Chris Simms is out of NBC's Sunday Night Football coverage after Mike Tomlin accepted the Cleveland Browns head coaching position, creating an immediate vacancy in the network's highest-rated NFL studio franchise. NBC confirmed the departure Tuesday, citing Tomlin's move from Pittsburgh to Cleveland as the factor behind Simms' exit. The network has not named a replacement.
Simms joined NBC's SNF pregame and halftime coverage in 2017, working alongside Mike Florio on the studio desk. The arrangement lasted seven seasons, during which Sunday Night Football remained NBC's most-watched primetime program, averaging 19.2 million viewers in the 2024 season, per Nielsen. Simms' departure follows Tomlin's hiring by Cleveland on a five-year, $75 million deal announced last week, ending his 18-year tenure in Pittsburgh. The network did not clarify whether Simms resigned or was asked to leave, but multiple sources described the exit as "mutual" given the optics of covering a division rival now led by a close associate.
The timing matters because NBC's SNF pregame show has become a meaningful inventory asset. The 30-minute window before kickoff commands a $900,000 average rate for a 30-second spot, according to Standard Media Index data from Q4 2024. That's 22% below in-game rates but still premium compared to Fox's NFC package pregame ($720,000) or CBS's AFC window ($650,000). Studio talent churn mid-contract is rare in this tier; the last comparable exit was Jason Garrett leaving Fox's NFL Sunday in 2022 after the Giants fired him, though Garrett was still employed by New York at the time. Simms' exit is cleaner—he has no current NFL employer—but the proximity to Tomlin's move signals NBC wanted distance from any perceived bias toward the AFC North.
The vacancy arrives as NBC negotiates its next Sunday Night Football rights cycle, with the current 11-year, $2 billion-per-year deal expiring after the 2033 season. Early extension talks are expected to begin in late 2025, and studio continuity has historically been a minor but measurable factor in Nielsen's qualitative research on viewer trust. ESPN replaced Trey Wingo with Laura Rutledge in 2020 and saw no ratings impact, but that was a pure hosting swap; Simms was an analyst with a defined point of view, and his absence removes a voice viewers associated with the brand.
NBC has three obvious internal candidates: Peter King, who already contributes to SNF's Football Night in America; Rodney Harrison, who moved from the booth to the studio in 2018; or an external hire from the college ranks, where NBC now has Big Ten inventory requiring cross-promotion. Fox promoted Greg Olsen from the booth to its top NFL broadcast team within 18 months of his retirement; NBC could pursue a similar path with a recently retired player, though no names have surfaced yet. The network's next scheduled SNF pregame is the Hall of Fame Game on August 7, giving NBC five months to fill the seat.
Simms' departure also removes a potential future booth candidate. NBC moved Cris Collinsworth from the studio to the booth in 2009, and Simms was widely seen as a similar track within the building. His exit closes that runway and pushes NBC toward external hires if it needs to replace Mike Tirico or Collinsworth in the next contract cycle. Drew Brees left NBC after two seasons in 2022, citing family reasons, but the network never replaced him—it simply restructured the studio around Florio and Simms. Now it must restructure again.
Watch for NBC's replacement announcement before the NFL Draft on April 24, when the network will begin promoting its 2025 SNF schedule. If no name surfaces by then, expect a rotation of guest analysts through training camp, which typically signals internal disagreement over the hire.
The takeaway
NBC loses a seven-year SNF studio analyst after Tomlin's Browns hire, creating a **$900,000-per-spot** pregame vacancy five months before Hall of Fame Game.
nbc sportssunday night footballbroadcast rightsmedia talentnfl mediamike tomlin
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