It's never too early to look ahead to next season's College Football Playoff despite the Ohio State Buckeyes capturing the ...
Ahead of the conference title stage, ESPN's Football Power Index (FPI) updated its Super Bowl projections. The FPI system calculates strength of schedule, win probability and overall statistics ...
Stephen Lew-Imagn Images ESPN and Rich Clark, the director of the CFP, worked overtime to arrange a new date and time for the Sugar Bowl after an unexpected terrorist attack in New Orleans the ...
ESPN’s president of content Burke Magnus called the network’s decision not to air a pregame moment of silence and the national anthem at the Sugar Bowl in New Orleans on Jan. 2 an “enormous ...
ESPN Vice President Burke Magnus addressed the backlash against his company for failing to broadcast the national anthem ahead of the Sugar Bowl on Jan. 2, one day ...
ESPN chief Burke Magnus has admitted the network made 'an enormous mistake' not showing the national anthem before the Sugar Bowl in New Orleans. But Magnus blamed 'human error' after neither ...
ESPN caught some heat after failing to broadcast the playing of the national anthem before the Sugar Bowl College Football Playoff game. The game was played in New Orleans one day after a deadly ...
ESPN admits it made a mistake by not showing the national anthem being played at the Sugar Bowl after the New Orleans terrorist attack. / Stephen Lew-Imagn Images ESPN caught some heat after ...
During the rescheduled Sugar Bowl on Jan. 2 following the terrorist attack in New Orleans on New Year’s Day, ESPN faced harsh criticism for not broadcasting the pregame national anthem performed ...
The Sugar Bowl has donated $500,000 to the Greater New Orleans Foundation in response to the New Year’s Day terrorist act on Bourbon Street, Sugar Bowl committee officials announced Thursday.
Former ESPNer Sage Steele believed it was a “blatant decision” by the network to skip the national anthem during the Sugar Bowl broadcast ... that was airing on ESPN,” she said.
Former ESPN broadcaster Sage Steele said the network deserved to be crushed for failing to show the national anthem on its main channel ahead of the Sugar Bowl in New Orleans after the terrorist ...