Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

History ofMonday Night Football

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The following article details the history ofMonday Night Football, the weekly broadcast ofNational Football League games on American television.

Pre-1970

[edit]

In1948 and1950, ABC televised theNational Football League Championship Game.Harry Wismer[1] provided commentary for the game in 1948 and the game in 1950 joined byRed Grange andJoe Hasel.

ABC first broadcast regular season National Football League games in1953, supplementing theDuMont Television Network'sNFL coverage. While DuMont focused on theNew York Giants andPittsburgh Steelers due to their respective markets having a DuMontO&O (WABD andWDTV, respectively), ABC focused onChicago Bears home games andChicago Cardinals home games. Beginning in1954, ABC addedWashington Redskins home games, taking those from DuMont, who replaced them with thePhiladelphia Eagles despite Philadelphia (unlike Washington withWTTG) not having a DuMont O&O. In ABC's final year of their initial go around with the National Football League, they addedLos Angeles Rams andSan Francisco 49ers games (for thePacific Time Zoneaffiliates) to go along with their coverage of the Bears and Cardinals. Wire accounts found in newspaperarchive.com indicated that theWashington-Philadelphia game in Week 2 of the 1953 season, was to have been regionally televised by ABC, but the cables needed for the telecast never arrived. The articles said thatNFL CommissionerBert Bell was "fuming" over the incident.

For the Chicago-based games, ABC used Red Grange and Bill Fay[2][3] on commentary. When ABC added the Redskins to their schedule in 1954, they usedBob Wolff[4] andDutch Bergman. For games featuring the 49ers and the Rams in 1955, ABC usedBob Kelley plus Bill Brundige on the Rams telecast.Bob Fouts andFrankie Albert were on the commentary for 49ers games. Although for the first two weeks of the 1955 season, the roles were reversed. In the event that the 49ers were in Chicago to play the Bears (which occurred in Week 3 of the 1955 season on October 8), then ABC would use Red Grange and Bill Fay. However, on November 13 (Week 8 of the 1955 season), when the Rams traveled to Chicago to face the Bears, ABC employed a split-commentary concept with Bob Kelley and Bill Brundige calling the game for viewers in Pacific areas and Red Grange and Bill Fay calling the game for viewers in the Midwest. If the 49ers were in Los Angeles to play the Rams (like in Week 7 of the 1955 season), then they used Bob Fouts and Frankie Albert.

ABC's relationship with the NFL at this point pretty much ended when CBS began carrying regular season games across its network nationwide in1956. This came off the heels of the NFL's previous principal network TV partner, the DuMont Network, suspending its operations. Less than five years later however, ABC became the initial network television partner for theAmerican Football League. The deal called for ABC to broadcast approximately 37 regular season games, theAFL Championship Game and theAFL All-Star Game. These games were typically broadcast regionally on 15 consecutive Sundays and onThanksgiving Day. This became the first ever cooperative television plan forprofessional football, in which the proceeds of the contract were divided equally among member clubs; theNational Football League would follow suit in 1961, a move that required Congress to pass theSports Broadcasting Act of 1961 to accommodate such collective broadcasting contracts.

Monday night National Football League games prior to 1970

[edit]

During the early 1960s,NFL CommissionerPete Rozelle envisioned the possibility of playing at least one game weekly duringprime time that could be viewed by a greater television audience (while theNFL had scheduled Saturday night games on theDuMont Television Network in1953 and1954, poor ratings and the dissolution of DuMont led to those games being eliminated by the timeCBS took over the rights in1956). An early bid by the league in1964 to play on Friday nights was soundly defeated, with critics charging that such telecasts would damage the attendance athigh school football games, and in any event had been prohibited by the aforementioned Sports Broadcasting Act of 1961 for that very reason alongside Saturday games to protectcollege football. Undaunted, Rozelle decided to experiment with the concept of playing on Monday night, scheduling theGreen Bay Packers andDetroit Lions for a game on September 28,1964. While the game was not televised, it drew a sellout crowd of 59,203 spectators toTiger Stadium, the largest crowd ever to watch a professional football game inDetroit up to that point.

Two years later, Rozelle would build on this success as the NFL began a four-year experiment of playing on Monday night, scheduling one game in prime time on CBS during the1966 and1967 seasons, and two contests during each of the next two years.NBC followed suit in1968 and1969 with games involvingAmerican Football League teams.

Negotiations with ABC

[edit]

During subsequent negotiations on a new television contract that would begin in1970 (coinciding with the completion of amerger between the NFL and AFL), Rozelle concentrated on signing a weekly Monday night deal with one of the three major networks. After sensing reluctance from both NBC and CBS in disturbing their regular programming schedules, Rozelle spoke withABC.

Despite the network's status at the time as the lowest-rated of thethree major broadcast networks, ABC was also reluctant to enter the risky venture. It was only after Rozelle used the threat of signing a deal with the independentHughes Sports Network, an entity bankrolled by reclusive businessmanHoward Hughes, did ABC sign a contract for the scheduled games. Speculation was that had Rozelle signed with Hughes, many ABC affiliates would have pre-empted the network's Monday lineup in favor of the games, severely damaging potential ratings.

After the final contract forMonday Night Football was signed,ABC Sports producerRoone Arledge immediately saw possibilities for the new program. Setting out to create an entertainment "spectacle" as much as a simple sports broadcast, Arledge hiredChet Forte, who would serve as director of the program for over 22 years. Arledge also ordered twice the usual number of cameras to cover the game, expanded the regular two-man broadcasting booth to three, and used extensive graphic design within the show as well asinstant replay.

1970–1985: Founding era

[edit]
See also:List of Monday Night Football results (1970–2005)

Prior to1978, Monday night games were not scheduled in the final week (Week 14) of the regular season. From1974 to1977, a Saturday night game was scheduled for Week 14 and televised live by ABC in lieu of a game on Monday night.

Cosell, Jackson, and Meredith

[edit]

Looking for a lightning rod to garner attention, Arledge hired controversial New York City sportscasterHoward Cosell as a commentator, along with veteran football play-by-play announcerKeith Jackson. Arledge had tried to draw inCurt Gowdy and thenVin Scully to ABC for theMNF play-by-play role, but settled for Jackson after they proved unable to break their respective existing contracts withNBC Sports and theLos Angeles Dodgers.Jack Buck was also considered, but when Arledge assistantChuck Howard telephoned Buck with the job offer, Buck refused to respond due to anger at his treatment by ABC during an earlier stint with the network.[5] Arledge's original choice for the third member of the trio,Frank Gifford, was unavailable since he was still under contract toCBS Sports. However, Gifford suggested formerDallas CowboysquarterbackDon Meredith, setting the stage for years of fireworks between the often-pompous Cosell and the laid-back Meredith.

Monday Night Football first aired on ABC on September 21, 1970, with a game between theNew York Jets and theBrowns inCleveland. Advertisers were charged US$65,000 per minute by ABC during the clash, a cost that proved to be a bargain when the contest collected 33% of the viewing audience. The Browns defeated the Jets, 31–21 in a game which featured a 94-yard kickoff return for atouchdown by the Browns'Homer Jones to open the second half, and was punctuated whenBilly Andrews interceptedJoe Namath late in the fourth quarter and returned it 25 yards for the clinching touchdown. However, Cleveland viewers saw different programming onWEWS-TV, because of the NFL'sblackout rules of the time (this would apply for all games through the end of the1972 season; beginning in 1973, home games could be televised if tickets were sold out 72 hours before kickoff).

One of the trademarks ofMonday Night Football is a music cue used during the opening teasers of each program, aJohnny Pearson-composition titled "Heavy Action", originally aKPM production library cue (and also used as the theme music for theBBC programSuperstars), whichMNF began using in 1975.

Cosell's presence initially causedHenry Ford II, chairman of theFord Motor Company, the program's main sponsor, to ask for his removal. ABC refused, and Ford had a change of heart once the show's ratings were made public. Cosell dodged another controversy when he appeared to be intoxicated on-air during the November 23 game between theNew York Giants andPhiladelphia Eagles. Already ill, Cosell drank at a promotional party prior to the game, then ended up vomiting on Don Meredith's cowboy boots near the end of the first half. Jackson and Meredith ended up announcing the rest of the contest.

Cosell, Gifford, and Meredith

[edit]

In1971, Frank Gifford became available after his contract with CBS Sports expired; Arledge brought him to ABC to serve as play-by-play announcer, replacing Jackson (who returned to broadcastingcollege football for the network, which he continued to do for the next 35 seasons). The formerNew York Giant had been an NFL analyst for CBS during the 1960s but had never called play-by-play prior to joiningMonday Night Football. In that capacity forMonday Night Football from 1971 to1985, Gifford was often criticized for his see-no-evil approach in regard to discussing the NFL, earning him the dubious nickname "Faultless Frank." Regardless, Gifford would have the longest tenure of any broadcaster on the show, lasting until1998.

Cosell's abrasive personality gave him enough recognition to host a livevariety show on ABC in the fall of 1975. That show is remembered today only as a trivia question, as its title,Saturday Night Live, preventeda new late-night sketch comedy program on NBC from using that title until the ABC show was canceled. That seeming popularity was in contrast to the repeated criticisms in the media, as well as bar room contests in which winners were allowed to throw a brick through a television image of Cosell.

After beginning with critical acclaim, Meredith began to take his weekly assignments less seriously, while also beginning an acting career. By1973, his motivation for the broadcasts seemed highly suspect, given incidents during a trio of contests. On October 29, Meredith was drinking during theBuffalo BillsKansas City Chiefs game, which was preceded one week earlier by his pre-game analysis of theDenver BroncosOakland Raiders game: "We're in theMile High City and I sure am" – a not-so-subtle reference to his use ofmarijuana at the time. Finally, during thePittsburgh SteelersWashington Redskins game on November 5, he referred to U.S. PresidentRichard Nixon as "Tricky Dick".

Cosell, Gifford, Williamson, and Karras

[edit]

Don Meredith would be absent fromMonday Night Football for a broadcasting and acting career on rivalNBC from1974 to1976.Fred Williamson, a formerKansas City Chiefs defensive back nicknamed "The Hammer" for his often-brutal hits, was selected by ABC to replace Meredith in 1974, but following a few pre-season broadcasts, proved so inarticulate that he was relieved of his duties prior to the start of the regular season,[6] becoming the firstMNF personality not to last an entire season (much less no part of the regular season at all). Williamson was replaced by fellowGary, Indiana nativeAlex Karras, formerly of theDetroit Lions. The highlight of Williamson'sMNF career was probably at the introductory press conference where he quipped that he was hired to "bring some color to the booth."

Karras made his debut on September 16, 1974 and immediately made an impact when he jokingly referred toOakland Raiders' defensive linemanOtis Sistrunk as having attended "The University ofMars." That would essentially be the high point of Karras' three-year tenure, with a developing movie career often distracting him from showing any improvement (in reality, Sistrunk did not attend any college but enlisted in the United States Marine Corps after high school and played semi-professional football before getting a tryout with the Raiders; the Raiders team guide listed his college alma mater as "U.S. Mars").

Cosell, Gifford, Meredith, and Tarkenton

[edit]

Meredith returned to the ABC booth in 1977, but seemed to lack the enthusiasm that had marked his first stint from 1970 to 1973. While the NFL moved to a 16-week schedule in1978, Meredith was contractually obligated to work only 14 games, leaving Cosell and Gifford to work games as a duo or with newly retiredFran Tarkenton beginning in1979.

From1978 to1986, ABC also aired occasional NFL games on Thursday and Sunday nights. Each of these telecasts would be billed by the network as a "Special Thursday/Sunday Night Edition ofMonday Night Football".

One of the more somber contests in the run of the series came on November 27, 1978 when theSan Francisco 49ers hosted thePittsburgh Steelers. Earlier in the day,San Francisco mayorGeorge Moscone and City SupervisorHarvey Milk had been murdered at City Hall. Despite the complaints that followed, the NFL chose to play the game, a decision that mirrored the league's decision to play its scheduled games during the weekend following theassassination of PresidentJohn F. Kennedy15 years earlier.

The opening contest of the1979 season saw a poignant moment as formerNew England Patriots wide receiverDarryl Stingley was introduced to a sellout crowd at thePatriots'Schaefer Stadium. Stingley had beenparalyzed in a preseason game the year before and was making his first visit to the stadium since the accident.

1980

[edit]

During the 1980 season,Monday Night Football continued its tradition of featuring notable guests during the half-time show, from a variety of different industries and backgrounds. During aThursday Night Football special in Houston, one month after Ronald Reagan was elected to the White House, Vice-President electGeorge H. W. Bush (who represented portions of Houston in the U.S. House from 1967-70) was interviewed in the broadcast booth at halftime. Prior to the election, none of the candidates were invited on the program due to equal time regulations governing appearances during campaigns. Later that same season in Southern California, movie starBo Derek, well known for her role in the movie "Ten", was the half-time guest and was interviewed by Howard Cosell. Some of the production crew teasingly referred to the segment as "The Beauty and the Beast".

1980 also marked some key personnel moves for the top-rated ABC show. It was the first season ofMonday Night Football produced byBob Goodrich, who would lead the production team for another 6 years. In addition, 1980 was the first year a woman joined the traveling production crew of over 40 cameramen, engineers, producers and directors. Alexis Denny, then a sophomore atYale University, served as the stage manager of the telecasts and wrote the script for the half-time highlights that Howard Cosell would voice over in a style for which he was known throughout his career.

John Lennon tragedy
[edit]

One of the most remembered moments inMonday Night Football history occurred on December 8,1980, yet had nothing to do with the game or football in general. During a game between theMiami Dolphins andNew England Patriots, Howard Cosell broke the news that formerBeatleJohn Lennon had beenshot and killed,[7] news that stunned a nationwide audience.

Yes, we have to say it. Remember, this is just a football game, no matter who wins or loses. An unspeakabletragedy confirmed to us byABC News in New York City:John Lennon, outside of his apartment building on theWest Side of New York City, the most famous perhaps, of all ofThe Beatles, shot twice in the back, rushed toRoosevelt Hospital, dead ... on ... arrival.

In December 1974, Lennon had appeared in theMonday Night Football broadcast booth and was briefly interviewed by Cosell. Reagan, then the outgoing Governor of California, was interviewed by Gifford during the same game.

1982 contract renewal

[edit]

The NFL's television contract renewal in 1982 also put ABC in theSuper Bowl rotation for the first time, giving it the broadcast rights toSuper Bowl XIX in 1985. A second renewal of the television contract gave them the rights toSuper Bowl XXII in 1988.

From 1983 to 1986, ABC also aired a Friday night game in the final week (Week 16) of the regular season, in addition to the normal Monday night game.

Cosell, Gifford, Meredith, and Simpson

[edit]

Cosell continued to draw criticism duringMonday Night Football with one of his offhand comments during the September 5,1983 game, igniting a controversy and laying the groundwork for his departure at the end of that season. In a game between theWashington Redskins andDallas Cowboys, Cosell referred toAlvin Garrett, anAfrican Americanwide receiver for the Redskins, as a "little monkey." Cosell noted that Garrett's small stature, and not his race, was the basis for his comment, citing the fact that he had used the term to describe his grandchildren. Later, a special on Howard Cosell showed him calling Mike Adamle (a white player) a "little monkey." Stung by the unrelenting barrage of remarks, Cosell claimed upon his departure fromMonday Night Football that the NFL had become "a stagnant bore." In Cosell's book,I Never Played the Game, he devoted an entire chapter ("Monkey Business") to the Garrett episode. In the book, Cosell also said that ABC should have had the right to choose its ownMonday Night schedule. In his mind,Monday Night Football is what elevated the NFL in popularity overMajor League Baseball. He felt that this should have been ABC's reward for raising the league's profile.

That same year,O. J. Simpson replaced Tarkenton as a fill-in when Meredith or Cosell, who also was a broadcaster for the network's coverage of theMajor League Baseball playoffs, was unavailable. The season would serve as a study in contrasts as one of the most exciting Monday night games ever was followed the next week by one of the most badly played in the run of the series. On October 17, 1983, the second highest scoring game inMonday Night Football history took place in theGreen Bay Packers-Washington Redskins game, with the Packers winning the game by a score of 48–47. One week later, theNew York Giants andSt. Louis Cardinals played for more than four hours before settling for a 20–20overtime tie,MNF's only OT tie until September 29, 2025 when the Green Bay Packers tied the Dallas Cowboys 40-40. The deadlock had come after dropped touchdown passes by Cardinal wide receiversWillard Harrell andRoy Green, and a trio of missed field goals by teammateNeil O'Donoghue, including two in the final 63 seconds of the overtime period.

Gifford, Meredith, and Simpson

[edit]

When Cosell left prior to the start of the1984 season, the trio of Gifford, Meredith and Simpson handled the duties. Cosell's departure seemed to have the greatest effect on Meredith, who many believed to be a poor analyst in his absence. Falling ratings also gave indications that much of the mystique that surrounded the weekly event had disappeared.

Gifford, Simpson, and Namath

[edit]

After the 1984 season, ABC replaced Meredith withJoe Namath the following year, with the quarterback making his debut in the annualPro Football Hall of Fame Game. In a coincidental twist, both Namath and Simpson were busy prior to the telecast with their induction into the shrine.

One of the more grisly moments inMonday Night Football history occurred during a game between theWashington Redskins andNew York Giants on November 18, 1985, atRFK Stadium. Redskins quarterbackJoe Theismann's career would end when Giants linebackerLawrence Taylor reached from behind to drag him down and Taylor fell heavily on the quarterback's leg in the process. On the play, which viewers could see in a gruesome slow-motion replay, Theismann suffered a compound fracture of the tibia and fibula in his lower right leg.[8] The injury ended the playing career of Theismann, who had teamed with Gifford and Meredith on ABC's coverage ofSuper Bowl XIX in January 1985.

Two weeks after that painful memory, the program's most watched contest took place as the previously unbeatenChicago Bears were defeated by theMiami Dolphins, who had not lost to aNational Football Conference (NFC) team at home since 1976. That 38-24 loss would turn out to be Chicago's only one in1985. The game broadcast earned aNielsen rating of 29.6 with a 46 share.

1986–2005: Al Michaels era

[edit]

Both Namath and Simpson would be replaced at the end of the 1985 NFL season, with critics noting their lack of journalistic skills in comparison to Cosell (both landed at NBC). In their place the following year came veteran broadcasterAl Michaels, who had previously anchored ABC's pregame coverage of Super Bowl XIX, and had been the lead play-by-play announcer ofMonday Night Baseball since1983. Michaels had also by this point, gained much acclaim at ABC for his1980 "Miracle on Ice" broadcast.

Gifford and Michaels

[edit]

Michaels served as the play-by-play announcer, teaming with Gifford for a two-man booth in 1986. During that season, theMiami Dolphins again made records with the biggest blowout inMonday Night Football history in a 45–3 rout of the then 10-1New York Jets (the record was later tied and subsequently broken in2005; see below). Also in 1986, when Al Michaels became unavailable because he was calling Major League Baseball'sLeague Championship Series, Frank Gifford moved up into the play-by-play spot whileLynn Swann orO. J. Simpson filled-in as thecolor commentator. Gifford would once again call the play-by-play when Michaels was busy calling theWorld Series in1987 and1989 and theNational League Championship Series in1988.

Gifford, Michaels, and Dierdorf

[edit]

In 1987, Gifford and Michaels were joined byDan Dierdorf, returning the series to its original concept of three announcers in the booth. The trio would last for 11 seasons through the conclusion of the1997 season making them the longest tenured broadcast team in the history ofMonday Night Football. In 1990, television composerEdd Kalehoff created a new arrangement of Johnny Pearson's "Heavy Action", by that time fully synonymous with the series. This more or less replaced an original composition byCharles Fox. Also debuting in 1989 wasHank Williams, Jr. performing "All My Rowdy Friends Are Here on Monday Night", sung to the music of his 1984 hit "All My Rowdy Friends Are Coming Over Tonight."

1989 contract renewal

[edit]

As part of the league's television contract renewal with the network in 1989, ABC was awarded the television rights toSuper Bowl XXV andSuper Bowl XXIX, and the first round of NFL playoffs. TheMonday Night Football announcing team anchored the telecasts, except for the first of two Wild Card Playoff games, in whichESPN's Sunday Night NFL crew ofMike Patrick and Joe Theismann presided over that telecast. However, the original crew for one of the two Wild Card Playoff games from1990 to1995 consisted ofBrent Musburger andDick Vermeil (both of whom did college football broadcasts for ABC during those two seasons).

From 1990 until 2005, ABC'sMNF television package included seventeen (eighteen in 1992 and 1993) regular season games (from2003 until 2005, a Thursday game and 16 Mondays – no game on Week 17 because of playoff preparation disadvantages), the first two wild cardplayoff games (held on the first Saturday of the playoffs), and at times, theAFCNFCPro Bowl.

1994

[edit]

The October 17,1994 episode between theKansas City Chiefs andDenver Broncos featured a duel between two futureHall of Fame quarterbacks,Joe Montana andJohn Elway. With 1:29 left to play in the game, Elway scored on a 4-yard touchdown run to put the Broncos ahead 28–24. But then Montana led the Chiefs on a 75-yard drive to score the game-winning touchdown with just 8 seconds to play. The Chiefs defeated the Broncos 31–28.

The October 31, 1994 game between theGreen Bay Packers andChicago Bears is notable for a very windy and rainy game, and also remembered with a 36-yard touchdown run byBrett Favre, who had a sore hip that night. Later dubbed the "Halloween Monsoon" by Bears fans, the Packers crushed the Bears, 33–6.

1995

[edit]

In the1995MNF regular season opener between theDallas Cowboys andNew York Giants at theNew Jersey Meadowlands, Cowboys ownerJerry Jones controversially broughtNike chairmanPhil Knight down to the sidelines, representing Jones' individual deal with Nike, contrary to the NFL's policy at the time of negotiating its marketing deals as a league (it wasn't until 2002 that the league's first league-wide uniform contract with Reebok was made; Nike would replace Reebok in that capacity in 2012).

1997

[edit]

In1997, ABC began using ascoring bug showing the game clock and score throughout the entire broadcast.

Michaels, Dierdorf, and Esiason

[edit]

In 1998,Lesley Visser became the first female commentator onMonday Night Football. She had been the first female beat writer in the NFL when she covered theNew England Patriots for theBoston Globe in the mid-1970s, and was the first and only woman to handle aSuper BowlTrophy presentation when she was a sportscaster with CBS. Visser was followed by several women, notablyMelissa Stark andLisa Guerrero, on the sideline who were perceived as "eye candy", none of whom affected the ratings.

For the 1998 season, ABC pushedMonday Night Football back an hour (it has usually aired at 9:00 p.m.Eastern Time). A specialpre-game show was created,Monday Night Blast, hosted byChris Berman from theESPN Zone restaurant inBaltimore. The game would start around 8:20 p.m. Eastern for this particular season. Despite leaving the booth, Frank Gifford stayed on one more year as a special contributor to the pre-game show, usually presenting a single segment.

Nielsen ratings data for the first 17 weeks of the 1998–99 television season showed thatMonday Night Football averaged a 13.9 rating, down 8% from the 15.0 average rating for the broadcasts in 1997 – the previous standard in ratings futility. In actuality,MNF ratings had been hitting all-time record lows for the previous four years.

Michaels and Esiason

[edit]

Beginning in1999,Monday Night Football telecasts used a computer-generated yellow line to mark where a team needs to get a first down, a method first used by ABC sister cable channelESPN. 1999 also saw the Pro Football Hall of Fame Game being moved from Saturday afternoon to Monday night. It would remain on Monday night through 2005.

Boomer Esiason replaced Gifford in 1998, and Dierdorf left for a return toCBS in1999. Esiason's relationship with Michaels was questioned leading to his firing. Esiason and Michaels reportedly never got along, and it led to ABC firing Esiason shortly after callingSuper Bowl XXXIV together.

Michaels, Fouts, and Miller

[edit]

2000

[edit]

Unexpectedly, comedianDennis Miller joined the cast in2000, along withDan Fouts.[9] The move was ultimately regarded as a bust by many viewers and commentators. ABC briefly considered adding radio personalityRush Limbaugh before Miller was added to the broadcast team, despite having no prior sports broadcast experience (Limbaugh would instead be assigned as a commentator toSunday NFL Countdown on ABC sisterESPN). Miller demonstrated a knowledge of the game and its personalities, although at times he tended to lapse into sometimes obscure analogy-riddledstreams of consciousness similar to the "rants" of his standup comedy act. ABC even set up a webpage dedicated to explaining Miller's sometimes obscurepop culture references. Soon, it would become apparent that Miller's comedy did not mix with football.

In June 2000, Lesley Visser's career suffered a highly publicized setback when she was famously bounced as theMonday Night Football sideline reporter for a less experienced, much younger woman and a man, who did not have as extensive journalistic credentials as Visser. "It was staggering to me", Visser later recalled. However, she wound up returning to CBS Sports, philosophical as ever. "You can have a short career if it's based on looks and youth", she said, "but legitimacy is what lasts." Which ABC replaced her with both Melissa Stark andEric Dickerson. This was part of the overhaul when ABC brought backDon Ohlmeyer to serve as producer, who installed Dennis Miller as an analyst (for ultimately two unsuccessful seasons). She sued ABC Sports for age discrimination, with Howard Katz and Ohlmeyer being named as co-defendants.

As previously mentioned, in 2000, Don Ohlmeyer, the program's producer up until 1977 was brought back.[9] After spending time atNBC, Ohlmeyer was lured out of retirement to spark interest and provide some vigor to the broadcast. Besides the on-air talent, Ohlmeyer's changes included clips of players introducing themselves, new graphics and music. In another rather irreverent move, thescoring bug began incorporating nicknames for the teams, such as "Skins" and "Fins" (for theWashington Redskins andMiami Dolphins) instead of their respective common abbreviations, WSH and MIA.

On October 23, 2000, theNew York Jets andMiami Dolphins competed in what is now known asThe Monday Night Miracle. Trailing 30–7 in the fourth quarter,Vinny Testaverde led the Jets to score 23 consecutive points to tie the game. After Miami scored another touchdown, Testaverde threw to offensive tackleJumbo Elliott to tie the game at 37-all. At 1:08 a.m. Eastern Time, the game having crossed into Tuesday morning,John Hall kicked a field goal in overtime to win the game 40–37. It was the second biggest fourth quarter comeback in NFL history and biggest comeback in Jets' history.Arnold Schwarzenegger predicted the comeback at halftime, where he was appearing with theMNF crew to promote his upcoming movie,The 6th Day. With the Jets already down by 20 points he said, "Wayne Chrebet will catch a pass and the Jets will win. They're a great team."[10] Two weeks later theGreen Bay Packers defeated their division rival theMinnesota Vikings 26-20 in overtime, with the winning touchdown by Antonio Freeman prompting Michaels to say "He did WHAT?!" (Freeman had caught a tipped ball while on his side, with the ball never touching the ground, and was never touched by the nearby defender).

2001

[edit]

The2001 season ofMNF featured a season-long campaign promoting the anticipated 20,000th point scored inMNF history.Denver Broncos kickerJason Elam completed the task with a field goal during a 38–28 loss atOakland on November 5. The three points also put Elam over 1,000 points for his career. In addition, the scoring bug reverted to using the team abbreviations, as opposed to the nickname scheme used in the previous season.

Michaels and Madden

[edit]

In2002, both Dennis Miller and Dan Fouts were dropped andJohn Madden joined Al Michaels in a two-man booth. Madden was a coach for theOakland Raiders, namesake of the seminalMadden NFL video game series, and a successful broadcaster for 21 years – first withCBS until 1993 and then withFox – before joiningMonday Night Football.

2002

[edit]

In 2002, the broadcast debuted the "Horse Trailer" award, in which a picture of the game's top performer(s) is displayed, as chosen by the broadcasting crew. During the fourth quarter of a preseason game early that season, Madden was joking about doing some recording in the "Horse Trailer", a term the producers used for one of the ABC production trucks. It was, in fact, a custom-built trailer designed from the shell of a horse trailer, but housed sophisticated electronic equipment inside it. By the first week of the regular season, an idea to decorate the plain white trailer withMNF decor, the entireMNF schedule, and a weeklyMVP, was born. Immediately following each game, the winner(s) is chosen, and his picture is affixed to the trailer in the corresponding location. When Madden and Michaels went toNBC in2006, they debuted a similar feature, theRock Star – in which the photo of the player of the game was attached to the top of30 Rockefeller Plaza in New York City (the "Horse Trailer" concept was reinstated for the2007 season).

In addition to Michaels and Madden helming the regular season broadcasts, Brent Musburger andGary Danielson served as commentators for that year's AFC wild card game, withJack Arute serving as the sideline reporter.

After suffering through several years of dismalPro Bowl ratings, ABC considered moving the game to Monday night. In February 2003, Madden declined to serve as color commentator for the game inHawaii, citing hisfear of flying; formerMNF personality Dan Fouts took his place. ThePro Bowl held the following year was played on a Sunday as typical, but was moved to ABC's sister network ESPN.

2003

[edit]

In 2003, ABC and the NFL dropped theMonday Night Football game for the final week of the regular season. The move, which had been in effect for the first eight years of the broadcast (19701977), was the result of declining ratings, as well as problems involved for potential playoff teams, as there was a potential of only four days rest between their final regular season game and first-round playoff game. ABC replaced the telecast with an opening weekend Thursday night game, and in exchange ESPN got a Saturday night game on the final weekend.

Also during the 2003 season, Lisa Guerrero decided to leaveFox Sports Net'sThe Best Damn Sports Show Period to join theMNF television crew as a sideline reporter (replacing thepregnant Melissa Stark). Guerrero's performance on the broadcast was heavily criticized,[11][12] and the following year (also in an apparent move away from the "eye candy" concept) ABC replaced her with longtime television sports journalistMichele Tafoya. Guerrero defended herself by saying that the show hired her with the intention of going in a totally different direction with the job of sideline reporter – personality-driven and feature-driven – then discarded all of that and told her to just do the job in the usual fashion. She said that she never would have taken the job if she had known that they would change their minds like that. In 2005, Michele Tafoya sat out much of the season while onmaternity leave, withSam Ryan temporarily taking her place.

During the October 6, 2003 game between theIndianapolis Colts andTampa Bay Buccaneers, Indianapolis was trailing 35–14 with 3:43 remaining. The Colts had returned a Tampa Bay kickoff 90 yards to the 11-yard line, setting up a quick score. The Colts recovered anonside kick and scored again to narrow the margin to 35–28. They forced a Buccaneers punt and with less than two minutes remaining,Peyton Manning led an 87-yard drive to score the game-tying touchdown with 35 seconds left in regulation. In overtime, kickerMike Vanderjagt missed a 40-yardfield goal, butSimeon Rice was called for aleaping penalty, a rarely seen unsportsmanlike conduct infraction that penalizes a player for running and jumping to block a kick and landing on other players. Vanderjagt's subsequent kick was batted and hit the upright, but fell in good, winning the game for the Colts. Vanderjagt went on to become the second kicker in NFL history not to miss either a field goal or extra point in a single season afterGary Anderson, who accomplished the feat in the 1998 season as a member of theMinnesota Vikings. Vanderjagt did not miss a kick in the playoffs either, making him the first kicker to accomplish that feat (Anderson missed a field goal in the1998 NFC Championship Game).

On December 22, 2003,Green Bay Packers quarterbackBrett Favre put on one of the most defining moments of his career (while also ranking among his greatest games ever). The day before the contest against theOakland Raiders, his father,Irvin, died suddenly of aheart attack. Favre elected to play, passing for four touchdowns in the first half, and 399 yards for the game in a 41–7 destruction of the Raiders (receiving applause from the highly partisan "Raider Nation"). Afterwards, Brett said,

I knew that my dad would have wanted me to play. I love him so much and I love this game. It's meant a great deal to me, to my dad, to my family, and I didn't expect this kind of performance. But I know he was watching tonight.

2004

[edit]

On November 15,2004, controversy shroudedPhiladelphia Eagles wide receiverTerrell Owens when he appeared with actressNicollette Sheridan (one of the stars of the new hit ABC comedy-dramaDesperate Housewives) in an introductory skit which opened that evening'sMNF telecast, in which Owens and theEagles played theCowboys atTexas Stadium. The skit was widely condemned as being sexually suggestive (see video[13]) and ABC was forced to apologize for airing it (the Eagles went on to win the game, 49–21, with Owens catching three touchdown passes). However, on March 14, 2005, theFederal Communications Commission (FCC) ruled that the skit did not violate decency standards, because it contained no outright nudity or foul language. Originally, John Madden was supposed to appear in the commercial.

2005

[edit]

For the2005 season, which would become ABC's final season as theMNF broadcaster and used throughSuper Bowl XL, ABC converted its scoring bug into a horizontal time-score banner placed across the bottom of the screen.

Monday Night Massacre (Seahawks)
[edit]

On December 5, 2005, in a game dubbed "The Monday Night Massacre" byNFL Films, theSeattle Seahawks shut out thePhiladelphia Eagles 42–0 with three defensive touchdowns (two interceptions, one fumble return). This tied the then-largest margin of victory mark inMonday Night Football history and set the mark for the greatest margin of victory in a Monday night shutout. This also set the NFL record for scoring the most points with less than 200 yards of offense.Andre Dyson scored twice for the Seahawks defense, once on a 72-yard interception return and the other on a 25-yard fumble return, earning himself the "Horse Trailer Player of the Game" as well as NFC defensive player of the week. A fourth interception return byMichael Boulware fell just short of tying another Seahawks NFL record of four defensive scores in a single game, set during a 45–0 victory over theKansas City Chiefs in 1984. The defeat was the Eagles' third-worst in team history, tied for the worst loss inMNF history, and was the worst shutout loss. This was due to the Eagles' major injuries such as star quarterbackDonovan McNabb (who was hurt in a Week 10 loss to the Cowboys) and the after-effects of theTerrell Owens saga earlier that year. The Eagles also lost their starrunning backBrian Westbrook due to an injury in this game.

End of the ABC era

[edit]

Despite high ratings, ABC lost millions of dollars[14] on televising the games during the late 1990s and 2000s. The NFL also indicated that it wanted Sunday night to be the new night for its marquee game, because more people tend to watch television on Sundays, and games held on that night would be more conducive toflexible scheduling, a method by which some of the NFL's best games could be moved from the afternoon to the evening on Sunday on short notice. Given these factors, as well as the rise of ABC's ratings on Sunday night, and the network's wish of protecting itsDesperate Housewives franchise (which they knew would be costly), on April 18, 2005, ABC and the NFL announced the end of their 36-year partnership, with theMonday Night Football broadcasts being moved to ESPN starting with the2006 season;[15] the move was criticized by some of theDisney shareholders (as well as NFL fans and purists). However, ESPN's ability to collect subscription fees from cable and satellite providers, in addition to selling commercials, made it more likely that ESPN could turn a profit on NFL telecasts, as opposed to ABC's heavy losses.

The finalMonday Night Football broadcast on ABC aired on December 26, 2005, when theNew York Jets hosted theNew England Patriots fromGiants Stadium. Coincidentally, both the first and last ABCMonday Night Football game telecasts ended with a score of 31–21 with the Jets on the losing end. Vinny Testaverde holds the distinction of throwing the last touchdown pass in ABC'sMNF telecast history; it was to wide receiverLaveranues Coles. Also, Testaverde's pass set an NFL record: most consecutive seasons with a touchdown pass, 19 seasons (1987–2005). PatriotslinebackerMike Vrabel set a record of note during that last ABC telecast, becoming the first player to catch twotouchdown passes and record aquarterback sack in the same game. The final play of the ABC era was a Patriots kneeldown by 44-year-old reserve quarterbackDoug Flutie. John Madden said at the show's ending:

They can take football away from ABC on Monday nights, but they can't take away the memories.

During its final NFL television contract, ABC was awarded the telecasts toSuper Bowl XXXIV,Super Bowl XXXVII and Super Bowl XL. With the end of ABC's contract, the Super Bowl XL broadcast was the network's final NFL telecast until 2016, when they simulcasted ESPN's Wild Card game production. To replaceMonday Night Football, ABC turned its series of primetime college football specials, which had run until 1975 and again from 1990 to 1993 and from 1996 onward, into aregular series. The network also acquired the rights to theCMA Awards ceremony. The Monday after ABC's final Monday Night game saw the premiere ofseason 2 ofDancing with the Stars.

2006–present: ESPN era

[edit]
See also:List of Monday Night Football results (2006–2019) andList of Monday Night Football results (2020–present)

Move to ESPN

[edit]

The changes to the NFL's prime time broadcasts took place with the 2006 season, as ESPN began airing the Monday night games at the same timeNBC assumed the rights to theSunday night package from ESPN. The Sunday night game is now the "showcase" game of the week on the NFL schedule.

While the ESPN broadcasts still carry theMNF name and heritage, NBC (like ABC) is abroadcast network, whereas ESPN is acable channel not freely available to all Americans, though per a clause in the NFL's broadcasting rules, many ESPN games air on a participating broadcast television station in the home markets of each team to allow viewers who do not subscribe to a pay television provider to view the game. For that reason, NBC gained rights to the Thursday night season-opening game, theWild Card doubleheader that has traditionally aired on ABC, as well as a share of the rotating rights to the Super Bowl (with CBS and Fox also in the mix).

ESPN had initially stated that itsMNF team would consist of Al Michaels and Joe Theismann in the booth, with Michele Tafoya andSuzy Kolber serving as sideline reporters. However, on February 8, 2006, ESPN announced that former NBA studio hostMike Tirico would replace Michaels in the booth in 2006, joined by Theismann, andTony Kornheiser. ESPN announced the following day that it had "traded" the contract of Michaels to NBC in exchange for someNBCUniversal properties, including rights toRyder Cup coverage, and the return of the rights toOswald the Lucky Rabbit (aWalt Disney creation) to ESPN parentThe Walt Disney Company after nearly 80 years of Universal ownership.[16]

Secondary broadcast teams

[edit]

From 2006 to 2020, ESPN broadcast two games in adoubleheader on the opening week of the season, with the second game using separate announcers and production staff that are not used for the rest of the schedule. On September 11, 2006, the announcers for the second game wereBrad Nessler, Ron Jaworski andDick Vermeil. On September 10,2007, the team ofMike Greenberg andMike Golic (co-hosts ofMike and Mike in the Morning) presided alongsideMike Ditka. For both games,Bonnie Bernstein was the sideline reporter.

Greenberg, Golic and Ditka served as the secondary team for the September 8,2008 game, with Suzy Kolber on the sidelines. The September 14, 2009 game hadSteve Young join Greenberg, Golic and Kolber. On September 13,2010, Nessler andTrent Dilfer teamed to call the second game, with Kolber again on the sidelines. On September 12, 2011, Nessler and Dilfer were joined byRachel Nichols on the sidelines.

From 2012 to 2016,Chris Berman and Dilfer served as the No. 2 team during opening week, with Nichols (2012),Sal Paolantonio (2013) andLindsay Czarniak (2014–2016) the sideline reporters.

In 2017,Beth Mowins became the second woman to call play-by-play in an NFL game when she called the second game of theMNF doubleheader alongsideRex Ryan and sideline reporterSergio Dipp. Previously,Gayle Sierens had been the only woman to do so, having called the second game of ESPN's Week 1Monday Night doubleheader in 1987. Mowins reprised her role in 2018, this time withBrian Griese andLaura Rutledge.

2019's second game was called bySteve Levy,Louis Riddick and Griese. The trio were eventually promoted to the No. 1MNF team the following season. The sideline reporter wasDianna Russini due toLaura Rutledge was on maternity leave.[17] In 2020,Chris Fowler andKirk Herbstreit, normally one of the announcing teams in ESPN's college football broadcasts, served as the No. 2 team withMaria Taylor working the sideline.

Tirico, Theismann, and Kornheiser

[edit]
icon
This sectionneeds additional citations forverification. Please helpimprove this article byadding citations to reliable sources in this section. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.(December 2015) (Learn how and when to remove this message)

ESPN's first Monday night broadcast was a preseason game held on August 14, 2006, when theOakland Raiders visited theMinnesota Vikings, publicized as the return ofRandy Moss to Minnesota for the first time since the Vikings traded him after the 2004 season. The telecast debuted with brand-new graphics, including a time-score box placed in the lower center of the screen; a variation of theMNF graphics began to be used on almost all sporting events televised by ESPN and ABC (the former of which effectively took over full responsibility of ABC's sports division that year, which was rebranded asESPN on ABC). The first regular seasonMonday Night Football game to air on ESPN was on September 11, 2006, featuring the visiting Minnesota Vikings at theWashington Redskins atFedExField, in which the Vikings won 19–16.

The September 25 edition ofMonday Night Football highlighted theNew Orleans Saints' first game back in theLouisiana Superdome followingHurricane Katrina to take on theAtlanta Falcons. The game had a Super Bowl-like atmosphere with performances by theGoo Goo Dolls,U2 andGreen Day before the game. The NFL tapped producerDon Mischer and directorHamish Hamilton to produce the event. Former PresidentGeorge H. W. Bush handled the pregame coin toss. The Saints beat the Falcons 23–3 in what now ranks as one of the most-watched events in the history of cable television.

ESPN's October 23, 2006 game telecast between theNew York Giants andDallas Cowboys drew the largest audience in the history of cable television at the time, besting the previous mark set by a 1993North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) debate betweenAl Gore andRoss Perot. An average of 16,028,000 viewers (12.8 rating) watched as the Giants defeated the Cowboys, 36–22. ESPN'sMonday Night Football telecasts now account for eight of the ten highest-rated programs in cable television history.

What would eventually be named the "NFL's comeback of the year" was played onMonday Night Football on October 16. Late in the third quarter, the massive underdogArizona Cardinals led theChicago Bears 23–3. Arizona seemed to have the game wrapped up, as rookie quarterbackMatt Leinart was having a great day, and Arizona had forced six turnovers out of Chicago quarterbackRex Grossman. Chicago's defense then went on to score 14 points on fumble returns for touchdowns. With 2:58 left in the fourth quarter, and down 17–23, Chicago'sDevin Hester returned a punt for a touchdown to take a 24–23 lead. Leinart then led the Cardinals down the field, only to haveNeil Rackers miss a field goal, and Chicagowent on to win.

Monday Night Football and its surrounding shoulder programming became the most profitable franchise on cable television.

Tirico, Jaworski, and Kornheiser

[edit]

Analyst and former NFL quarterbackRon Jaworski replaced Joe Theismann, who was offered a prominent football analyst job with ESPN, in the booth beginning with the2007 season.[18]

2007

[edit]

On December 3, 2007, 17.5 million people watched the undefeatedNew England Patriots defeat theBaltimore Ravens, 27–24. The game became the most-watched single cable television program of all-time by total viewership, breaking the previous record set by the August 17 premiere ofHigh School Musical 2, which was viewed by 17.2 million on ESPN corporate siblingDisney Channel (after the film was surpassed by the Patriots-Ravens game,High School Musical 2 retained the record as the highest-rated non-sports program in basic cable history).[19][20]

2008

[edit]

After experiencing low ratings[21] and criticism[22] about the production during the 2007 season, ESPN announced that long-time sideline reporters Suzy Kolber and Michele Tafoya would have reduced roles for the 2008 season.[23]

As the2008 season began, ESPN announced a new focus on covering the games as sporting events rather than as entertainment and cultural events. Among the changes were the removal of celebrity booth guests and a reduction in the number of sideline interviews. Tafoya and Kolber were retained to conduct those interviews and file reports from the field.[24] In addition, ESPN replaced the bottom center-screen time-score box introduced in 2006 (which was used until the 2008 preseason) with a horizontal time-score banner across the bottom of the screen.

The September 15, 2008Philadelphia EaglesDallas Cowboys game, with a 13.3 rating and 18.6 million viewers, set a new record for the most-watched cable television program, surpassing the record set the previous December by the Patriots-Ravens game.[25]

2008 election eve
[edit]

The night before the2008 United States Presidential Election, studio hostChris Berman interviewed both major party candidates,Republican nomineeJohn McCain andDemocratic nomineeBarack Obama at halftime. The November 3, 2008 game featured theWashington Redskins losing to thePittsburgh Steelers, 23–6.[26]

Tirico, Jaworski, and Gruden

[edit]

2009 season

[edit]

Tony Kornheiser stepped down for the2009 season and was replaced by formerOakland Raiders andTampa Bay Buccaneers head coachJon Gruden. The rest of the team remained intact.[27]

The October 5, 2009Green Bay PackersMinnesota Vikings game was the fourth ESPNMNF broadcast to become the most-watched program ever on a cable channel, with a 15.3 rating and 21.839 million viewers. The record stood until it was surpassed by the network's telecast of theBCS National Championship Game on January 10, 2011.[28][29][30]

2010 season-"Monday Night Massacre" (Eagles)

[edit]

On November 15, 2010, thePhiladelphia Eagles visited theWashington Redskins, in what was Donovan McNabb's second game against the Eagles since being traded on April 4 of that year. The Redskins won the first meeting thatseason by a score of 17–12; however, in the first half of the game, Eagles star quarterbackMichael Vick suffered a rib injury knocking him out of the game, resulting inKevin Kolb taking over. After the game, McNabb gave a post-game speech in the locker room in which he stated the Eagles made a mistake by trading him. Before the game, McNabb signed a five-year contract extension worth $78 million, after being benched in the fourth quarter just a week earlier. The very first play of the game Vick threw an 88-yard touchdown pass toDeSean Jackson.

The Redskins were criticized for their lack of coverage because the Eagles were known for going deep on the first play; the Eagles' next two possessions led to touchdowns. The very first play of the second quarter, with Philadelphia up 28–0, saw Vick throw a 48-yard touchdown toJeremy Maclin. With Philadelphia up 45–21 at halftime, Vick threw a three-yard touchdown toJason Avant in the third quarter to make the score 52–21. During the play, Vick scrambled, waiting for someone to get open whenAlbert Haynesworth (who signed a six-year $100 million contract with the Redskins the year prior) had fallen down and continued to lie on the field as Vick continued to scramble. The very next Redskins possession had McNabb throw a pick six toDimitri Patterson, helping the Eagles score seven points.

The Redskins went on to score one more touchdown, however their seven-point run was not able to stop Philadelphia, which defeated Washington 59–28. McNabb finished the game with 295 yards on 17 for 31, along with two touchdowns and three interceptions. The Eagles finished with 593 offense yards (setting a new team record); Vick went 20 of 28 for 333 yards throwing four touchdowns, and also ran for 80 yards and two touchdowns on eight carries. He became the first player with at least 300 yards passing, 50 yards rushing four passing touchdowns and two rushing touchdowns in a game. Vick's performance in the game also moved him past Steve Young for second place on the all-time list for rushing yards by a quarterback.

2011 season

[edit]

WithSuzy Kolber reassigned to the new studio showNFL32, andMichele Tafoya having left ESPN forNBC Sunday Night Football, the sideline reporter position rotated between various reporters for the season.

For the second year in a row, and the third time overall, the beginning of the 10:15 p.m.Eastern Time game (Oakland Raiders atDenver Broncos) was shown on ESPN2 as the game that began at 7:00 pm. Eastern Time (New England Patriots atMiami Dolphins) ran past the scheduled time period.

Hank Williams Jr. controversy

[edit]

On October 3, 2011, Hank Williams Jr. made controversial remarks during an interview onFox News Channel'sFox & Friends, when talking about a golf outing he went on that summer withBarack Obama,John Boehner,Joe Biden andJohn Kasich. Williams compared President Obama andSpeaker of the House Boehner golfing together to "Hitler playing golf with [Israeli prime minister]Netanyahu", stressing their philosophical and political differences.[31][32] On October 6, 2011, ESPN subsequently announced that it would stop using "All My Rowdy Friends" as its theme song (as the song is still owned by Williams) and drop Williams from the show's opening. Williams commented on the matter: "After reading hundreds of e-mails, I have made my decision... By pulling my opening October 3, [ESPN] stepped on the toes of the First Amendment Freedom of Speech, so therefore me, my song, andAll My Rowdy Friends are out of here. It's been a great run."[33]MNF was absent an opening sequence from Week 4 through the end of that season.

In 2017, ESPN re-hired Hank Williams Jr. for the intro.

Tirico and Gruden

[edit]

Color commentator Jaworski left theMNF booth after five seasons. As a result,Jon Gruden became the solo color commentator, withMNF going back to a two-man booth for the first time since its final season on ABC (2005). In additionLisa Salters was named the permanent solo sideline reporter, a role she retained since. ESPN also added a rules analyst to aid in crucial officiating calls, withGerald Austin filling in the role.

Starting in2014, ESPN was given the rights to broadcast one Wild Card playoff game. The following season, ESPN's playoff telecasts became simulcast to ABC, marking the network's first NFL broadcasts since the 2005 season.

The Tirico–Gruden pairing would last until 2015, when Tirico left ESPN forNBC Sports in June 2016. It also marked the beginning of a decline in quality forMNF, as it suffered low ratings, unfavorable criticisms over subsequent commentary teams, and a lack of compelling matchups (especially during the final eight weeks leading up to the playoffs).

McDonough and Gruden

[edit]

Tirico's role as play-by-play voice was replaced bySean McDonough, who prior to the promotion had been one of the voices of ESPN's college football broadcasts. However, McDonough only lasted two seasons and did not return after the 2017 season.[34] In addition, Gruden was rehired to coach the Raiders, opening the door for a newMNF broadcast team.

Tessitore, McFarland and Witten

[edit]

In the 2018 season,Joe Tessitore became the new voice ofMonday Night Football.[35] Tessitore was initially joined by then-retired NFL tight endJason Witten on the booth,[36] and on the field byBooger McFarland. McFarland, who has been a college football analyst for the network since 2014, served as field analyst and consultant.[37] In addition,rules analystGerald Austin leftMNF to work as an adviser to Gruden and the Raiders and was replaced by recently retired refereeJeff Triplette.[38]

That season, theKansas City Chiefs-Los Angeles Rams game on November 19 set the record for the highest scoring game in MNF's history. The game was originally scheduled to be played atEstadio Azteca in Mexico City, but was moved to theLos Angeles Memorial Coliseum (the Rams' home stadium at the time, which itself last hosted aMonday Night Football game in 1985) due to the poor field conditions at the former. The Rams defeated the Chiefs by a score of 54–51.

Awful Announcing's Ben Koo wrote[39] on October 23, 2018 thatJason Witten was in over his head as an analyst. Koo added that Witten made mistakes, was inconsistent, got tongue tied, and was awkward at times. Meanwhile the gimmick of placingBooger McFarland in on-field mobile platform[40][41] was clunky because all involved had to have direct comments and questions to each other explicitly, and there were lulls in the broadcast at times when it's not clear which of McFarland or Witten should be jumping in. As for play-by-play manJoe Tessitore, Koo regarded him as an acquired taste and many were not acquiring it. This was due to Tessitore's style[42] of going HARD on a lot of calls, in energy and volume. Besides the commentators, Ben Koo complained about the distracting sponsorships fromOld Spice andGenesis Motor.

On November 29, 2018,Deadspin's Drew Magary said[43] that ESPN "Is too busy living inMonday Night Football's glorious past, trying to turn the franchise into an event with needless innovations and halftime concerts -- likeThe Chainsmokers during last week'sRams-Chiefs game. All of those efforts to recaptureMNF's magic failed, but that hasn't stopped ESPN from continuously trying to doctor up ways to make the game as much of an EVENT as it was back in the 1970s. This is a show imprisoned by its own history. They still have pictures ofHoward Cosell adorning theMNF production trucks. They still use thetheme. They draggedHank Williams Jr. out of racist mothballs to sing his stupid f*ckingsong from the '80s salad days. They still use ancient clips of Cosell slurring "He could go all the way" and 'What a game this turned out to be' and all that nonsense. They refer to Monday records as if they are hallowed... None of that has stopped ESPN from still trying desperately to makeMonday Night Football a thing. In the process, they've in fact cheapened the product."

Tessitore and McFarland

[edit]

ESPN underwent another broadcast booth shakeup, asJason Witten left to return to theDallas Cowboys, and rules analystJeff Triplette left after one season. Triplette was replaced withJohn Parry, who retired afterSuper Bowl LIII. Witten was not replaced, therefore making the 2019 broadcast team consist of Joe Tessitore (play-by-play), Booger McFarland (color commentator) and Lisa Salters (sideline reporter).

Early on in the2019 season, there were so manyTwitter complaints over ESPN's then newdown and distance marker that it was dropped after halftime.[44] To clarify, ESPN made the down-and-distance graphic yellow, so it looked like there was aflag on every play.[45] ESPN's Bill Hofheimer tweeted "Our ESPN production team is aware of the feedback on the #MNF down and distance graphic. We have called an audible and adjusted for the 2nd half of #HOUvsNO and for the #DENvsOAK game to follow."

When reviewing ESPN's production of theNew England Patriots-New York Jets game from Week 7 of the2019 season,The A.V. Club's John Teti wrote[46] that "Once,Monday Night was the climax of an NFL week. Now it often feels like a last gasp.Monday Night isn't special anymore, but the production never formed a new identity to contend with that reality. So there's a lot of pretending. We all must pretend it matters when, say, a running back gains more yards in the third quarter of aMonday Night Football game than anyone has before. It's not clear why theMonday Night-ness of an achievement matters to anyone in 2019—though, did it ever? Regardless, part of the lore ofMonday Night Football is that the lore ofMonday Night Football is very important indeed."

Oliver Connolly in the November 26, 2019 edition ofThe Guardian boldly wrote thatMonday Night Football: the once great NFL show was now the worst on television. The article cited[47] the overblown announcing by Joe Tessitore, incoherent analysis by Booger McFarland and bizarregraphics. Connolly further wrote that "It often feels like the show's producers are more interested in their carefully choreographed packages and graphics than the actual game unfolding on the field. No other broadcast misses a play as consistently asMonday Night Football, continuing to prove that there is nothing in media or entertainment that cannot be ruined by more money and time."

Neither Tessitore nor McFarland were not retained after the 2019 season due to a bevy of criticism surrounding their work. However, ESPN decided to have the latter swap places withLouis Riddick onMonday Night Countdown.

Levy, Griese and Riddick

[edit]

The2020 season saw another major revamp to ESPN's booth, withSteve Levy,Brian Griese, andLouis Riddick, joining lone holdoverLisa Salters.[48] ESPN's lead college football commentary team ofChris Fowler,Kirk Herbstreit, andMaria Taylor called the first game of the Week 1 doubleheader (as Fowler and Taylor were already in the New York area handling theUS Open for ESPN and theNBA Finals for ABC respectively).[49] To formally celebrate the 50th anniversary ofMonday Night Football, the Las Vegas Raiders' Week 2 home opener (their first after relocating from Oakland) was simulcast by ABC, the first regular season game the network’s aired in any form since 2005, and given theMegacast treatment with a “watch party” broadcast onESPN2, which aired its first-ever NFL game in its entirety.[50] The Hank Williams Jr.MNF theme was once again dropped, being replaced by a cover ofLittle Richard's "Rip It Up" by Virginia-based band Butcher Brown.[51]

Initially, ESPN had an opportunity to air a secondMNF doubleheader when theBroncosPatriots game, originally scheduled on October 4, was postponed to October 12 due to a player testing positive forCOVID-19, The game would have been scheduled for a 5:00 p.m. ET kickoff with Fowler and Herbstreit working the game.[52][53] However, additional positive tests from New England forced the NFL to reschedule the game to October 18, along with a slew of other rescheduled games involving the Dolphins, Jets, Chargers and Jaguars.

Later on in the season, ABC simulcast two moreMNF games (both involving theBuffalo Bills), and the Wild Card game ESPN usually gets, received the Megacast treatment on ESPN2,ESPN+, andFreeform, airing their first live sports event since the2002 MLB postseason, when Freeform was known as ABC Family.

On March 18, 2021, the NFL announced that ESPN had renewed its rights toMonday Night Football. Under the new deal, both ESPN and ABC will gain a simulcast Saturday doubleheader on the final weekend of the season beginning in 2021. And beginning in 2023, it will gain four additional regular season games (with three airing on ABC as Monday doubleheaders, and one Sunday morningNFL International Series game exclusive to ESPN+),flex scheduling beginning in Week 12, the ability to feature up to four teams twice per-season, as well as produce many alternate broadcast feeds of select games, under their Megacast series. AllMNF games will stream on ESPN+, and ESPN/ABC will also gain rights to a divisional playoff game, and two future Super Bowls for ABC.[54][55]

The "ManningCast"

[edit]

ESPN took advantage of the new Megacast part of their new contract by announcing on July 19, 2021, thatPeyton andEli Manning would host an alternate presentation ofMonday Night Football forESPN2 andESPN+.[56] Under a new deal signed by ESPN andOmaha Productions for three seasons, ten games will receive this alternate broadcast each year.

The firstManningcast[57] aired on ESPN2, on September 13, 2021, as one of three feeds produced of the firstMonday Night Football game of the 2021 season, between theLas Vegas Raiders andBaltimore Ravens.[58] The main broadcast was also simulcast on ABC, and the Manningcast was also simulcast on ESPN+, who also aired another alternate feed.

On November 13, 2021, ESPN announced that theManningcast would be a part of ESPN's coverage of the new Monday night NFL Wild Card Game, which also included ABC and ESPN+.[59]

After a very successful first season, ESPN and Omaha Productions agreed to a one-year extension of the Manningcast, while also expanding Omaha Productions’ Megacast production rights to other sports like: college football,UFC events, and select golf tournaments.

A "curse" akin to theMadden curse began to develop upon players who made guest appearances on the broadcasts, with an observed pattern of players having a decline in performance the following week.[57][60]

Buck and Aikman

[edit]

Following the 2021 season, reports came out that Hall of Fame quarterbackTroy Aikman would be leavingFox Sports to join ESPN.[61] His longtime partnerJoe Buck would eventually join him.[62] These changes resulted in Griese leaving to become the quarterbacks coach with theSan Francisco 49ers.[63] Meanwhile, Levy, Riddick andDan Orlovsky will serve as the secondary team during doubleheader weeks, andLaura Rutledge would serve as that team's sideline reporter.[64][65][66]

On January 2, 2023, during the ongoing Week 17 game of the2022 NFL season between theBuffalo Bills andCincinnati Bengals, Bills safetyDamar Hamlin collapsed with 5:58 left in the first quarter after tackling wide receiverTee Higgins. Hamlin went into cardiac arrest near midfield atPaycor Stadium.CPR anddefibrillation were administered before he was rushed to a local hospital. The game was aired onABC,ESPN,ESPN2,ESPN+ andESPN Deportes as part of ESPN'sMonday Night Football coverage. Because of the threat of an overrun from the2023 Rose Bowl airing immediately prior to the game on ESPN (and diversion ofMegacast resources to that game), there was noManningcast for this game on ESPN2.[67] Buck and Aikman were on the call[68] for the initial incident, but coverage was quickly moved to ESPN'sMonday Night Countdown studio team ofAdam Schefter,Booger McFarland andSuzy Kolber.[69] Following the announcement of the game's suspension, coverage shifted to a special edition ofSportsCenter hosted byScott Van Pelt from Washington, D.C.[70][71][72]

ESPN was praised for its coverage of the incident.[73][74][75][76] ContributorsRyan Clark andBooger McFarland were specifically praised for their commentary.[74][76] ESPN's coverage of the incident, on ABC, ESPN, ESPN2 and ESPN Deportes, from 9 p.m. to 10:15 pm, which mostly featured coverage from theMonday Night Countdown crew, averaged 23.9 million viewers.[77]SportsCenter's coverage, from 10:15 p.m. to 11 p.m., on ESPN and ABC, averaged 14.3 million viewers.[78] The NFL was criticized for its reaction to the incident. Joe Buck initially reported on the broadcast that after the ambulance took Hamlin away, the NFL had told teams they had five minutes to prepare to resume playing. This decision was criticized immediately by commentators, but the NFL denied the report. The following day, Buck responded to the NFL and Vincent, and stood by the claim that he was told both teams had five minutes to warm-up before resuming the game.[79] A similar report regarding the players warming-up to resume play was aired onWestwood One.[80]

Prior to the 2023 season, ESPN reportedly replaced Steve Levy with Chris Fowler on the second team with Louis Riddick, Dan Orlovsky and Laura Rutledge.[81] The 2023 season was also the first year in which more viable games are allowed to be flexed toMonday Night Football between weeks 12 and 17. The first such flex scheduling took place on November 30, 2023, when the Week 15 matchup between theKansas City Chiefs and theNew England Patriots was removed fromMonday Night Football in favor of thePhiladelphia Eagles at theSeattle Seahawks.[82]

References

[edit]
  1. ^Brulia, Timothy."POST-SEASON FOOTBALL TV ANNOUNCERS"(PDF).profootballresearchers.org.
  2. ^"Retro: Philadelphia Sun, Sept 27, 1953".RadioDiscussions. June 5, 2008.
  3. ^"Thanksgiving Day Games".The Gridiron Uniform Database.
  4. ^Ducibella, Tim (September 6, 2007)."In their 75 years, Skins have made history".The Virginian-Pilot.
  5. ^Jack Buck; Rob Rains (1997).That's a Winner!. Sports Publishing LLC. p. 140.
  6. ^"A History of Monday Night Football".Bleacher Report. January 21, 2008.
  7. ^"Denver Adult Rock Station - KQMT-FM | 99.5 FM the Mountain".995themountain.com.
  8. ^"Theismann's career ended in a horrific moment".The Washington Times.News World Communications. November 10, 2003.
  9. ^ab"Dennis Miller a surprise addition to MNF". June 22, 2000.[dead link]
  10. ^Farmer, Sam (December 24, 2019)."Al Michaels recalls the time Arnold Schwarzenegger terminated the Dolphins".Los Angeles Times. RetrievedJune 3, 2024.
  11. ^Casselberry, Ian (February 3, 2021)."Lisa Guerrero recounts her traumatic experience as Monday Night Football sideline reporter".Awful Announcing.
  12. ^Lewis, Jon."Decade in Review: 10 worst personnel moves".Sports Media Watch.
  13. ^Monday Night Football onYouTube
  14. ^Miller, Shales, James Andrew, Tom.Those Guys Have All the Fun: Inside the World of ESPN(PDF). p. 547.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  15. ^Leonard Shapiro; Mark Maske (April 19, 2005)."'Monday Night Football' Changes the Channel".The Washington Post. p. A1. Archived fromthe original on September 22, 2018.
  16. ^"Stay 'tooned: Disney gets 'Oswald' for Al Michaels".ESPN.com.
  17. ^"Dianna Russini Joins MNF Double Header | Barrett Media".barrettsportsmedia.com. 2019-09-05. Retrieved2024-02-19.
  18. ^"Jaworski replacing Theismann in MNF booth".ESPN.com.
  19. ^John Dempsey (December 5, 2007)."ESPN football earns record ratings".Variety.
  20. ^Rick Kissell; Michael Schneider (August 18, 2007)."'High School Musical 2' huge hit".Variety. RetrievedAugust 18, 2007.
  21. ^"ESPN's 'Monday Night Football' Ratings Hit Record Low".Multichannel News. October 17, 2007.
  22. ^Paul Farhi (August 15, 2006)."Kornheiser, Not Yet in Game Shape On 'MNF'".The Washington Post. RetrievedMay 4, 2010.
  23. ^"ESPN Says Suzy Kolber, Michele Tafoya's 'Roles Are Being Determined' for MNF in 2008".FanHouse.AOL. February 10, 2008.
  24. ^Jim Carlisle (August 29, 2008)."ESPN will shift its focus to football".Ventura County Star. Archived fromthe original on September 13, 2008. RetrievedSeptember 10, 2008.
  25. ^"Eagles/Cowboys most watched cable program ever". Sports Media Watch. September 16, 2008. RetrievedFebruary 2, 2012.
  26. ^Leonard Shapiro (November 4, 2008)."Obama's Proposal, Berman's Performance Win on 'Monday Night'".The Washington Post. RetrievedMay 4, 2010.
  27. ^"Jon Gruden Joins ESPN's Monday Night Football". ESPN MediaZone. May 18, 2009. RetrievedOctober 3, 2012.
  28. ^"Packers-Vikings 'MNF' Draws Largest Audience In Cable History".Sports Business Daily. October 7, 2009. RetrievedFebruary 2, 2012.
  29. ^Philiana Ng (January 11, 2011)."BCS Title Game Most-Watched Cable Broadcast Ever".The Hollywood Reporter. RetrievedFebruary 2, 2012.
  30. ^"ESPN's Monday Night Football: 21.4 Million Viewers for Patriots-Saints Game". The Futon Critic. December 2, 2009. RetrievedFebruary 2, 2012.
  31. ^Michael Martínez (October 5, 2011)."Hank Williams Jr. apologizes for Hitler-Obama comparison".CNN.com. RetrievedOctober 7, 2011.
  32. ^"ESPN pulls Williams from MNF opening".ESPN.com. October 4, 2011. RetrievedOctober 7, 2011.
  33. ^"Hank Williams Jr. out on Monday Night Football".Yahoo! News.Associated Press. October 6, 2011. Archived fromthe original on October 19, 2011. RetrievedJanuary 14, 2017.
  34. ^"McDonough moving off MNF, back to college football for ESPN".Boston Globe. March 9, 2018. RetrievedMay 8, 2018.
  35. ^Lott, Thomas (March 9, 2018)."Joe Tessitore reportedly will be named new voice of MNF".sportingnews.com. Archived fromthe original on June 21, 2018. RetrievedMay 8, 2018.
  36. ^Archer, Todd (May 4, 2018)."Cowboys TE Jason Witten retires, joins Monday Night Football as analyst". ESPN. RetrievedMay 8, 2018.
  37. ^Hille, Bob (May 10, 2018)."New 'Monday Night Football' broadcast team made official".sportingnews.com. Archived fromthe original on May 17, 2018. RetrievedJune 2, 2018.
  38. ^Cameron Filipe (June 20, 2018)."Jeff Triplette to join ESPN broadcast booth as rules analyst".Football Zebras. RetrievedJune 20, 2018.
  39. ^Koo, Ben (October 23, 2018)."The new Monday Night Football broadcast has a lot of problems, and it's more than just Jason Witten".Awful Announcing.
  40. ^Sanchez, Mark W. (October 23, 2018)."Giants superfan erupts at ESPN over field-blocking 'BoogMobile'".New York Post.
  41. ^Traina, Jimmy (October 24, 2018)."Traina Thoughts: ESPN's 'Monday Night Football' Is Close to Unwatchable".Sports Illustrated.
  42. ^Marchand, Andrew (January 7, 2020)."Tony Romo is just one wild card in ESPN's 'Monday Night Football' shakeup".New York Post.
  43. ^Magary, Drew (November 29, 2018)."Monday Night Football Needs To Get Over Itself".Deadspin.
  44. ^Heifetz, Danny (September 9, 2019)."ESPN's Yellow (Green?) First-Down Marker Was the Latest in Broadcasts Fixing What Ain't Broken".The Ringer.
  45. ^Schwab, Frank (September 9, 2019)."People hated ESPN's yellow down-and-distance graphic, so the network changed it".Yahoo.
  46. ^Teti, John (October 25, 2017)."The sorry state of Monday Night Football—a review in four quarters".AVClub.
  47. ^Connolly, Oliver (November 26, 2019)."Monday Night Football: the once great NFL show is now the worst on television".The Guardian.
  48. ^"ESPN's new Monday Night Football booth is fine, so maybe we can all move on".Awful Announcing. 2020-09-15. Retrieved2020-10-10.
  49. ^"ESPN's Chris Fowler, Kirk Herbstreit shine in NFL debut".Sports Illustrated. TheMaven/Authentic Brands Group. Retrieved2020-10-10.
  50. ^Florio, Mike (May 7, 2020)."First regular-season game in Las Vegas will be simulcast on ABC".Profootballtalk.com.Archived from the original on May 12, 2020. RetrievedMay 8, 2020.
  51. ^Grow, Kory (2020-09-15)."With No Rowdy Fans, ESPN Turns to Little Richard for 'Monday Night Football' Theme".Rolling Stone. Retrieved2020-10-10.
  52. ^"Sunday's Denver Broncos-New England Patriots game moved to Monday at 5".ESPN.com. 2020-10-08. Retrieved2020-10-10.
  53. ^"Chris Fowler, Kirk Herbstreit will call Broncos-Patriots on Monday night".Awful Announcing. 2020-10-09. Retrieved2020-10-10.
  54. ^"NFL announces TV deals with ESPN/ABC, NBC, CBS, Fox, Amazon".ESPN.com. 2021-03-18. Retrieved2021-03-18.
  55. ^"NFL completes network/Amazon rights deals through 2033, bringing in $10 billion per year along the way".Awful Announcing. 2021-03-18. Retrieved2021-03-18.
  56. ^Patra, Kevin (July 19, 2021)."Peyton, Eli Manning to headline alternate 'Monday Night Football' telecast".NFL.com. RetrievedJuly 19, 2021.
  57. ^ab"Phil Mickelson believes in ManningCast curse, trashes Eli Manning's golf swing".CBSSports.com. 16 November 2021. Retrieved2021-11-20.
  58. ^"Peyton Manning salvaged a rough start to his 'Monday Night Football' debut". 14 September 2021.
  59. ^"ESPN to Broadcast MNF Wild Card Game, Will Include Manningcast". 13 October 2021.
  60. ^"Did the ManningCast 'Monday Night Football' curse strike again? Bills' Josh Allen latest apparent 'victim'".CBSSports.com. 8 November 2021. Retrieved2021-11-20.
  61. ^Marchand, Andrew (February 24, 2022)."Troy Aikman on verge of bolting Fox for ESPN's 'Monday Night Football'".New York Post. RetrievedMarch 12, 2022.
  62. ^Marchand, Andrew (March 11, 2022)."Joe Buck expected to leave Fox Sports for huge ESPN deal".New York Post.
  63. ^DeArdo, Bryan (March 4, 2022)."Former NFL QB, 'Monday Night Football' analyst Brian Griese leaving ESPN to become 49ers QBs coach, per report".CBS Sports. RetrievedMarch 12, 2022.
  64. ^McDaniel, Mike."Dan Orlovsky Taking On New Role at ESPN, per Report".Sports Illustrated. Retrieved2022-05-18.
  65. ^"Dan Orlovsky sticks with ESPN despite Fox pursuit".Awful Announcing. 2022-05-18. Retrieved2022-05-18.
  66. ^"ESPN reveals Monday Night Football doubleheader schedule, called by Steve Levy, Louis Riddick, Dan Orlovsky, and Laura Rutledge".Awful Announcing. 2022-07-12. Retrieved2022-07-14.
  67. ^"ESPN's Monday Night Football Bills-Bengals Week 17 AFC Showdown Available on ESPN, ABC, ESPN2, ESPN+, and ESPN Deportes". ESPN. December 28, 2022. RetrievedJanuary 3, 2023.
  68. ^"NFL announcers: Who is announcing Monday Night Football for Bills-Bengals in Week 17".Draft Kings. January 2, 2023. RetrievedJanuary 3, 2023.
  69. ^"Buffalo Bills News: MNF suspended after chilling Damar Hamlin injury".Buffalo Low Down. January 2, 2023. RetrievedJanuary 3, 2023.
  70. ^Deitsch, Richard."Deitsch: On a horrific night for Damar Hamlin and the NFL, ESPN showed humanity".The Athletic. RetrievedJanuary 6, 2023.
  71. ^Finn, Chad."ESPN's Scott Van Pelt and Ryan Clark deftly handled the difficult Damar Hamlin story on air - The Boston Globe".The Boston Globe. RetrievedJanuary 6, 2023.
  72. ^Clinkscales, Jason (January 3, 2023)."After Damar Hamlin collapse, ESPN made the best from a tough situation".Awful Announcing. RetrievedJanuary 6, 2023.
  73. ^"ESPN praised for coverage of Bills' Damar Hamlin's medical emergency on Monday Night Football".The Star-Ledger. January 3, 2023. RetrievedJanuary 3, 2023.
  74. ^ab"ESPN's Ryan Clark praised for 'empathy and humanity' in coverage of Damar Hamlin collapse".SportingNews.com. 3 January 2023. RetrievedJanuary 3, 2023.
  75. ^"Ryan Clark said all there is to say about Damar Hamlin injury".fansided.com. January 2, 2023. RetrievedJanuary 3, 2023.
  76. ^ab"Booger McFarland throws shade at NFL in aftermath of Damar Hamlin situation".Larry Brown Sports. January 3, 2023. RetrievedJanuary 3, 2023.
  77. ^"'Monday Night Football' telecast in which Hamlin collapsed was most watched in ESPN's history". CNN. 5 January 2023. RetrievedJanuary 5, 2023.
  78. ^"Monday 1.2.2023 Top 150 Cable Originals & Network Finals UPDATED".ShowBuzzDaily. RetrievedJanuary 5, 2023.
  79. ^McGuire, Sean T. (January 3, 2023)."Joe Buck, ESPN Reiterate Stance On Since-Denied Damar Hamlin Report".NESN.com. RetrievedJanuary 6, 2023.
  80. ^"Damar Hamlin update: Here's everything that's been reported on the Bills safety after collapse on the field".For The Win. January 3, 2023. RetrievedJanuary 6, 2023.
  81. ^Marchand, Andrew (May 2, 2023)."ESPN replacing Steve Levy with Chris Fowler in No. 2 'Monday Night Football' booth".New York Post. RetrievedMay 14, 2023.
  82. ^"Week 15 Flex Scheduling: Eagles-Seahawks to Monday Night; NFL Network Tripleheader on Saturday".nflcommunications.com. Retrieved2023-11-30.

External links

[edit]
Related programs
Studio programs
Other football programs
Related articles
Commentators
Former
commentators
Lore televised
by ESPN
ESPN Sunday Night Football era
Pro Bowls broadcast on ESPN
Music
Songs
Rivalries
Results
Related programs
Non-NFL programs
Related articles
Chicago Bears (home games)
Chicago Cardinals (home games)
Los Angeles Rams (Pacific Time Zoneaffiliates)
San Francisco 49ers (Pacific Time Zoneaffiliates)
Washington Redskins (home games)
Commentators
Postseason commentators
Lore televised by ABC
Postseason lore
Holiday lore
Music
Songs
NFL Championship
Super Bowl
Pro Bowl
AFL Championship
Results and standings
Yearly results
NFL draft
NFL Honors
Broadcast
partners
Streaming coverage
Monday Night
Football
Sunday Night
Football
Pregame shows
NFL Network
NFL Films
Other programs
Radio broadcast
partners
Defunct networks
Secondary partners
Local broadcasters
Broadcasters
by event
Pre-AFL–NFL merger
Postseason events
TV technology
Other
TV markets
Broadcast policies
Network
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=History_of_Monday_Night_Football&oldid=1316753667"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp