There are 195 million sports fans in America. Every one of them has a story. Nobody covers them.
For many years across our careers, we watched fan stories detonate across the internet — and disappear within 72 hours. No follow-up. No beat reporter. No institution that treated the people in those crowds as subjects worth returning to.
We wanted to know if the pattern was real. So we measured it. Two thousand posts. Four platforms. Twelve months. What we found: when you center the fan — not the crowd, the person — engagement doesn't just go up. It goes to a different place entirely.
No sports media organization has ever covered fans that way. ESPN can be first.
ESPN already talks to fans. It occasionally features them. But it doesn't cover them — as subjects, with a dedicated operation, the way it covers athletes. This proposal closes that gap.
Fans fill stadiums and drive ratings. They energize players, represent cities, and build the culture that makes sports mean something. But there is no beat. No standing operation. No editorial commitment to covering what fans actually do — how they organize, travel, protest, grieve, celebrate, and build communities around the sports they love.
Competitors aggregate fan clips. They celebrate fan moments. They don't report on fans the way a beat reporter would — with continuity, editorial rigor, and the commitment to follow a story through its full arc. That's what ESPN can do that nobody else has done.
We analyzed 2,000 posts across ESPN, SportsCenter, ESPN FC, Barstool, House of Highlights, and Bleacher Report. The metric: ER1 — engagements in the first 24 hours, normalized against follower count. 1.0 is baseline. 2.5+ is exceptional. It's the only way to compare a post from a 50M-follower account against one from a 2M-follower account. What the data shows is structural, not anecdotal.
Bleacher Report profiled a lifelong LSU fan — ER1: 3.30. House of Highlights found Tyler Herro's number one fan — ER1: 2.74, 813K E1. Barstool followed Indiana fans falling in love with Fernando Mendoza in real time — ER1: 2.86, 649K E1. ESPN aired every game. Someone else told the story.
The issue isn't speed. It's editorial curiosity about the fan dimension of events ESPN has already paid to broadcast.
Omar Raja's seat upgrade series is the #1 highest-engagement fan post in the full 365-day dataset. ESPN FC's organic fan instinct — no production, just a clip and a caption — averages ER1: 2.8 across fan posts, consistently outperforming the main ESPN and SportsCenter accounts by 2–3×.
This is what the format produces on best efforts. A named, staffed initiative produces it with intention — across every sport, every tentpole, every platform.
| The Moment | Who Covered It | ER1 | E1 | ESPN Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kent Broussard — Lifelong LSU Fan "Living His Dream" A fan profile. No players, no highlights. Pure fandom. |
Bleacher Report | 3.30 | 258K | ESPN had CFB rights. No coverage filed. |
| Tyler Herro's Number One Fan A kid who is the Miami Heat's biggest fan. |
House of Highlights | 2.74 | 813K | Heat play on ESPN. HoH found the kid first. |
| Fernando Mendoza / IU Fan Reaction Indiana fans fall in love with a player in real time. |
Barstool Sports | 2.86 | 649K | ESPN aired the game. Barstool got the fan story. |
| Spurs Fans — Coach Pop Tribute Fan community's enduring love for Popovich, late in his career. |
Bleacher Report | 2.33 | 645K | Spurs are on ESPN. Story went to Bleacher Report. |
| Omar Seat Upgrade — Yankees Home Plate Fan surprise format. Highest raw engagement post in dataset. |
ESPN / SportsCenter | 2.01 | 1.0M | ESPN owned it — proof the format works at scale. |
| Messi Chant — Angola vs. Argentina Stadium erupts. No production. Just a fan story posted with a caption. |
ESPN FC | 4.35 | 158K | Highest ER1 in full ESPN dataset. Organic instinct. |
Named individuals outperform crowd shots — every time, across every platform, every sport, every account size. It's not just names vs. anonymity. It is centering and telling their stories.
Fan coverage is not one format — it's a beat with four distinct story categories, each producing consistent above-baseline engagement across the sports media landscape.
The wall between court and crowd has never been thinner. Stars become fans of their own fans. Fans challenge athletes mid-game, sponsor streamers, go viral in exchanges that define careers. Each moment is a story — right now treated as noise.
Jackson Bonneville did Aaron Rodgers impressions on TikTok. The Jets DM'd him. He met Rodgers. The NFL posted their reunion. Sporting News named him 2025 Content Creator of the Year. ESPN had the rights. Nobody covered the fan whose obsession became a relationship.
Lifelong fans. Families where fandom is inherited. Communities built around shared team identity. The fan who has been to 110 games. The Knicks fan who books a Delta flight to Atlanta for a regular-season game in February. These stories consistently outperform game content in engagement — the data is unambiguous.
Ruslan Burns — lone Longhorn in a sea of Aggies at Kyle Field. 110 games, a $500 Facebook ticket, a dad who started bringing him at age 4. Regional NPR covered him. ESPN did not. He was the entry point to a series.
Not because they're celebrities — because their relationship to their sport reveals something true about what fandom is. Named individuals in crowds generate significantly higher engagement than generic crowd shots. This is the format the data most consistently validates.
Justin Dutari wrote a letter to Warriors owner Joe Lacob after a loss. Lacob responded in two minutes. Dutari posted it to Reddit. National story. ESPN covered Lacob. Nobody covered Dutari — the fan whose action moved a news cycle.
Fans storm fields, stage protests, go viral, make demands of franchises — and sometimes win. Right now they're treated as sidebar material within 72 hours. A fan beat covers them as main subjects, with continuity through the full arc.
When Chris Paul returned to the Clippers, the crowd chanted his name and brought him to tears. Bleacher Report had it — ER1: 1.51, 207K E1, 4.7M views. ESPN had the rights. The fan community's expression of love for a player they once booed is a story. Nobody told it.
Not a new vertical. Not disruptive to existing infrastructure. A system that touches every ESPN surface — broadcast, social, digital, in-person — and deepens engagement with every rights package ESPN holds.
Fan-first sensibility is the filter. The ability to disappear into communities, earn trust, and surface authentic moments over time.
A veteran sports journalist who has spent his career centering fan perspective and cultural context. Sports stories are human stories. Perfect balance of credibility and relatability.
Runs "Crows vs. Joes" independently across YouTube, Patreon, and Twitch. Entrepreneurial, authentic, hungry. Natural ability to find the through-line between individual fan experiences and broader cultural moments.
NYT bestselling author (Giannis, Dream). The best profile writer in sports — her work is about the humans inside sport, which is the exact editorial instinct the fan beat requires, pointed at a different subject.
Co-creator of the first feminist sports podcast. Her entire practice is built around community and fan perspective rather than player-first coverage. Deep credibility in soccer, Olympics, and women's sports. The 2026 World Cup window makes her timing ideal.
Newsletter voice who deeply understands fan culture and the social fabric of sports fandom. Natural fit for the flagship newsletter format and a voice that lives natively on the platforms where fans gather.
Additional candidates being identified through the Independent Journalism Atlas — spidering for fan-first journalists and community-embedded storytellers not yet visible in mainstream searches.
Game day is one day. The fan relationship runs 365. Fan coverage deepens engagement with the rights ESPN has already paid for — keeping audiences connected between broadcasts, across platforms, and through the full arc of a season.
Fan stories don't compete with broadcasts. They extend them — deepening the relationship between audiences and the sports they love to watch.
Fan beat finds the stories between games
Stories bring audiences closer to the sport
Closer audiences tune in more, subscribe more
Deeper rights engagement opens commercial surface
Investment funds the beat. The beat finds more stories.
Jomboy Media built a $10M+ business on fan-first storytelling — starting as a Yankees podcast, growing to 93 million social engagements in 2024 alone. MLB purchased a stake in the company. A fan with a camera did this without ESPN's rights, reach, or infrastructure. Imagine what's possible with all three.
We are proposing a co-development partnership. We bring the editorial vision, the talent relationships, and the community intelligence. ESPN brings the platforms, the rights, and the infrastructure. Because everyone is a fan.