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Dianna Russini Is Breaking NFL News and Breaking Ground at The Athletic

“The writing part of this was my biggest fear headed into this and has now become the most enjoyable part of the job.”

Derek Futterman

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Dianna Russini
Courtesy: Phil Ellsworth, ESPN Images

For Dianna Russini, the thought of leaving ESPN on her own accord was outlandish and ostensibly implausible. After all, she had earned a multifaceted position focused on the National Football League that involved hosting, analysis and reporting, including newsbreaking and feature reporting. Throughout her time with the network, Russini had demonstrated versatility and advocated for herself. She never declined an assignment and was willing to do anything necessary to survive in the business, a testament to her adaptability and eagerness to serve the audience and thrive.

Russini developed meaningful relationships with her colleagues and the network itself, even providing her ESPN email as an emergency means of contact rather than an unaffiliated email address. Recognizing appreciation for her work and acceptance in the craft, she thought she would never leave, even after sweeping layoffs within The Walt Disney Company that eliminated 7,000 jobs in an effort to slash $5.5 billion in costs. Nonetheless, Russini wanted to start covering more marquee events and be on Monday Night Football, aspirations she gradually felt were becoming unattainable.

“I never felt like they wanted me to be the one,” Russini said. “It was, ‘Keep working hard; keep getting better,’ but at that point, I remember thinking, ‘How much longer is this going to take for me to get on Monday Night Football because I’ve been reporting for a long time now?,’ and I consistently had success on Sunday morning shows; on our pregame shows; [as] the Super Bowl reporter. I basically hit my ceiling in terms of what I could do in that role, and I was still going to sign with them though.”

Although she was prepared to accept an offer that included a raise, she received a last-minute call from her agent who implored her to hold off on inking the contract. Once she learned of interest from The Athletic, she met with several key executives at the company including Steven Ginsberg, the digital platform’s executive editor. The proposition, which would name her the publication’s senior NFL insider, involved her executing reporting, podcasting and video work. One minute into the conversation with Ginsberg, Russini was sold and knew that what once seemed impossible would become a reality.

“It will be a moment for me I’ll never forget where I was; I’ll never forget my family crying [and] jumping up and down,” Russini said. “It was a really cool moment because I knew I was taking a chance again – I was taking another gamble, but I was going to take a gamble on me – and I still have a lot more things I want to accomplish at The Athletic, but I already feel like I won.”

Throughout her journey in sports media, Russini has had to rise above established patterns and tendencies, shattering glass ceilings in the process. Today, she is one of the only women consistently breaking NFL news, an entity that continues to experience a boon in popularity evinced in sales, broadcast ratings and digital engagement. Even though Russini recently completed her first full NFL season on the job, she already knows it is the best job she has ever had and is content in the role.

The Athletic is an incredible organization that just wants to get it right and tell amazing stories,” Russini said. “My colleagues are already friends of mine – the collaboration – it is the most team-friendly environment I’ve ever been part of. Everyone approaches it [with], ‘How can we be better? How can we make each other better?’”

Whereas she used to travel frequently throughout the season to work at games, Russini remained home for more time and worked remotely. As a result, she was able to consume more NFL action and have a broader scope on the league as a whole. During training camp though, Russini was on the road measuring her comfort level and conversing with players and personnel. Part of her role involves corresponding with reporters and developing rapport with sources, many of whom call her unsolicited. Before her arrival, The Athletic had never had anyone work in the job, and she has sought to be an asset to the reporting team.

“There’s conversations constantly between me and all the reporters on the ground covering the teams,” Russini said. “There’s no ego [and] there’s no bad attitudes. Everyone just wants to advance the stories and get more information.”

The resilience Russini demonstrated as a college athlete at George Mason University has been evident throughout her journalism career, defying the odds and providing timely, objective coverage across various domains. The premise behind her pursuit of a career came out of the September 11 terrorist attacks on the United States. When Russini was in class on that autumn day of her freshman year, the captain of the soccer team showed up at the door and signaled for her to exit the classroom. She then urged her to call her parents, stating she could not explain what exactly was going on.

“My mom answered our house line and she was screaming,” Russini said. “My parents had been married for 40 years and they’ve been together since they were 9 years old. She just was screaming, ‘He won’t leave me; he would never leave me like this,’ and I said, ‘What are you talking about?’ My brother grabbed the phone – my brother works with my dad – and he said, ‘I didn’t go to work today with dad. He’s in Tower One and the World Trade Center’s been attacked.’”

At the instruction of her brother, Russini returned to her dorm after her father had been missing for several hours. Later in the day, she received a call from her father informing her that he was okay and to stay in a safe place before quickly hanging up. Russini’s parents drove overnight to pick her up from school to return home, and they continued to watch news coverage together as the world stood distressed and apoplectic.

“Outside of the emotions of it all, I remember feeling in the moment that the importance of the reporters on the ground giving me information became the most valuable thing to us,” Russini said, “and what a privilege that would be; what an honor it would be to be the messenger at a time when we were all scared and unaware of what was going to happen in our lives, and that was the moment I realized I wanted to be a local news reporter.”

In an effort to challenge herself, Russini channeled her efforts into news rather than sports media and joined News 12 as a general assignment and crime reporter. Shortly thereafter, she became the youngest reporter hired by NBC 4 New York and tried to harness and develop her journalistic abilities in a major media market. Yet Russini was eventually told that the profession probably was not for her and was let go by the network, placing her career ambitions at a crossroads.

At the recommendation of sports anchor Bruce Beck, Russini left New York and began working as a sports reporter at CSN Northwest. The cross-country move was somewhat daunting, especially since she had not been west of Pittsburgh, but she was aware that it was a chance for her to gain repetitions and hone her craft.

“It was a really crucial part of my journey because I was so lost in my life,” Russini said. “My career was really confusing, but that was the city that really gave me a chance.”

Following her stint in Seattle, Russini returned home and out of work, prompting her to revisit previous contacts from years earlier. Replying to an email from an executive at NBC Connecticut in Hartford – an outlet that rejected her five years earlier for a lack of experience – she queried if now would be a better time. Russini was hired on the spot while visiting the studios the next day, acquiescing to the condition that she would do news reporting three days a week and anchor sports on the weekends. 

During these news shifts though, there were many breaking news stories that led Russini to be in front of the camera and on real-time coverage. In her role, she was the source of information and updates for communities amid anxiety and affliction. One of these events was the mass shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School, a national news story for which Russini was among the first reporters on the scene. Witnessing the situation firsthand placed her obligation to the viewing public in perspective and continues to remind her of what is genuinely important.

Four months later, the Boston Marathon bombings sent Russini to Massachusetts for a week to report on the scene. When professional sports resumed in the city, she covered a hockey game between the Boston Bruins and Buffalo Sabres, reminding her of why she loved working in sports. The news director of NBC Washington then saw Russini while taking his daughter on a college visit to Harvard University, proceeding her to land an interview and eventually be hired as a sports anchor. When she was covering the locale’s NFL team, she was upfront about her lack of knowledge and learned the game from connections and other personnel.

“I also remembered from my days in news that while covering a game and analyzing it is important, getting news can really separate you,” Russini said, “so I figured out that if I could take that newsbreaking element that I used as a news reporter and apply it in the sports world, it can have a lot of value, and that’s really what changed my career.”

As Russini developed sources and gained insider scoops, she began to be noticed by various media outlets including ESPN. The network ended up hiring her to be a SportsCenter anchor, but it was a move she was initially hesitant to make because of the fleeting nature of her previous stops. When she met with Jim Vance, the lead anchor at NBC Washington, he spoke of how seldom these opportunities come around and implored her to accept the role.

“‘Don’t not take this job because you don’t have the confidence yet. You’ll figure it out like you always do,’” Russini remembers Vance saying, “and I’m really glad that he gave me that guidance [and] that counsel because in the end he was right. I figured it out – you do; you figure it out – so I’m really glad that I took that leap.”

Transitioning from local news to anchoring SportsCenter required Russini to take part in significant research and diligent preparation before every show. When she first started at the network, she was oftentimes working with partners on ESPNEWS, providing her chances to make mistakes and augment her skillset.

One of the producers eventually chose to make her a solo anchor, an outcome she protested thinking that it was beyond her abilities. Russini ultimately learned that removing contingencies and crutches ultimately enhanced her on-camera repertoire. Despite her shift to anchor the 7 p.m. SportsCenter starting at 2 p.m., she was in the office at 9 a.m. every morning to ensure she was ready.

After accepting a challenge to depart from SportsCenter and cover the NFL, Russini found herself more comfortable on the air and expanding a grid of sources. In her new role at The Athletic, she frequently cold-calls people in an effort to build new contacts and continue reporting. Making sure she maintains preexisting relationships is critical in her job so she can explicate and accurately report the full story.

Russini triangulates her sourcing to strive for accuracy rather than being the first person to break a story. Over the last several months, she has observed that newsbreakers often beat teams, players or agencies to sharing news by a few minutes. The transactional news is more vaporous to her than exploring larger stories that could require weeks and/or months of work to compile a deft, comprehensive report.

“Something I didn’t realize when I wasn’t with The Athletic, and now that I am, is how much players and coaches love reading it and enjoy the work that The Athletic does, and it’s shared with me all the time,” Russini said. “It’s blown me away actually – the support that we get around the NFL – and it’s respect, and to me that is the most important thing you can do and the most important thing you can receive.”

Last December, Russini worked with colleagues Zack Rosenblatt and Jeff Howe to publish a report divulging that New York Jets quarterback Zach Wilson was reluctant to step back into the starting quarterback role for the team after being benched. Wilson had been benched two weeks earlier and the Jets did not plan to play him for the rest of the season.

After injuries and underperformance by the backups though, the team decided to place Wilson back in the role. The next day, Jets quarterback Aaron Rodgers, who was supposed to start throughout the year but tore his Achilles tendon on the first offensive drive of the season, criticized the report in an interview on The Pat McAfee Show.

“Having Aaron Rodgers go on ESPN to discredit me or to take shots at me – I don’t necessarily believe that he doesn’t like me or has issues with me,” Russini said. “In fact, every time Aaron Rodgers has gone on the air to talk about a story I’ve done, to me I think it’s actually his sign of respect for what I’m doing because he knows I know, and I know that.”

Interacting with sources merits a level of trust and adherence to standards predicated on credibility and journalistic integrity. While the dissemination of accurate reporting can have negative effects and direct vitriol towards the messenger, Russini knows that there are plenty of readers searching for answers.

After regularly writing for broadcast television over the last two decades, Russini gradually adapted her style to print journalism, something she believes to be the most rewarding part of her new role. In the week after joining The Athletic, Russini called ESPN NFL reporter Jeff Darlington to seek advice on moving into writing on a full-time basis. In response, he told her that she is a reporter rather than a writer and that it would come to her naturally. Darlington ended up being correct, and Russini has had the confidence to navigate the written word with insightful and cogent storytelling.

“It’s been awesome, and we’ve been able to put together some amazing stories already,” Russini said. “The writing part of this was my biggest fear headed into this and has now become the most enjoyable part of the job.”

Since being purchased by The New York Times Company in early 2022, The Athletic has amplified its subscriber base and altered its content strategy. The publication previously concentrated on delivering coverage of all sports teams and leagues around the country, but it is now investing in longer-form, deeper reporting.

The vertical also acts as the source of sports coverage for The New York Times itself, which recently eliminated its longstanding, independent sports section and reassigned reporters to different departments. According to the company’s latest quarterly earnings report, year-over-year losses at The Athletic narrowed to $4.4 million while it concurrently generated $38.5 million in revenue.

Russini is optimistic about the future of the publication and excited to continue her role into the offseason, which includes launching her own podcast. The work, she affirmed, is focused on dominating sports journalism, and she regards her contemporaries as luminaries with the right ideas. While the company laid off nearly 4% of its newsroom in organizational efforts last summer, Russini sees the dedication to growth and progress in the field.

“I don’t have any concerns about where The Athletic is going to be in five years,” Russini said. “If anything, I believe that The Athletic is going to be triple the size that it is now based on the success we’re going to have.”

In signing with The Athletic rather than another television network, Russini still has her television rights and makes occasional appearances on FOX Sports 1. Ahead of next season, she will look to add some additional responsibilities in the space to continue telling stories and information she receives. Through it all, she wants to emit inspiration and convey her dedication to sports media to aspiring professionals and hopes to validate the decision by The Athletic and various other outlets that took a chance on her.

“There aren’t any women breaking news right now, so that is a space I’d like to see more women do,” Russini said. “It’s just me with the guys, and I would love more women to do it at a high level and consistently because I think it’s going to just continue to make the league better and show other women and men that anyone can do it. The days of it just being a man’s game – that’s over.”

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Pregame Shows Have to Stop Ridiculous Pretend Pep Talks

“Audiences want access, but they want real access. Adults playing make believe is the peak of cringe TV.”

Demetri Ravanos

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Lou Holtz, Stephen A. Smith and Jimmy Johnson give pregame pep talks on pregame shows.

ABC caught a lot of deserved heat for its pregame show on Sunday. What was supposed to set the stage for a huge Game 7 between the Knicks and Pacers in the NBA Playoffs was actually something out of Stephen A. Smith’s fantasy. The show was more about the Knicks than it was anything else going on in basketball, but it was more about him than it was about the Knicks.

The network showed Smith’s arrival to the arena. To me, that was the peak example of just how bad the show was. It wasn’t the worst moment though. Sure, showing an analyst’s walk-in alongside each team’s biggest star was a new low in self-indulgence, but it didn’t match the pep talk.

Stephen A. Smith is not the first analyst to give one of the teams playing in the featured game his version of the pep talk. ESPN used to make this a regular feature of College Football Final when Lou Holtz was on the show. We saw it earlier this year on FOX NFL Sunday when Jimmy Johnson delivered an over-the-top speech to the Dallas Cowboys via the television during a halftime report.

I wish I knew whose idea this was. Who was the first producer to tell a former coach or player that they needed to give the audience an idea of what they would be doing in the locker room right now? I’d like someone to point that person out so I could slap the hell out of them.

Audiences want access, but they want real access. Adults playing make believe is the peak of cringe TV. I would rather watch literally anything else.

Even before the ManningCast, networks had learned that the access the audience wants is explanation, not bluster. Look, you won’t find a bigger critic of Urban Meyer as a coach than me, but I will be one of the first to tell you that he breaks down plays and decision making as well as anyone on TV. I understand the chess match between the coaches better after watching Meyer with a telestrator. I trust Nick Saban will bring that same quality, maybe even at a higher level, to College GameDay this season.

The men and women hired as analysts are smart. Regardless of the sport, if you’re hired to be part of a pregame show, chances are you have played the game. You have been in the locker room in these moments. You don’t have to convince the audience. They know it’s true.

Sports media is in a really interesting place. I have written before that I struggle to see how ESPN can justify a raise or a long-term extension to Stephen A. Smith in a landscape where the audience tells us over and over again that the only thing that really makes a difference to them is live games.

Star power matters because networks aren’t giving out the kinds of contracts they once did. Maybe that is why the former players and coaches don’t push back when asked to make fools of themselves in this way. They can tell us it’s about their personal brand, but if you’re doing something the audience isn’t responding to just because it puts you in the spotlight, are you building anything?

Pretend pep talks do not work. Does your respect for someone grow when you watch them get worked up over a situation they have imagined in their head? Probably not.

I have seen some studio shows take a moment and ask the former coach at the desk how they would respond to it. That makes a lot more sense. 

“Coach, the Panthers are headed to the locker room down seven and it can be pinned directly to Bryce Young throwing a pick six earlier this quarter. His rhythm has been off since then. What are you telling the young quarterback right now to get him ready for the second half?”

Analysts are supposed to be experts. The audience is supposed to feel like the analyst’s opinions have more weight than their own. Answers to direct questions give the audience insight.

My problem with so many studio shows is there is a lot of noise and not much being said. Everyone wants me to think the fellas are having a great time, so the laughter is over the top and every highlight is accompanied by a series of catchphrases that have caught on with no one. I’m not saying that I want studio shows to be completely devoid of fun. I just don’t want my time wasted.

That’s all pretend pep talks are. They’re just noise that waste my time. I don’t know a better way to describe what I saw Sunday on ABC.

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John Murphy Wanted to Go Out on His Terms as the Voice of the Buffalo Bills

“I guess I never appreciated the fact that the fans were paying that much attention.”

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Graphic of longtime Bills announcer John Murphy
Courtesy: Buffalo Bills

It’s always hard to say goodbye to a job that you love, especially when it’s under unfortunate circumstances. The Buffalo Bills organization and their many fans throughout Western New York were saddened to find out a couple of weeks ago that longtime Bills radio announcer John Murphy would be stepping away from the play-by-play position after 35 years in the radio booth.  Murphy spent 16 years as a color analyst and 19 years as the play-by-play announcer, but he continues to recover from a stroke that he suffered on January 1st 2023.

For the veteran broadcaster, the reality set in that it was time to step aside.

“I’m disappointed,” said the 67-year-old Murphy during a phone conversation last week with Barrett Sports Media.  “I’m nearing the end anyway, but you’d like to go out on your own terms and finish the way you want to finish and I’m not able to do that.  It’s disappointing but by the same token, there’s no way I can do the games talking the way I currently talk so I think it makes sense.”

Not long after the announcement, there were people, including former players Stevie Johnson, Alex Van Pelt and Ryan Fitzpatrick, who reached out to “Murph” to share their feelings about him.  Murphy also heard from so many fans and that was overwhelming to him to find out just how much he meant to “Bills Mafia.”

“It meant everything really,” said Murphy who was inducted into the Buffalo Broadcasters Hall of Fame in 2019.  “I guess I never appreciated the fact that the fans were paying that much attention.  You do this for so long and your kind of alone with the four or five who are on the air and honestly you don’t think anybody is listening. It’s pretty important, I guess, to people and that makes it fun, and it makes it gratifying for me.”

From a personal standpoint, Murphy was extremely important to me when I was a student at Buffalo State College (now Buffalo State University) from 1985 to 1989.  Nobody in my family had ever been in broadcasting but it was my dream to do it and every young broadcaster needs a mentor.  I’m proud to say that Murphy was one of them during my college years always willing to talk to me when I would see him at games that I covered for WBNY, my college radio station.

Words cannot describe what this man meant to me and my career.

We shared a lot of good times back then, especially when he hosted a sports talk show on WBEN and I would be a frequent phone caller “Peter from Porter Hall at Buff State”.  I can’t tell you how many times I would call in to the trivia contest and the prize always included tickets to a local sporting event and a bucket of chicken wings from “Rooties”, a popular restaurant in the Buffalo area back then.

To this day, it has been an honor and a privilege to call him a friend and to be able to stay in touch.

For Bills fans, it was an honor and a privilege to have a true professional like Murphy in the broadcast booth.  As the color analyst, he worked with legendary Bills play-by-play voice Van Miller from 1984 to 1989 and then again from 1994 to 2003.

“Van was great,” said Murphy.  “I learned so much about not getting in the way of the play-by-play announcer and letting him have his time and enough time to set up the play and to finish the play.  It was great to see him do that, and I learned a lot.  I learned almost everything from Van as far as the right way to do things.  He will never be matched as far as I’m concerned with the play-by-play job he did here.”

Following Miller’s retirement, Murphy slid over to assume the duties as the play-by-play voice in 2004.  It’s never easy to replace a legend, but that’s what Murphy did, and he was well prepared for the task at hand.

“I had huge shoes to fill,” said Murphy.  “I feel like, 19 years later, I’m still working on filling them.  I don’t think I ever matched what he did and the way he painted the words.  It was a great education and a great way to learn how to do it the right way.”

Miller was the Bills’ play-by-play voice through the glory years of going to four straight Super Bowls following the 1990 through 1993 seasons.  After Murphy took over as the “Voice of the Bills,” the great moments were few and far between.  In fact, the Bills suffered through a 17-year absence from postseason play, an era of futility that ended in 2016.

After a long wait, Murphy was finally the voice of a Bills team that was making Buffalo sports fans talking proud again and giving them a reason to shout.

“We had a rough go,” said Murphy.  “I was the voice of the playoff drought.  To break through that threshold and to get in the playoffs each of the last five years now has made all the difference in the world.  It’s a different game when the team is a contender and the Bills have been contenders for five years now so that’s been good and good to see.”

A native of Lancaster, New York and a graduate of Syracuse University, Murphy was able to spend his final seasons with the team calling some incredible moments, many of them that brought Bills fans out of their seats at Highmark Stadium but also a few that ended their seasons before being able to get back to a Super Bowl.

There are a couple of moments that stand out.

“There was Taron Johnson’s interception against Baltimore (AFC divisional playoff 2021) in the playoffs which he ran back 101 yards for a touchdown,” recalled Murphy.  “That was an incredible play.” 

That was a great moment but there was also a sad moment that he will always remember.

“The game that sickened me the most was the loss at Kansas City that went back and forth with Mahomes and Josh Allen,” said Murphy of the classic 2022 AFC Divisional Playoff game won by the Chiefs in overtime 42-36. 

“With 13 seconds to go, Josh had the lead, and they gave up the lead and lost to Kansas City.  That was a bitter loss, but it was really a fun game to work.”

As Murphy steps away from the booth, Chris Brown is expected to be named the new radio voice of the Bills.  In Murphy’s absence, Brown finished up the 2022 season and did play-by-play for the entire 2023 season.

Murphy, who had to replace a legend in Van Miller, believes that Brown is the right man to fill his shoes.

“I’m happy for him,” said Murphy.  “Chris has a great understanding of the way things work in the league and the way players are acquired and signed and he does his homework too.  I think he’s great and will do a great job.”

While Murphy has stepped away from the play-by-play duties, he still hopes to be a part of the Bills’ gameday broadcasts.  If his speech improves by September, the plan is for Murphy to provide one or two-minute features on the pre-game show.

“I hope so,” said Murphy.  “That remains to be seen but I’m hoping that’s the way it goes.”

And so is everyone in Western New York that has been accustomed to hearing Murphy on the broadcasts for so many years.  Aside from the continued excitement about the Bills being a perennial playoff team, Murphy shares in the excitement of the organization and the fans about the new stadium that is currently under construction.

Without an agreement for a new home in the Buffalo area, there was a good chance that the Bills would have been forced to relocate to another market.

“You drive by there and you can sense that this is real and this is happening and the Bills are here to stay,” said Murphy.  “It’s very exciting and very exciting to see that the Bills are implanted in Western New York for years to come now.”

I mean no disrespect to so many other radio play-by-play announcers in the NFL, but I have to admit something. Whether it was my time at SirusXM NFL Radio or my current run at Infinity Sports Network (formerly CBS Sports Radio), I always looked forward to working on an NFL Sunday, Thursday or Monday and using John Murphy’s play-by-play calls on my updates.  As long as the Bills won, I always used his highlights.  I’ll miss those calls (but not the ones when the Bills beat the Jets) and so will Bills fans. 

Here’s hoping for his health to continue to get better and that he could still be a part of the Bills broadcasts in some small way going forward.

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Seller to Seller: Scott Speropoulos, Audacy Memphis

“I was that guy when it’s fourth and long and no time left, give me the ball.”

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Graphic for a Seller to Seller feature with Scott Speropoulos

Sometimes when you meet people, you just know immediately they’re someone you could hang out with, watch a game and have a beer (or two). Scott Speropoulos, the General Sales Manager for Audacy’s four stations in Memphis is one of those. He is high energy, a great talker and comes complete with that great southern charm and accent.

Scott knows a thing or two about media sales, too, something he has been involved with in some capacity for most of his 25-plus year career.  He started in radio as a remote coordinator before going to work for a startup television station. Along the way, he sold print as well, managed in radio, managed in print, was a Director of Sales in television and then the pandemic hit. That’s when Scott decided, “It’s time to come home, I’m back here again.”

At the end of 2020, Speropoulos returned to the group of stations he had been with from 2005-2007, which now includes 92.9 ESPN the dominant sports radio station in the market.

When asked what made him a great seller when he was getting started, he said, “I just got out there and hustled. The Director of Sales from another station called me and said, ‘Everywhere my people go, they are finding your business card, so you are going to come work for us.’ Just getting out there and hustling and getting my name built and my reputation and I tried to meet with as many people as possible.”

Speropoulos talked about what led him to pursue management opportunities after he had been selling television for six years. He said selling the television station started to feel a little bit like “Groundhog Day.” He said he looked to his younger days as an athlete and thought about how well he generally had performed under pressure.

“I was that guy when it’s fourth and long and no time left, give me the ball,” he said. “The TV station had people who had been there for a long, long time and they were not planning on retiring any time soon. And it just so happened the radio stations I had started with needed a National Sales Manager and had me come over and sell for a year and then I got the NSM role…it was just that personal challenge of taking the next step in my career.”

Clearly Speropoulos has seen many changes in our business since his sales career began back in 1997. “Back when I started, it was you buy a spot on TV and you sprayed and prayed,” he said. “Now, we’ve got so many digital capabilities where I can take more of that sniper approach. Tell me exactly who you are looking for and I can bring you those people…I can get those people without you having to waste advertising dollars on people that don’t make sense for you.”

He talks a lot about the culture of the Audacy Memphis office and says the group of air talent he works with do a great job working with the sales team and their clients.  “I am lucky because my guys here, the culture we have here is everyone is pulling on the same rope together, we all want to help each other.”

Speropoulos recently grew his sales team by one and said he found a lot of people applying who seemed scared about commission sales and “wanted everything guaranteed.” He said being a big fan of former Alabama head coach Nick Saban, it is all about discipline with him when it comes to who he is looking for.

“I can teach you sales, but I can’t teach you self-discipline. It’s someone who makes those decisions every day and knows that it’s five o’clock but goes ahead and makes that extra call. And someone who is willing to constantly learn because the world of digital changes every day. There is going to be something new that comes out tomorrow and they’ve got to be able to adapt. We can’t have anyone who is just set in their ways and says they cannot sell digital.

“It’s being disciplined. It’s making those right decisions. You have the autonomy to go to lunch whenever you are ready. Are you going to take that hour and a half lunch, or do you take a lunch where you could make an impact somewhere? Am I going to make cold calls today or am I going to push that off until Friday?

“It’s the person who makes the strong decisions and the tough decisions that hold themselves accountable. I can’t babysit you. I can’t be as tough on you as you are going to be on yourself so that’s what I am looking for, someone who is going to hold themselves accountable, someone who is going to make the tough decisions. Someone who is striving to do better every day.”

92.9 ESPN made a change in afternoon drive a little more than a year ago when Gary Parrish left for a new position and former Memphis Tigers offensive lineman Gabe Kuhn took over. Many times, changes or noise in the industry can rattle a sales team. Speropoulos said he always tells his team to focus on what they can control.

“Focus on the strategy that we have put in place for that specific client and see it all the way through,” he said. “If we stay true to what we put in place that we know is going to work, who cares if the DJ leaves tomorrow. Our goal is to help them grow their business and bring them quality consumers. If we stay true to what we believe in, all that other stuff is noise.”

Scott believes today the key is for sellers to work with clients to drill down on what their ideal target is before creating a campaign and then pick the best products that fit how to reach that person. He also said sellers have to remain on top of the changes and new products that can help their clients.

“There’s going to be new technology that we haven’t even fathomed yet that we are going to be able to utilize. So, it’s staying on top of our toes, staying educated and embracing the change as it comes.”

When asked what he does to keep it fun and rewarding for his sales team he said, “In my group everyone is a little different. Some like trophies, some would rather just go out and have a beer.

“People don’t care how much you know until they know how much you care. I care about every single person here and I make sure they’re happy and I put their needs ahead of mine. We have a great team. They care about how we achieve as a team.”

They have achieved quite a bit since flipping to sports in 2009 and seem headed for continued success with Scott Speropoulos heading up the sales team. He is all about the team and nobody, as they say in the south, getting ‘too big for his britches.’

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