Joe Buck expected to leave Fox Sports for huge ESPN deal

Erin Andrews may be next Fox free agent to bolt in NFL TV frenzy

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Joe Buck is expected to leave Fox Sports for ESPN, where he will become the voice of “Monday Night Football,” The Post has learned. 

Buck, 52, has called the World Series for nearly a quarter century and was Fox’s play-by-player on six Super Bowls. 

On Friday, Fox granted Buck permission to speak with ESPN, according to sources. A deal is expected to come to fruition shortly. 

With Fox, Buck had one year and near $10 million remaining on his contract. Fox, though, is letting him out early as a gesture for his years of service to the company. He is expected to sign a contract in the five-year, $60-$75 million range with ESPN, according to sources. 

Fox tried to keep Buck with an offer of $12 million per year. 

At ESPN, Buck will join his longtime partner Troy Aikman in the MNF booth. The Post previously reported that Aikman agreed to a five-year, $92.5 million contract, according to sources. 

At ESPN, Buck, besides calling “Monday Night Football,” is expected to be involved in producing ESPN+ projects, as well. In exchange for letting Buck out of his contract a year early, Fox will receive the ability to choose one Big Ten football game earlier next season, according to a source. The two networks share the rights to the Big Ten and there is a drafting system that is utilized to pick games. The two sides began talks late Thursday night. 

Over the past year, ESPN chairman, Jimmy Pitaro, a diehard Yankees fan, has been on a George Steinbrenner-like shopping spree to glamorize the once-vaunted MNF booth. 

Joe Buck and Troy Aikman
Buck will be joining Troy Aikman at ESPN
Roy Rochlin/Getty Images

Nearly two weeks ago, The Post reported that ESPN and Aikman agreed to a five-year deal that is for $18.5 million per year. It has not been announced yet. 

Before last season, Pitaro added Peyton and Eli Manning for 10 alternative MNF broadcasts per season. While the Mannings’ exact salaries are unknown for their acclaimed Manningcast, it is at least in the Aikman neighborhood. Their agreement, which was recently extended, also includes Omaha Productions, which produces “Peyton’s Places,” and is scheduled to add more alternative broadcasts for other sports. This complicates how to calculate the Mannings’ exact per game rate. 

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