As the kids say: They’re cappin’.
Prior to the College Football Playoff quarterfinal (Sugar Bowl) between Notre Dame and Georgia, a moment of silence was held for the 15 people killed and several others injured in the New Year’s Day terrorist attack in New Orleans. Afterwards, Fighting Irish and Bulldogs fans united in a “U-S-A” chant following the national anthem.
Well, while it was a special moment for a lot of us who caught it on social media, viewers on ESPN (who exclusively broadcasted the Sugar Bowl) didn’t see it because the four-letter network decided not to show it — not even a replay! On top of that, the anti-American sports network even went to a commercial break while the anthem was happening. (RELATED: ESPN Proves That They’re Truly Anti-American By Not Showing National Anthem, U-S-A Chants Prior To Sugar Bowl)
Now we have some insight on what possibly happened with ESPN and their lack of patriotism, with “a source with knowledge of the situation” telling the New York Post that it was because of an apparent issue with timing.
“However, a source with knowledge of the situation told The Post that several factors played into why the national anthem and moment of silence didn’t make it on air, in particular, the awkwardness of the transition out of a commercial break,” reports the outlet.
ESPN didn’t show the national anthem, “USA” chants, or moment of silence for New Orleans victims during Sugar Bowl.
The network says it couldn’t because of a “timing issue.”
ESPN found enough “time” to carry the BLM demonstrations in the NBA.https://t.co/NqdFbKUE8D
— OutKick (@Outkick) January 3, 2025
We all know this is a blatant lie, ESPN has full control of their network and what they’re airing, the lying is so bad here.





