
Scott Hanson announces his ‘NFL RedZone' status for 2025 season
Scott Hanson has officially confirmed his return as host of 'NFL RedZone' for the 2025 season, marking his 17th year leading the popular Sunday broadcast.
This announcement comes after months of speculation regarding his future on the show following the reported expiration of his contract at the end of the 2024 season.
On Friday, Hanson shared the news of his return with a post on X.
Advertisement
Scott Hanson speaks on stage during the third day of the 2025 NFL Draft on April 26, 2025, in Green Bay.
Getty Images
'100 days from now = NFL RedZone. (& for those wondering: Yes, I *will* be there. We have A LOT of Touchdowns to watch together!) #NFLRedZone,' Hanson wrote.
Hanson has hosted 'NFL RedZone' since its inception on NFL Network in 2009.
Advertisement
Known for its coverage of touchdowns and few commercials, 'RedZone' has been an NFL staple for football fans on Sundays, especially heightened with the rise of fantasy football and sports betting, since it entered the fray in the late 2000s.
Earlier in the offseason, reports indicated that negotiations between Hanson and NFL Media had stalled, leading to concerns that he might depart for other opportunities.
Hanson had hosted NBC's Peacock 'Gold Zone' during the 2024 Summer Olympics, so speculation grew that he could make a complete move there.
Scott Hanson speaks on stage during round four of the 2022 NFL Draft on April 30, 2022 in Las Vegas.
Getty Images
Advertisement
Though fans will generally be happy about Hanson's return, some have expressed apprehension regarding the show's format.
In late 2024, 'RedZone' began incorporating limited commercials during its broadcasts, a departure from its longstanding 'commercial-free' promise.
Hanson even dropped 'commercial-free' from his opening catchphrase, previously welcoming viewers to 'seven hours of commercial-free football.'
Despite these changes, Hanson's continued presence will be a stabilizer for fans of 'RedZone,' even with the program's evolution.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


USA Today
30 minutes ago
- USA Today
11 best post-June 1 NFL free agents, from Asante Samuel Jr. to Keenan Allen
11 best post-June 1 NFL free agents, from Asante Samuel Jr. to Keenan Allen June 2 is an important date on the NFL calendar. It's the day players released in the offseason can have their dead salary cap hits spread over the current season and the next. It's also the day players can be signed in free agency without affecting a team's compensatory draft pick formula. The NFL's compensatory pick formula is designed to bolster teams who lose more than they gain in free agency. Compensatory picks are awarded at the end of rounds three, four, five, six and seven based on the value of players lost and the offsetting contracts of veterans signed as free agents. By waiting until June to sign players, teams can maximize the value of losing players in March by bringing in draft assets for the following spring. 1 GLARING WEAKNESS FOR EVERY NFL TEAM: What's your favorite team missing this offseason? That means the Philadelphia Eagles can ensure a mid-draft haul after losing starters Milton Williams, Josh Sweat and Mekhi Becton after their Super Bowl-winning season. The Pittsburgh Steelers can capitalize on their losses and potentially find a starting quarterback (even if he's a 41-year-old media headache who was 2024's 22nd-best passer). The post-June 1 free agent market won't be a spending spree, but it will provide more action than we've seen in the last six weeks of NFL roster building. Let's talk about the best players available late in the free agent process, in no particular order. CB Asante Samuel Jr. 2024 team: Los Angeles Chargers Samuel lacks ideal size as an outside corner (5-foot-10, 180 pounds) and has minimal experience in the slot. Though he's failed to live up to his father's spectacular example, he's been a solid presence who allowed a 87.8 passer rating in coverage (two interceptions, 15 passes defensed, three touchdowns allowed) over the last two seasons. His return from the shoulder injury that ended his 2024 after four games may loom in the heads of general managers considering him. WR Keenan Allen 2024 team: Chicago Bears WR Amari Cooper 2024 team: Cleveland Browns/Buffalo Bills Let's tackle these two former Pro Bowlers at the same time. Both Allen and Cooper had their least productive seasons of their past eight years. But both remained moderately useful on a per-snap basis. Allen's 1.65 yards per route run (YPRR) ranked 50th among 90 qualified wideouts. Cooper's 1.62 ranked 53rd. Allen is more productive. Cooper is younger and more engaged as a blocker. Either brings value as a WR3 type on a one-year deal -- think Adam Thielen in Carolina. But further decline is expected for two players in their 30s who play a position that relies heavily on athleticism. RB J.K. Dobbins 2024 team: Los Angeles Chargers A draft flush with running backs has dented Dobbins' value despite his comeback 2024 campaign. The oft-injured back ran for 905 yards in 13 games last season after totaling only nine games the previous three seasons. While he brings modest value as a receiver, Dobbins' 0.6 rush yards over expected (RYOE) per carry ranked 14th among qualified running backs last season and he's still just 26 years old. S Justin Simmons 2024 team: Atlanta Falcons Laying a bet on a safety who turns 32 in November is a tricky wager. While Simmons wasn't able to keep a streak of All-Pro selections alive in his lone year as a Falcon, he remained a valuable asset against the pass. He knocked down seven passes, intercepted two more and just 57 percent of his targets to be hauled in as the nearest defender. He may no longer be an explosive presence, but he remains a disruptor in the right secondary. CB Mike Hilton 2024 team: Cincinnati Bengals Need a veteran slot corner? Hilton's your huckleberry, even though he took a step backward alongside the rest of a defense that helped get Lou Anarumo fired this offseason. Hilton allowed 75 percent of his targets last season to be caught, which is a troubling trend for an aging veteran. But he's not *that* old (he just turned 31) and he remains a useful asset against the run (46 stops in 257 run snaps last season). A modest bet on a revival could pay out huge. G Brandon Scherff 2024 team: Jacksonville Jaguars Poor Brandon Scherff has only played for two NFL teams in his 10 year career; the Dan Snyder-era Washington Commanders and the Jacksonville Jaguars, whose dysfunction escapes eras and shines like the aurora borealis. He may be removed from his perennial Pro Bowl days, but at 34 years old he can still bring steady play and above-average pass blocking to the offensive line. EDGE Za'Darius Smith 2024 teams: Cleveland Browns, Detroit Lions Smith is entering the Jadeveon Clowney phase of his career, where he inks a one-year deal, gives you six to nine sacks per season and generates some trade interest near the deadline. His pressure rate has hovered around a solid 15 percent each of the last three seasons. CB Shaquill Griffin 2024 team: Minnesota Vikings The success rate for 30-year-old cornerbacks isn't great. Griffin's history of inconsistency doesn't help matters. But he's recorded a passer rating allowed of under 76.0 each of the last two seasons, albeit in much more of a "rotational guy" role than as a lock-solid starter. S Julian Blackmon 2024 team: Indianapolis Colts A market failed to develop for Blackmon after a frustrating 2024 in which his missed tackle and yards per target allowed rates spiked. That's been the case in four of his five NFL seasons, but his 2023 campaign was Pro Bowl worthy (four interceptions, four total missed tackles, a 46.6 passer rating allowed). Now it will only take a modest bet for a team looking to restore him back to pretty-goodness. ST Jalen Reeves-Maybin 2024 team: Detroit Lions How much do you value special teams play -- not from a returner or gunner, but from a linebacker who offers little utility as a defender? Reeves-Maybin saw his tackling and coverage skills decline in a 10-game 2024, but he's an intuitive special teamer who brings high effort to the kicking game and was a 2023 second-team All-Pro as designated special teamer.


New York Post
36 minutes ago
- New York Post
Four years into NIL, coaches, agents reveal heartache and frustration of students' big money chase
In late December, University of Miami hoops coach Jim Larranaga retired two months into the season. There was no scandal behind it, no family reasons given. Larranaga — who has taken two teams to the Final Four, most recently in 2023 — told The Post thisweek: 'It's not that I don't love coaching anymore or wanted to step down. I felt like I was no longer the right guy for the job.' More specifically, not the right guy in this brave new world where NIL — the NCAA right that lets college athletes profit off their name, image and likeness — combined with the freedom of movement the transfer portal provides young athletes, has essentially made college athletes free agents every year. Advertisement 12 Tennessee quarterback Nico Iamaleava caused an uproar in April when he held out for more money — but ended up transferring to UCLA for a pay cut. AP 12 Iamaleava had a reported $8 million deal at UT. AP As the first class who were freshman under NIL privileges, which were instated July 1, 2021, are now ready to graduate, the college sports landscape is a chaotic one. Not only did it change the status quo for coaches and athletes, it's taken dynamite to the whole system. 'When NIL hit and the transfer portal opened up at the same time, what I found immediately frustrating was that players and their view of the college experience was going to be completely changed,' Larranaga, 75, said. Advertisement The Queens native, who is currently writing a book on leadership and will be teaching at Miami, made it clear he's not critical of athletes wanting to capitalize on a short window and make money. 'But to build a program as a coach, you're losing the normal continuity,' he said of the now-yearly roster turnover. 'I had 10 new guys and they weren't that interested in a new system or developing skills that could be put to use. They were basically trying out for their next job. 12 Miami coach Jim Larranaga ended his coaching career in December and said he was frustrated with NIL culture. Getty Images Advertisement 'The culture changed. Not my culture, but the players had a different view.' Followers of college hoops will likely cite Larranaga's age and say he was already heading toward the end of his career. But only two months earlier, University of Virginia coach Tony Bennett also shocked the basketball world by calling it quits at 56. It underscored the tumult. On his way out, he expressed similar sentiments as Larranaga. Bennett was critical not of student athletes being compensated — but of NIL's lawlessness. 12 College hoopers Hanna and Haley Cavinder were immediately high earners after the implementation of NIL. Getty Images for Sports Illustrated Advertisement 'The game, and college athletics, is not in a healthy spot,' he said at the time. That was obvious this spring, when University of Tennessee sophomore redshirt quarterback Nico Iamaleava was a no-show at practice — because he was holding out in a high-stakes game for a better NIL deal than the reported $8 million one he had at UT. After a high-profile game of chicken that angered the school's rabid fan base, Tennessee removed Iamaleava from the roster and he transferred to UCLA for a reported pay cut of $500K a year. A few executives and experts told The Post the Iamaleava situation is a 'cautionary tale' on how to not conduct business. Sports attorney Mit Winter said the very public battle between a powerful institution and an individual player has 'galvanized' coaches to prevent a repeat. 12 Caitlin Clark became the first college athlete to sign a deal with State Farm. State Farm When NIL was enacted, it was a given that some athletes would be treated like influencers — netting deals with businesses and brands. We saw athletes like LSU gymnast Livvy Dunne and twin hoopers Haley and Hanna Cavinder, who transferred to the University of Miami, become early star earners. That led to NIL collectives — aka third parties — essentially paying them a salary for playing their sport. 'I don't think people envisioned that every school would [create] a new entity called an 'NIL collective' … just to pool money to pay athletes. It spread a lot quicker than people had expected,' said Winter, adding that it caught the NCAA, conferences and many schools flat-footed. As a result, college sports has truly shifted into a pay-to-play system with few rules in place, no transparency — and a whole lot of financial and cultural whiplash. Players, unencumbered bytransfer rules, can now hop around each year hunting for the best deals. Advertisement 12 Former UVA coach Tony Bennett shocked the college basketball world when he retired this year and said college sports was 'not in a healthy spot.' Getty Images It's also widened the gap between the schools that are the haves and have-nots. After leaping from Seton Hall, basketball star Kadary Richmond finished his collegiate career last season at conference rival St. John's where, coach Rick Pitino revealed on Vice's 'Pitino: Red Storm Rising' docu-series, 'He wanted to play for me. But we paid him a lot of money.' Richmond's NIL deal was reportedly in the high six figures. Texas quarterback Arch Manning is atop the NIL food chain with a valuation of $6.5 million, while Duke phenom Cooper Flagg, who declared for the NBA draft, had a reported valuation of $4.8. Dunne was valued at $4.1 million. And while NIL has led to greater player agency, allowing athletes to create generational wealth for themselves, it's also created a lot of uncertainty, Advertisement 12 ESPN analyst and former New Mexico coach Fran Fraschilla (left) said it's almost impossible to know what NIL will do to college sports longterm. Travis Bell 'I've talked to some of the smartest people in college athletics and it scares me when they say, 'Hey, I have been in this business 40 years and I have no idea where this all ends up,'' ESPN analyst and former New Mexico coach Fran Franschilla told The Post. 'I think they might have the answer but they have no clue. 'It's a new system. It's a very transactional business right now,' Fraschilla said. One frequent criticism of the current NIL system is the lack of transparency. Many sources said no one truly knows how much money collectives have, nor what players are worth. Advertisement 'What was a challenge for us was to talk to an agent and not know the true market value of a player,' said Larranaga. 'An agent could tell you, 'OK, to be involved with this player would cost you a million dollars' … [But] no one knows what other schools are offering. And so you're guessing and dealing with your own budget.' 12 Coach Jim Larranaga celebrated with his players as the clinched the Final Four in 2023. Getty Images Murky deals aside, Fraschilla said NIL and the transfer portal have altered not only the coach-player relationship, but also, in some cases, the power structure. 'I had a referee recently text me. He said, 'I did games this year where I could tell the coach was afraid to yell at the players because he was worried the kid might get mad and transfer,'' said Fraschilla, adding that money and the reshuffling of players every year has impacted team chemistry. Advertisement 'There are teams that, when you watch games, you think, 'How the hell are they losing with all that talent?' And you find out one guy is jealous of another guy because he's getting more money,' said Fraschilla. On the other hand, agent Daniel Poneman, the founder of Weave, one of the top agencies in college hoops, said the monetary incentive has only made athletes want to play harder — and, many times, led to more professional dealings between coach and player. 12 St. John's coach Rick Pitino admitted the program paid a lot of money to lure Kadary Richmond from conference rival Seton Hall. Getty Images However, not up for debate is the danger of handing large infusions of cash to young people with little financial acumen. While not many are reportedly making millions, there are significant payouts that come with few if any guardrails. 'I had one client and I told him how to save for taxes. Tax season came and it was all gone. It turns out, he had been playing online blackjack,' said one executive. That's where people like Michael Haddix Jr. come in. Haddix, who taught financial literacy for the NBA G league and NFL teams, founded Scout, a fintech platform that helps athletes automate pesky things like tax withholding. He works with top schools like Louisville, Mississippi State and Iowa. 'I've heard examples where players were going through money and not paying their taxes and jumping into the transfer portal, asking the new coaches for an advance so they can clean up their financial mess,' Haddix said, adding that coaches and ADs tell him they worry about athletes ending up in severe trouble with the IRS. 12 In 2021, Paige Bueckers was the first college basketball player to sign with Gatorade. Gatorade Over the summer, Poneman's agency will be trying to stave off this kind of scenario by hosting clients in Scottsdale for a two-week offseason training. 'It's like a boot camp, where we're bringing in tax experts, financial advisors and spiritual teachers,' said Poneman. 'We're saying, look, the money you're making is not for you to go crazy and buy bottle service on your college campus,' Poneman said. 'This is to put in your Roth IRA and into a diversified portfolio. This is life-changing money if you allow it to change your life positively.' There's less emphasis on graduation, not to mention traditional alma-mater relationships, but players are staying in college longer for the paycheck. 'I don't hear the term graduation rate anymore. No one is talking about getting degrees now. They're just figuring out how much money those kids can make,' lamented Fraschilla. 12 Haley Cavinder (left) transferred from Fresno State to the University of Miami to Texas Christian University — only to return to Miami. Getty Images 12 The Cavinders started playing at Gilbert High School in Gilbert, Arizona. Now they each have more than 1 million Instagram followers and a combined 4.6 million fans on TikTok. Haley & Hanna Cavinder / Instagram And one positive is the incredible boost NIL has provided to women's hoops by driving interest to the sport's big stars. In 2021, former UConn star and current Dallas Wings rookie Paige Beuckers became the first college basketball player to sign with Gatorade. Two years later, Caitlin Clark was the first collegiate athlete to notch a deal with State Farm. And changes are coming. On July 1, the NCAA House Settlement — the result of a class-action lawsuit brought against the NCAA and the country's five biggest conferences — is expected to go into effect, kicking off a flurry of new modifications. Among them: awarding $2.7 billion in backpay to athletes, allowing schools to directly pay athletes instead of compensating them through a third-party collective, revenue sharing and instituting what is, essentially, a salary cap of $20.5 per school over the next year. But as the new rules settle, Winter expects new legal issues, including inevitable Title IX lawsuits — 'Because, as of now, schools [are] paying like 90% of [their] dollars to male athletes,' he said. Winter said some athletic directors favor a collective bargaining structure that mimics the NBA and NFL. 'If college sports is really going to be professional,' Larranaga said, 'let's come up with good rules and let's figure it out.'
Yahoo
38 minutes ago
- Yahoo
The best reactions to PSG's Champions League triumph 📲
The best reactions to PSG's Champions League triumph 📲 When we talk about a historic victory, we inevitably talk about historic tweets. It can be said that fans from all over the world have been particularly creative in celebrating this Parisian title. Here is a selection of the best tweets after the final whistle. Also read: - Former PSG players pay tribute to the club 🥹 Advertisement - The jab from the Mayor of Marseille and the local press at PSG after the C1 victory - Haaland, Rio Ferdinand… Désiré Doué shocked everyone and benefited Rennes This article was translated into English by Artificial Intelligence. You can read the original version in 🇫🇷 here. 📸 Justin Setterfield - 2025 Getty Images