Sports TV News
Amazon Under Fire For TNF Halftime Show’s Handling of Tua Injury
There was plenty of reaction to how Amazon covered the situation and lacked the awareness to acknowledge what transpired last Sunday.

Published
8 months agoon

Miami Dolphins quarterback Tua Tagovailoa suffered a head injury in the 2nd quarter of Thursday night’s game against the Cincinnati Bengals.
The images of Tua’s injury and the reaction of his body to the injury shocked not only the other players and fans in the stadium, but also those watching the Thursday night game on Amazon Prime Video.
At halftime, Tony Gonzalez, Ryan Fitzpatrick and Richard Sherman all offered their reactions, with host Charissa Thompson providing an update from the team.
But noticeably absent in that discussion and reaction was the fact that Tua was playing in the game and suffered a head injury less than a week after he was believed to have suffered a concussion in Miami’s Week 3 game against the Buffalo Bills. Add in the fact that the NFL Players Association is also investigating whether league concussion protocols were followed, as Tua returned to that game and helped lead the Dolphins to a victory.
There was plenty of reaction to how Amazon covered the situation and lacked the awareness to acknowledge what transpired last Sunday.
Amazon just did an entire halftime segment on Tua without mentioning that Tua was tested for a concussion 4 days ago or that the NFLPA requested an investigation.
— Gregg Rosenthal (@greggrosenthal) September 30, 2022
I understand they were trying to take a serious tone, but to focus on the news that "he has movement in his extremities" and not have any critical discussion about what happened to Tua on Sunday is a very bad look for Amazon and that halftime crew. https://t.co/ihJQuLRKU6
— Lindsay Jones (@bylindsayhjones) September 30, 2022
If there were a professional NFL journalist or reporter on this Amazon halftime set, the full story here would be told and analyzed. And the public would be more informed for it. Unfortunately, that is not the case.
— Pat Leonard (@PLeonardNYDN) September 30, 2022
To have any credibility whatsoever, Amazon must have someone who will raise the obvious question of whether Tua should have been playing at all tonight, after what happened on Sunday.
— ProFootballTalk (@ProFootballTalk) September 30, 2022
As an active player, Richard Sherman was one of the most vocal critics of Thursday Night Football, arguing that it was dangerous for players to play with so little time off between games. Now he cashes a paycheck on Thursday Night Football and ignores the issue after Tua's injury
— Michael David Smith (@MichaelDavSmith) September 30, 2022
The Amazon Prime halftime crew just drops the ball regarding Tua’s injury. No mention of Tua’s injury v Buffalo on Sunday or the questions of how the Dolphins’ handled it or the NFLPA’s investigation.
— Mike Waters (@MikeWatersSYR) September 30, 2022
Amazon halftime show makes no mention of what happened to Tua on Sunday against Buffalo. No mention of Dolphins letting him play after he literally didn’t know where he was.
— Jimmy Traina (@JimmyTraina) September 30, 2022
For everyone crushing that TNF halftime (rightly so, BTW)
— Damon Bruce (@DamonBruce) September 30, 2022
It reminded me of a great quote by Upton Sinclair:
“It is difficult to get a man to understand something, when his salary depends upon his not understanding it!”
Unsurprisingly, but disappointingly, none of the extended Tua conversation at halftime from Sherman, Fitz and TG points out the obvious concern: That it definitely looked like Tua had another concussion 5 days ago. Massive miss.
— Damon Amendolara (@DAonCBS) September 30, 2022
The entire halftime show was about Tua, which is fine. Whatever. But nobody mentions that his brain might have been pre scrambled from last week??? What the hell??
— Sean Pendergast (@SeanTPendergast) September 30, 2022
People can be mad at the Amazon halftime show not mentioning Tua had a concussion, but it's one of two things. Total miss on their part to remember it happened OR the NFL doesn't want them to mention that type of stuff. Can be viewed as a "bad look for the game."
— Dylan Buckingham (@DylanBuckingham) September 30, 2022
How does Amazon do an entire halftime show and not even MENTION the injury to @Tua 4 days ago and raise even the most basic (glaringly obvious) question about whether he should've been cleared to play tonight, where NFLPA investigation stands, and possible consequences of this??
— Jonathan Hardison (@FOX6Hardison) September 30, 2022
I was curious how the Amazon Prime halftime show was going to handle this.
— Ren Clayton (@Ren_Clayton) September 30, 2022
They talked almost exclusively about Tua. Former players lent some insight.
Never laid out the full context of Sunday’s injury or even that the NFLPA was already investigating.
A complete disservice.
They did find time to make Tua's INT a Mercedes-Benz Electric Moment, however.
— Bryan Curtis (@bryancurtis) September 30, 2022
There were some good perspectives from Fitzpatrick and Sherman at halftime. But a host or reporter has to provide that context and cover the story. https://t.co/B48lXtcWQI
Young announcers.. learn to say nothing..be vanilla .. never address any controversy.. you’ll do every league every night… my Gawd this is embarrassing that nobody is questioning if Tua should have been in the game
— Dan Dakich (@dandakich) September 30, 2022
Between this and the constant replays of the injury, #TNFonPrime not handling this well. Which is surprising. A lot of pros on this broadcast. https://t.co/MRVVVFUKGw
— Brent Axe (@BrentAxeMedia) September 30, 2022
The network did provide a deeper discussion during its postgame show and Al Michaels and Kirk Herbstreit addressed the issue in the 3rd quarter. Unfortunately it didn’t become a bigger discussion on the broadcast until social media became littered with negative reactions to the halftime show’s approach to discussing the various issues involving the Dolphins quarterback prior to his injury during Thursday night’s game.
With Amazon now in partnership with the NFL, it’ll be interesting to watch how the network handles future sensitive issues given what they experienced covering the Tua Tagovailoa story.

Jordan Bondurant is a features reporter for Barrett Sports Media. He’s a multimedia journalist and communicator who works at the Virginia State Corporation Commission in Richmond. Jordan also contributes occasional coverage of the Washington Capitals for the blog NoVa Caps. His prior media experiences include working for the Richmond Times-Dispatch, the Danville Register & Bee, Virginia Lawyers Weekly, WRIC-TV 8News and Audacy Richmond. He can be reached by email at bondurantmedia@gmail.com or follow him on Twitter @J__Bondurant.
Sports TV News
Diamond Sports Group In Danger of Losing Padres TV Rights
“The company has a grace period to deliver the payment that runs through May 30.”

Published
1 min agoon
May 23, 2023By
BSM Staff
Diamond Sports Group filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in March after failing to make a scheduled debt payment to its creditors. At the time, the company had more than $8 billion in debt and was commencing a process of restructuring. Yet the company stated its Ballys-branded regional sports networks would continue to operate as usual. Major League Baseball decided to take action though and establish a plan to broadcast games locally if the company missed a rights payment.
Now, it is looking that is exactly what will happen. Diamond missed a payment to the San Diego Padres last week, meaning the team’s media rights could soon be the property of Major League Baseball. The company has a grace period to deliver the payment that runs through May 30. If it were to miss the payment, it would mark the first time it will relinquish a contract in this way.
“Despite Diamond’s economic situation, there is every expectation that they will continue televising all games they are committed to during the bankruptcy process,” Major League Baseball said in a statement. “Major League Baseball is ready to produce and distribute games to fans in their local markets in the event that Diamond or any other regional sports network is unable to do so as required by their agreement with our club.”
The company’s current contract with the San Diego Padres has nine years and approximately $540 million remaining with an escalator clause built into the deal. This means that the final year of the deal would cost Diamond Sports Group more than $70 million in rights fees, and while the team is in the top five for television deliveries, the entity perhaps may not view it as sustainable. The momentum headed in this direction was first reported by John Ourand of Sports Business Journal.
The company has also pushed Major League Baseball teams to agree to deals to stream the games in order to recoup lost cable revenue. By being granted the rights to stream games directly to consumers, Diamond Sports Group has vowed to pay the rights fees it owes to nine MLB teams. The company currently has the streaming rights for just five of the 14 major league clubs on its regional sports networks.
Some industry experts believe Diamond Sports Group is utilizing this stalemate to be able to exit media rights deals that are losing the company money. For example, the Diamondbacks’ media rights contract garners an annual payment of about $68 million while amassing the second-lowest local television ratings of any Major League Baseball team.
On May 31, a bankruptcy judge will establish how much money Diamond Sports Group owes its clubs for media rights fees while in Chapter 11 bankruptcy and whether it can continue broadcasting games at this time. The Arizona Diamondbacks, Cleveland Guardians and Minnesota Twins filed emergency motions urging the judge to coerce Diamond Sports Group to make their payments. If the company is unable to distribute payments, the emergency motion calls for teams to issue default notices to the regional sports networks, which could permit the termination of media rights contracts.
Sports TV News
Devin McCourty Joining Football Night in America on NBC
“I’m very grateful for this opportunity from NBC Sports to learn from great individuals, chase new goals and provide viewers with my thoughts on the biggest games every week.”

Published
6 hours agoon
May 23, 2023By
BSM Staff
NBC Sports has enhanced its roster of football analysts with the signing of Devin McCourty. He will join the cast of Football Night in America leading up to each week’s broadcast of Sunday Night Football.
McCourty is a three-time Super Bowl champion and played his entire 13-year career as a defensive back with the New England Patriots, and has the record for most career playoff games started by a defensive player.
“It’s rare when you have the opportunity to add a three-time Super Bowl-winner to your team, and we’re excited to welcome Devin McCourty to Football Night following an incredible NFL career,” said Sam Flood, executive producer and president of production at NBC Sports. “Devin is a leader in every sense of the word, both on and off the field, and his dynamic personality and passion for the game will be a great addition to the show.”
McCourty’s twin brother, Jason, currently works on the cast of NFL Network’s Good Morning Football, and the two co-hosted a podcast together while playing called Double Coverage. Devin was a guest host on Good Morning Football earlier in the season and also contributed to pregame coverage on The NFL Today and NFL Draft content for CBS Sports.
“I’m excited to be a rookie on the best team in America again,” McCourty said in a statement. “I’m very grateful for this opportunity from NBC Sports to learn from great individuals, chase new goals and provide viewers with my thoughts on the biggest games every week.”
Sports TV News
Glen Kuiper: ‘Traits Like Integrity and Character are No Longer Considered’
“I love the game of baseball and I love being a broadcaster, and I love the Bay Area community. I hope I will be remembered for that.”

Published
7 hours agoon
May 23, 2023By
BSM Staff
Glen Kuiper is out as the television voice of the Oakland A’s. The team and NBC Sports California made the announcement yesterday following an internal review of an incident on air earlier this month in which the broadcaster appeared the say the n-word on accident.
“Following an internal review, the decision has been made for NBC Sports California to end its relationship with Glen Kuiper, effective immediately,” a spokesperson from the regional sports network said in a statement. “We thank Glen for his dedication to Bay Area baseball over the years.”
Kuiper issued a statement of his own, affirming that what people are calling a racial slur was actually “a very unfortunate mispronunciation.” He said that he was talking to fast in describing a day at the Negro League Museum in Kansas City.
“Please know that racism is in no way a part of me; it never has been and it never will be,” he wrote in a statement shared with reporters. “I appreciate the Negro League Museum president Bob Kendrick and Oakland A’s great Dave Stewart’s public support of me in light of this. I am an honest, caring, kind, honorable, respectful husband and father who would never utter a disparaging word about anybody. Those who know me best know this about me.”
He has been the A’s primary play-by-play voice since 2006. He added that he is astonished NBC did nto consider that before making their final decision.
“I wish that the Oakland A’s and NBC Sports would have taken into consideration my 20-year career, my solid reputation, integrity and character, but in this current environment, traits like integrity and character are no longer considered. I will always have trouble understanding how one mistake in a 20-year broadcasting career is cause for termination, but I know something better is in my future.”
Glen Kuiper closed his remarks by thanking fans and his supporters.
“I love the game of baseball and I love being a broadcaster, and I love the Bay Area community. I hope I will be remembered for that.”