Daily • Morning Headlines: This was a segment at the very beginning of each hour with Jacobson and Crawford run down the biggest headlines in the sports world. • Here's the Latest: This segment was similar to Morning Headlines, but this informs viewers on the latest injury update and the latest on a developing story. • The Top Story: This was at the beginning of the show when they go in-depth about a developing story and discuss it with insiders on the situation. •
1st and 10: This segment appeared four different times during the program, when Crawford, Bayless, and a guest analyst debate some of the hottest topics in sports. This also airs at 3:00 p.m.
ET on
ESPN as its own show, and will continue on
ESPN First Take. • Morning Slice: This was when one of the hosts delivers an off the wall story. Sometimes called "
Suzuki Way of Life." • Top Plays:This segment appeared at different times throughout the show when they run down the top five plays of the day. • Cover Two: This was when they are joined by two
NFL columnists from all over the country to discuss different news and notes. • MLB Doubleheader: This was when they are joined by two
MLB columnists from all over the country to discuss different news and notes. • Full Court Press: This was when they are joined by an
NBA columnist from all over the country to discuss different news and notes. • NBA News & Notes: This was when they are joined by another NBA columnist from all over the country to discuss different news and notes. • SportsNation Question of the Day: This was a multiple-choice question for which fans get to vote at
ESPN.com. The hosts give the result of the vote at the end of the show. • NBA Minute: Highlights from the previous nights best games usually about 10 to 12 seconds per game for a total of 5 or 6 highlights.
Weekly • Couch Potato: Every Friday,
Howie Schwab,
ESPN’s resident
trivia guru, ran down the weekend's sports television viewing and Howie rates each of his choices with bags of chips, with five bags being the highest rating. • The Gamers: Reviews of video games, also on Fridays.
Sundance DiGiovanni, the president of
Major League Gaming, had been the contributor to this segment. • Gizmo Girl: This segment appeared weekly when they are joined by a guest to discuss a type of product that relates to sports. • The Great Throwdini: This appeared every Friday during football season, when
The Great Throwdini picks three
NFL games by throwing knives blind folded at the teams logo. • Plays of the Week: The top plays of the week, set to music. • The Must List: Personal picks from
Entertainment Weekly editor
Peter Bonventre, every Thursday. • Sports Doc: This was the weekly segment when ''Cold Pizza's
sports medicine contributor Jonathan Glashow, MD gives analysis on one of the big injuries in the sports world. During the NFL season, it is called "Diagnosis NFL" and he is joined by Newsday'' columnist
Bob Glauber.
Former • When the show began, former
NBA all-star
Darryl Dawkins served as the gadget, fitness and relationship guru in a segment called
Planet Lovetron. That was discontinued early in the show's run. •
Zach Leibowitz also contributed to the show at the halfway point when he mocked sideline reporters by grading Crawford and Hoover's performance in the first half of the show. This was also discontinued early on. • After
ESPN Hollywood was cancelled,
Thea Andrews briefly hosted a segment of the latest news of the
convergence between the sports and
entertainment worlds called
Sports and Hollywood which began in April 2006. The tightened focus on sports news resulted in an end to that segment in November 2006; however,
actors and other performers still stopped by the
Cold Pizza studios from time to time to pitch their projects and share their love of sports. ==Controversy==