Around the Horn
This article needs additional citations for verification. (February 2016) |
Around the Horn | |
---|---|
Genre | Sports talk Panel show Debate |
Presented by | Tony Reali (2004–present) Max Kellerman (2002–2004) |
Starring | See panelists |
Theme music composer | Umphrey's McGee (2015–2022) |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language | English |
No. of seasons | 21 |
No. of episodes | 4,491[1] |
Production | |
Executive producers | James Cohen Erik Rydholm Mark Shapiro |
Producers | Dan Farmer Aaron Solomon Bill Wolff |
Running time | 30 minutes (with commercials) |
Original release | |
Network | ESPN |
Release | November 4, 2002 present | –
Around the Horn (ATH) is an American sports roundtable discussion show, conducted in the style of a panel game, produced by ESPN. The show premiered on November 4, 2002, as a replacement for Unscripted with Chris Connelly, and has aired daily at 5:00 p.m. ET on ESPN ever since. The show has been recorded in New York City since September 8, 2014, and has had over 4,000 episodes aired as of 2020. The program emanated from Washington, D.C., where it was located in the same facility as Pardon the Interruption (PTI). Production still is based in Washington, D.C.[2] The moderator for the show is Tony Reali, who has hosted the program since 2004, replacing Max Kellerman, and also served as the statistician on Pardon the Interruption until the show's relocation to New York.
Broadcast history
[edit]Around the Horn premiered on November 4, 2002.[3] From its premiere until January 30, 2004, the show was hosted by Max Kellerman, who at the time was largely known strictly as a contributor to ESPN's Friday Night Fights. In late 2003, Kellerman announced that he would depart from the network for Fox Sports;[4][5] after the show tried out several replacements, current host Tony Reali was named the permanent host on February 2, 2004, three days after Kellerman's last episode aired.[6] As of September 23, 2019, Woody Paige has the most wins in the history of the show, with more than six hundred.[7] Despite early negative reviews due to its now-defunct argumentative formatting,[8] the show has lasted more than twenty years on the air, remaining a staple on ESPN.[9] The show became less combative and more playful over the years, and in 2018, changed its look with augmented reality of the panel with Reali standing in an enhanced studio at ESPN's South Street Seaport studios with a continuation of the relaxed tone of the show since the mid-2010s.
The show went on hiatus from March 16, 2020 to May 8, 2020, as a result of a national emergency being declared due to the COVID-19 pandemic, which caused the suspension of sports leagues around the world. Between May 11, 2020 and July 10, 2020, Around the Horn aired for 20 minutes with commercials at 4:40 p.m. EDT as Around the Home under a new format where Tony Reali, along with three panelists, discussed sports issues from their own homes. The Around the Home format became semipermanent beginning with the July 13, 2020 episode, which saw the show expand back to its normal length. The show returned to its regular format when it returned to the studio in September 2020, although the Around the Home format is still used occasionally.
The set
[edit]The original set was in the same Atlantic Video complex as the set for Pardon the Interruption.[10] It featured the host's desk with the point triggers[11] and mute buttons.[12] The judge of the show scores four panelists, that are shown on four different screens.[13] Behind the host's desk was a map of the contiguous United States of America with the cities the sportswriters on the show appeared from. The map, divided into time zones, displayed the names of five newspapers representing each time zone. The Los Angeles Times represented the Pacific Time Zone, the Denver Post the Mountain Time Zone, the Dallas Morning News and Chicago Sun-Times both represented the Central Time Zone, and the Boston Globe represented the Eastern Time Zone. This was to create a regionally biased discussion, but this was later phased out.
When panelist Woody Paige was based in New York, the logo of Cold Pizza was added to the Eastern Time Zone side of the map as Paige also appeared on that program. Eventually, the logo of the Boston Globe was replaced by the word "Boston" as many of the contributors from Boston were no longer writing for the Globe. The map was eventually revised in this way for the other cities on the map, but there cities of other contributors were not added to the board (possibly due to a lack of space) before the map was removed. Panelists still appear from left to right as on a map of the United States, from the westernmost on the left to the easternmost on the right.
On September 27, 2010, Around the Horn and Pardon the Interruption began broadcasting in high definition and moved from the Atlantic Video complex to facilities in the ABC News Washington bureau, where high definition sets were built for both shows.[14] In 2014, Reali relocated to New York, with a studio built in ABC's Times Square Studios.[15] In 2018, in conjunction with the conclusion of Reali's work on Good Morning America, the show moved to ESPN's South Street Seaport Studios with an enhanced set featuring augmented reality.
Each panelist appears either in the offices of their newspaper, in front of a screen representing the city in which they are located, or in another studio. Dallas, Denver, and Los Angeles (when Bill Plaschke is appearing) still use their newspaper offices as studio space while Washington, Miami, Chicago, and Boston each have their own screens. (Los Angeles employs this as well when J.A. Adande is a panelist.) Newspaper office space is rarely used in today's iteration.
Rounds
[edit]The current Around the Horn format consists of the following:
- Introduction: Three sports headlines that will be discussed during the show are previewed; this is followed by the show's open.
- The First Word: Current sports headlines are discussed. The panelists give detailed arguments and can also give rebuttals to other panelists. This round lasts until the first commercial break.
- Buy or Sell: A rapid-fire segment in which the panelists are asked to "buy" or "sell" (be for or against) two to three different concepts, also drawn from current sports headlines. In the first few months of this format and sometimes used with three panelists, four topics were discussed, with each having a shorter time limit to fit between the first and second commercial breaks. In the case of a scoring change happening during the first commercial break, Reali will tell the scores and announce the panelist or panelists that committed the "commercial break violation" before the first "Buy or Sell" topic. Between 2010 and March 2020 and again starting in September 2020, the 2 lowest scoring panelists were eliminated after this round; on the Around the Home format, the lowest-scoring panelist was eliminated.
- Showdown: Mentioned above, the two remaining panelists take sides on any sports or cultural stories remaining. There are usually two or three topics, sometimes one or four, depending on the amount of time left. Usually, the westernmost panelist goes first for the first topic, with the other speaking for the second half. The panelists then alternate going first for the remaining topics. Each topic is timed between 15 and 30 seconds each depending on time remaining. Reali usually gives a panelist one point per topic, although he occasionally gives more than one point or deducts points depending on the strength or weakness of the argument. Only once there was a one-person showdown and a four people showdown.
- Face Time: The winner of the showdown and therefore winner of that particular episode gets around 30 seconds (more or less depending on time left in show frame) to talk about any issue. Most of the time these are sports related, but often their own personal life or an issue in pop culture or the news is discussed. Formerly, Lounge music is played in the background as the winner talks. The lounge music is not played in serious Face Time (deaths, major news (both sports and non-sports related)). Since 2018, the theme song plays throughout Face Time.
- Goodbye: Reali says how long it will be until the next episode, for example, "we're on a 23-and-a-half hour break." On Fridays, he will sign off by saying "a 71-and-a-half-hour break." If there is an extended period until the show comes back on, Reali may simply say, "You do the math!"
- Paper Toss: Signature sign-off of the show, with Reali crumpling his notes and throwing them towards the camera. As he does this, the panelists will often continue to chatter in the background as the show ends. Since the summer of 2016, Reali has gone more towards throwing paper airplanes or flicking paper footballs toward the camera.
- PTI Next: This simply tells viewers just that: that Pardon the Interruption is up next.
Previous formats
[edit]Before the format of the show was changed in early 2003, the format was similar, wherein the first two rounds were largely the same but with different titles. There was a bigger difference after that. The show ran like so:
- The Opening Round: The two biggest headlines of the day.
- The Lightning Round: A quick-moving round with four topics where players had to make their points quickly or risk getting muted by Max Kellerman, the former host. Somewhat similar, though not entirely, to the Lightning Round used from 2009 to 2015.
- The Bonus Round: One final topic, with the panelists trying to earn some last-second points, followed by a sports trivia question for each panelist, worth five points.
- The Medal Round: The panelists earned Face Time equal to their scores converted to seconds, in reverse order of their placing. The winner wins a gold medal, the runner up received silver, third place got bronze, and the last-place finisher was given a foil ball. More often than not, due to time restrictions, the panelists were given less time than they earned, or at least one panelist would not be given any time at all. During this round, panelists could appeal to the Disembodied Voice for more points.
Despite the change in format, Reali still occasionally announces "ten topics, one winner" at the beginning of the show regardless of the number of topics.
This format ran from 2003 to 2015:
- Introduction: A commercial-free transition to the opening moments of the show starts with the host, Reali, introducing the panelists as "four of America's most (themed) sportswriters." For example, if the "theme word" is "indifferent," the four panelists would all do their impressions of an indifferent sportswriter. The show itself is then introduced with Reali mentioning three topics to be discussed, then exclaiming "Ten topics, one winner. Horn me!" The opening theme plays, and cuts to Reali for an introduction. The panelists are then individually introduced and given time for an opening statement. Most of the panelists use this time for jokes or criticism of the host or other panelists, which can lead to points or mutes. (One such example is when Woody Paige used his time by blowing a miniature plasticine horn, as a pun towards the show's name; this resulted in Paige being muted by Reali). Also any scoring changes that can be seen on ATH's YouTube page, Reali will tell the scores and announce the panelist or panelists that committed the "Pre-Show violation" before the first "First Word" topic.
- The First Word: Two current sports headlines are discussed. The panelists give detailed arguments and can also give rebuttals to other panelists.
- Buy or Sell: A rapid-fire segment in which the panelists are asked to "buy" or "sell" (be for or against) three different concepts, also drawn from current sports headlines. In the first few months of this format and sometimes used with three panelists, four topics were discussed, with each having a shorter time limit to fit between the first and second commercial breaks. In the case of a scoring change happening during the first commercial break, Reali will tell the scores and announce the panelist or panelists that committed the "commercial break violation" before the first "Buy or Sell" topic.
- 1st Cut: The panelist with the lowest point total is eliminated. In the case of ties, Reali often breaks them by miscellaneous things, like whose hair is better combed. If the awarding of a point causes a tie for the two lowest panelists, Reali sometimes gives the same panelist a second point to break it. Sometimes on shows with three panelists, the lowest score is spared from elimination.
- Out of Bounds: This round, always played as the third round, is dedicated to talking about one story which is indirectly sports-related. Serious and controversial topics, such as steroid use and suspensions, are usually discussed in this round, and few to no points are awarded. This was a daily feature from the time of the format change until late October 2009. It is occasionally tied together with the "Lightning Round." "Out of Bounds" is now used in ATH today.
- The Lightning Round: Another third round, this being a continuation of the sports discussion with two or three rapid-fire topics. Reintroduced to the show in November 2009, a different "Lightning Round" was part of the original ATH format.
- 2nd Cut: The next contestant with the lowest point total is removed, leaving just two. (In the event all four contestants were in the third round (mostly an important Out of Bounds), the two lowest point totals are eliminated). The camera then reveals the final two contestants and Reali typically says something to the effect of, "Two men enter, one man wins!" right before the cut to commercial.
- Showdown: Mentioned above, the two remaining panelists take sides on any sports or cultural stories remaining. There are two or three questions, depending on the amount of time left. Usually, the westernmost panelist goes first for the first topic, with the other speaking for the second half. The panelists then alternate going first for the remaining topics. Each topic is timed between 15 and 40 seconds each depending on time remaining. Reali usually gives a panelist one point per topic, although he occasionally gives more than one point or deducts points depending on the strength or weakness of the argument. Only once there was a one-person showdown and a four people showdown.
- Face Time: The winner of the showdown and therefore winner of that particular episode gets around 30 seconds (more or less depending on time left in show frame) to talk about anything he or she wishes to discuss. Most of the time these are sports related, but often their own personal life or an issue in pop culture or the news is discussed. Lounge music is played in the background as the winner talks. The lounge music is not played in serious Face Time (deaths, major news (both sports and non-sports related)).
- Goodbye: Reali says how long it will be until the next episode, for example, "we're on a 23-and-a-half hour break." On Fridays, he will sign off by saying "a 71-and-a-half-hour break." If there is an extended period until the show comes back on, Reali may simply say, "You do the math!"
- Paper Toss: Signature sign-off of the show, with Reali crumpling his notes and throwing them towards the camera. As he does this, the panelists will often continue to chatter in the background as the show ends. Since the summer of 2016, Reali has gone more towards throwing paper airplanes or flicking paper footballs toward the camera.
- PTI Next: This simply tells viewers just that: that Pardon the Interruption is up next.
Hosts
[edit]- Max Kellerman (November 4, 2002 - January 30, 2004)
- Tony Reali (February 2, 2004 – present)
Guest hosts
[edit]- Zachariah Selwyn (June 8, 2004 - June 11, 2004)
- Duke Castiglione (July 3, 2006 - July 5, 2006)
- Rob Stone (June 30, 2008 - July 4, 2008 and July 28, 2008 - August 1, 2008)
- Woody Paige (April 1, 2009 and April 1, 2019, both as April Fools' Day pranks)
- Pablo S. Torre (Recurring guest host from March 12, 2014 to July 14, 2017)
- Michael Smith (August 25, 2016 - August 26, 2016 and July 9, 2018 - July 26, 2018)
- Kate Fagan (August 21, 2017 - August 25, 2017, June 11, 2018 - June 15, 2018, and August 27, 2018 - August 30, 2018)
- Kevin Blackistone (June 5, 2018 - June 8, 2018)
- Clinton Yates (August 31, 2018, August 12, 2019, August 30, 2019, October 18–22, 2021, March 15–16, 2022, March 27–31, 2023, and March 25–29, 2024)
- Sarah Spain (August 13–14, 2019, August 26–29, 2019, August 28, 2020, June 24–25, 2021, October 28, 2021, and March 21–25, 2022)
- Frank Isola (June 18, 2021, October 25–27, 2021, January 31, 2022 - February 1, 2022, March 14, 2022, March 20–24, 2023, December 20–21, 2023, March 18–20, 2024, July 22–23, 2024, July 29–31, 2024, August 1–2, 2024 and August 28, 2024)
- Elle Duncan (April 21, 2023)
- Courtney Cronin (July 24–25, 2024, August 22–23, 2024, August 26–27, and August 29, 2024)
Panelists
[edit]Active panelists
[edit]As of 6/11/2024.[16] City (or cities) where the panelist is based are next to their name.
- J. A. Adande (Chicago): Former columnist for the Los Angeles Times and NBA reporter for ESPN. Left ESPN in August 2017 to focus full-time on his position as director of sports journalism at Northwestern University but returned in January 2018. Based in Los Angeles at ESPN's base there and Chicago while school is in session.
- Bill Barnwell (Boston): Staff writer for ESPN.com.
- Kevin Blackistone (Washington D.C.): The Washington Post, former columnist for The Dallas Morning News.
- Kevin Clark (New York City): Host of This Is Football on ESPN radio. Former Ringer senior football writer and WSJ NFL columnist.
- Tim Cowlishaw (Dallas): The Dallas Morning News columnist and former reporter for ESPN's NASCAR coverage. Based in Dallas at the headquarters of the Morning News.
- Courtney Cronin (Chicago): Chicago Bears reporter for ESPN.
- David Dennis Jr. (Atlanta): Senior writer for ESPN.com's Andscape.
- Elle Duncan (Bristol, CT): SportsCenter 6 PM co-anchor.
- Israel Gutierrez (Miami/Ft. Lauderdale): co-host of Highly Questionable, based in Miami at ESPN's studios at the Clevelander Hotel. Background currently shows Ft. Lauderdale.
- Frank Isola (New York City): columnist for The Athletic and former columnist for the New York Daily News.
- Martenzie Johnson (Washington D.C.): Writer for ESPN.com's Andscape.
- Emily Kaplan (Chicago): Writer, Reporter, Podcaster. Lead NHL reporter and insider for ESPN/ABC and In The Crease with Linda Cohn. Previously NFL w/ MMQB, Philly Inquirer.
- Mina Kimes (Los Angeles): Senior writer for ESPN The Magazine and former co-host of Highly Questionable. Based at network's base in Los Angeles.
- Jen Lada (Milwaukee): Radio host for 94.5 ESPN Milwaukee and College GameDay features reporter.
- Marcel Louis-Jacques (Miami): ESPN NFL Nation Reporter for the Miami Dolphins.
- Harry Lyles Jr. (Atlanta): Staff writer for ESPN.com, co-host of Countdown to GameDay.
- Monica McNutt (New York City): ACCN college basketball analyst.
- Woody Paige (Denver): Colorado Springs Gazette columnist and previously columnist at The Denver Post. Based in Denver at KMGH-TV. Was based in New York during his time on 1st and 10. Although he left the Denver Post in 2016, he continued to be based there while in Denver until February 2017.
- Bill Plaschke (Los Angeles): Based in Los Angeles at the headquarters for the Los Angeles Times.
- Bob Ryan (Boston): Boston Globe Columnist emeritus, substitute host of PTI.
- Jorge Sedano (Los Angeles): Radio host for ESPN Radio stations, NBA on ESPN sideline reporter, and Radio host for KSPN 710 Los Angeles. Based at the Networks base in Los Angeles.
- Sarah Spain (Chicago): Columnist for espnW, co-host of ESPN Radio's Spain and Fitz, occasional contributor to Highly Questionable.
- Ramona Shelburne (Los Angeles): Senior writer for ESPN.com. Co-host of TMI with Beadle & Shelburne on ESPN Los Angeles 710. Based in Los Angeles at network's base.
- Lindsey Thiry (Los Angeles): National NFL reporter for ESPN.
- Justin Tinsley (Washington D.C.): Senior writer for ESPN.com's Andscape.
- Pablo S. Torre (New York City or Miami): Co-host of High Noon alongside Bomani Jones, writer for ESPN The Magazine and ESPN.com, former reporter for Sports Illustrated, and occasional co-host of The Dan Le Batard Show. Also the designated substitute host. Usually based in New York, but sometimes based in Miami.
- Clinton Yates (Los Angeles): Senior writer for ESPN.com's The Undefeated.
Former panelists
[edit]- Jim Armstrong (Denver): Former columnist for The Denver Post. Was a frequent fill-in for Woody Paige.
- Josh Elliott (New York City): Former panelist of defunct show "Jim Rome is Burning," former contributor to ESPN the Magazine and ESPN.com, anchor of live morning SportsCenter with Hannah Storm. Left ESPN to become news anchor for Good Morning America, later moving to NBC Sports and most recently to CBS News.
- Kate Fagan (New York City): Columnist for espnW, contributor to Outside The Lines.
- Domonique Foxworth (Washington D.C.): Former NFL cornerback who played in the league from 2005 to 2011 with the Denver Broncos, Atlanta Falcons and Baltimore Ravens. He remains at ESPN as a writer with The Undefeated and is also a regular guest on The Mike O'Meara Show and other ESPN Radio talk shows such as First Take and Highly Questionable.
- Jemele Hill (Washington D.C.): Columnist for ESPN.com's The Undefeated; former co-host of SportsCenter at 6 and His & Hers, both alongside Michael Smith.
- Michael Holley (Boston): Former columnist for The Boston Globe and co-host on CSN New England and the WEEI radio talk shows "Dale and Holley" and "The Big Show", based in Boston. Originally a semi-regular, Holley left the show and ESPN to contribute to I, Max on Fox Sports Net and currently co-hosts the NBC show Brother from Another with Michael Smith, another ATH alumnus.
- Bomani Jones (New York City): Former co-host of High Noon alongside Pablo S. Torre, co-host of Highly Questionable, host of The Right Time with Bomani Jones, writer for ESPN.com. Based in New York; formerly based in Raleigh, North Carolina, and later Miami.
- Richard Justice (Houston): Former correspondent for MLB.com and former columnist for the Houston Chronicle.
- Andy Katz (Unknown): Former ESPN college basketball analyst.
- Joon Lee (New York City): Staff writer for ESPN.com who contributes to ESPN's MLB telecasts; former writer for Bleacher Report and Boston Herald.
- Jackie MacMullan (Boston): ESPN.com NBA columnist and freelance writer; former columnist for The Boston Globe.[17]
- Jay Mariotti (Chicago, Los Angeles): Fanhouse.com, former columnist for the Chicago Sun-Times.[18] Was arrested on May 11, 2011, and was charged with assault, stalking and domestic violence after approaching his ex-girlfriend, who he was ordered by a court to avoid,[19] and was based in Los Angeles at the time of his arrest. Had been based at the headquarters of the Sun-Times. Mariotti appeared 1549 times on the show, with 329 wins.
- Charlie Pierce (Boston): The Boston Globe.
- Tony Reali: Pardon the Interruption (before hosting; Reali was originally referred to as "Stat Boy", his former nickname on PTI), contributed from the PTI set
- Dianna Russini (New York City): NFL reporter and host who contributes to ESPN's year-round coverage of the National Football League. Her multi-faceted role includes reporting, hosting, analysis and features. She contributes to NFL Live, Sunday NFL Countdown, Fantasy Football Now and SportsCenter, and she often breaks NFL news stories.
- Adam Schefter (Unknown): Former reporter for The Denver Post and NFL Network, currently with ESPN as an NFL Insider. Schefter was still based in Denver when he appeared on Around The Horn.
- T. J. Simers (Los Angeles): One of the original regulars along with Woody Paige, Jay Mariotti, Tim Cowlishaw, and Bob Ryan. Based at the Los Angeles Times. Left show in 2003.
- Michael Smith (Miami): Occasional co-host of Highly Questionable, former Boston Globe and ESPN.com columnist, former host of His & Hers and SportsCenter at 6, both alongside Jemele Hill. He currently co-hosts the NBC show Brother from Another with fellow Globe and ATH alumnus Michael Holley.
- Jon "Stugotz" Weiner (Miami): Co-host of The Dan Le Batard Show with Stugotz.
- Gene Wojciechowski (Chicago): ESPN.com, columnist for ESPNChicago.com. Based at the site of the Chicago Sun-Times.
Panelist statistics
[edit]Statistics correct as of Wednesday, October 30th, 2024 [20]
Name | # wins | # appearances | winning % | Special Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Woody Paige | 679 | 2,940 | 23.1% | All-time leader in wins & appearances, 2015 Tournament of Champions; 70-70 versus Bob Ryan; Winner of ATH's 20th Anniversary show. |
Tim Cowlishaw | 541 | 2,073 | 26.1% | First show: November 5, 2002; 2018 & 2021 Tournament of Champions; 82-79 versus Woody Paige; 22-9 versus Frank Isola, fourth lowest score (-99) |
Bill Plaschke | 425 | 1,735 | 24.5% | First show: April 16, 2003; 2014 Tournament of Champions, third lowest score (-108), 74-66 versus Woody Paige, 21-14 versus Frank Isola, 13-9 versus Sarah Spain |
Kevin Blackistone | 377 | 1,582 | 23.8% | First show: January 21, 2003; 2011 Tournament of Champions, 39-38 versus Bill Plaschke |
J. A. Adande | 335 | 1,285 | 26.1% | First show: November 11, 2002; 2012 Tournament of Champions, 44-37 versus Tim Cowlishaw |
Jay Mariotti | 329 | 1,549 | 21.2% | Hasn't appeared on the show since August 2010; Consecutive shows record (265 episodes); Won 2009 April Fools episode hosted by Woody Paige, only episode to be scored with golf score procedure (lowest points wins). |
Jackie MacMullan | 258 | 890 | 29.0% | First show: November 12, 2002; Lowest score (-474); 37-35 versus Woody Paige; Last show 12/22/2021, retired after 19 years on ATH and 39 years at ESPN |
Israel Gutierrez | 226.5 | 866 | 26.2% | First show: March 18, 2008; 2023 Tournament of Champions |
Bob Ryan | 220 | 748 | 29.4% | 8-6 versus Bill Plaschke |
Frank Isola | 182 | 869 | 20.9% | First show: 2013, 2016 Tournament of Champions, Lowest active winning percentage (minimum 100 appearances), 7-5 versus Jorge Sedano, 4-1 versus Emily Kaplan |
Bomani Jones | 159 | 560 | 28.4% | First show: October 22, 2010; Highest Point Avg.: 23.4 Pts/Show (minimum 100 appearances) |
Michael Smith | 136 | 451 | 30.2% | First show: October 9, 2003; Highest winning percentage (minimum 100 appearances) |
Pablo S. Torre | 133.75 | 587 | 22.8% | First show: October 25, 2012; 2013 Tournament of Champions, most points ever (176) 2nd most points ever (136) most points lost (-336) second lowest score (-286) 9-5 versus Sarah Spain |
Clinton Yates | 128 | 498 | 25.7% | First show: September 6, 2017 |
Sarah Spain | 125.5 | 433 | 29.0% | First show: February 25, 2016; 2017 & 2020 Tournament of Champions; highest score (74); 11-9-1 versus Woody Paige, 14-2 versus Tim Cowlishaw |
Mina Kimes | 83 | 285 | 29.1% | First show: March 30, 2017 |
Ramona Shelburne | 59 | 216 | 27.3% | First show: July 2016 |
Jorge Sedano | 46.5 | 165 | 28.2% | First show: October 19, 2018 |
Kate Fagan | 41 | 157 | 26.1% | First show: October 22, 2014[21] |
Courtney Cronin | 41 | 138 | 29.7% | First show: June 1, 2022; Won in her debut on the show, first rookie panelist to win Tournament of Champions (2022) |
Emily Kaplan | 38 | 136 | 27.9% | First show: May 10, 2019 |
Harry Lyles Jr. | 37 | 170 | 21.8% | First show: October 12, 2021 |
David Dennis Jr. | 36 | 161 | 22.4% | First show: May 4, 2022; Record for lowest points in a Showdown (-25). |
Justin Tinsley | 35 | 142 | 24.6% | First show: January 28, 2021 |
Michael Holley | 34 | 120 | 28.3% | |
Jemele Hill | 22 | 78 | 28.2% | |
Monica McNutt | 21 | 86 | 24.4% | First show: February 17, 2021 |
Elle Duncan | 19 | 63 | 30.2% | First show: June 22, 2020 |
Kevin Clark | 19 | 59 | 32.2% | First show: September 22, 2023; Won in his debut on the show. |
Jim Armstrong | 18 | 75 | 24.0% | |
Bill Barnwell | 13 | 60 | 21.7% | First show: September 15, 2023 |
Marcel Louis-Jacques | 11 | 45 | 24.4% | First show: June 20, 2023; Won in his debut on the show. |
T. J. Simers | 10 | 65 | 15.4% | Winner of the first Around the Horn episode |
Joon Lee | 10 | 49 | 20.4% | First show: April 28, 2021 |
Gene Wojciechowski | 9 | 44 | 20.4% | |
Josh Elliott | 5 | 23 | 21.7% | |
Charlie Pierce | 5 | 13 | 38.5% | |
LZ Granderson | 4 | 19 | 21.1% | |
Jon "Stugotz" Weiner | 4 | 16 | 25.0% | First show: April 1, 2019 |
Jen Lada | 4 | 12 | 33.3% | First show: June 12, 2024; Won in her debut on the show. |
Lindsey Thiry | 3 | 11 | 27.3% | First show: September 29, 2023; Won in her debut on the show. |
Domonique Foxworth | 3 | 8 | 37.5% | First show: May 9, 2019 |
David Jacoby | 3 | 5 | 60.0% | First show: September 13, 2019 |
Martenzie Johnson | 2 | 12 | 16.7% | First show: February 23, 2023; Won in his debut on the show. |
Tony Reali | 2 | 7 | 28.6% | |
Adam Schefter | 2 | 5 | 40.0% | |
Kimberley A. Martin | 2 | 4 | 50.0% | First show: December 15, 2021 |
Richard Justice | 1 | 5 | 20.0% | |
Dianna Russini | 1 | 4 | 25.0% | First show: June 27, 2019 |
Mark Cuban | 1 | 1 | 100.0% | Guest Panelist |
Lil Wayne | 1 | 1 | 100.0% | Guest Panelist |
Bruce Arthur | 1 | 1 | 100.0% | First Canadian Panelist, First Canadian Winner |
Malika Andrews | 1 | 1 | 100.0% | First show: December 12, 2019 |
Christine Williamson | 1 | 1 | 100.0% | First show: October 3, 2023; Won in her debut on the show. |
John Powers | 0 | 5 | 0.0% | |
Dan Shanoff | 0 | 5 | 0.0% | |
Ron Borges | 0 | 4 | 0.0% | |
Jean Jacques Taylor | 0 | 4 | 0.0% | |
Mark Kiszla | 0 | 2 | 0.0% | |
Andy Katz | 0 | 1 | 0.0% | |
Bob Glauber | 0 | 1 | 0.0% |
References
[edit]- ^ @bhofheimer_espn (4 November 2022). "The best of the best from @AroundtheHorn's first 20 years" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
- ^ "ESPN's 'Around the Horn' to Move to the Seaport Studios on Nov. 5". 23 October 2018.
- ^ "Around the Horn". TV Guide. Retrieved 30 October 2017.
- ^ "Muted: "Around The Horn" Host Max Kellerman Out At ESPN". Sports Business Daily. 11 February 2004. Archived from the original on 7 November 2017. Retrieved 30 October 2017.
- ^ Matt Yoder (24 June 2013). "Max Kellerman new full time co-host of SportsNation". Awful Announcing. Retrieved 30 October 2017.
- ^ Lauren Weigle (7 September 2014). "Tony Reali, 'Good Morning America': 5 Fast Facts You Need to Know". Heavy.com.
- ^ Kyle Koster (16 August 2017). "thebiglead.com/2017/08/16/who-is-on-the-all-time-around-the-horn-panel/". The Big Lead.
- ^ RICHARD SANDOMIR (16 July 2004). "TV SPORTS; This Debate Show Is All Con". New York Times.
- ^ Richard Deitsch (7 September 2014). "Nice Guys Finish First: An unorthodox TV arc for ESPN's Tony Reali". Sports Illustrated.
- ^ Marcus Vanderberg (27 September 2010). "Around the Horn & Pardon the Interruption Now In HD". SPORTSNEWSER.[permanent dead link]
- ^ AZARIAH GEBO (17 May 2011). "Popular ESPN Show, Around the Horn, Scored Fairly by Host, Tony Reali?". Bleacher Report.
- ^ Phil Thompson (6 January 2015). "'Around the Horn' parody makes a mute point". Chicago Tribune.
- ^ "Around The Horn". TV.com. Archived from the original on 3 February 2020. Retrieved 9 September 2023.
- ^ Ourand, John (11 December 2009). "ESPN's "PTI" and "Around The Horn" going HD next fall". Washington Business Journal. Archived from the original on 2 October 2010. Retrieved 24 September 2010.
- ^ ""Around the Horn" host Tony Reali to join "Good Morning America"". 10 April 2014.
- ^ @bhofheimer_espn (4 November 2022). "Happy anniversary to @TonyReali @asolomon6 @joshbard @ErikRydholm and ESPN's @AroundtheHorn team. Today is ATH's 20-year anniversary" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
- ^ Scott, David (1 April 2008). "Jackie Mack Taking Latest Globe Buyout". Boston Sports Media Watch. Archived from the original on 7 April 2008. Retrieved 3 April 2008.
- ^ "Chicagotribune.com". Chicago Tribune.
- ^ Blankstein, Andrew (11 May 2011). "Former ESPN personality Jay Mariotti charged with felony stalking and assault". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 19 February 2012.
- ^ "All-Time Wins Leaders". Around the Horn. ESPN. Archived from the original on 4 April 2019. Retrieved 10 October 2019.
- ^ "Behind the Horn - 10-22-14 - Introducing Kate Fagan". YouTube. Archived from the original on 5 December 2021.