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SportsCenter With Stephen A. Smith Debuts Wednesday

“ESPN also announced Rachel Nichols will host their NBA Wednesday halftime coverage on October 23rd, with Scott Van Pelt taking over the role each week for the rest of the season.”

Brandon Contes

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ESPN announced Stephen A. Smith will host a new weekly version of SportsCenter which will serve as a pregame show to their schedule of Wednesday NBA games. SportsCenter with Stephen A. Smith will debut October 23rd from 7 – 7:30pm ET and continue to broadcast every Wednesday. 

“This is what it’s all about. This is what I have been waiting for. Stephen A. hosting in prime time, serving NBA fans with the information and passion that you’ve come to know from me,” Smith said in the press release. 

In recent years, Smith anchored ESPN’s illustrious 6pm SportsCenter as a special during the NBA Finals. His new 7pm version of the show will air throughout the entire regular and postseason. Smith will move into prime-time during the NBA season, but he previously shared aspirations of hosting a late night show, calling that “the ultimate fantasy.” The popular sportscaster attempted a late night show on ESPN 2 in 2005, but it was cancelled after less than two years. 

ESPN also announced Rachel Nichols will host their NBA Wednesday halftime coverage on October 23rd, with Scott Van Pelt taking over the role each week for the rest of the season. In addition to his new weekly 7pm SportsCenter, Smith will continue his daily shows, First Take on ESPN and The Stephen A. Smith Show on ESPN Radio. 

“Stephen A. Smith’s connection with all aspects of the NBA is a huge competitive advantage that truly differentiates our network,” said Dave Roberts, ESPN VP of production. “His tireless and exemplary work ethic will serve sports fans extremely well when they tune in before marquee games on Wednesday nights throughout this highly anticipated season.”

The news of the 7pm Wednesday SportsCenter comes amid a report by The Big Lead’s Ryan Glasspiegel that Smith and ESPN are nearing a contract extension. According to Glasspiegel, the blockbuster deal could be worth tens of millions of dollars and keep Smith with ESPN through 2025.

Brandon Contes is a freelance writer for BSM. He can be found on Twitter @BrandonContes. To reach him by email click here.

Sports TV News

Steve Rosenberg Out As President of Diamond Sports Group

“John Ourand of Sports Business Journal reports that a memo went out to the company on Monday morning announcing the change.”

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A company declaring bankruptcy is never good for the people at the top. Steve Rosenberg is experiencing that right now. He is out as the president of Diamond Sports Group.

John Ourand of Sports Business Journal reports that a memo went out to the company on Monday morning announcing the change. In it, Diamond CEO David Preschlack wrote that CFO David DeVoe will assume Rosenberg’s responsibilities for now.

Steve Rosenberg joined Sinclair in 2020. He replaced Jeff Krolik as the company’s president of local sports.

Last week, Diamond Sports Group filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy. The company intends to work out new deals with the NBA and NHL for its Bally Sports RSNs in hopes that it will remain in tact. Ourand writes that an attempt to do the same with Major League Baseball has not yielded meaningful results as of yet.

“With the recent appointments we have made to the senior leadership team, and the talented staff we have throughout the organization, I am confident in this team’s ability to work together to execute our strategic goals at this time,” Preschlack wrote in his memo.

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Sports TV News

Variety Predicts Sports Betting Broadcasts Future of RSNs

“With the state of the RSN business a little hazy for some networks, closer integration with gambling is something that VIP+ expects to be leant into more in an effort to engage the most passionate local fans.”

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The sports betting market grew in 2022. With five new states legalizing mobile wagering last year, that is not a surprise. The overall take for sportsbooks was $93.4 billion. That is a whopping 84% growth over 2021.

With so much money coming from new markets, Variety wanted to get an idea of how much the sports betting industry is actually growing versus how much of the growth is artificial.

The study from the publication’s VIP+ shows that in markets with a full year of mobile wagering on the books before 2022, the growth is slower but still significant at 19%. Writer Gavin Bridge suggests that the statistic could hold the answer for the future of regional sports networks.

“While winning money was the most popular reason for sports betting, data provided by VIP+’s research partner CRG Global in our ‘Sports Gambling & Media‘ report show that one of the most popular reasons was that betting ‘makes the games I watch more exciting,’ with several other reasons relating to watching televised games also important to some betters,” he writes.

With regional sports networks looking for a new model in the face of serious economic uncertainty, Bridge points to Comcast’s regional NBC Sports networks as a reasonable path forward.

Through its partnership with PointsBet, NBC offers alternate broadcasts of the local teams it covers that have a gambling focus. The alternate feed have not been available for every game on the RSNs, but Bridge writes that we could see more of that in the future.

“With the state of the RSN business a little hazy for some networks, closer integration with gambling is something that VIP+ expects to be leant into more in an effort to engage the most passionate local fans. Ultimately, sports betting overlays and alternative game feeds can be anticipated for most major sports in the coming years as media partners look for new revenue streams and ways to engage fans for longer.”

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Sports TV News

NCAA Tournament Delivers Highest-Rated Round of 64 Ever

“ For the first round on Thursday and Friday of last week, games accomplished a total audience delivery of 9.2 million viewers.”

Jordan Bondurant

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The first two rounds of the 2023 NCAA tournament are in the books, and the TV ratings indicate historic viewership.

For the first round on Thursday and Friday of last week, games accomplished a total audience delivery of 9.2 million viewers. This was for contests on TBS, CBS, TNT and truTV in addition to streaming on March Madness Live.

Action on Thursday averaged 8.4 million, up 2% compared to 2022.

On Friday, game broadcasts averaged 9.3 million, making it the most-watched first round ever.

The Sweet 16 tips off on Thursday this week.

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