NBC Is Reportedly Cutting Tony Dungy After 17 Years, and NFL Fans Are Not Happy About It

Tony Dungy during a NBC Sunday Night Football broadcast.

Tony Dungy might be done at NBC. And based on the reaction from football fans across the country, you’d think the network just cut the wrong wire on a ticking clock.

According to Andrew Marchand of The Athletic, Dungy is most likely out from NBC’s “Sunday Night Football” pregame show ahead of the 2026 season. That’s 17 years. Seventeen. The man has been breaking down football on NBC longer than some NFL players have been alive. And now, just like that, the door appears to be closing on one of the most respected voices in the game.

NBC’s reasoning, per Marchand, is that the network wants to take the show fully on the road next season and trim the cast. Slim it down. Streamline it. Whatever corporate buzzword they’re using this week for “we’re making changes and hoping nobody notices.”

What the Fans Are Actually Saying

The reaction online was swift, pointed, and, in some cases, pretty hilarious. One fan put it simply: “Imagine watching NBC’s NFL coverage and thinking Dungy is the problem.”

That’s the kind of comment that lands because it’s true. Dungy isn’t just a TV personality. He’s a Super Bowl-winning head coach. He played the game. He coached the game. He won the game. His presence on that pregame set carried actual credibility, not just the kind you get from reading off a teleprompter.

It’s Not Just Dungy

Here’s where it gets messier. According to Drew Lerner of Awful Announcing, Rodney Harrison and Jac Collinsworth are also likely on the way out. Harrison is reportedly unlikely to return next season, and Collinsworth’s role is now in question as well. The three of them made up the show’s traveling satellite studio that showed up on-site at every Sunday game throughout the season. So this isn’t a minor tweak. NBC isn’t just shuffling the deck. They’re flipping the whole table.

What This Actually Means

Dungy has not yet commented publicly on his rumored departure. That’s notable. When a man who has been as forthcoming and thoughtful as Dungy stays quiet, you tend to read into the silence.

NBC hasn’t made any official announcement either. So technically, nothing is final. But Marchand’s reporting carries weight, and the league’s internal sources apparently aren’t thrilled that this information got out at all. The “Football Night in America” crew finding out about their futures through a reporter is not ideal for morale.

What happens next is anyone’s guess. NBC will rebuild the show, introduce new faces, and insist it’s an upgrade. Maybe it will be. But replacing 17 years of institutional knowledge, genuine football credibility, and a face that fans actually trust isn’t something you do by just booking whoever’s available.

Dungy earned his seat at that desk. If he’s really walking out the door, NBC better have a very good reason. So far, “we want to take the show on the road” isn’t quite cutting it.