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Ian Eagle: Thursday Night Football Radio Crew Doesn’t Get Same Access as Amazon

“It’s a blank canvas. It is very much a play-by-play guy’s medium and you feel that when you show up.”

Ricky Keeler

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Ian Eagle
Courtesy: Getty Images

Ian Eagle is a busy man when it comes to play-by-play. During the NFL season, he is not only calling games on CBS with Charles Davis on television. He is also the voice of Thursday Night Football games on Westwood One Radio

By calling two games in some weeks, Eagle gets the chance to see more teams to help him later in the year if he gets a game with that team on CBS. He was a guest on the Sports Media With Richard Deitsch podcast this week and he mentioned that doing Thursday Night Football on radio allows him to look at the game differently. 

“It makes you a better broadcaster. It makes you more aware of situations, it gives you more reps. It forces you to look at the game from a different lens.”

In addition to helping him with his prep, Eagle has a soft spot for calling games on the radio.

“It’s really fun. It’s a fun thing to do. It’s a blank canvas. It is very much a play-by-play guy’s medium and you feel that when you show up.”

By doing the radio broadcast, Eagle gets the chance to work with different analysts whether it’s Hall-Of-Famer Joe Thomas or Jason and Devin McCourty. It makes Eagle have to approach the game differently to find chemistry, but the goal is to find common ground with whichever analyst he works with. 

“Joe Thomas is really smart, highly experienced, highly cerebral. It forces me to put a different hat on. Worked with the McCourty twins in Philadelphia – a whole different experience of a three-man booth and two guys that sound alike and think the game a certain way, but have a different way of doing it and they are still trying to find their way. They are so new in the business, but so natural and gifted in how they see the game.” 

At the same time, the access for the Thursday Night Football radio crew is a little different compared to what the Amazon Prime broadcast gets. However, Eagle enjoys the opportunity to work with the same radio crew consistently and form a bond with them. 

“You don’t meet with the coaches, you don’t meet the players, you don’t have the same access. You’re not necessarily treated quite the same in your support staff, getting you in the stadium, getting you out the stadium, escorting you to the booth. You don’t have the bodies on a radio crew. What you do have is a close-knit group, people you work with consistently.”

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95.7 The Game’s Bonta Hill, Joe Shasky and Matt Nahigian Address KNBR Cuts

Jordan Bondurant

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A photo of Bonta Hill
(Photo: Bonta Hill)

Bay Area sports station KNBR parted ways with several staffers this week including morning show co-host Paul McCaffrey. The departures took many in sports media by surprise, including 95.7 The Game morning host Bonta Hill.

Hill, who worked at KNBR on the Murph and Mac show, felt obligated to discuss McCaffrey’s exit on The Morning Roast on Thursday, offering his condolences.

“Whenever I worked with him on that morning show as a board op or producer, I always left with a smile on my face,” Hill said. “They made me laugh, they treated me right, they taught me the ropes. And when you have an 18-year run together, that is legendary. Legendary.”

“Morning radio, that’s what we grew up on, and he was a pioneer,” Bonta added.

Bonta Hill shared that Mac was one of his favorite people at the station, and that he did and continues to look up to him.

“I just feel bad, man. Christmas is around the corner, and people are losing their jobs,” Hill said. “You never want to see that. You never want to see that, but Paulie Mac, Murph, those guys are one of one. They are. They truly are man.”

“Murph and Mac is the combo in this market in terms of longevity, excellence, what they symbolized with that Giants run and how we gravitated towards them,” co-host Joe Shasky chipped in. “All of my sports radio love came through those guys’ love for each other. And you could feel it.”

95.7 The Game brand manager Matt Nahigian echoed the sentiments from Hill during a video commentary on X. He said despite the two stations being fierce competitors, there’s a mutual respect between leadership, talent and staff.

“I think it’s important to point out that the stations compete against each other hardcore,” Nahigian said. “We want to beat each other every month in the ratings and the whole bit. But all of us for the most part get along really well.”

“KNBR didn’t gloat and celebrate when we made changes in March, and we won’t do that either,” he added. “Onward and upward. Great run by Paulie Mac, Murph and Mac.”

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Gary Danielson: CBS Sports Isn’t Required To Use Me For Big Ten Games

Danielson told 97.1 The Ticket’s Stoney & Jansen that just because he’s under contract doesn’t mean he’ll be on Big Ten games in 2024 with CBS.

Jordan Bondurant

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A photo of Gary Danielson
(Photo: CBS Sports)

Saturday marks the end of an era for CBS. The SEC championship game between Alabama and Georgia will be the final conference game on CBS before it takes over as one of the Big Ten’s media partners next year. Longtime color commentator Gary Danielson joined Stoney and Jansen on 97.1 The Ticket on Thursday ahead of Michigan’s appearance in the Big Ten championship, and Gary said it was hard to believe the SEC adventure was coming to an end.

“I started this gig in announcing in 1990 and then started at CBS in 2006, and this is it,” Danielson said.

Gary Danielson was asked if he would be a part of the new Big Ten broadcast crew alongside Brad Nessler, and he joked that it hadn’t been set in stone just yet.

“I have a contract, I guess they don’t have to use me,” he said. “I think they have to pay me. I’ll have to check it out one more time to make sure.”

Danielson did get a taste of some Big Ten broadcasting this season, though. He was on the call for three different games featuring Big Ten teams. He called UNLV/Michigan, Ohio State/Indiana and Penn State/Iowa.

Michigan is playing Iowa in the Big Ten title game on Saturday, and so Danielson thought it was nice that even though he didn’t get a full slate of Big Ten games to broadcast, he still was able to familiarize himself with the conference’s perennial powers.

“We saw the three best teams and Iowa,” Danielson said. “So that’s very interesting.”

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Greg Papa: ‘These Are Rough Times’ After KNBR Cuts

“Murph, I’ve known forever, going back to the A’s days. These are rough times. Things change.”

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A photo of Greg Papa
(Photo: KNBR)

Late Wednesday, it was unveiled that KNBR had undergone a series of cost-cutting measures that eliminated the jobs of morning co-host Paul McCaffrey and evening host F.P. Santangelo. KNBR midday host Greg Papa reflected on the changes Thursday morning.

To open Papa and Lund, Greg Papa took the opportunity to address the elephant in the room.

“With Murph and Mac, and Pauly, I’ve been on with them every Friday since I started working with the Niners in 2019, and we hardly ever talked football,” Papa said. “It was always about other things and coming to the studio and getting to know them. Murph, I’ve known forever, going back to the A’s days. These are rough times. Things change. Look at what’s going on with the RSNs in the country. Certainly, terrestrial radio is feeling the brunt of it for a number of factors.”

John Lund agreed, calling McCaffrey “one of my favorites”.

Fill-in host Deiter Kurtenbach hosted the morning show Thursday in place of Brian Murphy. Papa joked that the fill-in host needed a better understanding of radio if he’s going to have the job full-time.

“For Deiter, if you’re going to be on in the morning, you gotta get on the clock better. We can’t start at 10:08 AM. You get a false start right away.”

It is unclear what Murphy’s role with KNBR will be going forward. The station has removed him from its website, and he has yet to comment publicly about his future. Kurtenbach said this morning he would host the morning timeslot for the remainder of the week.

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