When former Ohio State and Minnesota Vikings running back Robert Smith announced he was leaving ESPN as a college football analyst, the next step in his television career seemed rather obvious. On Sunday night, it became a reality.
SI’s Richard Deitsch tweeted that Smith was joining Fox Sports along with Big Ten Network:
With an eye towards what’s coming, Smith’s Twitter bio says “pending.”
Smith was a pretty good analyst at ESPN, but never really reached the top of the network – maybe because he didn’t have a particular conference or fanbase to troll.
He’s a perfect fit for the Fox/BTN conglomerate, especially considering Fox Sports just picked up half of the Big Ten rights package. Smith should help fortify a list of studio analysts at Fox including Joel Klatt, Matt Leinart, and Dave Wannstedt. One might expect him to have a similar role as another former Buckeye, Jim Jackson, who traverses back and forth between the networks in a floating role.
Overall, Smith is a very good hire that should help bring some more credibility to Fox’s efforts to build up their college football coverage, especially in the eyes of Big Ten fans.
Just please God don’t make him debate things with Clay Travis.
Comments are closed.
About Matt Yoder
Recent Posts
ESPN looking for ‘more regularity’ with ‘Inside the NBA’ schedule next season
The current licensing agreement with TNT limits how many times the show can air before January 1.
Jaylen Brown drops F-bomb on ESPN following win over Pistons: ‘Ball don’t f*cking lie’
The Celtics survived following a foul call on a three-point attempt.
Dave Portnoy, Barstool Tate get personal over Michigan-Ohio State livestream snub
"I don’t like you and I’m too old to spend time with people I don’t like."
Fox replay shows Matt LaFleur late on timeout call after false start
"Oohh, he did not get it."
Tom Brady ‘sorry not sorry’ for drilling pass at kid during Fox segment
"Catch the damn ball."
ESPN content head ‘not that concerned’ about Stephen A. Smith overexposure
"As long as the quality and level of his work on First Take is to the degree it’s always been, which it is as we sit here today, I’m not that concerned about overexposure."