The NBA media musical chairs keep spinning, and longtime Miami Heat forward Udonis Haslem is the latest analyst to board it.
Michael Wilbon has issues with the expanded College Football Playoff, and he even took a shot at his employer over what he claims is a money grab by all concerned, ESPN included. The “Pardon the ...
During his tenure as ESPN’s new golden boy of sports talk, Pat McAfee has provided or been central to no shortage of controversy. And a new ESPN-on-ESPN grievance might’ve just bubbled up.
Pardon the Interruption has remained one of ESPN’s most popular sports debate shows. As for why this is, Meadowlark Media’s Pablo Torre and MSNBC’s Chris Hayes believe that it was due to the show’s ...
Yet Michael Wilbon is probably the most correct here. If we compare the two bodies head to head, the NFL will always win. Bigger picture, football won. Throughout Saturday, more than 20 million ...
Unless you find yourself still treating analytics like it’s a bogeyman. ESPN’s Michael Wilbon has notoriously been anti-analytics over the years. From the sounds of it, he hasn’t wavered off ...
On Wednesday’s edition of Pardon the Interruption, Michael Wilbon and Tony Kornheiser discussed a Bloomberg article that reported that some PGA Tour players want any golfers returning from LIV ...
For Pardon the Interruption's Michael Wilbon, the size of the playoff itself is the biggest issue, and he believes it is a result of greed from those invested in the sport, including the network ...
Continuing their debate from last week about the increase in holiday programming of NFL and college football, Michael Wilbon joined The Tony Kornheiser Show on Christmas Eve and made his case for ...
But it appears that isn't the case. In 2020, during the peak of popularity of 'The Last Dance', ESPN's Michael Wilbon revealed on Rich Eisen's show that Jordan would call him to back off from ...
ESPN’s Michael Wilbon called out his own network for greed when it comes to the College Football Playoff. Now that we’re two rounds into this year’s iteration, Wilbon saw enough and said the ...