When David Pollack was let go by ESPN, it didn’t take long for fans to point fingers, many of them aimed squarely at Pat McAfee.
After all, ESPN’s mass layoffs in the summer of 2023 coincided with a high-profile licensing deal for The Pat McAfee Show. McAfee had already completed one season on College GameDay, and optically, it wasn’t a great look. One show arrived. Another personality vanished. And with Pollack — a Georgia legend — suddenly gone, McAfee’s presence in the chair he used to occupy only fueled the noise.
By the time McAfee took the stage at the SEC Championship Game in Atlanta, he fully leaned into his new role as a villain, at least in the eyes of Georgia fans. He teased them into thinking he was picking the Bulldogs, only to pull the rug from underneath them and take Alabama instead.
“They did not love me,” McAfee said of Georgia fans. “You’ve gotta remember that the whole narrative all year was that because my show came to ESPN, obviously we fired Steve Young, we fired all the people that were here and were great people at ESPN. It was my show’s fault. And then on GameDay, David Pollack got let go. David Pollack — who I am a massive fan of. One of the greatest Bulldogs of all time. A dude who was very good to me — obviously, I took his spot. So Georgia fans all year, not necessarily the biggest McAfee fans.”
McAfee didn’t shy away from the heat; if anything, he welcomed it. But for all the speculation, Pollack himself isn’t holding a grudge. Not against McAfee. Not against ESPN. If anything, he’s thankful it all played out the way it did.
“That’s a topic that people always want to bring up, but I don’t feel like that was Pat’s fault,” he told On3’s Pete Nakos. “Pat was hired to do a job, just like I would have been called in to do a job. I don’t feel like Pat was the reason, no. They hired Pat, and Pat is really good at what he does, very different, very unique. A lot of times, when you’re spending a lot of money on a show, there are also levels to who’s important and who’s not. I wasn’t on the right side of that. That also happens in every business across the country every year.”
Pollack admitted it became clear there likely wasn’t going to be room for both personalities on the same desk. And while he didn’t get into specifics about what offers may have come his way since leaving ESPN, he’s not rushing back to the spotlight. Television still interests him, but for now, he’s focused on family.
And McAfee is focused on being McAfee. He’s loud, polarizing, and unapologetically himself, all while being the face of a show that costs a lot to bring in, and one that ESPN is still betting on to break through.