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Samantha Ponder (née Steele; [1] born December 11, 1985) is an American sportscaster who most recently hosted Sunday NFL Countdown on ESPN. [2] Prior to hosting Sunday NFL Countdown, Ponder worked as a reporter and host for ESPN college football and as a basketball sideline reporter. [3] Ponder replaced Erin Andrews on College GameDay ...
Sunday NFL Countdown moved back to Bristol during the 2023 season after ESPN started scaling back on production at Seaport. Monday Night Countdown followed suit for select weeks including doubleheader weeks. On August 20, 2024, ESPN named Mike Greenberg, host of the network's weekday morning show, Get Up, as the new host of Sunday NFL Countdown.
Todd McShay: ESPN College Football and NFL Draft scouting; Barry Melrose (1995-2008, 2009–2023): NHL on ESPN; Mark Messier (2021-present): NHL on ESPN; A. J. Mleczko (2021-present): NHL on ESPN; Dominic Moore (2021-present): NHL on ESPN; Chris Mortensen: Sunday NFL Countdown and Monday Night Countdown; David Norrie: College Football on ABC ...
The 6-foot, 295-pound Smith became an unlikely pick to show up on the "You Got Mossed" segment of ESPN's Sunday NFL Countdown show. ... Sept. 27, 2024. The segment, featuring Pro Football Hall of ...
For its 40th iteration, ESPN's "Sunday NFL Countdown" show has its official new look. Amid the news last week that former host Sam Ponder had been fired, ESPN announced Tuesday that Mike Greenberg ...
BRISTOL, Conn. (AP) — Mike Greenberg will be the host of ESPN's “Sunday NFL Countdown” when the show begins its 40th season on Sept. 8. Greenberg becomes the fourth host in the show's history. Bob Ley hosted the first year in 1985, when it was called “NFL GameDay,” followed by Chris Berman (1986-2016) and Samantha Ponder (2017-23).
"Sunday NFL Countdown" will open its 40th season on Sept. 8 and conclude Super Bowl Sunday in New Orleans on Feb. 9. The now three-hour pregame show, originally named "NFL GameDay," debuted in 1985.
Ryen Russillo: 2007–2017 (The Baseball Show, ESPN Radio College GameDay and The Scott Van Pelt Show) Sean Salisbury: 2003–2008 (The Huddle) Mike Schopp: 2002–2006 (ESPN Radio College GameDay) Jon Sciambi: 2010–2020 (MLB on ESPN Radio) John Seibel: 2000–2009 (GameNight, The NFL on ESPN Radio and The Baseball Show)