Behind the scenes of SportsCenter's new era at ESPN

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On Friday, ESPN debuted a new edition of SportsCenter exclusively for the ESPN app.

The host is Scott Van Pelt, who shoots the app edition of the show immediately after hosting the live SportsCenter at midnight for cable television. That midnight time slot has seen enormous recent success: viewership was up 62% in May, and the May 27 edition, immediately after Game 7 of the NBA Eastern Conference Finals, was the most-watched episode of the show since it started in 2015.

SportsCenter with Scott Van Pelt will go up every day by 7 a.m. in the top spot on the ESPN app. In the debut episode, Van Pelt recapped Game 1 of the NBA Finals, recapped the return of Dodgers ace Clayton Kershaw, highlighted the recent success of Phillies pitcher Aaron Nola, and delivered his “Best Thing I Saw Today,” a popular segment from the Midnight cable show—all in 2 minutes and 43 seconds. He concluded, “That’s what we’re going to do here on the ESPN app. We will see you tomorrow morning and every morning, and we’ll see you at Midnight on TV if you want to spend an hour with me.”

Putting a condensed version of its flagship news show on its free app every day may look like a simple and obvious progression for ESPN, which recently redesigned the app and launched its first OTT pay product, ESPN Plus, inside the same app.

But behind the scenes, the effort has been part of a major undertaking to roll out three new mobile-first, social-friendly SportsCenter editions: for Snapchat, for Twitter, and now for the ESPN app. Last year ESPN also launched “SportsCenter Right Now,” ultra-brief news updates that air on cable and radio inside existing ABC and ESPN programming.

All four of these were launched in the past nine months and have involved new hires, new hosts, and new thinking for ESPN. These were a long time coming, and critics may say they are late to arrive. (ESPN got a new president in March, former Disney consumer products exec James Pitaro, after the December departure of John Skipper.)

Together, all the new SportsCenter formats constitute the next era of the SportsCenter brand, which once prompted images of two men behind a news anchor desk, but now stands for many different things to different sports fans. SportsCenter is as old as ESPN (1979) and remains the most important program at ESPN—for many people, the two are synonymous. But the new formats are an effort to capture millennials who may not care about SportsCenter.

ESPN is striving to bring more people into the SportsCenter fold (while avoiding all those accusations of liberal bias), even if they are people who will never sit down and watch a full episode of SportsCenter on television.