONFOX) February 22, 2026

FOS: MJ’s father, James Jordan, meant a lot to him. He was deeply impacted by his dad’s murder in 1993. Do you think NASCAR helps him connect with his late dad?

JL: I don’t know about the history with his father other than I heard him tell me about growing up watching the sport—and it was a family affair. He told me he watches every race. Whether it’s the Truck Series race. The Saturday race, which is like your Division I, Division II. Then you’ve got the big leagues on Sunday. He doesn’t miss a race. He tells me when he’s in Europe or he’s on vacation, he makes sure he finds a TV so he can be glued to what’s happening in NASCAR. It is a genuine love and passion for him. When he’s competing like this, and his team is winning, I think it brings him back to those moments that everybody’s talking about in the Bulls days. And the comparison to winning three straight. It’s just genuine happiness for the group they’ve assembled. And everything they’ve put in to get here.

FOS: What do you think about people saying you get more TV time with Jordan time than NBC?

JL: I know, I’ve heard that before. The cool thing is he loves NASCAR so much. … It’s so organic. He just wants to talk about NASCAR, which is so cool.

FOS: Still, he’s pretty reclusive. Take us through how you get access.

JL: It’s funny. I don’t know that about him. Since these last few weeks have been happening, and I interview him all the time, multiple people have come up to me and said he was very tough during his playing days. He takes a reporter, he trusts them, that’s who he gives information to, that’s who he gives access to. I’m very humbled and honored I’ve become that person.

FOS: You say things really took off two years ago at Talladega?

JL: Yes. So two years ago, nobody was able to get interviews with him on the broadcast. Tyler Reddick had won at Talladega. I knew MJ was there. He went into Victory Lane. I said, “I’m going to go for it.” That’s just kind of my personality. I always ask. The worst they can do is say no. So I went up to him. He gives me a big hug. I’m like, “I think I’m in.” So I said, “Do you mind if I ask you a question on camera?” He’s like, “Sure.” So we got the first interview. I know it was a very big deal in the sport. Last year, same thing. He’s sitting in the pit box, pre-race. We’re shooting the breeze for 10 minutes about things and NASCAR. I said, “Hey, can we chat on camera?” He’s like, “Sure.” He comes off the pit box. We do a great interview.

Fast-forward to this year at the Daytona 500. The night before the race, I got a call from my producer, Max. He says, “I’m going to add something to your list. And give you a compliment.” He said, “I’m going to have you interview MJ. They have requested you’re the one who does it.” I said, “Oh, that’s a great honor.” So that’s kind of how this whole streak began. Now I make eye contact with him. He gives me a nod. Puts his arm around me. I always ask first, “Are you O.K. with me asking you a question?” I know he’ll say no if he doesn’t feel the vibe. But heck, he’s winning. So it’s the perfect time. Yesterday, they made history at NASCAR. I said, “I’ll walk with you; your whole team is celebrating.” He said, “Perfect”—after he noticed I was wearing Jordan shoes. It’s hilarious. He notices what shoes everybody is wearing. We had a great interview. He’s just so naturally happy. It’s just organic. So it’s been great.

FOS: Can a celebrity owner like Jordan have an impact on NASCAR?

JL: Absolutely, it doesn’t hurt. This morning, I’m looking at X and my feed is full of these accounts that I don’t follow. Mainstream media, other sports outlets that I don’t follow that are typically stick and balls, and they all have Jordan headlines. And they have my interview connected to it. And I thought: That’s his impact. He is reaching way beyond the walls of motorsports reporting. He’s going mainstream. The people that love Jordan follow him. Whether they love his shoes, they love his playing, they love him. They’re like, “Whoa, he’s involved in NASCAR? And they’re doing something that’s never been done before? Let’s follow along.” I think it’s great for our sport.

Around the Dial

Apr 13, 2025; Augusta, Georgia, USA; Rory McIlroy falls to his knees in celebration after winning a playoff on the no. 18 green during the final round of the Masters Tournament at Augusta National Golf Club.

Kyle Terada-Imagn Images

  • Amazon Prime Video will chronicle Rory McIlroy’s lifelong dream to win The Masters Tournament in a new documentary premiering March 30. The sports doc, Rory McIlroy: The Masters Wait, will chronicle the Irish golfer’s early heartbreaks at Augusta National Golf Club before finally winning the Green Jacket last year to complete the career Grand Slam. McIlroy’s message to his younger self: “Keep believing.” You can watch the trailer here.
  • CBS Sports and TNT Sports released the full list of game announcers and studio commentators for the 2026 NCAA Division I men’s basketball championship. The lead game announce team will be play-by-play announcer Ian Eagle, color commentators Bill Raftery and Grant Hill, and sideline reporter Tracy Wolfson. It’s the third year in a row they’re calling the Final Four. Among the changes: Chris Webber will return as a game analyst, Robbie Hummel will call games through the regional finals, Candace Parker and Wally Szczerbiak will serve as game analysts through the second round, and Brandon Gaudin and Jared Greenberg join the team as newcomers.
  • Matt Ryan didn’t enjoy his stint as a studio analyst for CBS’s The NFL Today, according to Boomer Esiason. “The studio stuff can be a little bit boring, and especially if you don’t like traveling to New York or L.A. for it, or going to the games with the way that NBC does it. I think Matt Ryan found that out,” he said on his WFAN radio show in New York. “Sure, I think he was good at it, but he didn’t love it. He had an opportunity to go back and work for the Falcons, and he took it.”
  • The CW Network is signing up for a second season with the Savannah Bananas. The CW will be the exclusive broadcast home of six game telecasts this year. The first between the Bananas and Party Animals will air May 10 from Truist Park in Atlanta.
  • Ouch. Timberwolves reporter Dane Moore repeatedly rejected ESPN’s request to use video of a locker room interview he did with star Anthony Edwards. When ESPN Assignment Desk kept messaging him, Moore shot back on X/Twitter: “You do not have permission to use it—as I’ve told you numerous times in DMs. Shouldn’t have laid off all those reporters if you wanted locker room content.”
  • Hot-stove moves: ESPN is bringing back David Ross as an MLB game analyst after a seven-year hiatus. The four letters also gave Senior MLB insider Jeff Passan a multiyear extension. Meanwhile, TNT Sports has extended the contracts of Jimmy Rollins and Jeff Francoeur.
  • Chris “Mad Dog” Russo’s TV show The Verdict is returning to Vice TV for a second season, per Awful Announcing. The series seeks to settle the greatest debates in sports history.

One Big Fig

Feb 21, 2026; Houston, Texas, USA; UFC President Dana White speaks after UFC Fight Night at Toyota Center.

Troy Taormina-Imagn Images

$60 million

That’s the estimated cost of the UFC event on the White House lawn on June 14 as part of President Donald Trump’s America250 celebration. The event is also expected to air free on CBS.

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Events Video Games Shop
Written by Michael McCarthy
Edited by Ben Axelrod, Lisa Scherzer, Catherine Chen

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