College GameDay (basketball TV program)

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Template:Use mdy dates Template:Infobox television

College GameDay (branded as ESPN College GameDay covered by State Farm for sponsorship reasons) is an ESPN program that covers college basketball and is a spin-off of the successful college football version. Since debuting on January 22, 2005, it airs on ESPN Saturdays in the conference play section of the college basketball season at 10 or 11 A.M. ET at a different game site each week. Before 2015, the college basketball version always appeared at the ESPN Saturday Primetime game location. Since the 2014–2015 season, the show has appeared at a top game of the week, similar to the college football version. The program has also appeared at the site of the Final Four.

In 2005, the host of the show the first four weeks was Rece Davis, but then the last four weeks Chris Fowler hosted the show. Since 2006, Davis has been the exclusive host of the show. Since the show debuted, Davis has been joined by Digger Phelps, Jalen Rose, Jay Bilas, Hubert Davis, Seth Greenberg, Jay Williams, LaPhonso Ellis and Andraya Carter as analysts. In 2008 during Championship Week, Bob Knight joined the cast, where he remained until 2012. Andy Katz has also served as a feature reporter giving up to the minute news and reports.

When College GameDay tipped off its 7th season on January 15, 2011, the show expanded to two hours, with the first hour airing on ESPNU, followed by the second hour on ESPN. The first game of the 2011 schedule marked the first time the show has originated from a site that has featured a men's and women's game played in the same day.

Duke – North Carolina is the most featured matchup, appearing 22 times on College Gameday. The next closest is Florida – Kentucky with 8 appearances. Arizona – UCLA, Kansas – Kentucky and Kansas – Texas currently sit at 4.

History

The program has appeared in many different spots throughout each basketball arena. At Kansas, they were in the program's museum; at Kentucky, they were at the entrance of the arena; at UConn, they were on the concourse; at Gonzaga, Florida, and Marquette, they were on the court; and at Duke, they were in Krzyzewskiville, the tent village outside Cameron Indoor Stadium. It is also worth noting that in recent years (except for the Final Four), the morning airings of this program have taken place on the court.

Through the 2023–2024 basketball & football seasons, 42 schools (Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, Auburn, Baylor, Boston College, Clemson, Colorado, Duke, Florida, Florida State, Houston, Indiana, Iowa State, Kansas, Kansas State, Kentucky, Louisville, LSU, Memphis, Michigan, Michigan State, Missouri, North Carolina, North Carolina State, Notre Dame, Ohio State, Oklahoma, Oklahoma State, Oregon, Pittsburgh, Purdue, Tennessee, Texas, Texas A&M, Texas Tech, UCLA, Vanderbilt, Virginia Tech, Washington, West Virginia and Wisconsin) have hosted College GameDay for both basketball and football events. With the addition of Women's teams also hosting College GameDay, only 4 schools: LSU, Tennessee, UConn And Virginia Tech have hosted both Men and Women's programs.

Starting with the fourth season (2008), the basketball version of GameDay is broadcast in high-definition on ESPN HD.

On January 16, 2010, the 6th-season premiere of College GameDay, the show was broadcast live from the site of a women's college basketball game for the first time ever as it made an appearance at Harry A. Gampel Pavilion on the main campus of the University of Connecticut in Storrs, Connecticut. The show covered the women's college basketball game between Notre Dame Fighting Irish and the Connecticut Huskies.

On March 9, 2013, College GameDay had a men's doubleheader from 2 different sites (Washington, D.C., and Chapel Hill, North Carolina) for the first time in the show's history. On January 18, 2014, College GameDay opened its tenth season with another men's doubleheader, this time, at The Palestra in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and at Gampel Pavilion.

For the 2013 and 2014 seasons, the intro for College GameDay was Macklemore's 2013 hit, Can't Hold Us.

On April 7, 2014, longtime analyst Digger Phelps announced his retirement and would not return for the 2015 season.[1] That summer, Jalen Rose announced he would not return due to his priorities with NBA Countdown. As a result of the two departures, ESPN announced that Seth Greenberg and Jay Williams would be analysts for 2015 and beyond.[2]

On September 30, 2014, ESPN announced that College GameDay would no longer have a set schedule, just like the football version of the show. Instead, the location will be chosen the week before to give the network a better opportunity to pick games with ranked teams and interesting story lines.[3]

On October 8, 2019, Jay Williams replaced Paul Pierce as an analyst on NBA Countdown, and left College Gameday.[4] LaPhonso Ellis was announced as his replacement.

On January 10, 2023, ESPN announced it would be adding three women's college basketball shows in one season, equaling the total number of women's games they had done in the show's history, bringing the overall total for women's games to six.[5] Also since the first time since 2008, ESPN returned to the Final Four in Houston for both the Semifinal & Championship game.[6]

LaPhonso Ellis was part of significant ESPN layoffs, ending his three-year run on the show. It was also announced the Jay Williams would be returning to the show.[7]

In the UK, College GameDay was shown in full during BT Sport's decade on air (2013–2023), unless live sport was being aired on all of its channels. In July 2023, BT Sport was relaunched as TNT Sports following the sale of BT Sport to Warner Bros. Discovery EMEA.[8] This saw the cessation of ESPN studio programming and therefore College Gameday is no longer shown in the UK. The football version of the show returned in November following an agreement between Sky Sports and ESPN which sees Sky Sports broadcasting three NCAA basketball games each week plus March Madness.[9] However, Sky Sports has not shown Gameday.

Personalities

Current

Former

Locations

Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote". Since the program was launched in 2005, the show has been on the road. However, all shows in 2021 were broadcast from ESPN's headquarters in Bristol, Connecticut due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Appearances by school

Announced and visited locations as of April 7, 2025. All schools are listed with their current athletic brand names and conference affiliations, which do not necessarily match those of a given school during its last GameDay appearance.

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The Duke Blue Devils have been featured on GameDay a record 33 times, while North Carolina Tar Heels has been featured 32 times. Both have hosted the most games at 15 each. The Carolina–Duke rivalry has been the most frequent matchup featured 22 times, with the series tied 11–11.
School Conference Appearances Hosted Record Win % Last Hosted
Duke ACC 33 15 17–16 Template:Winning percentage February 1, 2025
North Carolina ACC 32 15 17–15 Template:Winning percentage March 8, 2025
Kansas Big 12 26 12 18–8 Template:Winning percentage February 10, 2024
Kentucky SEC 22 9 11–11 Template:Winning percentage February 16, 2019
Florida SEC 15 6 13–2 Template:Winning percentage March 1, 2025
Texas (Men's) SEC 11 3 6–5 Template:Winning percentage February 3, 2018
Michigan State Big Ten 10 5 4–6 Template:Winning percentage February 15, 2020
Tennessee (Men's) SEC 10 2 6–4 Template:Winning percentage January 28, 2023
UConn (Men's) Big East 10 3 5–5 Template:Winning percentage February 24, 2024
Louisville (Men's) ACC 9 2 6–3 Template:Winning percentage February 9, 2008
Auburn SEC 8 5 4–4 Template:Winning percentage January 25, 2025
Arizona Big 12 7 3 3–4 Template:Winning percentage February 19, 2022
UCLA Big Ten 7 2 4–3 Template:Winning percentage March 2, 2013
Gonzaga WCC 6 3 3–3 Template:Winning percentage February 25, 2023
Memphis American 6 3 3–3 Template:Winning percentage February 8, 2014
South Carolina (Women's) SEC 6 3 5–1 Template:Winning percentage February 16, 2025
Syracuse ACC 6 4 5–1 Template:Winning percentage February 1, 2014
Virginia ACC 6 4 1–5 Template:Winning percentage February 9, 2019
Baylor Big 12 5 3 1–4 Template:Winning percentage February 26, 2022
Pittsburgh ACC 5 2 3–2 Template:Winning percentage January 21, 2012
Texas A&M SEC 5 1 2–3 Template:Winning percentage February 20, 2016
Alabama SEC 4 2 1–3 Template:Winning percentage February 15, 2025
Houston Big 12 4 2 2–2 Template:Winning percentage February 22, 2025
Maryland Big Ten 4 2 2–2 Template:Winning percentage February 29, 2020
Michigan Big Ten 4 2 2–2 Template:Winning percentage January 24, 2015
Notre Dame (Men's) ACC 4 3 2–2 Template:Winning percentage February 6, 2016
Notre Dame (Women's) ACC 4 1 2–2 Template:Winning percentage March 2, 2025
Oklahoma SEC 4 2 1–3 Template:Winning percentage February 13, 2016
Georgetown Big East 3 1 1–2 Template:Winning percentage March 9, 2013
Indiana Big Ten 3 1 2–1 Template:Winning percentage February 2, 2013
Iowa State Big 12 3 2 2–1 Template:Winning percentage February 8, 2025
Kansas State Big 12 3 1 0–3 Template:Winning percentage January 30, 2010
Miami (FL) ACC 3 0 0–3 Template:Winning percentage Never
Ohio State Big Ten 3 1 1–2 Template:Winning percentage January 27, 2007
Tennessee (Women's) SEC 3 2 1–2 Template:Winning percentage January 26, 2023
Villanova Big East 3 1 0–3 Template:Winning percentage February 12, 2011
UConn (Women's) Big East 3 1 3–0 Template:Winning percentage January 16, 2010
West Virginia Big 12 3 2 0–3 Template:Winning percentage January 27, 2018
Georgia Tech ACC 2 0 1–1 Template:Winning percentage Never
Illinois Big Ten 2 1 1–1 Template:Winning percentage February 6, 2010
Iowa (Women's) Big Ten 2 2 2–0 Template:Winning percentage March 3, 2024
Missouri SEC 2 1 1–1 Template:Winning percentage February 4, 2012
NC State (Men's) ACC 2 1 1–1 Template:Winning percentage January 26, 2013
NC State (Women's) ACC 2 1 1–1 Template:Winning percentage February 23, 2025
Oklahoma State Big 12 2 2 1–1 Template:Winning percentage March 1, 2014
Saint Mary's WCC 2 1 0–2 Template:Winning percentage February 11, 2017
San Diego State Mountain West 2 0 1–1 Template:Winning percentage Never
Vanderbilt SEC 2 1 0–2 Template:Winning percentage February 11, 2012
Virginia Tech ACC 2 1 2–0 Template:Winning percentage February 10, 2018
Washington Big Ten 2 1 2–0 Template:Winning percentage February 20, 2010
Wisconsin Big Ten 2 1 2–0 Template:Winning percentage February 14, 2009
Arkansas SEC 1 1 0–1 Template:Winning percentage January 27, 2024
Boston College ACC 1 1 0–1 Template:Winning percentage February 17, 2007
Butler Big East 1 1 1–0 Template:Winning percentage January 9, 2013
California ACC 1 1 0–1 Template:Winning percentage February 28, 2009
Clemson ACC 1 1 0–1 Template:Winning percentage January 23, 2010
Colorado Big 12 1 1 0–1 Template:Winning percentage February 22, 2014
Creighton Big East 1 0 0–1 Template:Winning percentage Never
Dayton A-10 1 1 1–0 Template:Winning percentage March 7, 2020
Florida Atlantic American 1 0 0–1 Template:Winning percentage Never
Florida State ACC 1 1 1–0 Template:Winning percentage January 14, 2012
George Washington A-10 1 0 0–1 Template:Winning percentage Never
Georgia (Women's) SEC 1 0 0–1 Template:Winning percentage Never
Indiana (Women's) Big Ten 1 0 0–1 Template:Winning percentage Never
La Salle A-10 1 1 1–0 Template:Winning percentage January 18, 2014
Louisville (Women's) ACC 1 0 0–1 Template:Winning percentage Never
LSU (Men's) SEC 1 1 1–0 Template:Winning percentage January 6, 2007
LSU (Women's) SEC 1 1 0–1 Template:Winning percentage January 25, 2024
Marquette Big East 1 1 1–0 Template:Winning percentage March 3, 2007
Mississippi State SEC 1 0 0–1 Template:Winning percentage Never
Nebraska Big Ten 1 0 0–1 Template:Winning percentage Never
North Carolina (Women's) ACC 1 0 1–0 Template:Winning percentage Never
Northern Iowa Missouri Valley 1 0 0–1 Template:Winning percentage Never
Ohio State (Women's) Big Ten 1 0 0–1 Template:Winning percentage Never
Oregon Big Ten 1 0 0–1 Template:Winning percentage Never
Purdue Big Ten 1 1 1–0 Template:Winning percentage January 22, 2011
SMU ACC 1 1 1–0 Template:Winning percentage February 14, 2015
Southern Illinois Missouri Valley 1 1 1–0 Template:Winning percentage January 26, 2008
Stanford ACC 1 0 0–1 Template:Winning percentage Never
TCU Big 12 1 0 0–1 Template:Winning percentage Never
Temple American 1 0 0–1 Template:Winning percentage Never
Texas (Women's) SEC 1 0 0–1 Template:Winning percentage Never
Texas Tech Big 12 1 1 0–1 Template:Winning percentage February 24, 2018
UCF Big 12 1 0 1–0 Template:Winning percentage Never
Vanderbilt (Women's) SEC 1 0 0–1 Template:Winning percentage Never
Virginia Tech (Women's) ACC 1 1 0–1 Template:Winning percentage February 25, 2024
Wichita State American 1 1 1–0 Template:Winning percentage February 28, 2015

Frequent Matchups

College Gameday has attended several particular matchups with regularity.

Team 1 Team 2 Matchups Record Last Appearance Last Result
style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle"|Duke style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle"|North Carolina 22 Tied 11–11 March 8, 2025 style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle"|Duke 82–69
style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle"|Florida style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle"|Kentucky 8 style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle"|Florida 7−1 January 20, 2018 style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle"|Florida 66–64
style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle"|Arizona style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle"|UCLA 4 style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle"|UCLA 3−1 February 25, 2017 style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle"|UCLA 77–72
style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle"|Baylor style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle"|Kansas 4 style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle"|Kansas 3−1 February 10, 2024 style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle"|Kansas 64–61
style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle"|Kansas style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle"|Kentucky 4 Tied 2−2 January 29, 2022 style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle"|Kentucky 80–62
style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle"|Kansas style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle"|Texas 4 style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle"|Kansas 3−1 February 28, 2015 style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle"|Kansas 69–64
style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle"|Duke style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle"|Virginia 3 style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle"|Duke 3−0 February 9, 2019 style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle"|Duke 81–71
style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle"|Kansas style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle"|Kansas State 3 style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle"|Kansas 3−0 January 29, 2011 style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle"|Kansas 90–66
style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle"|Maryland style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle"|Michigan State 3 style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle"|Michigan State 2–1 February 29, 2020 style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle"|Michigan State 78–66
style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle"|Oklahoma style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle"|Texas 3 style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle"|Texas 2−1 February 3, 2018 style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle"|Texas 79–74


AP Top 5 vs Top 5

Date Team Team Result Significance
1 April 2, 2007 style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle"|No. 1 Ohio State style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle"|No. 3 Florida 84−75 2007 National Title Game
2 February 23, 2008 style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle"| No. 1 Memphis style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle"|No. 2 Tennessee 66−62
3 April 5, 2008 style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle"| No. 3 UCLA style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle"|No. 2 Memphis 78−63 2008 Final Four
4 April 5, 2008 style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle"|No. 1 North Carolina style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle"|No. 4 Kansas 84−66 2008 Final Four
5 April 7, 2008 style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle"|No. 2 Memphis style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle"| No. 4 Kansas 75−68OT 2008 National Title Game
6 January 16, 2010 style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle"|No. 1 UConn (Women's) style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle"|No. 3 Notre Dame (Women's) 70−46 Rivalry
7 February 2, 2013 style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle"|No. 1 Michigan style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle"|No. 3 Indiana 81−73
8 January 31, 2015 style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle"|No. 2 Virginia style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle"|No. 3 Duke 69−63
9 January 28, 2017 style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle"|No. 2 Kansas style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle"|No. 4 Kentucky 79−73 Big 12/SEC Challenge
10 February 25, 2017 style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle"|No. 4 Arizona style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle"|No. 5 UCLA 77−72 Rivalry
11 January 19, 2019 style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle"|No. 1 Duke style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle"|No. 4 Virginia 72−70
12 February 9, 2019 style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle"|No. 2 Duke style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle"|No. 3 Virginia 81−71
13 February 16, 2019 style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle"|No. 1 Tennessee style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle"|No. 5 Kentucky 86−69 Rivalry
14 March 9, 2019 style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle"|No. 3 North Carolina style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle"|No. 4 Duke 79−70 Rivalry
15 February 22, 2020 style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle"|No. 1 Baylor style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle"|No. 3 Kansas 64−61
16 February 15, 2025 style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle"|No. 1 Auburn style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle"|No. 2 Alabama 94−85 Rivalry
17 March 15, 2025 style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle"|No. 4 Florida style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle"|No. 5 Alabama 104−82 2025 SEC Tournament
18 April 5, 2025 style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle"|No. 3 Florida style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle"|No. 4 Auburn 79–73 2025 Final Four
19 April 5, 2025 style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle"|No. 1 Duke style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle"|No. 2 Houston 70–67 2025 Final Four
20 April 7, 2025 style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle"|No. 2 Houston style="Template:CollegePrimaryStyle"|No. 3 Florida 65–63 2025 National Title Game

International broadcasts

In the UK, College GameDay was shown in full during BT Sport's decade on air (2013–2023), unless live sport was being aired on all of its channels. In July 2023, BT Sport was relaunched as TNT Sports following the sale of BT Sport to Warner Bros. Discovery EMEA.[10] ESPN programming did not transfer to TNT Sports, and College Gameday stopped being shown at this point.

In November 2023, following an agreement between Sky Sports and ESPN, College Basketball returned to UK screens, but in a much diminished form with three games shown each week, and this deal did not see the return of College GameDay to UK television screens.[11]

See also

References

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External links

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