Norby Williamson, the ESPN executive at the center of any number of talent-related conflicts, has departed the company.
Williamson’s departure, which was first reported by the New York Post, was announced internally via a memo by his superior, Burke Magnus. The news comes just months after Williamson was the subject of harsh on-air criticism by ESPN’s Pat McAfee, who accused the controversial executive of leaking negative ratings information about him to the Post.
Per the Post, Magnus made the decision to part with Williamson, who “did not share a vision that aligned with ESPN’s long-term strategy.” The decision is believed to have been inevitable with or without the McAfee conflict.
Williamson, who joined ESPN in 1985, was one of the company’s most powerful executives and oversaw all of the network’s event and studio production — a role that expanded less than a year ago to include ESPN’s full suite of football programming. He was under contract through 2027 and there was no indication that he was winding down his time at ESPN. To the contrary, his power and influence only seemed to be growing.
Throughout his ESPN tenure, Williamson was seen as an advocate for traditional studio programming and SportsCenter in particular. He was able to capitalize on unrelated controversies involving Jemele Hill and Rachel Nichols to transform “SC6” and “The Jump” into by-the-numbers studio shows, part of a broader shift away from John Skipper-era experimentation that also pushed out Dan Le Batard, Michele Beadle, Pablo Torre and Bomani Jones.
Though McAfee may have a completely different fanbase than any of those personalities, he shares with them a non-traditional approach to sports commentary. When McAfee accused Williamson of sabotaging his show in January, there was far less surprise regarding the substance of the accusation than the fact it was made publicly. Even if the official story within ESPN is that Magnus made the decision to part ways with Williamson, it seems impossible that McAfee’s on-air barbs — unprecedented in ESPN history and completely unpunished — did not play a role.










