Chris Simms is out of NBC's Sunday Night Football coverage, effective immediately, following the network's hire of Mike Tomlin as a studio analyst. The move creates the first open chair in NBC's primetime NFL lineup since Maria Taylor joined in 2021 for a reported $5M annually. Tomlin's deal, structured around $6M per year for five years, includes playoff and Super Bowl studio work—roles Simms held since departing CBS in 2017.
NBC did not announce a replacement. The timing—four weeks before Wild Card Weekend—suggests internal casting rather than external recruitment. Simms' exit follows a season in which his on-air chemistry with Mike Florio drew declining engagement metrics, per two people familiar with NBC Sports' internal reviews. His Sunday appearances averaged 2.1M viewers in Q4 2024, down 14% year-over-year, while his weekday *Pro Football Talk* streaming show plateaued at 180K average viewers. Tomlin's hire, by contrast, arrived with 72 hours of advance gossip in coaching circles—unusual for NBC, which typically announces talent six weeks out.
The departure matters because NBC's Sunday Night Football pre-game show is the network's primary sponsor integration vehicle. Visa, Hyundai, and AWS hold branded segments inside the 7:00-7:30 PM ET window, and those slots require known faces. Simms' Q-rating among NFL decision-makers was serviceable—he maintained relationships with 18 head coaches and regularly broke coordinator hirings—but his appeal to the $200K+ household income demo NBC sells never matched his insider credibility. Tomlin solves both problems. His name recognition among casual fans is immediate, and his ability to discuss defensive schemes in sponsor-safe language fits the show's $400K per 30-second spot rate card.
The financial structure also signals where NBC sees risk. Simms' deal, renegotiated in 2022, included performance escalators tied to streaming growth and branded content deals. He never hit them. Tomlin's contract, by contrast, is guaranteed through 2029, with escalators tied only to NBC retaining *SNF* rights in the next negotiation cycle. That structure—flat money, long runway—suggests NBC expects Tomlin to anchor studio coverage regardless of who else sits beside him. The network's $2B annual *SNF* rights fee makes talent cost a rounding error, but the choice of Tomlin over internal promotion (Rodney Harrison, Jac Collinsworth) or external star (Troy Aikman was floated in October) indicates NBC values continuity in the 2025-2029 window more than upside.
Simms' next move will clarify whether this was a mutual exit or a dismissal. His agent, CAA's Michael Principe, represents 22 on-air NFL analysts, and the spring hiring cycle for streaming platforms (Amazon, Apple, Netflix's nascent NFL package) typically opens in March. If Simms resurfaces at a digital-first platform by April, the exit was planned. If he lands at NFL Network or a podcast-only deal, NBC pushed.
Watch for NBC to announce Simms' replacement by January 6, the Monday after Week 18. Internal candidates include Harrison (already under contract) and Drew Brees (whose FOX deal expires in 2025). The other tell: whether NBC moves Tomlin into the Thursday Night Football TNF simulcast rotation, which would convert his $6M deal into a bargain and suggest Simms' role was always smaller than his visibility implied.
The takeaway
NBC's Tomlin hire at **$6M** annually displaces Simms, leaving the network's second *SNF* studio chair open four weeks before playoffs.
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