In 2002, Gottlieb co-hosted a midday sports talk show on
Oklahoma City radio station
WWLS 640 AM, known locally as "The Sports Animal". Gottlieb took the job in Oklahoma City only after securing a job to call college basketball games on ESPN and ESPN Regional. In addition, Gottlieb called Oklahoma State games for the Cowboy Basketball Network. At the end of the 2002–2003 season, Gottlieb returned to France to play for
Clermont-Ferrand. Upon returning stateside he worked out with the
Minnesota Timberwolves Summer League team and co-hosted the
NBA draft on
ESPN Radio. Gottlieb was hired by ESPN Radio in September 2003 as co-host of ESPN Radio's
GameNight. Gamenight was ESPN Radio's longest running show. Gottlieb's co-host was
Chuck Wilson, one of the original voices of ESPN Radio. Gottlieb would also fill in on
The Dan Patrick Show,
The Herd with Colin Cowherd and began hosting
The NBA Today on Sundays. Meanwhile, he also continued to call college basketball games on ESPN's family of networks. He also worked as a studio analyst for
ESPNews during the
NCAA tournament. Gottlieb was asked by ESPN to help launch
ESPNU from
Charlotte. The fledgling network was a company priority, and based upon his age, his relationship with
Mike Hall, the host, and the launch being March 4, the heart of college basketball season, Gottlieb accepted the position and stayed in Charlotte for a month. The next basketball season, Gottlieb became a mainstay on
SportsCenter and as an analyst on ESPN and ESPN2 games. He caused a stir when he questioned the logic in the Big Ten's officiating crews. His segment "Point of Contention" was just that, a contentious look at previously untouchable college coaches and issues. On radio, Gottlieb would move to host
The Pulse weekday evenings from 8 to 10
Eastern before moving to afternoon drive (4 p.m. to 7 p.m. ET). He also served as a college basketball analyst for ESPNEWS and wrote for
ESPN.com. Gottlieb was also a frequent guest on other
ESPN television shows including
College Basketball Gameday Final. He occasionally appeared on the shows
SportsNation and
Mike and Mike in the Morning as a guest host. Gottlieb and
Syracuse basketball coach
Jim Boeheim have traded barbs since 2005 because of Gottlieb's criticism of what he regards as Syracuse's soft nonconference schedule and Boeheim's comments regarding Gottlieb's difficulties at Notre Dame. Boeheim has discussed their feud publicly. On July 31, 2012, Gottlieb announced that he was leaving ESPN to join CBS. He served as a studio and game analyst for CBS Sports’ coverage of regular-season college basketball and joint coverage with
Turner Sports of the NCAA basketball tournament. Gottlieb co-hosted a nightly television show on CBS Sports Network called
Leadoff. His co-host was
Allie LaForce, the former Miss Teen USA, who has become CBS' lead sideline reporter for college football. In addition to
Leadoff,
The Doug Gottlieb Show was moved to the new
CBS Sports Radio network. Gottlieb's commentary and conversational interviewing style followed his show from ESPN Radio to CBS Sports Radio. In 2013, Gottlieb started participating in the CBS Sports Minute on CBS Radio stations throughout the country. In 2014, CBS decided to move the
Doug Gottlieb Show to a TV simulcast format. Essentially canceling
Leadoff, Gottlieb's radio show and his longtime producer Adam Klug moved to
New York City, where the show was on both radio and television at 3 p.m. Eastern on weekdays. Beginning in April 2017, Gottlieb worked as a basketball analyst and radio host for Fox Sports.
The Doug Gottlieb Show moved to
Fox Sports Radio. Gottlieb was also an occasional substitute host on
Fox Sports 1 (FS1)'s
The Herd with Colin Cowherd, replacing original host Cowherd when he was on vacation. In June 2022, Gottlieb tweeted that
Casey Close, the
sports agent for
Freddie Freeman, did not present the
Atlanta Braves' final offer to Freeman before he signed with the
Los Angeles Dodgers. Close sued Gottlieb for libel in July. In September, Gottlieb acknowledged that he was wrong, based on incorrect information that he gathered from his sources, and apologized to Close. On December 19, 2025,
The Doug Gottlieb Show aired its final live radio broadcast on Fox Sports Radio, two days following his announcement that he would step away from live radio but will continue to podcast via the All Ball platform and iHeartMedia. On January 17, 2026,
The Doug Gottlieb Show re-emerged as a weekly produced show, broadcasting twice weekly on
WFRV+ with distribution on the iHeartMedia podcast network. == Coaching ==