May 9, 2025

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Front Office Sports Alert

Shams Charania is undisputed as the No. 1 NBA insider now that Adrian Wojnarowski has retired. He talked to FOS about his seven months at ESPN, reporting on the coming draft, and what it was like to break the Luka Dončić trade.

—Ryan Glasspiegel and Michael McCarthy

Shams Charania on Breaking Dončić Trade, ‘Whirlwind’ ESPN Tenure

Photo by Terrell Lloyd / ESPN Images

Shams Charania has a busy week ahead. He will be the lead insider on ESPN’s coverage of the NBA draft lottery in his hometown of Chicago for the first time, Monday at 7 p.m. ET before Game 4 of Celtics-Knicks. He will appear on the main set alongside Kevin Negandhi (also hosting the event for the first time) and analysts Bob Myers, Kendrick Perkins, and Jay Bilas. Charania will be providing information on the telecast in addition to interviewing key figures, and will also be a part of ESPN’s NBA combine coverage throughout the week.

This interview has been lightly edited for clarity.

Front Office Sports: You got to ESPN about seven months ago. What’s been the biggest surprise for you so far?

Shams Charania: A couple things—the platform itself, how big it is, how far the reach is, from the perspective of writing, digital, social, and obviously TV.

For example, there’s the ability to report something so late in the night and then almost immediately go on TV to talk about it. There were definitely a couple stories that encapsulated that this year.

When Joel Embiid pushed a reporter in the locker room, I tweeted about it late on a Saturday night and I was on SportsCenter within 15 minutes to talk about it and set the scene. I think the audience might take that for granted, but somebody like me, this is 24/7 for me, and I don’t take that for granted. That’s a superpower that the company has.

The other part is how welcoming everyone’s been. They’ve allowed me to be myself, to grow more, and put me in positions to succeed. Overall, it’s been a great year considering eight months ago I didn’t know [where I was going to be working]. Overall, it’s been a whirlwind.

I have to give credit to [NBA production VP] Hilary Guy, [executive editor] Lauren Reynolds, a deep group of NBA Today producers including Jaren Yang, Andy Davison, and Tony Honkus and Terrell Bouza and Greg Condas from NBA Countdown. Obviously Brian Windhorst, who I’ve known for a really long time. Malika Andrews has been unbelievably supportive and welcoming.

FOS: When you got the first Luka Dončić trade tip, I’m sure it was from someone very reliable, but did you think you were being catfished? Like their phone was hacked, or you were being had?

SC: That would be the first instinct, that there’s no way this is true, but the way I heard it was not that Luka Dončić had been traded for Anthony Davis. It was really a process throughout the week.

The deal happened late Saturday night. Wednesday, I’d gotten word that the Lakers and Mavs were discussing a trade that was going to send a Mavs player—who was not in the final deal, and I’m not going to name him—to the Lakers. I dug on it and got complete denials. I carried on with my business. There were other league things to monitor. Jimmy Butler and De’Aaron Fox were on the trade block. There’s always other moves you don’t know about that are coming.

But then when I got more wind that something was going on, it was Hey, the Lakers and Mavs are going to have a TRADE. I thought it had been what I’d heard about the other day, but then I heard that Maxi Kleber and Markieff Morris were in the deal. Hey, Utah’s also in the deal. I heard little bits and pieces, but obviously when I got to source 3-4-5, and had more details.

Obviously, if I got one call or text that Luka Dončić was traded for Anthony Davis, I’d probably feel right there in that moment that I’d been duped.

But it was a build-up to it, and by the time I got all the details—the tweet I put out had everything, there wasn’t anything missing—my hands were definitely shaking. I knew this was not the tweet to have a typo, this was not the tweet to get anything even minor wrong. Forget minor, you don’t want to get this wrong—period. You don’t want to get anything wrong, but definitely not this.

It was an out-of-body night. Even afterwards. My phone had 300 messages. Call on call on call. I took a few calls—a couple people around the league, Pat McAfee, Stephen A. Smith. SportsCenter producer Tom DeCorte called me a few times. I had to take his call because he was wondering what everyone else was wondering—did I get hacked?

My phone was malfunctioning. It was overheating.

For more on Charania’s ESPN transition, the Dončić trade, and the coming draft, read Ryan Glasspiegel’s full story here.

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Amazon Expected to Name Michael Grady As Top WNBA Voice

YouTube / Minnesota Timberwolves

A rising play-by-play broadcaster is poised for a big new opportunity.

Michael Grady is expected to become Amazon’s top WNBA announcer in addition to calling NBA games for the tech giant’s Prime Video streaming service, sources tell Front Office Sports. The deal has not been finalized. 

Grady currently calls Timberwolves games in Minnesota and also has national ESPN NBA broadcasts. The Athletic previously reported he has talked with Amazon about calling NBA games. 

As part of the new NBA pact, which starts this fall, Prime Video and NBC will be in the rotation with Disney’s ESPN/ABC for the WNBA Finals. Prime Video will have the Finals in 2028, 2032, and 2036. 

In an interesting wrinkle, Grady has also had talks to call NBA and WNBA games for NBC, FOS has learned. In this potential arrangement, it’s possible Grady would work for both Amazon and NBC.

Spokespeople for Amazon and NBC declined to comment. 

Amazon and NBC have been beefing up their talent rosters in advance of the upcoming NBA deal. NBC has announced that Mike Tirico, Noah Eagle, Reggie Miller, and Jamal Crawford will announce their games and that Carmelo Anthony will be a studio analyst. 

Amazon has announced Taylor Rooks, Dirk Nowitzki, Blake Griffin, Dwyane Wade, Candace Parker, Steve Nash, and Udonis Haslem as part of its talent lineup. Ian Eagle and Kevin Harlan are also expected to be play-by-play announcers. 

Joy Taylor Contract Decision Looms As Fox Nears Crossroads

YouTube / Speak

Decision time has arrived for Joy Taylor and Fox Sports.

Taylor’s contract with Fox expires this summer, sources tell Front Office Sports. The network is still reeling from the salacious sex scandals and explosive lawsuits of recent months. 

There are several ways this high-profile talent negotiation could play out. On one hand, FS1 could cut Taylor loose after recently splitting with executive vice president Charlie Dixon. 

Dixon, the former FS1 network chief, was named as a defendant in two high-profile lawsuits by former hairstylist Noushin Faraji and reporter Julie Stewart-Binks. Fox recently confirmed that Dixon was out. Letting an on-air talent’s contract simply expire—without firing them—is a standard tactic by networks that want to get rid of somebody, while decreasing the risk of getting sued for unlawful termination.

On the other hand, Fox could sign Taylor to a contract extension, allowing her to continue leading Speak with Keyshawn Johnson and Paul Pierce, which airs weekdays at 5 p.m. ET. Taylor recently celebrated her ninth anniversary at Fox. Fox “sidelined” her for a two-week period after the scandal broke. But Taylor returned in early March and has been on-air since with no repercussions.

As a free agent, Taylor would likely have job options. She’s one of the few female talents to ascend to the male-dominated role of “opinionist,” rather than a more typical moderator role. Right or wrong, the recent scandal has helped make her something of a household name. 

Taylor seems to be branding herself as a lifestyle personality who will blend in topics outside sports in her content. She recently resumed her YouTube show/podcast, Two Personal, which was launched alongside Taylor Rooks. Rooks is no longer involved. During a new episode with Dr. Cheyenne Bryant, Taylor discussed sex drives, dating, relationships, and trauma. She also discussed dating and relationships in a recent conversation with Paul Pierce and Azar Farideh. 

There are also some sports media observers who feel Taylor has been getting a raw deal from the tabloid-like coverage of the Fox scandals in recent months.

Dave Portnoy of Barstool Sports publicly questioned why Taylor was even named in Faraji’s suit. If she and FS1 colleague Emmanuel Acho were in a consensual relationship, as her suit alleges, that’s their business, wrote Portnoy on X/Twitter. “I honestly don’t even know why Joy Taylor is in the lawsuit?  Cause she was mean to her hairdresser yet simultaneously spilled her guts to her? Makes ZERO sense,” added Portnoy.

NFL Network’s Jane Slater also publicly defended Taylor. “Joy is seriously one of the hardest-working girls I know. A true friend to girls. So kind every time I was there doing a show. Not an ounce of jealousy or hate. She was cranking out content during Covid from home when others were waiting for assignments,” Slater tweeted. “It’s really annoying the way she is getting dragged without receipts and proof.”

There’s also a major difference in Faraji’s allegations against Dixon and former host Skip Bayless compared to her claims about Taylor in the 42-page suit.

Faraji accuses both Dixon and Bayless of sexually harassing her. Meanwhile, she essentially accuses Taylor of being a bad friend. Faraji [a native of Iran] claims Taylor made fun of her accent. She also alleges Taylor brusquely told her to “get over it” after Dixon allegedly grabbed her buttocks at a drunken West Hollywood party. 

According to documents obtained by FOS, attorneys for Taylor, Bayless, FS1, and Fox have been in mediation to settle the lawsuits by Faraji. The network is also in settlement talks with Stewart-Binks, who accused Dixon of sexually assaulting her in a Marina del Rey hotel room in 2016.

If Taylor does leave, it would put an exclamation mark on the roller-coaster history of FS1’s former Undisputed, with Taylor, Bayless, and Shannon Sharpe. Launched in 2016 as a direct challenger to Stephen A. Smith’s First Take at ESPN, the program was positioned as FS1’s flagship show. But over the years, First Take widened the ratings gap and the supposed competition was no competition at all. 

The escalating tension between Bayless and Sharpe came to a head in January 2023, when the partners nearly came to blows during an on-air shouting match. FS1 bought out Sharpe in June 2023, then tried to revamp the show with Bayless as host. But that didn’t work, either. Undisputed was canceled in August 2024. And Bayless, the network’s highest-paid talent at $8 million a year, left the network. Sharpe, meanwhile, has been accused of rape in a civil lawsuit seeking $50 million in damages. 

Taylor could not be reached for this story. An FS1 spokesperson says the network does not comment on talent contracts.

Around the Dial

Detroit Free Press

  • Even without a TV role at Fox Sports, Skip Bayless managed to get under the skin of Tom Brady. Tom Terrific didn’t like Bayless’s tweet claiming the minority Raiders owner had something to do with Las Vegas skipping Shedeur Sanders in the NFL Draft. “Everyone can just say whatever the fuck they want and get away with it. And it’s kind of unfortunate because there actually used to be a lot of integrity in media—and there’s way less now because everyone needs crazy voices to get heard,” Brady told hosts Logan Paul and Mike Majlak on the Impaulsive podcast. “It actually probably hurts a lot of relationships, which is not the goal of broadcasting. It should be to develop and cultivate and solve problems, and rather than the critiques, I want people to offer solutions.”
  • OutKick founder Clay Travis told Semafor that the site made $2 million in FanDuel affiliate sign-ups on Super Bowl Sunday in 2021. The site was sold to Fox Corp. for $100 million several months later.
  • Draymond Green has been touted as the next Charles Barkley if and when he enters TV. In the meantime, he continues to be a quote machine with the Warriors. After getting hit with his fifth technical foul of the NBA playoffs, Green expressed his frustration with what he calls an “agenda” to portray him as an “angry Black man.” As Green said to reporters after the Warriors’ Game 2 loss to the Timberwolves: “I am a very successful, educated Black man with a great family, and I am great at basketball and great at what I do. The agenda to try to keep making me look like an angry Black man is crazy. I’m sick of it. It’s ridiculous.”
  • Roku will begin its second season of airing MLB games on May 11. Similar to last season, the early Sunday afternoon games are designed to be the appetizer for the rest of the day’s baseball across other MLB rights holders. The broadcasts will be produced by the league and air for free on Roku, as well as on MLB.TV.

One Big Fig

Troy Taormina-Imagn Images

24.1 million

That was the number of paid subscribers for the ESPN+ streaming service during parent company Disney’s second fiscal quarter. That was down 3% from the end of 2024—suggesting the platform may have hit a ceiling as more sports content appears on Disney+. On Monday, ESPN will announce the name and other operational details for its long-awaited “Flagship” streaming platform.

Reader Response

Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

We got plenty of reaction from readers on multiple stories about 24-year-old Jordon Hudson causing a media uproar around 73-year-old Bill Belichick. Boston-based PR pro Lexi Panepinto emailed: “Allowing Hudson on the field during UNC’s spring practices is highly unusual–and raises valid questions. I played Division I sports and have spent nearly a decade in sports PR, and I’ve never seen anything like it. I get that sports/athletes/coaches and the media are becoming increasingly intertwined, but there still needs to be boundaries. Practices should be a protected space for athletes and coaches to work, not a stage for outside influences. There’s a time and place for media and/or personal relationships. This wasn’t it.”

On X/Twitter, Jonathan Grella wrote that it’s time for The Hoodie to fire his girlfriend as his de facto manager and PR rep. “BB’s idea of a breakup text: ‘We’re on to Cincinnati.’ Cold blooded!”

But Big Ten Refs was supportive of the six-time Super Bowl–winning head coach, tweeting: “Everyone makes mistakes Bill. Just keep showing up.”

Michael Nance added that timing is everything with the Belichick story. “The reason this story has gotten so much pub is b/c there’s no football right now. If this story happened in September it would’ve cycled through in 48 hours. When Carolina is 6-0 after being Cal, Jordan will have a positive image. Just win,” he tweeted.

Question of the Day

Did you believe the news about the Luka Dončić trade when it broke?

 Yes   No 

Tuesday’s result: Exactly 50% of respondents think the NFL should be worried about Ted Cruz’s Senate comments.

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

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