Connect with us
blank

Sports TV News

David Katz Leaving Digital VP Role At FOX Sports

Katz said in a memo to the Fox Sports staff that he is leaving to “return to his entrepreneurial roots.”

Kate Constable

Published

on

blank

David Katz, executive VP of digital at Fox Sports, is leaving the network this fall after three years in the Fox Corp. division. Variety was the first to report the story.

Katz said in a memo to the Fox Sports staff that he is leaving to “return to his entrepreneurial roots.”

According to Variety, Katz is heading back to ThePostGame – a digital sports content and marketing agency he founded in 2007 and ran before joining Fox Sports in 2018. Upon return, Katz will be the companies non-executive chairman and will work with CEO Eric Herd to expand ThePostGame’s sports betting content, per the report. Katz hopes to do this organically and via acquisitions.

“It’s bittersweet to leave a place as good as Fox Sports,” Katz said. “This is as dynamic and thrilling a time as I’ve seen in sports media and I’m excited to be exploring it further.”

David Katz has extensive experience in the gambling content space. While at Fox Sports, he led a significant app and website redesign that integrated gambling and bonus cams for the first time, according to Variety. He also “worked closely with Fox Bet to drive real-money bettors as well as players of its free-to-play Super 6 game.”

His influence on FOXSports.com also cannot be overlooked. He brought in a number of writers and other content creators that made the site a destination for original content again.

Fox Sports has yet to make a decision on who will take over Katz’s role.

Sports TV News

Paul Byrd, Brian Jordan Won’t Return to Braves Broadcast Booth

“Brian Jordan was part of the team of analysts covering the Braves on TV last year. Byrd was a studio host.”

blank

Published

on

blank

Atlanta Braves fans will be greeted with a very different television broadcast when Major League Baseball’s regular season begins later this month. Bally Sports South has undergone a full talent overhaul.

When the network announced its talent for the 2023 season, two names were missing. Neither Paul Byrd nor Brian Jordan will return. Justin Toscano of the Atlanta Journal-Constitution noted that Byrd’s decision was a personal matter, while the team made efforts to bring Jordan back.

Brian Jordan was part of the team of analysts covering the Braves on TV last year. Byrd was a studio host. He was at the front of a season preview show, which premiered last week.

The Braves have been hit with plenty of other changes this offseason. Chip Caray will be replaced by Brandon Gaudin on play-by-play after Caray decided to leave Atlanta for St. Louis. Also, Tom Glavine returns as a game analyst after taking time away from the team in 2022.

Continue Reading

Sports TV News

ESPN Employees Brace For Major Layoffs

“According to Front Office Sports, 700 jobs have been cut, including those of anchors, reporters and analysts, since 2015.”

Jordan Bondurant

Published

on

ESPN

As the restructuring at Disney continues under CEO Bob Iger, tough decisions regarding people’s careers with the company are being made.

The jobs of 7,000 Disney employees will be eliminated as the company tries to save $5.5 billion in costs.

Stephen A. Smith, on a recent episode of his podcast K[no]w Mercy, said ESPN is not going to escape unscathed.

“ESPN is under the Disney umbrella,” Smith said. “They’re going to have cuts coming.”

ESPN has gone through multiple rounds of layoffs in recent years. According to Front Office Sports, 700 jobs have been cut, including those of anchors, reporters and analysts, since 2015.

Stephen A., who has an annual salary of $13 million, said no one’s job is safe.

“Hell, for all I know, I might be one of them,” Smith said. “Now, I doubt that. But it’s possible. No one knows.”

Continue Reading

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.”

blank

Published

on

blank

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.

Continue Reading
Advertisement

blank

Barrett Media Writers

Copyright © 2023 Barrett Media.