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ESPN offers sports fans live major events and original studio programming with the authority that they trust and the personalities that they love. ESPN boasts 6,200 live and/or original hours of programming in over 65 different sports. Exclusive games include Monday Night Football, MLB, NBA, college basketball, college football and College Football Playoff, and many more. Original programming includes news and analysis on SportsCenter, Around the Horn, Pardon the Interruption and ESPN’s own X Games and ESPY’s.
Championship Drive
Air Date: January 20, 2025Led by host Kevin Connors, college football analysts and reporters meet to discuss and debate who the top teams are in the country.
Pardon the Interruption
Air Date: January 20, 2025The debate is the story in this fast-paced, half-hour series hosted by former Washington Post sportswriters Tony Kornheiser and Michael Wilbon. The pair engage in high-energy discussions, conduct interviews and often argue over topics not even related to sports. Other sports reporters appear as guests and offer opinions on the top stories of the day.
College GameDay
Air Date: January 20, 2025Originating from the site of one of the day's best matchups, with a sea of fans cheering wildly in the background, host Rece Davis and analysts Lee Corso, Kirk Herbstreit and Desmond Howard talk college football for three hours, reporting on the top teams, games, players and storylines. David Pollack and others contribute reports, interviews and features.
Ram Trucks Pregame
Pregame coverage.
#8 Ohio State vs #7 Notre Dame
NCAAFThe No. 7 Fighting Irish (14-1) battle the No. 8 Buckeyes (13-2) in the College Football Playoff final from Atlanta. Notre Dame seeks a 12th championship but the first for the storied school since 1988, while Ohio State aims for its ninth title.
SportsCenter With Scott Van Pelt
Air Date: January 21, 2025SVP's up at midnight and bringing his unique perspective on games people play to "SportsCenter" viewers. The hourlong, late-night show is driven by the host's self-deprecating wit and passion for sports, with featured elements, including Van Pelt's nightly "1 Big Thing" commentary and a weekly look back at the moments that drove bettors wild in "Bad Beats." The show also delivers what "SportsCenter" fans are used to -- news and highlights, guests and interviews -- but in a different, fast-paced and insightful way.