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Jason McCourty: Staying Awake For Primetime Games Most Difficult Part of ‘Good Morning Football’ Role

“It’s just a brutal watch sometimes. But nope, I gotta stay up, I gotta talk about this game tomorrow.”

Jordan Bondurant

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Working on any kind of morning show is probably one of the toughest gigs out there if you can’t manage your rest schedule. Oftentimes, as is the case with Good Morning Football host Jason McCourty, you are getting out of bed well before 4:00 AM so you can be on the road and at the studio. With the shift in your work schedule, you have to adjust your sleep schedule. You can’t regularly stay up til past midnight if you have to get up for work at 3:30 AM.

“I had to figure out I’m not an early sleeper, so I had to figure that schedule out,” McCourty told Jimmy Traina on the Sports Illustrated Media Podcast this week. “But that is the hardest part. Those Thursday night games, especially some of those games throughout the year just like you’re watching and the score is 3-6 in the fourth quarter. It’s just a brutal watch sometimes. But nope, I gotta stay up, I gotta talk about this game tomorrow. So it’s definitely 100 percent a grind.”

Jason added that it’s a labor of love by the whole show crew to make sure everyone knows how the program is gonna go. That makes getting up super early a lot easier.

“We do our morning production show where we’re talking about it in the car ride into the city and then we do a quick 15-minute Zoom call after,” he said. “They make it as easy as possible for us to be able to get on and get out and actually have a good product that we’re putting on the air every day.

“It took probably at least a month to two months just getting used to waking up that early and having to go to work,” McCourty added. “The kids want to play and I’m just a zombie walking around the house.”

With Championship Sunday approaching, McCourty said he’s very much looking forward to things slowing down for a little while.

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NFL Network Cuts Continue With Willie McGinest

“McGinest is currently in the middle of a lawsuit resulting from an incident in a LA-area restaurant in December.”

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Willie McGinest is the latest victim of cost reduction layoffs at NFL Media. The NFL Network analyst is out according to Michael McCarthy of Front Office Sports.

McGinest is currently in the middle of a lawsuit resulting from an incident in an LA-area restaurant in December. He is being sued and faces up to eight years in prison for allegedly attacking a fellow customer.

Since news of the investigation became public, NFL Network has kept Willie McGinest off the air.

McCarthy reached out to McGinest and NFL Network. Neither offered a comment at this time.

NFL Media has been busy this week as the company looks to reduce its expenses. Willie McGinest joins Jim Trotter and Rachel Bonnetta on the list of on-air talents that have lost their jobs at NFL Network.

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Holly Rowe Signs Long-Term Extension With ESPN

“I feel like I am living my best life and I am so grateful to ESPN for letting me keep doing this.”

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ESPN reporter Holly Rowe has signed a multi-year extension to remain with the company.

Rowe works as a sideline reporter for ESPN/ABC’s coverage of college football — including the College Football Playoffs, the WNBA, women’s college basketball, and the Women’s College World Series, among other high-profile assignments.

“I feel like I am living my best life and I am so grateful to ESPN for letting me keep doing this,” Rowe told The Athletic’s Richard Deitsch.

Earlier this year, Rowe was named the 2023 Curt Gowdy Media Award winner from the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame for her electronic media work.

Rowe joined ESPN in 1998, and signed her last contract extension with the network in 2018 shortly before she announced she had undergone her final chemotherapy treatment in August of that year after a melanoma diagnosis in 2016.

According to Deitsch, Rowe’s contract was set to expire next month.

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Mike Florio: The NFL Will Have Games 7 Days a Week & Will Expand To Make it Happen

“So if you wanna increase the total number of games so you can have games Tuesday night, Wednesday night, Friday night, Saturday night, at some point you need more teams to get more games.”

Jordan Bondurant

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Could you picture NFL games on every night of the week from September to January? ProFootballTalk’s Mike Florio thinks it’ll happen in his lifetime.

In an appearance on The Pat McAfee Show on Wednesday, Florio said it’s inevitable that we’ll see the league play games every night.

“I think sooner than later we’re gonna have Tuesday Night Football, we’re gonna have Wednesday Night Football,” he said. “It’s gonna be hopefully in my lifetime a seven day a week, primetime event. There’s too much money to be made.”

“I would love to have football on every night of the week,” Florio added. “It would be nice to have a night or two off. Like Friday night and Saturday night would be nice, but I’d be fine with Tuesday and Wednesday.”

How does Florio think the NFL will get to the point of playing seven days a week during the season? Expansion. And the league has already expressed interest in establishing franchises in Europe.

“I think they’re gonna start moving that number from 32 to in time 34, 36, 38 eventually 40,” Florio said. “Quarterbacks is the key. Is there ever gonna be enough quarterbacks to have 40 NFL teams? But I think that would be the ultimate maximum number.”

Even McAfee added that an 18th NFL regular season game will be coming sooner rather than later. Florio said in order to justify the need for one more game, expansion is the answer.

“When it comes to the inventory, 18 games is the most they’re gonna get away with,” Florio said. “So if you wanna increase the total number of games so you can have games Tuesday night, Wednesday night, Friday night, Saturday night, at some point you need more teams to get more games.”

“If the money’s there to be made by the owners, they’ll deal with it,” he added.

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