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PostPosted: Tue May 09, 2006 12:19 am 
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http://chicagosports.chicagotribune.com ... columnists

ESPN fans are accustomed to hearing Sean Salisbury talk about Terrell Owens, Peyton Manning and Donovan McNabb.

But on Monday, Salisbury started reeling off names such as Norm Van Lier, Jerry Sloan, Ron Santo and Keith Magnuson.

Homes
So Salisbury doesn't have an Illinois drivers' license and won't get choked up if he's asked about the demolition of old Comiskey Park. Nevertheless, he's ready to dive into the Chicago sports radio scene, which he'll do Tuesday morning on WMVP-AM 1000.

"I don't consider it a detriment that I'm not from Chicago," he said. "And I'll set out to prove that quickly."

Salisbury, who will team with the Tribune's Steve Rosenbloom from 9 a.m.-noon on weekdays, plans to buy a home in Chicago and spend at least 100 days a year here. When he's not at WMVP's downtown studio, he will broadcast from the ESPN mother ship in Bristol, Conn.

"I'll become a Chicagoan and would hope people will welcome me," he said.

Salisbury's competitors at WSCR-AM 670 won't be rolling out the red carpet, not after running this promo Monday: "We're Chicago's home-grown sports station, not some crap imported from the East Coast. Keep it here for all Sox talk, all Cubs talk, all Chicago sports talk."

WMVP program director Jeff Schwartz said Salisbury would blow people away with his Chicago sports knowledge.

"Anybody who wants to challenge him or test him, they're going to lose," Schwartz said. "And if there's something he doesn't know, he won't try to fake it."

Schwartz said what Salisbury also has going for him is "enormous pride and ego ... it's big enough that, if anything, it will force himself to overachieve."

Rosenbloom's take?

"Jerry Reinsdorf is not from around here either," he said. "You think Bulls fans and Sox fans have any problem with him? The Tribune Company has been here 150-plus years. How many championships have they won?"

Salisbury grew up in Southern California and played quarterback at USC before enjoying a 10-year NFL career. He joined ESPN in 1997 and is now widely regarded as the network's top NFL analyst, contributing to many of its TV and radio shows.

"People who think he's just a football guy need to see him walk through a baseball clubhouse," Rosenbloom said. "The players pull Sean aside because they've seen him on TV and want to know who to draft for their fantasy football team. And the guy's a human Rolodex."

Schwartz said Salisbury counts actors Vince Vaughn and Adam Sandler among his friends.

"And Sean has so many inside stories about Bristol," Schwartz said, referring to ESPN's on-air personalities. "People will hear things that are absolutely hysterical. And Sean said almost nothing's off limits."

Brief courtship

Salisbury has worked with Rosenbloom only once, when they subbed for former WMVP midday hosts Marc Silverman and Carmen DeFalco in January.

A canceled flight prevented Salisbury from meeting Rosenbloom until about 10 minutes before the show. So much for devising a script.

"He walks in, puts on the headphones and we roll," Rosenbloom said. "We fought and argued without it getting personal. It was loads of fun."

Said Salisbury: "It's amazing how he knew in one show how to get my blood flowing. He has a strong personality and knows where to take me."

For years Rosenbloom resisted taking on a five-days-a-week radio gig, preferring a weekend show at WSCR. But he said the chance to work with Salisbury—while continuing to write his "Out Loud" and poker columns in the Tribune and travel to poker tournaments for ESPN.com—was too irresistible to pass up.

And if he doesn't thrive, Rosenbloom said he'll tell WMVP officials to take him off the air.

"Radio contracts are worse than NFL contracts," he said. "Every 13 weeks they can take you out back and shoot you."

Night shift

The Salisbury hire pushed Silverman and DeFalco back to weeknights, where they started together at WMVP on June 2, 2003.

"That was the night Sammy Sosa corked his bat," Silverman said. "And the phone lines lit up."

Silverman will take his trademark intensity to the 7-10 p.m. show. He won't sulk about losing the more coveted time slot, though the winter ratings for the "Silvy and Carmen" show were strong, surging from 3.0 to 3.6 among men 25-49. And from 9-10 a.m., the duo easily surpassed the audience of the Score's Mike North.

Silverman and DeFalco will try to play to the younger set by doing remotes from sports bars.


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PostPosted: Tue May 09, 2006 12:31 am 
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Contempt wrote:
And from 9-10 a.m., the duo easily surpassed the audience of the Score's Mike North.

Silverman and DeFalco will try to play to the younger set by doing remotes from sports bars.


Suck it, North...err...Keeping Score.


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PostPosted: Tue May 09, 2006 1:49 am 
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Contempt wrote:
"And Sean has so many inside stories about Bristol," Schwartz said, referring to ESPN's on-air personalities. "People will hear things that are absolutely hysterical. And Sean said almost nothing's off limits."


Wow that is going to be hilarious! *cough*sarcasm*cough* :roll:


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PostPosted: Tue May 09, 2006 7:12 am 
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Contempt wrote:

Schwartz said what Salisbury also has going for him is "enormous pride and ego ...

.


Great. That combination always ends up in something good for the listeners.


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PostPosted: Tue May 09, 2006 8:36 am 
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THEGUEST2 wrote:
Contempt wrote:
"And Sean has so many inside stories about Bristol," Schwartz said, referring to ESPN's on-air personalities. "People will hear things that are absolutely hysterical. And Sean said almost nothing's off limits."


Wow that is going to be hilarious! *cough*sarcasm*cough* :roll:



That ridiculous quote got my attention, too. Did Spaceball even listen to Salisbury when he did his various auditions? All the guy did was try to sell the audience on what "great guys" all of the national ESPN talking heads are. That's really entertaining.

Personally, I don't believe it was Spaceball's idea to bring in Salisbury. I think this was a mandate from the network and now Space, MJH and everyone else at MVP has to do a big sales job for this guy--'cuz his suckage is overwhelmingly evident every time he opens his mouth.


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PostPosted: Tue May 09, 2006 8:34 pm 
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Tall Midget wrote:
THEGUEST2 wrote:
Contempt wrote:
"And Sean has so many inside stories about Bristol," Schwartz said, referring to ESPN's on-air personalities. "People will hear things that are absolutely hysterical. And Sean said almost nothing's off limits."


Wow that is going to be hilarious! *cough*sarcasm*cough* :roll:



That ridiculous quote got my attention, too. Did Spaceball even listen to Salisbury when he did his various auditions? All the guy did was try to sell the audience on what "great guys" all of the national ESPN talking heads are. That's really entertaining.


Yeah seriously, it's one thing if he's doing a couple fill in shows during football season and throws in a segment with ESPN stories, but this a permanent show in Chicago we're talking about, and that's a drawing point?

Also,

Quote:
"People who think he's just a football guy need to see him walk through a baseball clubhouse," Rosenbloom said. "The players pull Sean aside because they've seen him on TV and want to know who to draft for their fantasy football team. And the guy's a human Rolodex."


So because he's on TV and people recognize him, it means he can analyze Cubs and Sox for me?


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PostPosted: Tue May 09, 2006 9:34 pm 
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"People who think he's just a football guy need to see him walk through a baseball clubhouse," Rosenbloom said. "The players pull Sean aside because they've seen him on TV and want to know who to draft for their fantasy football team."

I thought the same thing when I read that quote Guest. It might make sense if the players asked Sean baseball questions. But instead Rosey is essentially saying even baseball players view him only as a football guy. :lol:


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PostPosted: Tue May 09, 2006 9:47 pm 
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Rosenblum also said in the article "Jerry Reinsdorf isn't from here". Not a good analogy for reasons many of you already know. I love it when people try to make a case and don't know how to properly do it.


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