ESPN NFL analyst Mina Kimes has made a career of critiquing decisions made by NFL teams. But on Friday, it was Kimes who was under a microscope after coming up short on her recent appearance on Celebrity Jeopardy! earlier this week.
After advancing past the quarterfinals round last month, Kimes faced off against David Friedberg and Sean Gunn in the semifinals on Wednesday. Despite holding a lead throughout most of Wednesday’s show, Kimes ultimately came up short after both she and Sean Gunn got the Final Jeopardy question wrong and Friedberg got it right.
Kimes finished in second place just behind David Friedberg. However, the ESPN NFL analyst was rather hard on herself during an appearance on the Pablo Torre Finds Out podcast, likening her tentativeness on “daily doubles” to that of an NFL head coach who is afraid to go for fourth-down conversions.
“I could feel his disappointment in my cowardly bullsh*t daily double strategy,” said Kimes of Celebrity Jeopardy! host Ken Jennings. “You can see it, just the disgust… I am the coach who kicks the field goal instead of going for it!! My whole career is devoted to calling these coaches out on cowardly game management, and then when I was in that situation, I panicked like a word I can’t say.”
If you don’t think Kimes was hard enough on herself, Pablo Torre and Dan Le Batard certainly were, roasting her for what they believe what would be considered a “choke” in the sports world.
“Mina, for those who are not watching, is in full NFL coach behind a mic podium posture,” said Torre. “Just really disappointed in herself not having the right strategy.”
“I was so pissed walking out of there because I felt like I just strategically didn’t prepare for the right things. And I didn’t think through it. I was really mad at myself,” replied Kimes.
“That is choking though right Mina?” asked Le Batard. “This would be textbook definition of choking, right coach?”
While Kimes was disappointed in her loss, she also couldn’t admit that she “choked,” claiming that she knew “pretty much every answer,” but wasn’t able to buzz in before her competitors did.
“I don’t think I dominated to the point where it is textbook choking,” Kimes contested. “Like, I don’t. I choked on the daily doubles. And I think that’s why that was the hardest for me to watch because that was my fault. I knew pretty much every answer, but I just couldn’t buzz in. That’s not choking, that’s just not being as good at it.”
Le Batard continued to call Kimes’ loss a choke, particularly when it came to Kimes’ strategy throughout the semifinals.
“The reason that I say it is choking is because the combination of panic and lack of strategy that, in a moment makes you go ‘Ahhh’. Because all of the sudden you are scared.”
Whether you believe Kimes choked or not, she is pretty disappointed that she wasn’t able to follow in Katie Nolan’s footsteps and become the second sports media personality to appear on Celebrity Jeopardy! finals.
About Reice Shipley
Reice Shipley is a staff writer for Comeback Media that graduated from Ithaca College with a degree in Sports Media. He previously worked at Barrett Sports Media and is a fan of all things Syracuse sports.
Recent Posts
ESPN reveals announcers for 2025-26 College Football Playoff
The CFP begins on Friday, Dec. 19, at 8 p.m. ET on ABC and ESPN with No. 9 Alabama at No. 8 Oklahoma.
Despite criticism, CFP chair Hunter Yurachek doesn’t see need to change weekly ranking shows
"You're always going to have controversy, and that's why we debated for so long..."
It’s inevitable that the college football bowl system will die
Blame it on whatever you want, college football and it's power brokers have already started killing the bowl system.
Notre Dame throws tantrum after playoff spot ‘stolen from our student-athletes,’ will skip bowl game
"Overwhelming shock and sadness. Like a collective feeling that we were all just punched in the stomach."
Chris Fowler on CFP: ‘This is a bracket that’s going to be talked about forever’
"There's going to be something more than a tweak, I think, going forward."
Joey Galloway unloads on CFP committee over ‘very strange’ Miami-Notre Dame flip
"The résumé hasn't changed a lick."