Monday Night Countdown

Last updated
Monday Night Countdown
Monday Night Countdown logo.svg
Also known as
  • NFL Prime Monday(1993–1997)
Starring Scott Van Pelt
Robert Griffin III
Marcus Spears
Ryan Clark
Adam Schefter
Alex Smith
Larry Fitzgerald
Country of originUnited States
Production
Running time120 min.
Production company ESPN
Original release
Network ESPN (1993–present)
ABC (2016–present) (select games)
ReleaseSeptember 6, 1993 (1993-09-06) 
present

Monday Night Countdown (officially Monday Night Countdown presented by Panera ) is an American pregame television program that is broadcast on ESPN, preceding its coverage of Monday Night Football . For the network's non-Monday broadcasts, the pregame show is simply titled NFL Countdown. When it debuted in 1993 as NFL Prime Monday, and Monday Night Football was airing on ABC, the pregame show was one of the first cross-pollinations between ESPN and ABC Sports, each of which operated largely under separate management at the time. The show was renamed Monday Night Countdown in 1998 to match its sister show Sunday NFL Countdown , and Monday Night Football moved from ABC to ESPN in 2006. When ABC began airing selected Monday Night Football games in 2016, the network's broadcasts were preceded by simulcasts of Monday Night Countdown. The current sponsor is Panera, starting with the 2023 season. Previous sponsors of the show include UPS, Applebee's, Call of Duty, Courtyard by Marriott and Subway.

Contents

History

Monday Night Football on ABC era

The show was initially hosted by Mike Tirico along with analysts Joe Theismann, Craig James, Phil Simms and Ron Jaworski. Mike Ditka also discussed certain topics and Chris Mortensen brought news and rumors from around the league. John Clayton was also a regular guest on the show. Former presenters include Mike Tirico, Bill Parcells, Michael Irvin, and Sterling Sharpe. During the 2005 season, it enjoyed its best ratings ever and was the highest-rated studio sports show on cable television. On occasion, the crew appeared on-site at the game, but for the most part the show was aired from the studios in Bristol, Connecticut.

ESPN Monday Night Football

2006

In 2006, the show began appearing at the Monday Night Football site live as the game moved to ESPN from ABC. Stuart Scott moved to host of NFL Primetime which precedes Monday Night Countdown and Chris Berman moved from NFL Primetime to Monday Night Countdown and was joined by returning analysts Tom Jackson and Michael Irvin along with new analyst from Sunday NFL Countdown Steve Young. Ron Jaworski also contributed to the show along with Chris Mortensen, Ed Werder and Sal Paolantonio. Also, in 2006 Monday Night Countdown introduced a new logo and new graphics as part of The Syndicate's new NFL package for ESPN. In the same fashion as all ESPN NFL studio shows, Monday Night Countdown adopted ABC's alternate football musical theme, though presented as a shuffle.

2007

Beginning with the 2007, the show cutback its onsite presence by having its main anchor team at ESPN studio's in Bristol, but still kept a set at the actual game site.

2008

The Bristol team was Berman, Jackson, Mortensen, Mike Ditka, Keyshawn Johnson, and Cris Carter. The on-site team is Scott, Young, and Emmitt Smith.

2009–2012

The Bristol team was Berman, Jackson, Mortensen, Ditka, Johnson, and Carter. The on-site team was Scott, Young, and Matt Millen (later Trent Dilfer) in the third spot.

On September 17, 2012, Monday Night Countdown moved up to the 6:30 ET timeslot and expanded to 2 hours. As a result, SportsCenter Monday Kickoff had its runtime cut in half, from 60 minutes to 30 minutes only. Additionally, Monday Night Countdown debuted a new program logo that closely resembles that of Monday Night Football and a new graphics scheme package matching that of Monday Night Football. Also, Monday Night Countdown began using MNF's "Heavy Action" theme music as this program's own theme music.

2013

Ray Lewis is added to the on-site team after his retirement from the NFL in 2012.

On December 23, 2013, the final scheduled Monday Night Football broadcast of that season, Chris Berman was at Candlestick Park in San Francisco covering the 49ers' final home game in that stadium, while Stuart Scott was at ESPN's Bristol studios. The 49ers defeated the Atlanta Falcons, 34–24, in the MNF season finale. That game was also the 36th and final Monday Night Football game — and the last NFL game — ever played at Candlestick Park.

2014

On September 8, 2014, Monday Night Countdown moved to a brand-new set inside Digital Center 2 of ESPN's Bristol studios, which shares the same set as Sunday NFL Countdown and NFL Primetime. However, the Monday Night Football graphics package is still used, but the rundown graphic was changed to match the one used on SportsCenter. 1 week later (September 15, 2014), Monday Night Countdown moved up to the 6:00 p.m. ET timeslot, which resulted in SportsCenter Monday Kickoff not returning for the 2014 season and moving the 6:00 p.m. ET edition of SportsCenter to ESPN2 on Mondays during the NFL season.

2015

Suzy Kolber, who substituted for the then-ailing Stuart Scott during most of the 2014 season, took over Scott's role permanently as an on-site host. She was previously a sideline reporter for Monday Night Football from 2006 to 2010. Additionally, Monday Night Countdown debuted a new logo resembling its other NFL-themed studio-show properties, along with a new graphics package that is also used for MNF.

2016

With the exception of Chris Berman (who remained in the Bristol studio), the entire Monday Night Countdown crew were moved to the Monday Night Football game site, joining on-site host Suzy Kolber. Meanwhile, Berman was joined in the Bristol studio each week by analysts who work or had previously worked at ESPN. However, Berman and the Monday Night Countdown crew did the show on November 21 from Estadio Azteca in Mexico City for the game between the Oakland Raiders and Houston Texans, and December 12 from Gillette Stadium in Foxborough, Massachusetts. This was also Berman's final season as a host for ESPN's NFL-themed studio shows.

2017

Suzy Kolber was named host of Monday Night Countdown on March 23, 2017. She replaced Chris Berman, who departed after 30 seasons of hosting NFL-themed studio shows, though he still appeared in occasional segments. In addition to her pregame duties, Kolber now hosts all halftime and post-game shows, normally from the game site; however, the October 9, 2017, November 27, 2017, and December 25, 2017, shows all originated from ESPN's Bristol studio. The Christmas Day episode, which only ran for 45 minutes, did not have Woodson or Young; Rex Ryan did the show.

2019

Woodson left ESPN for Fox, and Hasselbeck left Countdown to take over as a full-time co-analyst role for ESPN's Thursday Night College Football games. Therefore, the lineup was Suzy Kolber, Adam Schefter, Randy Moss, Steve Young, and Louis Riddick. The show got a new graphics package. The October 28 show originated from Bristol instead of Pittsburgh, probably because the show had been there earlier in the season.

2020

Monday Night Countdown, along with most of ESPN's NFL-themed studio shows, moved to the network's South Street Seaport studios in New York City for the 2020 season. With the exception of Louis Riddick, who switched roles with Booger McFarland & moved to the Monday Night Football broadcast booth (the latter of whom took over Riddick's previous role of studio analyst), the lineup remained the same from the previous season.

2021

After being at the network's New York City facilities due to the COVID-19 pandemic the previous year, Monday Night Countdown returned to the game site for the first time in two seasons. Kolber, McFarland, Moss and Young all returned from the previous season. The show originated from New York instead of Baltimore October 11 and Washington November 29. Young didn't do the show October 18; Alex Smith did the show for the first time.

2022

Prior to the start of the season, Berry left for NBC Sunday Night Football and a fantasy football show on Peacock. Larry Fitzgerald and Robert Griffin III made their debuts. Randy Moss left to do Sunday NFL Countdown only. Alex Smith made more appearances, but not every week. The October 31 and December 26, 2022 and January 2, 2023, shows originated from New York instead of Cleveland, Indianapolis and Cincinnati, respectively. On those shows, Young was not at the former, and in a remote location on the latter two. The January 2 show ran on ESPN2 and ABC (due to the Rose Bowl airing on ESPN) and ran for an hour and 15 minutes; Rex Ryan substituted for Griffin, who was calling the Cotton Bowl that same day.

2023

Kolber and Young became two of the several ESPN employees laid off in late June 2023. On August 21, 2023, three weeks before the first Monday Night game of the season, it was announced that veteran SportsCenter anchor Scott Van Pelt would replace Kolber as Monday Night Countdown host. Fellow newcomers Ryan Clark and Marcus Spears would also be joining the show, with Griffin and Schefter returning. Van Pelt would also host the postgame show and anchor SportsCenter with SVP from the site of Monday Night Countdown. [1]

This season, ABC started to join ESPN in airing the pregame show at 7:30 p.m. ET, similar to how CBS, NBC and Fox used to do for Thursday Night Football, instead of joining coverage at the traditional start time of the prime time slot at 8:00 p.m. ET. [2] [3] This only affected those 8:15 p.m. ET games that ABC was originally scheduled to air at the start of the season (including when two games was airing on September 18, in which ESPN started the pregame at 5 p.m. ET and ABC exclusively resumed the pregame at 7:30 p.m. ET); when ABC announced in September that it would simulcast an additional 10 games due to the 2023 Hollywood labor disputes, local affiliates kept the 7:30-8:00 p.m. ET slot on those dates. [2] On September 25 when ABC aired the 7:15 p.m. ET game as part of the ABC-ESPN doubleheader, the pregame show instead preceded the ESPN 8:15 p.m. ET game, while ABC aired SportsCenter after its game to fill the remaining prime time block until 11:00 p.m. ET. When the ABC-ESPN doubleheader games both kickoff at 8:15 p.m. ET on December 11, both networks will still begin to air the pregame show as usual at 6:00 and 7:30 p.m. ET, respectively, and ESPN will air the postgame as usual. [2]

The show did not originate from either of the September 18 doubleheader game sites of Charlotte and Pittsburgh. The show did not originate from either of the September 25 doubleheader game sites of Tampa and Cincinnati. Then on October 9, Van Pelt was unable to host after losing his voice, and was replaced by MNF play-by-play announcer Joe Buck (who had hosted Fox NFL Sunday in 2006) for the first part of the pregame show, and reporter Michelle Beisner-Buck during the last half-hour of the pregame show and the halftime show. [4] The show did not originate from the game site of Minneapolis on October 23 and November 27, or East Rutherford, New Jersey on November 6. The show didn't originate from the doubleheader sites of Miami and East Rutherford on December 11, as well.

Personalities

This is a list of personalities that currently or formerly appeared on Monday Night Countdown.

Current

Main panelists

Contributors

NFL Insiders

Former

Hosts

Analysts

Contributors

Segments

Current

Former

See also

Resources

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References

  1. Volner, Derek (August 21, 2023). "Scott Van Pelt to Host Monday Night Countdown as ESPN Signs Seven-Time Emmy Nominee to Multi-Year Deal; Analysts Ryan Clark and Marcus Spears Join the Pregame Show as All Three Commentators Expand Their Presence on ESPN's NFL Platforms". espnpressroom.com (Press release). Retrieved August 22, 2023.
  2. 1 2 3 "ESPN Schedules". ESPN Press Room U.S. Retrieved 2023-08-26.
  3. "What Fans Need to Know: ESPN and ABC's Two Monday Night Football Games with Staggered Kickoff Times and Overlapping Action in Week 2". ESPN Press Room U.S. 2023-09-15.
  4. "Scott Van Pelt is out for Monday Night Countdown in Las Vegas and wants you to hear it from him directly". Awful Announcing. October 9, 2023.
  5. "The dawn of a new age: First "Monday Night Football," then ESPN". Star Tribune. Retrieved 2017-09-07.