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GameNight is a weekend evening sports talk radio show on ESPN Radio hosted by a variety of ESPN hosts and contributors, most notably hosted by John Seibel, until he left ESPN in 2009. GameNight is regarded as being the flagship series of ESPN Radio, being the network's first long-form program and airing every night since the network's 1992 debut until July 21, 2008. On that day, the weeknight run was replaced by and , which was later replaced by The Freddie Coleman Show, followed by Freddie and Fitz/Freddie and Fitzsimmons. Now the show airs weekends from 10pm–2am (originally Saturday 8pm–12am and Sunday 10pm–1am, then both days from 8pm-1am ET). The program features in-game updates, guests ranging from superstars to experts, and in-depth analysis on the day's sports stories. It is broadc

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  • GameNight (en)
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  • GameNight is a weekend evening sports talk radio show on ESPN Radio hosted by a variety of ESPN hosts and contributors, most notably hosted by John Seibel, until he left ESPN in 2009. GameNight is regarded as being the flagship series of ESPN Radio, being the network's first long-form program and airing every night since the network's 1992 debut until July 21, 2008. On that day, the weeknight run was replaced by and , which was later replaced by The Freddie Coleman Show, followed by Freddie and Fitz/Freddie and Fitzsimmons. Now the show airs weekends from 10pm–2am (originally Saturday 8pm–12am and Sunday 10pm–1am, then both days from 8pm-1am ET). The program features in-game updates, guests ranging from superstars to experts, and in-depth analysis on the day's sports stories. It is broadc (en)
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  • GameNight (en)
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  • GameNight (en)
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  • GameNight is a weekend evening sports talk radio show on ESPN Radio hosted by a variety of ESPN hosts and contributors, most notably hosted by John Seibel, until he left ESPN in 2009. GameNight is regarded as being the flagship series of ESPN Radio, being the network's first long-form program and airing every night since the network's 1992 debut until July 21, 2008. On that day, the weeknight run was replaced by and , which was later replaced by The Freddie Coleman Show, followed by Freddie and Fitz/Freddie and Fitzsimmons. Now the show airs weekends from 10pm–2am (originally Saturday 8pm–12am and Sunday 10pm–1am, then both days from 8pm-1am ET). The program features in-game updates, guests ranging from superstars to experts, and in-depth analysis on the day's sports stories. It is broadcast from ESPN headquarters in Bristol, Connecticut. Guests on GameNight over the years include Mel Kiper Jr., John Clayton, Chris Mortensen, Ric Bucher, Tim Kurkjian, ·and Eric Byrnes. Jeff Rickard currently is the fill-in host. The most notable former host is , who was on the program from its debut to July 2005, when his contract expired and was not extended. Other former hosts include sports personalities such as John Seibel, Doug Gottlieb, Keith Olbermann, Tony Bruno, and Mike Tirico. ESPN Radio SportsCenter airs every thirty minutes throughout GameNight. A local version of GameNight also airs on CHUM 1050, the flagship of TSN Radio (ESPN Radio's sister network), from Tuesday through Saturday nights. Several ESPN Radio affiliates do not air this show but instead use GameNight as the brand of their own local evening shows, including:Note: These shows don't air during play-by-play live coverage (en)
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