One of the major criticisms around recent NBA Finals broadcasts has been how ESPN has failed to present the games as a championship-level event. It's taken way too long, but ESPN is going to take a ...
If anyone had worries that the “Inside the NBA” move to ESPN would change the show at all, they can put that to bed. Ernie Johnson, Charles Barkley, Kenny Smith and Shaquille O’Neal returned to the ...
The NBA’s beloved studio crew is still on TV—it’s just shifting gears. ESPN will be licensed Inside the NBA from TNT in a groundbreaking agreement, and fans will be able to see Shaquille O’Neal, ...
ESPN president of content Burke Magnus wants to assure all fans of “Inside The NBA” that his company is not going to mess around with the iconic show. When the “Inside The NBA” crew comes to ESPN this ...
It’s taken a long time, but we finally now know when we will see Inside the NBA on ESPN. The iconic basketball studio show will make its debut on ESPN this year as part of a unique licensing ...
After a year of wondering what the future holds for Inside the NBA and the beloved cast that makes up the best studio show in sports, we learned that this will not be the final year of its existence, ...
“Inside the NBA” will live on next season on ESPN. / JR Radcliffe / Milwaukee Journal Sentinel 1. The iconic Inside the NBA studio show was saved from possibly ending after this season when ESPN and ...
The studio program will serve as the pregame, halftime and postgame show for highth-profile NBA events on ESPN and ABC. Official release ESPN today unveiled its robust Inside the NBA schedule for the ...
ESPN unveils a revamped "NBA Countdown" team, including Brian Windhorst and Coach Michael Malone. Malika Andrews continues as host, with Shams Charania providing news and league updates. ESPN expands ...
Veteran analyst Tim Legler joins Mike Breen, Richard Jefferson and Lisa Salters to form new lead broadcast team. Official release Veteran analyst Tim Legler will join ESPN’s lead broadcast team this ...
It turns out that ESPN's insistence on shoving its television personalities down its audience's throat isn't limited to the grating Stephen A. Smith. Even worse, in tandem, it seems the NBA is all too ...