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Scott Hanson: Hosting NFL Red Zone is Like Fighting in a Boxing Match

“When I’ve got 6-8 games coming down to the wire and it’s snap, snap, snap. I look at it almost like boxing. Stick and move. Don’t stand in there the whole time.”

Ricky Keeler

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A photo of Scott Hanson
(Photo: NFL)

Scott Hanson has been the host of NFL Red Zone for the last 15 seasons. Over the course of that time, the show has tried to get better on a yearly basis and Hanson is trying to provide the audience the best viewing experience possible through entertainment and preparation.

Scott Hanson was a guest on The Ryen Russillo Podcast last week and he said that when he hosts the show, he is broadcasting to all 32 NFL fanbases compared to when most broadcasters only have to worry about two, so the slightest mistake can happen and fall under a little wider microscope.

“I prepare my tail off for this. I don’t want to ever get caught with my pants down. If Joe Buck is calling a game, he’s got two teams, two rosters, and two fanbases at-large. When I’m doing my show, I’ve got 32 fanbases that are watching. If I make the slightest mistake, it feels like to me it’s magnified. I want to overprepare. As a broadcaster, when you prepare so much, you want to demonstrate to everyone I’m ready for this.”

Even with all the preparation Scott Hanson does, the “witching hour” where wins become losses and losses become wins sometimes doesn’t allow for that information and prep to be shown. At the same time, Hanson looks at it like a boxer where he has to move around the screen and times when he has to let the announcer of a certain game take over.

“The problem with that is with the transitions that we do especially during the witching hour when I’ve got 6-8 games coming down to the wire and it’s snap, snap, snap. I look at it almost like boxing. Stick and move. Don’t stand in there the whole time. If you feel like that tackle just happened in the Packers game and the next snap is happening in the Dolphins game, if you can get your comment in between that and that, fine. But, you better be out of there by the time Tua Tagovailoa lifts his leg to bring Tyreek in motion to take that snap.

“Shut up and let the announcer who is there do the job with the crowd microphone available and everything. I’d like to think I do a great job about it.”

As Scott Hanson and the staff approach every season, they look to make any small change that is going to make the show better and he said that he will sometimes say the word backchannel to determine that a certain game should only be shown if it’s a touchdown because the margin is lopsided.

“Our whole staff tries to get better every single show and every single season. Getting better for us is not reinventing how we do things. I equate it to a pro golfer. Let’s say we are in the Top 20 in the world, but we want to be ranked number 1 in the world. The difference between 20 and 1 is maybe one stroke every four rounds. So, we look for little things here and there.”

“Yes, the show is called NFL Red Zone, but if I got a 35-7 game with two teams sub .500 and that game is inside the 20 but I got a team that just crossed midfield in a 20-17 game with playoff contenders, there is no choice to me.”

“We will say backchannel when my mic is not hot. The producers and I will let’s say the Cowboys game is touchdown-only meaning yeah if they get to the 19-yard line, that’s great, but that game is already decided. We are going touchdown only meaning we are not going to show 1st and 10 from the 19. We will show you the touchdown immediately if it happens. If it’s a field goal, fine.”  

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Kirk Herbstreit: Social Media Still Critical of Al Michaels Because of Last Year’s Comments

“He hears the noise. He has more of an ‘F you’ attitude about it than ‘I am going to show them’.”

Ricky Keeler

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Al Michaels
Courtesy: Tom Hauck, Getty Images

The narrative going around social media is that legendary broadcaster Al Michaels doesn’t have too much excitement when he calls a Thursday Night Football game on Amazon Prime with Kirk Herbstreit. However, in Herbstreit’s mind, that is nowhere near the truth.  

Herbstreit was a guest on the Pardon My Take podcast this week and he said that he thinks a lot of people are holding two games from last year against Michaels. One was the Chargers-Jaguars Wild Card playoff game and the other was the Colts-Broncos matchup that was a 12-9 overtime game.

“I think everyone is holding the Jacksonville playoff game last year against him. I didn’t work with him in that game and it got a lot of criticism after that game.”

“Social media is using that as a narrative and they are just using that and the one time in Indy/Denver he talked about how what a shitty game it was we were doing. It is almost like they are using those two examples to say ‘Al Michaels hates Thursday night, Al Michaels has lost it.'”

One comparison he gave for both he and Michaels is that while Thursday night games have strong atmospheres, they don’t compare to when Michaels used to call Sunday Night Football or Monday Night Football or when Herbstreit does a big Saturday Night game for college football.

“We’ve had a great schedule this year. We’ve had some great games. If you listen to me calling Florida State/Florida or to me this weekend, I’m standing the whole game, Chris Fowler is standing the whole game. There’s energy that is unparalleled in these college atmospheres. You get caught up in the moment you are performing in.”

“I think Al when he would do Sunday Night or Monday Night Football, those games were massive. You are doing big games and your voice projects based on the setting that you are in. These Thursday night games are good atmospheres, but I don’t think they are at the level of a Sunday night game or when I’m doing a Saturday night game. So, I think your voice always matches with what you are doing.”

Herbstreit has been with Michaels for the last two seasons and there is one thing that he is impressed by about him and he feels that both of them are similar in terms of how much excitement they bring with the situation warrants it.

“I’ve noticed that Al Michaels is pretty much like me. When the game warrants excitement, he brings excitement…I think Al hears it, he disagrees with it. He’s really enjoying our crew and what we are doing. To be at his age and I marvel at what he does. Producers talking in his ear, he’s always recognizing and ID’ing typically the right guy every time. At his age, I’m blown away by it.”

“He hears the noise. He has more of an ‘F you’ attitude about it than ‘I am going to show them’. He thinks it’s a bunch of bullshit, I think it’s a bunch of bullshit. I think it’s a narrative that social media is running with.” 

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Clay Travis: CBS Executives Should Be Fired For Allowing SEC to Leave for ESPN

“CBS tripping all over themselves and ending their relationship with the SEC is so dumb that every single person who was responsible for that decision should be fired on the spot.”

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OutKick host Clay Travis has harsh words for CBS executives who he says let the SEC leave for ESPN in lieu of a new deal with the Big Ten.

During OutKick The Show, Clay Travis broached the topic of the near future’s cosmic shift of college football media rights and made some stark comments about CBS and the execs that “ended their relationship with the SEC.”

“This is what CBS did, the single dumbest decision in the history of my life in sports media,” Travis said. “CBS tripping all over themselves and ending their relationship with the SEC is so dumb that every single person who was responsible for that decision should be fired on the spot.

“If I ran CBS, I would be like, ‘Everybody who screwed up the SEC game of the week and chose not to extend it at what would have been a substantial discount to what they ended up paying for a far worse package from the Big Ten? All of them should be fired.’”

Starting in 2024, the SEC will no longer air on CBS and will find its new home on ESPN and ABC. In its place will be a new-look Big Ten, sporting four top programs that fled the sinking Pac-12: USC, UCLA, Oregon, and Washington. Despite the excitement surrounding the Big Ten, Travis still feels like the move is a massive downgrade, comparing the SEC game of the week to a first-overall pick versus a third-round pick in the form of the Big Ten games.

“CBS Sports had the greatest television package in college sports history, in that they had the number one draft pick of every SEC game every week,” Travis said. “They went from the best game in college football many weeks — the SEC premier pick — to leaving the SEC and getting like third-round draft picks from the Big Ten.”

Travis credits ESPN for fostering their relationship with the SEC over the past two decades, which originally culminated in the formation of the SEC Network, a channel dedicated to all things Southeastern Conference. Disney and ESPN lay in wait while CBS had the big games, then took the next step with the SEC while CBS had its eyes elsewhere.

Now, the two sports titans are going steady at the proverbial sports media dance while CBS seemingly grabbed the first option on the other side of the floor. All CBS had to do, Clay Travis says, was pay a little more for then-new SEC entrants Texas A&M and Missouri back in 2012, and all would still be good.

“All the SEC had to do…was bump their payment up a little bit…and they could’ve extended their relationship,” Clay Travis said. “Yet when the SEC expanded and added Missouri and Texas A&M, ESPN said ‘Here is our checkbook, SEC. We want to be in business with you for as long as we can. We understand what you’re doing and we want to be in business with you. And that was the impetus behind the launching of the SEC Network.’”’ 

However, Texas and Oklahoma are leaving the Big 12 two years early and will join the SEC in 2024, which means more money for CBS that they may have not been willing to pay, even for some of the most recognizable programs in the country.

Despite the doom and gloom surrounding the deal, the new Big Ten will be no slouch. While CBS will lose perennial college football powerhouses like Alabama and Georgia, it gains USC and UCLA, Oregon and Washington from the Pac-12. This is on top of their existing teams like Michigan, Ohio State, Penn State, Nebraska, and Iowa. The only regular-season college football game to crack the top 100 broadcasts of 2022 was last year’s edition of “The Game” between Michigan and Ohio State.

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Darren Rovell Leaving Action Network

Rovell will begin covering sports business on a full-time basis in a new role.

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Darren Rovell
Courtesy: Stephen McCarthy, Sportsfile via Getty Images

Darren Rovell has announced that he will be leaving Action Network at the end of the week to take on a new role where he will cover sports business on a full-time basis again.

Rovell joined Action Network five years ago shortly after the U.S. Supreme Court deemed the Professional and Amateur Sports Protection Act to be unconstitutional, granting states the ability to determine whether or not to legalize sports betting.

A former member of ESPN, Rovell affirmed that he “took a leap of faith” in leaving the entity and joining the company, which was sold to Better Collective for $240 million in 2021.

“We have built a best-in-class product and sold the company amidst the sports betting wave,” Rovell said in a statement posted on X. “I have also been blessed to make lifelong friendships with some of my colleagues.”

Within his remarks, Rovell acknowledged that there is rapid transition within the sports media business, rendering coverage of the industry even more indispensable for fans. Moreover, he expressed how he misses “the dollars and cents reporting” that compelled him to pursue a career in the business 23 years ago.

Darren Rovell previously worked at CNBC where he wrote business reports and anchored several documentaries on its air, remaining at the outlet for parts of seven years.

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