October 8, 2024

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Front Office Sports

Sports media can be a fraught business, and college basketball is often seen as a space that only holds prominence during the NCAA’s March Madness tournaments. But longtime CBS Sports analyst Seth Davis is betting against those factors in launching a new company. He talked to us exclusively about his approach, how he’ll try to differentiate, and what he hopes to accomplish.

Also: We have more information on Pat McAfee’s role in ESPN signing Shams Charania to succeed Adrian Wojnarowski as its senior NBA insider. Read on, and feel free to respond to this email with your feedback or questions. Responses could be featured in future newsletters.

—Michael McCarthy

Seth Davis Launching Paywalled College Basketball Site

Inside Hook

Seth Davis has covered college hoops for media outfits ranging from CBS Sports to Sports Illustrated and The Athletic. Now the veteran reporter is going into business for himself, launching a start-up media company dubbed Hoops HQ.

During an exclusive interview with “Tuned In,” Davis told me he’ll push the proverbial button on his start-up Oct. 28. His new site will go in-depth on both men’s and women’s college basketball. The “No. 1” differentiator for his site will be “access,” according to Davis.

“I’ve been doing this for 30 years. I have a lot of relationships. The people I don’t know are hopefully familiar with my work,” Davis tells me. “We’re not click-baiting; we’re not aggregating. We’re going straight to the news-makers—and talking to coaches and players and covering games. Doing it the old-fashioned way. Little bit of shoe leather goes a long way.”

Davis is partnering with New York media company InsideHook to launch Hoops HQ. It will be financed by billionaire Steven Klinsky of New Mountain Capital. Davis, the author of Wooden: A Coach’s Life, will get an undisclosed amount of equity and serve as cofounder and editor-in-chief.

Davis says his company will also lean heavily in to social media and video. He recruited Slam writer Alex Squadron, author of Life in the G: Minor League Basketball and the Relentless Pursuit of the NBA, as a staff writer. Danny Saied will serve as the social media editor. Davis has also hired award-winning writer/author Lyndsey D’Arcangelo as senior women’s correspondent. 

“Because of my access, I can get coaches on the phone or players on a Zoom and just do a quickie video, that might not warrant an article, but we can put it behind a paywall on the site and also blast it out on social media,” he says. “Our social media strategy is going to be elite—because it has to be. We hired the social media editor before we hired the staff writer.”

Down the road, Davis says he wants to assemble a team of paid contributors, drawing from his many friends in sports media as well as college hoops scribes looking for exposure. Davis eventually wants to add NBA coverage to the platform. 

Unlike most sports media companies, Davis wants to cover college basketball day in and day out, not just during the NCAA’s men’s and women’s March Madness tournaments. He sees a big business opportunity to go in-depth year-round, not just in March. “There’s 48.5 other weeks where there’s a lot to cover. That’s where Hoops HQ will try to own that space.” 

The new site will “100%” be paywalled, according to Davis, at a cost of $4.99/month or $49.99/year. The company will utilize InsideHook’s email list, which he says has 700,000 “hyper-engaged” users, as a funnel to blast out news of the site to potential subscribers.

During his career, Davis has been the definition of a multimedia talent. He will continue to work as a TV analyst for CBS Sports—including what will be his 21st appearance on the annual “Selection Show”—and in addition to SI and The Athletic, wrote for The Messenger, which closed within a year of its launch.

Davis is frank about his unhappy experience at The Messenger, one of the biggest online news busts. Like many of the site’s employees, he was laid off without warning or severance. But he learned the hard way that start-ups need a robust social media presence to break through.

As Davis recalled, “The Messenger had nothing when it came to social media. I was like, ‘Do we even have a Twitter feed?’”

The Shams Charania–Pat McAfee Connection

FanDuelTV

Outside the prospect of Adam Schefter accepting the challenge of covering both the NFL and NBA, Shams Charania was always the odds-on favorite to succeed Adrian Wojnarowski as ESPN’s senior NBA insider. But I’m also hearing his hiring was partly due to Pat McAfee. 

Charania has appeared on McAfee’s show for years, even at the risk of the host offending Wojnarowski when he was still with ESPN. The outspoken McAfee is close with ESPN leaders Jimmy Pitaro and Burke Magnus. One source says McAfee’s ringing endorsement of Charania’s bona fides—on ESPN’s airwaves, no less—helped his friend land the job. “Expect Shams to break most of his news on [The Pat McAfee Show] and not on traditional ESPN NBA shows,” the source predicted.

One key asset in McAfee’s favor, and a big part of the reason Disney values him: Beyond his on-air contributions, he has a significant YouTube audience and generates a lot of engagement for the company through social media clips. Charania’s appearances on McAfee’s show helped him grow his own reach, and his continued presence on the program will maintain his grasp in the digital space while also presenting his reporting to a TV audience.

Mike Drops

Perspective on Brady, Shams Reaction

  • During his live interview at our “Tuned In” sports media summit, I thought ESPN’s Jay Williams made a good point about rookie NFL broadcaster Tom Brady. “I love that Tom Brady got flak. Good for Tom Brady. The one thing that Tom Brady needs more than anything is ammunition. You’re helping Tom Brady. So anybody that just thinks that you can just be put in that chair and you’re just gonna blow up, I mean, they love you, they hate you, they love you, they hate you, they hate you, they hate you until they learn to love you again,” noted Williams. “I think we want more authenticity, I don’t want Tom Brady shelled, I want Tom Brady ready to blossom and be that guy that I know he is once we have a couple of pops.”
  • My favorite response to our exclusive reporting that Charania was on the verge of joining ESPN—before he announced his new job within hours—came from Alex Sherman of CNBC, who tweeted: “The new Shams will be the person who breaks Shams’ deal with ESPN. And then Shams will make it his duty to destroy that person. I think there’s a proverb about this.” Hey, Shams—no hard feelings. I was just doing my job.
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Written by Michael McCarthy
Edited by Or Moyal, Catherine Chen

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