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It may come with less money and attention than ESPN, but Adrian Wojnarowski says his role with St. Bonaventure is still ...
Sports stars Sue Bird, Adrian Wojnarowski and Michael Vick are set to appear in “Second Acts Live,” a new live show from ...
ESPN analyst Chiney Ogwumike is launching Second Acts Live, a series of on-stage conversations featuring sports notables now ...
Wojnarowski shockingly announced he was retiring from ESPN as the outlet’s lead NBA insider on Wednesday morning to become the general manager of the St. Bonaventure men’s basketball program.
Adrian Wojnarowski, who has been ESPN's leading reporter on the NBA for seven years, is retiring to take a job at his alma mater, St. Bonaventure.
The biggest media story in 2024 was Adrian Wojnarowski leaving his lucrative job at ESPN to go back to St. Bonaventure as the men’s basketball general manager.
Wojnarowski graduated from St. Bonaventure with a journalism degree in 1991 and received an honorary doctorate from the school in 2022. The 55-year-old has worked at ESPN since 2017, ...
Wojnarowski says he was shocked to see how many ESPN coworkers didn’t travel to Arkansas for Mortensen’s memorial service. “It made me remember that the job isn’t everything,” he told SI.
Wojnarowski signed an extension with ESPN in 2022, where he averaged $7 million a year. “If you’re an insider, the company that you work for is leaning into you heavily.
Adrian Wojnarowski used to be one of the premier newsbreakers in all of sports. He broke some of the biggest news in NBA history. Even when he retired, he was still at the top of his game.