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Former athletes are increasingly moving away from traditional sports radio as they can now build their own media platforms. The rise of podcasting and social media has diminished the need for conventional radio broadcasting.
What is connection without credibility? To be persuasive, you must be believable. To be believable, you must be credible. That equation has guided sports radio for decades, even though most hosts never stepped inside a professional locker room.
The format has always relied on personalities who could connect with fans, but there has long been added value in pairing those voices with someone who actually lived the experience. Former athletes didn’t just bring stories. They brought authority.
Today, though, sports radio faces a new challenge. The issue is no longer whether former athletes want to work in media. Clearly, they do. The issue is whether they still need traditional sports radio to do it.
The answer, increasingly, appears to be no.
The evolution of sports media has created a world where current and former athletes can build entire media businesses without ever walking into a radio station. Podcasting, YouTube, streaming, social video, athlete-led production companies, and direct-to-consumer platforms have eliminated the traditional gatekeepers.
What once required a studio, a station brand, and years of industry development can now be launched with a camera, a microphone, and an existing social following. And for athletes, the math is simple.
Why spend four hours a day in a radio studio discussing games on someone else’s platform when you can own your content, control your schedule, monetize your audience directly, and build equity in your own brand?
That reality has become impossible for traditional sports radio to ignore.
Months ago, I watched an episode of Al & Jerry’s Postgame Podcast featuring WFAN’s Jerry Recco and Al Dukes discussing what they described as a growing issue for sports radio: current and former athletes simply no longer have much interest in entering the format.
The reasoning wasn’t centered on salary. It centered on time.
That same sentiment has been echoed across the industry. When I interviewed former FS1 analyst and current Denver Sports 104.3 The Fan host Mark Schlereth, he discussed how networks may eventually struggle to recruit former athletes into traditional analyst roles altogether. Not because athletes lack interest in media, but because the modern media landscape gives them better options.
And honestly, it’s hard to argue otherwise.
Having a former athlete attached to your station still delivers immediate benefits. Credibility matters. Perspective matters. Audience familiarity matters. Athletes walk into media with built-in trust, built-in branding, and built-in attention. They don’t need years to establish authority with listeners because fans already associate them with expertise and experience.
But in today’s creator economy, that same credibility has become more valuable outside traditional radio than inside it.
For every sports radio station searching for its next personality, there’s an athlete building a YouTube channel, launching a podcast network, signing a direct sponsorship deal, or creating a subscription-based community that they fully own.
And the pipeline isn’t slowing down.
NIL has accelerated personal brand-building at the college level, creating a generation of athletes who already understand audience ownership before they ever turn professional. Many of today’s athletes won’t wait until retirement to enter media. They’re already building platforms while still playing.
That shift should concern sports radio operators.
Not because athletes are replacing broadcasters, but because attention increasingly follows authenticity, access, and firsthand experience. In an overcrowded content ecosystem, credibility cuts through faster than almost anything else.
And sports radio already faces enough challenges competing for audience attention.
The format is battling shrinking budgets, corporate consolidation, syndicated programming, changing listening habits, and an endless supply of digital competition. In many markets, stations are asking fewer people to create more content across radio, podcasting, video, and social media simultaneously.
Against that backdrop, losing athlete participation creates another problem: perception. Because whether fair or unfair, listeners still view athlete voices differently.
Anyone can react to a game. Anyone can debate a trade. Anyone can fire off opinions online.
But firsthand perspective still carries weight.
That doesn’t mean sports radio cannot succeed without former athletes. Plenty of stations continue to thrive with strong broadcasters who connect authentically with audiences. Great radio has never solely depended on athletic resumes.
But credibility remains one of the format’s greatest competitive advantages. And if more athletes continue building independently rather than joining traditional outlets, sports radio risks losing one of its strongest tools for maintaining that credibility long-term.
The battle today isn’t just for ratings. It’s for relevance, attention, and trust. And trust is still built on credibility.
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John Mamola
John Mamola is Barrett Media’s sports editor and daily sports columnist. He brings over two decades of experience (Chicago, Tampa/St Petersburg) in the broadcast industry with expertise in brand management, sales, promotions, producing, imaging, hosting, talent coaching, talent development, web development, social media strategy and design, video production, creative writing, partnership building, communication/networking with a long track record of growth and success. He is a five-time recognized top 20 program director in a major market via Barrett Medi’s Top 20 series and has been honored internally multiple times as station/brand of the year (Tampa, FL) and employee of the month (Tampa, FL) by iHeartMedia. Connect with John by email at John@BarrettMedia.com.
The post Is Sports Radio Still Attractive To The Former Athlete? appeared first on Barrett Media.
Former athletes are leaving traditional sports radio because they can create their own media businesses through platforms like podcasting and social media.
Sports radio faces challenges from the evolution of media, where athletes can bypass traditional broadcasting to connect directly with fans.
The role of former athletes in sports media has shifted from being essential voices on radio to independent content creators using various digital platforms.
Former athletes now have alternatives like podcasting, YouTube, streaming services, and direct-to-consumer platforms to share their stories and insights.
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