Plans to have The Jump serve as the Finals pregame show were scrapped amid the COVID-19 pandemic, when NBA Countdown with host Maria Taylor was made the Finals' pregame and halftime show. She was nominated for "Outstanding Sports Personality/Studio Host" in the 2021 Sports Emmy Awards. During the following years, Nichols interviewed Meek Mill and Philadelphia 76ers co-owner Michael Rubin on criminal justice reform, Mark Cuban after an NBA investigation into workplace harassment within the Dallas Mavericks organization and Kobe Bryant in one of his final interviews. She also became a recurring guest-host on the podcast Pardon My Take (2016–present), as well as on the TV show Pardon the Interruption. A sit-down interview with Nichols became a benchmark for active players, and Sports Illustrated called The Jump "TV's smartest basketball show". Tracy McGrady joined The Jump when it debuted in February 2016. She pitched "a conversation about basketball" as a daily program where former players, reporters and associates of the NBA community discuss the league. In 2016, Nichols was recruited back to ESPN by then-president John Skipper. The Hollywood Reporter recognized her as one of the "10 Most Powerful Voices in Sports Media". Nichols was widely praised for her tough questioning of NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell in the wake of the Ray Rice scandal and likewise for confronting boxer Floyd Mayweather on his history of domestic violence. She was a sideline reporter for CBS and TBS during the NCAA men's basketball tournament, paired with Verne Lundquist and Bill Rafferty, and was a dugout reporter for TBS during MLB playoff games. During this period, Nichols also worked the sidelines for the NBA on TNT program in both regular season and playoff games as well as regular appearances on Inside the NBA. Unguarded with Rachel Nichols premiered in October of that year and changed from a regular series to an occasional special by October 2014. She was called a "revered player in the space" and considered a 'big get' for CNN. In January 2013, Nichols left ESPN for CNN/ Turner Sports and was announced to anchor the network's first sports-related program in twelve years. She was also a correspondent for E:60 and became a recognizable face at the network due to her rapport with prominent sports figures, with Esquire naming Nichols one of the "Women We Love". Nichols made regular appearances on SportsCenter, Sunday NFL Countdown, Monday Night Countdown and was a recurring sideline reporter for Monday Night Football and NBA broadcasts. She transitioned to broadcasting in 2004 when ESPN hired her as a reporter. Nichols covered Pete Sampras, Andre Agassi as well as Venus and Serena Williams early in their careers. She later branched out into other sports including professional tennis, the Olympics, the National Basketball Association and Major League Baseball. In 1996, Nichols joined The Washington Post to cover the NHL's Washington Capitals. Nichols' first job was as a sportswriter for the Fort Lauderdale Sun-Sentinel covering the University of Miami football team and Miami Dolphins. At age 21, she received a bachelor's degree from Northwestern University. ![]() The two began to talk on a regular basis after the exchange and Nichols credited the experience in growing her skills as a journalist. ![]() After a few media sessions where she took notes and did not ask questions, Michael Jordan called her out to speak. Michael Wilbon, a lead sports columnist of The Washington Post at the time, met Nichols when she was an 18-year-old intern and said "she had supreme confidence." One of Nichols' earliest assignments was to attend Chicago Bulls practices as a freelance newspaper reporter amid the team's first three-peat. ![]() ![]() While attending the Medill School of Journalism at Northwestern University, she had summer internships at USA Today, Chicago Sun-Times and The Washington Post. Nichols wrote for and edited the school newspaper at Winston Churchill High School, graduating in 1991. Growing up in Potomac, Maryland, she became a fan of sports during her youth, saying it felt like watching a live storybook movie with heroes and villains, and an ending not yet written. Rachel Michele Alexander was born to Jane and Ronald Jacobs. In 2014, Sports Illustrated called Nichols "the country's most impactful and prominent female sports journalist". She has covered the National Football League (NFL), National Hockey League (NHL), Major League Baseball (MLB), professional tennis, college sports, the Olympics and is most notable for her work with the National Basketball Association (NBA). Rachel Michele Nichols ( née Alexander born Octo ) is an American journalist and sportscaster.
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