March 11, 2026

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Front Office Sports

 

It was just one year ago that ESPN opted to put an NFL free-agency special opposite The Pat McAfee Show on ESPN2. But this year, the former All-Pro punter’s pull at the sports media giant was on full display as his eponymous program provided the network’s primary free-agency coverage.

—Ryan Glasspiegel

First Up

  • As ESPN prepares to take over NFL Network, longtime insider rivals Adam Schefter and Ian Rapoport could soon be colleagues. Read the story.
  • Netflix has tapped MLB Network and TNT Sports host Lauren Shehadi as its MLB sideline reporter, as first reported by Front Office Sports. Read the story.
  • Travis Kelce’s return to the Chiefs means we’ll have to wait at least one more year for his inevitable sports media sweepstakes. Read the story.
  • ESPN has hired six former Washington Post reporters after the paper shuttered its sports section last month. The network’s hires include Chuck Culpepper, Ben Strauss, Kent Babb, Robert Klemko, Tom Schad, and Kareem Copeland. Read the story.

Pat McAfee NFL Free-Agency Special Shows His Juice at ESPN

Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

Ground zero for ESPN’s NFL free-agency talk Monday was not in the network’s studios in Bristol or New York. Instead, it was at Pat McAfee’s Thunderdome in Indianapolis, with his Free Agency Frenzy Extravaganza serving as another reminder of how ESPN has maneuvered to meet his will. 

Last year, McAfee had his own show on ESPN, but there was also a SportsCenter special on ESPN2 offering more standard fare. This year, there was no intra-company competition. Instead, there were pods in McAfee’s studio, one featuring Dan Orlovsky and Peter Schrager, and another one with newsbreaker Adam Schefter.

Monday’s show opened with McAfee revealing a scoop that the Colts, his former team, were retaining star wide receiver Alec Pierce on a four-year deal worth $116 million. The report was paired with Pierce appearing on the show as a guest, which wasn’t uncommon considering McAfee lands A-listers on his show at a rapid clip. The program continued as a mix of McAfee’s familiar approach, with analysis from Orlovsky and Schrager, and reporting from Schefter. The format continued Tuesday, the second day of free agency.

“The last two days have been incredible content on ESPN,” ESPN president of content Burke Magnus told Front Office Sports in an email Tuesday. “Free Agency is a wild and fun time for fans of every NFL team. It’s also cool to watch players advance their careers in real time. The combination of Pat and his team plus Adam, Peter and Dan has been spectacular. Every single person absolutely loves football and it shows.”

Last year, McAfee was peeved about not having access to Schefter, as well as what he perceived as being counterprogrammed by the ESPN2 show. In announcing this year’s special last week, the former All-Pro punter brought up these grievances.

“ESPN NFL people, which is a department, ESPN NFL, they didn’t think we would be able to handle it last year, so they counter-program[med] us on ESPN2,” McAfee said.

“They tell us immediately, ‘You’re not allowed to have Schefter, he’s with us,’ all of this. It’s like, O.K., we’ll see how this goes for you guys. Murder scene, by the way, not only because we’re on ESPN, which is what everyone has on, but also because we’ve lived this life, too, somehow. I know you guys created the game, but we’ve also been in this whole thing? So there were some nice conversations between the last free-agency frenzy and the next free-agency frenzy, where we’re going to work together. Don’t we think this would be a good idea?”

While ESPN brass almost assuredly did not intend to bury McAfee’s free-agency show last year—his was on the main network while the alternative programming was on ESPN2—melding the two programs into one was another sign of the juice that he has at the network. McAfee has virtually unprecedented autonomy at ESPN in how he runs his show, which he retains ownership of and licenses to the network. Part of the reason is his general aura and gravitas, which is on display with the levels of guests he can land. Another part of it is that he is an individual draw. 

McAfee is one of the faces of College GameDay, which drew 2.7 million viewers per show this past season, breaking the show’s record set the previous year. His weekday show drew 436,000 viewers per day across ESPN and YouTube in 2025, up 8% from the year before. 

FOS’s Michael McCarthy reported ESPN is considering a Super Bowl “Field Pass” alt-cast with McAfee and crew, when the network hosts its first Super Bowl next year at SoFi Stadium outside Los Angeles. McAfee later seemingly confirmed the report publicly, noting any hurdles he may face should be easy to clear.

Around the Dial

Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

  • Nearly one year after Shannon Sharpe first left ESPN following a since-settled lawsuit accusing him of sexual assault, Stephen A. Smith wants to reunite with his former First Take cohost. “I got nothing but love for him. I wish I had him back,” Smith said of Sharpe on his SiriusXM show, according to Awful Announcing.
  • Speaking of Smith, the ESPN star is once again weighing in on his potential future in politics. Appearing on the debut episode of Sean Hannity’s new podcast, Smith made it clear he won’t run for president if it means giving up any of his sizable income.
  • NFL Network insider Tom Pelissero did not hold back on the Ravens pulling out of their proposed blockbuster trade with the Raiders for pass-rusher Maxx Crosby. “One GM summarized the feelings around the league: ‘This is very much bullshit on Baltimore’s part,’” Pelissero wrote on X/Twitter.
  • The NFL is exploring adding a Thanksgiving Eve game, which could debut as early as the 2026 season, Adam Schefter reports.
  • Former LSU stars Jarvis Landry and Leonard Fournette are launching a new podcast, 4th and South, with The Volume and Hard Rock Bet.

One Big Fig

Mar 9, 2026; Houston, TX, United States; United States outfielder Aaron Judge (99) celebrates a two run home run in the third inning against Mexico at Daikin Park. Mandatory Credit: Troy Taormina-Imagn Images

Troy Taormina-Imagn Images

142%

That’s the strong rise in average viewership for the World Baseball Classic through Sunday’s action across Fox Sports, FS1, and FS2 compared with the most recent WBC in 2023. However, Fox is now surely hopeful Team USA won’t be eliminated following its stunning 8–6 loss to Italy on Tuesday night.

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Events Video Games Shop
Written by Ryan Glasspiegel, Michael McCarthy
Edited by Ben Axelrod, Catherine Chen

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