ESPN is both the best thing and the worst thing to ever happen to college sports.
The network showed a lot of absolute junk in its early days, but it also made people become accustomed to being able to see their college football and basketball teams more often. Although ABC and CBS had been the early leaders in college sports, ESPN pushed the boundaries and opened the floodgates. The rights money flowed freely to colleges and conferences.
Fans were happy. Wealthy major conferences and colleges were happy. Athletes were happy with the exposure. Coaches got paid more.
But ESPN was a relentless hype machine. In promoting its games, the push is all about the individual — the single achiever, the big star. And that has taken a lot of the enjoyment out of team sports for me.

Despite promise of new tech, today’s journalism is just trivia
What was I when I was a child? I’m still that same person today
Man’s unconscious night after stroke leaves me uneasy about living alone
Taking responsibility for mistakes is foreign concept in many lawsuits
Archived audio of my Alaska radio interview available for download
Penn & Teller: ‘Carny trash’ who became stars with original art
When we’re scared of real love, we can panic if someone loves us
Envy drives hatred for wealthy, but I want to earn my riches