College Football Live

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College Football Live
GenreCollege football
StarringWendi Nix
Desmond Howard
Joey Galloway
David Pollack
Tom Luginbill
Greg McElroy
Country of originUnited States
Original languageEnglish
Production
Production companyESPN
DistributorThe Walt Disney Company
Release
Original networkESPN (2007–present)
Original releaseMay 23, 2007 (2007-05-23) –
present

College Football Live is a show that airs weekdays during the college football season on ESPN or ESPN2, and ESPNU. Its premiere was on Monday, July 23, 2007. Wendi Nix serves as the lead host, and it also features ESPN college football analysts Desmond Howard, Joey Galloway, David Pollack, Trevor Matich and others. College Football Live also features Live interviews with college coaches and players.

Format[]

As previous host Rece Davis mentioned in the opening of the debut, College Football Live aims to be the most fan-interactive show on television, featuring email questions and video segments sent in by fans on every show. After the opening music and graphics, the show shifts into the ESPN side studio and Davis and the analysts open the show debating a top story of the day. After their segment has completed, they send it to Joe Schad or another insider on the situation who gives their take on it and breaks other information. Then, the segment "Live Feedback" takes place and questions sent in by viewers are answered by the personalities. After this segment, there are two rotating blocks, which on some days are two interviews but on other days, could be debate, highlights or breaking news.

At some point during the broadcast, the segment "EA Sports Simulator" is shown. In this segment, a key game is simulated on the video game NCAA Football 08 and highlights and score are shown. After this, a short debate segment is held before the closing segment "Extra Points" which is the same as "Live feedback" except done with a timer. As Rece Davis' trademark opening line he says "and here's (random college mascot) to give me the new questions". The show is supposed to be the college version of NFL Live, but is actually more similar to NASCAR Now in that it focuses more on guests and debate than breaking news. It also is similar to the show in that the analysts do not appear on the whole program and only appear for the debate segments.

College Football Live aired with a new format beginning in 2016. Samantha Ponder and Molly McGrath became its lead hosts on a rotating basis, with Jen Lada, Adnan Virk and Chris Cotter also anchoring. Instead of the host and contributors all being based in one studio, only the lead host remained studio-based, with analysts and contributors being shown from different locations.[1]

By the day[]

  • Monday: "The Insiders"—weighing in with the latest news, reaction and analysis from the weekend's games; A look back at the best plays of the weekend
  • Tuesday: Live interviews with coaches
  • Wednesday: "Conference Calls" with college football reporters from around the country.
  • Thursday: "Recruiting Trail" with Tom Luginbill providing the latest news on the top high school recruits; Live preview of ESPN’s Thursday night game from game announcers
  • Friday: Picks and previews of Saturday’s top games; College GameDay crew live from the location of Saturday’s show; Live preview of ESPN’s Friday night game

Segments[]

  • Senior Thesis- follows several top senior players through a personal video diary
  • Sound Off- will feature home viewer-generated video on varopis topics
  • Live Feedback– Fans post comments online during the program and have them posted live on the air
  • Extra Points– Analysts answer e-mails and questions at the end of each show

Personalities[]

Current[]

Hosts[]

  • Wendi Nix (2007–2015) (2020–present)
  • Kelsey Riggs
  • Jen Lada (2016–present)
  • Jason Fitz
  • Peter Burns (2014–present)
  • Matt Schick

Analysts[]

Contributors[]

¹ also an analyst

Former[]

  • Erin Andrews (2010–2012); now with Fox Sports
  • Bonnie Bernstein (2008);
  • Ryan Burr (2008-2010);
  • Jim Donnan (2007–2014)
  • Doug Flutie (2007–present); now with NBC Sports
  • Pat Forde (2007–2011); Sports Illustrated
  • Bob Griese (2007–2011)
  • Craig James (2007–2011)
  • Lou Holtz (2007–2015)
  • Danny Kanell (2010–2016); CBS Sports
  • Erik Kuselias (2007-2010); now with CBS Sports
  • John Saunders (2007–2016) (Thursday and Friday); deceased
  • Robert Smith¹ (2007–2016); now with Fox Sports
  • Chris Spielman (2007–2016); special assistant to the owner and CEO of the Detroit Lions of the National Football League
  • Matt Winer (2007–2009) now with Turner Sports
  • Mike Yam (2011); Pac-12 Network
  • Rece Davis (2007–2015) (host of College GameDay)
  • Chris Fowler (2010–2015); Saturday Night Football
  • Dari Nowkhah (2007–2015); SEC Network
  • Brent Musburger (2007–2015) ; the lead broadcaster and managing editor at Vegas Stats and Information Network and radio play-by-play voice for the Las Vegas Raiders.
  • Jonathan Coachman (2009–2015); CBS Sports
  • Mark May (2007–2015)
  • Lee Corso (2007–2015); College GameDay
  • Samantha Ponder (2016) (host of Sunday NFL Countdown)
  • Adnan Virk (2016–2017); now with DAZN and MLB Network
  • Brock Huard (2008–2018); now with Fox Sports
  • Emmanuel Acho (2019); now with Fox Sports
  • Ed Cunningham (2007–2016)
  • Cassidy Hubbarth (2016–2019); Host & reporter for NBA on ESPN & #HoopStreams on Twitter.
  • Joe Schad¹ (2007–2016); covering the Miami Dolphins and the NFL at the Palm Beach Post.
  • Ivan Maisel (2007–2021); national college football writer for On3.com and book author
  • Marcus Spears¹ (2016–2018); NFL Live
  • Rachel Nichols (2007–present)
  • Ryan Leaf (2019–present)
  • Todd Blackledge (2007–present)
  • Kirk Herbstreit (2007–present)
  • Jesse Palmer (2007–present)
  • Joe Tessitore (2016–present)

Producers[]

  • Scott Harves (2007–2009)
  • Tom Engle (2009)
  • Michael Epstein (2009–2011)
  • James Dunn (2011–present)

References[]

  1. ^ "ESPN's College Football Live to Debut New Format". 18 August 2016.

External links[]

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