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Buck, Aikman going from Fox to ESPN booth

- Joe Reedy AP Sports Writer

On the first day of the new league year, one of the NFL’s top broadcasti­ng teams is moving from Fox to ESPN.

ESPN announced March 16 a move that has been in the works for nearly a month — Joe Buck and Troy Aikman will be broadcasti­ng “Monday Night Football.”

Buck and Aikman have been doing games together since 2002, when they became Fox’s top crew. They will tie Pat Summerall and John Madden’s record for the longest NFL booth pairing this year at 21 seasons.

“When you have the opportunit­y to bring in the iconic, longest-running NFL broadcasti­ng duo, you take it, especially at a time when we are on the cusp of a new era in our expanding relationsh­ip with the NFL,” said ESPN chairman Jimmy Pitaro in a statement.

“The NFL continues to ascend, and we now have more games than ever before, providing additional opportunit­ies for Joe, Troy and our deep roster of commentato­rs.”

Pitaro finally has an all-star booth for the longtime primetime franchise. He tried to get Peyton Manning for years to join the “Monday Night Football” booth since he retired after the 2015 season.

Pitaro’s patience paid off last year when the Manningcas­t with Peyton and Eli Manning debuted to rave reviews. The 10-game “Monday Night Football with Peyton and Eli” package runs through 2024.

Steve Levy, Brian Griese and Louis Riddick have done the main broadcast the past two seasons. Griese left earlier this month to join the San Francisco 49ers coaching staff.

The MNF booth has had frequent changes since Mike Tirico left for NBC in 2016. Tirico was the playby-play voice for 10 seasons (2006-15) and teamed with Jon Gruden for the last seven. Sean McDonough took over for Tirico for 2016 and ’17 and worked with Gruden.

After Gruden left to take over as Raiders coach and McDonough sought to move back to college football, ESPN went with the three-man booth of Joe Tessitore, Jason Witten and Booger McFarland in 2018. Witten struggled as an analyst and decided to return to the playing field in 2019.

The only stable part of ESPN’s booth has been Lisa Salters, who will return for her 11th season reporting from the sidelines.

Aikman had been with Fox since 2001, but there had been rumblings the past couple of months that the Hall of Fame quarterbac­k had been looking to move on.

Many thought that Aikman would join Al Michaels at Amazon, which takes over “Thursday Night Football” next season. Instead, it is ESPN.

“The opportunit­y to be a voice on ‘Monday Night Football’, adding to its legacy and being a part of the future of the NFL on ESPN, has me motivated and reflective. As a kid in California, the voices of Frank Gifford, Howard Cosell, and my mom’s personal favorite, Don Meredith, echoed throughout our living room each week,” Aikman said in a statement. “I am looking forward to the next several years with ESPN and all our new teammates.”

Buck’s Fox contract had a year remaining, but the network allowed him to pursue the opportunit­y to remain with Aikman. Buck has a long history with “Monday Night Football,” often going on trips with his father — Hall of Fame broadcaste­r Jack Buck — to watch him call Monday night games on radio with Hank Stram.

“I never thought that I could end up there and well, here he we are. I didn’t see it coming and gosh, I’m glad it did,” Buck said in a video on Twitter.

 ?? AP ?? Joe Buck, left, and analyst Troy Aikman have been doing NFL games together since 2002.
AP Joe Buck, left, and analyst Troy Aikman have been doing NFL games together since 2002.

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