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Amazon Prime announces broadcast roster for 2025-26 NBA season

With TNT leaving the NBA landscape at least for the foreseeable future, old friend NBC is stepping back into the scene, as well as newcomer Amazon Prime. Today, Amazon announced their broadcast teams for the 66 regular season games they will be exclusively streaming during the 2025-26 NBA season.

> Amazon Prime has announced its NBA broadcast roster:Play-by-play: Ian Eagle, Kevin Harlan, Michael Grady and Eric Collins Analysts: Stan Van Gundy, Brent Barry and Dell Curry.

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> Sideline reporters: Cassidy Hubbarth, Kristina Pink and Allie Clifton.

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> — Jimmy Traina (@JimmyTraina) [July 10, 2025](https://twitter.com/JimmyTraina/status/1943340987029365005?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw)

Ian Eagle and Kevin Harlan are the well-known play-by-play names coming over from TNT. Michael Grady was covering the Timberwolves, and Eric Collins was a member of the Hornets’ broadcast team with his own unique style.

In the analyst chair, Stan Van Gundy leaves from TNT, Brent Barry was most recently an assistant coach with Phoenix, but spent years with TNT and NBA TV last decade, and Dell Curry had been with the Hornets’ broadcast team for years.

On the sidelines Cassidy Hubbarth joins Amazon following a long career at ESPN, Kristina Pink worked Clippers games in addition to doing NFL coverage for Fox Sports, and Allie Clifton comes off a stint as a [Lakers](https://www.silverscreenandroll.com) pregame host with prior experience as the Cavaliers sideline reporter.

In addition to today’s announcement, the platform previously announced a studio show hosted by Taylor Rooks with Blake Griffin and Dirk Nowitzki as studio analysts, in addition to Dwyane Wade, Steve Nash, Candace Parker, and Udonis Haslem rotating as in-game and studio analysts. I’m not clear on how Haslem will do the gig while still forever being the 15th man on the end of the Heat bench, but I imagine he’ll figure something out.

Amazon certainly has a nice mix of seasoned broadcast veterans and fresh faces from both journalism and former playing day backgrounds. All I ask is that unlike some current and former broadcast partners, Amazon would appear to actually _enjoy_ the sport they’re covering and the players currently in the league. I look forward to seeing what the streaming service has in store for us.

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