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Report: ESPN Is Sacking The Roku Channel’s Free NFL Morning Show After Two Years

ESPN is reportedly about to make a change that will hit The Roku Channel users and NFL fans who have been following one of the league’s more unusual free streaming experiments.

According to Front Office Sports, ESPN plans to end the syndicated version of Good Morning Football, better known as GMFB: Overtime, after two seasons. FOS reports that the two-hour spinoff was launched two years ago to extend the reach of the franchise, with Sony Pictures distributing the show and The Roku Channel carrying it free alongside select local affiliates.

The main Good Morning Football show is expected to continue on NFL Network, so this does not appear to be the end of the franchise itself. But it would mark the end of a free Roku Channel version that gave cord cutters another way to keep up with NFL news without paying for a live TV bundle.

The timing is especially notable because ESPN now has a much bigger role in the NFL’s media future. The league agreed to sell NFL Network and other media assets to ESPN in exchange for a 10% equity stake in the company, a deal that was announced in 2025 and later cleared by regulators in early 2026. With the agreement, ESPN is now helping shape more of the NFL’s media footprint than ever before, including how some of the league’s programming is packaged, distributed, and promoted across platforms.

Earlier this month, ESPN and NFL Network announced an expanded preseason schedule. The networks will be home to 31 matchups, with NFL Network airing 19 and the other 12 available on ESPN Unlimited. ESPN is also carrying an exclusive preseason game on August 20 when the Texans host the Raiders. All preseason games will be available on NFL Network live or via replay.

For Roku Channel users, the FOS report is another reminder that free streaming options tied to major sports brands can disappear just as quickly as they arrive. GMFB: Overtime was not a live game package or a premium subscription service, but it still filled an important niche for fans who wanted NFL news and commentary without paying extra. Its reported end would leave one fewer free football-related option on a platform that many cord cutters rely on for accessible entertainment.

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