- NBA Countdown
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GMC Sierra NBA Sunday Countdown Format Sports Starring Hannah Storm
Stuart Scott
Michael Wilbon
Jon Barry
Magic JohnsonCountry of origin United States Production Running time 30 minutes Broadcast Original channel ABC (2002–) Original airing December 25, 2002 NBA Countdown, is a weekly, thirty minute pregame show airing prior to each National Basketball Association (NBA) telecast on the American Broadcasting Company.
NBA Countdown typically airs each Sunday at 12:30 p.m, with the exception of some markets pre-empted for paid programming, or some Sundays when it airs at 2:00 or 3:00 p.m, and the NBA Finals, when it airs at 8:30 p.m. In 2006, the first and so far only one-hour edition of the pregame show aired, prior to Game 1 of the 2006 NBA Finals.
Contents
Overview
Unlike NBC's NBA studio show, which was known as NBA Showtime for the first ten years of its existence, ABC's studio has been without much consistency. It has gone through five names in five seasons, and several analysts in each season. For the 2006-2007 season, the pregame show will be known as NBA Sunday Countdown. Each season, the show has been sponsored by GMC, with exception of the Finals, where it is sponsored by Chevrolet. Mike Tirico hosted the pregame shows from ABC's first season with the NBA to the middle of the network's fourth with the league. On March 19, 2006, Tirico was replaced by ESPN's Dan Patrick, and was be moved to the number two play-by-play team. Other hosts of the pregame show include regular substitute John Saunders.
NBA Shootaround
(25 December 2002 - 15 June 2003) Initially, ABC's NBA pregame show was known as NBA Shootaround, and shared virtually the same graphics and music as the ESPN pregame show of the same name. The program was hosted by Mike Tirico, with analysts Bill Walton and Tom Tolbert. Unlike most network pregame shows, Shootaround did not take place in a studio, and instead traveled to a different site each week (much like ESPN's College Gameday). Starting with Game 1 of the 2003 Eastern Conference Finals, Walton was replaced in the pregame show by Sean Elliott. Tolbert was dropped from the pregame show starting with Game 1 of the NBA Finals. Tirico and Elliott were joined by a guest analyst for each game of the Finals.
NBA Hangtime
(25 December 2003 - 25 December 2004) After bad ratings in the 2002-2003 season, ABC retooled much of its NBA coverage. This included its pregame show, which was rebranded NBA Hangtime, and moved into the network's Times Square studios. The pregame show was given new music and graphics, to differentiate itself from its ESPN counterpart, and was still hosted by Mike Tirico. Tom Tolbert was brought back as an analyst, but ABC dropped Bill Walton from pregame show duties. He was replaced by George Karl. After criticism from the media on Karl's lack of opinion during the program, ABC replaced him on February 22, 2004 with former New Jersey Nets coach Byron Scott. NBA Hangtime lasted through the 2003-2004 season, and continued on Christmas Day 2004, prior to the much-hyped Los Angeles Lakers-Miami Heat game. This telecast was the only NBA Hangtime to involve analysts Steve Jones and Bill Walton.
NBA Game Time
(8 January 2005 - 23 June 2005) For most of the 2004-2005 season, ABC's pregame show was known as NBA Game Time. Like Hangtime, it originated from the network's Times Square studios, and was once more hosted by Mike Tirico. Tirico was re-joined by Bill Walton in the studio, and Walton's old broadcast partner from NBC, Steve "Snapper" Jones. Tom Tolbert was dropped, while Byron Scott and George Karl both returned to the NBA coaching ranks. Game Time, unlike its predecessors, included guest analysts, such as Baron Davis, Jalen Rose, Rick Fox, and Bill Russell. During the 2005 Western Conference Finals, Steve Jones fell ill with appendicitis, and was later replaced for the NBA Finals by ESPN analyst Greg Anthony.
NBA Nation
(25 December 2005 -June 22, 2006) Starting on Christmas Day 2005, ABC's NBA pregame show underwent yet another transformation. It adopted the former name of the ESPN2 Tuesday night NBA studio show, and became known as NBA Nation. For most of the season, Mike Tirico hosted the program. He was joined by Scottie Pippen, as Steve Jones and Bill Walton both returned to the broadcast booth. In the first edition of NBA Nation, Pippen was only seen in the final segment of the show. The first three segments involved special-interest stories and a panel of celebrities and sportswriters discussing issues concerning the NBA. This panel of guests was the first of only two. Though it was originally planned for Tirico to be joined by an in-studio panel of guests each week, the plan was evidently scrapped after January 22. Following that, a panel of guests, all of which directly connected to the NBA or basketball in general, joined Tirico via satellite occasionally (with the exception of March 5, when both Mike Krzyzewski and Jerry Colangelo joined Tirico in-studio). Until January 29, the program also featured an NBA-related segment from ESPN's Pardon the Interruption.
On March 3, 2006, the New York Post reported that ABC would replace Tirico with ESPN's Dan Patrick starting on March 19.[1] Tirico moved to the number two play-by-play team, behind Mike Breen, and Patrick hosted ABC's coverage every week, including the NBA Finals. This move ended the most consistent role The NBA on ABC had, which was of Mike Tirico has studio host. In the suddenly revamped edition of NBA Nation, Patrick was joined by Scottie Pippen, who continued his role as pregame analyst, as well as former ESPN commentator and NBA player Mark Jackson and Washington Post and Pardon the Interruption co-host Mike Wilbon on a weekly basis.
On May 12, 2006, the New York Post reported that Pippen had been let go from his duties as studio analyst for ABC, but would remain an analyst for ESPN.[2] ABC went with the team of Dan Patrick, Mark Jackson and Michael Wilbon the rest of the way, representing a complete change from the beginning of the season.
Guests
- December 25, 2005
- Chuck D, rapper
- Josh Lucas, actor
- Bob Ryan, Boston Globe sportswriter
- January 22, 2006
- Method Man, rapper
- Chad Johnson, NFL player
- Peter Vecsey, New York Post sportswriter
- January 29, 2006
- David Thompson, NBA legend
- Jack Ramsay, ABC NBA analyst
- J.A. Adande, Los Angeles Times sportswriter
- February 12, 2006
- Michael Wilbon, Washington Post sportswriter
- March 5, 2006
- Kobe Bryant, Team USA Guard
- Mike Krzyzewski, USA Basketball Head Coach
- Jerry Colangelo, Director, USA Basketball
- March 12, 2006
- Byron Scott, New Orleans Hornets Head Coach
- Jay Bilas, ESPN college basketball analyst
NBA Sunday Countdown
With ABC Sports' demise and rebranding as ESPN on ABC, ABC's NBA pregame show was given its fifth different name in as many years. Now known as NBA Sunday Countdown, the show would continue featuring Dan Patrick as host, with analysts Mark Jackson and Michael Wilbon. The show would not originate from Times Square, but instead originate from the site of that week's game (ala the original ABC pregame show, NBA Shootaround).[3] After only two broadcasts, Mark Jackson moved to game coverage exclusively, and was replaced by Jon Barry.
NBA Countdown
In 2008, the show was re-named NBA Countdown, and Patrick, who left ESPN, was replaced by Stuart Scott, joining Bill Walton, Michael Wilbon, and Barry as a contributor/fill-in. For the 2008-2009 season (beginning with the Christmas Day doubleheader), Barry replaced Walton full time, Avery Johnson became the fourth member of the studio team, and Magic Johnson joined the show doing feature interviews and occasionally joining the studio crew as a panelist. For the 2010-2011 season, Hannah Storm joined Scott as they alternate as host.
Pregame show sites
Note: ABC's March 9, 2003 edition of NBA Shootaround took place at both Madison Square Garden in New York, with Mike Tirico and Sean Elliott, as well as Staples Center in Los Angeles with analysts Tom Tolbert and Bill Walton.
- San Antonio, TX
- 23 March 2003, 4 June 2003, 6 June 2003, 15 June 2003, 9 June 2005, 12 June 2005, 21 June 2005, 23 June 2005, 12 May 2007, 20 May 2007, 7 June 2007, 10 June 2007
- Auburn Hills, MI
- 18 May 2003, 10 June 2004, 13 June 2004, 15 June 2004, 14 June 2005, 16 June 2005, 19 June 2005, 25 February 2007, 18 March 2007, 8 April 2007
- Los Angeles, CA
- 25 December 2002, 9 March 2003, 27 April 2003, 11 May 2003, 15 May 2003, 6 June 2004, 8 June 2004, 25 December 2004
- Miami, FL
- 13 June 2006, 15 June 2006, 18 June 2006, 25 December 2006, 21 January 2007, 11 February 2007
- Dallas, TX
- 4 January 2003, 8 June 2006, 11 June 2006, 20 June 2006, 15 April 2007
- Cleveland, OH
- 28 January 2007, 6 May 2007, 12 June 2007, 14 June 2007
- Sacramento, CA
- 16 February 2003, 16 March 2003, 11 March 2007, 25, March 2007
- East Rutherford, NJ
- 8 June 2003, 11 June 2003, 13 June 2003
- Phoenix, AZ
- 4 March 2007, 1 April 2007, 22 April 2007
- Minneapolis, MN
- 30 March 2003, 20 April 2003
- Chicago, IL
- 21 April 2007, 13 May 2007
- Washington, D.C.
- 23 February 2003
- New York City, NY
- 9 March 2003
- Philadelphia, PA
- 6 April 2003
- Portland, OR
- 13 April 2003
- Salt Lake City, UT
- 26 May 2007
- Secaucus, NJ
- 22 May 2003 (for 2003 NBA Draft Lottery)
Personalities
Current
- Stuart Scott (host, 2008–present)
- Hannah Storm (host, 2010–present)
- Michael Wilbon (analyst, 2005–present)
- Jon Barry (analyst, 2007–present)
- Magic Johnson (analyst/interviewer, 2008–present)
Former
- Greg Anthony (analyst, 2005 NBA Finals)
- Sean Elliott (analyst, 2003)
- Mark Jackson (analyst, 2006–2007)
- Avery Johnson (analyst, 2008–2010)
- Steve Jones (analyst, 2004–2005)
- George Karl (analyst, 2003–2004)
- Dan Patrick (host, 2006–2007)
- Scottie Pippen (analyst, 2005–2006)
- Byron Scott (analyst, 2004)
- Mike Tirico (host, 2002–2006)
- Tom Tolbert (analyst, 2002–2004)
- Bill Walton (analyst, 2002–2003, 2004–2005, 2007–2008)
References
Former ESPN on ABC • NBA on ABC Sports properties of ESPN on ABC (formerly ABC Sports) Current programs College Football/Saturday Night Football · NBA Sunday · NBA Countdown · College Basketball · NASCAR · IndyCar Series · Little League World Series · FIFA World Cup · Breeders Cup · Scripps National Spelling Bee · ESPN Sports Saturday · Winners BracketFormer programs American Football League · Monday Night Football · USFL · Major League Baseball/Monday Night Baseball/Baseball Night in America · NBA Inside Stuff · NBA Access with Ahmad Rashad · WNBA on ABC · NHL on ABC · Olympics · PGA Tour on ABC · Monday Night Golf · Kentucky Derby · Preakness Stakes · Belmont Stakes · ABC's Wide World of Sports · The American Sportsman · SuperstarsSee also United States sports broadcasting listsNational Basketball Association media ABC CBS ESPN NBC TNT Other networks All-Star Game broadcasters • Criticisms and controversies • Current broadcasters • Eastern Conference Final broadcasters • Historical over-the-air television broadcasters • Music • NBA Finals broadcasters • NBA Inside Stuff • Nielsen ratings • Western Conference Final broadcasters Categories:- 2002 American television series debuts
- 2000s American television series
- American Broadcasting Company network shows
- ABC Sports
- National Basketball Association on television
- December 25, 2005
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