Tom Brady speaking into micTom Brady (Anne-Marie Caruso/NorthJersey.com-USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images)
Tom Brady’s first year as a broadcaster for Fox Sports received mixed reviews.

Despite his accolades, he had some tough shoes to fill coming behind Greg Olsen, who shocked everyone with his ability in the booth.

Brady called Year 1 in the booth “a very positive challenge.”

FOX announced Brady’s hiring as the No. 1 game analyst in March of 2022. However, he would return for a final season with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers and spent the 2023 season out of the booth.

The first live game Burkhardt and Brady called together was a United Football League contest. He just wanted to get his feet wet.

After being thrown in the fire in 2024, Fox is releasing huge news for Tom Brady in 2025.

 

Brady is back for the second year of his lucrative 10-year deal with Fox Sports. The seven-time Super Bowl champion will be back in the booth calling games this fall.

Brady is the game analyst for FOX’s No. 1 NFL broadcasting team, working alongside play-by-play man Kevin Burkhardt. Erin Andrews and Tom Rinaldi round out the crew as sideline reporters.

The team will open with Giants-Commanders in Week 1, then call Eagles-Chiefs in Week 2, and Cowboys-Bears in Week 3.

Greg Olsen Gets Chosen Over Tom Brady

NFL Fans Want Tom Brady Out As Pressure Mounts On FOX Ahead Of Week 1Tom Brady (Photo By Mark Hoffman / Milwaukee Journal Sentinel / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images)
Tom Brady is Fox’s No. 1 NFL color analyst.

Greg Olsen, who is Fox’s No. 2 in that role, was nominated for the Outstanding Personality/Event Analyst award at the 2025 Sports Emmys.

This nomination came after he won that exact award last year. Brady was not among the five nominees after a rocky rookie year in the broadcast booth.

It’s just another example of the awkward situation that Fox embraced when throwing $37.5 million per year at Tom Brady.]

Brittney Griner Finally Breaks Her Silence Over Alleged Caitlin Clark Comments That The WNBA Refused To Investigate

Brittney Griner speaking to reporterBrittney Griner (Photo via Twitter)
WNBA star Brittney Griner was at the center of a new debate over what she allegedly said in a game against basketball phenom Caitlin Clark.

The Atlanta Dream center found herself at the center of social media controversy last month when some fans thought she disparaged Indiana Fever star guard Caitlin Clark upon fouling out.

The game’s broadcast focused on an upset Griner saying something as she returned to the Dream bench after fouling out of the game. While there’s no audio of this moment, some who tried to read Griner’s lips thought she called Clark a “trash f–king white girl.”

However, there’s no proof of Griner saying those actual words since others thought she stated something else.

It took weeks for someone to finally get a quote from her, and she provided much of nothing.

Brittney Griner was asked about this moment before her team’s June 15 game against the Washington Mystics and said, “I remember fouling out, being mad. I remember fouling out on, I believe it was [Natasha] Howard driving to the basket. They said I put my hand in.”

WNBA Chooses Not To Investigate Brittney Griner

Griner Drops F-Bomb, Apologizes Amid Clark Slur RowBrittney Griner (Photo By Dale Zanine-Imagn Images)
Moments before the conclusion of the Indiana Fever’s 81-76 victory over the Dream at the State Farm Arena in Atlanta weeks ago, cameras seemingly caught Atlanta Dream star center Brittney Griner labeling Caitlin Clark “trash” before calling her a “f***ing white girl” in frustration over a foul on Natasha Howard.

The clip of Griner speaking on the bench, lacking context, spread on social media and went viral.

Griner, who won a gold medal for Team USA at the Summer Olympics in Paris in 2024, essentially got aw@y with whatever came out of her mouth because the league basically ignored the controversy.

This incident is not the only time Griner vocalized her frustrations this season. Following another game, she stormed off mid-interview, yelling at the referees to “be f—ing better.