List of The Sports Network personalities

Past and present television personalities on The Sports Network.

Current

Analysts

Anchors/Hosts

Play-by-play

Reporters

  • Jermain Franklin – Calgary reporter
  • Bruce Garrioch – Ottawa reporter (Sens on TSN: Question Period)
  • Paul Hollingsworth - Atlantic reporter
  • Farhan Lalji – Vancouver reporter
  • John Lu – Montreal reporter
  • Mark Masters – Toronto reporter, Tennis and Hockey reporter
  • Sara Orlesky – Winnipeg reporter, JETS on TSN host
  • Ryan Rishaug – Edmonton reporter
  • Matthew Scianitti – Toronto reporter
  • Frank Seravalli – Senior Hockey reporter
  • Brent Wallace – Ottawa Bureau reporter

Former

Analysts

Anchors/Hosts

Play-by-play

Reporters

  • Lisa Bowes – Winnipeg and Calgary reporter
  • Mark Bunting – Winnipeg and Toronto reporter
  • Ken Chilibeck - Edmonton reporter
  • Shawn Churchill - Winnipeg reporter
  • James Cybulski – Toronto reporter
  • Michael Farber– Montreal reporter
  • Sheri Forde — Toronto reporter
  • Gary Lawless – Winnipeg reporter
  • Nancy Newman – Sportsdesk reporter
  • David Pratt - Vancouver reporter
  • Rob Sinclair - Ottawa and Montreal reporter
  • Alex J. Walling – Halifax/Atlantic Canada reporter
  • Michael Whalen - Montreal reporter
gollark: I think the "random facts about taxes and whatever" life skills should be learned independently and the vague general stuff like "working in teams" would be best learned through actually doing it seriously.
gollark: I would of course replace the English lesson badness with bringing arbitrary books in to read yourself.
gollark: School but instead of reading random poems you memorise 'life skills' would be quite ae ae ae, as they say.
gollark: If I were to redesign school, it would be much less regimented (you would not be grouped by year etc.), more flexible (an actually sane schedule and more/earlier choice of subjects), and focus on more general skills (not overly specific reading of books, or learning procedures for specific maths things, or that sort of thing). Additionally, more project-based work and more group stuff.
gollark: Those are specific uses of some of those things, yes. Which is why those are important. Although programming isn't intensely mathy and interest is trivial.

References

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