September 18, 2024

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Mere hours ago, ESPN NBA insider Adrian Wojnarowski stunned the sports world—and his colleagues—by announcing his retirement from journalism. He’s leaving Disney to become general manager of the basketball program at his alma mater, St. Bonaventure.

Woj is arguably the most well-known sports reporter on the planet. Shockwaves from his departure will reverberate for weeks, but let’s focus on his legacy, his exit, and how ESPN will try to fill the void left by his absence. One former protégé is at the top of the list.

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—Michael McCarthy

Adrian Wojnarowski Leaves ESPN for St. Bonaventure GM Job

ESPN

During his career as the NBA’s premier newsbreaker, Adrian Wojnarowski became famous for dropping “Woj bombs” that moved the market.

On Wednesday, ESPN’s senior NBA insider dropped the biggest “Woj bomb” of all about himself, announcing he was retiring from journalism to accept a role as GM for the St. Bonaventure men’s basketball program, his alma mater. The university is in St. Bonaventure, N.Y., in the western part of the state.

“After all these years of reporting on everyone’s teams, I’m heading back to my own,” Wojnarowski tweeted Wednesday.

Wojnarowski was making an estimated $7 million a year at ESPN, just behind Adam Schefter’s $9 million annual salary. With an estimated two to three years left on his contract, he’ll leave an estimated $15 million to $20 million on the table.

The question now: Who can replace the 55-year-old Wojnarowski? Can he be replaced at all?

ESPN has a loaded bench of NBA insiders and analysts, including Brian Windhorst, Zach Lowe, Bobby Marks, Marc J. Spears, and Tim Bontemps. But none of them match the influence of Wojnarowski, with his 6.5 million followers.

My sources tell me ESPN will likely talk to Shams Charania, Wojanrowski’s former Yahoo Sports protégé, and former ESPNer Chris Haynes. Both are pending free agents, according to the New York Post. The 30-year-old Charania’s deals with The Athletic, Stadium, and FanDuel are all up. Ditto for the 42-year-old Haynes, who has plenty of on-camera experience at TNT.

Charania is also a frequent guest on Pat McAfee’s ESPN show, which has raised eyebrows at the network given his rivalry with Wojnarowski. But McAfee’s advocacy could benefit Charania.

Meanwhile, the mood on ESPN’s campus Wednesday was one of stunned disbelief.

“I’m floored,” one staffer told me.

Another wondered whether ESPN could realistically replace one of the greatest news-breakers in sports journalism.

“There’s only one Woj,” they said.

After starting his career at the Hartford Courant, Wojnarowski cut his teeth as an NBA insider at Yahoo before jumping to ESPN in 2017.  

ESPN chairman Jimmy Pitaro saluted Wojnarowski in a statement Wednesday morning. “He has led the industry at ESPN, and his dedication to the craft and to fans is legendary,” he said. “While we will miss his daily output, we completely understand his decision to make a lifestyle change and slow down a bit.”

SPONSORED BY TETON RIDGE

Teton Ridge Brings The American Rodeo to Fox

Building on its success of “The American Rodeo Championship Weekend” in March 2024, which drew more than 40,000 fans in attendance and 5.7 million viewers across digital and television platforms, Teton Ridge, the premier Western sports, media, and entertainment company, recently announced expanded programming and live rodeo broadcasts on Fox Sports. 

“The American Rodeo Championship Weekend” returns to Globe Life Field in Arlington, Texas, on April 11–12, 2025, featuring competitors in all eight traditional rodeo disciplines. Fans can root for the underdog contenders chasing a $1 million cash bonus and the professional athletes chasing the championship crown. Top musical artists will be announced soon. The event will be televised live, exclusively across Fox Sports networks, with the Championship Round airing live on Fox.

ESPN Standing Up for Pat McAfee, Whose Show Is Reportedly Profitable

The Anderson Independent Mail

Given some controversies surrounding Pat McAfee, one question I keep getting is whether ESPN brass is happy with its weekday and College GameDay star. The answer is yes.

Start with profits. For the last year, McAfee has licensed his eponymous show to ESPN for $17 million a year. But McAfee’s show is making money, said Washington Post media reporter Ben Strauss on Puck News’ Varsity podcast hosted by John Ourand.

Second, McAfee connects with the younger sports fans who are tuning out linear television, according to ESPN president of content Burke Magnus and chairman Jimmy Pitaro. As Magnus noted at the Front Office Sports Tuned In summit in New York, McAfee created his show, and became a star, completely on his own before signing with ESPN. 

Third, he draws the best guest list of any show on ESPN. Who else can make a call and get Aaron Rodgers, Peyton Manning, Bill Belichick, and Nick Saban? 

Fourth, he’s been a phenomenal addition to College GameDay, giving the venerable show a much-needed jolt in the arm. His weekly field goal competition is hilarious. ESPN’s legal team wasn’t sure about the segment, but McAfee’s instincts were right. And this week’s comedic disaster from South Carolina was the funniest one yet. (With an average of 2 million viewers, GameDay is off to its best three-episode start since 2010 and second-best ever.)

“Yes, he has done some things and said some things that required us to have conversations. It’s a very productive relationship that he has with myself, with Jimmy, and Mike Foss, who essentially runs the show,” said Magnus about McAfee at Tuned In. “Pat is extremely open. Never once has he been like, despite the construct of the relationship, ‘I don’t want to talk to you guys, leave me alone.’ … It’s never been any of that. It’s always been like, ‘How can I get better?’ He appreciates the megaphone that ESPN provides to him—and to his aspirations and his business.”

Mike Drops

Brady’s Bounceback, ESPN’s Super Bowl

Kevin Jairaj-Imagn Images

  • Legendary Fox announcer Tim Brando tweeted to me that it’s unrealistic to think Tom Brady should be an instant success in the broadcast booth. “He’s being measured by media critics largely against [Cris] Collinsworth, and Troy Aikman, and I get that, but for context Troy worked with Cris at FOX his first season…This happens a great deal when superstars come to our business. We live in a country that, sadly, prefers seeing failure. Not success!”
  • For those of you curious about my thoughts on Brady’s second game, you can read my full review here. I thought he improved dramatically and seemed much more comfortable.
  • Troy Appel replied to my story reporting ESPN’s first Super Bowl pregame coverage in 2027 will last seven or more days: “Only seven days? I figured it started as soon as the 2026 Super Bowl ended.”

Question of the Day

Do you think Shams Charania joins ESPN before the 2025–2026 NBA season?

 Yes   No 
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Written by Michael McCarthy
Edited by Or Moyal, Catherine Chen

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