April 2, 2025

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Front Office Sports

As the NFL Draft approaches, questions remain about the league’s media landscape. From free agents to rights and directional shifts, we examine a few of the biggest.

—Michael McCarthy, Ryan Glasspiegel, and Eric Fisher

From Open Jobs to NFL Draft Rights: NFL Media Questions

Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

NFL owners are shaping the league’s future at an annual meeting in Palm Beach, Fla. But over the coming months, the league’s TV partners will decide the fate of their TV and streaming coverage. As first reported by Front Office Sports, ESPN’s hiring of Peter Schrager away from NFL Network takes an important piece off the chessboard. But some free agents could still be available, ranging from Dan Orlovsky of ESPN to Scott Hanson of NFLN and Charissa Thompson and Erin Andrews of Fox Sports. The 41-year-old Aaron Rodgers remains a wild card if he doesn’t return to the field.

Here are a few burning questions as we speed toward the NFL Draft, training camps, and the kickoff of the 2025 season.

Will the retired Jimmy Johnson be replaced on Fox NFL Sunday?

It’s standard for the top NFL pregame shows to boast a former coach on the studio desk, preferably a Super Bowl winner like Johnson at Fox and Bill Cowher at CBS. But the 81-year-old former Cowboys coach has been a part-timer for a couple of seasons now. Rob Gronkowski has been doing more on the league’s most-watched pregame show. The 35-year-old Gronk delivers a more youthful, irreverent vibe alongside TV monuments like the 76-year-old Terry Bradshaw and 65-year-old Howie Long. Fox loves stars. They could also be in the Travis Kelce sweepstakes if the tight end retires.

Who replaces Peter Schrager on Good Morning Football?

NFL Network has big shoes to fill with Schrager, who was very plugged in on topics like the NFL Draft. It remains to be seen whether they would replace him with another journalist, or whether they plug in a former player in the spot. Orlovsky praised the Schrager hire on X/Twitter on Tuesday, writing: “ESPN got better with this addition. Peter is great in all facets.” One source speculated the Los Angeles–based show would like to fill his spot with another NFL insider. Ex-NFLN talent Shaun O’Hara could also get some reps.

Will ESPN keep the NFL Draft?

ESPN has done a superlative job televising the draft for 45 years, turning it into the NFL’s marquee offseason event and a rite of spring, along with The Masters Tournament and the Kentucky Derby. The smart money is that ESPN keeps a nice slice of draft coverage. But the NFL will likely add a giant streamer to the mix, such as Google/YouTube. As first reported by FOS, Netflix was invited to bid but passed. But Netflix is reserving the right to jump back into the bidding for rights to the draft starting in 2026. “New entrants to the TV world have recognized what those of us who have been in the business have known for a long time,” says ex-Fox executive Bob Thompson. “High-level sports rights will bring viewers to your platform. It’s been this way since the invention of radio—and nothing is changing.”

For the rest of our burning questions around Dan Orlovsky, Scott Hanson, and J.J. Watt, you can read Michael McCarthy’s full story here.

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Sources: NFL ‘Virtual Lock’ to Opt Out of Media-Rights Deals

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PALM BEACH, Fla. — The National Football League hasn’t formally decided whether to opt out of its domestic media rights contracts four years early, but it’s all but certain to happen as data continues to come in, strongly bolstering its case to do so. 

The NFL’s current rights deals with Amazon, CBS, ESPN, Fox, and NBC run through the 2033 season, but the league has opt-out provisions with most of them that allow it to exit instead after the 2029 season, and do so with ESPN a year later. Before Super Bowl LIX last month, commissioner Roger Goodell said the opt-outs were “incredibly valuable,” and that their deals are “undervalued” given the NFL’s status as by far the most popular programming in all of U.S. television, regardless of genre. 

Since then, the Super Bowl itself became the most-watched program ever on U.S. television, and Major League Baseball is parting from ESPN and is now pursuing even greater riches for those national rights. Those data points, plus other major sports rights deals for entities such as the National Basketball Association and College Football Playoff add support for the league’s position. 

Sources said the opt-outs have become a virtual lock, even if NFL EVP and chief media and business officer Brian Rolapp isn’t confirming it. 

“All that data is positive for the value of sports media in general, and for the NFL specifically,” Rolapp said in response to a Front Office Sports question about the impact of recent factors such as the Super Bowl LIX viewership. “I don’t think it’s a mystery that as media fragments, there are very few programming options that aggregate large audiences. Sports are at the top there, and the NFL is at the top of that. 

“How we think about the opt-outs, we haven’t made any decisions, but they are there because in a media environment that is changing rapidly, we want to make sure we have the flexibility to make any, all, or no changes at all. We continue to monitor the landscape and we continue to do the thinking that would be necessary as we go forward,” he said. 

The league’s rights holders, of course, are also well aware of these forthcoming opt-outs.

“The NFL is our largest partnership. They have an incredible product, and we’ve had a deep relationship with them for a very long time,” Fox executive chair and CEO Lachlan Murdoch said last month at a Morgan Stanley conference. “So, we see this ‘amend and extend’ provision, which is still some years out, as an opportunity for us to, frankly, deepen our relationship with the NFL.”

Getting Flexible on Flexing

NFL team owners, meanwhile, approved an extension of flexible scheduling rules to allow Sunday games to be moved to Amazon’s Thursday Night Football on a permanent basis with 21 days’ notice. 

Previously, the shifts were available with 28 days’ notice, but the reduced window gives the league additional time to optimize broadcast placements. It also further highlights the Amazon showcase as the streaming property continues to draw audiences more like its linear counterparts. Other standard rules around flexible scheduling will continue to apply, and league officials promised a careful application of the more liberalized approach. 

The league also acknowledged that a shift from a Sunday afternoon game to Thursday is far more disruptive, particularly for attending fans, than simply going from Sunday afternoon to prime time on NBC’s Sunday Night Football.

“We’re going to be very judicious when and how we do this, but in those instances where it arises, it’s very valuable to us,” said NFL Media EVP and COO Hans Schroeder.

Boxing Reporter Mike Coppinger Leaves ESPN for Saudi Advisor’s Ring Magazine

Mike Coppinger / Facebook

Turki Alalshikh’s The Ring Magazine is beefing up its boxing coverage ahead of a big year of fights. 

The outlet has poached reporter Mike Coppinger from ESPN, Front Office Sports has learned. Coppinger declined to comment. 

It is a homecoming of sorts for Coppinger, who is considered the top news-breaker in the sport, as he previously worked for the outlet from 2017 to 2019. He has also covered boxing for The Athletic and USA Today. 

Alalshikh is the chairman of Saudi Arabia’s General Entertainment Authority and an advisor to the country’s Royal Court. He purchased The Ring, a publication that is more than 100 years old, from Oscar De La Hoya last year for a reported price tag of $10 million. 

Alalshikh has taken boxing by storm, backed by Saudi Arabia’s deep resources that have also gone into other sports like golf. In February, he signed Canelo Álvarez to a four-fight deal with Riyadh Season, which is expected to include a highly anticipated fight with Terence Crawford in Las Vegas this September. Boxing fans have wanted Álvarez-Crawford to happen for years, but rival promoters in boxing had never been able to make it happen.

There will also be a mega-card put on by Alalshikh—under the banner of The Ring Magazine—in Times Square in May that includes Ryan Garcia vs. Rolando Romero, Devin Haney vs. Jose Carlos Ramirez, and Teófimo López vs. Arnold Barboza. The Ring’s first boxing event will be April 26 at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium in London. 

Alalshikh and The Ring are also partnering with Dana White and Nick Khan at TKO—the parent company of UFC and WWE—on a new boxing league. 

Coppinger had been ESPN’s lead boxing reporter since the summer of 2021. In addition to writing, The Ring is expected to use him in a variety of roles including video content and reporting live during fights. 

One Big Fig

James Snook-Imagn Images

53%

How far women’s Elite Eight ratings dropped from last year to this one. The Caitlin Clark Effect on viewership cuts both ways. This year’s quarterfinals averaged 2.9 million viewers vs. 6.2 million last year. Still, the round was up 34% from 2023, and it was the second-most-watched women’s Elite Eight ever.

Around the Dial

Los Angeles Golf Club owners Alexis Ohanian and Serena Williams cheer for their team against the New York Golf Club during the TGL semifinal match at SoFi Center on March 17, 2025, in Palm Beach Gardens, Florida.

Palm Beach Post

  • The NFL’s planned flag football leagues are attracting superstar investors. FOS exclusively reported Tuesday night that Serena Williams and her husband, Alexis Ohanian, lead the list of bidders answering a request for proposal from the league. Once the new pro leagues are up and running, NFL media czar Brian Rolapp told FOS’s Dan Roberts and Baker Machado that the NFL will sell media rights to the new leagues. Serena and her sister Venus Williams are part-owners of the Dolphins.
  • Walt “Clyde” Frazier, the 80-year-old legendary former Knicks star and current longtime color commentator for MSG, told Steve Serby of the New York Post: “I don’t see retirement anytime soon.”
  • CBS Sports will have a big presence at the women’s Final Four in Tampa. Analysts Lisa Leslie, Renee Montgomery, and Terrika Foster-Brasby will join host Hailey Sutton on CBS Sports HQ and CBS Sports Network from the Tampa Convention Center’s “Tourney Town” area. 
  • NBC Sports has named Betsy Riley senior vice president and coordinating producer of NBC Olympics coverage. Beginning with Milan Cortina in 2026, she’ll oversee production of NBC’s Olympic primetime show.
  • Boston sports talk-radio host Mike Felger likened the combination of high costs and trying to locate platforms to watch a sporting event to being “digitally penetrated.”
  • Zach Lowe is joining The Ringer, reuniting with Bill Simmons nearly a decade after the two worked together at ESPN’s Grantland.

Question of the Day

Will Fox replace the retiring Jimmy Johnson this season, or use a smaller Fox NFL Sunday panel?

 Fox will replace Johnson on the set   Fox will proceed with a smaller studio panel 

Friday’s result: 45% of respondents think ESPN should step into the Stephen A. Smith–LeBron James feud.

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

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