Michaels To Stay With “MNF” After Signing Eight-Year Deal
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Michaels Inks Eight-Year
“MNF” Deal With ESPN
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ESPN yesterday named Al Michaels as the play-by-play announcer for “MNF” when
the show moves to the network in ’06. Michaels, the voice of “MNF” on ABC since
’86, will be joined in the booth by analyst Joe Theismann. Suzy Kolber, currently
the sideline reporter for ESPN’s Sunday night NFL games, and Michele Tafoya, who
handles sideline duties for ABC, will continue as sidelines reporters with ESPN’s
new team. ESPN Exec VP/Programming & Production Mark Shapiro said that in addition
to John Madden and Troy Aikman, he made “a pretty long list” of potential candidates
for the “MNF” analyst role, including ESPN’s Tony Kornheiser. Jay Rothman and
Chip Dean, both of whom currently work on ESPN’s Sunday night NFL broadcasts,
will continue in their roles as producer and director, respectively, for “MNF”
(THE DAILY).
AL ABOUT MONEY? In N.Y., Andrew Marchand cites sources as saying that Michaels’
deal is for eight years and worth around $32M, “plus the use of a private jet
for game travel.” Michaels will continue to earn $2M “for his limited schedule
as the voice of the NBA on ABC next year.” The ESPN deal is about $1M more per
season than NBC was offering. NBC Sports President Ken Schanzer said that NBC
“could have had Michaels for ‘significantly less than the deal that was offered’
by ESPN, but Michaels still wanted too much money” (N.Y. POST, 7/27). Also
in N.Y., Richard Sandomir reports NBC offered Michaels $2.9M a year. Meanwhile,
“there was confusion yesterday about when Michael’s deal was completed.” While
NBC Universal Sports & Olympics Chair Dick Ebersol indicated that he had “pulled
his offer to Michaels on Monday night,” Shapiro said that “the deal had been made
last week” (N.Y. TIMES, 7/27). Ebersol: “I can’t speak for Al, but the
only issue was money. He clearly understood ... this was qualitatively the best
package. But we have, at NBC, certain numbers that we won’t go beyond for certain
roles.” However Michaels said, “The only issue was not money. ... The ESPN deal
was a better deal, and it should have been because I’ve been at [the company]
for 29 years” (THE DAILY). Shapiro: “To say Al Michaels made the decision
based on perks or money he couldn’t get elsewhere is spin from somebody finishing
in second place” (USA TODAY, 7/27).
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Shapiro Says Patrick And Maguire Will Stay With
ESPN
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FLIGHT OF FANCY: In response to reports that Michaels demanded the use
of a private plane to travel to games as part of a deal, Ebersol said NBC is “not
in the business of providing private air travel.” Ebersol noted NBC News’ Tom
Brokaw, Matt Lauer and Katie Couric do not have similar clauses in their contracts.
Michaels denied making the requests, saying, “To make this seem like some sort
of diva play for a private plane is ridiculous” (THE DAILY).
CABLE READY: Michaels had previously stated his hesitancy about moving
from network TV to cable, but he said yesterday, “I was pretty much lobbying for
the status quo, because I was hoping that ABC would continue [with ‘MNF’]. ...
I didn’t understand why the league would be thinking in another direction, but
the league answered that ... when it became apparent they could get about $200[M]
more a year by going the other way” (THE DAILY).
LEFT OUT: Shapiro said that current ESPN NFL announcers Mike Patrick and
Paul Maguire, who are not part of the “MNF” broadcast team, will stay with the
net in some capacity. Maguire will probably have a role on the “MNF” pregame show.
Shapiro said Patrick, who also calls college games for the net, “has the Dick
Vitale clause. He tells us when he wants to quit working at ESPN. It’s a lifetime
deal” (THE DAILY).
CORPORATE AMERICA: In L.A., Mike Penner writes, “Michaels has been the
one constant, credible and defining voice to a sometimes meandering American institution
since 1986.” Penner adds, “The pairing of Michaels and Theismann has the sound
and feel of a corporate merger of convenience rather than design. ... [ESPN] needed
to go outside to bring in some star power, but [refused] to concede it did not
have the in-house staff capable of stepping up to the NFL big time” (L.A. TIMES,
7/27).
COSTAS STAYING PUT: NBC formally announced yesterday Bob Costas’ extension
with the network through 2012 and his role as studio host of the net’s Sunday
night NFL coverage. Costas will continue his roles as host of NBC’s coverage of
the Olympics, Kentucky Derby and Preakness Stakes, and will also work the U.S.
Open and The Players’ Championship golf tournaments. He will not be part of NBC’s
regular season or early playoff round coverage of the NHL, though Ebersol said
Costas may work during the Stanley Cup Finals. Meanwhile, with Michaels out of
the picture, Ebersol would not say the focus will now move to Tom Hammond for
the Sunday night play-by-play position, but he did say, “Tom’s at the top for
just about any list that I could put together.” Hammond would not continue to
call Notre Dame football for the net if he moved to the NFL (THE DAILY).
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