Jon Gruden may not be finished with the NFL just yet, at least not on the microphone.
The former Tampa Bay Buccaneers and Las Vegas Raiders head coach has been away from direct league involvement for a while, but he said in a recent interview that he wants another crack at play-by-play broadcasting. Gruden made the comments while talking with JoeBucsFan’s Ira Kaufman on the Ira Kaufman Podcast.
“I was a broadcaster for nine years,” Gruden said, per JoeBucsFan. “I want to be play-by-play.
You know, Frank Gifford, he transitioned into the play-by-play role. I would like to transition.
I had nine years of watching these guys, [Mike] Tirico. And I’d like to give that a shot.”
That would mark a return to a lane Gruden already knows. He spent nine years as a broadcaster, working for ESPN from 2009-17 as a color analyst and also hosting Jon Gruden's QB Camp.
His path back to coaching, though, looks far more complicated. Gruden has an ongoing lawsuit against the NFL tied to the email leaks that surfaced in 2021, and his trial against the league is scheduled to begin in May 2027. That timeline makes a coaching return tough to imagine before the case is resolved.
Broadcasting, on the other hand, is a different story. Gruden has been in and out of consulting roles since 2021 and most recently joined Barstool Sports as a media personality covering the NFL. His standing has also improved some since then, including a recent reinstatement into Tampa Bay’s Ring of Honor.
There are already signs that the booth could be next. FOX Sports reporter Greg Auman said Gruden is expected to work with Ronde Barber on the call for Tampa Bay’s preseason home game against the Chiefs on Aug. 22 on @WFLA.
Just to add to this: Jon Gruden is expected to return to the booth and work with Ronde Barber for Bucs’ preseason home game against the Chiefs on Aug. 22 on @WFLA. https://t.co/tdOf6GPMt9
If that assignment goes smoothly, it could open the door for more opportunities with a major network down the line.
For now, Gruden is still with Barstool Sports, and he’ll have his old team in view when the Buccaneers open training camp on July 28.
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For OConnell, that leaves a familiar but uncomfortable spot. He wants to be a starter, but the Raiders do not appear to view him as either their answer under center or even their primary backup, which is why a trade before the deadline is at least on the table. Still, the team could decide to keep him around if it thinks moving on now would push Mendoza into action before he is ready, especially with questions still lingering around the offensive line and the lack of a clear No. 1 receiver. [Read more 🡒]
