| Football Night in America | |
|---|---|
![]() Former logo used from 2008–2021 | |
| Also known as | Football Night in America on NBC |
| Genre | Pre-game show |
| Presented by | Maria Taylor Jac Collinsworth Ahmed Fareed Tony Dungy Rodney Harrison Chris Simms Jason Garrett Devin McCourty Mike Florio Matthew Berry Steve Kornacki |
| Country of origin | United States |
| Original language | English |
| No. of seasons | 20 |
| No. of episodes | 305 |
| Production | |
| Production locations | Studio 8G,Comcast Building,New York City,New York (2006–2012) Studio 8H, Comcast Building, New York City, New York (2013) NBC Sports Headquarters,Stamford, Connecticut (2014–present) Various NFL Stadiums (2006–present) |
| Camera setup | Multi-camera |
| Running time | 80 minutes |
| Production companies | National Football League NBC Sports |
| Original release | |
| Network | NBC Peacock |
| Release | September 10, 2006 (2006-09-10) – present |
| Related | |
| NFL on NBC NBC Sunday Night Football | |
Football Night in America (FNIA), branded for sponsorship purposes asFootball Night in America served byApplebee's, is an Americanpre-game show that is broadcast onNBC, preceding its broadcasts ofSunday night andpostseasonNational Football League (NFL) games. The program debuted on September 10,2006, when NBC inaugurated its Sundayprime time game package. The 80-minute program airs live at 7:00 p.m.Eastern Time, and is broadcast from Studio 1 at NBC Sports Headquarters inStamford, Connecticut. Prior to 2012,Football Night in America originally broadcast from theGE Building inNew York City, first out of Studio 8G from 2006 to 2012 and in 2013, from Studio 8H, whereSaturday Night Live is also taped.
The program's title closely resemblesCBC Television's long-runningHockey Night in Canada franchise. In addition, NBC – along withABC andMajor League Baseball in a joint effort called "The Baseball Network" – had previously aired baseball games as the similarly titledBaseball Night in America from1994 to1995, a branding Fox has used for its Saturday evening games since 2012.
During the2006 preseason, theFootball Night team appeared at halftime from an exterior set at the site of that night's game, as the set at the GE Building was still being prepared.
The format forFootball Night originally had the program begin with a video package, in which a football seemingly flies throughout the country. Several landmarks were featured in the introduction, including theGateway Arch, theGolden Gate Bridge and theEmpire State Building. After a welcome, the program featured a rundown of the day's scores, before a first visit from game announcersAl Michaels andJohn Madden.
By the end of the first half of the 2006 season, the simulated landmark flyover sequence was removed, and the reading of the game scores was replaced by around table discussion segment called "The Week (number of NFL week) Buzz", during which the scores appeared at the bottom of the screen. Michaels and Madden were now shown only once during the broadcast, in the later segment, "Drive to Kickoff". Just before the first highlights piece, a graphical rundown banner for the current and succeeding highlight segments (similar to that seen onFSN Final Score) was added on-screen. Originally, the second segment featured several field reports from the day's games, additional analysis, and inside information about the NFL fromPeter King.
The field report segment was eventually eliminated, while field reports on the program were reduced, supposedly due to cutbacks atNBC Universal. The second segment began featuring aninterview conducted earlier in the week, usually byBob Costas.
In the third segment, the studio team moved to ascreening room, in which highlights of the daytime games were reviewed.Football Night in America is the only pre-game show that the NFL allows to carry long-form highlights (running up to three minutes, twice as long as the usual allowance). Because of Game 2 of the2006 World Series, and the preference that no NFL game competes against theMajor League Baseball championship series, a one-hour edition aired from 7:00 to 8:00 p.m. on October 22. Additionally, as the NFL spurnedChristmas Eve contests (a policy that was revoked in2007), another one-hour show aired on December 24.
NBC had chosen one game per week to focus on as well. For this game, usually the marquee late matchup on either Fox or CBS, NBC will send one of its reporters to cover the game in a more in-depth fashion (as ESPN does forSunday NFL Countdown). Starting in 2014, the on-site role was primarily filled byKathryn Tappen. Previously, reports were filed byCarolyn Manno andAlex Flanagan (the latter left NBC Sports after the 2014 season). The on-site reporting role had been a rotating one, with reports being filed by Manno, Tappen,Paul Burmeister (who came over fromNFL Network in 2015 to replace the departed Alex Flanagan), andHeather Cox (who came over fromESPN, alongside current host Mike Tirico, for NBC's coverage ofThursday Night Football in 2016). An exception came during Week 16 of 2016, where NBC produced two games on Christmas Day, the first one being Ravens-Steelers (which was on NFL Network, labeled as an “NFL Network Special”), the other being Broncos-Chiefs, which was on NBC. Because of that, the usual “focus game report” came from Tirico, Tony Dungy, and Cox, who called the game alongsideDoug Flutie.
Hyundai Sunday Night Kickoff (previously sponsored byChevrolet in 2006 and 2007,GMC in 2008,Kia from 2014 to 2017 andHyundai from 2009 to 2013 and since 2018) is the broadcast's closing segment featuring analysis of the upcomingSunday Night Football game, which follows immediately afterward, aired shortly before 8:00 p.m.Eastern Time. The segment features Al Michaels andCris Collinsworth (with John Madden appearing on the segment prior to Madden's retirement from broadcasting in 2009.[1])
Some major changes went into effect for the2007 season. In addition, to Michaels and Madden appearing in the first segment,Tiki Barber – who was added to the program – was brought in during the second segment to help provide analysis. Starting in the third portion of the program, Costas and Olbermann take turns reading the game highlights, while Barber, Collinsworth and Bettis were isolated in the "players' room" on another part of the set. After each set of highlights, the analysts comment on the events shown. Peter King also appears during the segment from a location on the main set. For the last 30 minutes of each edition, Collinsworth emerges from the room to join Costas by the large monitor on the set for highlights and analysis of two pre-selected "marquee matchups" (in Week 1, for example, these were theNew England Patriots atNew York Jets and theChicago Bears atSan Diego Chargers). At the end of the show, the panelists reunite for a one-sentence summary before kickoff.
The roundtable segments and screening room were eliminated from the broadcasts. However, interviews continue to be run on occasion; such as on the September 23 edition, in which Costas spoke withChicago Bears starDevin Hester. Two features were added: the "TKO Report" ("TKO" being anacronym for "TheKeith Olbermann"), a mini-commentary by Olbermann on a topic related to the game; and "Monday Morning Headlines," which summarizes the big stories of the NFL's afternoon action, as determined by the panel.
An abbreviated version was shown at halftime, with Olbermann presenting a new segment called "Worst Person in the NFL," modeled after his "Worst Person in the World" commentary segment onMSNBC'sCountdown with Keith Olbermann. His first "honoree" was himself, for advocating a light prison sentence forMichael Vick on his August 26 debut during apreseason game (the following day, Vick pleaded guilty on charges ofdogfighting). On the regular season debut, Olbermann pilloriedNew York Jets fans for cheering asChad Pennington limped off the field with an ankle injury.
On September 16,NFL commissionerRoger Goodell appeared live onFootball Night to discuss thevideotape scandal that enveloped theNew England Patriots and their head coachBill Belichick. In the interview, Goodell revealed that the Patriots were asked to turn over allvideotape andstill photography from previous games and that the team could face further punishment than what had been announced. Olbermann missed this program due an emergencyappendectomy, however he returned the following week (September 24).
A one-hour edition of the program aired on October 28, as the NFL decided not to schedule a game that night to avoid scheduling conflicts with Game 4 of the2007 World Series, which played that evening (and turned out to be the last game of theMLB season as theBoston Red Sox completed its sweep of theColorado Rockies).
On July 7, 2008, it was announced that formerESPN andABC commentatorDan Patrick would joinNBC Sports and serve as a co-host onFootball Night in America. The move reunited Patrick and Olbermann on television for the first time since their days on ESPN'sSportsCenter. The highlights package at the end of the program, originally known as "Olbertime", was also revamped under the new segment title "The Little Big Show," a reference to the duo's nickname during their time onSportsCenter. Olbermann quipped, "We tried 'Sportycenter', but that didn't work out." As had occurred during the previous two years, a one-hour edition aired on October 26 from 7:00 to 8:00 p.m. due to scheduling issues with Game 4 of the2008 World Series that resulted the NFL deciding, when the2008 schedule was released earlier that year, not to schedule a game for that night.
At first, the reunion of Patrick and Olbermann was the only change from the year before. However, in November 2008, NBC released Bettis and Barber from the studio and effectively discontinued the "players' lounge" set. Barber spent the rest of the season as a field reporter, and held those duties for theNFC Wild Card game between theAtlanta Falcons and theArizona Cardinals on January 3, 2009. Bettis bounced around between Rockefeller Center and select game sites. Bettis appeared in-studio forFootball Night for the 2008 Wild Card Saturday matchups. During the2008–09 playoffs,Matt Millen, who had been fired earlier in the season after roughly eight years as general manager of theDetroit Lions, joined theFootball Night in America team as a studio analyst.
Since NBC held the national television rights toSuper Bowl XLIII that year, a five-hour edition of the pre-game show aired starting at 1:00 p.m. Eastern Time on February 1, 2009. Bob Costas anchored the pre-game, halftime and post-game shows, with Cris Collinsworth as co-host and lead studio analyst. On the main set were recently retired coachesMike Holmgren andTony Dungy, along with former Lions executive Matt Millen. Dan Patrick and Keith Olbermann hosted segments on an auxiliary set outside the stadium and on the field and in the locker room (standing up) withFootball Night regularsJerome Bettis and Tiki Barber, as well as guest analystRodney Harrison. Andrea Kremer andAlex Flanagan respectively filed reports on the Steelers and Cardinals; Patrick handled the Super Bowl presentation.
When the2009 season of the program kicked off on September 13,[2] Cris Collinsworth replaced John Madden as a color commentator, alongside Michaels following Madden's retirement. Bettis' contract was not renewed; Tony Dungy and Rodney Harrison replaced Collinsworth and Bettis as full-time studio analysts,[3] while Barber served as an on-site reporter.
On August 26, NBC announced thatFootball Night host Bob Costas would host the pre-game show at the game site; pregame panelists Dan Patrick, Keith Olbermann, Dungy and Harrison would remain in the New York City studio.
The basic format remained unchanged from the previous year; all commentators remained except for Olbermann, who remained with MSNBC until his dismissal and move to Current TV (laterAl Jazeera America) the following year.
The December 26 edition of the program aired for 90 minutes, with Costas hosting fromLincoln Financial Field despite the postponement of that night'sMinnesota Vikings-Philadelphia Eagles game to December 28 due toa blizzard that hit the area a few days earlier. A short five-minute pre-game show aired on that night preceding the game, however the usualSunday Night Football introduction byFaith Hill did not air.
The format remained virtually unchanged as all commentators returned to the show from the previous season.
On February 6, 2012, NBC aired a five-hourSuper Bowl XLVI pre-game telecast starting at 1:00 p.m. Eastern Time, hosted by Bob Costas and Dan Patrick, who also emceed the halftime and post-game shows; Tony Dungy and Rodney Harrison served as the co-hosts and lead studio analysts. Active NFL playersAaron Rodgers andHines Ward contributed as guest analysts exclusively on the pre-game show. Costas hosted segments on an auxiliary set outside the stadium and on-field; Patrick hosted segments from the stadium concourse on an additional auxiliary.Michele Tafoya filed respective reports on theNew York Giants andNew England Patriots, while Patrick handled the Super Bowl trophy presentation.
The format remained virtually unchanged as all commentators returned to the show from the previous season.
With Studio 8G being prepped to become the home forSeth Meyers' version ofLate Night, production ofFootball Night in America moved to Studio 8H at 30 Rockefeller Plaza, the studio in whichSaturday Night Live also broadcasts. Earlier that year, in March, NBC Sports' operations and all other studio programs moved from the network's New York City headquarters to a new facility inStamford, Connecticut.
Football Night in America joined the other NBC Sports studio programs at the new NBC Sports Headquarters in Stamford, where an entirely new set for the program was introduced with the debut of the program's ninth season on September 7,2014, replacing the original set that had been used since the program's 2006 debut. In addition, Kia Motors replaced Hyundai (both automakers are owned byHyundai Motor Group) as the sponsor for the program'sSunday Night Kickoff segment. Then-recently added NBC Sports correspondentJosh Elliott (formerly of ESPN and later, ABC'sGood Morning America) also joined theFNIA broadcast team that year. Elliott would leave NBC Sports to join the network'ssister news division in March of the following year.
On February 1, 2015, NBC aired a five-hourSuper Bowl XLIX pre-game telecast starting at 1:00 p.m. ET, hosted by Bob Costas and Dan Patrick, who also emceed the halftime and post-game shows; Tony Dungy and Rodney Harrison once again served as the co-hosts and lead studio analysts, along with guest analystJohn Harbaugh.
The "4 Downs" segment was added as the final segment ofFNIA before ending with Costas at the game site.
Other thanMike Tirico joiningFNIA to alternate pregame hosting duties with Bob Costas at theSNF game site, the format remained virtually unchanged as all commentators returned to the show from the previous season.
Mike Tirico became the new host of the program from theSNF game site, replacingBob Costas. Also, the format remained virtually unchanged as all of the other in-studio commentators (Patrick, Harrison and Dungy) returned from the previous season.
On February 4, 2018, NBC aired a six-hour pregame show fromMinneapolis, the host city ofSuper Bowl LII, starting at noon ET (11am CT), hosted by Patrick, Dungy and Harrison, the latter two also served as lead analysts. Liam McHugh, who had previously hosted the NBC-producedThursday Night Football pregame show during parts of the2017 NFL season, filled in for Tirico at the game site while the latter was inPyeongChang, South Korea preparing for the network'sWinter Olympics coverage (which began just four nights later, on February 8, 2018). Patrick also hosted the halftime and postgame shows.
For the 2018 season, Mike Tirico succeeded Dan Patrick as lead studio host for the show. Tirico is joined in studio by returning analysts Rodney Harrison and Tony Dungy. Liam McHugh took over Tirico's previous role at theSNF game site. The show now ends withSunday Night Football game picks by Tirico, Harrison, Dungy, Florio, andChris Simms. McHugh also makes a pick, however, because he is at the game site, Tirico announces his pick for him.
The format remained virtually unchanged as all of the in-studio commentators returned from the previous season. However, the only significant change from the previous season is that Liam McHugh now makes his game pick on camera from the game site.
The format remained virtually unchanged as all of the commentators, including McHugh at theSNF game site, returned from the previous season. Joining the team was Collinsworth's sonJac, who had been withESPN'sSunday NFL Countdown.[4] Jac Collinsworth serves as a substitute host from the stadium, generally when McHugh fills in for Tirico at Stamford or has other commitments such as the2020 Stanley Cup playoffs. Mike Florio started working exclusively from home, from the studio where he films PFT Live on weekdays. Also making his debut in December wasMSNBC political analystSteve Kornacki, who examined playoff scenarios in a manner similar to his coverage of the2020 United States presidential election.[5][6]
There were several major staff changes that were put in place for the2021 NFL season. Jac Collinsworth replaced the departed Liam McHugh, who left to joinTurner Sports and anchor theirNHL coverage, as an on-site host and analyst Rodney Harrison was moved to the game site as well. FormerNew Orleans Saints quarterback Drew Brees took over Harrison's previous role as an in-studio analyst. Additionally,Maria Taylor (formerly of ESPN/ABC) joined Mike Tirico, Tony Dungy, Brees, and Chris Simms in the network's Stamford, Connecticut facility. Florio remains at his facility at home.
NBC's five-hour pregame coverage for Super Bowl LVI began at 1 ET, on February 13, the latest date for a Super Bowl.
Rather than staying put with theWinter Olympics, NBC announced that Tirico would host both events. Tirico started in Beijing, then flew back to the U.S. and Los Angeles, to host from the game site,SoFi Stadium. Tirico, who also presided the Lombardi Trophy presentation, hosted on the main set with Dungy and Brees, outside SoFi. Taylor, making her NBC Super Bowl debut, hosted on the famous Santa Monica Pier with Simms, while Collinsworth, also making his NBC Super Bowl debut, hosted inside the stadium with Harrison. For the first time all season, Florio joined the crew on the road.
With Tirico succeeding Michaels as lead play-by-play announcer, it was announced that Maria Taylor would become the new main host of the program.[7] FormerDallas Cowboys head coachJason Garrett also joined to replace Brees, who left after only one year with NBC.[8] Florio continued to appear from home, but made several appearances in-studio and on the road during the season.
2023 saw few changes to the pregame show. FormerNew England Patriots safetyDevin McCourty joined this season and was added to the studio set, replacing Dungy, who was reassigned to the on-site crew with Jac Collinsworth and Harrison. From Week 16 to the Divisional round,Ahmed Fareed took over as host due to Taylor going on maternity leave. Florio also made a full-time return to the studio this season.
After missing the final 3 weeks of the previous season as well as the previous year's postseason due to maternity leave, Maria Taylor returned for her third year as host of FNIA. 2024 also saw few changes to the pregame show, but the only significant change was to the show's final block, with the "Sunday Funday" segment replacing the "Best of Week (number)" as well as a major change to the show's final segment, the "Lowe's Home Team Picks" (in which the picks are no longer made individually on camera as in previous years).
There were little to no changes made for the 2025 season, exceptVerizon now sponsors the picks format, replacing Lowe's, who became the main sponsor of FNIA.
Prior to theWild Card Saturdaydoubleheader, a half-hour version ofFootball Night in America is broadcast featuring an in-depth preview of the first game; during the afternoon halftime, a special edition of theSunday Night Football halftime show is also broadcast. After the conclusion of the afternoon game and before the kickoff of the night game, an edition known in 2007 as theDiet Pepsi Bridge Show aired.
At that point, the format became very similar to the traditionalFootball Night in America broadcasts, with Faith Hill singing a special playoff version of the intro, Al Michaels and John Madden working the booth, and Keith Olbermann doing a segment during halftime. In addition, until Madden's 2009 retirement, a "Horse Trailer Player of the Game" was named awarding theMVP for the nighttime game. In 2009, the Wild Card edition of the pre-game was retitled theNFL on NBC Studio Show.
For the2006 Wild Card coverage,Jim L. Mora appeared as co-host in place of Cris Collinsworth. In2007,Miami Dolphins playerJason Taylor filled in for Collinsworth in the player's room, as Collinsworth was inSeattle, serving as a commentator for the afternoon game withTom Hammond. Matt Millen made his first public appearance in Collinsworth's seat for the network's2008 Wild Card coverage, after being fired by the Detroit Lions. Barber did not appear as he was assigned as the sideline reporter for the early game.
Bob Costas hosted the pre-game fromNew Orleans, whileCharles Barkley – who was at 30 Rock to host that evening's episode ofSaturday Night Live, which taped next door at Studio 8H – sat in with Patrick, Dungy and Harrison in New York City.[9]
NBC renegotiated its contract with the NFL following the 2013 season and ceded one of its two Wild Card Saturday playoff games in order to obtain rights to one of the Saturday playoff games in the Divisional Playoffs. This guarantees NBC at least two games per playoff year, with the network airing a wild card matchup, and a second round playoff game which alternates conferences each year.
These playoff games under the 2014 contract have aired at 1:00 pm EST, 4:30 pm EST, and NBC's usual 8:30 pm EST.
However beginning with the2016-17 NFL playoffs, 1:00 pm playoff games have been eliminated by the league (except for Sundays), at first nominally due to weather, but announced as permanent a week later.
With NBC gaining an extra Wild Card game in 2021, which they also streamed onPeacock, NBC had two Wild Card games for the first time since 2014. With that, two editions ofFootball Night aired before both games, withLiam McHugh taking over Mike Tirico's spot for both nights. Tirico was assigned to the Saturday night game, along withTony Dungy andKathryn Tappen, which he worked from home due to COVID-19 protocols.Jac Collinsworth, son ofCris Collinsworth took over McHugh's spot on site in Landover and Pittsburgh for both nights, withRodney Harrison joining him in Pittsburgh for the Sunday night game, as Dungy returned to the studio after the Saturday game. Tirico returned to the studio the next week.
For the2022 playoffs, NBC's studio coverage totally changed. With McHugh leaving NBC to joinTurner Sports, who along withESPN andABC, picked up theNHL’s media rights from NBC after 16 years, and anchor theirNHL coverage,Maria Taylor took Tirico’s spot as studio host, as the latter was calling the Saturday game, along withDrew Brees. Because Brees was also calling the game,Chris Simms moved to the main desk with Taylor and Dungy. Collinsworth and Harrison continued to contribute from the game site, with Brees joining the two for the Sunday game. Tirico, Brees, Taylor, and Simms all returned to their usual positions for Divisional Weekend and Super Bowl LVI.
For2023, the only change was Dungy, who replaced Brees as the analyst for the Chargers-Jaguars game, alongside Amazon'sAl Michaels andKaylee Hartung. Simms joined Taylor and Garrett on the desk for Super Wild Card Weekend. Dungy then joined Collinsworth and Harrison in Cincinnati the next night. The FNIA crew later went on the road for Divisional Weekend.
For2024, Garrett was the only change for the main desk. Because Garrett called the Dolphins-Chiefs game on Peacock, alongside Tirico (who replaced Michaels amidst continuous criticism over lack of enthusiasm during Amazon'sThursday Night Football games and comments made about Chiefs tight endTravis Kelce's girlfriend,Taylor Swift) and Hartung. Garrett returned to the studio the next night, joiningAhmed Fareed, who replaced Taylor while the latter was on maternity leave, Simms, andDevin McCourty, who joined FNIA that season. Collinsworth, Dungy, and Harrison reported live from Kansas City on Saturday and Detroit on Sunday. The rest of the FNIA crew joined Collinsworth, Dungy, and Harrison in Detroit for Divisional Weekend.
Starting in 2018, NBC implemented an opening, similar to the opening that kicks offSNF. The song used is “Check it Out” by Oh the Larceny. The open features NFL players like: the Vikings’Stefon Diggs andAnthony Barr, the Cowboys’Dak Prescott, the Rams’Todd Gurley andJared Goff, the Falcons’Julio Jones, and the Seahawks’Russell Wilson. Some of the players’ actions during the open were taken from when NBC had a share of Thursday Night Football In 2016 and 2017. The theme was retained for 2019 with new players being added likeBaker Mayfield of the Browns.
Football Night in America was also used as the pre-game show for NBC-producedThursday Night Football games in 2016 and 2017, though with a slightly varying format due to it being that week's first game, andAmerica in the title substituted with the name of the host city/region of that night's game (AVikings home game would have that edition of the pre-game titledFootball Night in Minnesota, for instance).
For the program's inaugural season in 2006, Bob Costas served as the host, with Cris Collinsworth,Sterling Sharpe and Jerome Bettis as analysts, andSports Illustrated columnist Peter King as the special "insider" reporter. On September 7, 2006, Jerome Bettis arrived on the exterior set in aschool bus (a reference to his nickname as a player for thePittsburgh Steelers, "The Bus"); that night, in addition to providing analysis, Bettis received his ring for winningSuper Bowl XL. Bettis missed the December 3 broadcast to prepare for the funeral of his father, Johnnie, who had died of aheart attack the previous Tuesday.NFL Network analystMarshall Faulk (who at the time was technically still an active player in the NFL, although theSt. Louis Rams eventually cut him after a series of injuries) substituted for Bettis that week.
At the end of the 2006 season, Sharpe's contract was apparently terminated, and formerNew York Giants running back Tiki Barber replaced him in 2007.[10]Keith Olbermann, then host of MSNBC'sCountdown, was named as another co-host.[11] In addition, Costas and Collinsworth hosted the halftime show for theGeorgia Tech–Notre Dame game on September 1, 2007; this turned out to be a one-shot promotional appearance.
Studio:
On-site:
For the 2013 season (from September 23 to December 15, 2013),Football Night in America averaged 4.123 million viewers between 7:00 and 7:29 p.m. Eastern Time; 4.960 million between 7:30 and 7:58 p.m. Eastern and 11.677 million between 8:00 and 8:22 p.m. Eastern.[13]
The November 2, 2014, broadcast averaged 3.408 million viewers between 7:30 and 7:58 p.m. Eastern Time, and 10.124 million viewers between 7:59 to 8:22 p.m. Eastern.[14]