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Mark Sanchez Remains Sidelined From Fox Sports NFL Booth After Stabbing Incident
Mark Sanchez faces multiple charges including a felony after a violent altercation in Indianapolis, leading Fox Sports to replace him for the Colts vs. Raiders broadcast.
- On October 17, 2025, Fox Sports released its Week 7 announcer slate without Mark Sanchez, who was replaced on Oct. 5 in the Colts vs. Raiders booth by Brady Quinn and Chris Myers; AP reports no return is expected soon.
- On October 6, police say Sanchez was arrested in Indianapolis after an altercation over Perry Tole's delivery truck, leaving both hospitalized with stab wounds.
- A civil lawsuit filed Oct. 6 names Mark Sanchez and Fox Corporation, alleging Sanchez’s `propensity for drinking and/or harmful conduct` and Fox’s failure to ensure reasonable employee behavior.
- A preliminary hearing in the case is scheduled for Wednesday in Marion County court, Sanchez said on October 12 he is focused on recovery and thanked surgeon Dr. Lindsey Mossler, while his November court date was canceled after Judge Jennifer Prinz Harrison recused herself.
- Sanchez, who joined Fox Sports in 2021, had called the first four weeks of the 2025 season alongside Adam Amin and had a 10-year NFL career before retiring in 2019.
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Is Mark Sanchez Broadcasting an NFL Game This Weekend? Everything to Know
A return to the broadcast booth is not imminent for Mark Sanchez in the aftermath of his shocking arrest. Fox Sports released their slate of announcers for Week 7 of the NFL schedule this week, with Sanchez’s name noticeably absent. Sanchez, 38, was arrested on Saturday, October 4, in connection to a violent attack in downtown Indianapolis. The former New York Jets quarterback was in town to broadcast the game between the Indianapolis Colts and…
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Read Full ArticleFormer NFL Field Marshal and sports analyst Mark Sánchez will hardly return soon to the Fox Sports transmission booth.
Coverage Details
Total News Sources58
Leaning Left11Leaning Right4Center38Last UpdatedBias Distribution72% Center
Bias Distribution
- 72% of the sources are Center
72% Center
L 21%
C 72%
Factuality
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