Longtime ESPN sideline reporter Lisa Salters is set to return to her usual role with the network’s coverage of the NBA Finals.
ESPN has announced that Salters will return from her three-game absence for Game 5 of the NBA Finals between the Indiana Pacers and Oklahoma City Thunder on Monday night.
Salters was the sideline reporter for Game 1 before Jorge Sedano filled in for her for the next three games of the series. Ryan Glasspiegel of Front Office Sports reported at the time that Salters was dealing with a “personal matter.”
During Game 2, ESPN play-by-play announcer Mike Breen revealed that Salters had taken some time away from her sideline reporter duties while her mother dealt with a serious health issue.
Sedano is typically the sideline reporter for ESPN Radio, and he will return to that role for Game 5.
Salters has been the sideline reporter for the NBA Finals on ABC/ESPN since 2022. She began working at ESPN two decades ago. Salters has also been the sideline reporter for ESPN’s “Monday Night Football” since 2012.
The Pacers and Thunder are tied 2-2 in the NBA Finals, which means the series will go at least six games.
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At Sedgefield Country Club in Greensboro, North Carolina, Sunday’s final round of the 2025 Wyndham Championship closed out the PGA Tour’s regular season. It also marked the end of an era for one of golf’s most revered broadcasters. For the last time, Ian Baker-Finch manned the hole-announcing microphone for CBS Sports, capping 30 years in the booth following a playing career that peaked with his victory at the 1991 Open Championship. Before the day was over, Tiger Woods took to X to salute "Finchy." "Congrats Finchy for 30 incredible years behind the microphone. You brought insight into things that the viewing audience could understand and relate to. From all of us—thanks for the memories." The message joined tributes from Jack Nicklaus, Jason Day, Adam Scott and others, underscoring Baker-Finch’s standing among champions past and present. Ian Baker-Finch: From Major Champion to Broadcast Mainstay Baker-Finch turned pro in 1979, winning 17 professional tournaments worldwide. His lone major title came at Royal Birkdale in 1991, where he secured the Open Championship by five strokes. After retiring in the mid-1990s, Baker-Finch transitioned smoothly into broadcasting. He cut his teeth as an analyst on Australian television before joining ESPN and ABC in 1998. In 2007, he became CBS Sports’ dedicated hole announcer, a role he held through 2025, calling golf’s defining moments with a blend of technical acumen and warm delivery. Over 19 seasons with CBS, he covered five Masters and contributed to countless PGA Tour telecasts. Throughout Woods’ five green-jacket haul (1997, 2001, 2002, 2005, 2019), Baker-Finch was a trusted on-course voice that helped demystify championship golf for television audiences. As a player, Baker-Finch remains one of only seven Australian men to win a major championship and is one of a select few to dominate links golf on British soil. As a broadcaster, Baker-Finch’s voice guided generations of fans through golf’s signature moments, shaping how millions understand the game’s subtleties. When the G.O.A.T. of professional golf uses his platform to honor your contribution to the sport, it signals a broadcast career worth remembering.
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