NCAA’s massive new TV deal doesn’t change college golf championships

No changes are coming for the college golf championship.

The NCAA signed a significant eight-year media rights deal with ESPN on Thursday to broadcast 40 of its men’s and women’s championship events, but those won’t include college golf.

ESPN will cover 40 NCAA championships domestically – 21 women’s and 19 men’s events (not including men’s basketball) – along with the international rights to the Division I men’s basketball tournament, as well as those same NCAA championships.

NCAA President Charlie Baker told Sports Business Journal the deal is worth an average of $115 million annually. However, college golf won’t be included in the deal, an NCAA spokesperson confirmed to Golfweek.

The Division I men’s and women’s golf championships have a separate agreement with Golf Channel to broadcast the event, which this year moves to Omni La Costa Resort in Carlsbad, California, about 30 miles north of San Diego.

There shouldn’t be many changes to the broadcast, however, producer Brandt Packer won’t return. He was in charge of the NCAA Championship broadcasts in addition to numerous other golf productions for Golf Channel over the past two decades.

The Division I Women’s NCAA Championship is set to begin May 17 with the men starting a week later.

Commercial-free golf returns: Last hour of final-round coverage at The Sentry to be uninterrupted

Commercial-free golf is coming.

The Sentry kicks off the PGA Tour’s 2023 slate this week in Hawaii, and Sunday’s final round will feature a commercial-free final hour.

For the second straight year, the last hour of coverage on Golf Channel and Peacock will be commercial-free, thanks to Callaway.

“We always look for creative ways to work with partners to enhance our golf broadcasts for the viewers at home,” Tommy Roy, NBC Sports’ lead golf producer, said in a release. “We’re thrilled to have Callaway back this year to present uninterrupted coverage on Sunday during the critical moments down the stretch at The Sentry.”

Golf Channel will have coverage of all four days of The Sentry, though two hours of play will be shown on NBC from 4-6 p.m. ET on Saturday and Sunday. There will also be coverage on streaming services ESPN+ and Peacock.

The Sentry: Best photos from Kapalua

The typical handoff from cable to network TV is reversed this week. Usually, Golf Channel starts coverage before NBC or CBS pick up over-the-air duties. This weekend, NBC will kick things off before the final two hours being moved to Golf Channel.

Here’s a look at TV information for The Sentry in Hawaii. All times ET.

Thursday, Jan. 4

Golf Channel/Peacock: 6-10 p.m.

Sirius XM: 4-10 p.m.

ESPN+: 12:30 p.m.-10 p.m.

Friday, Jan. 5

Golf Channel/Peacock: 6-10 p.m.

Sirius XM: 4-10 p.m.

ESPN+: 12:30 p.m.-10 p.m.

Saturday, Jan. 6

NBC: 4-6 p.m.

Golf Channel/Peacock: 6-8 p.m.

Sirius XM: 3-8 p.m.

ESPN+: 1 p.m.-8 p.m.

Sunday, Jan. 7

NBC: 4-6 p.m.

Golf Channel/Peacock: 6 p.m.-8 p.m.

Sirius XM: 3-8 p.m.

ESPN+: 1 p.m.-8 p.m.

Brandel Chamblee sparks No Laying Up social media beef with wild commercial comparison

Social media caught fire as the two sides debated podcast and television commercials.

Brandel Chamblee is in Hawaii for the PGA Tour’s first event of the 2024 season and the outspoken Golf Channel analyst is already in peak form.

The former PGA Tour player turned broadcaster took offense with a post from No Laying Up talking about television commercials – the self-described “fan-analysts” have long been critical of the commercial loads that make golf broadcasts difficult to watch – and decided to join the conversation.

Chamblee tried to compare an ad during a podcast to the commercial load during a broadcast. The ad in question was less than two minutes for a two-hour podcast. In contrast, an hour of golf coverage features 18 minutes of commercials. Needless to say, the replies weren’t in support of Chamblee.

Never one to shy away from a debate, Chamblee then fired back at those who called him out and further made their point for them: it’s not an equal comparison.

As fans, we know commercials must be part of the broadcast to cover the cost of airing an event. We also know how much those commercials take away from the broadcast. Networks continue to overpay for the rights to broadcast live sports, and it’s the fans who get the raw end of the deal. That’s the true problem at hand. I pay for Peacock, NBC’s streaming service, and still get hit with ads. As No Laying Up pointed out, there is major championship coverage – not bonus content, actual coverage – that is only available behind the paywall.

One of the key issues with pro golf on television compared to other sports is that when the broadcast goes to commercial, play continues. The same can’t be said for football, baseball and basketball. Both NBC and CBS have struggled with this, especially in recent years. In 2023 alone, from major championships to the Ryder Cup and Solheim Cup, key shots were missed and players were completely absent from coverage. The broadcasts often run their Playing Through and Eye on the Course segments, which feature a double box of commercials and golf, down the stretch of tournaments.

Jim Nantz, the voice of golf on CBS, joined the No Laying Up podcast in June of 2020 and had a healthy discussion with host Chris Solomon about the state of golf broadcasts, including the overloaded volume commercials.

“When you do feel like you have to make quicker work of it, you can’t ever really linger on anything too long because you have commitment,” said Nantz. “You go to commercial, and let’s say you’re away for two and a half minutes. How many important golf shots do you think were struck in those two and a half minutes? It’s just a random guess … but let’s say on a Saturday or Sunday, there are at least six to 10 shots that happened while you’re away. Now you come back from commercial and you have a player live, ready to hit another shot. You still have to make up for what happened while you were away. So the rhythm and timing of it, it’s like a Rubik’s Cube trying to figure out how to slot in live when we go back.”

They still haven’t solved the cube.

Chamblee is a smart man who does plenty of research to back his opinions. This take, however, wasn’t his best.

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Kevin Kisner to serve as NBC Sports analyst for two early events in 2024 PGA Tour season

Kisner is a four-time winner on Tour and one of a few potential replacements for Paul Azinger.

Kevin Kisner is putting down the club and picking up the mic.

The four-time winner on the PGA Tour will serve as an analyst for NBC Sports at the Tour’s first event of the 2024 season, The Sentry, at the Plantation Course at Kapalua Resort in Maui, Jan. 4-7. Kisner will also cover the WM Phoenix Open at TPC Scottsdale, Feb. 8-11.

“I’m excited to have this opportunity with NBC Sports to watch the game of golf from the other side and comment on what I’m seeing on the course,” said Kisner, one of the game’s more colorful characters.

“I have always found Kevin to be very forthright, honest, and fearless when sharing his thoughts and opinions about the game, whether it’s in a conversation on the driving range or during his pre- and post-round press conferences,” said Tommy Roy, lead producer for NBC Sports’ golf coverage. “We think his style will translate well to the viewers at home and we’re excited to have him join the NBC Sports broadcast team at The Sentry and the WM Phoenix Open.”

Kisner won for the first time on Tour at the 2015 RSM Classic before claiming his second win two years later at the 2017 Dean & DeLuca Invitational (now the Charles Schwab Challenge). The biggest victory of his career came in 2019 at the WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play before his last win at the 2021 Wyndham Championship.

The network is experimenting with new talent after both Roger Maltbie and Gary Koch were shown the door in 2022 and Paul Azinger wasn’t renewed following this last season. Paul McGinley was the lead analyst during the recent Hero World Challenge and a Sports Business Journal report hinted at interest in Geoff Ogilvy for the open seat.

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Paul McGinley to replace Paul Azinger as lead analyst at NBC Sports — at least for one week

McGinley, 56, won four times on the DP World Tour and served as winning Ryder Cup captain for Europe in 2014.

NBC Sports is replacing one Paul with another in the booth – at least for one week.

Former European Ryder Cup captain Paul McGinley will be in the chair formerly occupied by Paul Azinger as the lead analyst for NBC during the Hero World Challenge, which begins on Thursday in Nassau, Bahamas. A spokesperson for the network confirmed the news to Golfweek after the Irish Independent was first to report.

Azinger had one event remaining on his contract that was up at the end of the year, but negotiations to renew stalled when Azinger countered and NBC reportedly pulled its offer and parted ways with the 12-time PGA Tour winner.

McGinley, a 56-year-old Irishman who won four times on the DP World Tour and served as winning Ryder Cup captain for Europe in 2014, is no stranger to American golf fans and to the Golf Channel/NBC team. He’s a longtime TV commentator for Sky Sports in Europe and has contributed to Golf Channel’s “Live From” show from the majors for the past two years.

McGinley will work in the booth with NBC lead anchor Dan Hicks and also team with analyst Curt Byrum in a three-man booth in what has the feel of a tryout.

The Independent noted, “McGinley’s [TV] future will likely depend on how he does in the Bahamas and future events over the next few months.”

“They obviously need a fill-in this week and as I’ve done some work with them this year and am part of the Comcast Group I’m filling in,” McGinley told Golf Digest. “That’s all. No more than that.”

Azinger had been NBC Sports’ lead analyst since 2019 following the retirement of Johnny Miller.

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It was 40 years ago that the Skins Game launched made-for-TV golf during Thanksgiving weekend

It’s a concept that became one of the most successful made-for-TV franchises in all of sports.

In 1983, Steve Sesnick claims that he conceived the concept that became one of the most successful made-for-TV franchises in all of sports: four of golf’s biggest names, competing in a go-for-broke format over two days during Thanksgiving weekend when golf traditionally was dark, college football was limited, and even the NFL had two fewer games to compete against.

From its debut in 1983, it became a runaway success that once generated TV ratings that eclipsed all of the majors except the Masters and was another feather in the cap for television producer Don Ohlmeyer and IMG executive Barry Frank, who have long been credited for shepherding its success and not Sesnick.

If you do a Google search of Steve Sesnick, who died in October of 2022, you’re unlikely to find connections to the sports world, let alone golf. Sesnick made his name in music in the late 1960s, his biggest claim to fame was managing The Velvet Underground, now regarded as one of the most influential bands in rock.


Schupak: The never-before-told story about the Skins Game forgotten man


In 1979, Sesnick’s parents relocated to Palm Coast, Florida, which has grown into a bedroom community for St. Augustine, 25 miles to the north, and Daytona Beach, 30 miles to the south. Back then, it was still in its infancy. It had an Arnold Palmer golf course and a Sheraton Hotel, but the 1980 U.S. Bureau of the Census reported a population of 2,837.

Sesnick remembers there was once nothing but miles and miles of roads and swimming pools. He knew what Palm Coast needed to put it on the map. He’d create an event capable of generating the enormous publicity and goodwill for the community necessary to jump-start home sales – only this time he’d do it around golf.

“I loved my parents,” he said. “I did it for them.”

The key was to secure the participation of Arnold Palmer, the lynchpin of Sesnick’s concept. Jack Nicklaus suggested to Palmer that if the course in Palm Coast was dragging its heels, he could convince Desert Highlands in Scottsdale, Arizona, a real-estate development with a new Nicklaus course, to step in as a suitable replacement.

When the Skins Game, which also featured Gary Player and Tom Watson, became a hit, Ohlmeyer took credit as its visionary. It joined a long list of successes for Ohlmeyer, who was the original producer for “Monday Night Football” at ABC.

In a 1986 story in The Los Angeles Times, Ohlmeyer recounted how The Skins Game transformed Desert Highlands into a household name among golfers and ignited the golf-course construction boom in Scottsdale that made the city a golf mecca.

“The first year we were there, it had sold only a few houses,” Ohlmeyer said. “By the time we went back for the second year, it was almost sold out.”

When asked how he conceived the idea for the Skins Game during an interview in 2010 for a book on another subject, Ohlmeyer said, “I looked at a leaderboard one day and I didn’t know who anybody was. I said, ‘What if you had a leaderboard with Palmer, Nicklaus, Player and Watson? People would be calling their neighbors to tell them you have to see what’s on right now.’ That was the whole impetus of it.”

According to the Nielsen ratings, the Sunday telecast of the Skins Game in 1985 and 1986 had more than 8 million viewers and higher ratings than any other golf tournament, including that one in Augusta, Georgia.

All of the vaudevillian hoopla between its participants made it easy to forget what were enormous stakes at the times – Player banked $170,000 in unofficial money in 1983 and Nicklaus $240,000 the next year, more than double the winner’s check for the Masters ($108,000).

NBC aired the event with none other than Vin Scully doing play-by-play. The public lost interest in this holiday tradition and in 2008 it was finally canceled when its title sponsor, LG, dropped out and couldn’t be replaced. But 40 years ago Sesnick’s concept centered around golf’s version of the Beatles launched the made-for-TV silly season of exhibition golf at its best.

LPGA stars Lexi Thompson and Rose Zhang in talks to be first female competitors in ‘The Match’ in 2024

“I will acknowledge we’ve had some conversations but there are no intentions to have a Match in December.”

The LPGA could be making its debut in “The Match” in a mixed-team version before too long, Golfweek has learned.

According to multiple sources, the latest rendition of the made-for-TV event, which has featured PGA Tour stars and celebrities from the world of sports, is expected to include rookie phenom Rose Zhang and former major champion Lexi Thompson. The two male players being discussed are no slouches either: four-time major winner Rory McIlroy and Max Homa, who recently won the Nedbank Golf Challenge and appeared in Netflix’s PGA Tour-F1 mashup.

Rumors have been flying that The Match would be held at The Park Golf Club in West Palm Beach, Florida, on Friday, Dec. 15, but Golfweek has confirmed that the exhibition has been delayed due to scheduling and other logistical challenges and won’t happen until the first quarter of 2024 or possibly in the second quarter of the year.

More: Brady’s pants rip, Charles chats and Rodgers’ walk-in: The best moments from the first six versions of The Match

“I will acknowledge we’ve had some conversations but there are no intentions to have a Match in December,” said a source with knowledge of the event.

Last December, McIlroy teamed with Tiger Woods against Jordan Spieth and Justin Thomas. Just as in that 18-hole competition in South Florida, the proposed match would be contested under the lights in primetime.

The Match has previously included Woods and Peyton Manning against Phil Mickelson and Tom Brady, Bryson DeChambeau head-to-head against Brooks Koepka and most recently in the eighth installment in July between the NFL’s Kansas City Chiefs stars Patrick Mahomes and Travis Kelce and the NBA’s Golden State Warriors stars Stephen Curry and Klay Thompson. (The NFL pros came out on top, winning 3 and 2.)

In the past, WBD Sports has produced the event, which typically airs on TNT and utilizes Bleacher Report, which is also under the WBD umbrella, for exclusive digital coverage.

Lexi Thompson of the United States plays her shot on the eighth hole during the second round of the Shriners Children’s Open at TPC Summerlin on October 13, 2023, in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo by Orlando Ramirez/Getty Images)

Zhang, 20, won the NCAA title at Stanford and Augusta National Women’s Amateur before turning pro in May and winning in her LPGA debut. She represented the U.S. in the Solheim Cup in September.

Thompson, 28, is an 11-time winner on the LPGA including the 2014 Kraft Nabisco Championship. The American has long been one of the most popular female golfers and played on the U.S. Solheim Cup team for the sixth time this year. She made headlines last month when she competed in the PGA Tour’s Shriners Children’s Open and nearly made the cut.

A source confirmed that when the ninth installment is held next year it isn’t expected to be a battle of sexes competition but rather a mixed-team match.

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Q&A (Part 2): Roger Maltbie dishes on Tiger Woods, says the way NBC reduced his role was ‘pretty (expletive)’

“They (NBC) were very good to me for a very long time. So I’ve got no hard feelings. But yeah, it was handled pretty sh**ty”  

Roger Maltbie has led a charmed life.

He’s the first to admit that winning 12 professional tournaments, including the first Memorial Tournament at Jack’s Place and the old World Series of Golf at Firestone, exceeded his expectations and made for a pretty respectable playing career. Then he made a seamless transition into television, working for more than three decades for NBC/Golf Channel, and becoming a fan favorite.

As he discusses in part two of a Q&A with Golfweek that was conducted at Silverado Resort during the Fortinet Championship last month, Maltbie may be making his final appearance behind the mic this weekend at the Shriners Children’s Open in Las Vegas. (You can read part one of the Q&A here.)

Maltbie’s role was reduced this season to a handful of second-tier events and he doesn’t know yet if he’ll be asked back for next season in a similar capacity. But after chatting for a solid hour, Maltbie bid adieu with these classic words: “I’ve got to get suited up.” Here’s hoping he’s brought back for an encore.

Q&A: Roger Maltbie on his life and times walking the fairways for NBC

His most memorable call? “Tiger Woods, sixth hole at the 2000 U.S. Open: My response was ‘just not a fair fight.'”

Roger Maltbie is a national treasure.

The veteran pro turned roving reporter for NBC/Golf Channel had his workload cut back significantly this year to our everlasting chagrin but he still is making a few appearances here and there, including a few weeks ago in Napa at the Fortinet Championship, not far from his old stomping grounds as a NorCal golfer.

Wine Country is where Golfweek caught up with Maltbie for an hour-long chat that was so entertaining we’ve decided to split it into a two-part Q&A. And here’s some more good news: You can get another fix of Maltbie and his unique brand of humor this week as he takes part in the broadcast of the PGA Tour’s Shriners Children’s Open in Las Vegas.

ESPN+ to carry PGA Tour Live on Thursdays, Fridays only at fall 2023 U.S. events

For you live streamers and cord-cutters out there, your viewing options are being altered just a tad.

The FedEx Cup Fall is a unique one-off of seven tournaments, as the PGA Tour transitions from the wrap-around schedule to a return to a calendar-based format, with the 2024 campaign starting in January.

Of the seven events, four of them will be staged in the U.S.

That means for you live streamers and cord-cutters out there, your viewing options are being altered just a tad, as the streaming coverage of PGA Tour Live on ESPN+ will only be on Thursdays and Fridays.

ESPN+ is the exclusive home of PGA Tour Live, and Front Office Sports reports that it’s the most watched content on the streaming platform. But while ESPN+ generally has its four-channel experiences for all four days of PGA Tour stops, it’ll only have the first and second rounds of those U.S.-based tournaments.

According to ESPN: “Coverage of the four fall events on PGA Tour Live on ESPN+ will include one feed showcasing complete rounds of two Featured Groups in both the morning and afternoon waves on Thursday and Friday.”

Dates Tournament Course Coverage start time
Sept. 14-15 Fortinet Championship Silverado Resort
Napa, Calif.
10 a.m. ET
Oct. 5-6 Sanderson Farms Championship The Country Club of Jackson
Jackson, Miss.
8:30 a.m. ET
Oct. 12-13 Shriners Children’s Open TPC Summerlin
Las Vegas
9:30 a.m. ET
Nov. 16-17 RSM Classic Sea Island Golf Club (Seaside Course)
St. Simons Island, Ga.
9:30 a.m. ET

The Zozo Championship in Japan, the World Wide Technology Championship in Mexico and the Butterfield Bermuda Championship will not have PGA Tour Live on ESPN+.

All seven of the fall events will have four rounds of live coverage of Golf Channel, which will be simulcast on NBC’s streaming service Peacock.

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