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HAS ESPN CONSCIOUSLY DECIDED TO SPAR MORE OFTEN WITH FSN?

          The "rivalry" between Fox Sports Net (FSN) and ESPN
     "may well take its place" among the list of sports'
     "greatest natural rivalries," according to Scott Hettrick of
     the HOLLYWOOD REPORTER, who wrote that for the past three
     years, FSN has "been trying to bait ESPN into a battle of
     bravado by trash-talking ESPN in the media," by "stealing
     high-profile" talent, such as Keith Olbermann and Chris
     Myers, and "literally rubbing the nose -- and head -- of
     Olbermann in ESPN's face."  ESPN has "played the role of the
     sage veteran sports star refusing to be drawn into a war of
     words with the hotshot rookie upstart.  But in recent
     months, ESPN has been more inclined to go toe-to-toe with
     some vitriol of its own."  Hettrick: "Interestingly, now
     that ESPN has accepted the challenge of publicly blasting
     the opponent, Fox has suddenly chosen to lay low for the
     time being."  Fox Sports Senior VP/Media Relations Vince
     Wladika: "We're downplaying it and they are up tempo-ing it
     a bit.  We're just going about our own business and building
     on what we've created."  But one ESPN source said: "We
     decided it was time to fight back on a selective basis." 
     ESPN Exec Editor John Walsh says that all of FSN's marketing
     spending "has still not brought Fox an audience that is
     anywhere comparable to ESPN's."  Walsh: "We know that
     someone will attract some part of the audience when they
     spend lots of money, but Fox has proved that they can't buy
     their way into a sports fan's heart."  Walsh adds, "In head-
     to-head news shows, we're getting five times their
     audience."  Olbermann "takes issue" with comparisons between
     the three-year-old FSN and the 20-year-old ESPN and feels
     that it will take "at least three to five years to be
     competitive."  Olbermann, on the verbal sparring between the
     two: "We won't gain points by pointing out what kind of
     morons work in the other building.  We need to be a little
     bit more elegant than ESPN" (HOLLYWOOD REPORTER, 10/15).  

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