Monday Night Football

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Monday 9:00 PM on ESPN Premiered Sep 01, 1970 In Season

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Monday Night Football

Show Summary

"Monday Night Football really got on the air because of Pete Rozelle," recalls former producer Don Ohlmeyer. Indeed, it was Rozelle's reputation for public relations and marketing that created a prime-time venue for the National Football League. The prototypes for Monday Night Football were those annual Monday night games staged from 1966 to 1969 inclusive on CBS. St. Louis hosted three of them, and it seemed natural for the NFL to make Monday night their regular turf. The only trouble was, Rozelle couldn't get a network to agree. CBS did not want to lose Gunsmoke. NBC had Rowan and Martin's Laugh-In, TV's highest-rated show the past two years. Even ABC, floundering in third place in the ratings, was unsure. Rozelle then threatened to put the Monday night package in syndication via the Hughes Television Service. So ABC bought in. NFL owners themselves weren't keen on Monday Night Football. Some thought the gates would be dormant. But then-Cleveland Browns owner Art Modell, who knew a thing or two about marketing himself, agreed to host the first MNF game. He asked that the Browns face the Jets to maximize ABC's first-night audience. The result was a smashing success. For 36 years, Monday Night Football would air on ABC at Mondays at 9pm ET/6pm PT ever since (except for when it aired at 8pm ET). Though two teams would always meet on the field, viewers often got their fill from watching the original ABC broadcasters. Don Meredith and Howard Cosell were, along with Keith Jackson, part of the original team that started in 1970. After Jackson returned full-time to ABC's college football broadcasts, the network hired Frank Gifford away from CBS. From there, Monday Night Football began its most memorable years. It got ratings thanks to the wide appeal that Cosell, Meredith, and Gifford collectively garnered. Except for a shift in the mid-70s that sent Meredith briefly to another network, ABC played a strong football card for twelve years. The separate departures of Meredith and Cosell left the Monday Night Football booth in a shaky transition period during the mid-80s. Though they sometimes got it right on the field, with the high-water mark being Miami's romping of the eventual Super Bowl champion Chicago Bears in 1985, it was plain that the booth could not work with three ex-players (what Howard Cosell had labeled "jockocracy"). The likes of Fred Williamson, O.J. Simpson, and Joe Namath were quickly disposed. The second-most-stable team was assembled in 1986, when veteran ABC sportscaster Al Michaels joined Gifford. Rounding out the booth was future Hall of Fame offensive lineman Dan Dierdorf. They would share more than a decade of prime time football coverage, including three Super Bowls. For all its considerable charm and novelty, one thing Monday Night Football did not achieve was a proper farewell to Frank Gifford. After the 1997 season, the booth welcomed the recently-retired Bengals quarterback Boomer Esiason. Gifford was cramped in a studio to introduce pregame and halftime stories for the 1998 season. Neither change worked, as Gifford was out of ABC after one year and Boomer Esiason agreed to a contract settlement in 2000. The next two years were the least successful. Joining Al Michaels was ABC college football analyst Dan Fouts and, of all people, Dennis Miller. Even though their first season had an abundance of nail-biters (witness the Jets' Midnight Miracle over the Dolphins), the new recruits were unable to get in focus. Miller in particular was over-rehearsed in the hours leading up to a broadcast. Both he and Fouts were out of the booth after January 7, 2002. ABC needed a lift for the show, and thought they had it when John Madden (who had recanted on his offer to join ABC in 1994) came over from another network. Monday Night Football went from planes to buses for the next four years. Again, though, the players were meant to be bigger stars than Madden or Michaels. Sometimes it showed, such as the Colts' stunning comeback over the defending World Champion Buccaneers in 2003. But in all honesty, the hundred forces that had emerged after 1970 to compete with Monday Night Football, were collectively getting the better of ABC. Thus, on April 18, 2005, a new eight-year contract sent Monday Night Football to ABC's adopted sister network, ESPN.moreless

Previously Aired Episode

AIRED ON 12/22/2012

Season 43 : Episode 17

Next Episode

AIRS ON 9/9/2013

Season 44 : Episode 5

EXPAND to see 16 more future episodes
S 44 :  Ep 20 Airs 12/23/13
S 44 :  Ep 19 Airs 12/16/13
S 44 :  Ep 18 Airs 12/9/13
S 44 :  Ep 17 Airs 12/2/13
S 44 :  Ep 16 Airs 11/25/13
S 44 :  Ep 15 Airs 11/18/13
S 44 :  Ep 14 Airs 11/11/13
S 44 :  Ep 13 Airs 11/4/13
S 44 :  Ep 12 Airs 10/28/13
S 44 :  Ep 11 Airs 10/21/13
S 44 :  Ep 10 Airs 10/14/13
S 44 :  Ep 9 Airs 10/7/13
S 44 :  Ep 9 Airs 9/30/13
S 44 :  Ep 8 Airs 9/23/13
S 44 :  Ep 7 Airs 9/16/13
S 44 :  Ep 6 Airs 9/9/13
S 44 :  Ep 5 NEXT EPISODE Airs 9/9/13
S 43 :  Ep 17 Aired 12/22/12
S 43 :  Ep 16 Aired 12/17/12
S 43 :  Ep 15 Aired 12/10/12
S 43 :  Ep 14 Aired 12/3/12
Alex Karras

Alex Karras

Color Commentator (1974-1976)

Al Michaels

Al Michaels

Play by Play Announcer (1986-2005)

Dan Dierdorf

Dan Dierdorf

Color Commentator [1987-ca. 1998]

Frank Gifford

Frank Gifford

Play by Play Announcer (1971-1998

Boomer Esiason

Boomer Esiason

Co-Anchor [1998-1999]

Dennis Miller

Dennis Miller

Commentator (2000-2002)

Wednesday
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Friday
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SUBMIT REVIEW
  • MOnday Night Football

    8.0
    Gruden has to GO.... The Mouth has to go, period... I mute my TV can stand to listen to him any more.

    He never shuts up and every player is great until he makes a mistake.
  • A clever title goes here!

    2.5
    if gruden knew as much as he thinks does he would still be coaching. I mute all monday night games because of him.
  • Great!!

    10
    Love Jon Gruden. Wish the other guys would go away.
  • Dennis

    8.5
    Seattle gets gift from terrible officials. The NFL is now a joke. Coaches shouldn't "touch" officials like on Sunday. Maybe they should just deck them after the terrible job last night in Seattle. As a Cowboy fan, I am shocked at how GB got screwed on the final play. The Commissioner should fire the refs from last nights game and they RESIGN FOR THE GOOD OF THE GAME....he has no control, no clue and is now ruining the game week after week with this officiating fiasco. Tate knows he lied twice...he was guilty of blantant offensive pass interferance and holding the ball to the chest of an opposing player is not catching the ball in anyone's mind but his own delusional mindmoreless
  • Seattle/Green Bay

    2.0
    If the announcers can't be unbiased and not comment on the poor calls by the officiating team then the small market teams should not even play - this game was a joke!!!! If the referees don't bail out GB on third down calls this would have been an upset.



    If the NFL isn't going to support a level playing field cancel the games for about 20 teams.
  • RIP

    Webster Dad and NFL-er Alex Karras Is Dead at 77

    The pro-football player who became an actor after his days on the field died of kidney failure.

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    More Info About This Show

    Categories

    Sports, Talk & Interview

    Themes

    Football, NFL