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NFL REDZONE

Posted on: September 10, 2024 Written by: natharaky Categorized in: All
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NFL REDZONE










NFL RedZone

NFL REDZONE. Catch every touchdown, live every Sunday with NFL RedZone.

Scott Hanson kicks off your Sunday with 7 straight hours of live football,
featuring up to 8 games at once within the octobox. NFL RedZone brings you every
touchdown from every game, every Sunday afternoon during the regular season and
acts as the perfect Fantasy Football companion. Watch from anywhere across
NFL.com, NFL Mobile, and other connected devices.

NFL RedZone
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to navigationJump to search
Not to be confused with the Red Zone Channel on DirecTV’s NFL Sunday Ticket.
NFL RedZone From NFL Network
NFL Network Redzone.png
Country United States
Headquarters Inglewood, California, U.S.
Programming
Language(s) English
Picture format 1080i (HDTV)
(HD feed downgraded to letterboxed 480i for SDTV sets)
Ownership
Owner National Football League
Sister channels NFL Network
History
Launched September 13, 2009; 13 years ago
Links
Website www.nfl.com/redzone
NFL RedZone (stylized as NFL RedZone from NFL Network) is an American sports
television channel owned and operated by NFL Network since 2009. As a “special”
game-day exclusive, it broadcasts on Sundays during the NFL regular season from
1:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m. Eastern (10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Pacific), or when the
last afternoon window game ends. RedZone provides “whip around” simulcast
coverage of all Sunday afternoon games airing in-progress on CBS and Fox.

RedZone is based out of the NFL Network studios and is hosted by Scott
Hanson,[1] and airs commercial-free. The channel prides itself on showing “every
touchdown from every game,” and is closely linked to Fantasy Football,[1]
reporting superlatives and tracking various statistical accomplishments
throughout the afternoon. RedZone monitors coverage of the traditional Sunday
1:00 p.m. “early” games and 4:05/4:25 p.m. “late” games.

RedZone is offered by numerous cable providers, Dish Network, and Verizon
Wireless smartphones, but specifically is not available on DirecTV, which offers
its own version (Red Zone Channel hosted by Andrew Siciliano) as part of NFL
Sunday Ticket.

RedZone is also broadcast live internationally in the United Kingdom on the Sky
Sports Mix television channel, and in Canada and Italy on DAZN, every Sunday
evening and running through the full seven hours. It is a direct simulcast of
the American feed, with no commercial breaks, live coverage of both the early
and late games and Hanson hosting.

ESPN Goal Line, a channel which debuted one year later, broadcast college
football with a similar format and style until the end of the 2019 season. The
name “RedZone” derives from the term red zone, which is the part of the football
field between the 20-yard line and the goal line.

Contents
1 Format
1.1 Whip around coverage
1.2 Commercial-free format
1.3 Touchdown montage and sign-off
1.4 Off-air periods
1.5 Preseason
1.6 Availability
1.7 Criticism
2 Similar channels
2.1 DirecTV Red Zone Channel
2.2 ESPN Goal Line
2.3 SiriusXM’s The Sunday Drive
2.4 Learfield IMG’s College Football Blitz
3 See also
4 References
5 External links
Format
On game day, the RedZone channel signs-on at 12:55 p.m., US Eastern time. The
countdown clock counts down the minutes and seconds until the start of the game
coverage. As of December 6, 2020, the channel has featured 200 weeks of coverage
since its debut.[2][3]

Whip around coverage
At 1:00 p.m. (Eastern) the RedZone program begins, and immediately dives into
live look-ins across the league. Host Scott Hanson gives a brief introduction of
the day, highlighting key developing stories, as teams are typically already
lining up for opening kickoff. When the first kickoff takes place, Hanson will
say “Seven hours of commercial-free football… starts now!” Coverage of the
opening kickoffs and a cursory look at early drives that are being established
are the initial focus. Coverage is normally shown in full-screen, with one
particular game as the primary focus for the moment. The coverage is a direct
simulcast of the CBS or Fox broadcast feed and commentary, with only occasional
and usually brief voice-over comments by Hanson as needed. Coverage sometimes
switches to split-screen, with two, three, four (“quad-box”[1]), five
(“Penta-box”), or as many as eight (“Octo-box”[1]) game feeds being shown
simultaneously. Producers in the studio monitor all game feeds in-progress, and
decide which game to feature at any given moment. NFL television rules are
exempted for RedZone, and live look-ins of games that are subject to blackout
are still allowed to be aired in all markets.

Whenever a team enters the red zone, the coverage will switch to a full-screen
live look-in of that game’s television broadcast. It will attempt to cover a
potential scoring result (touchdown or field goal). Meanwhile, the other games
continue to be monitored, in case the need arises to switch to another feed at
short notice. Field goal attempts from outside the red zone are sometimes shown,
either live or in replay, if they pose significance to the outcome of the
respective game.

As the games enter halftime, the coverage shifts over to games still finishing
up the second quarter, even if there are no teams in the red zone. Some
noncompetitive games that would otherwise not be looked at may take the
attention for a few minutes, in order to fill the broadcast with as much live
football coverage as possible. As soon as better games start returning for the
third quarter, second half kickoffs typically take a priority.

If there are no teams in the red zone at a given moment, the focus may shift to
a team on a strong offensive drive, or an otherwise important game of the day.
Despite the channel’s moniker, a team does not have to be inside the red zone
for the focus and coverage to shift to that game. During the latter portion of
the season, extra sidebar attention may be given to teams fighting for playoff
berths, and the respective status thereof. The “whip around” coverage also is
used to show quick replays of major plays such as turnovers, deep pass
completions, very long runs from scrimmage, kickoff/punt return touchdowns, and
other potentially interesting or important key plays. The “Game Rewind” feature
is sometimes used to replay a significant play that resulted in a particular
team entering the red zone.

Hanson rarely takes any kind of rest break during RedZone’s seven hours on the
air,[4] and since the early years of the channel he has purposefully planned out
his eating and drinking schedule during the regular season to avoid any need for
a restroom break, having boasted on Twitter on December 10, 2017 (that year’s
Week 14) about his first restroom break in four years of NFL RedZone
coverage.[5]

It is not unusual for RedZone to switch between two or more games in quick
succession, even between individual plays. Despite an effort made by producers
to air all touchdowns live, some scoring plays are actually aired after a very
brief time shift – ranging from as much as 30 to 60 seconds – sometimes because
another scoring play is unfolding elsewhere. Time shifting can also occur if the
scoring play happened unexpectedly, and/or initiated from outside the red zone.
In those cases, the coverage is aired plausibly live with no mention that the
coverage is slightly behind real time (though Hanson often tries to introduce
the switch with some kind of segue, such as ‘while we were watching that
(play)…’ to note it isn’t live video). As the 1 p.m. “early” games begin to
conclude, RedZone seamlessly leads into coverage of the 4:05/4:25 p.m. “late”
games, though on afternoons where all early game action has ended, extended
statistical rundowns and check-ins on team press conferences may occur to fill
the time before those late games start. When the “early” games are in the fourth
quarter, attention begins to focus on one-possession games (games within 8
points); Hanson will additionally introduce the fourth quarter coverage as “The
Witching Hour; where wins become losses, and losses become wins”.[6][7]
Likewise, early games that go into overtime are usually prioritized, but never
at the expense of missing touchdowns in other games that just started.

As the 4 p.m. “late” games begin to arrive at their conclusions, coverage will
likewise narrow down to the remaining games still ongoing. At which time there
is only one game left being played, coverage will switch to full-screen and see
out its conclusion, irrespective of its competitiveness. When each game is
concluded, a final score alert will flash on the bottom corner of the screen to
inform viewers. This is especially important for games that have not had a live
look-in for many minutes.

Periodically throughout the afternoon, producers keep track of and update
viewers on the status of fantasy football statistics, and/or other statistical
superlatives.[1] With the legalization of sports betting in several states
beginning in 2020, it also points out the over–under and certain betting
statistics provided by league partner Caesars Sportsbook. The channel’s
priority, however, is to show every touchdown scored in every game throughout
the afternoon. During the entire day, RedZone features a ticker at the bottom of
the screen, updating scores and stats throughout the league. The ticker is
situated in such a way that it is superimposed over the respective tickers of
CBS and FOX.

On occasion, technical difficulties could prevent RedZone from showing certain
touchdowns live. During Week 1 in the 2019 season, a technical issue with the
CBS broadcast prevented a live look at a touchdown in the Kansas City
Chiefs-Jacksonville Jaguars game; the touchdown was later shown using video from
the scoreboard at TIAA Bank Field.[8][9] Similar issues during Week 2 in 2020
prevented two touchdowns in the Buffalo Bills-Miami Dolphins game from being
broadcast live; both touchdowns were later aired on replay (with one aired from
the Dolphins’ Instagram feed).[10][11][12]

Commercial-free format
RedZone operates as a commercial-free service; as such, whenever a game taking
primary focus goes to a broadcaster-designated commercial break or other
stoppage (such as timeout, instant replay challenge or an injury timeout), the
feed will immediately switch to the next most-interesting game in-progress at
the moment. Despite the network’s commercial-free commitment, commercials are
not completely avoided as sometimes the network coverage may take a break faster
than expected, causing the first second or two of a commercial to air, before
RedZone quickly cuts to another game, which usually includes Hanson jokingly
playing off the brush with the accompanying commercial with some kind of snark.
Additionally, broadcast network promotions of their programming (most notably
CBS and Fox promoting their Sunday night primetime lineups) will be shown as a
natural part of the coverage.

If all games being held at a given moment are on a commercial break or in
halftime, coverage will revert to the studio for brief commentary, replays, or
statistical analysis by Hanson. In the “late” timeslot (when there are fewer
games to choose from), highlight packages of selected “early” games may be shown
during down times.

Touchdown montage and sign-off
The network’s broadcast day ends when the final Sunday afternoon game concludes,
or at 8:00 p.m. (Eastern). At the conclusion of the coverage, an edited montage
of every touchdown scored throughout the afternoon is aired. Until 2018, due to
contractual obligations, RedZone was required to sign off no later than 8:00
p.m., even if a late afternoon game(s) was still in progress; this was due to
avoid a conflict with NBC’s Sunday night game broadcast. This was rectified in
the 2019 season, and any game that ends after 8:00 p.m. will continue airing on
RedZone until its conclusion. If the RedZone signs-off with inadequate time for
the touchdown montage (which can vary from 5–10 minutes in duration), it will be
posted online instead. At the onset, the total number of touchdowns for the
afternoon by type (offensive, defensive, and special teams) is listed on a
graphic, with a running tally for the entire season also shown.

In some cases, when games are running close to the 8:00 p.m. deadline, the
touchdown montage has been shown in a split-screen format. The montage is shown
in a prominent square with audio, while the game still being played is shown in
a lesser square in the corner of the screen without audio. This is done
particularly when the game still being played is a nationally-televised game – a
situation in which most viewers in most markets across the country (per NFL
television rules) could simply switch to CBS or FOX to watch the game to its
conclusion.[13]

Off-air periods
After the broadcast day ends (≈ 8:00 p.m.) RedZone remains dark until the
following Sunday. During the week, as well as during playoffs and off-season, a
generic title card advertisement is shown, accompanied by music from NFL Films.
However, cable providers may overlay their own tie-in title card. Providers are
disallowed from using the channel space for other purposes during its off-time.

While the RedZone channel is only utilized for Sunday 1:00 p.m. and 4:00 p.m.
(Eastern) games, in the unique instance in which Christmas Day falls on a
Sunday, and the full slate of Week 16 afternoon games is switched to Saturday,
the RedZone channel is activated for that Saturday afternoon schedule.

RedZone is not on-air during Thursday night, Sunday night, Monday night, and any
stand-alone Saturday night games, not for NFL International Series games which
are scheduled in an early Sunday morning timeslot. It also does not cover
Thanksgiving games or postseason games.

During the offseason breaks since the 2016 season, NFL Network has re-ran the
previous season’s RedZone presentations. During seventeen selected Sunday
afternoons in the spring and early summer, all seventeen weeks of the regular
season as seen on RedZone are re-aired, with editing for length and content and
ad breaks inserted.

The 2019 re-run of the season was compressed in April 2020 to air throughout the
month on consecutive days on a thrice-daily loop on the RedZone channel space,
due to the coronavirus pandemic leaving the network wanting of content not
involving live studio shows for the safety of their staff, as their facilities
in California and the New York/New Jersey metropolitan area were closed due to
stay-at-home orders and to allow NFL Network’s traditional Draft run-up shows to
air. Another rerun of seventeen consecutive days was done during what is usually
the pre-season in late August, which was cancelled out in full, leaving the
channel without its usual preview night in the last week of the
pre-season.[14][15]

Preseason
Through 2013, during select nights of the preseason, special “whip around”
coverage aired on the primary NFL Network. It followed the same style as RedZone
and utilized the same production team and host.

Starting in 2014, preseason “whip around” coverage moved to the RedZone channel
itself. On four selected nights in August RedZone aired as part of a free
preview of the service for all providers. Week 1 (Friday), weeks 2–3 (Saturday),
and week 4 (Thursday) of the preseason featured the familiar “whip around”
coverage. The broadcast utilized national and local team coverage feeds, as most
preseason games are carried through regional sports networks or ‘state/team
networks’ made up of local broadcast stations. Coverage started at 7:00 p.m. ET

In 2015, RedZone aired a free preview during the preseason for five selected
nights, and during Week 1 of the regular season. In 2016, RedZone aired a free
preview on four selected nights during the preseason starting August 11 and
during Week 1 of the regular season. In 2017, RedZone aired only once during
preseason.

Availability
The RedZone Channel is available on most American pay television providers
carrying the NFL Network,[16][17][18][19][20][21] and is presented in both
standard and high definition; availability of the channel depends on the service
tier. Some carriers might carry NFL Network available on their main digital
tier, while RedZone might be relegated to a digital sports tier at an additional
cost. Access to the network is available through the Watch NFL Network mobile
app via a subscriber’s TV Everywhere credentials if offered by their provider,
or through a provider’s own viewing app. Before the 2018 season, the app was one
of the few exceptions where some form of access to NFL games is offered beyond
Verizon Wireless subscribers due to that provider’s mobile rights exclusivity
(That season, Verizon-owned Yahoo Sports opened its live NFL streams to users
from other mobile phone providers).[22]

Including the 18 Sundays of the NFL regular season, and as many as five special
broadcasts during the preseason, RedZone broadcasts a total of 18–22 days out of
the year.

In the United Kingdom, NFL RedZone is broadcast in full on Sky Sports Mix.[23]
Since 2014, NFL RedZone aired in Australia on ESPN Australia until 2019.[24][25]

In Canada, starting in 2020, NFL RedZone is included for subscribers of TSN
through TSN.ca and the TSN Go mobile app.[26] A French-language version is also
available on RDS.ca and RDS Direct.[27][28]

ESPN Latin America began to air NFL RedZone in 2016.[29] It features two pairs
of Spanish-language announcers, one for the early games and another for the late
games.

In Spain, starting in 2021, NFL RedZone is broadcast in full on Deportes por
Movistar Plus+.[30]

Criticism
RedZone has generally received favorable to positive reviews,[31][32] and its
product has been referred to as a form of new media.[32] One source of criticism
stems from RedZone potentially drawing viewers away from the traditional
broadcasts on CBS and Fox, and likewise devaluing the commercial values for
advertisers.[33] This was noticed on-air during 2021’s Week 3, when Fox’s two
late games had their FoxBox score graphic on the lower part of the screen
adjusted lower than usual, so that the RedZone ticker obstructed the lower half
of the graphic, obscuring the regular and play clocks, along with down distance
and quarter indicators. Sports media critics thought this was meant to frustrate
viewers to tune to their local Fox station instead in order to view the
affiliate’s chosen game unencumbered, during a week when Fox had 100% national
coverage for the two late window games. This forced RedZone to overlay its own
scorebox and time graphic usually used in ‘around the league’ segments, rather
than compromising the overall picture quality with a screen scaling above the
ticker.[34] The late Fox window games returned the FoxBox to the regular
position in Week 4.

Other minor complaints deal with viewers not seeing equal coverage of all games
across the league, the inability to see outstanding defensive team performances
(outside of defensive scores), and emphasis on individual players instead of
teams.[31] Games in the “early” time slot that become blowouts are sometimes
completely ignored (except for very brief replays of touchdowns to maintain the
promise of showing “every touchdown from every game”, or merely to fill time
when other games are in commercial) Likewise a scoreless, or very low scoring
game, will not garner much attention either until the end of the game if still
tied. Furthermore, many fans still prefer to watch complete games.[32] Other
complaints include middling games without playoff or draft positioning
implications being nearly pushed off the channel in the last weeks of the
season, with only cursory glances at highlights, fantasy stats, and scores for
those match-ups.[35]

Similar channels
DirecTV Red Zone Channel
The NFL RedZone channel should not be confused with the nearly identical Red
Zone Channel, a service included as part of DirecTV’s out-of-market sports
package NFL Sunday Ticket, and hosted by Andrew Siciliano.[1][36] The two red
zone channels operate independently of each other but have similar names,
identical formats, cover the same games, and will often show the same game live
look-ins at the same time.

ESPN Goal Line
ESPN Goal Line aired live look-ins of college football games in a similar format
and style as NFL RedZone. Hosted by Matt Schick. Established in 2010, the
channel ceased operations in 2020.

SiriusXM’s The Sunday Drive
Apart from the RedZone channel, a similar service is aired parallel on Sirius XM
NFL Radio, hosted by “Judge” Steve Torre and Bill Lekas. (Zach Gelb fills in
when Torre is unavailable.)[37] During the Sunday afternoon games, The Sunday
Drive monitors all games in progress across the league. Any time a team enters
the red zone, they will cut-in to the team’s live local radio broadcast to cover
potential scoring action. Until 2014, this audio was also carried on NFL Network
during Sunday afternoon games, overlaid with textual scores and stats to avert
any form of competition with the league’s broadcast partners. In the past it
featured more of a “carousel” type of format where reporters at each game would
check in via telephone with the basic score, scoring plays and statistics, as
most sports radio networks and stations that do not carry game play-by-play do.

Learfield IMG’s College Football Blitz
Similar to The Sunday Drive above, Learfield IMG provides a whip-around radio
service for college football that airs on TuneIn and Sirius XM’s ESPNU Radio
service, for schools that utilize Learfield IMG to produce and distribute their
broadcasts. Starting in 2015, College Football Blitz airs on Saturdays during
college football season from noon to midnight Eastern time, and like The Sunday
Drive, cuts into local team broadcasts for possible scoring action.[38][39] The
show is hosted by Stephen Hartzell, with Phil Brame and Adam Witten sometimes
taking over for evening hours.[39][40][41]

See also
List of personalities on NFL Network
NFL Sunday Ticket
References
Brown, Rembert (November 15, 2012). “A Trip Inside the RedZone”. Grantland.
Retrieved September 3, 2014.
Blezow, Dave (16 December 2017). “Behind the scenes of channel that’s changing
how you watch NFL Sundays”. New York Post. Retrieved 18 February 2022.
Kaplan, Emily (November 30, 2016). “An NFL Sunday with the Red Zone Channel”.
Sports Illustrated. Retrieved 18 February 2022.
Sullivan, Becky (14 December 2014). “7 Chaotic Hours Behind The Scenes At NFL
RedZone”. NPR. Retrieved 12 March 2018.
Joseph, Andrew (10 December 2017). “RedZone host takes first bathroom break in 4
years”. USA Today. Retrieved 12 March 2018.
BroBible (2020-10-28). “Week 10’s NFL RedZone Slate Might Break Your Brain”.
BroBible. Retrieved 2020-11-15.
Staff, BarDown (2020-11-04). “NFL RedZone’s Scott Hanson easily shared one of
the best tweets during election night – Article”. BARDOWN. Retrieved 2020-11-15.
Reyes, Lorenzo. “CBS drops Chiefs-Jaguars broadcast in fourth quarter due to
technical difficulties”. USA TODAY. Retrieved 2019-09-15.
“Every TD from Every Game | Week 1”. NFL.com. Retrieved 2019-09-15.
Reyes, Lorenzo. “Dolphins-Bills CBS television broadcast briefly dropped during
Hard Rock Stadium power outage”. USA TODAY. Retrieved 2020-09-24.
National Football League (2020-09-21). “Every Touchdown from Week 2 | NFL 2020
Highlights”. YouTube. Timecode 12:45. Retrieved 2020-09-23.
“Miami Dolphins’s Instagram profile post: “UNC!! @devanteparker1 📺: CBS””.
Instagram. Archived from the original on 2021-12-23. Retrieved 2020-09-24.
The split-screen format for the Touchdown Montage was used on September 21,
2014; at the time in which the Denver at Seattle game went into overtime. The
network instructed viewers to switch to CBS if they wanted to see the game out
to its conclusion, though it concluded just a minute before off-air time and was
taken to full-screen to conclude the day’s schedule.
Cadeaux, Ethan (3 April 2020). “NFL plans to re-air the entire 2019 season on
the RedZone channel”. NBC Sports Washington. Retrieved 5 April 2020.
Alper, Josh (6 April 2020). “Report: ESPN, NFL Network could team up for draft
coverage”. NBCSports.com. Retrieved 7 April 2020.
Dish Joins Comcast In NFL RedZone – Both Distributors Will Kick Off Scoring
Ser2009
Updated: Verizon FiOS Fires Up NFL RedZone Deal – Telco Positions Service As
Stand-Alone Network Available On A Full-Season Basis Multichannel News September
10, 2009
AT&T Adds NFL RedZone To Lineup – Telco Will Position Scoring Service On Its HD
Premium Tier Multichannel News September 11, 2009
Blue Ridge Enters NFL RedZone – Operator Adds ‘Scoring Channel To HD Plus
Package Multichannel News September 10, 2009
NFL RedZone on DISH Network – Brings You Every NFL Touchdown Archived 2014-09-21
at the Wayback Machine American DISH Blog July 30, 2010
Cox Re-Ups With NFL Network, Adds RedZone Multichannel News August 24, 2010
Jesdanun, Adam (2018-09-05). “Fans rejoice: Subscription-free streaming for NFL
games”. sports.yahoo.com. Retrieved 2020-09-24. Last season [2017], Verizon
customers got subscription-free access on phones to whatever CBS or Fox was
broadcasting regionally on Sunday afternoons, plus all the nationally televised
games on NBC, ESPN and NFL Network. Now, any wireless customer can get them on
both phones and tablets.
“Press Release Distribution”.
Pierik, Jon (18 September 2014). “Channels kick for NFL touchdown on Australian
TV”. The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 22 September 2014.
“AUSTRALIAN NFL TV GUIDE & GAME PASS FAQ”. US Sports Down Under. 31 August 2015.
Archived from the original on 21 October 2015. Retrieved 1 September 2015.
“NFL RedZone now free to watch for TSN subscribers in Canada | Offside”.
dailyhive.com.
“NFL RedZone presented in French for first time on RDS Direct”. Cartt.ca.
2020-09-23. Retrieved 2020-10-04.
“NFL REDZONE présentée en français sur RDS DIRECT”. Bell Media (in French).
Retrieved 2020-10-04.
Nueva temporada de la NFL en ESPN – ESPN Media Zone Latinoamérica, 6 September
2016
“Arranca una nueva temporada NFL en Movistar+”. comunicacion.movistarplus.es (in
Spanish).
“Red Meat for N.F.L. Fans: Football Channel Sees All”. The New York Times.
September 20, 2011. Retrieved September 3, 2014.
Best, Neil (December 12, 2014). “Touchdown frenzy enhanced by NFL RedZone
channel”. Newsday. Retrieved September 3, 2014.
Van Riper, Tom (September 9, 2013). “Is ‘Red Zone’ Hurting NFL’s Network
Ratings?”. Forbes. Retrieved September 3, 2014.
Buchholz, Andrew (26 September 2021). “Fox moved its scorebug down between early
and late NFL games, prompting NFL RedZone to add its own scorebug”. Awful
Announcing. Retrieved 28 September 2021.
Chase, Chris (29 December 2013). “9 reasons Redskins-Giants was the worst NFL
game of 2013”. USA Today. Retrieved 10 April 2019.
Strauss, Chris (October 24, 2013). “Follow the amazing: A behind-the-curtain
look at the Red Zone Channel”. USA Today. Retrieved September 3, 2014.
Gelb, Zach (2019-11-02). “Tomorrow I will be on @SiriusXMNFL from 12 PM-8 PM
Eastern coming off the bench for @JudgeTorre on The Sunday Drive. We will cover
everything you need to know for week 9, live play by play and postgame
interviews. @BillLekas and yours truly for 8 hours on your Sunday! Tune in!”.
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ESPNU Radio”. All Access. 2019-08-28. Retrieved 2020-07-26.
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