May 28, 2025

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A Fox Sports exec confirmed to FOS that Texas blocked Ohio State’s idea to move their Week 1 game from noon on Saturday to primetime Sunday, as Buckeyes fans continue to complain about start times.

— Ryan Glasspiegel, Michael McCarthy, and Colin Salao

Fox Was Willing to Move Ohio State–Texas from Noon to Prime Time. Texas Said No

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Texas shut off the idea of playing Ohio State under the lights.

Fox Sports president of insights and analytics Michael Mulvihill confirmed to Front Office Sports that the network had given the green light to Ohio State’s idea of moving the defending national champion’s much-anticipated Week 1 matchup against Texas from Saturday’s noon time slot to prime time on Sunday night.

Mulvihill revealed that Ohio State AD Ross Bjork approached Fox with the idea. Since 2019, Fox has been putting its top Big Ten or Big 12 game of the week at noon—labeling the window Big Noon—in a strategy to maximize viewership as the games would no longer be competing with the highest-profile matchups on other networks, which traditionally air later in the day. In this case, it would have been possible to move the game to Sunday because the matchup will take place before the NFL season kicks off. 

Mulvihill said Fox anticipated a “minor” viewership loss if the Ohio State–Texas game moved to Sunday night, because it would be competing with Notre Dame–Miami on ABC, but that Fox would’ve been willing to make the move to accommodate a key partner in Ohio State. However, as 247 Sports first reported, Texas put the kibosh on the idea. 

Fox’s Big Noon strategy, which has been an enormous ratings success, has been the subject of much debate, particularly around the Ohio State program. The fans who are vocal on social media prefer the games to start later to allow for more tailgating time prior to kickoff. There is also a school of thought that home field advantage is greater when the fans are more lubricated and anticipation has been building throughout the day, which, combined with not playing the following week on short rest, would inform Texas’s decision to block the schedule change. 

The older alumni donor class that operates less in the public eye prefers to be able to drive home from games while it’s still light out. (I’ve previously reported that Ohio State and Michigan have it written into their Big Ten TV contracts that they have the right to refuse to play home games at night after daylight saving time in early November.) 

Anecdotally, coaches like playing earlier games because it means they don’t have to figure out how to keep track of their players all day, and last year Ohio State players expressed a preference for competing in the Big Noon window.

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ESPN’s Ashley ShahAhmadi Targeted by NBC, Prime for NBA Role

Bruce Kluckhohn-USA TODAY Sports

ESPN dual-threat sideline reporter Ashley ShahAhmadi is drawing interest from multiple sports media companies, sources tell Front Office Sports.

The college football sideline reporter has become a favorite of ESPN viewers for her work covering the SEC with Dave Neal and Aaron Murray. Her fame grew during coverage of the SEC championship game between Texas and Georgia in December. But she has also covered the NBA postseason for ESPN Radio, including the Mavericks vs. Timberwolves Western Conference finals in 2024.

Sources say ShahAhmadi’s contract expires this summer. That could make her a potential free agent in time for the 2025 college football season as well as the 2025–26 NBA season, when new rights holders NBC Sports and Amazon Prime Video will be competing for the best hoops coverage with incumbent ESPN. 

The University of Georgia graduate previously covered the NBA as a TV host and reporter for Turner and Bally Sports South. She joined ESPN in August 2023.

Both NBC and Prime have been on a hiring spree for NBA talent. In the biggest news, NBC announced Michael Jordan will serve as a “special contributor” as the network returns to NBA game coverage for the first time since 2002. NBC has also hired former Knicks star Carmelo Anthony and is bringing back its classic “Roundball Rock” anthem from the 1990s.

Meanwhile, Dwyane Wade and Candace Parker are expected to join Prime’s NBA coverage. The giant streamer has already hired Taylor Rooks, Blake Griffin, and Dirk Nowitzki for its studio. Ian Eagle and Kevin Harlan are expected to be the company’s top two play-by-play broadcasters.  

Well tonight was fun !! ☺️🏈🎉@drpepper @SEC @ESPNCFB pic.twitter.com/a79mllC0ur

— Ashley ShahAhmadi (@ashahahmadi) December 8, 2024

ESPN has a deep bench of NBA talent ready for next season. But as part of the NBA’s new three-way media-rights arrangement, it will show fewer games. While ShahAhmadi is well respected in Bristol, ESPN may let her walk to a competitor. ESPN must also sort out the contracts of looming free agents Malika Andrews and Brian Windhorst. 

ESPN chairman Jimmy Pitaro also licensed Charles Barkley’s Inside the NBA from TNT Sports next season in exchange for a package of Big 12 college football and college basketball games. 

ESPN declined to comment.

Clark, Fever Set Another Ratings Record Before Two-Week Injury

Trevor Ruszkowski-Imagn Images

Caitlin Clark is expected to miss at least four games due to a left quadriceps strain, but she still brought in record ratings in her most recent game.

The Indiana Fever and defending-champion New York Liberty drew 2.22 million viewers to their matchup Saturday afternoon on CBS, the second-most-watched WNBA game ever on the network. It fell just short of passing the most-watched game on CBS, which was a rivalry contest on June 16, 2024, between the Chicago Sky and Fever that drew 2.25 million viewers.

It was also the second-most-watched game of the WNBA season (which started May 16). The most-watched game was on opening weekend between the Fever and Sky, which drew 2.7 million viewers on ABC, the most-watched regular-season game ever on ESPN platforms. It was also the most-streamed WNBA game ever on Paramount+, though the exact viewership numbers on the service are unclear.

Saturday’s game on CBS is the fifth-most-watched regular-season game since Clark entered the league, with the top three being games between the Sky and Fever. Fourth goes to an Aug. 18, 2024, game between the Fever and Seattle Storm, which drew 2.23 million viewers. 

The close game, which the Liberty won 90–88, peaked at 3.24 million viewers.

A World Without Caitlin

Clark’s injury, announced Monday, will keep her out for a minimum of two weeks and will be the first time she will miss a regular-season game in the WNBA or college. The timeline suggests she could return for the Fever’s road game June 10 against the Atlanta Dream.

All four of the Fever’s games without Clark air nationally, if NBA TV is considered.

  • May 28: at Washington Mystics (NBA TV)
  • May 30: vs. Connecticut Sun (Ion)
  • June 3: vs. Mystics (NBA TV)
  • June 7: at Chicago Sky (CBS)

Ticket prices for the two Fever road games have tumbled, with the get-in price for the Mystics game on Wednesday down 47% since the announcement, according to TickPick. The get-in price for the Sky game is down 71%. Both games were moved by the opposing teams to arenas with larger capacities.

One Big Fig

Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images

7.05 million

Average viewership for Fox Sports’s coverage of the Indy 500 won by Álex Palou. It marked the highest viewership for the Great American Race in 17 years and was up 40% over last year’s 5.02 million viewers. Fox research guru Michael Mulvihill tweeted that the eye-popping number is a testament to the wide reach of broadcast TV: “Tremendous result for FOX’s first Indy 500 and the latest in a growing list of validations for sports on little ol’ broadcast TV.”

Around the Dial

Kyle Terada-Imagn Images

  • Shannon Sharpe is postponing the Nightcap podcast’s “NSFW” live tour this summer, according to Awful Announcing. With Sharpe still embroiled in a $50 million lawsuit with a former sexual partner, he told his audience that he and podcast cohost Chad Johnson decided to push the live shows back to next year. The Pro Football Hall of Famer has also temporarily stepped away from ESPN but says he will be back in time for the NFL season.
  • NBC’s Today show featured a heartwarming story about Sam Flood Jr. the son of NBC Sports executive producer Sam Flood. Born neurodiverse, the boy didn’t speak until the age of 5. To get his parents’ attention, he would grab his older sister’s hair. Specialists told his parents he’d never finish high school, much less go to college. Faced with constant childhood bullying, he turned to writing, reading, and his own sense of humor. Now the younger Flood is the author of Don’t Pull Your Sister’s Hair: And Other Life Lessons Growing Up Neurodiverse. As NBC’s Flood Sr. tells Today: “It’s truly a miracle—but a miracle that happened because of love and hard work.”
  • Former ESPNer Jemele Hill blasted Disney CEO Bob Iger for urging the cast of ABC’s The View to tone down their anti–Donald Trump rhetoric. Trump already squeezed $15 million out of ABC by suing the network and anchor George Stephanopoulos, Hill noted on CNN. If the network caves, Trump will make further demands, she said. “It’s not just about these four ladies; it’s about what this represents. You already gave them $15 million. Do you think if they ask, he’s gonna stop?” asked Hill. “No. It’s this today; it’s something else tomorrow. So, at some point, you have to draw the line. Bullies just keep bullying when you keep giving them things.”
  • ESPN’s Chiney Ogwumike has apologized for comments she made before the WNBA announced it could not substantiate reports of racist comments at the recent Fever-Sky game. “I am sorry that my message was in the heat of the moment, because when I initially spoke on the topic, it really came from a place of care,” she said in a video statement posted to X/Twitter.
  • Orioles reporter Melanie Newman was struck in the head by a foul ball Saturday and returned to the team’s broadcast the following day.
  • DraftKings and Meadowlark Media have officially announced a multi-year renewal. FOS broke the news on the partnership extension last Friday.

Loud and Clear

Kyle Terada-USA TODAY Sports

“They can’t get rid of us.”

—Host Ernie Johnson to the assembled staff of TNT Sports’s Inside the NBA when they learned the iconic show would survive on ESPN next season. If the Knicks lose Game 5 of the Eastern Conference finals to the Pacers on Thursday night, it would be TNT’s last NBA game telecast in the U.S. after 36 years.

Question of the Day

Woud you be upset if your favorite school played many of its biggest games at noon?

 Yes   No 

Friday’s result: 60% of respondents said they planned to watch Game 2 between the Pacers and Knicks.

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Written by Ryan Glasspiegel, Michael McCarthy, Colin Salao
Edited by Or Moyal, Catherine Chen, Lisa Scherzer

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