Sports

NFL Legend Terry Bradshaw Makes Announcement After 31 Years With Fox Sports

Terry Bradshaw built one of the most decorated careers in NFL history before ever stepping into a television studio. The Hall of Fame quarterback won four Super Bowls with the Pittsburgh Steelers, earned NFL MVP honors in 1978, and helped establish the franchise as one of the league's dominant dynasties during the 1970s.

After retiring from football, Bradshaw transitioned into broadcasting and became one of the faces of Fox's NFL coverage. He joined Fox when the network acquired NFL rights in 1994 and has remained a central figure on Fox NFL Sunday ever since.

Given his age and lengthy broadcasting career, questions about retirement have followed Bradshaw for years. Those discussions intensified during the 2025 postseason after an on-air mix-up during Fox's NFC Championship coverage led to renewed calls from some viewers for him to step away from television.

 Former Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback and Fox Sports analyst Terry Bradshaw. Dale Zanine-Imagn Images
Former Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback and Fox Sports analyst Terry Bradshaw. Dale Zanine-Imagn Images Dale Zanine-Imagn Images

The moment occurred when Bradshaw mistakenly began discussing the wrong game following a segment transition, leaving fellow analyst Michael Strahan visibly confused. The incident sparked criticism from some fans, while others defended the longtime broadcaster.

Bradshaw, 77, recently addressed speculation about his retirement during an appearance on the Sports Business Radio Podcast.

"I may not be with Fox Sports. That would be their call, not mine," Bradshaw said. "But I would still be speaking, and if not doing that, I'll still work the bourbon trail. Billy Graham said that the day that you retire is the day you start dying. I do believe a lot of people when they stop using their brain, their thought processes moving and advancing. I believe you age, and people end up dying. How many people die within a year after retirement? So, I don't want to do that. I see myself staying fully active to the end."

Entering the 2026 season, Bradshaw is preparing for his 32nd year with the network, making him one of the longest-serving analysts in sports television.

He did not indicate that retirement is imminent, nor did he reference any contract deadlines or discussions with Fox. Instead, he made it clear that he intends to remain active and that any decision regarding his future with the network would ultimately be Fox's to make.

For now, Bradshaw remains a fixture on Fox NFL Sunday, and there is no indication that his role is changing ahead of the 2026 season. Whether he eventually steps away on his own terms or the network chooses a different direction remains to be seen. But one thing is clear: retirement is not something Bradshaw is actively planning for.

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This story was originally published June 16, 2026 at 5:21 AM.

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