Arrow-right Camera
The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Cbs Sports Wants To Play With The Pros

As he continues rebuilding CBS Sports, Sean McManus might face more problems in public relations than in programming.

“The perception is not the reality,” McManus said in his first meeting with CBS Sports personnel since he became division president. “That will change.”

Although the ouster of David Kenin and the hiring of McManus were announced last month, McManus didn’t actually move from his old office at International Management Group to his new one at CBS until Monday.

Some of what McManus will and will not be able to do will be dictated by the other major broadcast networks. For example, if the NFL’s partners want to renew their contracts in 1997 without haggling, there’s just about nothing CBS can do about it.

Although CBS is strong in golf, tennis and college basketball, owns U.S. rights to the next Winter Olympics and has built strong relationships with college football and the emerging sport of stock car racing, there remains the perception that it is a network without sports.

That’s because, since the beginning of the ‘90s, it has lost the NBA, Major League Baseball and the NFL.

“We need a pro franchise, and given the opportunity, we will do everything in our power to get one,” McManus said.

Since Westinghouse took over CBS earlier this year, even CBS employees had to question the new ownership’s commitment to sports. McManus said CBS president Peter Lund arranged a meeting between him and Westinghouse chairman Michael Jordan last month that “turned into a 90-minute discussion.”

McManus said he came away convinced that Westinghouse would spend money on sports.

“If I was not sure of that, I would not have been interested in this job,” McManus said. “And if CBS was not committed to this sports division, the network would not have any use for me.”

Out takes

Jerry Glanville and Sam Wyche are two former football coaches who now work in television - Glanville at Fox and HBO, Wyche at NBC. But instead of common interests, all they really share is a history. And it is one of acrimony. They haven’t liked each other since they were coaches.

“If they dropped the big one tomorrow and we were the only two guys left on earth, we’d be trying to kill each other to get it down to one,” Glanville said.

ABC has the Citrus and Rose bowls on New Year’s Day, and the Sugar Bowl in prime time on Jan. 2. That gives ABC the national championship game, but, at this point, the network doesn’t know which game that will be - the Rose or Sugar.

“Frankly that’s a win for us in both cases,” ABC Sports senior vice president of programming, David Downs, said.