As Samantha Ponder begins her seventh season hosting ESPN’s Sunday NFL Countdown, two words that her missionary father has said to her countless times resonate more than ever.
“Then what?”
This stop-in-your-tracks, look-in-the-mirror, soul-searching, reality check of a question overtakes Samantha’s thoughts anytime she has a weighty decision to consider.
In June, when the cable sports giant laid off about 20 of its most accomplished broadcasters, Samantha wondered if she would be included in the cuts. Then what?
Instead of being anxious, Samantha counted her blessings, including a career for which she gives God all the credit. “Just knowing that God did it in the first place means that if it works out, ‘great.’ And if it doesn’t, it wasn’t supposed to be in the first place,” she said.
Samantha has hosted ESPN’s NFL pregame show on Sundays since 2017. The iconic program, which launched the same year she was born, averaged 1.24 million viewers per show last season, the most since 2019. One of her colleagues on the show was let go, but Samantha, 37, survived the cutbacks.
Meanwhile, few in the sports broadcast industry have been more outspoken lately about fairness in female sports than Samantha and her former ESPN colleague Sage Steele. Both have repeatedly tweeted their unequivocal support of former University of Kentucky women’s swimmer Riley Gaines, who has testified before Congress against allowing biological males, or transgender “women,” to compete in women’s athletics.
And in late July, when former University of Pennsylvania swimmer Paula Scanlan testified in front of Congress about being traumatized to share a locker room with a biological man, Samantha applauded the swimmer’s bravery to speak up.
“I think the fact that there are many young women who were in this situation who were told not to speak—not to speak their fears or concerns or what they were uncomfortable with—is actually a really dangerous message to send to young women, especially when it comes to consent in a locker room, but also in competition and in fairness and in the reason that we had separate sports in the first place,” Samantha told Decision.
“I’m passionate about this because I lived it. I was a beneficiary of having essentially a safe space to compete as a young girl all through high school. I mean, it was really formative for me, the relationships with the other girls, and was just a place to know that there is fair competition.”
Cancel culture or not, Samantha will not be silent when it comes to defending truth.