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Patrick Creighton, Jayson Braddock Moving Forward After One Bad Night

“Neither host seemed concerned about a lasting impact on their relationship from the argument heard round the internet”

Brandon Contes

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Minutes after their on-air blow up, Patrick Creighton predicted he and co-host Jayson Braddock would let cooler heads prevail, forgive and forget. And he was right. After seeing their outburst go viral, the two hosts were reunited Wednesday night for Late Hits with Patrick Creighton and Jayson Braddock on Houston’s ESPN 97.5. 

Both are veteran radio hosts, having worked together for more than a year, but Monday night saw their discussion about James Harden flare up to a level rarely seen or heard on-air. Expletives and insults were exchanged and bled into the break as the show remained on its Twitch live-stream. Eventually, the producer cut the audio as the vulgarities worsened and Braddock walked out with nearly half the show remaining.

Creighton continued the show by himself, but didn’t seem rattled, even telling the audience he and Braddock would make up over the next 24 hours. 

“Two minutes after it happened, we both knew we would squash it the next day,” Creighton told Matt Young of The Houston Chronicle Wednesday. “We let it cool off overnight, then we talked about it the next day. I accepted my fault in what happened and he accepted his fault in what happened and we moved on.”

While social media loved viewing and poking fun at the heated debate, the segment escalated to a point where it’s not one for the hosts to be proud of. But credit Creighton and Braddock for being able to move past any embarrassment and get right back to work. Neither host seemed concerned about a lasting impact on their relationship from the argument heard round the internet. Both comparing the incident to a fight between brothers. 

“We’ve been doing this for 13 months, and we had one blowup, we’re fine,” Braddock told The Houston Chronicle. “Usually, we’ll go at it and then drop it at the end of the segment, but this time, things got too heated and we got embarrassed by it. We’re like brothers. We’re great friends. The thing I wish I could take back the most is I should have never called this man outside of his name. I would have been even more heated if someone talked to me like that. For me to do it on the ESPN brand in the fourth-largest market in the city, I apologize for that.”

Creighton and Braddock were also helped out a bit by their unique show schedule. Late Hits airs Monday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday for ESPN 97.5. With the argument coming Monday night, it meant Creighton and Braddock had nearly 48 hours to reconvene.

“The tagline for our show is ‘no-holds barred sports talk,’” Creighton added to Matt Young. “There are a lot of shows that will make up an argument. ‘OK, we both feel the same way about this topic, so you take the other side’ just so they can create an argument. We don’t do that. That’s fake radio. We don’t do fake radio. We say what we think, and sometimes it gets hot. This was just a bad day for both of us and we didn’t move on like we should have.”

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Jay Williams: My ESPN Contract is Up in 3 Months

“It feels like media cannibalizing media right now, and I get how that game is played. But sometimes that game gets boring to me, dawg.”

Jordan Bondurant

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ESPN NBA analyst and ESPN Radio host Jay Williams may not be at The Worldwide Leader for too much longer.

Talking to Chicago Bulls guard Patrick Beverley on his Barstool Sports podcast, Williams revealed how much more time he has on his current deal with the network.

“My contract is up in three months, man,” Williams said on The Pat Bev Podcast with Rone.

Beverley seemed kind of surprised at how soon Williams could become a free agent. Jay joined ESPN in a full-time capacity in 2008. He’s hosted ESPN Radio’s weekday morning show alongside Keyshawn Johnson and Max Kellerman since 2021. The show featured Zubin Mehenti for a year prior to that.

Williams implied that he’s looking to change things up away from the routine he’s got at the network.

“It feels like media cannibalizing media right now, and I get how that game is played,” Williams said. “But sometimes that game gets boring to me, dawg.”

Jay added that he’s intrigued by the laid-back nature of the podcast that Beverley has going. He said if he could have an ideal situation, that’s what he would strive for.

“Everybody can just be themselves authentically and not feel like you have to give a take on something,” he said. “Not everything requires some kind of polarizing POV.”

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Mike Felger: LIV/PGA Merger ‘Brought Me a Little Bit Back to Golf’

“I’m not here to save the world. I’m just here to watch a little golf.”

Jordan Bondurant

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While many golf fans might be completely turned off to the sport after the announcement of the PGA Tour/DP World Tour/LIV Golf merger on Tuesday, 98.5 The Sports Hub host Mike Felger is going to be more inclined to tune in more regularly.

On Felger & Mazz on Wednesday, Felger felt like bringing unique personalities like PGA Championship winner Brooks Koepka and Bryson DeChambeau back into the fray after they defected last year to join LIV will be more of an incentive to watch.

“I’ve got to tell you, this has brought me a little back to golf,” Felger said. “At least there’s something here. And as opposed to these milquetoast, lily white, ‘Iron Byron’ – that’s what I call them, all these country club kids with the exact same swing who never say anything or give me any sort of edge. You know, Jordan Spieth and who’s the latest? Mark Scheffler? What’s his name?”

“Oh, Scottie Scheffler,” co-host Tony Massarotti responded.

“Like one cardboard cutout after the next,” Felger said. “Like, oh, my God. I have found the PGA Tour so flippin boring for so long.”

Koepka, DeChambeau, Phil Mickelson and others have sort of embraced being a heel among PGA Tour fans. Felger said having guys who can show some emotion and personality on the course is refreshing in a sport where a certain spirit of decorum is expected.

“There’s depth to what he is,” Felger said of Koepka. “And maybe he’s a bad guy. Whatever. Golf needs that. Golf needs it. It needs personality. It needs good guys, bad guys. Guys to root for, guys to root against.”

The discussion circled back to the merger having serious financial backing by the Saudi Public Investment Fund, which got LIV Golf off the ground and lured some big names away from the PGA Tour with massive signing bonuses.

Felger said he gets that people will have certain feelings towards the Saudi royal family and the government, and those feelings are justified. But at the end of the day if he wants to turn on the TV and catch a golf tournament, he’s going to do that. By being interested in watching this new iteration of professional golf, it’s not an endorsement of the Saudi government’s role in 9/11 or other atrocities.

“I’m not here to save the world,” he said. “I’m just here to watch a little golf.”

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Scott Van Pelt: LIV/PGA Merger ‘Changes Everything From a TV Perspective’

“You need to have a television partner where you have eyeballs. They didn’t have that.”

Jordan Bondurant

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One of the big questions moving forward with the LIV/PGA merger is what will happen with the media coverage and distribution of tournaments. SportsCenter anchor Scott Van Pelt told Dan Patrick that he’s not sure.

SVP was a guest on The Dan Patrick Show on Wednesday, and he told Dan that he thought the announcement of the merger was fake initially. But now that it’s real, and details on the TV rights side are scarce, it’s hard for Van Pelt to speculate on what golf on television will look like a year or two from now.

“I don’t know what I don’t know in terms of the contracts. How long do they run?” he asked. “This changes everything from a TV perspective I would think. If you’re CBS or NBC or whomever has paid for one thing, well now it’s going to be a different entity – which I think this new entity is going to sit down and say, ‘Alright let’s talk about what it’s going to cost to have us on your air.'”

LIV Golf made waves and drew the ire of PGA Tour officials, players and fans with each new announcement of a superstar player signing. Often when a big name got announced as a new addition to the league, details of a signing bonus worth tens or hundreds of millions of dollars followed.

SVP said where LIV will benefit is in the potential with a new rights deal.

“You bought players, but on LIV you just didn’t have the distribution where you were being consumed as a product,” he said. “You need to have a television partner where you have eyeballs. They didn’t have that.”

LIV Golf went the entire 2022 season without a TV broadcast partner in the United States. Just ahead of the start of the 2023 season, the league announced an agreement to carry the final two rounds of tournaments live on The CW. And not all CW affiliates across the country even opted to air coverage, thus drastically impacting viewership.

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