NBC's Melissa Stark back on sideline, 1st time in 20 years
The last time Melissa Stark was regularly on the sidelines, Tom Brady was a one-time Super Bowl champion, and Matthew Stafford was a freshman in high school
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Your support makes all the difference.The last time Melissa Stark was regularly on the sidelines, Tom Brady was a one-time Super Bowl champion, and Matthew Stafford was a freshman in high school.
As Stark returns to sideline duty for the first time since 2002 after starting a family, Brady is still in the league and has added six more rings to his Super Bowl collection. Stafford is part of the defending Super Bowl champion Los Angeles Rams.
Stark will be reporting on both quarterbacks this week for NBC. The Rams begin defense of their title in Thursday nightās kickoff game against the Buffalo Bills, while Brady and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers visit the Dallas Cowboys on Sunday night.
āNever in my wildest dreams did I imagine my life would come full circle this way,ā said Stark, who replaced Michele Tafoya after she decided to leave sports broadcasting. āBeing part of hosting a live show in a studio is one thing, but being part of the action and being on the sidelines in the middle of the game is totally different. And thatās what I love.ā
Stark was the sideline reporter on ABCās āMonday Night Footballā from 2000-02. She spent four years with NBC News (2003-07), including stints as a national correspondent for the āTodayā show and an MSNBC anchor, along with covering three Olympics for NBC Sports.
Stark left the business for a few years when her family grew to four children, including twins, before joining NFL Network in 2011. She hosted Sunday morning coverage during the season, was a reporter, contributed to NFL draft coverage and did some sideline reporting when the network produced games in London.
Stark started on āMonday Night Footballā when she was 25 and returns to primetime football at age 48 with four teenagers.
āIāve always said to my husband, āIām going to be replaced by someone younger.ā And heās always said, āStop thinking that. No, youāre not.ā To be able to come back with a family is very validating and an important message for women,ā Stark said. āI think it affords a lot of opportunities to women and shows they can find a way to navigate to have that family but also have a career.
āI feel so honored that (NBC NFL executive producer) Fred (Gaudelli) thought of me. I feel privileged to be able to come back and do that.ā
When it comes to how sideline reporting has evolved over the past 20 years, Stark cited additional resources, including having someone in the truck to directly relay information to the producer.
āThe access to the storylines and research has also increased tremendously. Ultimately, the job of the sideline reporter is to be the eyes and ears on the field. So we can have a story here or there,ā she said.
Stark isnāt the only staff shuffle on āSunday Night Football,ā which has been the top-ranked primetime show for the last 11 years. Mike Tirico becomes the primary play-by-play announcer after Al Michaels moved to Amazonās āThursday Night Footballā package. Rob Hyland takes over as coordinating producer after Gaudelli moved into an executive role at NBC as well as producing the Amazon games.
Cris Collinsworth returns for his 14th season as an analyst. The crew worked last monthās Hall of Fame Game in Canton, Ohio.
āIf I learned anything in Canton, itās that my instincts are to be trusted. Weāre going to be fine. Everybody communicates. Everybody connects, gets along. Similar-minded folks,ā Tirico said. āWe havenāt done a regular-season game together, but I know what (director) Drew Esocoff thinks and does, certainly Rob. Cris, I donāt have to look over and see, āhmm, what is he thinking?ā Iāve listened to Cris. Iāve worked with Cris. I have a sense of exactly where heās going and what he wants to say, and the same is true with Melissa.ā
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