Longtime SportsCenter anchor and idiosyncratic relic of America’s nightly living room routine Kenny Mayne announced on Monday his time at ESPN is coming to an end in the coming weeks. Mayne tweeted, “I am leaving ESPN” as a “salary cap casualty” leaving many to wonder what lies in wait for the longtime television staple. He spoke with Richard Deitsch of The Athletic about that and more.
As for the reason to his departure, Mayne said he was offered a 14 percent reduction in work for a 61 percent reduction in pay in a meeting he described as “almost seems like they offered me something that I would turn down.” The offer rejection means Mayne, an anchor with the company since 1994, will host just six more SportsCenters before entering the unknown. That limelight purgatory figures to be short-lived as he told Deitsch he’s received calls and texts not just congratulating him on his tenure, but inquiring if he would join other enterprises.
“I thought of doing this for a couple of different contracts and it wasn’t as good a market as it is right now to be a free agent,” he said. “Right now it seems to be a good time based on the incoming calls. Previously, it would have been, ‘What the hell am I going to do? Make a movie? Sell pencils?'”
Mayne gave insight into his wide array of projects he assisted in during his time in Bristol. In addition to his regular appearances on SportsCenter, he also had a heavy hand in the iconic This Is SportsCenter commercial series, Mayne Street, and even in the company upfronts where they pitched to media buyers. The departure adds to the list in recent years that include Bill Simmons, Dan Patrick, Trey Wingo, Mike Golic, Dan Le Batard, and others, who left the network in pursuit of other opportunities in one capacity or another. As to what Mayne could be doing, he joked on Twitter in response to former colleague Keith Olbermann admonishing the quantity of podcasts on the market.
“I feel like there’s room for one more.”